The Weather. - Bi _ ‘THE PONTIAC PRES _ ‘ Saturday: Rain, Snow 112th YEAR ok kw PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 —40 PAGES TALEricoae uate learn 7 120 Traffic Fatalities Mar Holiday Celebration COUPLE REMARRIED — Mrs. Maude Hodgins | mounted on their favorite horses. The eae ey ( “a ‘ Divorced Couple Rewed on Horseback pee AP Wirephote Rev. W. S. and her former husband, Kenneth, who were| Nelson (right) performed the ceremony. Hodgins, married for 22 years but divorced two years ago, a horseshoer, was on a Tennessee Walking Horse were remarried south of Ann Arbor yesterday while | and his wife was on a registered quarter horse. Jap Premier as Leader of From AP and Steps Down Liberal Party UP Dispatches TOKYO — Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida today gave up the leadership of the Liberal party which he guided | through more than eight years of the stormy postwar era, a Japanese news service reports. Yoshida agreed to step down as president of the Lib- eral party in favor of Deputy Premier Taketora Ogata after party leaders decided* yesterday that this was the best course of action, the Kyodo agency said. The 76-year-old prime minister was reported to have conferred for an hour and 4 minutes with high officials of his party today before he accepted the executive board's decision. Yoshida will retain the premier. ship but his strengthened opposi- then in the new Dict (Parliament) which convenes Nev. 3 is de termined to unseat him and end- Liberal party rule. For the first time in his long rule his opposition has enough cer- tain votes to topple him with a non- confidence motion in the House. Yoshida, a fighter, was said by the newspaper Asahi, Japan's big- Hateyama, from forming a gov- ernment. Burglar Helps Himself to Thanksgiving Dinner LIVONIA (INS) — Trustfut Mrs. Fog Smothers South California Paralyzes Land, and Air Traffic; Boat Rescued Dramatically ANGELES #—The worst | today, | land, at sea and in the) . Harmony, groping in the murk and unable to radio its position. Using radar | and radio bearings, a Coast Guard boat located the craft in the thick | a More Drizzle, ‘Some Snow Due in Pontiac Pontiac residents have more damp weather in store for them, the U.S. Weather Bureau says. The forecast for tonight is snow mixed with rain and rain or snow |tomorrow. There will be little change in temperature until to- morrow night, when cloudy skies and colder weather will bring snow flurries. Sunday also will be cloudy and cold with snow flurries. Yesterday rain dampened Thankagiving day, with a total of 09 in. recorded. Temperatures ranged from 29 to downtown Pontiac. It misted and rained off and on evening. is expected to be a high tomorrow night the low thermometer reading was 36 de- grees, rising to 38 at 2 p.m. ; Radiator Has Shakes, Police Get on the Job BALTIMORE (®—Someone heard sounds of hammering inside a | clothing store here yesterday and called police. Three patrol cars, a patrol wag on and 14 policemen converged on the store. Inside the officers found the radiator system shaking itself silly on a cold day. In Today's Press . Bed County News Crane, Dr. Fiterials Widening Work on M24 to Start Here in Spring Four-Lane Highway Will Be Built From Lake Orion to Opdyke Rd. sioner Charles M. Ziegler revealed today that work will begin “as early as weather conditions permit” next spring on widening M-24 from two to four lanes over an eight-mile stretch from Lake Orion south to Opdyke road. The project will cost about $1,350,000. The widening is scheduled to be extended from Opdyke down the North Perry street business route to East Huron street in 1956 at an estimated cost of over $700,000. All right-of-way will be pur. chased in time to let the contract during winter or early spring ‘‘so the contractor can start work... ‘after the frost has left the ground.” “This is a definite commitment,” | | Zeigler pledged, ‘‘and will be ad- to.”’ One of the most heavily trav- eled highways in Oakland Coun- ty, M-24 im 1963 averaged 8,000 | ears per day over the stretch to be widened. Pontiac will pay 25 | | | per cent or | about $170,000 of widening costs | for the section from Opdyke road | |to Huron street. ; i "Shown fo Jury | Photographs Taken in Sheppard House Are | Identified by Chemist | CLEVELAND « — Photographs | showing a trail of blood spots through the Sheppard house of murder were introduced by the state today. There were 15 pictures. The de- jfense objected unsuccessfully to | four of them. ’ Dombrowski, a chemist | with 12 years experience in the } State Highway Commis-| | © J Famil THANKFUL TO BE HOME — Mrs. Mildred Orchard, of Amityville, N. Y. hugs 36, on his arrival at Idlewild Airport yesterday from Communist China. Orchard was accompanied | y Has her son William, visa from Red Happy Holiday Reunio by his wife and two sons, one 11 months, he holds. Orchard n mp ~ ba ea of, Ss sy 4 Sj ~ s of whom, was denied an China for four years. ° exit ‘Selfridge Officer Detends Protective Value of Nike The commanding officer. of the Army's 28th Anti- Blood Pictures on Artillery unit stationed at Selfridge Air sess Envoy Named to Assist Dulles Base today denied that the “Nike” has become obsolete George V. Allen Moves even before becoming established as part of the nation’s | defense against air attack. Air Force Secretary Harold E. Talbott stated two days | ago that Nike, an antiaircraft guided missile, had lost much of its protective value and was fast becoming out- | moded by fast flying planes and “flying bombs,” like the ti | V-2 bombs of World War II. “I would say categorically that Nike is not obsolete,” declared Col. Walter C. Con way “There are always plans? on the drawing boards even when a new weapon comes out,” he said “But Nike is so revolutionary ; and offers such a high degree of | photos from the witness stand. = to be a long, long time before it | He was a prosecution witness at '8 obsolete. — the first degree murder trial of “Once we've got our defenses | Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard, the Bay established if planes come along | peggnes osteopath who is accused | of the July 4 fatal bludgeoning of his wife Marilyn, 31. Chalk marks and pointing pen- |cils were used to call attention to | ithe blood spots, many of which | | were quite small. } The specks—from basement to bedroom and from deor to door inside and out—were detected | by a substance called luminol. | This is a liquid which Dombro- | ski said produces a bluish green | fluorescence if the spot is blood, but does not indicate whether the’ blood is human or animal, | The jurors passed the photo-| (Continued pn Page 2, Col. 8) ' _ sy had a good idea where the campus was when he was a student Project for research in peacetime should be completed by next July. The Phoenix Laboratory will and windows to music and fine arts center. required for the operation of this the university has ments. Meanwhile, back of the ‘‘old’”’ the only “caves” of any college campus. “Caves” are specially built structures with solid concrete walls constructed underground . _ These “caves” will permit research involving the use of highly » radioactive materials. Only other structures of the kind are located at the Oak Ridge atomic laboratory and the Atomic Energy Commission’s Argonne National Laboratories in Chicago. On the drafting boards for the new north campus are a new automotive engineering laboratory, an aeronautical] engineering laboratory, a reactor building next to the Phoenix lab, and a The new campus is intended to become the center of graduate studies and research at the university. To house some of the personnel that will eventually be at any known speed now, we can! track them down and there would be a very high probability that we would ‘be able to engage and shoot them down.” Meanwhile, the Army district engineer's office in Detroit re-! ported that construction has begun | on two Nike sites in Oakland County The sites, part of a 14-unit pro- tective ring around Detroit, are located at Featherstone and Squirrel Rds., near Auburn | Heights, and 11-Mile and Frank. | lin Rds., near Franklin village. Each site will include a launch- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) uses of atomic energy, the lab be unique in that it will have allow control of experiments tremendous new physical plant, apartments for married students’ and staff members near the new campus. One hundred units of the 600 dnits planned have already 40 of the no-bedroom type, and « dosen twé-hedroom apart. campus, students have become i Ocean Relinquishes 250-Year-Old Beer SANDWICH. England w — to be about 250 years old have washed ashore here in the past week - Ivor Noel-Hulme, an archaeol- ogist, fixed the approximate age of the brew by examining the old handmade bottles. They were of a type used 2'% centuries ago. The beer is believed to have come from an ancient wreck fi- nally broken up by the sea. “People who have tried it,’’ Noel- Hulme reported, “say it is horrible."’ Petitioners Are Counted NEW YORK (®—Counting of sig- natures on petitions opposing cen- sure of Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis) is scheduled to start to- day. From India to the State Department AUGUSTA, Ga. (&~—President Eisenhower today named V. Allen, now ambassador to India, © be assistant secretary of state \for Near East, South Asian and | African affairs. Allen will succeed Henry A. By- roade, who will become ambassa- | dor to Egypt, succeeding Jeffer- son Caffery, who ‘is retiring. | The President armounced at the little White House here, where he is spending a Thanksgiving week- | end vacation, that the nominations | will be sent to the Senate when | protection that I think it is going Eighteen bottles of beer believed | ‘he lawmakers convene again. | There had been speculation for | weeks about the shuffling of top diplomatic posts. Some reports have suggested that John Sherman Cooper, Kentucky Republican de- feated for re-election to the Sen- ate, might get Allen's post in India. | Press secretary James Hagerty had no comment on Allen's suc- | cessor there. Allen, 51, from Durham, N.C., | has been a foreign service officer | since 1931, starting as vice consul |} at Kingston, Jamaica, He rose to become ambassador to Iran in 1945; assistant secretary for Pub- lic Affairs in 1948; ambassador to Yugoslavia in 1949; and went to India in March, 1953. Byroade, 41, from Maumee, Ind., goes to Egypt after serving as assistant secretary since 1952. Caffery is retiring after 43 years |in the foreign service. accustomed to passing construction in classes. e Finding Old UM Campus in Maze of New Buildings process on their way to students’ campus life. Completely blocking off the previously popular entrance at the side of the Union, the project will have additional cafeteria and other facilities for students by July. A few blocks down State street from the Union, the new athletic administration building $350,000 supplied by the board in is being built to the tune of control of intercollegiate athletics from football revenue. Proceeds from grid games were also responsible for approximately 97 for the new women’s swimming liorary being built as a wing on Kresge Foundation funds of to concentrate medical books Altogether the University of buildings amounting Total cost per cent of the $1,000,000 spent pool finished last spring. diffused around Wirephete Michael, Michigan Roads Lead to Death for 14 Persons Illinois Posts Highest Highway Toll, With 16 Losing Lives From AP and UP Dispatches sorry Thanksgiving Day traffic record of more than 100 deaths on the high- ways. A United Press count be- tween 6 p. m. Wednesday and midnight last night showed 120 persons had died in traffic accidents. Fires killed 4 and miscel- laneous mishaps 18 for a | practically zero at Los Angeles. | Three members of a | tumily whose car collided steel’ truck E Charge 3rd Man in Prison Death pirer 4 exit bate ee: bee . TWO The Day in Birmingham “= Jaycees Plan Yule Contest, Business Directory of City From Our Birmingham Bureau BIRMINGHAM — Swinging into action, the Junior Chamber of Commerce has lined up -an im- pressive list of projects for the coming months, the nearest one at hand being the annual Christ- mas lighting contest. But the most ambitious under- taking is the compiling of a direc tory new to Birmingham. Classed is another annual civic project members are busy acquiring the necessary data for the cross-in dexed book, which will list bus: nesses only, The’ approximately 60 page guide will include inside its cov- ers a map of Birmingham and a history of the city, March 15 has been set as the probabie “publication date,” according to | Claude Kidd, president. United Fund Reveals Gifts of Over $50 More gifts of $30 and over were amnounced by the Pontiac Area United Fund today. The campaign topped its $525.- 823 goal yesterday, with donations totaling $526,754. The list includes Most important. Kidd said. the | directory will be distributed at no charge to every householder in |Birmingham, Bloomfield Hi! |! s Bloomfield Village. Franklin and Beverly Hills } Kidd added that the senior cham ber is cooperating with the Jay cees in the venture and said Allan | Keough has been named chairman of the project . . * With fraffic Violations resjn ble for 27 of the S32. accidents shown in Police Chief Ralph. W Moxley 5 October report Monte commented that the accident: toll has been mounting month b month this year He added that strict enforce ment of traffic laws will reduce traffic violations. but pointed out | that police officers do not enjey issuing tickets and are not fe quired to issue a certain number each day. Moxley said he has ‘issued or- | ders to all officers to enforce the laws more vigilantly than in the past . it will be very grati- fying if we find that by better traffic law enforcement we have fewer tickets to issue and fewer accidents to investigate.” * 6¢ »* . 14 public hearings were set by Planning Board mem- bers this week. Pleet Carrier Corp. ........+ $1 000.00 Pontioe Retsil Store 150.00 One will consider a property — R. Wilson pe owner's request te rezone the ol ee a ne eripeneer Simms Brothers—employes 556 45 | southwest corner of Southfield es ee ee ogre and Lincoin from single to two- ater Township Schools tamil id . a oor & nag c eee | peeperty ownery will ttend the roger Grocery ng Co | will a Wissen Foundry . wo.09 | i ‘ vee Dee employes . ted Tw way em pio ‘ | Lien Store —empiore: 300.40 Three property owners will also ers Title Insurance ........ i Central @chool—-employes ...... i6a.00 | Pe present when their request to Winklemans—employes —......... 19038 | the ee property on serine on Whittier School—empioyes ..... q south side ot Coloni ‘ourt Alfred G. Wilson . 18006 Quaen'e—ometeges : pe from single family residence to ter- ting urse thea hcchace . jean temperature.................. Weather—Foggy. Rainfall .09 inch. One Year Age in Pontiac Highest temperature..............-. ™ Lowest temperature... ....s.se.e00++ bs] Mean temperature.......-.-+-s--00« 31.6! Highest and Lowest Temperateres, This AIRMAN OF YEAR — Airman Date tn 8? Years | 2/¢ Thomas E. Wensauer of Battle 65 in 1896 10 im 1940) : Tabernacle will officiate with bur- veeseter‘s Tounsretece'Cpert | (even: holds a trophy designating ia) following in Oak Hill Ceme- Alpena 4 35 Kansas City 43 3: | him as the .irst Michigan Air Na- | tery samore pa 4 ~_ ps 35| tional Guard title of “‘Outstanding ee 8 29 Miami 5 §7| Airman of the Year.’’ He won the Clerk Under Knife a 4 + eee A 4 3 | trophy in competition with some Chiengs | if i | s «7/'1.200 other guardsmen in August Municipal Court. Clerk Leo F. iy i | maneuvers at | Alpena. He's @ McDonald today is reported in| ees oe | member of the 172nd fighter good condition following an opera- _ 23 28 Washington 47 . 32 squadron, , , tion at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. * ° ) | Pontiac Deaths Arvin A. Dennis Arvin A Dennis 69 of Northwood = Dr died suddenly Wednesday at his home . Born in Montague Sept. 18, 1885 the son of William and he Was Carne V 1925 Mr Dennis has lived in Pontiac and Oakland County 35 years and was last employed at the Jig Bush- ing Co. He had previously been a bookkeeper Besides his widow, he is sur- vived by two sons, Frank and Ted at home and granddaughter, Carol Lynn of Drayton Plains. Also sur- viving are two sisters. Mrs. Daniel (jrow of Auburn Heights and Mrs Fred Tucker of Drayton Plains Service will be held Monday at ll aim from the DeWitt C. Davis Funeral Home Dr. Tom Malone of kimmanue!l Baptist Church will | with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery officiate Kathryn Herrington The funeral will be held Satur- day at 3 p.m. from the Huntoon + Funeral] Home for Kathyrn Her- rington, 88, of 509 Lenox St. Dr. H. H. Savage of the First Baptist Church will officiate. Burial will follow in Perry Mount Park Cem- etery Born in Albany, N. Y. Oct. 10, ® 1866, she was the — daughter of Lem- uel and Louise Herschenh am 5 | A brother and a sister survive, | Ben Herrington of Albany and Mrs. Rose Chase of Bloomfield, N. J. | Miss Herrington died at her ‘home Wednesday after a brief ill- ness | 1300 Crescent Lake Rd., died yes- | terday after a 2-year illness. Born in Lapeer County Feb. 8. 1892, he was the son of Frank and Mary Foster Salisbury. A farmer, he lived near and in Pontiac for 60 years. Mr. Salisbury was a veteran of World War I. Surviving are two brothers and | four sisters, Arthur, of Churubusco, Ind., and William, Mrs. George 'Dunham, Mrs. Roy Clayton, Mrs. Charles Edson and Mrs. William Brown, all of Pontiac. The funeral! will be held from the Kirkby Funeral Home Saturday «at 2 p.m. with burial in Mount Avorn Cemetety. Rochester Mrs. Kelley Spencer Mrs. Kelley (Anna W.) Spencer, 51, of 24 James St., died last night at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after ‘an illness of one year. Born in Bay County Jan. 9, 1903, |she was the daughter of William and Minnie Drader Burwell was married in Detroit July 20. 1921. and came to Pontiac at that time Mrs. Spencer was a member of Bethany Baptist Church, Royal Neighbors. Gold Star Mothers and VFW Auxiliary Besides her husband, she is sur vived by her father of Genoa, Tex.: six children. Mrs. Jane Til- lotson of Tacoma, Wash., Mrs. Marion Carter of Mandon Lake. Mrs. Elinor Skinner of Toledo, Ohio, Mrs. Patricia Parr of Pon- tiac, Mrs. Joyce Gates of Clarks- ton, Conalee Spencer at home and 10 grandchildren. Also surviving are a sister, Mrs. Harry White of Flushing; two , brothers, Alden ‘of Alanson and Eljay Burwell of Genoa, Tex. Mrs. Spencer will be at the Farmer-Snover Funeral Home un- til 11 a.m. Monday when she will be taken to the Bethany Baptist | ‘Church for service at 1:30 p.m. with the Rev. Fred R. Tiffany of her church officiating. Buria) will _ follow in Perry Mount Park Ceme- tery Mrs. Glen R: Ward Mrs. Glen R. (Dorothy M.) Ward #, of 583 Arthur St. died yester- day at the Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital after an illness of two | days. Born in Eaton Rapids March } | 17, 1914. she was the daughter of son and was married Aug. 15, 1953. Mrs. Ward had lived in Pontiac 16 years. Besides her husband, and father |of Fremont, Ohio, she is survived by two children, Mrs. Gaitha Mar- row and Duane Miles of Pontiac; ny, Mrs. Parnalla Fisher, Mrs. Viola Kuppus, and Glenn Ward all of Pontiac, Melvin and Mary Ward at home. . Three brothers, Darwin, Darrell and Virgil Hudson all of Fremont, Ohio, also survive. The funeral will be held Satur- | day at 1:30 p.m, from the Farm- er-Snover Funeral Home. The Rev. A. J. Baughey of the Evangelistic Gillette Dennis and mar- | ried Lucey A. Decker here April 17, | THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 _ SX ” er / 1 ’ + i wh ae: ‘ > | | ¥ errs win | ‘ | | | ' j aed | : Of HIGHWAY THREATENED—Airview of U. S. 12 near St. Joseph, comes close to edge of bluff overlooking shores of Lake Michigan. | Note particularly in lower righthand corner. Cracks can be seen in |face of bluff where highway comes near drop. Erosion of bluff in | recent years has forced abandonment of several lake-front homes. ee a ————_— SD in Remington Death (Continued From Page One) Alger Hiss who has spent three. Aerial Joyride Lands and a half years in the jail. His | . Wife, Priscilla, was expected to Gladstone Youth, 18, in meet him at the prison gates. Jackson * 8 ¢ | The 50-year-old former State De- | GRAND RAPIDS W — Darryl! partment official, who was con- Spaulding. 18, who piloted a Lear, | victed of swearing falsely when he Inc., airplane to Gladstone in an, told a congressional committee he | unauthorized flight two weeks ago. had never passed secrets to a Com- for Plane Theft She | Harry EF. and Olive Lashley Hud- | six step-children, Mrs. Lora Ben-| | was sentenced today to Southern munist spy ring. is leaving on a Michigan Prison Circuit Judge Fred N. Sear! sen- tenced Spaulding to 18 months to five years and said the youth's past record failed to warrant probation. examination on charges of ‘wil fully and without authority tak- ing possession of and using an airplane.” He had been bound over to Circuit Court under $1,000 bond. He was arrested at Gladstone after landing a Lear-owned single- engine Beechcraft plane which he took from its parking place at Kent County Airport. | During the flight Spaulding was pursued by Air Force jet planes but disregarded their attempts to make him land. Judge Searl, commenting on the sentence, said: “Just because the boy's act | was spectacular, several persons have attempted to intervene for IHe said it was unfortunate that few persons offer to intervene for the many youths who appeared be- fore him during the year on lesser charges and who obviously could be helped with outside guidance. Ronald V. Kennedy Gets Probation, Fine GRAND HAVEN — Ronald V , Kennedy of Grand Rapids, last of ; the three defendants in the state land frauds, was sentenced today war Red spy ring. and that he, Robert L. Grim. 26, Sturgis, and to two years probation and to pay | lied again in testifying he did not! Voigt Mathews, 57, Albion, were $500 in costs and fine. | Kennedy, 44, dismissed state em- | ploye. was convicted by a jury Oct. 23 of conspiracy to defraud the State of Michigan of $600 in right- of-way land deals two years ago. The sentencing was the final chapter in a series of court cases stemming from an_ investigation which Attorney General Frank G. | Millard launched 10 months ago. Earlier Kennedy's former boss in | the Grand Rapids state highway | right of way division office, G. Pal- mer Seeley, was sentenced to two and a half to five years in prison for similar land sales conspiracies | in Muskegon County. Today's sentencing of Kennedy was by Circuit Judge Raymond L. Smith of Ottawa County. Ken had been free on $1,000 bond. Freedom Confol Slote ALBION uF — One hundred dele- gates. representing all Michigan colletes, are expected here for the Michigan Methodist Student Move- ment study conference on acade- mic freedom Dec. 3-5. The con-| ference will be held at Albion! College. , | More Cars Than Homes | | HARTFORD. Conn. «—Connec- | ticut’s Motor Vehicles Commission. | er Charles F. Kelley reports that the state has more registered mo- tor vehicles (900,000) than dwelling units (700,000.) COMING The New CATALINA - LOUNGE *" Wateh for It! Spaulding earlier had waived | probationary basis. He was orig- inally sentenced for five years, but he won an earlier release with a “meritorious” record. As a convicted felon, he will be without the right to vote or hold public office Acting Warden Fred’ T. Wilkin- | son said he has had his ‘‘custom- ary talk’’ with Hiss. His itinerary for simple Eat breakfast. check out with the library and then walk to free- dom. tomorrow is * . . Prison guards have described Hiss’ prison life as that of an ex-| tremely cooperative inmate | s s . They said he worked most of his | prison time as a clerk on the cloth- ing issue detail. His spare time, they said, was | devoted “almost exclusively” ' reading in the prison library. | Dozens of newsmen are expected to be on hand to question Hiss on his plans for the future. He entered the prison claiming his in- | nocence and some indications are | | his immediate future might be de-| "es | voted to proving it. * a ~ } But at least two congressional \tommittees have indicated they | may ask first call on his time. Until March 21, 1956. Hiss will; | have to check with a parole offi- 'cer and report various details of his persona; life. There were two charges in the | indictment against Hiss — that he | Hed to a federal grand jury when he denied that he passed govern- | ment secrets to Chambers who, | says he was a courier for a pre- | see Chambers after Jan. 1, 1937.! | The first trial in 1949 resulted in a hung jury. At a second trial | ending Jan. 271. 1950, he was con- victed on both counts. The Supreme Court rejected his | appeal and he surrendered March | 22, 1951, to begin serving his term. | | The kilometer is 0.621 of a mile. Students fo Get Added Holiday Pontiac Teachers Slate Conference for Monday; Pupils to Take Day Off Pontiac public school students will get an extra day of Thanks- | giving vacation Monday while their | teachers hold an annual curricu- | lum conference. During the day designed to help improve classreom tech- niques, elementary instructors will study the areas of social studies, science, music integra- tion and books and materials. “The day has been divided into quarters to enable all the teachers tu meet with the various consult- | ants we have brought in to ad- vise them,"’ said Gerald White. elementary coordinator for the Pon- tiac schools. | Webster School will be the scene | of this all-day conference for ele- | mentary teachers. .. Special education person- | nel plan to meet with the ele- | mentary sessions in the morn- ing and will held their own departmental meeting in the aft- ernoon. Philosophies of what constitutes | | | a good junior high schoot program have been formulated during the | past few weeks by ee high school, They will meet at Lin- | coln Junior High School. “We are asking the senior high | school teachers to begin to think | schools Pointing out that a new senior | high school will be constructed for | this district within the next few) years, Cox said it was important | that planning begin now. 118 Traffic Deaths Mar U:S. Holiday (Continued From Page One) ert Walker, 66; her daughter. Mrs, Della Mae Johnsen, 37, and a nephew, Joseph Williams, 38, whe was driving. | Not counted in the state toll | were two Michigan residents killed in a holiday crash in Ohio. George O. Wentworth, 62, of Athens and his wife. Marion, 38. were killed | along with an Ohio man in a collision at Kiefersville. One of Michigan's traffic mis- _ haps derailed six railroad cars two Another holiday trip ended in tragedy only minutes after it be- | gan for the Walter K. Tiede family | of Birmingham. Tiede's wife. Vir- | ginia, 43. was killed less than a mile from their home early yes- | terday when their car ran off a. Bloomfield Township road during a dense fog and crashed into a| tree. The Tiede family had just started out for Chicago. killed Wednesday night in a head- on collision four miles south of Eaton Rapids. Other traffic victims: Mrs. Beverty E, Merphy, 36, Lapeer, Killed when struck by a car on U.S.10 north of Pontiac. Max Hutchins, 7, Fennville, struck and killed by a car while Jewel NEW! .. . bu preety Simms Has Cut the Price! Choice of 4 Hi-Fashion “REVIERA” —by Sheffield MADE IN SWITZERLAND 9” Colors walking on M.89 near his Allegan County home, Stratton Grier, 44, Sault Ste. Mar- rie, killed when his pickup truck struck an abutment on a rural road 10 miles south of his home. Bersal A. Gunnell, 52, of Cedar Springs, killed Wednesday in a car-truck collision on a Kent Coun- road near Sparta. Henry Sturgis, 30, of Crystal Lake, killed Thursday in a two- car collision on M.21 r ar Fow!l- er, George Kazimer, 65, of Monroe, killed Thursday when hit by a car while walking across a street near his home. Officer Defends Protection by Nike (Continued From Page One) ing area and a control area a half- mile apart, Four Nike batteries are already operating, Col. Conway said. Two are at Selfridge and two at an old naval air station north of Monroe. Work is expected to be com- pi-ted on the local sites by May, said Col. John E. Unverferth, of the engineer's office. Each site will cost approximately $500,000. The Nike is a supersonic pilot- less missile which tracks down enemy aircraft with its own elec- tronic “brain,” using informa- The “brains” of the system con- sist of two radars and a computer. ‘ Goes to Prison Third Man Charged people trom this echool group In| power ot fight are bath Chemist Identities — Blood Photographs (Continued From Page One) graphs around from hand to hand, looking them over. Pictures to which defense attor- ney Fred Garmone objected were, he said, either duplicates of other pictures — closeups taken from a different angle — or there were other things in the pictures that he apparently felt did not belong , * * * At the beginning of the session Judge Edward Blythin excused the jury while defense counsel William J. Corrigan renewed his motion for a continuance of the trial, now | ending its sixth week. | Corrigan produced two copies of j the Cleveland Press of Wednesday and yesterday. He said they con j tained “prejudicial statements”’ | and that the material covered was “striking at the very foundations of i - * . The stories dealt with reporters’ interviews — one with friends and relatives of the slain Marilyn Shep- pard, the other a feature about a woman juror’s family struggling along without her while she was on duty. The juror, Mrs. Lois Mancini, was not at the home when her family was interviewed and pic- tures were taken, a fact Judge Blythin noted in overruling the motion. The state contends Dr. Sheppard killed his wife after an affair with a pretty nurse, Susan Hayes. FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY! Pic Grills 2 sandwiches —easy to clean. Combination Grill & WAFFLE BAKER ietintiimnsiec ‘3° able Grids New streamline design. Easy to change. Two appliances im one, Record low price. = Styled as (beth sides) time. Self-adjusting hinged top for thick- ness of any sandwiches. 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Press reports said the Reds stormed ashore from motorized junks under cover of shellfire from 10 gunboats. Nationalist warplanes raced to the island and helped drive the invaders back into the sea. Wuchiu is a guerrilla base only a mile long and half a mile wide. It is 15 miles from the mainland and 10 miles south of Red-held Nanjin Island. It is 63 miles north- east of Quemoy and 66 miles south- southeast of Foochow, capital of Fukien province - . - The 7th Fleet has been patrolling the Formosa Strait since June 27, 1950, just after the outbreak of the Korean War. Its assigned task is | to protect Formosa and the Pes- cadores from invasion. U.S. policy has been to keep the Reds guessing about what the fleet might do if one of the many offshore Natipn- alist outposts was threatened. | The first plot of ground for Arlington National Cemetery, Ar- lington, Va., was appropriated by the government June 15, 1864 or new SUPER SOFT (Contains we locqver If You Suffer | Stomach Acid Pain oo /t’s A Real Pity | Sufferers say there's no common pain socom- | petely wpset Ung as the burning. gasey feeli j that comes from excess stomach acidity. Iie a real pty to suffer unnecessarily when TRYPT ACIN TABLETS are as near to you as your druggwt's. TRYPTACIN works fast 1o x mmhat the annoy ing drecomiort of excess tionnach ecadhty by mevtraliaing excess stom- | ach acd Ask Your Oruggist for TRYPTACIN TRYPTACIN doesn't interfere with diges- tron and it doesn t bring on acid rebound. 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PHOTOGRAPHERS NEEDS 2-4 4-4-4 44s os ‘ee egos a) a) Se 4 4 4) gd ggg a a ea el de SSS SS RTF J : — NS P Mc. : 33° 98 North Seginew St. $13.95 Value A Darn Good Camera Gift for a Youngster! Eastman Kodak BROWNIE HOLIDAY Flash Camera Regular $8.15 Value 50c Holds Yours 3°787 Truly an economical and * simple to use camera I with flash unit for indoor use Uses inexpensive 127 size film handy duo-pak by Ko- dak. Buy now at this low price and save Limit 6 rolls per cus- tomer. FRIDAY G SATURDAY ONLY GENUINE | Eastman Kodak FILM (om ~—s) 0620 0 120 127 fi | - ¢ eR 56g 3. Ce | N ma Up to 85e Values = . Presh dated film in / ij For 8mm end 6mm Famous ‘CORNET’ Movie Splicer Regular $449 Value An amateur splice that gives professional re- sults. 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SC TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR | JUNIOR EDITORS elie C —— éy GET PALLIATIVE RELIEF Witt TRUMAC TABLETS | ‘row (he setow Enter Coated The . has 580 park e@ami Beach, Fla., ing places for every registered, highest in the nation | Roseville, Mich., a Detroit suburb is second with 396 per thousand HELPING YOU SEE Setter... 18 OUR BUSINESS No expense has been spared «+ - no opportunity over- looked . . . to provide the finest service possible for the care of eyes! When your eyes need attention. . . you may safely entrust their care to our modern, optical facili- ties! DR. ERNEST E. JOHNSON ° Registered Optometrist 25 NORTH SAGINAW STREET owl so its shadow will fall on the wall 1.000 cars THIS OWL CASTS A SHADOW Owls see best at night—and that's when an owl hunts for food Here's how to make this one: 1. Color the owl brown. 2. Cut out this whole square, use white library paste to fasten it on sitff paper 3 Cut out the ow! and the attached white bar. Cut the dark lines into the wings, so they make a fringe. With a pencil, poke holes in the owl's eyes. 4. Bend the white bar into a ring, pasting ends together to fit the first finger of your left hand 5. When the ring is dry, slip it and the owl on your finger and go into a dark room with a flashlight. Hold the light close to the You can also us a lamp Disabled Hunter Found in Auto Invalid Was Unable to Free Car From Rut in | Backwoods Road By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A disabled hunter who has a special permit to hunt from his car was found by a Coast Guard helicopter Thursday, after being | stuck for more than 19 hours on a backwoods road in Antrim Coun- ty near Alden. Lloyd Aemisegger. 30, of Alden who is paralyzed from the waist THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 . ° of the Soviet-surrounded ¢ity ritory. Amencan officials said Asle n His Feet Paris Accords 1° Bring e In a ‘declaration of intent.“ the specific acts to, implement the dec- ep ° NO 1 IN MICHIGAN Wide Self-Rule to Berlin American. Britifh and French laration have not yet been decided DAYTON, Ohio @ — Flagpole ° cammandants last night announced stander Hichard (Dixie) Blandy, BERLIN w — Tre Western oc cupation powers say ratification | ,of the recent Paris accords on down, drove his car into the woods | | Wednesday. The vehicle got stuck lin a rut and he couldn't get it | turned around. A volunteer rescue party called on the Coast Guard after | a fruitless night search for the | hunter. Meanwhile, the State Conserva- tion Department said Thursday that hunters took one less deer soutl® across the Straits of Mac- kinac in the first week of the big game season than they did in the same period last year This season's count stood 7,365 as of 10 p.m. Monday. The gunfire death toll among Michigan deer hunters remained unchanged at seven over Thanks- giving day with only five days left in the regular 16-day big game season. Besides the gunfire’ victims seven persons have died of heart attacks and scores have been wounded since the season opened Nov. 15 Last year 13 persons were shot to death and 61 were wounded during the season Eighteen National Guard infan- try divisions — nine in Europe. nine in the far Pacific—were on duty during World War II. | | OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS ( so easy to buy at... | Lolign | MopEss | I i. 5 tr Large Size Box of 48 - $1.49 the luxury of a new whisper soft fabric covering. to look like ony package. Carry it discreetly! You buy from o woman ot Kresge’s. Open Fri.-Sat.‘til 9’P. M. 39 . | @ IN NEW DESIGN—No gouze ... no chofe . . . gives you @ IN THE SECRET SHAPE BOX—Pre-wrapped for you @ SO EASY TO SHOP FOR . . . AT KRESGE'S. [i ~ AT YOUR NEARBY KRESGE’S — German rearmament will bring| Although the city has a com- ‘ tend West Berlin the widest self-govern- | pletely organized administration, Wilmarth said it crawled into the | platform, stoically replied( Like a| ment compatible with the security it still is classed as occupi d ter- watch case and spun a web stork, I slept on one foot. plans. to amend the occupation statute to increase the authority | of the West Berlin government 17-Jewel Parlor WEED, Calif. W—A tiny spider | stopped a watch. Jeweler James /quired on how he slept during his “world record” 9-day, 21-hour sojourn 50 feet up on an 18-inch UNITED SHIRT DISTRIBUTORS 35 Stores in Michigan GIVING GIFTS from ENGGASS Is A 89 Year Old Christmas Custom! gifts at ENGGASS! Man’s Wedding Band. . The newest, most fashionable creation in diamond threesome. in 14k gold. Federal Tax | Parr ss r —* alized Christmas Stocking «inside | Save 3.29! 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Relieves tired, aching foot é $164.00 eee i” - muscles, stimulates blood circulation, im- low os — f ; . . : , proves miistle tone = | Waite’s White Sewing Machine Center—Fourth Floor ‘ * : ; Waite's Cosmetics—Street Floor Ds i \ | Weathered brown spots on the surface of your hands and face to tell. the world you're getting old—perhaps before you really are. Fode them away with new ESOTERICA, that medicated cream that breoks up + masses Of pigment on the skin, makes hands look white - ond young again. Equolly effective on the face, neck and arms. Nota cover-up. Acts in the skin-—not on it. Fragrant, greaseless bose for softening, lubricating skin as it clears up those blemishes. !f you hove these. age-fevealing brown:spots, blotches, of if youvwant clearer, lighter skin, begin using ESOTERICA eee: Waite’s Cocmotics--Strest Floor * i a ee eee, eee,SIX - THE PONTIAC PRESS Hosacs PF. Beovrw = Rvusexj. Bassett Advertising Manager Net’) Adv. Mgr MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press ts entitled exclusively to the use for republication of al) loca! news printed tn this news- paper, as well as al) AP news dispatches Tus Powrtac Press is delivered by carrier for 40 cents a week: where carrier service is not available by mall Genesee. Liv ton. Macomb, Lapeer and ‘ounties tt fs $1200 a year: elsewhere ta nited States $20 00 All mail subscriptions are pavable tm advance FE 2-8181. a year. ~\ Phone Pontiac MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 Airport Project Revived Thanks to a forward looking group of citizens efforts have been revived to give the Detroit area a modern airport with- in easy reach of most of its residents. Among other things, petitions are being circulated in Oakland County supporting construction of a major airport in Warren township, Macomb County. It is hoped to obtain at least 50,000 signatures. * * * A citizens committee for the airport has been organized by residents of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb Coun- ties. There also will be an Oakland County committee, now in the process of organization, under the chairman- ship of C. B. DeViigc, Ferndale indus- trialist. The proposed tri-county air- port would be an expansion to two square miles of the present Detroit owned Warren airport. It would be bounded by 12 Mile, 4 Ryan, 14 Mile and Dequindre Roads and wouldn't cost Oak- land County: anything. Warren Township is attempting to block this project by seeking to have the 74 acres of the original site condemned for park purposes. Hearings on this suit have been postponed until February. * * * There isn’t any doubt about the need for this major airport. It would be only four miles from the Detroit city limits and 18 miles from Pontiac. Willow Run airport is about 40 miles away. As Chairman DeVu1ec points out, that fa- cility conveniently serves only 35 per cent of the metropolitan area’s population. The proposéfl new airport would provide air service for the other 65 per cent. * * * Let's get behind this project 100 per cent by signing the petitions. The metropolitan area is one of the largest and most important in the country. It can’t afford any longer to be without first class air service and terminal facilities. Red China’s Dope Trade Once again the question of Red China's iniquitous traffic in narcotics . has come up in the Social Committee of the United Nations. i There is ample proof of Pei- - ; ping’s use of opium to earn : foreign exchange. It has been : supplied in well documented form , by Harry F. ANsLINGER, U. S. Commissioner of Narcotics. The evidence indicates that this trade is carried on by private com- I panies which actually are agents . of the government. ' * * * ; So far it has been impossible to com- bat this health destroying trade effec- ; tively. The Communist Nations refuse to have anything to do with a narcotics convention. They also deny that Red ) China has any part in the traffic. Be- ) cause the Reds would not consider it, ~ ' there has been no proposal that an in- } spection system be established. ; * * * : A suggestion by the Nationalist Chinese delegate, Dr. C. L. Hsta offered some hope. His idea is that opium stocks be analyzed to determine their origin. This proved process eventually might mobilize such a volume of free world opinion that effective curbs on the traffic could be applied. The situation has a discouraging aspect, however. Such a solution obvi- ; ously would have to await abandon- ment by the Communists of their long time policy of considering political goals more important than human welfare. be | lefaiilt , eann wen anked M his attempts to grow hair on his bald head by taking certain hormones were meeting with any success, he replied, “Oink.” ? FY aa: = - | o Whaling Dispute Serious. Serious international complications have developed over Peru’s military action to enforce its ban on whaling within 200 miles of its Pacific coast. The ban was aimed at the whaling fleet owned by ARISTOTLE SOCRATES ONASSIS operating un- der the Panamanian flag. How- _ever, when the fleet en route to the Antarctic, ignored Peru's warning which had the support of Ecuador and Chile, the explo- sion came. Peru's fliers bombed the whaling ships and its sailors boarded them * * * One complication is the fact that Peru, Ecuador and Chile do not belong to the International Whaling Commis- sion. This body represents 20 interested Nations. Realizing that with modern equipment it would be possible to ex- terminate whales in a season or two, the commission has imposed strict con- servation rules. The situation would be much improved if these three countries would join the commission. This would make it easier to reach agreement on the control of whal- ing within the 200 mile limit. * * * Another possibility is the proposed action before the International Court of Justice which would be asked to rule on the validity of Peru’s ban. Certainly any other method of seeking settlement would be preferable to that chosen by Peru's air force and navy. THE person who says he doesn’t care what people think of him has a clear conscience, a dead conscience, or a pro- nounced propensity for lying. The Man beat Town Are Given Awards Boy Scout Leaders Here Have Regional Training Busy man: The best one to give any job, as he'll find time to do it— or his secretary will. For outstanding work on the Boy Scout regional training program, Robert Bennett, Edward H. Leland, Van R. Braidwood and William Wells have received awards. Here to make the presentations was Don Teisberg of Chicago, Deputy Regional Executive Clinton Valley Council, which covers most of Oakland and Macomb Counties, will have a close neighbor activity in the preparations for the 1955 meeting of the National Council, to be held in Detroit In May. When given the bonds which she won in the Man About Town football contest, Mrs. Maureen Thompson of 1325 Mount Clemens S8t?, remarked that there is a lot of satisfaction in being a con- testant, even if you don’t win anything, as it stimulates an interest in the game. The same sentiments were expressed by Miss Suzanne Karner : of 711 Menominee Rd., the other winner, when she received her bonds. “We also have big fish in Florida,” writes Mrs. J. M. Hanggee of Drayton Plains, who is visiting at Tarpon Springs, where ' J. O. Stevens caught a 350-pound jewfish in his own back yard. Oakland County deer grow big and fat. The average of these shot in the county by local hunters runs much larger than those shot in the northern part of the state. Better feeding conditions and less compe- tition are given as the reasons. A post-election joke which is said to have originated with George A. Cram is to the effect that the vote on Michigan Secretary of State was much closer than the figures indicated, as it was won by a Hare. With the teurist business dis- placing farming as Michigan's sec- ond largest industry, a speaker at the recent tourist and resort con- ference in Detroit remarked that it is because many farmers find it most profitable to go into the tourist business. One of Pontiac’s original boosters for bar- ber shop singing, Rawley Hallman continues to plug for this form of entertain- ment that has made many of us forget our troubles. Verbal Orchids to— Mr. and Mrs. William Kreklow of 11 O'Riley St.; fifty-fourth wedding anni- versary. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Coe of Walled Lake; fifty-second wedding anni- versary. Mr. and Mrs.. Fred Dates of Clarkston; fifty-first wedding anniversary. a TILE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 Voice of the People Back-Seat Driver r 4 G. A. Dunham Salutes General Motors for Continuous Progress in Automobiles (Letters will De condensed when oseces because of lack of space. tga gee » eno - the writer “ust accompany letters but these will not be pubdi tf the writer so requests unless the letter ts critical tw its nature) Pontiac is a fortunate city. Sev- enty years ago when a young fel- low went to see his girl, he prob- ably drove to her hame in a shin- ting red buggy with bright colors on the panels and stripes on the wheels and the frame. On the dashboard would be the name of the maker or perhaps a German silver plate engraved ‘‘C. V. Taylor Co., Pontiac, Mich." or “R. D. Scott Co., Pontiac, Mich.” or very often “Pontiac Buggy Co., Pontiac, Mich." Then after marriage it would be a surrey with the famous fringe and bright carriage which might have had the pread name “Pentiac Vehicle” on the body. One of the first motor cars was the Welch Motor Car. Actors and actresses of national fame had these custom made for $9,000 or $10.000 The Oakland Motor car and the Flanders Electric were as lovely for their time as anything today. From a little acorn a great Oak grew, the Pontiac Car, our Peatiac, symbol of mative strength and quality. We are not forgetting the Gen- eral Motors Trucks which are known in every corner of the world; heard from village to vil- lage but getting there in war or peace. A salute to General Motors for the pleasure of the open house at our three factories. George A, Dunham 506 W. Huron Teenager Agrees With ‘Disgusted’ I agree with “‘Disgusted’’ 100 per cent. I'm a teenager and one who isn't allowed on the streets after a certain hour. We are tired of hearing about juvenile delinquency but it’s like ‘‘Disgusted"’ said, peo- ple sit back and gripe but they don't do anything about it. What about = “Disgusted’s” question, “Is it against the law te have a roller rink inside the city Timits?"” School kids could take a bus downtown much easier and get home cartier than if they had te take one outside the city limits. I hope these letters do some good. And I hope “‘Disgusted’’ re- members the old saying, “If at first you dont succeed, try, again.”’ try Well, here's one teenager who's behind ‘‘Disgusted."” How about you” A Bored Teenager Editor's Note—It is not against the law to have a roller rink in the City of Pontiac if it’s licensed. Looking Back — 15 Years Ago KING SIGNS ORDER to scize Nazi exports. REDS DEMAND that Finns leave border. 20 Years Ago SENATOR HUEY Long takes ti- tle of King Huey I of the Ozarks. UTILITIES LAUNCH war on FDR's power projects THOUGHTS FOR TODAY But first must he suffer many things, and be rejected ef this generation —Lake 17:3. . we a The cross of Christ is the pledge ‘to us that the deepest suffering may be the condition of the high- est blessing; the sign, not of God's displeasure, but of His widest and most compassionate face.—Dean Stanley. Case Records of a Psychologist Child Who Spends Time With Mother Usually Slower in Learning to Talk When children are slow to , do know the rea- sons why? Did you ever feel the vibrations of your hat ora hymn book when a church or- gan plays? That is the meth- od used in the Gault Tele- tactor, etc. By GEORGE W. CRANE Case M-377: Lewis, aged 3'S. doesn't talk yet. “I don't know what is wrong with him,” his mother protested with some discouragement. ‘‘He just will not learn to talk. I have tried and tried to teach him, but he will not pay *ttention to me, or else he makes noises which are not intelligible. “My mother-in-law says his daddy didn’t learn to talk much until he was three years of age, but Lewis is now 314, and still he cannot talk as well as children in the neighborhood who are ‘ barely one year old. thereafter. But many youngsters ~- not have as much drill in speaking as do others. For example, a child with many playmates will hear far more speech than the young- , ster in the home alone with his mother most of the day. Even though the parents take time out occasionally to talk ‘o the child, their few hundred | So it is with babies. They hear language for almost twelve — before they are able to peak. And their ability to talk associates it with the food or tey which he wants. Parents often fail to suspect deafness in their children, though this is often a cause for a young- ster's failure to talk. After five years of psychological research on the deaf, I was naturally interested in Lewis in this regard, and found that he was almost stone deaf in his right ear and so hard of hearing in ‘he left that he could not understand most of our speech sounds. I referred him to a specialist at Northwestern University who educating deaf people to talk, that has ever been attempted. He catches a deaf chiid'’s in- terest and teaches hitn to control his voice by letting him ‘‘feel”’ a vibrating instrument. (Copyright, Hopkins Syndicate Inc} David Lawrence Says: Alger Hiss Must Remove WASHINGTON — Alger Hiss has paid his penalty under the law. Anybody else in the same circum- siances is entitled to be accorded by his fellow men a chance to rehabilitate himself. To pursue Al- ger Hiss to tell what he knows about Communist activities in the government may be a logical ob- jective of some congressional com- mittee in the future, but it would be wiser to leave a decision on further revelations—if, indeed, Al- ger Hiss can contribute any—to him alone As matters stand today, the statute of kmitations has run on any crime committed before or in the five years after World War II, and there can be no prosecution of an\ body in that connection. But any evidence of wartime acts in violation of espionage laws can be prosecuted. Se far as anybody here knows, there is no evidence concerning any Wartime violation of law by Alger Hiss, This means there is no plan by the Department of Justice to try to make any fur- ther case against him, Thus, the future of Alger Hiss fs in his own hands. But what will the public think about him? Will he be accepted by his former friends? Rarely in American his- tory has there been a case of one so prominent in government and in the collegiate world who, after serving a sentence for perjury. comes back to an atmosphere still surcharged with memories of his two trials and the sensational charges that surrounded them. What attitude shall society take toward Alger Hiss? Somewhat the same problem was posed shortly after Hiss was convicted, when there was widespread criticism of Dean Acheson, then secretary of state, who said he refused to turn his back on his fri@hd. This cor- respondent wrote at that time— February 1950—as follows: “When the jury rendered its verdict of guilty, Mr. Acheson didn't attempt te dodge the in- evitable recurreace of the same question when put to him by the reporters. He didn’t say, how- ever, as had been since, that he believed Hiss nocent. He expressed no view that phase of it but simply point- ed out, in effect, that, irrespec- tive of whether Hiss went to jail or not, he would continue to give him his friendship. “This is a far cry from con- doning treason or any other crime. It assumed merely that Hiss, by the verdict if nothing else, had _already received more punishment before his countrymen than a jail sentence could inflict, It assumed, too, that the rehabilitation of a man gone wrong is an obligation imposed gn society as a whole— now recognized as an enlightened attitude in penology, It assumed also that the Christian spirit is not something to which men pay Much will depend on the attitude of the man himself. For he never has publicly conceded jury was right in of perjury. In the Z ness—Nathaniel Weyl—who broke with the Communists, has stated There have been m Communists who have main silent altogether, he will not Cloud Surrounding Him utation he himself will remove. Public opinion is not charitably inclined toward anyone who does not voluntarily tell the facts about a crime committed by others of which he has firsthand knowledge. For today undisclosed information about the past relations between Soviet Russia and the American government is still of vital interest to the security of the United States. (Copyright 1954) ‘ Baering Down By ARTHUR (BUGS) BAER (International News Service) With Zwicker in Japan and Schine in Alaska it looks like Mc- Carthy has a fine start toward a travel bureau. We'll also say with Kipling I wouldn't want to be the man who sent Jack Barrett there. We've followed this nimble case from the time they started launch- ing battleships indoors. For the next two years Schine will be skipping those weekends at El Clippo. The intervening landscaping traversed by Zwicker and Schine demonstrates the centrifugal force of an official investigation. Twenty-three months in Alaska will cool off the kid's postcards. We don't grapple the strategy of the Zwickerian expedition to Japan. There are closer beach- heads. It has been our contention that absence is an excellent lawyer and distance a wonderful argu- ment. But why the polar expe- ditions? When the Army wants to quarantine you it strums a seven-meridian chord on the Aeolian harp. You're gone with the breeze. The top brass polishes itself with friction. Nobody sees eye-to-eye at the squint level. We still hold it is a good thing for morale. We stroll with Omar through the portals of bewilderment. When the zebras chase the lions it will be on carousels. McCarthy was right in his state- Brady Says Tonsillectomy No Better Than Simpler Tonsillotomy at Home : tH) z ‘ 3298 oH grigig ad THE PONTIAC PRESS,\ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 SEVEN General Bows to Lowest Rank Private Beats ‘Brass to Be Golf Champion of j? 80-83—163, soldier. He saulted. | University of Flor- | team in 1950-51. The general was 4 gentleman. | the private gu | . Atl six dollars a ticket that runs into) “Sometimes at the last minute | we find ourselves in trouble. All | of a sudden the governor and his | wife and the lieutenant goveror | and his wife and every voter and | his wife decide to come. | “But when it looks like a run-; away, nobody wants to come and eating $6 tickets isn’t much fun. This year, we are all sold and you can tell the folks back a model, too, Broker Endows ‘| Medical Chair to Honor Doctor made possible by the Old Boston Newsboys Union. $92,000 in Jewelry Is Reported Stolen WEST ORANGE, N.J. @—Police last night reported the theft of - | $92,000 in jewelry from the home of wealthy manufacturer Anthony: DeSiderio. The loot, police said, was takew from a small wall safe in a bed- room closet by thieves who may have telephoned the home before they broke in through a window. The. theft first became known through a 13-state alarm sent out yesterday by West Orange police but actually was committed last Friday night. Details of the crime were withheld at first by local offi- cial _E DeSiderio and his family had been out of the 15-room house when the thieves forced a window on a rear porch. Jailing of 13 May Backfire Move Seen as injurious to China's Bid in U.N.,. Formosa Compromise WASHINGTON (®—Washington officials were hopeful today that | Red China's imprisonment of a Americans as “spies” would | diplomatic struggles of the cold Authorities here looked for two) likely results: | i | support for its drive to wig gen- eral diplomatic recognition and a seat in the United Nations. 2. British efforts for a compro-, mise between Washington and Peiping on Chinese Nationalist- held Formosa will be dropped at least for the present. British of- ficials indicated they shared this view, ington was ment’s sharp condemnation yesterday of the imprisonments |as an “outrageous” violation of | international law. In much the same vein as earlier U.S. protests, | London accused the Chinese Reds lof bad faith in deliberately con- | cealing the detention of the 13 men |for more than a year after the Ko- rean armistice. s A personal Thanksgiving Day message was sent by President ff i F & E 5 f ti i R tact between the two governments. Should efforts at Geneva fail, action. (Eisenhower has talked only in terms of “peaceful” means). One alternative under study was During War noted Catholic church in the Ukrainian city of Lvov which was damaged by a World War II Ger- man bomb. A Moscew radio broadcast iden- tified the structure as the Church of Mary Magdalene, ‘‘a monument of 17th century architecture.”’ The broadcast said: “This restoration work was done by the parishioners with the assist- ance of the city . architectural board. Religious services have been resumed.” x Costs aF of geese, some other | i ———— - ’ *<) - “ 5 at ; * > Take the work out of washday with new 55 FRIGIDAIRE 1. Laundry Helpers Porcelain where it’s needed! FRIGIDAIRE WASHER i All Russians Hot ! for a block of re-| and immin- | flickers of Jackie Coogan playing the pa- thetic waif stooge could bring | * | 5th?) and the kids (the last batch, honest tears te my childish eyes —but Chaplin looked just like | Hitler te me, even then. Before Hitler, that is. | Some 5O thousand people have Red | Just been welcomed as new citi- | zens of America. They pledged themselves to defend their coun- try, to de honor to it, to love it. life in America can be. When he left our shores, with +the—lueky girl he married (4th? that is; there are some still un- accounted for, here and there) he didn’t exactly renounce America. He E Te Hit Charlie Chaplin Deserves Can Provide Uncle Sam was made up by Unele Ivan, who placed Russia's peace prize on Charlie's noble brow. When-this grand gesture hit the front pages, choked up with emo- tion I could only murmur — “It couldn't have happened to a nicer guy!” A guy who deserves all the bounties Russia can provide. A real gent, who doubtless will move the wife and kids to a swell apart- ment right in the center of Moscow where he can keep close tab on the other peace-loving characters we all admire. Can't think of a better fate for | Charlie than the charms, the free- doms, the gaiety and good times | of — Russia For this new home (which he, of course, isn't about to leave for) S SWEETEN A our STOMACH warming present? Maybe that /| useful as well as ornamental, eh? bushel of tomatoes, even if slight- (Copyright 1984) SUNHEAT FURNACE OIL IS Ss Se ee torn capers a new ingredient that keeps it clean in your tank by minimizing sludging and rusting. Say good-bye to troubles due to oil. Order Sun- heat today. CITY PRODUCTS CORP. (CITY ICE & FUEL DIVISION) Call . . . FEderal 4-1507 183 N. 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OEE ———— OO — ———— eee ee eae ee RO ee eee THE Indian’- American F TACtION |e o he eter mot swan Polio Susceptibility Felt Mainly in New Delhi NEW DELHI, India —Ameri- can afd Indian relations are/ usually do so for personal reasons. | severely strained, but it should not take much to bring about a new period of good will between the two countries. This conclusion | emerges from a curvey of diplo- mats, officials and businessmen— including some Americans—work- ing and residing in India. Most of these observers agree differences in foreign policy are the main cause of American-Indian | antagonisms. * *¢ * “There's no anti-Americanism among us,” said an Indian official | with finality. ‘““We do not like you: government's foreign policy, and there was considerable irritation when you gave arms aid to Pakis tan: but that doesn’t mean we're anti-American.” An American educator, here sev- eral years, seconded this opinion| Delhi cannot help but be stirred | a.m., and added: “Sure, many Americans here camplain of anti-Americanism. | has been cool toward India's. ad- coexistence the Reds. Despite this dispute, jess and the United States have fas something goes wrong in their Maintained fairly good relations. The foreign policy disagreement exploded with the U.S. decision to But those who complain loudest |“ work out here, or if they fail in) | their jobs, they find it easy to | ‘oat rican. | blame Indian ‘anti-American | cive military aid to Pakistan. But an Indian newspaperman said However, a European diplomat, | “Nehru could change the whole whose view seemed to be support- jattitude in this country toward ed by most surveyed, felt that in Americans by a single statement.”’ New Delhi at least there is a cer- —— tain amount of anti-Americanism . He commented: Storm in England Halts “On an individual level most Sailing of Queen Mary | Indians and Americans get along | | beautifully. Outside New Delhi! te, IN (INS)\—Gale — winds ‘he re is nothing like ‘anti-Ameri and torrential rains hit many sec canism.’ tions of England today and pre “It's in New Delhi where it's “* nted the scheduled sailing of the felt. There have been so many liner Queer | fr South attacks on American fdreign pol ampton for New Yor icy by the Prime Minister (Jawa- The Cunard line said it hoped the big shop. carrying S20) pas harlal Nehru) and other high of | ficials that many Indians in New | *¢ ngets. could leave at 11 a.m. ‘6 EST) Saturday emotionally against Americans."’ There were reports of flooding | India has never agreed fully with | in some parts of the country as a | the U.S. policy of building up an | result of the heavy downpour. Studied by Doctor | NEW ORLEANS (UP)—A pro | fessor at Tulane University has | begun a study to see whether susceptibility to paralytic polio can be inherited Dr. H. Warner Kloepfer, who will make the study under a $8,030 grant of the for Infantile Paralysis, said that although polio could not be in- herited, there might be certain hereditary traits that might allow some persons to get polio more} easily than others | He said a theory that such susceptibility might be carried in the genes has never been ac- cepted or ruled out. Dr. Kloepfer’s study will include in examination of records of 75 to Each will consist of of four or more living children in which at least one child has had paralytic polio. thes 100 fam parents The Egyptians mumified many birds as sacred animals. DOUBLE TRADE-IN WATCH SALE! oper ite gee ett eee 3a LAY-A-WAY A WATCH at MYER’S TEL-HURON \ 4 “4 EVENINGS SHOP AT MYER’S in TEL-HURON CENTER Thurs., Fri., Sot. Nites to 9 P.M. N V7} GRUEN 10% powN A YEAR TO PAY! $4.75 Down, $1 Wk. oss TEL-HURON a ra CENTER § L__. am. _J PARK FREE RIGHT AT OUR DOOR . ote ee Nationa! Foundation | | PONTIAC PRESS, ~~ — FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 Famous Brands at Lowest Prices Lid SMALL DOWN PAYMENT Admiral NEW LOW PRICE 9 Now you can have the latest television F for your home at prices within the budget of everyone. A small deposit holds your choice until Christmas t Zhe OOD HOUSEKEEPING’ 7, AUTOMATIC GAS CLOTHES DRYER ma SAVE *80” Regularly $279.95 — M | HOME TRIAL! . | INSTALLATION! || | GIFT! cectine “ecto rus "whether you keep the dryer or not! aie re ~ pee 3 ¢ Admiral RADIO-PHONO Plays All Speed Records! AUTOMATIC CHANGING Fours of wonderful music enjoyment goes with this New Admiral. Auto- matic changing of all size records Pull deep-tone reproduction of entire music and 5 range. A LAYAWAY NOW! & Jo WS A Small Deposit Holds Any Item Until Christmas! Admiral TV for the Family! LOOK AT THESE NEW LOW PRICES! 149” a . ote < —. — New Bigger Picture 17-INCH Admiral Table Model Television With super-power chassis that brings \ clearer pictures in fringe areas. 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Saginaw St. bs & & te ng bide net. om Rat St) kT ~ eng ens we eee — Bei hs ee ‘ ) iS a ee a net a ac A aR oS ‘wale - : othe oth aaa PE NON iA Dese wenbl noe aac RARE abe ok A ~ vail | ‘ ‘ v \ ) ™ je ' \ d . a i i ee eeee TO EL EE Vicar Objects ito Clergymen’s ‘Crowlike’ Attire MERTON, England #® — Cleri- cal clothing, says a vicar of the Church of England, make clergy j}men look “like so many old | crows.” He wants reform, maybe |a snappy but dignified waistcoat with checks | The vicar is the Rev. Denis Large | ot St. James Church. In an article LUXAIRE and All Types of Sheet Metal SHEET METAL MAJESTIC less garment that has ever been devised. Must the clergy hop about like so many crows creating the Heating Systems Eavestroughing WRIGHT 5904 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1277 Waterford, Michigan impression that religion is a dreary affair associated wth funerals and public mourning? “At least the cloth might pro claim a cergyman to be a ‘man logical reason why it should not also proclaim him a man of good taste.” WOMEN’S GIRLS’ Nationally advertised Cozy Toes ... soft, warm, and really plushy. The perfect slipper for those cold evenings. © RED © ROYAL BLUE © PASTEL BLUE ue SHOE STORE IN BASEMENT of good cheer, and I see no theo- | Eyed for Reads U.S. Is. Seen Favoring for Highway Projects | WASHINGTON (INS) — The ad-! ministration is reportedly favoring a plan today whereby a billion| dollars in federal taxes paid by motorists every year would be used for highway building and improve- | ment Officials said the plan is looked on with favor by a special presi- | dential commission headed by Gen. Lucius Clay which is charged with finding a way tion's future road needs, } As the diversion idew now ap- pears, the government would set | up a roads authority which would | issue government . guaranteed bonds ty pay the government's share of the projected ten-year | road building program over a long period of time, The government's share will) probably run to 25 billion dollars over anf above its current con- tributions to road building. These bonds would be repaid from | federal taxes on gasoline and lub- | ricating oil now bringing the fed- eral government a billion dollars a year in revenue, The plan has the advantage of spreading out over a great num- ber of years the cost of a pro gram which could not be paid for from regular revenue. Boy, 12, Is Injured in Two-Car Crash to meet the na-| [ff |German rearmament and member-| GRAND RAPIDS (UP) — Fu- ship in the’ North Atlantic Treaty | Organization. The vote was 126-7 for ratifica- | Plan to Use Revenue tion of the Paris accords. There | were 17 absentees Denmark also has ratified the day of cancer — tt id i THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 — | . the first U. S. fountain in sh . ’ blished ° agreements and a House of Com- r Although so — ae publishe . Norway OKs Treaties mone vote has assured British | Manistee Forest G oup pen patent was issued in 1830, such Tie garb of the cleric is prob as, | axes for Rearming Germany approval. Picks Festival President - — not considered practical . i lor — The Manis- —_ ably the most unsightly, comfort OSLO, Norway W—The Norweg- MANISTEE (UP) — ian Parliament last night approved Funeral to Be Saturday tee National Forest Festival Asso- USED a SETS ciation has chosen Erwin Bark as neral services will be held Satur- —— pole vy tgertiners ee ae | day for Kenneth P. Hansma, @% | Fioyd Clement. HAMPTON TV sistant U. S. district attorney here | ‘The 1954 festival made a profit |from 1943 to 1953, who died Wednes- | of $550 which boosted the festival's 825 rage Se. | balance to $1,500. > > r . Sx ; i ’ ; A G Ronald E. Jones, 12, of 7290) Moy Engleman, Centerline, was treat- ed at Pontiac General Hospital aft-| % er he was knocked unconscious | during an auto accident at US10| and Telegraph road yesterday. A Jones, treated for head injuries and scalp cuts, was a passenger in a car driven by his step-father, Richard Potter, 31, which was struck from behind by another auto as Potter waited for the traf- | fie light to change. , Potter and the other motorist, Freddie Blakely, 44, of 4189 Can- ton, Detroit, were not injrued. According to Michigan State Po- lice of the Pontiac Post. both mo- | torists were northbound on USI0| when Blakely lost control of his | auto and skidded into the rear) of the Potter car. AUTOMATIC a 6d RANGE! 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For Any Bowler’s Merry Christmas ob if Re ee ee a ee ee Se ee -— is tall 4 A THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 M THOMAS YEARS ee SE RVICE & FURNIT RE co. é 361 South Seginew Street — — > a | RESERVES ANY LANE! 1 Bolonce on EASY TERMS | FREE Moth Protection 18th Century Mahogany ches ~ Guerantee with self-lifdag way. 55995 ONE GARMENT SAVED FROM MOTHS CAN PAY FOR A LANE! D a ue ys | 34 . < CSS yr CHEST j y é Z : world’s = #3 Be} at wll 9 pp ste - of bedroom sit eae ' ve Ce” > ‘ such a price! This charm- be ~ i rs med will be the envy of — : : oF ' all your friends. Concave drawer 3 % ree @ gts fronts, plank tops, intricately ee ee | eer et et ee ae ie c ye} i me mirror is of genuine Pitts- «a Ss burgh Plate glass. The durable . ie ‘an finish is Du Pont Dulux. jae Sez ; set ° - , ' . ‘ shelf 4 - s a J ell space. ve've Deep-Seated, Wide-Arm Sofa and Chair ever offered. Attractive twosome designed to provide the S$ luxurious comfort and trim good looks you want for your home. 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Give your room interior harmony and functional “FURN IT RE CO utility with this handsome sofa by day dnd comfortable le | bed by night. Expertly crafted of finest materials; has 361 South Saginaw Street | full spring construction, smart modern tweed upholstery. =| TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, Y, NOVEMBER | 26, 1954 ‘Sale Price - Purchase Now for Christmas Casco Deluxe Steam or Dry lron Only Casco Has All These Features— @ Uses ordinary tap water. @ Ne distilled water to bey. @ Steams ever 1 beour @ Lightweight, ently 3'3 peends @trens édry—irens with steam. @ Felly guaranteed. $4 5995 Regular $1995 --- Now 12 PRESTO PRESSURE COOKER f @ A Preste Cooker saves time. saves food lavers and vitamins @ Was amaring magic-likhe speed in cook ing feeds @ Recipe Rook given with every cooker Regular $14.75 Now *]10” A few of our outstanding values. Layaway today for Christmas PARK JEWELERS 1 N. Seginew Credit at Ne Extra (ost—P Pontiac, Michigan ay as Little as $1.60 a Week Open Every Friday & Saturday Evening to 9 O'Clock Ever wish you had more time each day? You can—by taking a tip from America’s busiest men and women. They've learned how to save important hours, by short-cuts on the little things we all do each day— dressing, shopping. mail, etc. —Sunday in This Week Magazine. > Read how they do it Another Hiss Case Today WASHINGTON (UP)—Is another | that his connections (with subver “Hiss case’ possible? sive groups) were secret, although Vice President Richard M. there was evidence of association . which indicated some doubt about Nixon, who played @ major role in his security. His personal loyalty bringing Alger Hiss to book, thinks could not have been disproved be it highly unlikely under present cause it was his word against that government security programs of someone else."’ Nixon also feels that Hiss, Under the Eisenhower program former state department official, Nixon said recently, “it is very un- never would have gone to prison likely that another Hiss case would except for the tireless investiga- occur,’ although there is always tions of the House Un-American the a, ee because—as he put Activities Committee it—real espionage agents ‘‘don't The vice president has refused to go around carrying cards." comment on the release tomorrow : Nixe » of Hiss from the Lewisburg, Pa.., | Se oe et ¢ : | the new regulations permit drop- federal penitentiary. Nor will Nixon die _ Ping a man like Hiss from gov- discuss publicly the details of his ernment rolls even though there own role—as a member of the Un i ; American Activities Committee—in * no actual proof against him. the case which eventually put Hiss Nixon was a little-known con behind hars for perjury and sky rocketed Nixon to high office But Nixon's recent remarks in campaign speeches and else where clearly underline his be lief that the Eisenhower § ad- ministration’s security program will trap loyalty suspects such as Hiss who might have been cleared under former regula- tion, The vice president's harping on| that point provoked bitter contro- versies between him and_ the Democrats during the recent con- gressional campaign. But he nel | to his attacks He once said “Under the security risk pro- gram of the previous administra- tion, Alger Hiss probably would have been cleared due to the fact —< LA ‘Highly Unlikely’---Nixon | gressman in 198, only two years| investigations of subversive activi- from the obscurity of a smalltown | | ties should be concentrated in one California law practice when the | committee. He has told friends House committee was digging into | that the committee might be either charges that the government once | House, Senate of joint, but it should was honeycombed with secret Com-| be given the responsibility and munist spy rings |manned with able lawyers for A writer and admitted former) members communist, Whittaker Chambers, | — named Hiss Thomas Edison was 32 years old A dramatic “confrontation” fol-| when he produced the first com- lowed. Hiss coolly denied Cham-| mercially practical electric light. bers’ charges. The committee ‘ap- dence, Hiss eventually was indicted vreage sr child for perjury and convicted. — Re ony The vice president is known to peared willing to believe Hiss. But feel strongly that all congressional Wort's Largest Selig Aspirin For Chldres Nixon and some other members remained skeptical. At Largely through Nixon's efforts, | which turned up corrdborating evi- ota & | G GIFTS FOR THE HOME : coreercerecereesrrscerecc: me Che Christmas Story Beautifujly Illustrated The Ange Viele Mery the Holy Bible by ‘ STARTS WED., DEC. | retold in the words of Norman Vincent Peale A Mender of Marriages Women's Watch for it. 88 - Page Rotogravure Pictorial money-saving gift sug section. Be sure to see it The Detroit News To Order Your Copy, Call Ralph. Long 14 Front St. Starting _ Sunday, the Section will carry the fascinating story about a women and her work as a marriage counselor, the first ever to be hired by any city. Scores of interesting features plus hundreds of gestions in this mammoth Don't Miss a Day of **4 Christmas Carol” Bob Cratchit, slave, and his little son, n. tiny Tim, play never-to-be-forgotten roles in Charles Dickens’ immortal story, “A CHRIST. MAS CAROL.” It's the of the haunting of flint-hearted gon Scrooge by three Spirits, with a climax thet brings “God bless us every one" from Tiny Tim. Watch for this holiday classic brought to life in strip form. Daily in The News 5-Pe. Dinette Set great gift value! @ No Interest @ No Carrying Office—Fed. 2-092! Cherge Res.—Orlande 3-1407 @ No Payment If Sick a or Out of Work fo fe fe fo * fr fe N . oe ' (_frecifont Lnee.) — oes aie eee CF ic Welle eceseeeeeresteeeseses sees Get $25 to $500 on Signature, Furniture, Auto “Why Certainl . that’s the prompt Mh Pe Art il manager likes to give you at Beneficial. Vous loan is fitted to your individual aeeds and income. You choose the best repayments and payment date. You will find chat you always get cordial, cour- teous service. That's why men and women — married of —s to Beneficial when they need —, For extra fast service, phone Grst. Or, if more convenient, write 2) cues in to Beneficial today! FINANCE CO. 7 WEST LAWRENCE ST. e PONTIAC ¢ FEderal 2-9249 THE GIFT OF A LIFETIME™ Complete Modern Bedroom Including Innerspring Mattress, Coil Spring and Pair of Pillows ... Your Choice of LIMED OAK or CORDOVAN Spectacular Christmas special you won’t want to miss! En- ravishing suite designed to meet’ feminine demands for ultra modern styling and expert crafting details—such as, center- guided drawers, dustproof construction, recessed case backs —at an unbelievably low price, plus a luxurious innerspring mattress, coil spring, and downy pillows at no extra cost! You won't want to miss this opportunity to give o really superb gift at colossal savings. Hurry in now! PAY AS LITTLE AS $1.25 A WEEK! eee Give your living Plastic top table ight and 4 chairs in ime $B Q20 style built ye bat tr oe $ 9% contort fr Cat: By Q)SO sitting comfort! mas. Bookcase Headboerd Bed $12 Extre Matching Night Stend .. . .$18.95 Gient Chair Value Handsomely tuft- ed, armless chair at 3192 a rock bottom low! POCO CCOOCOCEES Ward's Give Gs az€ Se nee EEC Teeter tC Or Coo corer ret Toate e At [TT TTF 48 South Saginaw aa oy A the Finest Gifts of Air * q , ann WKC’s 26: IT’S THE WONDER of THE AIRWAYS ZENITH tor RADIOS With the Exclusive WAVEMAGNET ANTENNA The “PAGEMAKER” COMBINATION ‘seinen tice “a 99 Faster, more accurate tuning. Finer tone, finer performance even on weak signals. Beautiful mahogany cabinet with brighter, clearer, long range TV pic- ture and all speed Phonograph ‘that The BROADWAY The ZEPHYR DELUXE GLOCK RADIO 79” 36” “4h” plays and changes all size records 33, 45 and 78. BUY FOR CHRISTMAS NOW ON LAY-AWAY The Perfect Gift The Perfect Pair Take Up to 2 Years to Pay WHIRLPOOL Autonstic WASHER PRICED AS LOW AS Just ‘look at the savings at WKC on this new Whirlpool automatic washer! Agiflow action, seven rinses, water temperature selection! WHIRLPOOL Etctie DRYER ‘emerson... CONSOLE TV Regular Price $279.95 179” Save $50. and the latest in 1955 TV. New [955 Emerson Console All advanced Emerson engineering features. Famous Emerson Turret Tuner gives outstanding UHF reception. No hidden extras. Federal taxes included Full warranty. Free delivery and installation! S 3-Speed PRICED AS LOW AS Emerson The perfect mate for your new Whirlpool PORTABLE PHONO washer . . . dries your clothes fade-free, Regular 79.95 . wrinkle-free and fluffy. Vhanp PARK ie - : / } a 1ergi et will, pley >— <9 ny record Sw " $.7114 In Rear 108 NORTH SAGINAW Wan as . troubie. = lubrione ing te ba | THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 _ SHIRTEEN ree EMERSON MODEL 1000 Table Model TV 149° Save even more when you trade in your old squint-size TV for this big 21-inch Emerson Table Model. No hidden taxes. Full delivery and installation. is.” & (ane arm t ficating BAIL: SUarentesd operation Pully en a FOURTEEN ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 | 3 Laat plans for the year were dis- the stage crew and Barbara Welch | Hit-and-Run Pedestrian jones girl after she darted from + | is chairman of the wardrobe com- | sidewalk. She was knocked down, Holiday Recess |” Chairmen tar the tall play com- | mittee. Ron Cummings, Don Hege-| Chased for Four Blocks but got up screaming. Then she mittess have been man and Ken Lonigan are doing} PARIS, Ky, —You've heard of fled with Johnson in pursuit. Pe oreiage gel agg 1 Fran the lights. Sound is by Dick Rams- le hit and run driver. But have you | He caught her after four an charge of tickets. dell and Myrna Paul will take |heard of a hit-and-chase motorist? |and took her to a hospital. Ron Cummings takes charge of} care of properties. lo. A. Johnson's car struck an g. |had only a minor bruise. ; for High Schools | ! St. Fred’s Give Party, Mike’s Make Donation | and PHS Plans Play St. Frederick Seniors have been spending their religion periods all week practicing for their Dec. 8 program which includes a skit and hymns. Fol- ‘ Jowing, in the evening, will be a procession of seniors in caps and gowns and the crowning of Our Lady. One day this week sister told her junior boys that she didn't want) them to talk any more while they | were walking over from Mass to} school, The. next morning not a word was uttered, They were all too busy whistling, “Shake. Rattle and Roll." All the cheerleaders and foot- ball players are still licking their chops, thinking of the delicious Now in direct competition SAVINGS with the very lowest priced V-8s! was in return hours of long prac- fought battles dur- FOR YOU ee eta cet World's greatest V-8 value! ‘ - dent body was - busy congratulat- | ing the junior class this week on thier success- ful Fall Frolic. Two new black- boards erected on | ‘ ‘ second floor this) PHS PLAYERS—Seen = a ‘preview of the fall | Dick Ramsdeli, 254 Draper. Tickets are stil] on sale week for all an-| Pontiac High Speech Department production, “On | at the high school auditorium box office for the nouncements kept | Borrowed Time,” are left to right, Bob Crandall, | play to be given Dec. 1, 2 and 3. eiieecdediend . students flound. | 61 Glenwood; Burton Belant, 1@ Ottawa Dr.; and | Built pies L when not on! Sra ~ eo ners ” ~~ 7 a world's be we ’ dv ~ card contegt end- |ed for the Rolladium where they | Sunday night. Fr. Seudkamp was .» McPherson sian end eel skated away the evening at the’, former CYO director at St c leh ations Tuesday with the sophomores in | — ; A team-mete of the caheai | oad anion’ | Mike's. have been work: | ERE is a real price reduction standing in beauty and in solid sensations! mon ws | Everyone from frosh te seniors | Seniors were very busy this week ing on a consti- bombshell from thedynamic quality. And it carries the prestige | contributed to the annual Red (deciding on their motto: “The road en, A: Pome new Studebaker-Packard com- of both Studebaker and Packard ! -- cand the big powerll new parade in junior Cross drive this week, Contribu- alone is ours to conquer; hold ers and emblems Nieatia the finest Stude- in, Go out fer 8 i Chempien in the lowest price field eighth grade im | tions were over the top, and high the torch that lights the path.’ have been sub- nation... : Come in. tria the second grad- | each proudly carries the They also selected their gradua- mitted for ap- baker Commander V-8 ever built drive. See all the other exciting The new "SS Studebakers yay ee = card of the dunier Red tion announcements. proval —sensationally reduced in price! new 1955 Studebakers, too—the are the fastest cars on the get-ewey will buy new _—_ Pontine High | Recently elect- This high-powered new Gom- - magnificent new President V-8 and the sofest, surest-stopping the school library, | ilat tetsds ene cache ad Thoughts of turkey and cran- ae aid an mander is the top V-8 value in and the big, powerful new Cham- cars in Americe chae y berry sauce in the minds of ‘i _ - west price field. ot school being in oe | tied this week as they all dug deep | puis'ers will continue until Mon- VICKI are Dixie Tharp, the low price field—big—out- pion in the lowest price Special features include what happened on oon 6 @ Guicte Laon day, as their vacation this year president tele, Seen shai Power Steering . . . Power Brakes . . . Friday except from = * —— for the Thanksgiving holiday in- see | S d b k h b d Automatic Drive or Overdrive and on Wednesday box to a mission in India. cludes Thursday, Friday and Mon- "etary, Juanita Neidrick, treasur- tu eC a er...SO MUuc. etter ma ae ae spent sleeping late. chacite pao as the = day er, Salley Roth, historian, Marilee / AVARASLE IN ALL MODELS AT EXTRA Cos |chmelte ls under way thia week.| Tueaday the 2400 etdérate st |Minesinger, and sergeantatarms worth more when you trade: sreay te) Se Eas Shs Se | "en tae tem | DAVIS MOTORS P. C. McKIBBEN Mary Parrish’s Wedneeday eve- 608 Nerth Main Street, Rochester, Mich. 8145 Commerce Rd. at Union Leke Rd., Walled Loke, Mich. cations Day trip| While most clubs took a breather to Nazareth Col-| for the holiday, the newly or-| lege last Sunday! ganized Fencing Club has been) added to the) quite active. Officers were recently | girls’ busy sched- elected, with Arthur Schulz as) ites, MARCEE ules president, Don Hegeman vice presi- Father Immeli,| Michaelites were surprised to see dent. Vicky Micu is the new sec | bus and head-' Fr. Wilbur Seudkamp over TV last retary and the armor is William | SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY, SATURDAY—FREE PARKING—OPEN FRIDAY EVENING ‘TIL 9 P. M. IT’S CHRISTMAS TIME at. WYMAN’S! CHRISTMAS IS A FAMILY AFFAIR! WYMAN’S YOUR FAMILY STORES! LISA. COMFORTABLE, — aPC. SUITE a : ; , Pa A eee: - ieee pb aad a + Sap reap ae, ie ae YS SSNS <> + 2 Se ae alll A> 2. NSS >») TMA" al . San 3 ~ oo ~_ - “ s \ ‘ - (Not exectly as pictured.) Created by one-of our best designers and it shows his talent in every line. In its luxurious comfort. Upholstered in smart. furniture cover. Sturdy construction. Just the suite you have been looking for. A wonderful Christmas gift the whole family can enjoy. 2-PIECES perl DON’T MISS THIS BARGAIN! 1 29” $12 DOWN, EASY TERMS! | You Gan Use One Account Pentiac Press Phete PARTY GOERS—Enjoying the Thanksgiving Party | Michigan; and Deborah ‘Van Natter, 97%, Paddock. given by St. Fred's students are seated left to right, Standing are Philip Nye, 314 Whittemore St. and Marilyn Barnett, Bb Miller; Sharon Hughes, 243 | Thomas Leahey, 1714 Beverly St., Syivan Lake. EVERY SET iS GUARANTEED FIRST QUALITY! TABLE SIZE 30"x40"x48"—SEATS 10 PEOPLE COMFORTABLY! Plated 5 Pieces Extra Large Deluxe Tri ae $49% : \ la Mule A | See wey Color Choice bcm? nee & Guerenteed Perfect oy ~ eel EASY TERMS! @ Perfect ‘| 3 nen $89.95 MAS | BRE. JE os: a oo $1695 |i... $40.00 : Our Stores FURNITURE one:: 18 W. Pike St. | 2—Stores—2. , THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 } STORE HOURS... DAILY 9:30'to 5:30 Friday 9:30 to 9 P. M. PARK FREE... REAR of STORE GIVING! ALL THROUGH THE HOUSE A LANE CEDAR we" HOLIDAY oe — - . & J cs & . . : to =e Pa am = 4 ¥ ~ ~ a he a P a Sw ore . Rew nik yi i : me ee do 2 Pee sui — BS inviting $0 luxurious | @ee and se very easy te own! $459°° THE NEW BAHAMA GROUP >KROEHLER ‘82°"~- ight « eh, com ~ Now—just before the gayest at-home holidays of the year, you can make important savings on the very newest inspirations in living room furniture! And here is furniture soundly built for a luxurious future—superbly designed to stay in style—Cushionized for years of lasting comfort and beauty. Stunning new color choices in modern tweedy textures. totre, Son teat i $e 09S A SMALL DEPOSIT Holds Any Lane Cedar Chest ND tims $4995 ——" THEY SWIVEL Buy Now. . . Pay Next Year! rs] ee ee se 2 take of) nex balance THA) For omy $ cn 16 dems melee Gambiine “lees A Lewis’. = $49.95 Lewis’ offer a most complete selection of Lane cedar chests ae . Modern or Period styling, we have one to match your atcha wa twas bedroom suite. Choose while the selection is complete and veneers with lift- Lewis’ will lay it away on a small down payment ing tray. ond deliver it to HER before Christmas. New! Modern Oak Tables with Lifetime Formica Tops DOLL CARRIAGES “Playtime” doll car- riages as advertised in $ 95 “LIFE.” Attractive de- signs in many colors and sizes. From ..... TRICYCLES TABLE and CHAIR SETS : HARRY THE HORSE , Extra well made with A!l types and sizes in 3- , Moulded plastic horse t diff } narra ee lerge 95 on rockers . . . colored $ 95 cnt finishes Wood , yi 95 } . e-- anion a red, white and blue... chrome . . . eateries | Chartreuse and white. will not chip or peel. and folding tables from } DESK and CHAIR SETS A toy that will last for 95 years . Roll-top desk +16 Mensman fables “the costume jewelry of the home” Special ot ee > 7 d- .\ $ 95 PONY SHOO-FLY HOT ROD AUTO HORSMAN DOLLS . * eoch with matching chair in maple. . just like Dad's nationally advertised Sturdy construction. ust tike ‘big Beautifully dressed ‘ other's’. Orange th Sa has wares cores, SQL 99 ease Po $19" Seances § Ass busy for hours, chain drive and and curled. Large { er table $34.95) every day. semi «- pneumatic assortment, priced com tires. Diu EOOOORAaSE High Quality ., , Low Price The smartest and best quolity tables we have ever offered ot this low price. Beautiful ook . grained FORMICA tops that ore FINE FURNITURE — : . : $19” sets. You can own one as low as $19.95 with engine, with smoke and whistle, unharmed by alcohol or stoins. f : | cara, tech endl transformer. Start Junior . te ee ee oe 62-70 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET |<... "Oo" ™™ » , . gy | R ane te \ ; _ SIXTEEN Change the side you carry your | wise the shoulder of your coat and shoulder bag over often. Other- | the pocket will wear thin. a and Mrs. F. iH road left Miller of Thursday to Here’s. Beauty and Grace | , Chippewa spend the weekend with their son for vour table ! and daughter-in-law. Lt. and Mrs e David B. Miller of Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Indianapolis Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Burnes of Mark avenue and Mr. and Mrs Bruce Kinzler of Bloomfield Hillis left Thursday to spend several days in New York City. | They will also attend the Army- Navy football game in Phila- delphia Saturday. * * - Walter were Mr and Mrs. \W of Maple Place family dinner Thanksgiving days The Smiths recently returned from Smith hosts at a Varried Thursday in Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Cavalier Eggshell $0) 95 Church were 20-Pc. Set Choice of 6 Patterns Julie Terrien and Robert Alopfenstein. Easily mistaken for vitrified china, the new Cavalier Eggshell shape has five exciting new decorations. Grape above, has teal green or grey shoulders with platinum or gold trim. 20-piece set includes: 4 dinner plates, 4 pie plates, 4 sauce dishes, 4 cups and saucers. DIXIE POTTERY Her parents are the L. L. Terriens of East Montcalm street, and he | is the son of the C. J. For Your Convenience Alopfensteins Open Daily 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.—Sunday, Noon to 9 P.M a Rania 5281 Dixie Hwy. (Near Waterford) OR 3-1894 Creek VRS. ROBERT KLOPFENSTEIN THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 a siX month stay in Hawaii. They also visited the islands of Maui Laua! and Oahu * 7 * Mir. and Mrs. Lous Kimm of Hickory Nut road and Mr. and Mrs Roy Newton of State street left Thursday morning for Fort Lauder- dale, Fia., to visit with Mr. and Mrs. G,. H. Woods, formerly of Pontiac. * * * } Edward J. Kuhn, of Lake An- | gelus road and Mrs. Mary Hawkes of Orchard Lake will re- turn to East Lansing Safurday after spending a busy week in New York City on the ‘Mission to UN,” edueational teur spon- sored by Michigan State Col- lege. Wonderful to Give—W onderful to Get! Fine Leather Wallets © Key Cases © Purses y By Buxton § Rolfs Meeker = Bosca Beau Brummel The executive board of 18th dis- $2.50 te $12.50 trict WCTU met Tuesday alter noon in the Dwight avenue home of Mrs. John Veneman. Mrs. Joseph Green of Royal Oak district president, offered for con- sideration and analysis plans for the coming year's activities as recommended by the state officers in session during the state con- vention held recently in Holland. Mra. Green disclosed the need | fer more and different branches te take care of the work as out- lined. She alse pointed out the need for qualified directors and personnel to take charge of the additional duties. A workshop has been scheduled by the group for mid-January. Pur- ' pose of the activity is to bring all groups together and to corre- late work as outlined | A spring institute to be held in February or March is also on the |agenda. Mrs. Frank Deaver was proposed as new director of the | character building branch of tem perarce work A branch for soldiers and sailors welfare will be activated. Work of the groups will include visita- tions to homes and hospitals Initials in Gold Free—Gilt Wrapped Use Our Christmas Layaway While Selections PHILIP'S rm 1vecac FINE LUGGAGE, SPORTING GOODS 79 North Seginew Street FLORA-MAE Infants’ Specialty Shop 718 West Huron Street - © jewelry © Chine FE 2-3220 © Lingerie ©@ Linens Mrs. Greene has been made a fife member of the State WCTU. | her by Mrs. John J. Little, past of the 18th district. | Mrs. Elva Ashiey was appointed | house committee chairman, Mrs. was named assistanmy treasurer. | Dec. 7 is the date for the Pon- | tiac federation meeting. Others at- The honor was conferred upon | WCTU Outlines Activities at J8th District Session tending the Tuesday meeting were Mrs. Little, Mrs. Earle Cunning ham of Birmingham. corres- ponding secretary, and Mrs. Wil liam H. McCullough of Farming- ton, recording secretary. Still others were Mrs. Sadie Pat- ten. Mrs. Frank Clemens and Mrs. Ruth Townsend Designer Says Style Returns NEW YORK (INS) — American fashion is in the grip of ‘‘bosoma- nia.’ and a noted designer thinks we're in danger of losing the long- favored ‘long - legged Ameri- can look.” Ceil Chapman, who's quite a neckline expert. complained “There has been so much fuss and confusion lately about the bust line that we seem to have forgotten the rest of the figure.” Mrs. Chapman added that for her holiday collection she’s letting the curves remain in their natur- al places. She said “Slinky clothes are back.”’ coming Buying on Impulse |Not Always True Women may buy many things on impulse, but when it comes to table glassware the ladies know what they want A survey shows that out of 1,000) women who made purchases of | glass stemware. 69.3 per cent had | decided what they wanted before | they entered the store Josce Hocking of Birmingham students in the Voice of Olivet Col- lege who recently participated in an informal recital Miss Hocking took part an the Italian selections which were pre- sented. Frencn, German and En- glish songs were also included in the program. + Was among the department . Bob Hoffman arrived from his | studies at Notre Dame to spend Thanks- — giving with his parents, the Ev- | erett Hoffman's of Center Street. Guests entertained By the family Thanksgiving day were Mr. and Mrs. Dominic Kline of Whittemore street and children, Bethie Ann, Julie Terrien Wears Satin for Wedding Reception Held in) Church Following} 2 o'Clock Rite Julie Terrien wore a gown of white silk crystalette over satin made by her mother as she ap- proached the altar of Oakland Ave- nue United Presbyterian Church Thursday afternoon to become the bride of Robert Kieft Klopenstein The Rev. William Klerekoper of Detroit performed the two o'clock ceremony. He is the son of the minister who married the bride- groom's parents on Thanksgiving day 31 years ago. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence L. Ter- | rien of East Montcalm street and he ts thé son of the C. J. Klopfensteins of Battle Creek. Imported trimmed the skirt and bodice of the the cap which held a fingertip veil ot silk illusion. The bride wore the bridegroom's gift of pearis and carried a cascade arrange- ment of white fuji chrysanthemums and English ivy. Charlotte Ward was maid of hon- or and the bride's cousin, Judy Terrien was junior bridesmaid. Their ballerina length gowns, also made by the bride's mother, were fashioned of iridescent mauve and green silk crystal- ette. They wore velvet head- | pieces and carried cascade ar- rangements of lavender fuji | iage. ' Renata Keisd of Toledo sang the bridal recital. John Larson of Kal- amazoo was best man and seating the guests were Gene A. Zerlaut of Grant and Phillip Kinsella of Sylvan Lake When greeting guests at: the church reception, Mrs. Terrien was wearing a champagne colored bro- cade street length dress vith black accessories and a corsage of lav- corsage of white A tailored navy blue flannel suit with white trim, navy blue ac- cessories and a corsage of pink pompons was chosen by the bride for her honeymoon trip to Western | Michigan. The newlyweds will re- side in Ann Arbor until the bride- groom enters military service in January. The bride is a junior in the | University of Michigan School | of Nursing and is planning on re- turning to her studies. He is a graduate of Western Michigan College of Education in Kalamazoo and he took his gradw- | ate work in chemistry at the Unk versity of Michigan. 4% CALL FE 5-6330 Why struggle with your husbend’s shirts . . . when it costs so little to send them to us! DRESS SHIRTS § | Expertly Laundered and Beautifully Finished for 1" & } Small additional charge for pick-up and delivery! | OL KL CC CC CC CCE CK CC KC ES ee =" S'S SS SSS SS 4 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS: e570 N. Perry St. x. 469 Elizobeth Loke Rd. te 158 Auburn Ave. 1995 Coss Loke Rd. | Fe x Pet are ee : APPAREL for WOMEN. 75 N. Saginaw St. a el . Open Fri. and Set. Nights ‘til 9:00 P. M. the University of quette University in Milwaukee, lace medallions » and Tommie; C. Lees of Clarkston, was recently promoted to the rank of Sergeant Major of the ROTC Corps at the Michigan College of Mining and Technology in Houghton bad « Mr. and Mrs Harold Haskins of Walnut Lake road are the grand- parents of two boys born during November. Mr. and Mrs. Willard L. Kennedy (nee Mary Haskins) of Mapleleaf road, chose William Dommie, Johnne Stella Underbrink of Ottawa, Ohio and Mr. and Mrs. Pau) Todd and daughter Diane of Lima. Ohio * om “« David S. Dennis. . son of the Branton Dennis’ of Last Kennett road: Louise D. Ploe, daughter of the John Ploes of Lakeview ave- nue and Adolf R. Swimmer, son of the Benjamin Swimmers of Neome drive are students at Mar- Wis. David ig enrolied in the col- | whe was born Nov. 14 at Pontiac General Hospital. The paternal e of engineering, Louise in grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. re school of liberal asie and M. W. Kennedy of East St. Louis. Adolf is a stadest in the dental =!!! school, David Lee, son of the Alfred William Clinton was the name given to the son of Mr. and Mrs. as BEVERLY RIBIAT Mr. and Mrs. Milton Ribiat of Detrow are announc- ing the engagement of their daughter, Beverly Joan, to Sheldon Gilbert, son ef the Jack Gilberts of Marshall street. He is a graduate of Ferris Institute where he was _#bridal gown and were repeated on affiliated with Kappa Sigma Kappa fraternity. The bride- ESTHER GILBERT elect attends Wayne University. A May 29 wedding is planned. 7 Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gilbert are announcing the engage- menl of their daughter, Esther Zita, to Morton Golditch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Golditch of Detroit. They are planning an early October wedding. Problem Faces Teeners A girl just beginning her teens one’ who develops before her writes of her discomfort over her friends. undeveloped figure. Most of her! _ TMs ty completely natural. frietids look like young ladies and| 7u*t S* one Swe height chests ; : up when she's in the sixth grade she feels awkward because she and another doesn’t grow until doesn't yet. she’s starting high school, so do Both sides of this problem are girts reund cut at different ages. common: The girl who seemingtys lags behind her classmates and the ies pA ETA sapeg~ipartwts No one ever is. There are no exer- cises that can start a girl on her path to a woman's figure before her body is ready. There are medical treatments, Fame of Corner Turns to Dust SAN FRANCISCO (INS)—Little Jack Horner achieved fame by sitting in a corner but the modern housewife usually finds that cor- ners contribute nothing except to catch dust The San Francisco architectural ee ae pot Rooms firm of Malone and Hooper have’ 1.4 space a padded bra, it she done something about this . . . and wishes Ba wilt mabe her etethes Accommodations for ided just what every home- ce = fit better, She can start making | large or small in the kitchen — poten eo that he | ees Their design is a kitchen corner _— aarp fiero Pg Convenient Downtown that is an ideal place for condi-| }e°re ai Location ment storage and vegetable bins. ag. They have placed the cabinet; She may select camouflaging and storage drawers on the diag-| styles, pleated and ruffied blouses Waldron onal corner space to use it to the | worn with jumpers. The very popu- fullest advantage and have made | lar shrug sweaters that look like HOTEL use of revolving shelves for condi-| boleros and button at the neck can ment storage to make life simpler.| make a girl appear to have a Coffee Shop The condiment cabinet is over | larger bosom. the work level of the drain board: | The body works at its own pace 36 E. Pike work shelf that circles the two |The next corner the flat-bosomed sides of the kitchen, and below the | girl turns may be curves 1 4 Patrick as the name for their son, | Pontiac Area Residents Travel Over Holiday Weekend Robert G. Pack (nee Norma Has- kins) of James K boulevard, who was born Nov. 8 at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital. Mrs. Robert Pack 1s the infants paternal grand- mother s * * Out of town guests who attended the Thursday afternoon wedding of Julie Terrien of Montcalm street and Robert K. Klopfenstein of Battle Creek were Mr. and Mrs, Loyal T. Phares of Battle Creek, Mr. and Mrs. Gustane Carlson of Grand Haven, Mr. and Mrs. Abram T. Keift and daughter Charlotte of Grand Haven. Mary Smith of Royal Oak and \r. and Mrs, Melvin Klopfenstein of Niles Fashion Show Slated by ‘Alumnae Plans are being made for a card party and fashion show to be spon- sored by the alumnae of St. Joseph _ | Mercy Hospital at St. Benedict ' Hall, Wednesday evening. ' Co-chairman of the event. which will begin at 8 o'clock. are Mrs. Orrin Huntoon Jr. and Mrs. Wayne Dengate. Mrs. Nicolo Gagne 1s | publicity chairman: Mrs B. A. Beck and Mrs. Alfred Wagner have charge of tickets and the decorating committee is headed by Mrs. Ray Pardee and Mrs. Arthur Chambers Models will include Dorothy Wil- liams, Mrs. Richard Hoover. Mrs, Ben Sweeney Jr., Catherine Mc- Manue, Mrs. M. A. Caibi, Bradley Lewer. Brian Jackson, Martha Ann Dengate. Sally Huntoon and Eliza- beth Rowston. Woman Plumber Makes Good HANOVER, Mass. (INS) — The only licensed woman plumber in the state of Massachusetts is a 47- year-old Hanover Center housewife who thinks there should be more female plumbers. Mrs. Grace Norwood points out that history tells how the lead pipes whicn carried water to the palaces of the Roman emperors were made by women. And she hopes her own record will make it easier for modern women to enter the plumbing field. Mrs. Norwood had to study three years and pass the master plumb- ing examination to qualify for her license. She said one of the prob- lems she encountered was the fact that most people thought ft was a gag. and another problem was to break down the prejudice of male plumbers who thought plumbing was no place for a woman. Private B @ Party LION’S CLUB RUMMAGE SALE DEC. 2, 3, 4—THURS., FRI., SAT. 9:00 A. M. te 8:00 P. M. Corner of Auburn Ave. at Gaginaw St. 11-13 Auburn Ave. This Ad Sponsored by Rendell's Shop Ivory < Color-Phone Makes Your Phone Beautiful— Makes a Fine Gift! New Model Covers Over the Gold Red Green White Gray Now you can make your telephone fit right in with your color scheme . . . makes it @ good lookifg accessory in any room. . . new hard plastic cover ever goes over the cord too. . . choose from most popular House and Garden colors . . . get several. . , for yourself and for gifts too. . OPEN FRIDAY and SATURDAY ‘TIL 9 P. M. Cord, Too! 30 ca =< WIGGS 4 Gift . . ' at the roves! = 24 W. HURON Mth! is , ———__——__——- : i , 4 f } 5 ‘ > Peter Laska of South Shore drive, Wat- kins Lake, has had as his houseguests for the past few days the family of his son, from Ft. Knox, Ky. Amused with the story being Louise (left) Mrs. Leonard ” read by Nancy Laska (right) are her sister and her parents, Capt, and | Laska. | Promenaders Hold Dance DeMolay Plans Mr. and Mrs Jack Burke and Mr. and Mrs. George Sweazy were welcomed as new members of the | partment Square dance class. ' Callers for the evening were Oscar Forslund, Harry Anderson, Ralph Annual Dance in Waterford Pontiac Chapter, Order of De- Promenaders Square Dance Club Erland, Warren Allen and Engel Mojay have completed plans for when the group met Tuesday eve. | ning at Daniel Whitfield School for | a Thanksgiving dance Guests for the evening were Mr. and Mrs. Owen Rindfuz of the Pon- tiac Parks and Recreation De- ae ‘Oscar’ Is Won at Meeting Groenberg. Club members will donate items they gather on Dec. 14 for their Christmas dance. . Evelyn Cole won the ‘‘oscar”’ Wear Right Coat for the table topic at the Tuesday | evening meeting of Toastmistress | Club held in Hotel Waldron. Mrs. W. Arthur Vernon was toastmistress for the evening and Mrs. Alice Sinclair conducted the table topic which was ‘“The First Thanksgiving.”” Speeches were given by Mrs. Joseph Shaw whose topic was “We Have Much to be Thankful For’’ and by Helen| Lapisch who spoke on ‘Thanktful- | ness’. Mrs. Milton Freet talked on “Thoughts on Thanksgiving’. Miss Cole gave the special event. Crities for the evening were Mrs. Clayton Rule, Mrs. Leon Windsor, and Mrs. Peart Davidson with Mrs. Wendell Green as chief evaluator. Others taking part in the eve- ning activities were Mrs. P. E. | Miller, who gave the invocation, Mrs. Gertrude Nethercott, tail- | twister, Mrs. Ivan Wilcox, time- keeper and Shirley Dovre, gram- marian. Two Couples Host Farewell Party The Warren Oakleys and the George Boultons were hosts re- cently at a farewell party honor- ing Mr. and Mrs. David Anderson who are leaving for Florida in December. : The surprise event was held in| the Oakleys’ East Pike street home. Mr. Anderson retired from Pontiac Motor Division this month. | For superformal wear, an occa- sion when you want to look just right, don't try to wear your day- time coat over an evening gown. Borrow a long evening coat or GAYLE JANIECE HUBBUCK Mr. and Mrs. Orville Hubbuck of East Huron street are announc- ing the engagement of their daugh- ter, Gayle Janiece, to Donald Ogg He is the son of the Harry Oggs of Stanley Avenue. A spring wed ding is being planned COAT Some of the most attractive coats flatter you... in ported tweeds, popular Stroocks. Regularly Featured to $115 Your New season's im- 100°% camel hair and the ever to Telegraph at Huron Open Tonight and Saturday ‘til 9 — Sunday 2 to 5 ' Park Free in Rear - its annual Thanksgiving dance to be held Saturday evening from 9 p.m. to 12. Waterford Community Center will be the setting for the | semi-formal event. One of the most active of com- | munity organizations, DeMolay in- cludes membership of boys be- tween the ages of 14 and 21 of all |men of the community. They feel | that their annual dance is a good |way of showing their high ideals | and practice of good citizenship. Charles Furlong is master coun- cilor, Paul Hagel is senior coun- cilor, and Keith Mittledorf is junior councilor. Other officers of the chapter are Lee Hathaway, Roland Cornell, ‘cape. A fur coat, naturally, will Richard Boney, James Wert, John Ensworth, -Alex Sekles, George , Bergstrom, Robert McVean and Nicholas Ciovica There’s Always Enough Room There's always room for a stove, refrigerator and sink in your home, says a West Coast manufacturer, leven if all the space you can | spare is 37 inches wide, 38 inches high and 26 inches deep | A three-in-one installation offer ing all the necessary kitchen equipment for just this small a space was exhibited at the Mer- chandise. Mart in San Francisco It is designed for the small apartment, or the weekend cabin The top has a sink, work space and two burners, and the base is a refrigerator with a freezing compartment and vegetable bin and a storage cabinet for supplies and pots and pans The burners can be either gas or electric Returns Home Daniel L. Kellogg has returned to his home on Fairgrove avenue after spending four weeks in Pon- tiac General Hospital. Concert Set December 8 by AAUW Goldkette Will Be Presented in Special Matinee Parents of school children in Pontiac area may note with inter- est that a special matinee perform- ance of the Dec. 8 Jean Goldkette concert is scheduled for the chil- dren. Pontiac Chapter of American As- sociation of University Women is bringing this well knwon American | for a Christmas basket, to be pre- religions. The boys would like to by Evelyn Cole | sented to a needy family, when jntorducestheir group to all young | pianist to the city to raise funds | for a special project. Proceeds will be turned over to a scholarship fund to bring foreign women to} this country for further study. | The children’s matinee begins at 3:45 p.m. at Pentiac High School. Besides enjoyment, the concert will serve as a musical 8 p.m.Faye Donelson is general chairman for the evert. Mr. Gold- kette will donate his proceeds to the National Artists Foundation to | provide music scholarships to wor- thy, talented and deserving stu- dents. The artist has been a favorite of American music lovers through millions of records and tours. For a number of years he was absent from the concert stage. and was among the first to Mergan, Glen-(iray, Hoagy Car- michael and many others. He returns to the concert stage in a coast to coast tour to help raise funds for the hundreds of service clubs and organizations who are active in civic work AAUW promises that he will pre- sent a most versatile piano concert with programing designed for pop- ular appeal. Missionary Circle Elects Officers An open discussion on Thanks- giving and its meaning was held by members of Ruth Missionary Cir- cle of Joslyn Avenue United Pres- byterian Church. Mrs. Frank Cohoe was hostess Tuesday after- noon in her home on Raskob street. Mrs. Eugene Hoisington gave devotions and Mrs. Francis Oak led the prayer group Mrs. Hoisington is the group's new president Other officers elected at the Tuesday meeting were Mrs. Kenneth Lyons, vice president; Mrs. Oak, recording secretary; Mrs. Fred Bohlman, corresponding secretary and Mrs Harry Lunsford, treasurer The group's Christmas project will be to send toys and goodies to the children’s home and money to the children of missionaries working in Haiti Mrs. Oakes Hostess to Omega Mu Sigmas Mrs. Emma Olson and Mrs Wayne Anable were guests of Omega Mu Sigma Sorority when the group gathered for dinner Tuesday evening at Villa Inn. | Mrs. Harlan Oakes was hostess in her Drayton Plains home for the social evening that followed. Demonstration Held at T.B.1./Meeting The T.B.I. Women's Club met | Fecently for a demonstration of a gift wrapping given by Mrs. Freida |Bennet, Home Demonstration Agent for Oakland County. The December meeting will be | advanced to Dec. 4 and will be held | at the home of Betty Whitson IRed Wears Red A redhead should wear red, too | mot just green. But it should be lorangey rather than bluish, to | bring out the good colors in her | hair. A blue-red will drain it off. Nice compromise on the storm coat; in dark colors, it has a furry collar, double breast. It doesn't look as dreary as the old over coat-brown one, but it's as warm and weatherproof Scheel of Beauty Call,teday for detailed information. No age limit! For Future Security Phone FE 4-1854 Cell Miss Wilson Today ter Information PONTIAC BEAUTY COLLE ‘£ The evening concert will begin at ‘ss THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 MRS. KENNETH ‘ALLEN KLEYN K. A. Kleyn Claims Bride The bride wore white Chantilly lace over tulle and taffeta in an, BIRMINGHAM — At a family | wedding Wednesday at six-thirty o'clock in the Oxford Congrega- | tional Church, Janet Lillian Caryl, Pleats Can Hold daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Basil J. | Caryl of Watkins St., Birmingham, was married to Kenneth Allen Kleyn of Ann Arbor. He is the son of Mrs. George A. Kleyn of Oxford, and the late Mr. Kleyn. Experts Tell Us | Wondering if the pleats in your “permanently pleated’ skirt will hold if washed? Clothing special- ists of the Department of Agricul- ture report good results in launder- ing pleated fabrics with about per cent man-made fibers Hot water, mild soap or deter- gent will not harm the pleats or the fabric. If an automatic washer is used, remove the skirt before the spin dry cycle and simply press the pleats into place with the fingers before hanging the skirt straight to dry. If the skirt is washed by hand or in a non- automatic washer, hang it up to drip-dry and finger-press the pleats after some of the moisture has dripped out. The clothing specialists suggest first laying the skirt flat on a towel and patting out excess water, then hanging it straight to dry This speeds drying and also pre- vents the weight of the water from stretching or pulling the skirt out of shape SEVENTEEN Janet Caryl became the_ bride of Kenneth . A. Kleyn of Ann Arbor, W ednesday evening in the | Oxford Congregational | Church. The Basil J. Caryls of | Birmingham | and Mrs. | George’ A. Kleyn of Oxford and the late Mr. Kleyn are their parents. + .. monica, CARRYALLS ankle length gown. A lace cap held a tiered shoulder veil, and she carried a white prayer book with white spray orchids. | Mrs. Caryl's gown was of sheer wool. She wore a white hat and a corsage of rubrum lilies. Mrs. Kleyn wore navq shantung with a matching satin hat and rubrum lily corsage. Joan Koggenhop of Pontiac was. honor maid and wore yellow taf- feta and carried rust chrysanthe- mums. Charles Sheron of Oxford was best man For her wedding trip to Canada the bride wore a pale blue suit with a pid hat. They will live in Ann Arbor Blue Star Mothers Plan for Needy Plans were made to pack a Christmas basket for a needy vet- eran and his family when Blue Star Mothers, Chapter 4, met re- cently in the YMCA. Mrs. Wil- bert Fitzthomas reported on pack- ages sent to servicemen overseas Compact, cigarette case, lipstick case, accessory Compartment, mirror -.. all her vanity needs, in one stunning accessory. Our complete selection of Elgin American Carryalls and other fashion accessories makes git choosing easy, your choice sure to please. $105 Layaway “Her” Carryall Today! “4 Gift From Connolly's Means More” Registered Jewelers American Gem Society JEWELERS 16 W. Huron Street and in the states. It was voted | to send cards and gifts to veterans | in the TB sanatorium The group honored Mrs. George Cervenka who is leaving soon to make her home in California. Mrs. John Yungk was in charge of re- freshments A Christmas party will be treld Dec. 8 » od ‘im =e % f PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11% S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. Enroliments Available in Oay or Evening Classes. Write, phone or call in person tor Free pamphiet. PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 EE POTTS Me? a os Mh TO MAKE YOUR HOME REFLECT Polstay 7 o All Wool Carpeting to Fit Your Budget Tone-on-T one Tone-on-Tone Axminster Beautifully blended shades to form an at- tractive leaf pattern. Will make your home and comfortable. 90 Sq. Yd. Leaf Pattern TILE — LINOLEUM All Wool Swirl Pattern Heavy pile looped twist for long life. A carpet that will fit into modefn or traditional backgrounds. Sq. Yd. Ever Popular Floral A delicately modeled floral pattern that will add charm and distinc- tion to any home. 95 Sq. Yd. New Beauty for Your Home WINDOW SHADES — VENETIAN BLINDS Embossed Leaf Wilton One of the finest new patterns available Wov- en of heavy all wool fibres in an attractive leaf tone-on-tone effect 95) Magee’s Avon Park Here is one ‘of the newest Long, fore you buy any carpet! 95 Sq. Yd. Sq. Yd. . STORE HOURS: Mon., Tues., Wed., 9 to 6 — Thurs., Fri., Sat., 9 to 9 Se owes et ok Je sh * BEE DS gre sy c. vs ff 2 * Ao Pea inch. beauty of the tropics, There's a This pattern easy to use. simple special emphasis on pale pink, to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- blue, lilac and green for both day- time and formal wear. But there are stronger shades, too. and the muted colorings Pale beige. smoky gray, tangerine, purple, a plete illustrated instructions Send 35 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for first-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- That's very nice — but when we have company or go to visit rela- lives she knocks him. She'll say he's remark. This is very embarrass- Her Mother ‘Sincerely . Likes Boy She Merely Shows She Considers Him Casual Friend By ELIZABETH WOODWARD “Dear Miss Woodward: When | Mark is over at our house my} | mother can't do enough for him. | not so cute or ing I'll admit he's no movie star but he is cute and a wonderful per- — some such | j | | son. I've begged and pleaded with | 2 my mother to stop, but to no avail. Can you help me?” doesn't lat all by Lona font | You can’t about Mark, can you? Most giris bristle mightily when mention of the boy friend's name isn’t be- decked with beuquets. Your mother's remarks embarrass you. bear the merest | whisper of a breeze of criticism | 3ut_ do you notice that she | preach what Her comments. I suspect. relatives that she doesn't take you two very seriously. She it a BIG THING You take her knocking very seri ously, of course. You take it very personally wher vVour treasure is And your hurt has shown itself in your very serious plead- ing with your mother to stop tor- blasted turing you It's become quite a mountain. But you might get a different perspective on it if you'd ask your mother very quietly and calmly what she's trying to prove by running Mark down to her friends. See if you can get her to explain why she's one way to his face and another behind his back. If you tackle her in grown- up fashion she might give you her grown-up reasons for her teasing. Understanding each oth- er will give you a different an- gle — and will make jt much easier to laugh it off. “Dear Miss Woodward But I have boy that I like very much. Last week he wrote me saying he likes me very much and he wants me to be his girl frend Though I like him very much, | don't know what to say to him I get very flustered when But I'm at a loss for words help me.” “It's funny how you're attracted to some people on first sight. while ‘other people make no dent in you I liked you right off the bat. and I'm so glad you liked me too. I hope you'll like me more and more, the better you get to know me.” That's making it easy — to say, or to write. Why make a mountain out of it when he said what you wanted to hear, and you're eager to tell him what he's waiting for? PETUNIA! I take the clothes and blankets out And then I sand it well — For whats aceder chest without Its lovely cedar smell 7 Fine idea, Petunia! In time, cedar chésts and drawers lose their aroma because the pores of the wood become dust-clogged. Sand lightly but thoroughly. she prac- tices? She's all apple pie to Mark. She acts as though she likes him and approves of your going gether are to persuade her friends and to- doesn't want them to think she considers I'm 15 and I've gone out with boys quite often so I'm not usually in need of help where one is concerned., MAilwqukee Visitor met a really nice! I'm near him, so the only way-] could '” the mail it's lke getting a tell him I like him is by letter. Please Siu Qwecnee | } | | | drained } j /ened. Cool. Add rest of ingredients. / 4 The candle caddy is a useful and decorative accessory. It carries its own candle and box for safety matches. It's extremely handy in the event of a power failure and is per- fect for lighting after-dinner smokes. A wonderful gift for the host or hostess, the practical and charming ornament has an overall height of six inches and is available in either gold plated or silver plated finishes. IF onrice-joo giri— Anticipate Christmas With Salad ; Sends Recipe for Frozen Delicacy By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Feed Editor When a promised recipe comes i present. It's nice to have people remember With Thanksgiving behind us— but just—our thoughts turn to Christmas. Today's recipe is for a | Frozen Christmas Salad. You may certainly serve it at any time. but consider it in the days ahead as part of your holiday menus. Mrs. Arthur E. Miller of Mil- waukee is today’s contributor. She was a recent visitor in Pontiac We know she is an active member of the PEO Sisterhood FROZEN CHRISTMAS SALAD By Mrs. Arthur E. Miller 2 egg yolks * Miss J. G—The basic black Hporeies cco ra a dress depends to a large extent }ean (Ne. 2) crushed pineapple.| for its effectiveness on accesso- | ‘ries. The mood of the dress clin | be changed by a change in acces- sories, creating an office outfit and smart looking evening dress. Get Garden With Home in ‘Frisco’ SAN FRANCISCO (INS) — Buy The besic black dress, by @ change of occessories, con heed for the office, ond on foward evening geiety. cubed eut \% pound marshmallows ty pound pecan meats \% pound candied cherries, cut 1 pint whipping cream, whipped stiff Mix egg yolks, sugar and vine- gar together and cook until thick- _—_—_—— Pack into freezer pans and freeze Serve on slices of lettuce leaves. To make the salad a real Christ- masy one use both red and green candied cherries. Anewer te Previous Purric SIMI ISIFPE IL/AIM 818) PIAIRIGI@L [AIDiOiR ig: ho: i » subdivis ith CIAIRIAITICON IMC TIOIRis |" me _ . ™ sigh AIRIADIETT IOI | Wiiits (of San Francisco and you get a SSS SE AaiRiN, TaSsinias i E mielettis ten IEMA tet? | complete professionally - planned AlmisLatiolt garden thrown in—with one slight FP iATT Fae Al © hitch Si TISIRILIBIOLADIAICIOls| , L4E0803 iw ALAA MLV IOIT TAS iA! RISITIOCINig: IRIAITii Tie: SISIVIRIE] [S/S/Al Sie TIRIOITiO’ ([RiGiNiT is What you get are do-it-yourself garden plans and a manual of instructions, drawn up by profes- | sionals. = ~~ | Andres F. Oddstad, president of Experience Is Hidden in Corners Self-Search Can Be Helpful in Finding Career Starter By MARY MARGARET McBRIDE If helping others is as much fun as it's supposed to be, Sidney and Mary Edlund are undoubtedly among the world’s happiest folk. For these two, starting from a sparetime hobby. have made a business out of aiding thousands of men and women to choose, and then land, the jobs they want. Back in the depths of the de- pression years, Edlund and his wife were fooling around with a fairly revolutionary idea: That a job hunt was really a sales cam- paign and the job-seeker should build himself up as if he were. say, soap, real estate or a refrigerator, “Instead of asking for work,” Ediund explains, “you offer a service and you expose yourself and your capabilities for per- forming the service to as many prospects as possible.” In support of the theory, the Ed- lunds set up a non-profit Man Marketing Clinic which almost im- mediately was taken over by New York City’s Sales Executives Club Clinics have also been established in other cities. Through the clinics and their book, ‘Pick Your Job— and Land It!"’ the Edlunds have given literally thousands of voca- tionally unhappy men and women a shove in the right direction Like most of the rea] boons to mankind. the Edlunds’ job-hunting assists aren't hand-outs. They point the way and describe various tech- niques, but most of all they stimu- late the job-seekers to dig down into their equipment and dredge up experiences which demonstrate usefulness as an employe—or as president of the company. as the case may be The Ediunds have even dreamed up a few ways to beat that old bugaboo question which young people have despaired of answering: “What experience ° have you had?" The real-life story of one %2-year-old applying for a sales job iMlustrates this. The young man who had never held a selling job was rebuffed immediately by the manager who said firmly, “We want someone with at least a year's experi- ence.” **May I please tell you a story?” asked the young man politely. Per- mission given, he launched into the tale of a 12-year-old boy named Tim who wanted to buy a sailboat that cost $200 Tim's dad told him that. if he could make $25. father would sup- ply the rest. Tim canvassed the neighborhood to see what was most néeded and then suggested that their house pets needed fresh meat and within hours had set up a horse-meat delivery route to dog and cat owners. A shrewed deal with a butcher gave him a profit of a nickel a pound “The bey used his bicycle for deliveries and built a route,” the young man related. “Then he put two other youngsters to work. He kept this up for three years and the ncighbors found they could trust him, He paid for his beat ali by himself without call- ing on his father and two: years later bought a bigger one that $900. “Now, you know this boy only through his story. But wouldn't you say he has initiative and knows how to sell a service? That he is reliable and hard-working? And that he is definitely a self-starter?"’ The manager had to agree and when he found as he by that time guessed that the boy had grown into the young man sitting before him, of course the bright youth got the job. That demand for experience is the toughest thing about getting Started on a career. Just how an earth do you get experience if no one will hire you without it? In connection with this, I've got a problem I wish the Edlunds would tackle: A young. ambitious ~ actress fresh out of college, with only a little apprenticeship in a summer theater. Nobody wants to hire an actress without real pro- fessional experience. In Judy's case. what would the Edlunds sub- stitute for Tim's horseméat route? Judy can't think of anything and neither, alas, can I. Think of Pipes in Remodeling CHICAGO, Tl. (INS)—You can't “slipcover'’ your old-fashioned bathroom to bring it up to date economically, but you can remodel this important room without mak- ing the budget wince. The key to economy is hidden in your walls — the original piping tp awkward door openings. If your bathroom has a slanted softened yellow and charcoal and | tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West ACROSS _Odd black in the velvety suedes. 17th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print| } Desce step Homes by Sterling. developers of Suits demonstrate great variety plainly name, address with zone, parts | the Rollingwood subdivision, ex- | in jacket types: Bloused, spencer. |“. , @ Barrel | | plained that his firm believes that size and style number 12 Small island ; | boxy and gently fitted. Most are. 13 “The harp that | indoor-outdoor living is no longer | fitted to the figure by careful cut pans Myo an editor's cliche but a present j and detailing. The coat silhouette 14 Toward the | actuality. He said: | most liked is full and flowing but | ners sheltered side sta Colahteaie —_—_" a 18 _ sweet a a — cee tn and as apple cider” tgradually realizing that outdoor some ve a ness. 16 Richly | "Shoulders are gently. rounded MAKE FRIENDS | is recovered the areas properly developed serve as | inside a. extra ‘living room’ and can be and there's lots of collar interest | 20 Implements pebe Saction of online ‘with variations on the shawl, | & Semere | Geveloped at a _ w 4 22 Adhesive | indoor ce." notched and petal collars. co The “subdivision of some 400 | Many daytime suits get com- $9 Sductce! ‘ | homes has eight exterior Variations tweeds for skirts and for yueble ‘Sacket tria Ob teenie cond 30 Thoroughfare = /in each of three plans and gar- | meres are dyed to match the leath- 34 Take offense den designs for each of thé three |er. Some of the formal greatcoats 3s a | Plans include — aa 7 | have fur and jewels as trimming. 96 Worm = making num 37 Melody combinations practically limitless. 39 Scottish ones Organ ingwood resident Make Door Pocket —— J| When. 2 Rollingwood | resent ess Door pockets fastened to the in- @ Sty ie 1 \s0 up — tie socetves a: bhupetet | side of your closet door are good | . ro j\ ot Ne p tio area including iso- space savers. You can use a reg-| If you remember just two rules © custody + — metric details of benches, fences ‘ular shoe bag for the pockets are Seo tre podiear ie anaes at jump — 3 Triteness: 19 “Goodnignt 4 targrouse screens, barbecues, rs vi just about the right size. Or. you o present man W& the | 8 Creek pure @ Make smends =e So Plans for planting types jot wart to make your own set woman. The other is present the Pe Aatective . ome * embankment ‘a Charen of flowers and shrubs most suited of pockets from a sturdy material, | younger woman to the older wom- | .. a. $! y 36 Golicitude cates for best effects. a detailed manual ‘ . ’ ‘ in a toys 7*My gol — 25 Genus of birds 42 Endure jlike denim. These little pockets /an-dr the younger man to the older | s¢ wiies # Light boat 26 Arrangement 43 Preposition explaining exactly how to go about | will hold many odds and ends — \man. ~ S | 37 sas mae 1) Qaune voice 3 acne 44\Orgen part building the garden and how to |clothes brush, whisk broom, han- -With those rules in mind, it's‘as 1 Couple il Fiano parts ” Fruit drinks “ Musical cound care for it, Even fertilizers and i kies, artificial flowers and so on.' simple as one, two. 1, * ee ing ~~ hh So eeeeceerticn «| Watering ‘schedules are suggested. | + ~~ i P ‘ ¥ 4 \ 4 5 ee aes 2 2: ee ER ES REO THE PONTIAC PRESS, When a speck of matter no larger than a grain of sand enters the earth's atmosphere from outer | space, people on the ground will | pee it as a bright meteor. o| Bob Considine Says: | Hiss Will Enter New Lite as Man Marked by Crime, NEW YORK (INS) — Alger Hiss; Tossed into the U. S. manpower | out; Whittaker Chambers in. The | working pool, cold, he might have | accused leaves the federal pen at j | trouble finding any kind of work, Lewisburg. Pa. Saturday. Cham- | because his name has come to be bers may never leave the bedroom | almost. as much of a epithet as of his Maryland farm, to which | that of the late Quisling. he is confined by a heart attack. . Another page in what Chambers Pi terribly ar fer almest called “a ft history.” former con to make a living, oy # my no matter how obscure the crime and the character in- volved. Hiss’s sin marked him through the free world, He'll not starve. It will be sur- prising if he does not wind up in some unofficial capacity with the law firm of the former Secretary of State Dean Acheson, who stood will change all your ideas about cough syrups! At last — a new and pleas- ant cough medicine with a “relief-action” all its own! Science has combined ina that enabled him te sit ponder- ing long on a bench at Colum- bia University Communist.’’ “and get up a special way a penetrating For: Hiss, the other end of one | UP for him in public. Donald Hiss, ingredient with a medicat- | of the most significant ideological | iS brother, is part of the firm. Apter pe pt og clashes of the 20th Century, a new Alger Hiss has important friends | lief . . faster, tore aifus. | lige begins, It will not be one he in See aed New York. tively. This new medicine is alone can shape or steer. Some of them, like Acheson, were named Vicks Medi-trating Unless fully pardoned, he can- | prominent in the administrations Cough Syrup — because it not pursue the profession for! of Presidents Roosevelt and Tru- medicates as it penetrates. | which he was finely tooled: The|man. Others are commentators. VICKS ‘law. He cannot hold public office, | He'll not want. MEDI-TRATING | leave New York for a year with- | COUGH SYRUP Apparently there never was any difficulty finding the money te pay the charges of his two trials and appeals, though his attorney for a long time was Licyd Paul Stryker, who has out the permission of his probation officer; cannot vote or accept jury __® Medjcetes os it Penetrates service. been known to demand and re- ceive $1,000 a day. When the “Hollywood 10’ were convicted, the scriptwriters among them continued to work. Their scripts were sold under the table |to sympathetic, frightened or just | | plain knuckle-brained studio heads |— but always under the ‘name of | some ‘‘safer’’ writer In this connection it may be in- | teresting to note that Dalton Trumbo, one of the better writers | among “the 10,” ghosted the speech which the late Secretary of og $4 Stettinius delivered at San Francisco during the forma- | tion of U. N. Hiss was secretary- general of that conference. Few men who have served time | came closer to escaping the pen- | alty than did Hiss. Nobody wanted | to believe Chambers. Physically | and from a personality standpoint, | | his was ostensibly the finer speci- } men. One of his boosters when he | was being considered as president ' America’s Most Beautiful Glasses! ONE PRICE TO ALL. Sg ER SUARANTER sensational optical value! Fer ene week only — we offer you these Your money will be refund- of within 60 days if you are handsome ang rugged first quality styte glasses tn o choice of ony not completely satistied ter any reason! tene coler combination fer enty Here sre tt quality frames end tep quality tenses made = yeer ewn exact pre- Safety Lens at Special Low Prices REPAIRS YOU CAN’T PAY MORE! Brotee — tm Amertes et this emasingty teow aa tages _—, rou pay ts $11.00 — Ne extras — No edditions! sisi te otal ere werth flattering gtasses mech meore—yeurs this week fer only $11.50—Ne more! NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY EXTRA FAST SERVICE | ternational Peace was John Foster Dulles. In his first appearance before | the Howse Un-American Activi- | thes Committee, im response to | an indignant wire sent when | Chambers named him as part of | @ prewar Communist apparatus in Washington, Hiss made such a fine showing that the commit- | tee considered extending him a congressional apology. Even after the damning micro- film was turned over by Cham- } bers, who melodramatically hid it in a pumpkin in his garden, it ap- peared that Hiss could not~be nailed. | A man from the Eastman Com- | pany examined the coded perfora- | tions at the end of the films and told the committee the film had | | been manufactured in 1947. The | committee had been contending | that Chambers microfilmed the documents in 1937. With newsmen pounding the door and demanding an explanation, it FRIDAY & SATURDAY have to confess that it had been | ithe victim of a monstrous hoax, | MEN’S & WOMEN’S ne Hiss was innocent Congressman Richard Nixon | | and Chief Investigator Bob Strip- | ling calied Chambers on the | Phone and spoke very sharply to | him. practically accusing him of fraud. But in the midst of this the man | from Eastman called back. He had made a slight mistake, he said. The code mark meant 1937, not | 1947. And Hiss was on his way. 8 N. comet? St. LWAYS DEAD TIRED You may be dangerously texlog your entire system when you ollow fatigue, nervousness, poor eppetite end sleepless nights te dreg you down BECAUSE YOUR BODY IS VITAMIN AND IRON STARVED.* or be awe te func tera Geerders we Pe é *These spmmpteoms map howe other ¢ euses that doctors will tell you are essen- when your system is vitamin starved tial for proper nutrition; plus Vite you raust feel tless nervous min B12 and trace minerals. The irritable. This is because weak wonderfully strengthening capsule ough your are recommended for mothers-to when @ sufficiency of iron and When you leck strong. red blood ystem, taxing your heart putting be a burden on every veir capillary vitamins is vitally importent toa and artery in your bedy' their health. Also especially impor Stert building rich red bleed tant if you are over 40. Teke 2 « . . sules daily for double potency. A fast with Bexel Special all drug stores. Formula teday! Feel Better... _— Each high-potency BEXEL Special Formula capsule gives you §$ times the daily minimum requirement: of iron, more then the daily minimum requirements of all the B-vitemins leek Better... Werk Better... or Your = MONEY BACK! ] © Penny for penny—you get MORE * Be \¢i DRUG STORES 148 N. Saginaw St. Ed Near Sears West Huron at Telegraph WE GIVE HOLDEN RED STAMPS ’ ? , | of the Carnegie Foundation for In- | & | appeared that the committee would | | Cd NINETEEN _ OPEN — FRI. and MON. ‘Til 9 P.M. DONT 100 BREAKFAST SETS 5-PIECE CHROME DINETTE Factory Imperfect -TOYS- OPEN 9 P.M. FRI. and MON. ‘Til BUY UNTIL YOU SEE OUR PRICES pKYeo]e} ig PRICES ON FURNITURE-RUGS APPLIANCES.--TVs Use Our Discount LAY-AWAY PLAN ~wrwrwerwrewweweege'''''''"T*.* 5-PIECE Orig. ALL MAKES AT $7950 Decoretor Colors. Our Price. . WROUGHT IRON DINETTE a APPLIANCES TELEVISION DISCOUNT PRICES 5-PIECE CHROME Orig. ZF Pies INNERSPRING oOUR % $3950 MATTRESS ‘rr PRICE — KOROK DINETTE.....°96-> 16° ALL AT DISCOUNT PRICES vwrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrer e* Org. SEALY 2 $3950 Mattress or Box Spring $7476 ~wrwrwererwere-Teseeeeeeeeeeeeeeee,rrr,r,r,, ™_ewwrvrveveweweweeeerrerererererererrrrrrrr”””””” ORIGINALLY $13.95 IRON 7. Orig. 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Cushioned, Coll Spring Filled, Regular $89.95 ye § —SSl/ NO MONEY DOWN Not a long shuttle machine but a genu- ine round bobbin — sews forward or bockward _ FRIDAY, , NOVEMBER 26, 1954 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, -MICHIGAN,. TWENTY-ONE Feuding AFL Unions Return to Work at Steel Plant Phantom Cat Reports Keep st Joseoh Residents on Edge sT. JOSEPH (UP) — a “phantom cat” fing parts had many residents jumpy today. First reports of a huge, snarling eat started five years ago. At that time, the animal was said to be living in the woods along Lake Michigan 10 miles south of here. New reports have moved the “phantom” farther inland. The cat is believed by some te be There even has been talk of forming a posse to flush the woods The first of the recent reports on the cat came Oct. 22 from three amateur’ radio operators on the Don Martin farm. Martin, 29, John Wirth and E. G. Weed told police they spotted a cat near a barn. They said it was five feet long and stood three feet high. Only a few nights before that, Martin said his dog was mauled and clawed by a mysterious in- truder. A week later, Kenneth Murphy, and decide once and for all wheth- | 16, and his brother, Richard, 13, er the Cat is fact or fiction. Edward Gunn, a native of the | | said they saw a huge cat and fired five .22-caliber bullets at it. They he saw the cat sneaking around his garage. He made a plaster cast of a big footprint to back up his story. Police became aroused when William Hodder, a Lincoln Town- ship patrolman, and Sam Lamun- ion said they saw a cat in a field about 15 miles south of here. Two Berrien County patrol cars sped to the scene and joined them in a futile search. They said they found tracks — but no cat. Since no one reported seeing the cat during daylight hours, descriptions of the “phantom” were sketchy. But enough reports have come in recently to put rural dwellers on edge. Some deer hunters in southern Berrien County have taken to looking for a cat rather than bucks. Many other suburban resi- dents are keeping their guns load- ed just in case. Father of Seven Held in Killing FORT AVAYNE, father of seven small children was in jail today charged with the fa- tal shooting of his teen-age stepson brother. The shooting occurred at the suburban home of Mr. and Mrs. Everett H. King as their seven) children and Mrs. King’s three | pared to eat their Thanksgi Gimer yesterday. 45-year-old factory worker, admit- Landis, 16, and wounding his broth- of homicide. sons were ‘‘trouble makers”’ and | “didn’t treat the other children | right.”” The Kings’ children range | in age from 8 years to 18 months. The Landis boys, with their brother Jack, 15, came to visit | their mother for the holiday from | nearby . Where they | have been living with an uncle for several months. . ° Ld] Zeis said Mrs. King told him the Landis boys had quarreled with | King since their arrival Wednes- | day | The sheriff said Mrs. King re- lated that after she summoned her | family to dinner, her husband said: “Feed the hogs first and I'll eat the leavings.” sheriff said Mrs. King told him, pher husband got a 12-gauge shot- gun and a 22-caliber revolver. Mrs. King said she ran to a neighbor's house to cal] the sheriff but heard shots before she return- United Press Phete — NEW FIRST BASEMAN ?—President Clark Griffith | for “Griff” in Washington. With the fine points that of the Washington Senators helps his grand nephew | Calvin Griffith Robertson, 2 months old, get the feel | he mi of a baseball during lestivities at an s&h birthday | | bimeel West Berliners Are U rged to Fight Reds BERLIN (INS) — Former Pres- ident Herbert Hoover told democ- racy’s outpost behind the iron curtain today that resistance to communism must be based on | moral and spiritual strength. He also stressed that “one of the greatest resistances te com- With Morals ments contributed to finding “solutions to many social ills which prepare the soll” for the “evil growth” of communism. Hoover paid tribute to-the West | Berlin population for its courage in facing “an enemy who lives just across the street.’’ and added: munism has been the increase in productivity in the western werld.”’ In a speech prepared for deliv- “You-have seen your duty and | performed it well. Thanks to the |¢lect from 12 states—the biggest spirit and courage of men like | turnout in recent years—will attend ery t West Berlin Municipal Senate, the 80-year-old Republican cited three problems with which he said the Communists still con- front the western world. He listed them as “their declared | amoral basis of relations between | nations,” “increasing armament,’ and ‘‘their militant Promotion of the Communist faith.” Hoover; on a six-day trip to West Germany, arrived in Berlin last night and was greeted at the air- port by Mayor Walter Schreiber your late great Mayor (Ernst) Reuter, you cam, like the men of | ancient Athens, hold your heads high and say: “*T am a Berliner’.”” | Ike Encourages Kin ‘of Jailed Americans WASHINGTON (UP)—The fam- | flies of 13 Americans imprisoned | by the Chinese Communists had assurance from President Ejisen- hower today that the government is “using every feasible means” to obtain their freedom, The President sent Thanksgiving Day telegrams to the families from Augusta, Ga., where he is spend- ing the holiday. “You may be very sure that your government is using every feasible means to bring your (hus- band or son) and all other Ameri- elected. nounced his intention to resign _can pick up from the venerable baseball man, ht have a head start on a baseball career awe Lamps Recall Dem Governors | to Attend Parley New Party Chairman to Be Named at Victory Meeting WASHINGTON (INS) cratic governors and - Demo- governors- the Democratic victory meeting in New Orleans next week at which a new party chairman will be and expects the National Com- mittee to elect his suctessor when it convenes. Governors who have accepted Mitchell's invitation to attend the meeting are Hugh L. White, Mis- sissippi; Robert B, Meyner, New Jersey; William C, Marland, West Foremost in the running for the job are ex-price administrator | Wagon Ride, Oil Indiana Man Charged | Ind wm A/S and seriously wounding the youth's | sons by her first marriage hall ted the shotgun slaying of Gerald | Zeis said King told him the step- | adver: office building at 1 Lafayette St. sewer and drain installations. Costing about $200 each, seven! RECORDS RAINFALL—Donald Ringler, engineer | in the Oakland County drain office, takesareading | dne of 13 being set up by the county to take. from a rain gauge installed on top of the county | rainfall measurements which will aid in planning | (Six Are Injured in Holiday Brawl Fight Climaxes Other Flareups Between Two Unions at Plant DETROIT (UP) — Members of two feuding AFL unions who en- gaged in a bloody Thanksgiving Day battle at the McLouth Steel Corp. plant worked side by side today under a “nearly perfect agreement” aimed at preventing further trouble. The holiday brawl, which sent six Pontiac Press Phote The device is | future drain construction. The Drain Commission is now} of the devices are now operating , ous installing 13 rain gauges through-| with three to be installed in out Oakland County to take meas- | Oakland County, ¥ Glen, 17. He was held on a| urements which will aid in future | Drain Commissioner Ralph A. | according to/ Main. “By ‘Measuring rainfall at vari- Book Review New Rain Gauges Will Help Determine ™|Need for Drain Installations Here Se eee ae | ints we can trace the most county,’’ he explained. ‘‘This will | | indicate where the most water is | | likely to fall and we can plan bigger drains in those areas. *‘When drains become overloaded | and a flood results, we can check | rainfall measurements for that area to determine if the flood re-| sulted from unusually heavy rain- fall or from inadequate drains." Oakland County's figures will be | turned over to the Detroit Metro- | politan Area Regional Planning | Commission to be compared with other rainfall totals from areas | surrounding Detroit. The gauge is a simple device which catches water in a bucket resting on scales. As weight in the bucket increases or decreases, the scales moves an inked pen arm up or down to record rainfall | amounts on a revolving drum Parties Reveal Vote Expenses Dems, Liberals Spend Over $1 Million in N.Y. “|New York cost more than a mil- lion dollars, and the party's state ALBANY, N. Y. —The election | ing. | Fifteen of the 530 men who par- | ticipated in the fight were taken | to two hospitals. However, only six were admitted for treatment. | Only one of them, David Mann, | 40, of Detroit, remained in the hospital overnight for X-rays. Doc- tors feared he had a broken jaw. Union spokesmen said the riot was the climax of a series of less serious flare-ups among members of Riggers Local 575 and Mill- wrights Local 1102. Members of | both locals are employed by be ard leay Corp. of Pittsburgh, which | contracted to replace an old rolling mill at the McLouth plant. | The locals’ day shifts were sent North | frequent storm-path through the | home after the jurisdictional battle. The company told the men not to return until they had settled their differences. W. E. Short, Eichleay superin- tendent, said the night shift re- sumed normal operations after the unions reached a “nearly pertect agreement" on “technical” juris- dictional problems. | There had been ill feeling be- | tween the two unions during the | past year over the allotment of | work in which the Pittsburgh firm was engaged. Although he expected no more trouble, Short said union meetings would continue until the agreement was ‘perfected.’ Meanwhile, Trenton Police, State Police and members of “surround- ing police departments remained vigilant for any possible new out- | break. State Police eae tag were ordered to the plant from | the Redford Post after |Mayor Gordon Strohm appealed | to Gov. G. Mennen Williams for reinforcements to bolster his small force. A forman said the holiday melee started when the riggers invaded the millwrights’ construction shack seeqing revenge for an alleged on beating administered to a fel- husband in the yard and he threat- . pipe- ened to shoot her “‘and the whole| MARRIED 79 YEARS—Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F. Hartley, who| Campaign | Sow Flaper. mess of you.” She quoted him as | Were married when they were 16, celebrated their 79th wedding “Our men were changing clothes saying: | anniversary this week at Sagle, Idaho. They're believed to be nation’s | in our tool shanty and the riggers “Isn't this a great way to spend | longest-married couple. Although 95, both are keen of mind. She is | campaign of Averell Harriman and miler aaanee a Thanksgiving!” interested in current events. They enjoy a daily cup of onssatras tee. fellow Democrats and Liberals in| wright od the man who dap- ged the rigger and four or jumped him. We came to his aid : : workers to the hospital, raed un- With Shooting Stepson, WT suburban Trenton fired . bullets into the air to quell the Wounding Brother - fist, pipe, wrench and club swing- ststoGrendna Texas Qilman’s Biography zm ay Bod Member ~CENCINNATI W—A year-old | ves dae lipmahigery by a nar- Thanksgi celebration just like ‘‘the good old days”’ back in the Gay ‘90s. Mrs. E. M. Rusk, mother of nine | and grandmother of 27, was sched- uled to have Thanksgivi ing dinner with one of her sons. Chadwick family, dressed in costumes of the 1890s, were sitting on a straw the wagon bed. A turkey was {into a river whirlpool and coming =| Shows World Hugh Roy Cullen é Story of cutee Opportunity | Ed Kilman and Theon Wright The world is full of chances ta jumping to the top a few seconds later. He used this symbol of self{confi- s Opportunity’ = the courses of the rivers and | ereeks winding around hard for- mations of the land, which re- vealed the action of the pres- sures of deep rock in the earth. Perhaps the secret of his success | could be summed up in one of his own statements—“I never tried to | spent at jeast §854,- amp engi cetowidp campaign and the state committee record- ed a surplus of $50,146. These figures were filed with the @lections bureau of the state de- | partment, However, any organiza- | tion or candidate may file an amended report early in January. 67 The Liberal Party, which backed | Harriman, spent $73,452, as against Succumbs in Florida the Michigan Tourist Council, died today at Homestead, Fla., of a | heart attack. He was 78 and arrived in Home- Rusk ai be taken opportunities for th Expenditures by Democrats to-! stead only Monday with his wife, When they called for her it was optimistic In all of Calle ns work, his moves taled $1.007.944. Of this $761.166 Julia, to spend the winter. in an old spring wagon drawn by Hugh Roy Cullen proved this to fr idee oc eek a lia me fro oat the state committee, __ Armstrong was a former pres- | two horses. Members of the son's his own satisfaction by - _ which listed receipts of only $326,-) ident of the National Assn. of | Rural Letter Carriers, a past treas- | out-trade anyone in my life and 1| receipts of $44.585—a deficit of $28,- | never let anyone out-trade me if I | 367. could help it.” Harriman and family gave or Another—*‘the station of life does | | lent a total of $113,044 to the Dem- not make the man; on the contrary, | ocratic campaign. it is the man who must make the! Harriman listed personal ex- station.”’ penses of $17,494. Ives said he had Cullen believed strongly in the |” P® [ ao, | Republican party pilesophy of Among contributors to the Re- tree enterprise and he fought publican side was Mrs. E. Re Eormosan Tosses Out hard hard for those principles. land Harriman, wife. of the gov. ernor-elect's brother. But her Red-Tinged Monicker ) elthough a Repeblicas, | 1 AIPEH, Formosa, ®—Lin Piso | said he was ashamed of his name Democratic committee expendi-| and wanted to change it. tures were almost twice as heavy! The reasom Another Lin Piao those of 1952, while the GOP | commander in chief of the committee outlay rose ‘only about | Communist 4th Field Army. five per cent. A Nationalist Chinese court in in a coop om the trail gate. | dence all the restof his life. . . grey-haired grandmother | |when he was a cotton broker, the party for the drive to | real eatate sen, and finally an il ‘producer. Callen barely finished the fifth grade but he made college pos- sible for thousands by giving away $160,000,000. He is the most fabulous ef all Texas oil barons and one of the greatest philanthropists of our time. The joined the son's home — with one stop to buy ‘‘nosegays” (chrysanthe- | mums) for the ladies. At the son's antique-filled home, the heavily laden table was lighted by kerosene lamps—and the de- ‘lighted sparkle of Grandmother Puusk, The trip back to her home was made by wagon. Brother Ordered to Pay | $1,400 for Stealing Wife. of Arlington, Va. also | have written his biiography in the | respondence with Gen. Eisenhower | book, “Hugh Roy Cullen . . . A| and was most instrumental in in- | Story of American Opportunity” to | ducing him to be a presidential be released Nov. 2. The style of candidate, and in aiding in his | 28 PLYMOUTH, England (UP) _|the ao Sear: Concise and ab election. He felt he had helped Judge P. L. E. Rawlins yesterday | 0st Sparkling | save the American form of govern- condemned the conduct of sail The ees oy of Cullen's wild- ment. — Haterly, who ran off with his/| inal Gokuaial Gee And in his philanthropies, Cul- | Police Lodge Is Looted brother's wife. favor of ts owa “cinehebay’-o|¥m called himeclf “slfish.” He! peumceoon (UP) Gurion | The Rarroctd said Henry's —— aves of eeicweet pra “enjoyed” seeing his money spent thieves broke into the North Mus-| was “a inable and treacher- ; for the good of others. So hospi- ous” and awarded Ernest Haterly, Df Patched together until he had | tais and schools benefited to the | rem. Perera y ond ‘ole a bon | ping -oow he ope oo | containing $32, the club’s entire! er Body union hall 55, $1,400 damage for loss of his ® map in his mind of the forma- | sum of millions. bpd Muskegon police report- | | avenue, according to ed today. | ton, | P in wife, Hilda, 50. The couple had | "ons of the earth far down below. | hae soe Chiles At praying. roe been married 30 years. This creekology was a study of | man, but he prays on his feet. All-Red Military Confab Seen for Moscow (® — ‘All indications | ence” the Kremlin had proposed; Only the Soviet bloc h&s agreed | man ‘communist China organization Communists nainiak ele to the convening of | convene Nov. 29 in either Moscow | to the meeting. warp cert pogo ag wuld bo tie pee een Caeee: & conference in Moscow Menday jor Paris. East European representatives at | . = ‘6 Red Moscow meeting. to weld a formal military alliance | . 6 the Stockholm meeting of the Com-| The- Soviet bloc nations..ate!> This. was indicated in Soviet of the Soviet bloc nations. Experts for the Western Big munist-dominated Wortd Peace bound together formally... by-| Foreign Vv. 1 a In the past two days four of the Three finished drafting their gov- Council said that despite the West- ‘treaties of mutual assistance and declaration : the East European satellites — Czecho- ernments reply to the Soviet, in- err? rejection the meeting would friendship, But so far as the West | Soviet Union and her wold slovakia, Poland, Romania and _vitation last night.\ Informed begin Monday in the Soviet capital | knows they have no official single | take conammanamal a thetr Bulgaria — —" ennpunced the | sources said the notes, expected to| and that a military alliance would military command like the West's! own security Wee makeup of ir delegations to the | go to Moscow this weekend, would | be Z North Atantic. Treaty Organise: | heed with the Duels sapememne ‘aimee ieee, chee (nad the Communist proposal. bania, Hungary, East Ger-| tion, Presumably a counterpart|to réirm West Germany, t ry —_ it es __ TWENTY-TWO | " Wheat State Buys Some Al situation results from the fact Kansas Was not able this year to : LINCOLN, Neb. had — Nebraska produce enough of the high-protein is shipping wheat into milling cen- wheat demanded by millers, say| By LAURA Z. HOBSON ters in Kansas, normally known as | state Aricultural Stabilization and | NEW YORK (INS)—Lots of tele- the “Wheat State.” The unusual | Conserv ation officials. vision executives and ‘stars tell you | ——————— | “radio's dead’’—but if it is, I've | | been having lots of fun recently * oe Holida y Snecial ” ” Even if it’s only mortally wound led, it’s quite a fabulous invalid, with more life in its veins than 3 LOVELY PORTRAITS This is a personal opinion that | I'm now broadcasting, of course, | but I’m basing it on a couple of ONLY $ 4 9 5 — —— with a corpse jany emergency blood transfusions ‘could possibly account for | recent-experiences I've just had myself, experiences I can vouch | for on a whole stack of portable | radios. | One concerns an NBC half-hour QUALITY CHRISTMAS |evening program called ‘‘Conver- GIFT PORTRAITS | sation,”’ with Clifton Fadiman, and | FOR THE the other a CBS 15-minute morning | show called ‘Make Up Your} WHOLE FAMILY | Mind,” with Jack Sterling the daily MC and Dr. Norman Vincent Peale | the guest panelist on the day of | which I speak. | ‘Conversation’ is “dedicated to | ithe art of good talk,’’ with such | guest gabbers as Bennett Cerf, | |Faye Emerson, Arnold Toynbee, | | Emily Kimbrough, Jacques Bar- | zun—and occasionally even yours | eb hee last Saturday night and | tomorrow night! | Originally, “Conversation” was — a Sunday evening show, and my | stery concerns the first week it | was switched to Saturdays in- stead. Despite all the usual ads | and spot announcements of the -| change, a couple people must | , have tuned in at the usual time | Sunday evening. “A couple”?”’ That's my evidence about how dead our little corpse is, for at the home studio alone, | over 1,000 calls came in that eve- | ning saying, “‘Wha’ hoppened? Is | my set broken? Where's Conversa- | tion?’’ And all the other nice things you ever dreamed of I wasn't even slated to appear that weekend, so any bragging I'm | doing is strictly on behalf of that old-fashioned little miracle the TV | | boys slander! | But the testimony that really | wound up the case for me came | jene morning just after I'd been on a national hookup with no less * You Save $6.50 mi One Week Only PORTRAITS a oe oe | AT Varden stuertos o8 E. Lawrence &t. Phone FE 4-1701 Heoers Dally: 8:38 te &5:36—Fridey Evening 7 te © Sunday if Neen te 8 SAVE WASTE PAPER! We Are Now Paying NEWSPAPER, MAGAZINES 20°© rer 100 tbs. Serep tron—Junk Cors—Structural Steel FyrHvON STEEL C0. FE 4-9582 135 Brench St. across from American Forging & Socket GIRLS’ “HORNET” ‘ Gilbert No. 1032 Puzzle Set $950 Pussies for children with complete solutions. Other Sete ...... $1.49 and book B. F. GOODRICH TUBELESS TIRE 1. Dees skids! Outstops, out starts regular tires 2. Changes blowouts to safe s-s-slowouts 3. Seals punctures. Re self with no loss o Nerle mere cost. Sire 670-15 enty ~~ As lew as 1.00 dewn B. F. Goodrich Battery gives 30% longer service rs m- an. ~ ~ MEPCATS LOVE THIS TV TRAP DRUM SET $495 Bass drum, snare drum and tom-tom. Foot-beater cymbals, bells, cow bell and sticks. TOOL CHEST 2.98 Just right for little Mr. Fixits. Saw, screwdriver, ruler, pliers, hammer, sandpaper, putty knife, ete. . . . everything he needs to play-build. ‘TELEVISION’ PHONE $1.59 Press the button, phone rings, ictures revolve on screen. cg Oy mga winding key can't lost. ‘See Burns and Allen on WJBK-TV — Monday Wight — 8:00 P. M. Open Friday Nights ’til 9 111.N. Perry St. FE 2-0121 — Ss THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 ‘Radio Gives Lots of Kicks tor Medium That's ‘Dead’ | err irecrprsted inthe New ro a personage than Dr. Norman Vin- cent Peale Dr. Peale, as everybody knows, is the minister whose book, ‘‘The Power of Positive Thinking,” has perched right up on the top rung | ef the best-selier ladder for 109 weeks as the No. 1 non-fiction | title in the nation — having achieved the heavenly sales of some 800,000 copies. *“‘Make Up Your Mind” minutes of batting around opinions on some amusing and/or human problems submitted by letters from listeners all over the coun- try, and Dr. Peale’s positive think ing and power of expression cer- tainly were the star performers of that special show is 15 Such fun was it that [ was sorry it lasted such a short time and | as we shook hands all around aft- erward, I cheerily said, ‘I simply adore this little radio show!" | “Little radio show!” a voice shouted in my ear. It was the | voice of Arthur Henley, the pro- | ducer of the show. “Little?” asked still other voices —belonging to various executives | of the network and the client “IT meant ‘short’.”’- I hastily } amended. “Brief, quick, a small span of time—that's the only ‘lit- tle’ I had in mind.” “We get nearly 10,000 letters every week,”’ they all said. ‘‘Week | in and week out—that’s how little | this little 15-minute show is!” Much of the old Erie Canal has | Skunks can squirt chemicals from their odor sacs as much as State Barge Canal system. 10 feet. I turned to Dr. Norman Vincent - ~~ —- Peale for sustenance, guidance and help in my moment of shame. He tactfully shifted the subject to something more positive than em- barrassment-—for which he has my | eternal thanks But is radio dead? You should live so long! about QUARTER BEEF SALE SIDES eo» 150-Lb. Avg. ~ 31 ° FILL YOUR FREEZER NOW! | Lb. 3 5: 75-Lb. Avg. There are 2'y million widowers in the United States. 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Grinnell’s selection is the largest and finest you'll find any- and includes the perfect instrument for you, whether you're an accomplished musicion or a begin- ning student. Convenient terms can ‘FIRST IN MUSIC 7 Hi /; h / ie YOu CN TOF UTE: af ~ y The GRINNELL “Contemporary” Con- The KIMBALL “French Provincial” Con- sole Piano in beautiful limed ook. solette Piano, in a glowing fruitwood Enduring tonal beauty. Outstanding finish. 0... .....cceeeeeeeee $975 durability. ............ ....- $745 The WINTER “Classic” Spinet Piano me sane ox oud redie- with Resotonic tone, full 88-note key- siudapdoes AAA er nde eri . i redcio. og- beard. Mahogany veneer..... $545 any finish................ $279.50 The GRINNELL automatic 3-speed phonograph. Deluxe VM record changer. Leatherette case in green or maroon with grey.......... $89.95 SINCE 1879°° © 27 S. Saginaw St. v ~ $ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 TWENTY-THREE Secret Parleys to Be Held |4.cars™as CAROL on Atomic Control] Agency | UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. w —), President Eisenhower picked a Encouraged by a unanimous vote | New York industrialist, Moorehead in the U. N, Political Committee. Patterson as his special ambassa- the United States is looking to | dor for atoms, Patterson will work new secret negotiations for the |out of the State Department and | quick formation of an international | will be assigned exclusively to the | atomic energy agency. | negotiations, The 60-nation General Assembly | Patterson got his first baptism is slated to meet next week and | in international negotiation’ earli- give final and unanimous approval | er this year when he served as the to the U. N. endorsement of Pres- | U. S. representative on the U. N. arms. But one very small coroler made a very large mistake. He got os for merry, gentlemen, let nothing So ident Eisenhower's program of disarmament ‘subcommitte which when the door tiew atoms for peace. SS ie sae a rest you open. At the sight of The Assembly's Political Com- | eventually banning atomic —_—T mittee voted unanimously Wednes- | 0S. day for a resolution approving cre- | " + * you dismay...” dismayed. | iti ee _| The alternative to a costly and ation of the agency and calling, The subjects of disarmament | —- Se |they were not satisfied with parts | be no link by “ne anyone could | Mon Exhumes Frogs of it and would press their views | cast a veto in the’ agency opera- - in the coming negotiations. They | tions. Long and hard negotiations | Alive From Concrete for an international scientific con- | and atoms for peace have been plaining that two frogs jumped out the U. S ference by next summer. | kept separate by the U.N. at the y Ue | special request of the United The United States already has | States, and the United States is | want the agency made repsonsible | are in prospect. | ROANOKE, Va. ® — Jom J. years. set up machinery to pursue nego- |looking for a new representative | to the General Assembly and the | |Kealey, manager of a florist’s | tiations with the Soviet Union, | in disarmament talks which will | Security Council. The United More than 100,000 different kinds | greenhouse, knows al] about plants| Americans of college age at- WASHINGTON W — Sen. Flam- | | ders (R-Vt) has told the Russians | they should go along with the U.S. | plan for disarmament under in- ; h world can be freed of the cost ot | @@UKIer Storage | In a Voice of America Thanks- | | giving Day broadcast beamed di- | rectly to the Soviet people. Flan- ders said America /covets no new territory but is spending “huge sums" on armaments because she | fears further Russian aggression. | s . program for world dis- | | when he tore up a concrete strip | armament. The Communists have | | which had been in place twenty Countered with disarmament pro- | iali j P Y | posals based on pledges rather than |"O- | Specialist in | the U. S. plan for policing through | long-distance moving! the use of inspectors. ens | Iles | i By beans Dick ‘Solon Urges Arms a Attack Kills Hunter HOMER, N, Y. #—Howard L. ‘Pact in Talk fo Reds ists’ art Snr” wednetay mild heart seizure Wednesday | while hunting deer- He went. bunt- ing again yesterday and died of a | heart attack, Coroner George E. | Nevin reported. 8 Orchard Lake Ave. which still has not entered the plan | be resumed in January. |States and its atomic partners, | of sea shells are known and but admits that frogs have him tending college were about 4 per in fult and with other retina] The Russians voted for the reso- | Britain, France, Canada, Belgium, | named. They range in size from puzzled. countries.. These talks likely will | lution sponsored by the United | Australia and South Africa, do not | the microscopic to some weighing| “I don't see how they got air, take place in Washington. ' States yesterday but served notice ' agree and are insisting there must! more than 500 pounds. ‘food or water,” Kealey said, ex-' today. animal. a44- of Any Extra Charge TAKE YOUR PICK-TAKE YOUR CHOICE FREE! ipa i=) BUNK BED, DINETTE yeas SET or RANGE ABSOLUTELY FREE! B= With the Purchase of This "Saag _REG. ‘250 R ser bo tbe os r - -_* ites oe : . : 7 , . : ~/ BUN K BED ‘ ons» BEDROOM SUITE 7) an ; i TAKE YOUR PICK! © Includes 2 Bunk Beds © Springs © 2 Mattresses © Guard Rail, Ladder ae Tonight, Saturday, ‘ = Monday UNTIL NINE! WE HAVE, SELL, GUARANTEE and ARE PROUD OF ANYTHING WE ADVERTISE! 4 . | ‘ , = \ ( ~ j ’ , CHROME DINETTE © Extension Plastic Top Deluxe Chrome Table & 4 Chrome Chairs 125 W. HURON ST. } ad The House of Discounts ORDS Purwry or race panning ” Where Wrigley’s Used to Be” OPEN TONIGHT — of Any Extra Charge a Not as Shown Regular JEWEL GAS RANGE © Fully Insulated—Deluxe Quality © Large Oven and Broiler © Auto. Lighters § © All Porcelain Genuine Famous WINCHESTER 30-30 Carbine With Your Choice of 41 Selected Items at TERRIFIC Discount Prices! wWYUtthte UUM aE : ar Be PH. FE 4-0 8) PLENTY OF FREE PARKING a eR ee a ee _TWENTY-FOUR _ _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954_ - Walled Lake to Vote on $825,000 School Bond Issue | Ballot Monday on Tax Increase 2 Year Building Plan for itional Rooms anton 2 Mill Boost By ELEANOR DUCKWITZ WALDED LAKE — Electors in the Walled Lake School district wil! go to the polls Monday to vote on an $825,000 bond issue to finance school buildings to be constructed during the next two years. Voting hours will be from 7 a. m. to 8 p. m. , $1,000 Damage as Fire Strikes Waterford Home WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Fire which broke out in the home of Gerald Whittaker, 30 Leota Dr., late yesterday afternoon caused an estimated $1,000 damage, Water- ford Township Fire Department officials said today. | The fire, believed to have started iin a faulty furnace pipe, was de- tected by neighbors at 5:30 p. m. |The Whittakers were not _ home | when the blaze was discovered. Damage, primarily from smoke, was mostly to the interior of the home, acting fire chief Ed Smith reported. County Deaths Willard 8. Deckham LAPEER—Service for Willard S. ; persons registered with the township by November 19 and who | voted in the last election are eligi- | be constructed if il i a < > t 4f, a fk ech se . Dockham, 60, of 5218 N. Lapeer | Rd., will be held at 2 p.m. Satur- | day at the Liberty Street Gospel | Church, with burial in West Deer- field Cemetery by the Baird Fu- neral Home. He died Thursday. His body is at the residence until the service. Surviving are his widow, Emily, two daughters, Mrs. Milton Ambrose of Capac, Mrs. Home, with burial in Imlay Town ship Cemetery. She died Thurs- day i ik ait i ae | i fi ‘| HH Hi f : | ft : rs f ; xy 1 i 3 Z g i 2 EF i P : 2 % sustained in an automobile acci- __| Rochester's new community hos- By HAZEL A. TRUMBLE ‘Avon Center Hospital Set fo pital, Avon Center Hospital, Inc., will hold open house for the public 4 Sunday. |} The official pening of the doors lof this 56-room institution Sunday | represents the realization of a dream for Dr. FE. E. Ludwig, build- ler, owner, and director of the 4 4 + | board of trustees for the new non BF 7 profit organization. | Located at the south entrance | to the village, on the east side of Rochester road, the new hos- pital will accommodate 20 to 29 patients now with expansion to take place in the near future. of this area for hospital facilities close to home which prompted me to get into this,” said Dr. Ludwig, a young osteopathic physician and surgeon who has been in Rochester for more than a decade. He acquired the land in 1946 and planned the hospital as part of a complete building program. The Ludwig Clinic, which will in no way be associated with the hos- pital, is located near the roadside of the site. The hospital, a modern one- story structure is set back from the read and is surrounded with All area doctors have been noti- fied by Dr. Ludwig that they are ie 8 “It was the dire need on the part Open Sunday successful tenure in that office is not up for re-election. He serves a 2-year term. In addition to Benson, Dr. Eisen- hower and Kline, the convention speakers will include. Sen. Spes- Music Teacher, Lloyd Orr Wed at North Branch Farm Bureau Convention Set i y 3 NORTH BRANCH — Gretchen msi + att Se SF Personiis and Lloyd Preston Orr . . sard L. Holland (D-Fia), a senate ; ie ilk spoke their marriage vows recent 5-Day Meeting Opening | acricuiture committeeman; Sir Arlen reget bested Dec. 12 in New York to Roger Makins, British ambassador emony at the here. Back Benson Program A teacher {n the school music department, the bride is the); WASHINGTON (INS) — The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William | american Farm Bureau Federa- Personius -of Elmira, N.Y, The | tion, 1 tof US. t i Mrs. Dwight P. Orr of North head of Bradley University’s De- Branch. ae ees Be ee ee partment of Economics. Candlelight satin was Gret- meoting opening in New York gown, and she carried a bouquet Heights, Il., was matron of honor. | the farm bureau is pretty much | Clare Orr of North Branch at-| - tended’ his brother as best man,| Taft Benson is to be a featured assisted by William Simmons of| speaker at the convention, along North Branch and Roy Stacey Jr.| with Dr. Milton Eisenhower, the | of Goodrich. Richard Allen of Chi- | - President’s brother, who is pres- cago Heights and John Gilbert of! ident of Pennsylvania State Col- ' | ro 50% orr Thousands of Christmas Gitt Items Those attending the meeting are sure to reaffirm their endorsement of flexible price supports as em- bodied in the GOP-sponsored Agri- | cultural Act of 1954. in a cartoon in the organization's ° Open 7 Days a Week welcome to use this facility. According tg the girl's parents, congressional accept- ae institution is equipped te Mr. and Mrs. Charlies F. Mcn-| ne bureau policies, an DEPT _—— ee roy of 264 Withington, Marbeth lft | Coportunity to earn a good income R & M ° diagnostic treatment, pediatric _—* sib eae ak a cokes ae and self-help programs. | . STORE , Obstetric and areas. apteeeet SEe ws All plans are based on the require Narr ee vine cn credit tec oth tal tabs on chctien of Gnctan w || 1529 Union Uche Bd ments made for hospitals the o) Michigan Public Health’ Depar Dr. E. E. LUDWIG gga ee — — — Union Lake ment. - ~ : brown hair and hazel eyes, and : EM 3-3912 Dr. Ludwig performed some | ®* laboratory head and X-ray ° has a dark complexion. Her par- AFBF President Allen B. Kline experimental engincering in the | technician. 5 Choruses fo Join ents believe she may have left, 7% has had a relatively long and |]. ee a eg Decorated in soft pastels, the |, C rt tR lly Neca re pene - combining radiant air | waiting room of the hospital is changed name correspond conditioning in a ceiling unit, be | painted a cafe au lait with furnish- In Lonceri al KomeO with imitials M.M.S. on the bag. WILD BIRD FEED MIXTURES has been able te cut constraction | ings in eggshell and turquoise} ROMEO—Handel’s Messiah will | Anyone knowing her whereabouts 5 costs esustdorably. \ | leather. be sung Dec. 12 by more than Suet and Sunflower Seeds nsccy Artem, — rie ar sie was payers sd poncceel r= Hw a ef te peer ty | Panes All Types of emo t nteen tantnad build. ee ee See es SS OF oa, Bae coma Toran and | Plan Dinner at Leonard FEEDERS’ SUPPLIES ing ideas and came up with the ee | oe LEONARD — | PET SUPPLIE plan which gives each room & The program will be held at| gues Aciliacy Society will serve U s square feet.per bed and the sin-|Interlakes Garden Club = ‘%t. Jotm Lutheran Church at 8/9 turkey dinner Wednesday at ~ All Kinds of ood, Canned and Ory gle rooms, 126 square feet. : p.m. aden ah Reutend Tiel PARAKEET and CANARY 3V's and HARTZ MOUNTAIN Each room has individual bath- t0 See Movies Tuesday Soloists for the concert: include Hay, Straw, ontiac Varnish Paints e a = 4-H Grounds out Perry Street 5 : TUES THURS. : * - ‘s » isa SATURDAY E3 “Buy At Farm Prices” | 5 = - ti @ Fresh 7 les . } ee hee @ Poles § 7 e a Me Have nabbits Goods 5 : Perennial © Plants © Flowers . = Plantstlow © Vegetables . ‘ Ample Parking Space for 600 Cars at the Grounds : dh hehehe detectable ecbetetneleedelatededededediededededden Be Ready average of daily telephone conversations in the United States is 194,000,000. Attention Farmers! § See the New Aluminum The perfect tool for removing snow around home and barns in the winter and hundreds of jobs throughout the year. _ KING Pontioc Rd. at Opdyke Rd. SCOTT LAWN ! For Winter Blasts with a Front End Mounted Blade WE TAKE TRADE-INS — CREDIT TERMS Your Authorized Decler tor FARMALL TRACTORS — BOLEN CARDEN TRACTORS McCORMICK FARM IMPLEMENTS — KASCO FEEDS BROS. FE 4-0734 or FE 4-1112 PRODUCTS WALLED LAKE—The Interiakes | Mrs. Roy Borland of Romeo, Mrs.| Astronomers say the varying ARRIVING SOON... Garden Club will hold its Novem-| Fred Scheuneman Jr. of Almont, | colors on the surface of Mars are A Whole Toy Display and Blectrical Appliances That You Can Afford ber meeting in the home of Mrs.| Donald Albrecht, of Romeo, Ira | the. best evidence there is life on ; Leola Todd, 483 We Williams Lake | Weaves of Lapeer. Worth Mallory the planet because dust from the UNION LAKE FEED & SUPPLY gp henge of Rochester will direct the chorus, Mars deserts would cover every: | Movies will follow the regular | and organist will be Arthur Snook | thing and produce a uniform color Cooley Phone luncheon. of Romeo. if there were no life. rats nano Tae eer {5 Today You’ll See It ’ = ANNOUNCING A WHOLE NEW IDEA IN AUTOMOBILES FROM , DYNAMIC AMERICAN MOTORS From this day on you can forget your traffic For American Motors has come forth with a whole new motoring idea—a car to meet your new needs today. Styled with the finest—yet with America’s cod Your loved once fda nt Hicsving “Safety Smttout Can For Trove Tool The Aitiner Re Read the facts ere, then see the new 1955 Ramble, Zone” with Double Strength Single Unit Body, “unin eae tb aubup ade —- at all Hudson dealers and Nash dealers, are surrounded by a safety belt of steel ==. travet couch, a rectining seat or, in 4-door models, é( as illustrated above). Double Strength Single Unit = Soros page Body helps your Rambjer stay new years longes . .. ‘ means greater value as & used car. New Four-Door Sedan Custom, one of five new 1955 Rambler models. SEE IT TODAY AT ALL Mash DEALERS oA a JACOBSON'S MOTOR ,.. 58 W. Pike St, - | aM ‘Wel Diy sow en Teen. Grote fo extant by Nad deinen hn deca Soe yu sopaper fre ed hrm: = s lively New Performance. Here's the new idea in turning radius on the in a car that outdistances them all on a tank of gas. It's the lowest- priced car to offer Hydra-Matic Drive. Ball and needle bearings eliminate need for power steering. with the shortest Newest, Smertest Idea in Station Wagons —the new Four-Door Rambler Cross Country. New Prices Now the Lowest in America! THE 1955 American Motore Means More for Americans HUDSON DEALERS +i 3 Phone e FE 2 - T Boas. 2 yo ey SS 4 ee; : ‘ F ae = ss . * a we ae : * o: rhea > Awa” ‘ apy y ee ae eee a ae, oar ee aot ee | pT hee 7 — » = THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1054. ) Thrills Police, Too arrested bith on a charge of reck- BCE es on the Air Science Lt, Eugene E. Mikolinaki rented a |ot suesr beads the ind annie ELEC. APPLIANCES WATCHES and LUGGAGE “We Guarantee to Save You Money” . . 2258 Dixie Hwy. Near Junction of Telegraph OPEN DAILY—EVENINGS end SUNDAYS Plenty of Free Porking rel Epitaph for an Idealist ‘Sometimes Liberals. | Judge Once Told William Remington | f é i i sad | z E Fektt § i 4 % i tt ebepty fame, despair, hope and dis- grace to the man they knew. “I was getting to be a big shot. z + he ett i duction Board. The of credit counseling experience assist veain you” CREDIT COUNSELLORS | Phone FE 8-0456 Above Oakland Theater League life were enough, he began his government career a messenger for the Tennessee | Authority, reading Go Too Far Lett’ , red “yy and at spending his Lenin and to im- Board, then Price Administra- tion, and in 1942, to the War Pro- . Commission- in the Navy in 1944 he was loaned to the economic U. i S. embassy in Remington went “tmpetus toy 1949, it looked like a clear road ahead when a loyalty review board cleared him of all suspicion. In May, 1950, came the first perjury indictment, his resigna- tion was demanded and accepted Jan. 27, 1953, he was convicted on two charges of perjury. At a previous trial, he was also con- | victed, only to have the case | reversed on a technicality. His divorced wife was a key govern- ment witness. my innocence will be established,” he said. “I know that in some future walk of life I shall dem-| | onstrate my deep loyalty to our | } American form of government.” ing by. ‘Ike Dedicates Week to Salvation Army WASHINGTON (INS)—President Eisenhower designated next week |as National Salvation Army Week, and urged all citizens today to honor the organization during the week for its humanitarian work ic over the last 75 years. | Eisenhower said: ‘‘Let us remem- ber that the banner of this organi- | zation, and the principles for which | it stands, are stalwart bulwarks | | for the physical and spiritual needs of our people, and let us salute this great body of unselfish men and women during Salvation Army Week...’ In issuing the proclamation, the | three federal grand juries, | President conformed to a joint | | the House Un-American Activities resolution passed by Congress ear!.- | ‘ Committee and the Senate Investi- lier this year. Something Wonderful Has Happened At Pfeiffer’ ! Here is exciting news about beer! ‘ For the first time in brewing history, complete, refreshing mildness has been combined with deep satisfying flavor in the finest beer ever brewed. Ie was a real challenge to combine two opposite qualitics—mildmess and deep flavor in one great beer. But patience and hard work have been rewarded. Pfeiffer’s discovered a way to brew a milder beer and still retain that much-wanted, deep, true flavor! Today’s Pfeiffer’s proves that beer can be mild yet distinctive in taste—can have true character and deep, satisfying flavor without being beavy or filling! This achievement sets a new standard in the brewing indus- try. Never before has there been a beer like this! . - The moment you taste this clean, sparkling brew ' you'll know something great has happened to beer. Here is a smoother, subtle mildness you wouldn't have believed possible—yet with a mellow, more pleasing flavor that can only be described as d-e-e-p! We are very proud of today’s Pfeiffer’s Beer, and those who have compared it with other beers share our enthusiasm. People are actually calling us at the brew- ery to say, this is the finest beer they have ever enjoyed. We urge you to make a side-by-side comparison of this great brew with any other beer. Note today’s Pfeiffer’s inviting clear golden color, its sparkling liveliness, its pleasing mildness, with a deep flavor character that is so completely satisfying. . Once you've discovered the wonderful mildness and the deep flavor of this brew, you'll agree. . . that the big difference in beer is today’s Pfeiffer’s. Try it and judge for yourself! PFEIFFER BREWING COMPANY Detroit and Flint, Michigan gating Committee, In February, and the road down began. On. Last Apri] 15, Remington sur- | rendered to begin his prison term. | | “It is my hope that some day In a grim prison hospital ward | | yesterday, the bright-eyed college | | dreamer of two decades ago died | making “speeches at | Unconscious as history went whirl- i OUR OWN “EXCLUSIVE | WATERPROOF 17-JEWEL Conceived ond Inspired in Sallan’s Own Paris Office on the Rue De La Paix .. . Direct to Sallan in the U.S.A. “Versailles” [x Another New Paris Creation by M. Barot Lovely 3-Diamond $12500 M. Barot created this Engagement Ring design of rich sim. Matching 3-Diamond plicity for the “Ver- Wedding Ring sailles” . Combined $15 DOWN both yellow and white ‘ o All Sallan Paris orig- gold for a duet en inals with semble of rare beauty. imported direct {rom Holland for saving. aiagmonas Prices Mhelude Pederal Tas Diamond Engagement 3 GREAT STORES y * SALLAN Downtown Woodward at Grand River * SALLAN Northland D-27 * SALLAN Pontiac 17 N. Saginaw * SALLAN Amsterdam, Holland - 17 Prof. Tulpstraat Rings Enletged te Show Detail FLOOR SHOW FRIDAY and SATURDAY The Sensational FIVE COMET 4 America’s Newest Singing-Dancing Sensation... Recording Stars of Stage, and Television PLUS JACK EDWARDS Comedy MC Sensational Comic Screen With ALVIN WALLS and HIS EBONY SOPHISTICATS , CALL EARLY FOR RESERVATIONS Jam Session Tuesday Night Featuring the Parade of Musicians Corner Elizabeth and Cass Leke Roads Just One Short Bleck West of Huron Street Delightfully Delicious PREPARED AS ONLY THE CHEFS AT THE VILLA INN CAN DRIVE OUT AND EAT WHERE } DINING ISA PLEASANT ADVENTURE ve For Reservations . MY 2-6193 MY 2-9258 BE SURE AND VISIT OUR COCKTAIL LOUNGE WITH THE BIG PICTURE WINDOW VILLA INN Where Dining Is a Pleasant Adventure 60 Parkview Blvd. Corner of M-24 and Clarksten Read—Lake Orion FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 10:00 & 12:30 K wy TIHLTE x see FI : EET a + = Let us help you plan your hoilday parties and banquets 1420 South Telegraph Read at Orhard Lake Road For Reservations Phone FE 5-8060 and A Sensational M. DAILY, EXCEPT D SERVED UNTIL 1 A M. DAN To the Music of the Joe Banket Trio EVERY NIGHT Except Sunday HENRY’S Bloomfield Inn Oakland Couaty's Smartest Supper Club Take her dining and dancing by candle light and partake of our excellent dinners served in a refined and romantic atmosphere. COCKTAILS WINES BEERS NO COVER or MINIMUM CHARGE OPEN 4P.M TO2A FOO The pipeline extends to within 12 CE < VIPS % 2 Combo SUNDAY - , < v¢ ry -_ i) o < ‘es sf 1? A “ ; O26 vi phy o ) % ‘¥ Cy, x > ~~ iS \ y ° * LOOK WHO'S HERE NOW! JOHNNY “SCAT” DAVIS Returned by Popular Demand Popular Star of TV Stage, Screen end Redic With an All Star Floor Show SALLY CLARK Character Dancer JAM SESSION SUNDAY Featuring Parade of All Stars with Frenk Perry and His Swing Masters AVON INN 3982 Auburn Road at Adams Road—Auburn Heights PLOOR SHOW SATURDAY ONLY Now Appearing for Benny Ray, Comedy MC “ Your Dancing Pleasure Dining at Its Distinctive Best! Luncheon Dj Inner Cocktail Party Banquet ——— Se eB Xingsh lnn BLOOMFIELD HILLS — U PHONE MIDWEST 4-1400 WOODWARD at LONG LAKE RD. 7 Scribs BAR and RESTAURANT 130 S. Telegraph Rd. “The House of Fine Food and Good Music” - BOB'S Delicious T-Bone Steak. . $1.95 Delicious Fish Dinner BEER * WINE * LIQ LUNCHEONS TO TAK - served in our sew Room CHICKEN HOUSE 497 Elizabeth Leke Read ot Telegraph OPEN 7 A. M. $1.35 95¢ "wv tOL E OUT! PONTIAC PRESS = (i The largest single carrier ot | its current capacity is 301,000 bar- % | crude petroleum in North America | rels per day. lis. Texas According to the 1954 trom Port Arthu; Piicyclopedia Americana Annual, ‘miles of Colorado City. 5 OUP tO, as S46 AC ey Ah + RAS, + ane eergeerr'y é &, tt sie “ ; ye) » Recent Births ' FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, _ ~ % 1954 Show Business By EDDIE CANTOR Outside of Niagara Falls, the’ and the Champs Elysees, the sight this guy Cantor has seen and Debbie Reynolds looking in | eyes. America. Eddie Fisher who, not too many years ago | sold fruit and vegetables from his father’s wagon, now finds himself with bage and the most gorgeous peach in Holly- > | wood. Born on April Fool's Day, Debbie has all the answers to the million and one wise- cracks concerning this birth recent guest on “What's My Line?” she had the audience and the famous applauding and laughing at her ad libs. The gal is amart. She must be. Below are recent births which | ; | have been reported to the Pontiac Health: Department. The name of | © \the father is given for each child. Boys Joseph E. Anderson, Birmingham Robert H. Leonard, Birmingham Robert H. She w rd, 41 Hilidale William D. Mughes, Auburn He George C Cushingberry. Fernd George W. Biggs, 329 East Pike we, 11801 Mt. Clemens James D. Craig, 566 Lenox Bt | Lawrence W. Martin, 4683 Baldwin Henry, 716 Emerson 6t 2040 Kingston R4d., hts James O. George E. Russell, Rt. 2 Napoleon Roberts, 30 Clovese Bt Charlies H. Dowlan, Drayton Piains Paul A. Derryberry, 49 James St Cornial H. Crum, 293 Baldwin Ave L. Lacey @chiefler. 57 Vinewood Ave Keith A. Mog Holly Derold L. H . Oxford | — L. Rose, a Prank J. Bpotts, Capec Perry 8. Scheffer. Milford. Rt 1 F. Reynolds, Milford . yton Plains 387 Scott Lake Rd . Rochester | John T. Psenak, 2810 Buck Street Herold A Mugford. Birmingham | Marvin E. Vest, 1377 Tull M. Shaw, Rochester 614 Williams Lake | Reynolds, Drayton Plains Danie! B Gallagher Jr. Birmingham Richard R. Engelsman. Detroit Richard W. Button, Walled Lake Darwyn R Williams. 364 Oxmun Bt David A Sisk. 72 North Astor Orval K. Rose, 82 Edwards 8t Dantel V. Mora, 3175 Greenwood Dexter J. Kennedy, 315 Draper 8t Kenneth L. Prank, 2574 Premont Prank M. Portune Jr. Rochester Donald O Akers, 306 Mt Clemens 8t. | Peters. Rochester ' la, East Lansing eis, Rochester + Marvey J. Mattoon, 101 West Ken- nett prem ly z Pg pomcem Ortonville, Rt. | Lomason, Lake Orion Milford . 188 South Joha- ton Bernard A. Kirby, Parm Ernest A. Musgrave, Stevens, Lock Drewer A., | Orandsteff, James MH. Wheeler Sr. "Reyal Osk =| David H. Swansey, 158 South Merri- William VaenMeter, Walled | ake Leo Vailleneourt Jr. €! Ruth at Xavier Oron. Svivan Villege Dale F Purren. Rove! Oak James GO Schults ¢€7 Mark et Gereld E Lundquist, Birmingham atthews Jr. Oxford Paul A Gamaae. Birmineham | Jack. FE Roerink, 804 Corwin Ct Samuel L. Caleote, 40 North Windine oo Ree'ee oc * Nee eten Plein 2°44 Promont Parr ‘n-ton 4765 «(Crescent Orece Geralds, Fog Strands Everyone MONTEBELLO, Calif. (UP) — Richard Larkin and his girl friend, Marie Brenner, both 20, telephoned | sheriff's deputies saying they | couldn't see to drive because of | intense fog. Deputies told the | stranded couple nothing could be | done. ‘‘The fog is so bad we can’t they said. | |Riemersma. He succeeds W. A. even drive ourselves,” To See Farming Gear GRAND RAPIDS (UP) —Nearly | 1,000 farm implement dealers from throughout new president of the Holland Tu- . Sesaeacacaaea oe Vivacious, talented Debbie typifies young B. Davis, 3135 South Adams | - Eddie Fisher Ran Vegetable Wagon Now Has the Cabbage and a Peach about cokes so Grand Canyon most beautiful is Eddie Fisher to each other's being selected plenty of cab- date. Asa panelists She's isc ciaball pany’s head salesman. Her biggest thrill, next to meeting Eddie, was and Donald O’Connor in “Singin’ in the Rain.” Laying no claim to talents as a dancer, she was! personally coached by Kelly and is now quite, expert in both ballet and tap. Along with the rest of America, I can | hardly wait until Eddie slips the ring on Debbie's finger. When young Fisher gave his concert at the| Hollywood Bowl, Debbie sat with Irving Berlin | in front of Ida and me. performance, when the audience was cheering young Fisher, I said out loud, “Now there's a boy I'd like to own.” ‘smiled and whispered, | right out of my mouth.” | DANCING | TONIGHT “The Dynamic Duo” Ray & Sully SATURDAY The Tune Toppers she falls in love with the com- to appear opposite Gene Kelly At the finish of the! Debbie turned around, | “You took the words | Sweetest Dance Band in Town! (Copyright 1954) [Romance Hinted as Nun Quits Buddhist Monastery TOKYO (INS)—A Japanese ab-, bess has broken tradition by leav- ing a Buddhist monastery in the | ancient city of Nara over a report- |ed romance with a young college student. The abbess is 35-year-old Sonsho Ichijo who gave up her vows and returned to her mother in Kuma- | moto on the island of.Kyushu. She | was described as beautiful despite | her closely-cropped hair. The abbess comes from a no- ble family and was born the | daughter of Viscount Tokiharu Hiramatsu and later adopted in- to the family of Prince Sanetaka Ichijo while a child. The Ichijo family was one of | the five families from which the Emperor's future bride was tra- ditionally picked in the old days. In a move almost unheard of in Japan, the abbess disappeared | from the Chuguji Temple weeks ago. She entered the tem- | ple, which is a monastery, when she was only 7 years old The abbess joined her sweetheart after leaving the monastery and left behind a note saying she want- ed to be relieved of her respon- | sibilities She met the student, named Hiroski Nakagawa, when he came to take calligraphy lessons at the | | But the student brushed aside | When Gun Blows Up two Sully, 250 Ibs. of Rhythm at the Piano Bar mony and flower arrangement The abbess was united with her student sweetheart for only a brief -MANNY’S Ringside Bar whisked her off to her mother’s | home in Kyushu. |] W. Huron et El. Lk. Rd. reports of the romance and said, “I have seen her only twice since | Fess | squabble in her parish.” | by the publicity she received over | reports of her tradition-breaking ee said she left the mon- | GOOD FOOD astery because of ‘bad health.” | HOME COOKING Reasonable Prices Man’s Hand Is Injured Clarence Watterworth, 32, of 7445 | Bridge Lake Rd, Springfield Town- | fi ship, was treated at Pontiac Gen- | eral Hospital yesterday for injuries received after the gun he was us- ing for target practice near his home blew up in his hand. The .38 caliber revolver could | not take the high-powered 38 au-7#r tomatic ammunition which Wat- terworth and a companion, Edward | Jacobs of 303 Avalon, Highland | | Park, were using in the gun, ac- cording to Oakland County Sher- iff's Deputy Shelton Stites. The index finger of Watter- worth’'s right hand was cut and broken when the cylinder exploded, _ {Stites said. as the year of comparison with lowed is 1939. 100 American cents. fifteen years later still charge only Sc per play. value, as inflation In short, the juke box I present economy. : ACE MUSIC SYSTEM s|| OAKLAND COIN CO. 1 $s] OAKLAND MUSIC s| PONTIAC AMUSEMENT | : RUMBLE CITY ENTERTAINERS y 10¢ Juke Box Play i 1 Oakland County? The besic financial yeer adopted by all the nation’s economists The reason the economists chose 1939 is because in 1939 the U. S. dollar was actually worth a full and complete dollar: In 1939 the juke box operators charged Sc per play , the very greater majority of juke box operators But, during those 15 years a great many changes have come about in the nation’s economy, of which the juke box operator is paying 300% more for his machines and all his other necessities, as well as for his own living expenses —but is still charging onty Se per play. At the same time the American nickel, too, went down in., the nation, and today, the 1954 nickel, compared to the 1939 nickel, is worth only 2.3c. operator is paying 300% more for everything he buys, and sells it for half of what he used to charge today, inasmuch as a dime today is worth only 4.6 cents in our WOLVERINE ENTERTAINERS . RECOMMENDED BY DUNCAN HINES lw) — so" * - Lag all the years that have since fol- In 1954 y all are aware, and today, C/O i _Zh in 1939. 1939 Then 1954 um [ES New Juke Bex .... $350.00 New juke Boz .... up 450% Collector's Salary. week $40.00 Collector's Salary up 275% or a delightfully Serv "s Servieomen’s Selery up 278% different, romantic Selery, week ..... $40.00 Rent for Shep .... wp 350% place to enjoy your Rent fer Shop, month. $35.00 Ties & Tubes. . .up te 300% meals out... come to Tires and Tubes _ 'P the colonial Rotunds Aute Maintenance iaieamammandia iad Inn where our service Insurance “(Car pe yr.) $50.00 Insurance. .... ..upte 300% FF said culsinw eee’ ‘ts eegeee - Cartage oereeeee te 300% See sees $2.00 m . wn 100% | standards of those ——e . laid | who prefer the very SERVICE PARTS finest. RECORDS NEEDLES ‘ ruses RESISTORS LSMORGASBORD CONDENSERS TRANSFORMERS Bu . Ff E T AMPLIFIERS SPEAKERS Rotunda Styl wikt STAPLES - TAPE SOLDER p = up to 300% SERVED EVERY DAY VOLUME CONTROL CABLE BRACKETS PLASTICS DINNERS: po LOCKS : Served Daily from 5 P.M. to CLASS 10 P.M. Bundey from 1 P. \ No industry could withstand these tremendous cost increases tPA o oR. ~. without increasing their price to the ultimate consumer. LUNCHEON: Several major cities in the U. S. Reve converted their music oe equipment to 10 cents as long as 4 years ago. 2:30 P.M. tf the omatie. egareters were 60 eortiney eperating ot 5 conte per play they would be forced to operate only old obsolete phono- Bestrvétions Acsigied graphs, and ultimatly fade out of business due to public’s reluctance Now for: to play old worn out obsolete equipment. If it was worth a nickel in 1939, it should be worth a dime Parties, Sengects, &. 23 ten the contng Hee ROTUNDA INN Army National Guard units re- ceived 88 Presidential unit cita- Monty Leaves warns oem rne wells Retreat - President Remains at Little White House for Brief Holiday ~ AUGUSTA, Ga. w—President -SALT: i ALL GRADES 7 e his old comrade, Britain's Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, WE } DELIVER DANCEY'S PET and GARDEN SUPPLIES 358 OAKLAND AVENUE 1 Bleck Nerth of Johnsen WE &-noat WE DELIVER Water Softener Montgomery, whe flew down with the President Wednesday for \a Thanksgiving vacation at the ' National Golf Club, headed back | for Washington early today in the | President’ s — plane. * « Eisenhower remained at the Lit- tle White House here to get in a little work at his office and try the links again. He returns to Washington Monday. The President played golf yes- terday, with Montgomery put-put- ting around the course in a motor scooter. But the President “didn’t do very well,” in the words of Press Secretary James Hagerty. s ” - Hagerty voiced a familiar golf- at Li} | er’s lament—the President was out DSA So Nas of practice, having played only | once since he returned to Washing- InTe ton from Denver Oct. 15. LG RSM | Eisenhower carved his Thanks- | giving turkey, a 43-pound bird | |called ‘‘Kentucky Colonel,” at an LR™ b | RWRACARS a MAAS NL TOE fi cuss astat x LX _ STRAINS *}) aa sn SURMOUNTS HANDICAP—Samuel James Larsen, | even dinner with friends the Pier llamo at ae auaeeae he cerebral palsy victim who once faced life as a |menu included cranberries and | hopeless cripple, now enjoys a thriving career as an lother traditional Thanksgiving ®Uthor. Among his accomplishments is the sale | trimmings. to a MA -G- M of the original story for * ‘The Prodigal, . Ld . 7 — | After dinner he played bridge in the two-story frame house built | for his use just off the 10th tee. In the foursome with the Presi- dent yexeriny were td Duatey.| While Truck Burns former Professional Golf champion and now pro at Pages Na- PEABODY, Kan. (® — Terrified | tional club; Clifford Roberts, New | turties—hundreds of them—stopped labor peace and for an end of | York investment banker and chair- h 50 here | rackets on the Port of New York |man of the club; and retired Col. —— <2 eee Friday, Nov. 26th . | Thomas Belshe, a golfing com- | Yesterday. National Guard Armory pahion cf the President at the| The snapping turtles were turned | Cials today as machinery ~vas set PON Burning ‘cree Club in Washington. | loose after a trailer carrying more in motion for ratification of a two- ata, year union-company agreements. |} Mohtgemery, now deputy com-/ than two tons of them caught fire. | Ghew Starting at 9 P.M. Bosed # || mander of Allied fortes in Europe, ¥ Terms for a contract covering Pies Ter Chldne free “*e @ FE will meet later today with the pacer David Young, 25, a sailor at the | the 30,000 dock workers in the port | ee Chiefs of Staff in the Pentagon. Hutchinson, Kan., Nava] Air Sta- | will be put to votes of the union — Listen te tion, said be and 0 companion had | members and 170 employers. WEXL Daily 3:45 P.M. | spent several weeks gathering them | and were on their way to the Chi-| we Displays Costly = Whisky Bottle in Window | Ke market when the trail Conciliation Service says the WANTED TO Buy | FRUITA. Colo. @ — An emety|coua fire. | practically eliminates USED MAGAZINES | whisky bottle is displayed in the Peabody firemen extinguished, the “shape-up” system of hiring We Sell Novelties, jokes window of the office of L. I. Har-| the blaze and then helped round, which has been blamed for a and Tricks ris, justice of the peace. On it is| UP the turtles. About a third of, major part of the evils that have S , a penciled note: the load perished. | infested the docks for many = Piper's Magazine Outlet | "This cost the man who drank years. “85 Aubers Ave. Fe 4-e000 it $266."’ Heir Freed for Holiday; | A no- strike-no-lockout-no-work- 2 H . | stoppage clause in the pact caused Enjoyed Stay in Prison ‘optimism in the maritime industry | SANTA ANNA, Calif. @—Sugar which has been plagued by strikes | heir Adolph Spreckels I] was re-|that caused multi-million-dollar leased from the Orange County | losses and diversion of commerce | Jail in time to have his Thanks-! to other harbors giving dinner in his Ojai home. He! Agreement on terms for a con- had served 25 days of a 30-day tract were reached at 5 a.m. yes- sentence for beating his fifth wife. terday, after 14'2 hours of con- actress Kay Williams. tinous negotiations. by committees “I had a good time here; I'd of the International Longshore- even like to come back some time,” | men’s Assn. (ILA) and the New | quipped the 43-year-old millionaire. | york Shipping Assn. The associ- | ation represents the 170 major wa- Don’t Cough ieee All Night FRIDAY & SAT. ee HURON: | agreement gave the dock workers a union shop, the first in the industry on the North Atlantic coast; a wage, pension and welfare package of 17 cents an hour; and man is to be hired, and to guaran- in most cases. Camana MITCHELL: Ane BANCROFT . LE 1.COBB- nero sm 2nd FEATURE! 1 te | WCK-DIUIN THE LIFE... LOVES OF A MISSISSIPPI RIVERBOAT GAMBLER! The Gamer e AND IN TECHNICOLOLR * Brave | oO 30 2S 2 tgp, y is elejte Rie, wht a } j Fs \) C244) | ae weet \ SPANISH MAIN OWL SHOW SAT. ee ee waterfront was expressed by offi-; oe aah a * te Turtles Stop Traffic Docking Pact Otters H ope of Peace Without Rackets “: NEW YORK #& — New hope for , Burke said the notification and work guarantee will practically wipe out the “shape-up” sytem, under which a hiring boss blows a This system for many years has led to favoritism, blacklisting, pay kickbacks and other evils which | have been assailed by reform | groups and highlighted in federal and state investigations of water- front crime and racketeering, East and West Violin Contest Ends in Draw LONDON \W—The East-West vi- olin sweepstakes ended in a draw | today as far as London's critics were concerned The contestants were the Soviet | Union's fiddling pride, David Ois- | trakh, and Jascha Heifetz, also Russian-born but a resident of America for many years Heifetz played the Brahms Vio lin Concerto here last week in what was popularly considered the first round of an East-West musi- cal battle. Oistrakh was soloist in the same concerto here last night. | s - * This morning only two critics drew a comparison. Andrew Porter of the Daily Ex- press said Oistrakh gave ‘‘just an ordinary run-of-the-mill perform- | ance, not to be compared with that given by Heifetz."’ But the anonymous critic of the Times said Oistrakh's treatment “had more personal feeling and more identification of himself with the composer than Heifetz’s.”’ Critics of the other morning +Papers said Oistrakh was great | and drew no comparisons. Town Teaches Refugees About Thanksgiving FREEDOM, Pa. Turkey- stuffed and happy. Nicholas Tag joru and Aline Pop can return to New York now after a full day of fashioned American Thanksgiving vania community of 3,500 opened | its hearts to Nicholas, 12, and| Aline, 14, who not too long ago lived behind the Iron Curtain, in Romania. They fled, with their parents, to jthe West a year ago, inspired by a Radio Free Europe broadcast | They settled in New York Through the sponsorship of the refugees and their mothers They were greeted yesterday morning by the local schoolchil- |dren, who waived American flags ' | and sang “God Bless America” as | |the honored guests motored in| | from the Greater Pittsburgh Ar ——— Thomas W. in a turkey feast, with all the | itrimming, at Freedom High | School. The activities wound up with a pageant depicting Pilgrim and early American days, in the high auditorium. Yesterday this western Pennsyl- | . ni Prone 5c aaa reine, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 — Can Psychiatry Improve Actor's Movie Career? By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD ® — Can psychia- try improve an actor's career? Tony Curtis thinks so. And that’s one of the reasons he has been con- sulting a psychiatrist for the past seven months. Now don't get the idea that the current heart throb of the bobby- soxers is blowing his top. He isn't. “I’m not insecure,” he explained on the set of ‘‘The Purple Mask.” “I don't have a split personality. It's just that I wasn’t as happy as I should have been. Little things bothered me. A friend of mine suggested I consult a psychiatrist he was going to. - N N N \ \ N 5 me . Baa aaa \ N N NJ * ‘i cee Ht i is taal de be ee et we} year deal, Tony will be able to make outside deals of his own. National Guard divisions made learning about and living an old- | | | |American Heritage Foundation, | Freedom, Pa., decided to turn over Thanksgiving Day to the stesviece | HOTTER! presented them with the tradition- | }al keys to the city. | Later, some 150 residents and | Si officials of the town joined them | up two-fifths of the American Ex- | VANITY- LAVATORY It’s a dandy . . . full size genu- ine vitreous chins Ie roomy drawer and two sliding trays. . . beautiful, long Formica top in wide variety of colors... té install If .. . Budget terms if desired. Complete 5\1455 G. A. Thompson 80 S. Perry PROCESS ROAD GRAVEL No Waiting! FE 2-2935 CLEANER! muradane. 436 Orchard Lake FE %-6159 7 GREAT STARS! Here's the provocative, exciting, fun-filled onswer to the question: Should a woman be @ bosom friend of her husband's boss? And just exactly how far should (or shouldn't) a woman go ee her man get that $125.- 000 a year job . . . (plus expense account) ! @ STARTING THURSDAY @ Gene KELLY in “BRIGADOON” cinemascore On Our Giant PANORAMIC Screen FEATURES: 11:10 — 1:54 — 4:38 — 7:22 — 10:05 P. M. 12:42 - 3:26 - 6:10 - 8:55 P.M. 2 Sun.: Frenk Sinatra in “SUDDENLY” WHERE NO MAN TURNED “UNDER SUSPICION” Also “THE and “RETURN FROM THE SEA” Bex Office Open Week-Days at 10:30 — Sundays at 12:30 Kiddie Cartoon Show! 1 Day—Saturday Only At 2:00 - 6:00 Pius Serial HIS BACK AND LIVED! HOWARD HAWKS FUE THIEL THING | . 4 * j Sten CUE een Pm . dent at sea on father’s yacht On Our Wide Miracle Screen I tried it, and I've been going once or twice a week ever since. leaky ©. Wille Gpeat, qyap bis latest | “BETRAYED” It has done wonders for me: 1| lesson. | phere don't lie on the couch or anything. } Clark Gable and I just go to this fellow’s office| He’s Off to a Good Start | Lane Turner _jand we talk about all kinds of BALTIMORE @®—Robert Reid's) also things. I tell him what's bothering | first day as owner of a liquor | “BATTLE OF ROGUE me gnd we dig back into my past | store was something less than a RIVER” ) and find the reason for it.” rousing success, He reported to po- | In Technicolor with The result has brought him hap-/ lice yesterday that two armed ban- George Montgemery piness, he said, not only in his/ gits held him up and escaped with | career but in his ‘married life with | $37, ee Janet Leigh. And he feels it will be a wise investment for his future. “Look— I want to be in the movie business for the next 3 years,” he remarked. “I think this te, a io. & “5 TWENTY-EIGHT _ ~ Lions Win, Thankful They're Done With Packers By JACK SAYLOR DETROIT — The Detroit Lions went home Thursday afternoon thankful for at least one thing— sen scored twice and Bobby Layne tossed a pair of touch- down passes, the 100th and 1ist | ot his NFL career to account they have no more business this | for the Lion scoring, as Detroit's season with the Green Bay Pack- ers. For the 2nd time in 5 days. the pesky Packers extended the Lions to the utmost before bowing by 4 points. A holiday crowd of 5,532 in Briggs Stadium watched Detroit | squeak by, 28-24, to move within a game of clinching its 3rd straight \ NFL western division title. City Parochial. Cagers Drilling for SCL Season Shamrocks Have Four | Starters Back; Freds| Lack Experience Pontiac's two parochial squads z & if é : ai I Fi 3 58 peu! rte es bk ! usually potent running game gained only 85 yards. Poor offensive line play was partly responsible, but the Pack- ers also presented a stout defense led by tackles Jerry Helluin and Dave Hanner and linebackers Clay- ton Tonnemaker and Roger Zat- koff. : Also damaging the Lion cause his territory. Al Carmichael and again. Mid-way in the period. Son- were 11 penalties for 90 ydrds,|Max McGee also dropped passes ny Gandee rushed Rote and his many coming at inopportune mo- ments. Lion coach Buddy Parker was particulary incensed by the officiating. Meanwhile, Lions were having their hands full of Tobin Rote, Packer passing ace. Green Bay flooded the secondary with eligible | receivers, yet got fine protection from his 5 interior linemen. Rookie Bill Stits, in particular, had trouble following the Packer pass patterns as one touchdown was scored and another set up in THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 _ in the open that might have spelled misdirected toss was intercepted fore traveling to Chicago and defeat for the Detroiters. 'by Christiansen, who returned 30 | Cleveland. Green Bay opened scoring late | yards to make the half-time score, Thursday's loss added to the oo et. 1414 frustrating record of Packer coach lateraled to Floyd (Breezy) Reid | : Gre Say Liz Blackbourn. He now has lost who went 48 yards to score. in the 3rd period, Green Bay |, games by a total of 27 points. Layne’s 10-yard scoring aerial to ‘went ahead again on Fred Cone's Doak Walker, after set-up passes 26-yard field goal, but . Layne te “‘Dorne Dibbie and Leon Hart, | ; Dibble. th Mita aii Oe eee threw for the touchdown on a 10- of the tnd quarter. = Rote hurled 49 yards to Howie yee ming (pass ta: Lew Carper: Marquette (losses to 3 Big 10 schools by 9 points), Blackbourn’s teams have dropped 9 games by a total of 36 points. punt return opened the gap to 28-17 with only a minute left in | » Det GB Ferguson, then sneaked over from '€!- First downs bees 1s 16 the one to put Packers in front | Christiansen's brilliant 6i-yard Y*'% seine rushing. 0000000 #8 13 Total net yardage.......... 299 350 Passes attempted = ieee aces «3 Passes completed ‘ Hit only two Y ef : ; 4 wall! i i Eg i i. 5g g a Ee 4 ead : j E f z | | : : ig year’s captain and high scorer. There are three ways to deliver a bowling ball, any one of which | could take you pleasantly and easily right up the ladder of suc- cess. Practice will soon give you the right method. Topflighters use them ail: Spot, beard (line), and pins. It's case of keeping your ¢ye on _—S—_=- ®@GO0) #| @O® | @ ® BOWLING Poems! 290, c- Oune Steer a ° 6- OLINE AS A- OUNE SPOT Xx ene of the three on the strike. bali delivery, as tie Ha i iE ri gr Fay : i Today's Pontiac Press _UOst MIS GRIP—Tackle Roger Zatkott of the reen Bay Packers tackles Dorne Dibble, Detroit | Dibble slipped away and gained 30 yards. The Lions Lion end, who took a pass in the 3rd period Thursday. | won, 28-24. : y trample Army. — | Passes intercepted the 3rd quarter, but 2 plays later 4 |p Lovee sesesvneyneeeses ee Kote ary McGee iar 9 an | punting BUOUOED osc ccencseseess a 33 him with a spectacular 60-ya Penalties...) ok lee cess Seoces pass and McGee completed the Pine e 82-yard scoring play. Opponents fumbies ree. . ..... 1 0 ; DETROIT 01614 0-28 Detroit nursed the 4point lead GREEN Bay . . 17 710 O-% through the final period, but. not, Touchdowns: Detroit—Walker. Chris- a t ious mo ts. pg Carpenter. Green Bay—Reid Lions close their home schedule ae Detroit—Walker 4 Green against Philadelphia,’ Dec. 5, be- | “Sid seal’ Cone. Including his mark last year at | Played in Mud Acorns Down Maples in Traditional Game Heavily-favored Royal Oak swept | yard line for the 2nd marker in | to its 3rd straight victory over | the following quarter, after Acorn Birmingham in their traditional | end Allen partially blocked a Thanksgiving Day football game | Maple punt on the 27. yesterday, 12-0. A crowd of 6,000 turned out to watch Royal Oak post its 8th vic- Game was played under what probably was the sloppiest condi- tory in nine starts this season. ROYAL OAK .. 1 tions in the long history of the srrmmomaM - H : : = series. Inadequate drainage facili- Touchdowns—Soldan (2) - ‘Seed oe pon ot ein | Argentine Lifts Flyweight Title From Jap Boxer Both teams’ attacks begged down in the mud, with the Acorns Perez Wins Unanimous Decision Over Yoshio gaining only 88 yards and Bir- mingham picking up 4 yards from scrimmage. Royal Oak pushed across its 1st touchdown in the 2nd_ period. Passes from quarterback Frank Firiney to halfback Darrell Harper set up the score and fullback Roy | Soldan rammed over from the one. | By BILL MARTIN | predominately - under classmen Pontiac High's swimming team | 1953-4 squad that won four of 11 this week finished its 5th week of meets. pre-season training for a limeet' “pig three’ among the re- | schedule that opens Dec. 8 at Flint turnees are juniors Tom Cross Central. and Bob Keavy and senior Bob Coach Robert ‘‘Des'’ Boyce has | Lamson. Cross is a backstroker, nine lettermen returning from his' Keavy is a breast-stroker and Erdelatz’ Navy Team Named Desire Is Ready for Army squad with having an unbounded desire to play football and to win, ‘| Coact Erdel said it ‘has indeed been a pleas- | ft Eddie atz has ure for me to be associated with dubbed “The Team Named De the ‘Team Named Desire.’ ” sire” sallied forth from the Naval | ee Academy Friday with its destina-| He paid tribute to Monahan, who AP Wirephote tion Philadelphia and jts object to has spent most of the season rid- ing the Navy bench because of leg | injuries, as a team captain who '“hasn't played much football this By HERB THOMPSON ANNAPOLIS, Md. —The out- | s ° Ld ANN ARBOR w — A Michigan team, overlooked by the experts in | ning five and losing two. inate the entire schedule. Probably no team in the Big Ten suffers less this year by grad- vation than Michigan. The Wol- six top seniors. if v8 Wolverines Will Be Loaded in 1955: Walke Cline, Baer Principal Losses From 1954 Team Spe guard who was team cap- | tain. a ——— Big| Back for more action will be we sophomores Gene Snider football circles year, win-| Tony Branoff, recovered trom a ® erry Goebel coming back | Soutt | knee operation: Lou Baldacci, who ®% juniors. Jim Bates also has | its passing and kicking games | iy mire Danae it Sater Next yeas, they may wel] done will probably hit his peak running |°¢ More year of eligibility. ~ | from the fullback slot.; Jim Mad- |dock, improved at quarterback: Terry Barr. expected to be a | powerful double threat man at left | halfback In the line, coach Jack Blott DENVER (INS) — Skyline Con- ference players dominated the 194 International News Service Rockey | Mountain football team announced | today, Ten Skyline Conference players Rocky Mountain (Little Six) star. He also was high on the list of ~~ Bowling Results wt 33 10 31 12 Indiv. game—R. 318, series —V. Chmiloski 568; —WKC 800, 2610 Md, #—The of one of Maryland's most breathtaking foot- bard as to keep from scor- * | wasn’t any attempt to run up the | | LACROSSE, Wis. ® — Regular | score,”” he said. ‘‘Maryland's three }teams played good, that’s all."’ It was the highest score a Mary- | |land team has posted in eight ever scored against Missouri. most, before the game. compassion was praise- }worthy, but the performance couldn't have been timed better It was on a national television might end in the Orange bowl. t/ were on the first squad and one | Fred 16 28 Elsie 29 18) 28 for Maryland's football reputation. | C mj der is for women, too. She shot/were Ann Arbor, Grosse network (ABC) and wound up &/ two Canadian geese to become the | Dearborn, season in which Maryland's 1954) first woman hunter of the season grid fortunes dipped early but still | to Lake punt returners with a 27.!-\ard average The Montana senior gained 889 yards in 111 carries in nine games. | Gary Glick of Colorado A&M, Mahaffey of Denver, and Bill Westhoff of the Colorado School of Mines were other "| backs named to the first team. Glick repeatedly buoyed up the second division Rams, Mahaffey was the big cog in the pioneers’ best season in years, and West- | hoff drew the envious eyes of big | league coaches ag he burned up | the Little Six | Best of the first-string line chos- } jen are Orville Nellestein, Utah ;end, Larry Ross, Rangy Denver |end, and Dave Kragthorpe, Utah States 225-pound senior tackle. |Larry White, New Mexico cen- | ter, was chosen for the second year. Utah State, Center, Larry White, nea; roa Denver, and Bill Westhoff, Colorado Mines. Bowling Knows No Age competitors in bowling league play every Monday night in this city are Mrs. Ella Schneeberger, 75 | years under Tatum and the most | years old, and her grandniece Ly- a two-touchdown favorite, at the has an average of 135. Successful ‘Diano’ CARMI, Til. —Myrna Embree | but tied once in Tift games.-—*~ | wing. Before proved what's sauce for the gan- bag the limit at Horseshoe Thirty-six hundred midshipmen gave the football team the tradi- tional vocal send-off, tagging along V behind the busses from Bancroft | Hall, the midshipmen's dormitory, {to the academy's main gate. The team boarded a train in Baltimore. year, but has played a lot of lead- ership.”’ Trojans Flying to South Bend for ND Game | Erdelatz planned to send his Middies through a light drill at after a shoulder separation. Philadelphia's Municipal Stadium, | | Center will be equally strong | Sene ‘wpm anal co | Cilereie’s Trelenn Navy put the finishing touches bound for Los Angeles by plane to- and its blocking assignments at two-hour workout Thursday, cap- | afternoon. ping it off by dunking Line Coach | Homer Hobbs in the Severn River. Thursday night, Parad ghee Po affair, but in the cold clear Indiana midshipmen was 000 ozone the Tro 14*4-point le and Maryland Gov. ne ae ae What help freshman coach Wally Weber has provided remains to be seen Seat Prices Listed Oklahoma Sooners were named by the United “Press ‘today to its All-Big Seven Conference football team for 194 supremacy Previous meetings—Army won 28, Nevy won 22; four ties Rival coaches—Army: Earl (Red) Balik. | Navy: Eddie Erdelats. : team: Stirnweiss, baseman Max Boydston and Carl Ailtson, for the New York Yankees a dec- State and Al Poriney” Miseourt Guargs: |@d€ AgO, Was named manager of Bo Bolinger, Oklahoma. and Charles the Binghamton, N. Y. club in the} a referee Bryant, Nebraska Center’ Kurt Burris, Oklahoma. Backs: Gene Calame, Okle- oma. 4 Carroll Hardy and Prant | Binghamton club Bernardi, Colorado aes Corky Taylor, | is e farm for the ice. games of the Michi- gan State College team. leave fog- an pee name wen. 20-7 ‘to an all-American team to play Rouse. Hockey Montreal ...........14 . | League. Now, at the age of 57, he | Porcero ° Amy Prepared for Any Na | WEST POINT, N. Y. @ — In| frowned Cadet Coach Earl Bilaik years, Navy has been able | before stepping aboard a bus that urprises z E a 3 | Army in their annual service foot- leg of its journey ball game. Not in 1954, though. | Thursday. ° * * . | cae oo for any even- | a" w nL eee ee Battle Creek Central Tops UP Football Poll Ti ‘ i F | 2 3? z i z Ed: é i i e E. | the season. Central was i i 2 5 2 ig § E i 3 : i if; : z Lie sti 5 i rd = ij | | i : abd | TOKYO W — Pascual Perez, a | terrific little terrier from Argen- | tina, won the flyweight champion- ship of the world tonight by bat- tering heavier and rangier Yoshio | Shirai of Japan into a stumbling | Lamson specialises im free style gaze in 15 violent rounds. — | More than 15,000 fans saw Ja- Other lettermen back include | pan’s Ist world champion lose in free stylists Dick Gavette, Bob | ‘he outdoor match in Korakuen B i | Baseball Stadium. Howse and Bruce Mumbrue, back-| The fiery Latin, who wasn’t giv- stroker Bill Hampton, breast- | en a chance against the champion, ‘stroker Ken Scott and individual won by a wide margin on all three mediey man Duane Butler. | official scorecards. Three highly-promising sopho-| U. 8. Army Majer Jack Sualli- mores—all products of the Pon- | van, referee, scored it 146-139. tiac YMCA swimming program— | dudge Bill Pachecho of Hawail are back-stroker Ken Bogard, free | "#4 it 143-139 and Judge Kuni- stylist Dennis Simonson and diver | S#F¥ Hayashi of Japan 146-134. |Rennie Saigeon. The Associated Press card had Tankers’ 1954-55 schedule: }it 143-140. Dee oot Fuat Central. Des Pa Perez, trailing after 11 rounds, t t . 1i—et Perndale: 2 i ‘ ol $ Birmingham. Jan 1 Arthur | Punched out his decision in the la ae Gagie aw; Jen. 19—| last four. iy 1—Bay City Cen- _ tra. Ped. 1 Punt Central Pet 11 .| He knocked Shirai down in the at Arthur Hill; Ped. 18—Saginaw, Feo 23—Plymouth; Peb. 25—at Bay City Cen- tral; arch ¢4—Valley relays at Flint: March 11-12—state meet at Lansing. Southern Cal 11 Meets lrish —_ ._— vibe Upset of 4th Ranked ship. ° He rushed to a microphone at Notre Dame Would Aid ringside and shouted “I won for Trojans’ Ego Peron! I won for my country! 1 SOUTH BEND, Ind. w—Southern | | 12th with a stunning left uppercut and jarred him into a fumbling wreck in the last three. The champion, who had carved j out a sizeable point margin in the jearlier rounds and opened a | streaming cut over Perez’ left eye, | offered only a feeble resistance to | the barrage of blows Perez threw | won for Argentina!" Shirai weighed lil's, Perez LOS ANGELES w — Southern | California, which gets in the Rose | 107%. The limit is 112 pounds for Bowl through the back door, so |to speak, will try to boost its ego | with a victory over Notre Dame | little Perez. Saturday. The crowd, smallest ever for a A Trojan triumph over the | Shirai title fight, sat stunned once-beaten Irish, ranked fourth | through the final rounds as Japan's boxing’s smallest division. Shirai at 5 feet-5 towered 5 inches over If the game were to be played in /nationally in The Associated Press | idol was chopped down. Los Angeles in the prevailing Poll. would somewhat ease the pain murk it might be an Even-Stephen ° being flattened 40 by UCLA last week ' UCLA, unbeaten Pacific Coas Conference champion, is ineligible Football Results HIGH SCHOOL GAMES Roya! Oak 12, Birimingham 6 Cline and fullback Fred Baer, | f 1 ‘ . | Theodore R. McKeldin at t t to the Rose Bowl Saginaw Arthur Hil] 7, Saginaw ¢ | lia group sophom : a pep, * ¢ ee o return to this | the leading ground gainers as ome indrg for a eee Or 956 Olympics rally in Thompson Stadium. After its 340 shellacking by | time having appeared there last EV ee | Michigan held eff Otte for three | i aiors Tackles Bill Kolesar, J | Team Capt. Phil Monahan tol) UCLA last week, Southern Califor. New Year's day. So, CouLses canes full quarters of last week's cham- , John; MELBOURNE w—Al , Alabama St. 23. Tuskegee 3 ad | Morrow, Ron Geyer, Jim Davies, | 195 oy though the the crowd, “I never like to nia’s morale is none too high, and | USC, with six league victories, has| Alien U. 31, Claflin Coll. @ a so . | Jim Orwig and Dave Williams re-|ieg seme Games are almost |g but I can tell you orie | the injury to right halfback Lindon | drawn the assignment to meet un-| 2icvren"sa Mes, MI 14 Gone also will be passer Dun- | turn. he years away, the Australians | thing, our boys aren't going UP | Crow takes much of the zip from ‘efeated Ohio State. Catawba 14 Lenoir Rhyne 7 |ean McDonald, a T - formation 9, 4) a ‘pa dtm | bovkingrnounced details of seat | there (to Philadelphia) to lose.” | the ground game. P Cornel 0 Penn eo | quarterback who went to a single- Fs pol egg Beene, greta | Erdelatz, who has credited his | There are 41 on the UBC speed. |} [J € C Colo. We. 8k BI. Cult, Pot 20 | wing formation school, tried hard) 9. so. ond ama we Fey aye 1 range from —— = which arrives in Elkhart, Ind., | owe uppers B Texas St. 27, Sul Ross 6 | te adjust. but never quite reached . a merican money) for the Facts Fi ures late today. Pia. AGRE , Fie. Normal 6 best seats in the boxing finals to ’ g . ° Fresno St. 39, S. Pran. Bt. 30 his best performance. At the ends. coach Matt Ss conte tt olen’ #4 : > > Tilt in Aussie Test iw > at Others who will leave include Patanelli will Mave little trouble. ents . i jene Le | rugged, fast Art Walker, a tackle He needed help and found it Blocks of seats for every Olym- on ervice it Irish Hockey Invaders | MELBOURNE @ — America’ | ae (Pa) & tioward ¢ ” | who might have been an All-Amer- this year in All-America candidate |PiC Program will be reserved for | By UNITED PREss Blanks American Squad {top three Davis Cuppers, Vie| Mellurry @ Mer valey © |fca had Michigan's football for-|Ron Kramer, Tom Maentz, Mike | he from overseas countries. g.Retiqnallz-tetovioed fosenal game oe at re | Seixas, Tony Trabert and Hamil.| 2m! £0.) 2, cinctnnat: 0 tunes been better; John Veselenak, | Rotunno and Charlie Brooks. Jer. T¢ Olympics will be held here Ireland team of Il women re.|t0n Richardson, advanced Friday eee Sey |an end, and Ted Cachey, a dim-|ry Williams will return to action | {T° Nov. 22 to Dec. 8, 1956. Bighedt und 120 pm BED net ee eT ae x. 1 N.C. AaT 6 Televising mained unbeaten in their current Victorian Tennie champion- preaey. Cell. 38, Newberry 18 . Five Sooners Selected | Fas es™fi its» tae| American tour Thursday msetxas, the U. 8 champiga trom| fans 5 ating ot ¢ Skyline Conference Stars on ur aitsig Seven |\Eeh RES yates |[mecraetteete i 2 Been | aneaeiae eeeeee econ] Ret SLR . . KANSAS CITY mey ‘=. & i oe of tournament play of the U. §. Graham Lovett of Sydney 97, 6-4, Giah ot. 28, Ura 19 Dominate All-Rockies 1] members of the ‘eowelanue . 9 re eety to Hockey Asan. 63. Trabert, the former U. S.| Va Tech. am 0 : P sonetve Lemmons trophy, emblematic of Eleven players from seventeen titleholder trom Cincinnati, tangy gt tage r NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUt EASTERN CONFERENCE New ¥ ene | Philadetpnia ‘was sae euCurn eeseoeeo £ “i |New York | Boston eeeecee Boston 96. as Pert Wares Ge Beltneeee 00 chain in the fifth race Saturday. s. Texas Wins, Dims Shouts for Coach Price's ‘Scalp’ Ss AUSTIN, Tex. @®—Texas contin- Ht ! | if (Editor's note: is the a in @ series of rt mong Giscussing the eentboces bask Season and By JACK SAYLOR Berkley High School started the athletic year 1954-55 in great style ‘Leafs Blanked by Red Wings Win Sawchuk’s Third Straight Shutout, Sixth for Season DETROIT w — Terry Sawchuk blanked the Toronto Maple Leafs 24 last night to give the Detroit Red Wings undisputed possession of 2nd place in the Nationa! Hock- ey League. . 7 * It was Sawchuks 3rd straight shutout and his 6th of the season. Alex Delvecchio and Ted Lindsay sniped in the two Detroit goals. Lindsay's was the clincher and came in the last seconds of play | after Toronto goalie Harry Lumley _ was pulled off the ice for an extra attacker. s . . a loose puck when Red Kelly's shot bounced off the legs of Toronto defenseman Jim Thomson. The goal was Detroit's Ist against Lumley in three games. SEE THE Beautiful NEW >) NOW ON DISPLAY AT... BRAID MOTOR SALES DE SOTO-PLYMOUTH DEALER Cass at W. Pike St. FE 2-0186 Aireraft Charter AVAILABLE Approved for GC. |. Veterans’ Training Northern Flying SERVICE Pentise Airport OR 3-2222 . -| Bowling Results Delvecchio scored in 15:08 of the | lst period with a quick swipe at) PLYMOUTH) =: games as well as the Inter-Lakes’ Conference championship with a 50 record ' coach, Jim installed circuit's ongey BEADLE PIONEER LEAGUE 7A DIVISION we wte Window 31 13 Gehick's 23 21 Munro 2816 Plumbing 20 4 Ackerman 25 18 Fleet 17 37 i. 25 19 Cass 15 28 Benson 24 20 Miller's 12 33 206, series Indiv. game—June Kinney | —Gen Bradiey 527; team game—-R. B | Munro Electric 653, series—Harry Acker- | man Trophies : 7A DIVISION we wte | Stadium 21 23 Young 34 10 Buperior 19 25 Frayer's M18 Parmer's 18 25 Drewry's 24 20 Jack's 17 26 Oakland ™“ | Porge 16 27 Limings 21 23 Indiv. game—Bertha West 197, series |—Clare Olsen 520; team game—Russell | Young 763, series—Superior Steel 2156. 7B DIVISION we wt Pabst 28 16 Benson 23 31) Lien 27 17 Jeck 22 21) Motor 26 18 Bivd is 33 | Jacobdsens 25 18 Maple 16 27 Altes 25 19 Service 8a Indiv. game. series—D. Evans 200, 406; | | | team game, series—Motor Inn 707, 2028 TB DIVISION Pts Pts State No. 1 20 Oliver 35 Peggy's 19 Recreation 33 Pp 16 Sturdevant 31 Btate No. 3 12 Quality 25 4 & Greyhound 21 v. gante—M. Samuel 173, serire— | | wt. | Chuck's 28 16 Paul's 23 32 | George's 277 17 Stedium 20 4 Allen 2618 Hartman 19 25 Matthews 23 31 Recreation 1s 33 Penfold 4 3 Matthews-Hargreaves 666. series uck's Shack 1968 ROLLING PIN we. wte Roth 21 23 Burley eM | Schults 20% Ghore | Bell 20 2% «6Pilmore 25 19 Rex 16 28 Theater 4 20 Banner 16.28 Bow! 23 22) Indiv game—-A. Massa 207, series —K. Echlin 576; team game—Huron Bow! 755, series—Schults 2108 BALDWIN BOWLERETTES wil wt White 33 18 Curnell's 23 25 Avon 31 17 OL Tav 23 25 Btreeter's 23 18 Mandaieri 20 38 Acker 28 18 Sport 16 33 Chuck's z2wnmGaoaw 8 | Indiv. game series—Loulse Batley 172 458: team game—Streeter's Poods 003, series—Acker Trucking Co. 2621" vAW-clo wte wte. Woodchop 3% 10Dots 20 Pinpotnts 29 10Whitriwinds 19 31 Woodward 29 11 18 17) re 28 12Gecks 18 34) Kingpins 22 17 15 26 Bhots 22 18 Jets 93) Beit 22 18 Upsetters 627 Vampires 21 17 Knockouts 58M Women's game—C. Newton 168. series |—FP Wise 443; men's game, series—é. Cooke 214, 578; team game, series—Pin- spillers 788, 2213. IMPERIAL . Pts Window 34 «6Pooles 23 Munro's 31 Oriff's 23 Lanes 27 Lounge is Shaw's Prue's 16 Gresham's 25 Cottage 15 It’s quick and easy to your cor at | thro ECONO-RATE® — Allstate's convenient bonk plon 8CONO-RATE brings you the combined benefits of low rate financ- ing by a cooperating bank plus dependable low cost Allstate Auto | Insurance—the really better founded by Sears. value you'd expect from the company | } ay tak a Ga en es a ioe } or car easy monthly payment covers everything. No fuss, no delay, no red tape. “= SCONO-RATE gives you the benefit of Allstate insurance—which includes such advantages as “Disappearing” Deductible Collision coverage that gives greater protection against the heavier costs of | today’s collision damages. The larger the loss, the less you pay. | Get complete details before you buy—See or phone your Allstate Agent today ! RUSSELL j. BOUSHELL end ROSS LEAHY Sears, Recbuck and Co. Bidg. 158 NM. Saginaw 66. You're in good hands with . . ALLSTATE sTroc kK com P Bounded by Sears 25 \\):-0:s corporstion founded by Sears Roebuck and Co with assets 04 adres oratinct and separate trom the parent company Fire inaurance ava iacie to Nome @wrers in ths state mot ‘eeved on fare of commercial Du | C/nge. Phene: Federal 6-4171 aeneee AN ¥ eenpre PROTECTION ae ae Sl Ue” eee THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 Berkley Tabbed Inter-Lakes Favorite: by winning six out of nine football basketball crown to their foot- | ball laurels. Under Lieyd Houden, Berkley won cage tities in 1952 and '53 before yielding to Farmington last winter. Houden has basketball dropped to concentrate on football. Beadle * ¢ @ BEEDLE | 'Hillites Clinch Title Saginaw Arthur Hill defeated | | cross-town rival Saginaw High, 74, | | yesterday to clinch its Ist Saginaw | Valley Conference football title since 1936. In another traditional Thanksgiving Day clash, Flint Central edged Flint Northern, 20- 13, to nail down 2nd place in final SVC standings. Heavyweight boxer Nino Valdes of Cuba refuses to wear black 3* | trunks in the ring. He says they | Dion are bad luck. is one of two new coaches in the tMmter-Lakes this season. The other is Don Beedle at Waterford. Berkley's Beadle is a Western College graduate and moves to the varsity after hand- ling the Berkley reserves. The Skippers’ Beedle is a Pontiac High School and Bowling Green (O.) Uni- two years at Memphis joining the Waterford athletic de- partment last year. Other schools in the Jeague have the same coaches, Niles Freeland at Walled Lake, Bob Burtch at Farmington, Bob Watts at South- field and George Ward at Van Dyke. Top man on the Berkley scene is 6-5 center Dick Radatz. One of the area's top scorers, he is a mid- year graduate but will be available for six of the Bears’ 10 conference games, including both with defend- ing champion Farmington. Regular guard Lou Lemack (5-8) returns and Berkley has Bob Blackwell, Don Biggott, Max Roe and Bill Donohoe all 6foot or near. Farmington has three of its starting five back, but will be shorter than last year. Center and Capt. John Faweett, 5-11 guard, is a good outside shooter | and driver. Van Dyke and Walled Lake ap pear relegated to also-ran roles. Only Myrel Taulbee and Charies | Aughenbaugh are back on Free-| lland’s Viking team. Lettermen | John Reid and Mike Tierney and | | 6-2 junior Bob Hess likely will com- | plete the first five. Other prospects | are football star Dick hehenge faci and a_ trio of sophomores, Larry —s John Walker and Larry underclassmen. Skipper returnees include Bob Jacober, Dave Larkin, Dick Gilchrist, Myles Watkins and Joe Umphrey, all seniors. Junior Jerry Kruskie gained « regular berth late last season, while juniors Jerry Harnack, John Woodman and Gary Meek. er all are moving up from the | jayvees. Another who may bear watching is Chuck Gillis, a 64 | sophomore whe played recrea- tien ball last year. Skippers also have Roger Asbury, | a 5-11 transfer from Milford. Jaco- a wrist injury. Southfield has a junior team might be a year away from title contention, Bluejays were hurt by the loss of 62 Steve Klamek from a football injury, but still have good height with Eric Le Fillar both hit- ting Moser and Bob Evans will the guards, while foremost forward berths are Center Line, 62 +2 sophomore. OPEN BOWLING FREE INSTRUCTIONS Dick Deleruyelle, 6-1 transfer from | and Leonard Lamb, | miss at least | DAILY AND EVENINGS a ING THE DEER SEASON LEAGUE RECESS LAND-0-LAKES BOWLING ALLEY Hopes of Waterford and South- ‘ ’ Brings "Nationally Advertised SAM BENSON . PERRY ST. 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MOTOR INN RECREATION 18 South Perry FE 5-6032 — TWENTY-NINE ' ‘luce gutes. Us Maas © at the rate of 100 vards in 10 of_ ll seconds. +* When an elephant chaiiges, it walks with high speed, making a | gait something like a run, but it ORDER YOUR SUIT / for Christmas Deliver} Now! H. V. HARCOURT & SON. 53% W. Hurea Your Personal Tailors INSTALLED FREE WHILE YOU WAIT Motor Mart Auto Parts 121-123 E. Montcalm FE 4-8230 ITS NO My Business Is Terrific! I SELL FOR LESS . . THEY BUY HERE .. . TOPCOATS ... FALL SUITS . SAM BENSON SAYS: AT SAVINGS BEYOND YOUR EXPECTATIONS } SHARKSKIN SUITS! } WOOL TOPCOATS! | ZIP-LINED COATS! SECRET! . ASK YOUR FRIEND . . . NEIGHBOR . THAT’S WHY YOU CAN BUY NEW ZIPLINED COATS ... PANTS and JACKETS | Could Sell for ‘55 and *60§ | All My Clothes Have the @ WOOL ZIP COATS @ WORSTED SUITS @ TRI CORD SUITS © SHARKSKIN SUITS @ CALIFORNIA COATS @ ALTERATIONS FREE MY PRICE 33° A JACKET MFGR. OFFERED ME SPECIALS! | BOUGHT PLENTY!; COMBINATIONS! 2-TONES! REVERSIBLES! GABARDINES! QUILT LINED REAL $12.95 and $16.95 VALUES! SIZES 36 to 46! RAYON LINED! WARM LININGS! ACKETS! 20 - and M BENSON * PARK FREE IN THE HUBBARD GARAGE x S@°H87 } South Perry St. . THIRTY PS B. RE Et. SO: PORE he NR RI, core ier Se eee See ee weae Seenoeee We Mee stares crear | THE PONTIAC PRESS, By ROBERT E. VOGES by | ALLEGAN wm + during the last few days Think of the Thanksgiving season workers were keeping an especially ® | sharp lookout for possible poach- * ers in the Allegan State Forest Another 150 birds, raised from — Conservation eggs, were released in September. | Michigans last wild turkey was shot around the turn of the cen- tury. Both ‘the birds and the eggs were imported from Pennsylvania, where a good start has been made FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 Dr. Whitlock was in a party of five that bagged three birds. He |reports they are a little gamier than the domestic brand of turkey most people enjoyed on Thanksgiv- ing but will make good eating. “They are a sporty bird to hunt,” |Poachers Threat to Turkeys in since a flock needs about 3,000 acres. ‘Mail Carriers Will Start Bird Count LANSING @& — Some 700 Michi. | gan rural mail carriers will begin a post-season count of pheasants Experiment isn't expensive, how- | Noy, 29, the conservation depart- ever, so the game men are will- | ment said Thursday. ing to give it a try. If the turkeys | take hold in the Allegan area, there’s a chance they may also| Two-legged predators also are Mail carriers volunteer to count the pheasants for the department on their rounds. Survey will end 3 and _ bana of turkey And there at bringing back the big game he said. ‘‘They have excellent eye- be tried cut in sections of Lake. Dec. 11. , are some 200 turkeys running pirg : od heari The Newaygo and Wexford counties . around loose in the Allegan State sight and very good hearing. 4 eta deep woods furnished the| Department officials say they t | erent - Dr. C. S. Whitlock of the re- will run and dodge in the under- | needed cover and food get most of their information on = | search division of the conserva- | brush when they hear or see you . ‘the pheasant population from the Fifty l-year and 2-year old tion game department said the tur- coming and also are surprisingly Se far, the turkeys seem to be mail carrier volunteers. birds were released in the forest key flocks are prospering in Penn- | fast in flight.’ doing well. About half a dozen Later, the department says, mail last spring in an effort to re- | syivania—so much that hunters are Conservation people are a little| have been found dead, three the | carriers will a count of ! establish the wild turkeys that | allowed an open season skeptical about the possibility of victims of disease and others | grouse and deer in the Upper once roamed the Michigan hard- About 10,000 were shot two years restoring wild turkeys to Michigan. | killed by predators and st arva- peninsula. | weed forests in almost unbeliev- | ago and last year more than 15,000 They require wild, hardwood for-| tien, able numbers. | were taken ests and a | wide area to range | meen! | Hunting Survey ~ to Be Extended CR IES oa DE Sy aw Farrell Winner Mike Higgins, who guided Louis- ville to the Little World Series champiogship after finishing sec- ond in regular-season play, and to John Keane, whose Columbus team ranked fourth. expected to take their tol] of the, flock. One hunter was seen to shoot a turkey and carry it off! Hold Winning Edge In the 26 years Iowa University stadium has been used, the Hawk- | but the poacher got away before | eyes have won a total of 53 foot. | his license number could be taken. ball games, lost 45 and tied eight. _'0Small Game of AA's Award conservation’s hunting poll will be extended this year to include smal] game, the department said Thurs “~ day Until this year, the poll asked hunters to report their success with deer and pheasant hunting |) | enly. The survey is conducted & by mailing out postcards request- | {mg information from a cross-sec- First Quality Original Equipment Quality $ Ford, Chevrolet, Studeboker 95 Fully Guaranteed Farrell, 41, is a native of Hen- derson, Tenn, Indianapolis Manager Named Outstanding in Season of 1954 LOUISVILLE, Ky. W — Kerby Farrell of the Indianapolis Indians was the overwhelming choice of American Assn. Baseball Writers as the league's outstanding man- Airplane passenger service in the | United States was started in May | of 1919. YALL COME-—- SEE US-—- WE FINANCE! Also TAIL PIPES and EXHAUST PIPES INSTALLED FREE 4 tion of hunters. ager of 1954. : BUY N < Department officials say the Farrell, took a squad composed Everybody's Credit 0 BUDGET Same tremendous sav- > | postcards, which will be mailed out primarily of rookies in his first Is ° in early December, will ask sports- | season at the Indians’ helm and Good Here! NO MONEY DOWN ings on all other makes and models. men to report their success in all| won a pennant and a victory in types of hunting through Dec. 1./ the all-star game. Next year, a separate poll may Farrell's accomplishments made ’ $ ENS be conducted on cottontail rabbit | him the consensus of choice of se and snowshoe hare hunting in the | writers in six of the Association's | => | state, the department said. ‘eight cities. Single votes went to) UITS and COA — Regularly Priced at $55.00 44 The SUITS: All wool of course, choice in fine hard finish Worsteds, Sharkskins, NATIONAL MOTOR SALES 171 Seuth Saginaw Se. “9 to 9” FE 8-0424 * >. +8 4.4 *! All this -and more miles per gallon too! The COATS: All wool of course, imported Tweeds in set-in and Raglan sleeve models, Gabardines, and the new Splash j, h Ml wool zip-out 1i Be sure to test out Patterns. Here are all the latest en 2 8 WOO! 2iP-out ie So Buick engineers asked themselves _ half-inch beyond the full throttle posi- . ing, and the coats are all popular, the phenomenal effect of ae . ;. . models in regulars, shorts and longs. , —“If you can do it with air, why can’t tion—and a-way you go! The values are outstanding, the Youthful styles. One look will con- ™ “variable pitch propellers"’ you do it with oil —the oil inside a ) tailoring excellent. Extra trousers vince you of the value. These tweeds ha ke Dyna flow Drive™! Dynaflow Drive?” Or course, there’s a lot more to make are available for those “who want are particularly outstanding in ap- ~ And to make a Jong story short—the a visit to our showrooms the “must” them. pearance and wear. ne sory y of the new- ' could,and they did. sw Stns —_ sen Open Tonight and Saturday *til 9 P. M. regular stock Regular $12.95 and $14.95 Special!! Mien’s Dress Shoes Discontinued numbers from our sqp°° Park Free Rear of Store While Shopping Charge Your Coat at No M “x2E- smone the upcoming crop of new 1955 models — there’s another car with an advance that can hold a candle to this one. But we doubt it. We doubt it because nowhere — among the rumors of what's cooking in automotive labora- tories — is there anything to compare with what’s actually happened at Buick. It all started with the fact that modern air liners get two big advan- tages because they can change the pitch of their propellers. First, they get off the ground hundreds of feet sooner than they used to. Second, they can stretch their gasoline by setting propeller blades at just the right “pitch” for cruising. ‘ instant safety-surge They designed and engineered the propeller-like blades inside the “stator” of a Dynaflow Drive so they can change their pitch as much as 75 degrees. That provides one setting for. more- miles-per-gallon, There’ 8 a step-up in styling as sensa- tional as the step-up in power. And the step-up in horsepower is this: 236 in the ROADMASTER, Super and CEnTuRY — 188 in the SpectaL. But the thrill of the year is Buick’s latest engineering and another for an of power when it’s Pay-off on progress! Buicks today go a lot farther on a gallon of gas, thanks to constant “first”-and what it does for the man or woman who drives needed. improvement in Dynaflow and in the latest and great- All you have to do engine design. Even awe =~ est Dynaflow Drive. 4 ROADMASTER averages 4.8 more m ° ™ 7 is push the acceler- it alice tenn telah td Stonderd on Roadmaster, ator pedal the last Thrill of the year is BOUICK MILTON BERLE STARS POR BUICK—See the Buict-Berie Show Alternate Tuesday Evenings WHEN BETTER AUTOMOSILES ARE BUILT SUICK WHI 8UNLD THEM ' @ OLIVER MOTOR SALES 210 Orchard Lake Ave. 4 Pontiac, Michigan Phone FE 2-9101 Three League Crowns _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 26. 1954 at Stake Duke 11 Shoots for ACC Title, Orange Bowl Mississippi Can Gain! Sugar Bowl Berth; Big One ts Army-Navy By ED CORRIGAN The waning college football sea- son takes its final deep breath to- morrow. Action is skimpy but important. Heading the program is the Army- Navy game before more than 100,- 000 in Philadelphia. This year’s contest is more important than usual because the winner will be rated the unofficial champion of the East. Nebraska, the Big Seven runner- up, already has been installed as the Orange Bowl visitor. The At- lantic Coast Conference will vote the title and the voting will be a mere formality. If North Carolina wins, then Maryland will take the title and should get the nomination, espe- cially after its 74-13 trouncing of Missouri yesterday. The Sugar Bow! nomination tra- | ditionally goes to the Southeastern Conference winner. Mississippi can take it by whipping Mississippi State. Other mportant SEC games pit Auburn against Alabama at Birmingham and Georgia Tech at Georgia. Baylor can tie Arkansas for the | Southwest Conference crown by ‘Plays in Ortonville Army Given By HARRY WISMER (Copy t 1954) (laternetio News Service) College football season ends to. all intents and purposes this week- end with a handful of contests that | includes the traditional service classic between the offense-minded Cadets of Army and defensive wiz- | ards of Navy. I feel the men from West Point have a 3-point bulge in this affair. Villanova-Fordham . 3 serves the nod over Holy Cross by | HE, Hi F Ff ry i i Edge Over Navy Squad }as a “slicer’s nightmare.” But not | $0 any more. Three-Point Arkansas-Houston .. . Razor- backs have lost their last two games, but should win this one by | 20 points. Oklahoma is a solid 30 | | point choice over Oklahoma A&M. | Southern Methodist is a 3-point | choice over Texas Christian. aia Dame-Southern California . 1} like the Irish by 14. And, now, to the pros. Chicago Cardinals can take Pitts- — a. 10. Philadelphia Eagles by 21 ver San Francisco can | _A battle | spill sanenen by 28 points. Cleveland | Browns beat New York by 14 | ‘Slicer’s Nightmare’ | [Removed From Links | | concorp, golfers and _ and duffers alike N. H, ®For yours} swore loud oaths at a lone pine tree in| the par-4, fifth hole of the munici- pal golf course. The natural hazard was known - | nearly hadhed through by an un- identified axe wielder. team’s leader, Bobby Roth. Body sheet metal House of David Five | Inquire in person House of David's touring basket- ball team will make its first ap- pearance of the season in the Oak- land County area Thursday, Dec. 2, at Ortonville High School. | Leke Orion, Mich. | man. Experience necessary. Top body shop facilities. at body shop. | Lc. ANDERSON, MY 2-2411 The bearded clowns, led by little | | Bobby Roth and big Moose Gordon, | will meet Shaw's Jewelers of Pon- getting past Rice. But Arkansas | already has been selected for the | “8° & § p.m. in the Ortonville gymnasium. A preliminary at 7 Cotton Bowl, having beaten Baylor | earlier in the season hd ‘clock will match Davis Machinery ° lof Ortonville and an opponent to Notre fain ‘titining Southern | | be named. California, which will be warming | up for its Rose Bow! tilt against | Pointers’ slim advantage lies aad ! Ohio State. their backfield. Oklahoma, perennial ruler of the| Other games on the slim sched- Big Seven, goes after its 19th | ule have Holy Cross at Boston Col- straight victory, ‘Playing Oklahoma | lege, Miami at Florida, Wake For- A&M. ‘Jest at South Carolina, Louisiana Army is a slight favorite over | State at Tulane, Tennessee at Van- Navy, although the two teams ap- | derbilt, West Virginia at Virginia, pear almost evenly matched on|Texas Tech at Hardin-Simmons, paper. The Cadets have a 7-1 mark | Arkansas at Houston and Texas and the Middies 62. The West! Christian at Southern Methodist. PY . BOWLING OPEN DAILY 12 Neon te Midnight 24 BRAND NEW ALLEYS OPEN BOWLING Neon te 6 P. M. Daily Saturday and Sunday Alley Always Open! We Drill 30 - Minute Personalized Bowling Service (Permerty West Huren Recreation) 1124 W. Muren $e. Phone FE 5-2383 ROEBUCK AND CO. 2" PAIR ALL NEW FIRST QUALITY ! While 2700 lasts! Choice of 18 colors and white! Not irregulars, not seconds—but all Ist qual- ity! Limit 6 pair per cus- tomer! Saturday only! Nylon Size-Stretchers Fits Any Foot-Size 10 to 14! Compare to Others Selling at $1.00 and More! f a’ fi 154 North Saginaw Phone FE 5-417! We Have The | | Finest Selection of 1954 Demonstrators ——— (39) and 1l-Owner TRADE-INS Some with as low as 2,000 miles, | some with radios, all with heaters, some with squirts and signals, some with Fordomatic! Tudors--Fordors--Convertibles Club Coupes Your Choice of Colors ®@Sheridan Blue ®Raven Black ®Torch Red @ Cadet Blue ®@Sandstone White ®Killarney Green ®Saddlewood Tan 08 As Low S As Per Month LOW, LOW BANK RATES 2 BIG LOTS 13/2 Mile and Woodward 464 South Woodward, Birmingham Watch for the Sign “Cars” HAROLD TURNER FORD Midwest 4-7500—JOrden 4-6266 Liberty 9-4000—Liberty 9-4001 A phone call will start a courtesy car to your home Visit our location at oun expense. and bring you to our sales room! ee ee — - ——— wee. we we —<¢- Coe yes | yh F ““e-e eo Pa a _— - . ov 2s Ve . eV Ss THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 , | | Stole it. This may take a big of her mother, Then mail the tur- / SPUR LINE THIRTY-TWO Hal Boyle Says: Surplus Turkey Problem Comes Annually in U.S. NEW YORK «® — Throughout | treat this fine turkey as if it, too history most men rarely have been were a fine wine. certain where they ‘d get their next “After vou have dined off it well meal. once, don't paw through the debris The problem in America for the for days, insulting your palate and next few days is just the reverse. | the memory of a mellow, wonder Practically evéry husband will be ful Thanksgiving dinner. If you only too sure where his next meal | throw away the dregs of this bird doing, because if the dog sees the | turkey in your hand first, he may | refuse to come near. He is prob ably as fowl-stuffed as you are. 3. Make a game of it. When your wife leaves the house, call in all the surrounding kids, and offer a dollar reward to the one who can hide the turkey where nobedy will ever find it, 4. Make the turkey a_ lottery prize in your office. You pay 50 friends a quarter apiece to take a key to her mother. 7. If nothing else works bundle | up the used turkey and go to ai psychiatrist. Don't tell him your real name. Tell him you're John Doe. As you lie down on the couch, } put the bundle unobtrusively by | the couch. Then tell him that your | big problem in life is that you can never get enough leftover turkey As he listens in fascinated amaze ment to this strange tale, you un obfrusively nudge the bundle out of sight underneath the couch with your foot. + ITS TERRIBLE!! THE THEY DIDN'T WHOLE “TOWN iS LAUGHING) USED 10 LAUGH AT THE WAY THUMP AT RAILROAD TRICKED YOU INTO ENGINEERS! TAKING HIG BUS TO garam (_SKULLBERG ! n lo is coming from—the ruins of a4) by nightfall of the day on which. ket. The one whose number is Then you arise y him quickly Thanksgiving turkey you cook it, you'll appreciate your | pulled from a hat has to agree to - ne snlpies , and when you leave his office, run A turkey, for the average small | next turkey that much more take the turkey Don't accept a ticket yourself, If you do, you're te as fast as you can. I'll admit CISCO KID this is a dirty trick to play on a psychiatrist who is probably al- | ready sick of leftover turkey him self. But it at least will give him material for an article entitled. “A Case Study of Amnesia in a Tur key-Philiac.”’ Your turkey may even end up in family, is a cavern of de pressing plenty. Just when everybody hope- aa, traditionally thrifty to go for fully believes the bird has yielded| this tine of patter all at once, it up its last morsel, you turn another | is up to the husband himself to ioe th of the [careass—and ther find some way to deal realistical- . re or eals are three more mea ly with this problem of what to hack(ired, Linx wile rever even we The poultry industry is no help | do about Jeftover turkey, jiced the dilieremse. and he had t0 It is always putting out lists of | Here are a few untested tips eat. turkey-a-la-library-paste for 1,012 appetizing ways 8 wife can 1. Do a real job of disguising :t three days. That kind of food really 7 medical museum, and is that disguise’ leftover turkey. But Put a red stocking cap and a stieks with a man bad” every way ends up with the man a hiten benrdmriniiitand tet lio . ~ of the house staring moodity into 6. Pick a quarrel with your Fish live in Ceylon hot springs another plate of turkey rubble. wife until she gets so angry she |‘where the water temperature 1s packs up and goes home to visit | 120 degrees Fahrenheit a by Galbraith However, since housewives are bound to be the unlucky winner », Don't trv t sabotage the tur- key remnants by pouring library past on them A friend of mine who did this found the strategem OUT WIS FARM ~~ Y THAT $ ON ACCOUNT | OF THE CISCO 10 ! It COULD VE SWORN A LAZY LOUT LiKE BRANNIGAN WOULD VE BEEN STARVED OUT BY NOW. aa nd kids its Santa Claus. Naturally they will start to cry, as no child This seems to me a short-sighted wants to eat Santa Claus. This will approach to the problem. If I were force your wife to get rid of the SIDE GLANCES rd / Cage 1984 King Posters Seodivnte te vet gp head of the poultry industr Id bird * } put a little tag on ever Thanks. | ’ The inorning after Thanksgi\ i i? << giving turkey that said ing. lure vour neighbor's dog to ‘ Ts When you drink wine, you don't the door, throw the turkey at him ALLEY OOP drain the dregs, do you" We! and swear to Sour wife that he GRANDMA by Charles Kuhn ‘ = eS 6 FRECKLES AND HIS FRIEN | "ae Es. AY \ 7 m tog CO Pe On , | ot AAW \ ; . " aN ANN | Gaps. 1984 by HEA Bervien, tne. pas \ \ WW a\\ z « S\ \ “This Do-It-Yoursgif idea is okay, but I don’t think we ought to KAN. hy we ‘\ ee LAN | be keeping paperhangers out of work!’ = AN Va od NY As ~ AY — a WA by Carl Grubert by Ernie Bushmiller ---AND I HAVE TO KEEP | MOVING TO STAY WARM 4 HEY---wWHO Is THAT I HEAR FURNACE RUNNING 2 IS OUT OF ORDER d J ME---our —S . é «< o . 4 BOYSF ~¥Y = wih uml fram, toe. ¥ | a ¥P-. | Mev te —~LaNIP BIN MAE by Walt Disney (ster: rm + —t LE — ne: BOARDING HOUSE YOUR SOCIAL BATTING ANERAGE 15 DOWN F YOU DONT KNOW BASCOM, MAJOR! HE JUST OPENED LP A NEW SCHNAPPS CALLED CHARES Oasis A a MAYBE Ny HEARD OF HIM N ONDER His NICK- NAME, “ODD-BALL* You'll Find PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Pontiac Press Want Ad Section Take edventage of this easy way to solve ell your buying and selling problems. RSON WITH WHOM L SHOULD BE FAMIL 2 =~ JOVE ! THAT'S AN*UN- UNION To Place Your WANT AD DIAL FE 2-8181 pleasant chewing hel u keep ha ‘ yo PPY elev SPEARMINT | “Why don't you lock your baby sitter in the closet, too, and come on over?" ‘ \ / a _§ — £ y \ TICAGO, Nov | Produce | Stocks ONTIAC PE sistent, although - % DETROIT AC PRES . w— —_ S demand sent wn spr S ES Ee , FRIDAY Board of grains higher light, od ty — = . , NOVEMB sence of Trade toda on the pur Not ae. oe os fa sure any hee in the ab-| anton. z4i mabe bu jepp rete: | ER 26, The wy woling, pres |S steer ee tsi stock YORK y — betw one-day : North be; fin = Nov. 38 een the session Cider. We i. 3 SH FBT | deine. was Pw — 4 and the sl ee sandwiched inpaaee | 390-536 far ee dealings m higher Pata T anything ving hol oriole 0 bu. case, .50 ba. I anner in ict trading in the didn't iday | Pes: . Feil og it was in early . but way produce Cobtagn on. No. Mo 1 vance the fifth F : . general te vy 1.28 bu. 180 7 — 1.00-1 des. | the into ces on ad- e . = IRT . ss tr | ft eo ea | carrot ball mar pond Be Raat ight tices | Y-THRES a topped, 0 oe. market tor (INS ] eee ees: patria omens atly Lower ospital Lets Hi \d a ‘ ’ amet Pglacg te aunt no 1 Bit gusta instances average ae efs cbeember ‘So, | Se eis wand nat ere fratomal odie So et ict tat ete $1.56%: to % high- &s eg No 1 were did well le but i a little in 1955 t Ample be 5 to % high December { oa Parley, ens 1.35 % lower are supplies higher ts M% [Sse Et tant Soe motors , and than coming beans Dasaehie $8 hg bree root Bo ft 190-1 % Soni bee — » wtitition, also higher The sources this year forecast fer peel po ig 138-1.80 60-1 No 110-00 doe. bebe ccna imines olls, rubbers, no meaty hake aa en, butter Include beet, the vente, a und to 1 higher. rr 188. Sora cale and ted siaseed coat cery ny ote ee But oven | mak ond ot Senator or 198 ba. 08 potatoes, ie nips, ; _ apecial include corner even potatoes Sh Re eS pounde to 2 1.80 ba. Redishes 4 380. Curtiss - W elevisions chemi- processi service gro- receive though the rt i leased $14.65 higher gate Be faite ek a coon en spenad a a receive a. smal bss “ay | Ma While Yester for , sagas, Ho. No 1m | 13%. ,000 sha like- 8 food A Grain Pri om pepe It was up i; it say there dollar of the con- y Attend Session , : Prices Ke 1.0.18 bu agua aauaah, etter active ee. “ a tha isn’t mu the experts WASHING wun ae T0350 ie bu; egeseh, . issue er t market much thy w TON crain , Nev. GRAIN ye pad bskt mg Among ° : most if large’ ing costs kelihood while Ti out of Sen Dec 6 (AP) 3S fos bene: tu Turnip Ho .| wore other ly beca will Thanksgi the Say ogl val = Cyanine sastvce as craps topped to: mere, Amercan Telephone 8 . ie uae eee go down, | nat ving Day for May ie in bage, Wo f. 128-t ‘a tae 0 Esti to take ileal is anes disclosure from. . — et ide Mar cuasveu U00¥ 190-138 bu; 1.25-1.75 : Ot 3,500 up % ing 175, U. 8. 2,500 IS l eiiian nan are os cuts is | that Mi Hospital from Beth a istenst Soe yo! 133% income vo eat Es oy Steel 1,200 4, - 8. Steel | | the persons t about have rthy’ today Dec .... ein “bo : i mer No Ne 1, ae Carbide 3, up % at Poon gpaoaee Sen process are em five improved. ailing roo | eet vee 1.56% Jan 38 bu. 150 tla ri ty 1, 1.00- New Nn ge up 1% Unica ator Pr | ucts trom of moving ployed in M enough may F Mar .. vt La oll anaes sor No, Serre rat ne toe be 00-1.80 be. changed Ceatral , at 84%, P Other oposes T | sumer. the fa food jonday Republican thes let the ee | aeaoe Hr ted alias -s a SS | Kale, No 1; | Aviation at 24%, 4,000 un : st ; Lands Joi hat ': ¢ padi - rh pied _* = on hand a % Sep. eed aaa ng bu Spinach, 2,500 : MARRIED—Singe: ". a . sb in ; Dec 188% Le eanre Ste ogi rs Wednesday up % PR gene | rovidi in U.S and the » the distri es agai debate sched- Mar pitt SS ¥e4 cme bg 73 “yy : at 44%. ; in ° -d. | al transporta the bu- | Pital w ainst him on “ vq |. CHIC. with 5 market w g A 1 involved processor oul censure Bie sccm BE |{CHIEAGO, Nev 3 ar tp guests —— ASHIN id Rach oerce ee July anaes eee rtd aed . oe he ments < rgpove 4 Arye bon ciated Pre a feature was higher atttended the the and I field evading w— . pects his — each ons M * y So. hos- aR A ORS for" Rusoets supple tou! OSs ined 0 cceas ot ni683 e Asso] ue talian Film Synace: and the ei, Mee | Se aturally ex: | mes Carthy went , vse AES tor Red a oll voor Bag Ama level for cents at $146 60 stocks ng ceremeny Les Star Pier wealth the mall shag Bascer Daa gens r | men eek for tre to the Dec .. “ a vue ne a 14, 1929 the average 30, highest . N . L Angeles Angeli Stat nations tish Co that ths Agricciine —o report atment hospital Loan idaho "Ruseeia 3. Pontiacs firm: , when ew . . Some es in: jo mmon- in expects ma ed t of Nite | Pontises, wasi 368-390, "° ace demand The all-time it stood since Oct in Br 709 | to aidi Spee: the U << of the to fice tie. bursitis a pli Po cathy Femi Secs eee eee” ck sales: occurred high for at $146.80. Joseph le peor aah aniren . major happen | bru wen @ cane ae a. a ened North fous Sept. 3 the a 80.) ard St Omans, - mmunist e ipproach”’ Ca commodi- ise caused as the 's of OWS geen ba: Col ee ae 199, when it eee of 226 W. Me X eee SS Me cca hese greeting hi So = : Det the martest it | thieves home salt Pontiac . intervi ld’s views jes. og ths in the ering j m at a Mil well-wisher e me ghee muus start was who been Police ane yes , given a year hold at next f table. ret waukee Ser a? on fede ote math seca i oma “i int medi je 80 a r Gederat-sate iw . th cash -~ e pe Washin ggestion ed the |° wil ttle may be eumaile te i a es 2,4 Sambo -state York through try and others ington tis weak | sprin slight! len tan. in special ne Brown: _ wa ove ai Aamiral Stocks an unlock bg geil ig in assi step in w official | Hogs—Pri . y small- | the censure session Beli rr rowns: avg 3; ove more Air oe. 4 siInt Thieve ed eens a isting As ith this that six mon ices for ja 10-da t charges = Won’ eve Se largo aioe ae A + grade *. ae ° a Int Nick .. $55 stole UM F jan econo country | low ths or at least the | on y rece ap- t OK nate | "re ae rade © ae oe tice tag SA int Pager | Ore nit hg ott gom Zoologi ca mics. | cas caren i ss rather than \ as NLRB Kammho ee a large 30" trade B Allied Btre:.. > ale olla 34.8 | th ane at i Guten Re ogist Beli toe wee re paige jearlier. A high levels tinue be-| F te in his than carry Counse iz | the y_ receipts 0° wta avg | Alum ec Se Soe ont i MoClellan, of. poten port Fr lieves Monda a new Harold Prices is moderat of a year First w . aaence WASHIN I for the holiday wer 30.083 Sicen see 72.6 Jones Mien. o08 according , of a| Enti om pean y that protall basen forecas e upturn | out of hi ord tha : some 10.008 cases. Aad .-ooe Tt ry 5 by Ar tire M coun w er t hi t M contaloty wurrennae oe ose Ly fm alnincss=- 187 Sones ek 3a /O™ DMS ed 1 Bemett St, ly False alaya| World we tres have reo are. pean tia: ater toe cary, Was a wean wh McCarthy wes ae ae aarti with some, larg today with th goed am Sano. a Kim. Clk 8 pried lee. A win- ANN ARBO! rticatly trom the ettects of vance Prices abn " Washington Peet me yesterday , Presi —_| unset pe ag igen Am Gas & as Seer et Lawrence — two armi R States ar effects later expect | ald on Pos telephoned Ped s nomi dent Overall sree.” Supplies ‘empie Am &@ Ei 2 Sor 11 St armies wn in te join ot in ed | that s t a is nammbols nee joqmeien! ewe mand we dicounted te = Rea “os ice © eo 233 that reperned re of 52 Bennett shed in Mal frogs ee orts that |. Seassen = i ee United “Petnne—tower wit to ad- j —— and tnd Time Her . AGO : to Beating. . 22. Glass. 21, Pon ; ay re fighti “ : program. . ve. rid had important ago att recMICADO, > Burren an cme is Lib Ment ‘ mA thieve home was tiac Poli Unive Heid sot siege my pos ther ex this wint hee 7 —e ing on seen 1 of t of bl oa "149, whe age ircumy Am Tob as lowe a) from a stole sacked Assoc y ot M y toda | bere ntages in would be : ted to rise prices that s to ecticut lations the National general pon lg A,B. is Ligeia. fae = A Lorillard"... se 3| The small bank only 90 by | Hart iate ichigan a a | taken b mic ap / ceandinnt-| Wheat according! are | that report Ae hospital Sor Board. Labor Re- eee B A 3028: em . Ppp prices Aa a = 316 Mare To a8 oe f in a b — ond weg, caratr of _ N logist. The by Mansel an j were es in y. | only ; spokes ught the about atl arya = sin : ae paar tase eit Bator 281! iva. Detrott , | told am Ann nein the Un re Comm Senate Foreign Rel peop it te hah tv gad yoni noee ae tee Kammholz by name m4; m: emanges: U8. te | Asa ur co oa Mes A : 343 | Biva., Detroi ot 197 a eo any nittee, said “sper hoe ductior and othe time. tor | “New ineals to show sa — at all ae ar Prom be today Lane arog ng hs ane —, 7 wi! that Peachey P wv. Grand reeves the redic —oclony kaik one-way aid would tions | ex this ‘ flac aia | ca iui. today, tisfactory ; ar by the s —— rties | St! Refin "130 . 728 rom his car the Police it is report Ang osig ow cca? and d domestic ar is Pro- | ethene word _ te Democra' or next Pou A Par eee 33.9 Muelle - 21.6 front of which spare tainly true, false. e would in prices use and ikely to | of the t M however. The t-controlied | per pou Y: tree Mg Murray ‘Cp Sa|_age 25 Pioneer St. poe ll ge het ah tig 8 aa tan es said, “to £0 Int far bet eae tant oak aie exports pepe cage enero was = orn, Nov. 36” AP galt & on... $y Rat Can it | pe ocse7 m. beat night Cae oe ny imowtedge . To the on ou ae a year ear continue attending, with ini of samareg te Ta SE Sot Sta et Hf nt at ee a = [ipl te | Bean Psce ‘ting’ o's CB carina |, Th spear ai % aoe ao — of A strats ‘ae ‘a ron gad a = omed “yt Noes te sale call Frogs not monwe , France .- urchi : no defini A eral Hartley or is- o 1 8 No. Beth ee g Net Lead . 41 distribution. free pick ing just » alth and il da nite i said counsel the t : an tae qual- a N s up because don the “ nat the ° s te w indica there without NLRB M 3. hal bo hens Boeing ~ : : we Ste | 50.5 . For your t go princi ions Com- B 80t when ition’”’ was witht cooling te Ken- ag Bh Sea% me): Ore? Bohn ‘Alum o WY Alr Bet - $85! Rummage charitable — rong 4 oe um | ® pal” s souid paar irthda oe => will be lee! is ee decide the — both wholesale retal ween Brit My. = Nia M Pe 3 fan Ch sale, —Adv. agente have the aoa Bri y to Sti McCarthy “ren net ean at ecute NLRB Turkeys: gee Re a fat de B My . 163 Nort & en urch, First one Mansfield . said. to Tl . #@ ti } re ° cto tat” bor pret “aie ee at aeons | SE ee mle, First Preabyer- cp Sec taf Se toe _Manatild sad be w ain’s Heart |“ maine improved.” ployer, eainst 0 practic a t steady Ne Calu Ml Res Be a: at if your , 0:30, janich | have a im oh mee ing the ald favor cough rt Viet ° unioa overs re- | Cam: an 25.4 Nwst A’ =e bail, friend's —Adv ’ t Uses United program ning Pp or em cHic Nigh! pd Obie trim 6 Ph. in _| they ay owerful million States cost one Brit Roemer a5 cmscano, mer. 9 taP> | Soo Ber BA Stree a3 PE S420, 0. A Mitchell a a edema years, a & 100 to ot Se amon biggest, diet | oie reported Bled —— ee, (AP) tare ay Atri mi aoe | Bt C. A Mitenen | ot ee a |) a Poses i tor affection ever displays | efurn to went age against have light hens or Das a. seus | oe, 2 By Pana ae Ait ” have fresh 1 —Adv eo were that two figure.” on the a reserved seen in| SA Battali vened Sige en one ae Te heavy ‘hens 1 r- | Celanese 3 Param Pict a. ein fa TE Fb rr odnor ling tn mies | sional 9 eld, a recognized nee dae == hae S0th army aid teen lon special when, ys 13-38: due 33; capone fore 33 Cort-tecg | - —— “4 Ay Bo The of ie be a ee pecialist ; His health y. office today Nam aon ta year — Nore 8 (over hy Maes 5 young ‘om 7 | a ie ne we te 2 Witsen Local ‘ = obeet § added pradaend bodies. wail does not t nearing dr on — betel drunk | hav who rg agi eral Demecratic apps = vane oe) tur- | Cnr Malay ty ee 658 U —Adv.| STOuP the they approve believe “= © houses in pubs | all ag leave ond 13 counsel, of the farmer d0cks | op “toe” ey | 2 AW. Saas cae were gram an Congress | of Parl Britai bs | talion ly rejoined Sunday gr in S — Li 8. pe . -- Pnilp er" =. p. m. 71% F Bunda, 8 o. wa, and — one parepeen ved sae aid of baa t will The | The ven ang. r bat ply Bott, ex- DE estock Climan Mo” cae Pail Pes eee 6 wrence -_ Prof. other “A, Marshall the po pro-| There e* e te. join Mountain . who > © d privately CIO officials 128. Be IT, Nov Sevmanecs a p24 Pit Pate Hl saan ec. Sal —Aa sameness pie sai “would mien ira deceees be gif political ghvane ds dis off into the oo ile, they | Satter a ik "ehotee A eS ee en se ay and Sat sere ot the same apc etal in ‘at ton pond Hi Sate aoe in ha Job _becay to have fair, | sows unt ake Part or ® | Goncum Pe. —. i oe ei Ppl ~ as proba ted. Col species too much.” pounds something leaves Ay ogee and Premier ve been use his him in| 7 ae ae ae 190-330 te Sta | Som Perro nt as — Bie | Lions rummag Adv. | ~ dhe per or, he ; spent . This like ag N Acting ment side mostly on law clients miedo is ae Ide po a BE pr A aig 1126 Re . =" Relief pe pe Bale te the "| that ttoo difference said, ranc ney See eee a mil- They s guyen Van Vv Chief ms side. ‘And Democratic ene wot coe ren 200 = em; Gree ‘tu. 274 Bt doe a 8.1238 names Peer e poser omer wet goad bree now cas lalate u want cali taae tic sena | steers sales eo Dis C et oe St Reg Lead. = 4-3680 for FE Jy dmg oe | of = cepont were Seoewone Churc to the pro ge H hater orn resumed appoin they - | Sredes fy geies commercial et ~~ Sle © ong .. 13.7 Bee = 3 or deli pickup or MI ber —— ved, hill Sir of | they a decision their tment hearings would | <2! absent: : @ } a teady Dow Aire . ie > AL '3 ver to of your dwest dead. He that fund O Birthda Win There should by ing out —thus on the | ters. bulk pg y wanes a good | O8 —— lat gnell RR... 79.2 492 8. rummage if they said the were frogs | om ® will ¢ guess y Presenta let pot a possi be discipl: Vy mf ane apparently ru Sieh enamers 30 0 ct et BS a By ear mi Santa rummage have been. imma —y ‘ae nsation © berate money ts sini witha reprimand, willbe ; i = ool gc chair O.... . 0 } pacer See ce eee peed pe wi bes atte &! to Be Claus Visi ge une to mt, would Wants U Pg human dented ry — sension revolved | norninati “ choice dition; high 14.00: | =™ Mus 3 rks W Ss . ugges' own . re the nist fund. St differenc round nominatio up “c Sed chot ing, quality ena aap al a Sperry Wesees 7 to Delayed Mtn in hee dona the Use of Fi S. to Pay fo da of 8 festivities oto sand _ diasidents Nguyen Van with viewed mate informants steady; bd tent eu = and Seas oo st oe Ott cal $13 T $100 Fi Aarti by ad oe Atomi ive Patents aa i ¢ he un of state The busy descr listening Page Diem’ Hinh. Seentions” oid the plet inter- So0e: an i. Market -g Paird Mor... oo ou 4 aa” mel Two1 inde sible swampy were e an a ic Energy Fi in the a : loves birth- ibed as fal what mad side further 5 said tie some choice ae mostly Firestenne 23 Btd Ol Rd. 1084 | Over 2-year-ol TS too tha tat. ‘*’ ’ of WASH y Field . Parlia open- ais: leans army 1 complicate hy nage — age Ping 7. ~ tambo “19.00. en tre. a8 —— ast to authori d boys, w wement _ there w It is no spain INGTON The usual = State : “ale The Whit beca’ is ‘omits E oan er Gen Flee ++ 18 Sun oe ound in jon _ who turned poisoned frogs was am [raat Commi (—The will start ly late- Industri ther Sen. Do a « CacSia oot mat | Gem eee, =: ‘s Gun Oaths Be have tow anteand sacee naw ato tet “away trom the eammarem and Atomic | “it mone dealt wren GRAN strialist Di a ee ee notified merit | Gen Mote Srl te Sr Sag Bi peg wait Aer mai use, Cre * om the (re cimaah us saci a special cup of van | Cartons, 58.» Dies coat Ri (‘DM cmc cmicaGo on we Tre ort 2s ++ #23) tiae collect ian ware we will | battle, ™ he e impres cumpeneat States has acid te Soeaa’ ott celebration po IDS w#— ate ee ee ote ied | 14°000. fairy ‘net LIVESTOCK Gen Ry Sig... 303 Temas) Co “gag | tine Police ing the mon months | cone | ee te he ee to | Screwed See. Oe Ine., and F caaliah at Dan degree ing it t appoint-. *** asaee’S cov. 28 (AP)— Ba = Eo TS rd er said today. Pon- 0 ~ a ae eed cgay Sagi eo al hae ot Down, emabden wena me Siledigrd ed ro sows Mpg Sa igen Bar a3 wy St ot 3 Lina Warren unty Deaths ‘An AE fasion. Sealing with be only pe tent to Chur fl os Lena piper pg Mae far considered tors GP in an compare cichers: “an Gi re 383 w a F EC spok with | 2. y presen wort a a legislative-executive os breadd me ie Soe on wt Goebel Trea w Ar BY Nort Ses | the spokes ich | OY, Someone — y heart a nicl cases No “s ates fg = with Weanes Cree! oo" = Twent mer Bt found the of _" and W und rs. Charles A. poe first time esman said | Old A wri I can fel pa h Hospital night at at- Pntaly days etiquette of +e eS — pork Gand reat - “a Underea 7" me|tea Oct ge og cg Dr ——— A. — airy a grin sacha 4 foreign this is | ‘Age Pensioner. himself pil sell wor tg hy S. : bef a : ‘ on a! h U ar e i. } ps Ca { Adams, last Aug. Congress ad- 10.80: 8: ste ae | Se No RS “te Unit Air at jed police. and rim bin fot ate Urences) spray to settle the time, | claim. It er | Said the Pri of the b , — Copenhagen, Sephened imate sain up te ian: choice, $030 “sca | Quit Ou cen gg ellie pay not | at Mars w. @ former, residen 89, the clair ti by the gift, was veel? Tp | Holland . $3 US — . were custodian with d 1 in M Hi .m, today Ceeaniiaamtin’ was as an ¢ it to be | FREMON : ; te -W, and 1; | Hom r.. a1 U8 ud 16 given and the ied W cLeish ome a . take: ye opener former NT commit oe th — ime ei 8 Bek Ba eens am, "Sit ame. th acy mt Tae Num arl M Ste ata soca es som aera ial tose Foreign Indust Ray 02 wv huge. Cl peryte hey peaetve the $80 man and ¢ are th fine | Petras appticatt re coms anxR . Products ic a Gone on the NEW Exchan Inland Ray .. or 6Yous - 192 claimed in the $100 Alfred Gordon ree sor ; nt appli ition w energy | - e U Co. allow Smith ail ea ee ge Ineptr 80.4 ‘ 4 they it, event Land ot Martet Seren on plications datir based at rl market reseai has at Gerber at enough ti said this dollars, rates on. p> Interiak * 03 Gnie 8 were told, the bo no daughters of Rarnlingi x The dating b on ife cultent research been able by tyrterrety er oe aut io: ce (AP) Int Harv "My Fee ++: 38] | Howeve ye claim Midland . Mrs. Vi troit; rai cat > earliest ack to 0 Me . ment by the par pet cpeti 2 request an piqued a 3 w dollar “in 8 * Britain = . 364 & Ten os this week , the boys Ypsilanti Mrs, Al cor Longfie! mel soa was f of these ft \ LONDON morial le - Mr. seal heyy com Kammbhol unreason- US cents, Bg Bs wnwvere oo Red :@ {the sera Mba were not Saginaw. rill aap atin tee oe led by Dr. J wll. heen ne N (The ave for saat WAaine Gen tant tz off 1 Grea te, off tw open get ee AVERA < police ified L . Walte rson _ Lew - Jans v r. Je L be father body Dec Oslo eichelt to is re én 4 of t Brt 3 ™m tod ae ars «| that signed deranar| ey Two rT of | K von an F en di of y of K 5 . N will Cuneo bor his la ported rel Soeas eee b cent Gi (pound cont ~~ ial alae and th mistake by an offi and Winder snere, tee 3 ain owarski Halban rig tn gh a ——_—_ tway, by next for a w practi uc- | 1/16 t"privain 6 a ae wl $2.79 | wet 20 by The edt the had — one . Mrs. lar Ww French were | , nuclear and Ce t plot i reburi sm. has i oT air tty month be recess ce in tures t's cent: day he of — 30 | Noon change Indust 18 is ateanery made son, of brother, Daw il- | int atomic eading fi scien- metery At a in a dif anal and di = Ee Te CN that the pointment (frane) 1. oft he Brita! door oe nti Prev Pri +7 Rails Ut 60 3» six vive Kippen > Arthu: — st in devel gures in ed for ab in s Highg vi Comber at office taxes soe firm of the eet, eat ro a ged 20 oe days. months wai . r Ander- turned the opme' a ger si ghga <2 iE 1084 COUNTY Senate 5 a da da ut ock ting Ont nt. erect la te te 1955 { u him. possibil ae | cent; y fu- | Mi Haga aaa ne ¢ .| Further instea , al over patent The ed rge was PR gt Ay Bony may never | ma ged. ’ a ot “ty Beigiu onth er 004 11 0 663 aa Te d of , so sur- to the s has ir| The short! memo need- Piven thout tok cee and con- rk) 23.86, ( of «a Ld Soma: Year ago... -- 197.2 a +t y- e638 1468 | found , since Mrs. The e Comm: been cot y. rial to wart om Mh ogy January De- Auto (lira) “unchanged, Ro » “Der mat: | pee niet. hae ool 623 ive | have on privat the mone SOUTH Newton Jones the AEC spoke . ariat darkness = | 1986 to, avoid ay ag . M tugal Fras of _—o al 5 Hem : he | 1983 low iegnee BOR. 80.8 me iss 3 | etor to be ret e propert y was Mrs. oe _ applica . Secen moved ji _All vier Mae = be (krona oP a cent; 1983 high. .! 143 111.4 1 108.7. who urned y, it wi i on : at a tions said Tuesday in the ary . ) 3 ‘unchanged : . w Se l of rs oe aa So, unchanged. 8 WE acess ies one ee hee will decide to the in|‘ was (Libbie rvice ater were that oil . workin by fi pan gy nm enemaneed: OU : =. tse 1088 in propri- | ‘he, Phi held Sm for | °*Plana date, abandoned home lam gb five in a nged; Sweden 30.3 ; oe ute : the f -{ Philli at 1 ith) J tion , but of Ps. y the be ’ rome) 14.80, Whenegts Gun DETROIT 725 803 oes The ate of the | Purial rig rs el on tod ones, |, The ®PP why th aed fer, fice, in oka cal the eecm r 53 T ed: Brasil a anchaneed | [Rerettower STOCKS aad Nertend on mothers, ghee wee I Home, with agency w — by the rnc at eee ying the the bam Mn otal an ake satine (free) tower & Weeks and Mrs Roary in, Con with | /a0ont as filed a Palle take pla et ae telekl § mar Reet: Moog ‘oa o wn 12 eS 7 — ak ae Asay urviving “mi emetery. | **% a Compensation pe French bodies re rasa at night reburial . Kong dalle im Gery-anenigan pe — ere Map Rye wens robe ther J des her "| such ai up by rei Board =C's | gr: ies of Ma new site . Also re- | Fi rita, un- | Midwe Seiten’: 1s g4| Place walting told of : ry. sult od Davie SS eee rhe to baer shies Hiniry Longe were the inally ~ | Midwes' we e, HY 154 K period the six- of Davi cla our mon law handle ena De airy Lon Jenny: hi finan ‘Says Tonk Bere o Hur Steet | xeEc0 HARBOR scam aner which Aang a Be Sys ay ve Hel . “ke. ee oe a principl HARBOR—Serv The y woul soatinas, the Marx me? mere a r of jo sale: bid ond ssi + te ' bebe cer the thi Arthur J id be ao pre- | G n ded tare . ant. BOSTON wwi arn ie were honest thing.” |W ames ciples French | ie wae in in Seiber (UP) Bills ea 3 L,| money jemi “The ha low ae oe vice for sate | armies oe | His most 1883 at exile from ot New — It took Dyed — over oe ee turda . will 59, of 27 by hewitt oe ee ee woman his thanks for a 37 years ifering Stor n Trap poopie em eo teat thel perry Mout F Co 3. Godhardt in the see Oh ated Pag Bl aia oo Kap- In pape sor = Seber! MATTYD e Emplo the — praleed the he thon, po-| uke = given Large United States. [ore ae Memorial aay all World War him a| Mattydale ALE. N. Y ye Also : honesty ot | sday. Cemetery in S Forei . | over he’ monument oO of | ra at me en the caught (UP) — A| hardware ~ Ba oys ‘Hotel Manager Nc me tudying eae Group Pgures | black arctay be erected Mass. hoger ems 5 y wen te een cite of store, ee a na TROY enssa on Pedi mf Gromsiuct” nt of W by a Halpen came off atic by the < san sold he the Py onorgg RA ger Named iden sora (UP)—A loer | the base. with on France well the the — being natore —— 4 ond between pale rhaadlctnsr poles ym IDS (UP) 4 incr Polytechnic Iti poy hemes Christmas T y to contact Met ssl tea aoe eos etna ane aia who will eave Dec, 3 mel poaet De, ign count |_ The nine y Cub Pa | un- and a box to him ve M ea by ries ick This Mrs bills sprinkled of spring N manager Dec lor- Dr 193 are | reee™ dens ih ye Stee bate A few — == Names Pe Cleveland whvs Shae pater A.W (ne on “ Pack fered < reached ticed hours ° MID! Peterso er heen Sage Seanad . Waite, Jr meeting at their Adventures 51 tered he ery th el ing, cera) ao anaes _—* Peon LAND n manager of came bere fom |e and and South : cting at Doelon Scho. ce Mrs. though of- and (2) parece inl = § assist *—Dr the Hot assist pane gee mie Amert night Haywood et hn one was president ant to the F.C | a o ant | 19 Co students, nounced Lester Law were on it blawe renaing worinkd a ced od lyre Pron 4 > Ni - . 4 the meeting chool Dec. . ? ee + -FOUR | f A | sh H E y P y INDEX D PONTIAC PR | ESS ro path Notices ~~" 88. FRIDAY, N ENN ew WwW » 4 \ r CL via 18. NOVEMBER ee ete anted M. OV E) . A in A Soe Mal us SS 3720 ~ LFIC West Bloo Nor 24. 1954 an 6 ER s ATIONS - «* mioomfeld Wood Ang BARE} R - ____Ne 26. 193 ANNOUNC NS | tha teat husband of Mrs rive.) MAC "HUS a e e Tr ow fone cet ate a S| oad S BAKE a of Tha ° — ae aa] ale gee apie, Bt RY Building Servi In nks held r runeral se cae of B DRIVERS. OM rmingt mms Memor ehde D. a om y, Nov rvice wi red x rks old uust B = GENER lam seveeee FT] sevis - from ember Nl be _Cab rchard aa OVE Flow 1 Tom Puneral the 29th DR —— Ls rel R T brick L BUILDING 1 WE ee secon ment Malone Home Dewitt i IVE: WITH 1 me Kee AR - Pe OEE racascssesviestiee 2 nt at of wit c cleane ITH _ eego a end EP ~~ y | Fu ‘< Arr Otta fictat hb Re r TR _ an al | neral D oueese ee De angemen wa Pa ing v _ Press 5 route UCK FOR | N tile ment R, |OEW “ i st vis ts tiger eel | Box R work ER Cem scious _.. Slenicheaa ne by ‘the Dewitt c ges Reply Pontiac CU wort. VE| FE RAL MASSQOE. 21A itery' Lats as. dacs tICKSON. ao Home ree (cet ERIENCED ‘ontiac | TIV Mg _PE 213 ends EVEN Wanted . (is. ... dt ‘Recue Maree VEMBER OENE eet METAL C fa to Rent EMPLOYMENT I s inetaee a 4 19 RAL F ast W FINISH. | R oer iFic 8 aly. 1COU. 29 YMEN see a ee ae stiaw ‘eaek at coe son HM.) : oe siding. Special WED P “ 1EN sha b Be = H ta AIRING nes 24 72_Eim ish oe fetes ae Bee UATE] RET ga ere os| _ Tete erema_unsszar| OM) Dab WITH 7 MO | nt Ne u ar fai Bertha | . eileen |Help W 3 Male Joe Doyle Jr leas | ‘are | — — AILI AST EEO. rantecd. FE Telev 5 4-288) unf y desire 5 s. fa > Wake wectble: cone 6 Fun son, Mrs ., we rng = T G Pa . oo, aw ___ Television Sisvite R | house. Cl room - elp We ma . ardas rvi i J & scutes tes . o p Wanted le... 7 drawi * November” 7 M4 Rauducn ay! setmaies Out gy RA rvice 22 sonable re se in. patted ieee + apse oday! — rlacatare sone a on oo wi . ons §| officiating Rev hardt Pur m Devartment 8 tt 7 SNYD & Son. guaranteed DAY a. E. SERV. erenc nt care. | Work Seer Sie a Park «interment i | Tarte toed - re Wee wid 5-0 « ing DER FLOOR LAYING, vo 7 a es. FE 8-1215. ef- - he oe y mete a ulle y 8A t ae ae rede civ = ish 5-1206, RENT Work ed Male -9 a ge Msn ‘tg gg ide LARIE i: ie eS Display Ba cute | WE SPECIAL ane Suikawts FE 5-8390 Hs E ,| m D | ¢ le pla a 1 _ 0, P we a Warmed Female cous. 10) FRE eee arate an between 33-4 AS youre eater ecg "g wactt ne DL ve OARANTERO_3V" CEPAIR-ARY Page wet Ren SERVICE SERV male REEGARD. 5 N rego Har- Intorectin 45 years py al reene:” recnees powerte riestimates EM 3-4878. EMEN’ —SOHOME SERVICE CALEB Aha eal Prorae a ur B rote 1] beloved Rone Pies -| Should ag a vesetinnd ne 1 laa Buildin mM ere HOME & oo 6o fords ualified tenact uilding Se s “RED | M Free usband of Rd * 1954, others “ae obi — sor wl the year train A Bullding Supplies 12A ix i - td ' a ait B rvice | Pte nw dare’ aeatrie si aa weal country A bl iy ing prog RE YOU pplies 12 MI7 i A ENCY. PE else the OSER’S uilding Supplies ..... 12! Tom She a teat ae gg «meet the public | to Promotic conterence vo Reliable fir I gy Bea Aje 5 ITCHELL'S T Ls T Wtd. Con ai ali famed WIDOW Bu : — see's a and P sese as will bed Ane Bp! a va t riment font prog rat le firm LIVE a ARO eee , diaplays veer Ed AT 91—M sneas Gevvions ......... A! beral Charles ce corte Pound iwerk iter to dena mgt wstistant naee| .~r ioterea ‘inance ome? m| Typewsie Vv reas tracts, Mtgs. 32 scroll ndw Mrs. M Bookkee . | weak a ee and IN P Secumaiion memenr is 3 Bu ere, PE 4 1008 A er gn |°w 0 "ve official sent ard M Marian N ping & Taxes “... 13) sgt Le Ahk 27 « be bh Pu To ERSO Pas aes siete + Nid ee shine ay o baie Serv ov LAND ; s of her ji MacDow MacDr Chi Tax aR ment — Pa t 10 0 eld Sat N rial ff vou ot = << 21e88 3 Serv = veewewees ice 22 _OR + we Ig ving retreat Peterpor n Los An ell, lau ywell wid ropodist xes | Recitat. n Mt ul Chur m. at Bt. red 7 ine are rex eet ic Mitchell aes 2A Dix cTs. : les ‘ , > s Feead@] the ton Pong 2 . d TI Dreseatly in A& a d Soe 5% ie Hw lee ti named ough, N geles ghs hear dow of F ; ces ay of the in rial fore 101 | ly ~ es (13 R h y prihee fr perpetuatios oa on bee ith etniey be ot Feet Scalise 5 See ae wer culation Dept 2 pears, fol Se Gene os anaes ~ or, cae MORTGAGES, a to w uation nusbar MacDowe jay by cee cin de eile race-8 will He Cha pm a ie Lo lept aeaauaien: cone an aur Means r tins NG 7 — to BURMA To work of th id, is ell C y by cit sina de Vellctae 154) HER mith in pel t ntiac I? in f tes a equired equiv MakET OF PS field Expe too ron trom a Wild in isol e cok operat olony y Fur g & Tailori ; RINGTO Puneral Hor he Mr Pre —— eae AB cachrsy eh alent veoairal ta OF ee Belg the : w Ad ‘work BD. = tage. N othe Rose,”’ ‘a lated w my wher ed. S , an artists’ rniture orin | 94. K NN Hom the aL rsonnel Sheed ed to term atc by FOUNT ~__ Uphotateri Sup Eau CI ~ other works. . st ana cabins. artists whe has Pokal Garden P Refinishing B16) tos, dear sete OVEMRER — “¥ office, sth Noor. poly Ottice store. Gener ames ae U wae ES : “< s ~ - nd r ° a m L — saieaall Se stant tere iain oe civics Mis Rove ch aid WAIT APPLTAN repel Printing & onan, sap ns 23 $ et re. sae. awmaker’ np Te Tax Service... 16B) November # Raith Pick? dear | . P ITES w- TANCE | ons. 5 beadie, “FE 6 ~ Un ted er as ed Laund rvic the Pal hel Pur servic E SE M iM. FE 5- MATERI im Cuts Off a 32nd Will and many I ry Servic @ isce.-1f] Dr age ig ne eal mitaraay, iF and. ant she = akes ERVICE are EOR, y mn OP r ; aA e ‘ert. | ; member of scarp oe Sta- | Health oe the All his resigna- in Ue Decorating 19) “Seabee are bobbies “aff rienced ganas | CARPENTR uted Male 10 CEMENT tsi ts Pree estimate.” csteR| 17 FE4 Realtor wills before ——— Se tive tod PePEIHOES ni County hotos & Acce ating 20. aren nee 82 is Creavent Lak eae ge BLocK tle @ specialty carne a cen re . aut 2-1631 Lest TEx |_1704 S T oe The death e 2 ht will be y Physi ssOri we 20) bur ur Salis Solna ea a) Gee Loge 3 cheri| aoe aan oe Geer craic be KINDS awn ot & F : To Mie Mtn‘ | 32nd last - effec ysio-Th - aoe Gnas bury W ecathar’ of jae time ie vine cn cE pe em 5-8054 lw ee OTOR LADY’ ound el aph Rd fortune will left August. | _ S€< c- oe a1) ena a Geerne Doni er of (SA — strict con MENT 3 AND CEM rewind cEnvi ADY'S BR ~ 24 poe ae hi Secret Televisi Py : and \ atone, Du m Salt LESM ae on ta Poe: any k PINIS ENT| PLUMB ing 2 cE R : OWN BI AR ts contrac OsT FO! Hut to a friend, s $112,000, C wat wasn Geoen * ond Mra. W oo oe s.| stor AN * Bon |CA ind oft HER 1 oe ino se Sot. rie BI 2 is the “binds rade R YO chinson. Mi ongress ng {ec Serv ... 21A| N vice © item wecan's Mrs.| be m wind FOR — RPEN work 1 DES! m AND Pike to MP LFOLD a ae Part UR ingwood Justice om Emily | °™ S was mn or ~=member Typewri BU November 2 coe wala — _ Bite ma ue wna SOM TER, REPAI FE SiRES - Rad no WEATIN se 03 Bete wal’ Bho tl PE 20 43 Ww ——— — it was “i Coll. incon until er reqlived by f of ' Upholst ler Service 2 22| eee. rid) Saturday. Excell . commlaion const =e Bocce ; AND AL Elec. — § be FOUND: ——, o& ove and "papers WE _ “ne dow and petition by egal. He | ~ y fed ering os... oo,q| mente avon Ce ie xcellent op ones p22) ee ME 2g 24 br ewer urea. 8t.-Call” 1 THOEs mon-|At ou 00) son Shaw’ uy teres spt Michiean remap paaal young pportu — work rR F see Weatneriy charge: servic s Cle LosT — FE ER CA seas dispps ) 31 binding. to make w Pol PADD - a 23 rane Mr ‘Se Kirk pycrtenl elohit man nity for maf remodeling. cabl __ extra : hemieaty res aned | {sees WHIT xi a clients. peed Aho oper il No. ocK Los | SP eral ho Salisbu kby Pu mge-| f othing to | _5-576T is Wor . err gman Roto * y Baroy no __1-6608 “Purzy" E 8AM ASK cont m contracts” new © t & Found re ae a rye ‘at the er pe busine Pre. . t puaracteed. FE -Re Sewe at 20| Om sag cence #22. Ol = eS ae out Appoi H ws 5 Anna VEM =e = arrie a » | . : FE on & “Duk SLACK CH _ . OL -To Se AN sell. nted San ta lobbies Se 24 cer beloved — M4 Jame 25 1954 essential d man. but c real ENT : SE Sineraae Cleaners Fy a BO Pe ll-To Insure roger w sansdaniia d ' Notices & P pees - al Burwell. ae dona Kelley 8 =i N. Sagi Huddick’ 4 driveways. wr ORK Jinks, WER CLEA’ in ant, OF WEDDIN Keeedhonand WE tL, TES _ a e cose @ ne ear er of W pen- RE — iaw s, 2 abo: 8. sid ment Sund . = . w y IT Allegan John Reynolds, | = = 1 wa s . | foie Yn es mother of Mrs zAL EST 3\sov ai w 70702 al Be Ede FXPERT TREE TRI EANING —_—_ bot mye flee tion NTED seo 25 t rs M A 2 02 m TR Pre Com 8 Count saaee ric El rs Mrs.| Bow oppo T 1 Ww afte: eh oval EE Fr = an | Sf m WwW maarieye Vere gg . solo she ye E SAL ae eee r tla — TRIMM E ¢2012. Lost: BEI a ee for five ta @ A td. Chil ae tn ‘ne peas Mrs. — vie tl od SALESMER CARPENTER WO 54 ie =a if _ for pointed years, has ee , ildren Elja ro Marry Whine oyce Gate on ak an a at tn oe _Part NTER Fe 2-381 TIME} but RA ~ na) fee heed 1 STOLEN REALTY the District chief sanit |& @ | Wid. How to Board will Moat Bg cine dear sister yes con ae afraid < ahenea list. | CAl ae B woas 2este one | oll ISING A oa} wr s and wate we FE- COOPERATIVE | No. terian| 2 a D> | . sehold ...38) 2 cee nd 5 Pde Aion one Cal — oe ea wale RPENTR ly. OR ¥ ANTED. — ND FOOoTI pete er ag 1075 Cpr ERATIVE EALTORS 3 Health D | z o wu Wtd. Mi Goods - eee cae Monday . == Pe wise a ge Din _ NTRY. CABIN 2276 - on tanks, end Nos Datisbure oe sonnet 1 Fags _ MEMBERS New Elemen —— | Money llaneous ved] Bere officia at Bethany Baptist Goop ste “for points over. Beat fined Rema rs. roa. mo Ome oa ere on cee ly evseres —r oa Conrh “PES tary 6c BIDS | R oo = w is eid Mt tating Fred R ptist LAYOUT tment. CARP Remodeling s at| ot fon me CIRCULA set: FAR y. mm, mee arart plan to CONTRAC 2-0263 ecnest Dunriet of. oe om | = | r | Wanted anted v2.28) Brower Fh tate. a ae ve after 500" M eo | ‘modeling & ‘sidin ‘= me wort ateones aed wouLD Sens ror nb of funds Sa i tee eee er s . —_— § of dy yey = > - to Rent veces DRA} wt" "Funeral Pg lll aed MUlberty S18 PRO- |¢ FE tors. we _Beeiag Ave. punranteed OULD woMa teilliaalles —— pour seauin ade an sleuag ara | * schigee of Pon = — | Share Li ore oa sane eee Parmer- Pcs ry wae call ARPENTER. DM. Ww re |‘ting TO - water. rE beast Press W wo . ae a bie discounts, of the Education tiae © - | wy ving Quart PACA. WARD s_soken Ps — = il 5 rene poo Col ex : 2 eY CU right _ting and | CLEAR. ” 1313| Mone I beg Beg 0 CALLED nL CAMERON i —— — Simi frome one, mee pontine, Michi- » g ine Tranpectelion’ “o SOVEMUER church Product ‘cngineer BoE GRAD |“ varies Swett, ¢ CLASS AL o- trtenent heer eet about green | rice H. CLAR the New and bids for Michi - io eae eee 30 sex a. ee as 25. 1954. DC nen, con r AD COLORED | ett, ca) ra ’s! TER-| pL 5-0028. EM 33112 Fascomnccr agi iiMED Huron posed street Elemen: masonry + one aime ee o a 7 ‘td. — ed — ent gg a an col a |. an up pots or ° MAN W ta TaTR ine TERINO 2 H mMy| aod IATE C. nape self Bette Busing = Teg M = @ Wanted acts, Migs. am Miles. “war mane Gea stock Clerk. ee en be Sahoo a ae on no ants PART een Norn ties ieee ies & Supplies K contract aH FoR YOUR 8, r : +2892 as ‘ = gartens, boiler ine i cons The | ARIVA — Real Est cere d+ sven ey sal Wee Driver ~ json sate up| 3 ET MAKER A Dorter TCH WORK a ARTISTS: SUPPL 244208 L. Temp! uty te your which will room an of eight | gre RENT ate. and pod o gg core. or $216 $ E a3 as 8 ND CARPEN- _ 4-351 Work LATHING 1. num picture TEs: a Orchard pleton R San ca nae Soe oa SAN eu hata rum | ee ee ae Rt et ences rime x fase rama praren aan) tant ere 2 sy ee a, BH space —— mober . 1954 terry B. Hudson: dea ~* ag PA Male nig Ee = Je pt by hints : 0863 ome tee aoe | tor = ome et Anan, tdi Radnor Panera se ‘eat Soter | SAV oye Plot weet | Pact wets noe ripe all D - ahiead Ea re ae the rink We're Kidd received The the . U tee f tng and IT rc __*170 unterested mode man- NEW to STOSE -; Any gt ing? til 3:00 | Buperintenden by and aa | certo City of Zone No ee baer Ren nfurni 7 th. r gee Virgil CH uron. Ex rosa acenae oun AND KE. c FE ven g? « shed x e will X : . PE T Bu: ND ole ag Te you amount =? wea EST t of } he ay Pp. me — ES tiac Ordinance.” known tt Houses Ml Heme ne Parmer-Sacy Peng GENER {AN.-A eral ou D wou apels rete Bg MAINTING a' | “tiaity. PE 88 g 16A be seep toe apt SoSours, keust casi, ee ee Pay ee. A no on the le Lake eesasesees Dire nD ive s OMA! PRR POTAPP 34763 AND in -—— AoA : a pan ta ee —— = | etty; thas Sf oust oe “tinal ‘paseage For Property ad tors xs) oe can a MAN FOR 5, POTAPPT Pree est. oi 78 ttl Vo A SPE RECORDER Gy: thee ing room soft water home has waa et ss eee ee = ey A al Lake Property|.) —e wa ecto eae ws ees aia eho Te a Farenat “"| S St sien | _ of a o bene | ont pon ~ Bh a eaien ae aon NEXT Bun 1 Want Cars ha ae be kad a 3807 W. —6 B ed : rok HO inti or . ry MAILAHN F Used a | APPLY naeatnaae Free ing, V. re : ag a or Sale U icks SEA PERSONNEL Ht cael ashin + ioe LF ainda i SARS. ROEBUCK Reavonabie CA sed Cars eweancee & co CK IN x : ’ preerre | be . Begins . 3 * ° . ‘ ‘ © ED 7 Ww. M. ST TN. sagioes oa hm ALL . tio. tain HE : 3 Classif LP. ty, sell, ids! To ~ ' ° a ) . THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 Rent “Houses Unturn, 36 SLICE OF ‘HAM | For Sale Houses 43° ee ew te | For Sale Houses 43, For Sale Houses 43 WEST SIDE. —— FOR YOUR EQUIT é jet WE 88 : 7 IN 48 HOU S eres cares tao" Pull prce {or this large 4 bedroom Cherny awe awo — J eeeme. owes * pa. EE “4 ym WRIGHT, Realtor slectne stove roe a ‘st rittet, Crescent Lane. $1300 down. Aner 6 cl FE sym ai tor, comleste. oy , | Wee room nome, Madera, van. : | OepOW ae nope, fe Me near heldwia, 918 09 down. yeome and'bele: 04008 Lan aews | PONTIAC REALTY. CO. TRE OR ee AN HOWEWa 11 Below PE be | | uxury Brick Rancher month includes ‘a.es and i> SFRIOUSLY | ome SEZ ving rope and. ain GUS 1019 M-19| We need listing, Let us sell or! Ph. Ortonville 132, Reverse Charges | ‘rede your home for you We 3 | have many good prospects in our be mi. ifice. — tte pee the haat EN iRREE & GREGG | 9 ROOMS—S1.150 DN. INCOME: ; Se “took “gona. bape ae | NEAR OXFORD | -Sgtt"ipctte feat Bass | reer, = : ‘tag aa “ . Beat gies clear. 81.715 down. * | —— ayives’ *vilags. i | | Only @ stone's throw from ell arrange ; wate wuss | BLAIS SaR | upper cepmarag IEEE SRR Str | x | Race "Puli pros “only eeebh tad recat FY) For Fruit Lovers! Lake Privileges | This ts a Whitlock bargain IRWI & ROSA, Big Yearly Income 4 : other fruit carpeted, Urine and dining Ares, I'dw. M. Stout, Realtor | N A | ana errig deemed, oar, me im) ol ee ee SE ag ws Tm NEM APA omnes | Rat vr tec Be Sylvan Tato, on $2,155 Down. FE S00 zaist | ca. wandestal basement, oil beet. itis i i | Attached dbl. « Peac : REAL 6 rooms ce the owner GATEWAYS to C5] OPPO ORTUNITY "Cau fos details. and @ 3 room apartment : | ' i sae HAPPINESS | LES _ HUMPHRIES. on 5 on terms — New home at Crescent | : . oy trede La | REALTOR FE 2-0474 EAST PIKE INCOME | S$"? Nee'bomes tn Poo | 43 N_ Telegraoh Open Evenings IVAN W NEAR EASTERN JR. wan | Hes Terms. 9660 at nn Co-Operative Real Estate Exchange SCHRAM See RIES _ : Enea a at) tee ow oo Bateman “ order in French!” | becepr Py epee te Ces eas | de Onl A. JOHNSON, Realtor FE 5- S01 orFE 5. 2564 I told you not to re | Sette." Ortered at Tee 180 81.008 oe tsa wi Fost cde. Only | FE 4-2533 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. WE HAVE BUYERS WAITING FOR K. acy Hempstead, Realtor Be nr Rea ce ET Po BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES R. J. VALUET, Realtor We Cokment Ave, "Exchange Heated. $70 month. Middleaged tars waren |éssit—wesiee PARTE ED. NORDMAN PE 10s | a am ed rs Re ¥ . ear WILL BUY List YOUR TAKE gq tae ee MCRINNEY lar a pr LISTINGS WANTED | ,& Sart st Cau Tums legecse ent comme Kam Fe +608) or OR ROY KNAUF, Realtor PORN OR WOT INSULATED 1 Mie _W_Muree __"_Y'E_3-741, |" bedroom nome, ute, oil heat & Rent Apts, Furnished 33) P*tt si Tas” die 1 ROOM Wis ITCHENETTS NEW 3 ROOM COMPLETELY | dertu @ . —- Ae modern, On line. : Ser eae ee _z ML Bae only, FE 5-440 A bath. shower, and a em hot water, gas eer . ing_women 26406 ° Ren Houses: t wfurn. 36 LARGE ROOMS PRIVATE EN- trance. Adults only. 13 Pinegrove re BEDROOM GAS AUTO HEAT room apt. private beth a ROOMS AND BATH. ADULTS | PE scene * fren ser drinkers. 447 Orchard see? © Ave. i SROOME AND BATH vals PLEAS : ctoer “ik FE a a 4 TeroRN Sante HOUSE 3 3 NG Modern. 8. cent cent Lake. Baby welcome. 5171 i after | . ee nore eff Auburn on T Dorris Rd TS ROOMS STORER HEAT AUTO | bot water ful} basement. 5181 | es TR — % MINUTE Grive to downtown s r month. Available Dec 13. eM | Dae gy OS we ee $75 mo. re- —=M siel o - orton Ave. FE 23-6771 ARM tleman. Rooms With Board 38 cage ane — — MEN Motor west #24 Markie. Convalescent Homes 38A arene "er eee et Lk Louise : Saent ogomie Sa be Crurnin service, Now taking bed patients FRIVITE ROOM FOR ELDEX: : Pi as im convalescent home. Hotel Rooms 39 eee ee y day or wk. aw oe Fe 2-4206 HOTEL AUBURIN Room HOTEL ROOSEVELT If vou are or a home. coeeion sty 5 oe se and hote! WEEKLY RATES $12 and up ROOMS WITH TV r= 5-126. _ Rent Houses Furnished 3s) Fork For Rent Miscellaneous 42) ite | | 138 8, PADDOCK ABOVE PRANKS Dry Cleaners Suitable for t = Va mootings. Apel wi aed | t ut 0. | Co-operative Resi Erste | Rutate Wachangs | !STOUT'S |° BEST BUYS | TODAY $950 DOWN | TWO BEDROOMS ated w Keego Har- | | ! WATERFORD AREA bedrooms full oil heat. base- A ing | TWO FAMILY | $1,750 DOWN | in good four bedrooms. tnctered wells and coved ceiling, large liv- room. kitchen : $4,950 ——* egerr irrubie as thing Sui BRICK BUNGALOW .Loeated tn Sylvan Villege Three For Sale Houses 43. Edw. M. Stout, Realtor GI RESALE windows unit Particular e will approve it's location exceptional cond: tien and overall worth at $4) OO—term:<' CARL WW. BIRD). Realtor oe ail —_ | ioe 8 La Pat — Wood- new dr. and Senior high ase “ee MA 42198. a mes — v_PAlMER OR 30815 For Colored People 5 — e Fn agp bed. 8 éining room camel orag living room | tth fireplace, kitchen and | e full bath Also 8 full | ment with ges heat and | a two car gerage 815.000 | with $3 50° down | TT ON. «ine — ul 8 30 Po FE 56168 | | Tk Tap ‘1A a “i 990 N. Johnson Ave. = KNUDSEN | Elizabeth Lake We think that tis is ‘one of | the finest homes la ———s. Consists of = H tome, brosseway and e ma on, the second com| rome os fir, ae grounds Beasuh im a 000. with reasonable terms. WM. H. KNUDSEN REALTOR Pontiac State Bank Bidg Ph. FE 4-4516 Readi- Bilt Homes Co GOVERNMENT SURPLUS HOUSINO UNITS Ideal for Motels Lake Homes or Cabins 3 Bdrm. Cottages Hiouse, Low as $895: a wate ‘ eet te | DED | tor * ghtly | All Bulldings constructed with A-1 material, oak flooring Sheetrock vpsum sheathing. &»- siding. Eech unit ¥ shower, toilet stool sinks, stoves and electrical f'x- tures, Some buiidines have storm Windows doors and screens Other sizes available Special Price. to Contractors & Motel Owners Readi- Bilt Homes Co. | & 8 East Bivd. | Corner Irwin Phone FE 8-0001 Landlords Hate ‘em! WHY BE A TENANT? 1 Many excellent 7 buys at easy terms in the home , 225 Pontiac Lake Ra ‘er Sale Houses POPPE PII OO Oo BUY TO FELL REALTOR PARTRIDGE [8 THE ‘BIRD’ | SEE ATTRACTIVE 2 aire #8 HOME. ! 4a] unfinished oe heat. large lot newly secnbeled . Wood- _Ward Estates FE +0748 | T PM sty, 7 NEW UNFINISHED Low Seen peyment. Phone | ree rE 2 A Home Of your own. If interested, Reply Pontiac Pre«s, Box 80. $350 DOWN NEW 2 BEDROOM STARTER | HOMES WITH FULL BASE MENT. CHOICE OF CORNER OR INNER . E TO ®CHOOL AND STORES LAKE WILLIAMS GARDENS. OR }-2837. HAVE YOU A email nome ment. tf plumbing, 52 gallon electric water beater forced ot) furnace ing restricted — Selling Hl ERBERT C. DAVIS OR }-761¢ COTTAGE AT KEEGO HARBOR 2 car _dery. FE 373 $1,500 DOWN. 5 Fn MODERN. brick fireplace, oak i breeze Pic 2 ear ‘od talieg gars garage. Priced os ‘eum Oa y anaisiiiide Rd. 4 room mod- = Dg utility, garage. GEO. “MARBLE, Realtor €261 Andersonville Ra. Waterford 2 OR 3-1268 Partridge 18 THE “BIRD™ TO SEE a INCOME Truly an Rw sive home sur- Troundea with ott MO rengageaced of many varieties SECURE HERE Il. resale near Vantin School $2,500 down. For Sale Houses 43 FRI EN DI Yy G I. resale for colored PPD DD DOLLA AAPA ~ 4 ad 4 $1,950 down | RESTAURANT ANT 6 ROOM NELGHBORS G I. ressie for colored house Immediaie sossession 561 “ee” $.,800 down 8 Sanford WILL WELCOME YOU . ————— = Se In Uiis Drayton Plains ranch type There * om here to - your : 2 bedroom home with spacious needs ive us @ call om one PIONEER. HIGHLANDS carpeted living room tile bath, of these A dandy 2 bedroom bungalow gu hest, storms and screens. 7 ; . L’ ‘Y CO full basement. recreation room. | enced iawn with 75 {t frontage, GILES REALT C select oak floors. plastered walls | Sttached garage offered at $10- | 9, w purce st FE 51675 ceramic tile bath. storm windows| 000. terms. YOU'LL SAY ITS Open ® til ® and screens Situated on eorner| NICE _ ———— lot with picket fence | land contract or | | } a ee Te Buy-To Sell-To Trade rage and concrete drive An ideal | YOU BUY IT—WE LL INSURE IT home. $12,650, total price WEBSTER ig” DISTRICT BUNGALOW - $1,500 DOWN | Dandy modern . room bungalow interior in excellent ¢ ition. | outside needs decorating, full base. | REALTY CO. REALTORS ment, gas heat, laundry tubs and automatic hot water Garage Pay- mimner acted Lape Estate Exch ments of $50 per month [Ep Beye 0263 Oo Eves SUBURBAN BUNGALOW ee ee $1 869 DOWN NEXT DOOR TO “BRANCH Dendy modern home with five _ Post OFFICE full rooms. beeutiful kitchen and ——— <= --——— breakfss’ room, nice bath, full basement automatic ofl heat at-| tached carport, nice enclosed rear | porch This a besutifal, neat and | sa asl Oe" i Z| avauable SYLVAN | Since our opening. two Weeks ago more than half of ot 2 erage. yon eaten | have be sold bea ent ear | v en < oil heat, recreation ‘reom rick | om site in this well-planned =| VILLAGE replace other jal | vision Ww :! features. Was OP bedrme % mre reo 3 jo lg Ly one apt. rents for 680 per mot. Takes | ment, beth. ster, net only $5.0000 to handie. WM. A i fireplace, knotty Eee pane } ' . 8s Ls re y ? ’ | | reerew and ? car gare with WEST SUBURBAN) | KENNEDY | Nitttesietidaits 8, 22 $2,000 DOW N | ner lote Paved street sewer Ex can REALTOR, installed 623400 WE 3-2105. rE. cellent 4 cours modern Open Evenings rd LJ _— 45080 Open 8 meee) ‘ese fas Hardwood 3097 W_ Muron FE 43560} ne ooo floors. plastered walle, full bace- | —S eS REED LAKE ment and oi] heat Also a ity car, ADAMS wicck trea the ae Wanes Lake high schoo! se on Loa fhe 28 1S by ft ie os I rice with easy seller a WARD FE. PARTRIDGI REALTOR FE 2-8316 @ W Huror 8 Oven Eve 17 te 8 ANNETT | OFFERS 2 Houses—Close In 4 room modern aepel ume room dining gg) Be ised $= kitchen Laces bath pew siding and gas heet Also 4 room modern heme 2 car aerate cement drive Y blecks« from downto 810 060 terms Side 2 bedraom buneasliow in ex cellent condition dming room in etc? modern kitchen tile beth al: o@k floors, Full ment with of] heat recreation room with tile og automatic water beat- Venetian blinds and ewn- ings l%e car gerage. Lo- ca block from Huron Shoppine center. Only $2500 down West '4 Bedrooms—Suburban A home vou Will be proud to on attractive ranch type home in excellent con- dition tooms and bath on first flour plus 12x20 heated breezewry also 2 knotty pine rooms up Full Dase- | ment with of] AC heat fin- | ished recreation room 2 car attached earace 2 we * landscaped lots wv ith privileges Full orice $16 800. terms lake only Silver. Lake Front Laree remodeled home in excelient condition with ap- proximately i acre of jand ake front lot 100x135 * jandseaped Living a3i with fireplace sun room. 1% baths 4 bed- ‘ull basement with of steam heat at- tached ? car garage and utility room. $26. 250. terms Brick Ranch—Rochester New Romen_ Obrick home situated on 2 acres living rm i6m28 with nat- ural fireplace and Redwood 3 large bed- vatory Standar: hot water heat. 2‘ car garage Owner \eaving state $27 250 terms 5 Acres—Lake Privileges This unuwal new 3 bed- room home Phot all the be tra modern features possi- bie incturine beautiful ee foom w wali and picture ovetiookine 185 feet of take froritage full dining room. modern kitchen. spacious recreation room with. — bar and and manv other ftems Roy Annett Inc. mee OE Open Evening. and Sunday 1-4 EAST SIDE New subdivision of ranch style Nice 2 Dedrooa home leceted on homes offers for sale aveu stree 2 ce. garage. extra 2? becrooms $15 000 100 : = = | ol! heat Very clean } betroom. 615.600 100 COLORED 3 — lakefront.- $17 850. ls x lote Near Baldwin Rubber 3 bed- Possession room home Excellent buy. Can) Bendy tor Terme. Multi-Lakes Realty be sar Sue0e < — furni- Back REALTY Co. MA +1060 3000 8B. Commerce | asa Ave. FE 4-339) | rE =) 2 FA West Ras | large 7 SR down. 6 room | apt. up -tn baths & showers. oak floors, private & rea :| entrances 2 car. gerage Close enough to walk to town Good investment FOR BETTER HOMES IN TOWN Jwner wou'4 prefer cash to pre- _baLpwtn scHoot crt Mtge © foom white frame ’ de m mo modern bungelow stairway to e ame With es pel and ga floored a.tic Qae heat Close to ace } car warece and nice Ou Micht G1 $9700 ed it 3 « t b ar s Owne . accept free 8. BURBAN anc clear ate mode! housetratier ood litt'e @ room medern home a. down pa ment. Or will se wt low down parment pe vers son, — oes ( after call r mic QCPEFp o al ELS gio JOSEPH F. REISZ 53%. W. Huron 8t PE 20289 SUBURBAN 1 room modern home itp the F AMILY "HOME village of Commerce All large = is th erie a you dream ms, becem.nt With new fur- veiw Toom With smal! barn tn rear Only 3.008 | * dream of a kitchen With lots down to responsibie people. Eves cupboerds end bvrilt tp features after 6 cal] Mr. Bloom MY 32-0606. | Plemy closet space, tile ba’ ful basement finished entirely LAKE FRONT / ‘th DBir-h plywood Cornices. For the most unusual buv of your | tapes and carpeting included lifetime, be sure to call us about! reezeway gerace workshop this 3 bedroom bi-level home, 3 iaree ints. Plenty of shrubbery with 2 bathe pine rec- and raspberrie« te heme has fireplace. 2 electronically been lo ed and work shows rears of eno thought. a finished pro- feation room w'' car garage wil | . Dandy ga-' | MAHAN | WEST SUBURBAN Snow white bungalow with breere- arage is immaculate inside and out large bedrooms Huge livin : room Excelient painted basem with of] furnace. $4,000 down $100 per mo. 20 ACRE ESTATE CLARKSTON AREA Lovely 3 bedroom Colonia] farm | bome on semi-private lake =4 i tiful grounds and scaping. onseliod views, Full loge word = | ; month includes teaszes. in- surance an“ 4\— per cent interest Boecious living room with e i3n17 kitchen 2 | rege rooms bath Activities room ao attached garage Laree site with vie iat and privileges Close j West suburban Desirable WATKINS LaKE - Defi- nitely e heme. built in °S3 The Rest’ tr work- manshin and meterial Ther- mopene picture window in the 19° living . tached carege ent beat the price: cf 612 RAY O'NEIL. Realtor 7 W MHuron Gog. e FE 37103 or TRIPP Seminole Hills SUBURBAN lt, story brick-1 bedroom rt beth down, 2 bed- troms and. full Plenty, of walk-in Taree’ living room across Le ap naéture!l fireplace Full + steed dipine room Breakfast fook in kitchen m porch terrace 2 cer po en garage Full high basement © of] _ 2 lote 14¢ Se real buy at 816000 Call ‘es e@pvoint- ment now! Union Lake privileres' At- tractive home —- eal jo- cation. 1 bedroom and bath down: 2 bedrooms up. Nat- ure) firepiece tn living rm full dining room. sun room all carpeti Dlus_cornt- ces Handy & Penced vard i‘ car garage heat Perfect condition. Im- mediate possession A_ rea! ouy at $12 730-$2.500 down Corner Lot controlled overhead doors Only 6 duct’) Porat time offered for sale! miles from Pontirc | §& burban but ir Pontiac: school Gietrict Can be bought on PMA OFFICE OP*®N 66 i rm he Sa d [ : Jorothy Snyder Lavender \. JOHNSON, Realtor REALTOR “- ms on £ 3110 W WMuron &8t PE 2-441) } FE 4-2533 EM_ 3-290) MUtual_€6417 | 1704 S. S. Telegraph } Rd. SMART BUYS. A BEAUTIFUL SPOT bedroom ranch home - be beat for 88000 & “A large and pretty a sor ses thie G0 Sosa ne et | RANCH HOME. A lovely kitehen with vy of |3 bedroom with ful) basement, Home. business & apart cupboard spece, dining room very beautiful birch cupboard large living room and loads of kitchen. walk-in closets extra closet space A breezeway and large lot It ts @ reasonable garage. araveied drive on a orice & terms par road. Part basement with —— room. 4 miles from court use and school bus at door. $1.450 DOWN | New racant 2 bedroom home HE RE poche ARE | Full basement 1 biock to OMT The 4 room | sto home| Plant. . you've been look le rowel on a large int © wn, trees and flowers, a pav street. j OXFORD school bus at door, 3 blocks from |7 room home completely hey og stores 6 miles from Pontiac. basement, 1 This bungalow hag 2 Ww ar- Soult Be mate lute & ranged rooms attractive living " foom. kitchen end area) with terms = combined. Al utility room stop at . Pint tile bath. Priced x 850 Small) Orion down or this . STOP HERE LAKE FRONT I's paiaen 7 can find a home 6 room home very attractive in the ag 80 —,* = decorated — standing iol Nice ‘ing | basement, To room and dining — — bed: tal ot mg S13 Terms. room with spacious c —_ tiful tile bath and entrance lovely new BP all oa! “ floor 3 bedrooms and closets on | -e Rms The | niceness of the We |e ‘ seen to be a. ed. This § nome “9 B od yours at a very rea- Pike St FE 4-9584 ~- .. BAB ; BABIES, THE ‘CRAWFORD | oe ae wa on| RORTHW to's w. urea =Y™* pe cide! Shieh gow yeu tn ad-erner, | ORGANIZATION ; : . . + Eecl re Toreat L try Club Estates Idea building spot level ranch home surrounded by pines. Priced fer quick | sale OPPORTUNITY PLUS | Leslie R. Tripp. Realtor inm- | 22 W Lawren*s Street Evenings 5-8161 or FE 5-6304_ BABIE thet ray = Me py Hye A, PEE acd BS heck ‘Lakefront Brick This lovely suburban home refiecta excellent taste individua.lty for its owner. You are sure to enjoy the living din: room, the large deluxe Kitchen, com- pietely tiled bath ‘even the ceiling) ané 3 pedrooms. The basement .E” at around level with ture windows and plater rec- reation room. € . pool fr the kiddies 100 f frontage. You'll be amazed at only 626.500 - by ap pointment Seeing Is Believing You Il have to see this valve to believe that you can = ceive so tor m bedroom and — down 3 > gg bath up. a ass cesecued bey -ell $0950 Ranch Style With breerew and at. attrac. clean home garage : $2206 DOWN - Large 7 room! Large suieened Week as a tively decorated home is in OFF BALDWIN home witn basement and furnac e dining room Just off w conditien OUTSTANDING BUNGALOW good §=cleen condition, walking zie Hwy. about way between with 3 bedrooms, tiled bath Situated ss two lots. nice garden distance of downtown. suitable Ponta and Fin wa copper plum mm spot concrete Grive. new for rooming house. Priced « f ® and e large arage, modern alow with only §7.500 , el 80x215 en I! basement. oak rs on plastered walls. 88 63.000 DOWN — Lovely > bed- | PAUL A. KERN, Realtor = room modern bungalow. Bric a — Fo FE 2.0208. WE SELL-WE TRADE frame Pull From aat Poser Hi Since 1019" , . ; . condition. fenced rear yard. This | DORRIS & SON o ls or'y @ years old { a. MEMBERS oa ee ere = Kampsen 163_W_ Muro OP + 1887 $780 DOWN — Sig room abet | ‘ ome at Lotws Leake Verv at- | | tractve cedar shake construc- | ; Realtors FE 4-0528 HOUSE oe es Tee sclMd comfortable ‘living im. |377 8. Telegraph Eves & Sun ? : comfo iving in - | : 7 "YT “ft 7 to 3 bedroom enaniee | this well meintsined home | seers = — —_ HUNTING? | with emterior all completed Pull Stapedcorwer lol Vestibule | * | beth. well, septic, wired guto- | to spacious living BUr | matic hot water kitchen sink | room with Ach went: e MODERN RANCH D- | 28s all lwterior studing “You | Wail to wall carpeting fo iv pO moe ME D t and in 4 our thr can save many dollars by room ire . ‘ bola brick po pease an | ishing this one yourself.” | bo re | kitchen. i | te canal on Chetolan Ss | j 4990 Ross Drive | sess DOWN — Resch weneciow| Oe, Yous iticeh aed om FOR SALE EQUITY im | searty Drive out W Huron St. (M-58)| with an acre 3 dition completed 2 — to Crescent Lake Road. turn right bedrooms. full bath well, septic throughout ed right at to Sylvan Leake. takes Se two blocks to property wired automa’ hot water | sil @ double kitchen sink, all A SACRIFICE—+43,000 cash to mort- _ studding and exterior all com- CLARKSTON -Built in gage of $2,600 Roomy 3 bedroom Excellent Terms pleted Close to bus. stores and Located of paved road at home with lake privileges. Mod- scaools . edee of Villace 2bedrooms ern New ofl furnace. Walled 1 He BROWN, Realtor | — diessant living room. biteh- Lake school ares $700 D 7 | en wit «4 space Ot} own 1962 W Huron ve ce| wi a wo ak cee RED HORSE with 36 vear V. A_ mortgages Member Co-op Real Estate Exch | Paymens only 847 per 5019 Case Elizabeth Rd. FE ¢22352 West Side Income “45 per month income of W berg so construc uon IM WR ICHT. Realtor A HOME OF YOUR OWN North—Off Baldwin 2 bg ag Fisher Body and Grete @ school. eaneonenh gas heat ONLY $7,150, terms Ph | Co-operative Resi Es ee Be | New 2 Family Income Uticat. sec’ 2 pear ean i one property. Priced at 611, Son forme Near Lincoln Jr. High £ er, Pirenince, ful dinine all on one room, fi Seoow - lv acant—West Side On N. Johnson Ave. 6 room frame home Ful: basement, stoker heat Best price enc te1ms Near General Hospital WE BUY AND SELL LAND CONTRACTS NICHOLIE AND HARGER _— 3 Ww Mores Ph Pe CLARK YOU CAN BE THE LANDLORD. A 2 family home with @ 3 -room steam heat. 1% car a cor gerage. ae | block to bus $1 ws aon This four room 2? bedroom home with glassed tn rch. basement suto e heat on Oxbow lake eivile a t.-"—, Lake. -— RANDY MM MAN. ~ S pia oA CLARK REAL ESTATE pee Real oven, . ‘ege OXFORD HOME j ‘ room of- er mf aay “ roo and riwileges on SE. lor the orice af s. MID | eryday problems the Want _ Ad way! Phone PE 28181. for an ad-writer, Fe ove TIME! Solve ev- cope Mids. . ; é . od 7 e za THIRTY -SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS r,N ee y NTIAC PRESS, | FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 Fer Sale Houses & For ne See Houses 43 For Sale Lots 46 _ Sale Land Contract 52 CARNIVA a se as ELIZ. LAKE ESTATES ‘Tem le O | LOCATED ON mm gasTwaY Da. 1 |S0LD Pom este OVER YEAR| a eee Goods 57, For Sale Miscellaneous 60| For Sale Miscellaneous 60 down rooms, 3 pe ‘ontiac this lot is 009330. Full| old land contract * AcU OE |r ww . full basement, ofl t mp t ni le rice $475 terms, Gall J. a. Tay-| fe U ge ge VACUUM CLEANERS, USED 200) BATHROOM : = _ A, Tay) Lb sed all year around oil | : ) to choose from. All. makes; FIXTURES. G6OIL| LIONE!. TRAIN FOR SALE. 584 NEW Gl HOMES =| WE a SUBURBAN ete Sn) tt ota EOP j—— | Be oa dase BL EE] Spach ater eat] iter Vp eine: paral aoe © . : AL _tween 9 a.m. and 9 p. coal furnaces, steam and bot we | Genicine CABINET. LAROE 2 lh ag cost Au"'s ‘yea: | tered pee ee) ar sasnavax| Money to Loan 83 — sora BED was? wows | TIBICHTS cl irret, ‘cabinet. 67.08 2 Excellent west sub- a seuanicced taranee’ Bomahu | varuce Glas then ee POS OCIS se IO oho PISO $9.50; Wie cher day HEIGHT’S SUPPLY value 3) os buehtly marred. Kise trees cian. Biarered wait: | MDE ASSESS, "Grane Su anSay | cme sore ST ~~} srhet dias, Bs ets] wea isi ‘ets ap iinout ghs, ew marbie sills, tile bath ‘| down ; a e PE 4-543) . Ne Fides _dasement. Automatic. = NORTH SUBURBAN ic sci LJ ie a ae and Need Money? cupert. ond cnsir, sis te.. yao BICYCLES BOYS. ‘s. ENGLTSR exe Lot ggg Bae ont on rnac wat . y obs o € 1 Oo one o nes choi of tile and room colors, ose = bedroom Living room. kitchen) Oho are tracts, Excelent land | BANK FURNITURE Co. tae 95 Ff dane Sn 2 are on 303 Grehasd Leke rT . ne ink 00 nd convenient location a ; $950 DOWN oe a = leoee [0s Ge gone Be veut Seleuhens: (2 ORCHARD LA -E AVE NEXT ps Be ee Eas MAYTAG WASHER. 630 o vAcuUM. Tag motors how ¢ on a wood floors. enclosed porch, good 1. HW. BROWN, Realtor | TO FARMERS Gad STATION 7 stove ove 623 FE "Meas “Aubure ins, s on 1 i ° lo . ee | e > with oll furnace, Priced some Leak accel Or oa $7,090 | ye2, WooMurer FE 23-4810 E- Z TERMS 1 — ew OALVANE ware lu! ; r cash . | TTT Open till P NEW GALVANIZED PIPE (KO 1. Templeton, Realtor For Sate Acreage 47) pe auto po ie —fowIRAL” att | QaCKeUS [fe ae or ibe ch : nee aa Fons o u anc | ee eras a ne ce ape encing refinancing. | television Alco, a type sew- SAVE PLUMBING SUPPLY annie Soe ere er en Gas | Thee nire LaSalle .E ( ff 100_6 Saginaw FE 52100 mapeted on your first visit and OIL CIRCULATOR, SED . ser Walton Bivd we 008i INZLER | 2 ACRES—S§]00 DOWN = few miputes Liberal repay ] amaLL aia igs, Ml EE LS er weeks Wil se cheap -connder ealto Located on Walt So — s after 4 pm. newness gas range. Open Eves | K one mile sri vp do o “s | iV i~ STOVES | BOUGH™ LOLD 5 ax ein in’ Wiltty plywosd. $625" per ee re For That Growing Family | 9 y 6. ¢1—frick J cision Tana onus om" | Home & Auto - came Sag Me Mom | SE wr ane way em. |e eae oreo Very attractive home located on| “| “oo! — trick Ranch Sit sine of each parece) ite op 4 SILVERTONE RECORD P 8 end 2x6's $05 M. 5 Saco” 7 ae OlL HEATER. North Side. $ rms. and bath New England Colonial styled es ee sk be 9 f can Compan | ‘ | Table model Detrole Bescg bo and & mate, one —— white | Good conditivn $35. FE +0000 eedims ‘whee peed Fell kaw. | rooms and I's, led. baths ee beter bare wc x Y ——— | Sipigien. Wales colton tabie. FE | 6 Diste we OF SO Giartston |! GLOBE 3 WHEE an he cas c 2 tiled baths “ommun'ty Natioa! Bank Bid Sor : Sane wens ax foe a ee ee ee clare | tide. Wf. Stout. Real Hours ® to 5. saturdays to! . Ay (* Sa Dg ye G00 CON- “BRICK: on ed -RRICK - hoist, a EM 3-2721 loday . windows and pegged oat 711 N Saginaw 3st i ap P —_—_—__—— — oe — PETRO floors Marvelous kitcher I Open Exe tll 8 30 “ = | FaRLF TOP _— AS STOVE OO Goop Common Brick - igh Brick Otter Lake Recreation room on lower . LOANS — TO $500 } _ condition. $50. FE 2-8676. Ore oniv—TS0 gal tank HE. AT SERVICE pi : age on high sightly cers Aske Setetegen, tri | Oo signature only | — en ee see ee 30 ALL PRICED POR Lieber Pig re — Your Bose... » ly cres fine ho ous oa r less an ior satachts Srebate’ win'iste| Fecomtmend'tou see "SM | ann For Sale Farms 48,‘ Hlousehold Finance | DRED TVs gore AN UP RIB. | Excelent! wedtraen tate | tu "ae" basement auc ee ee) iitews | a ice unre Tear inh tm es eee aces so are | aa Pa es aliens | et tehgutes ey tea terd wa wand' enced tron! porch |. taal Thi | “thece ‘quarters mile of waterieant! | +8 Semane te _ EE NO “aire saa | git et, 92,8 coment, | prices: & late, test oad, barns bsmt. S deth up Pull) home all plea et A me eS ieee ee GENERAL PUBLIC LOAN Used Trade-in | ee ce tus’ eer eevee 0 ae ~ | Cr Coe ee! Be _Dinne_eno Som: 08 W. Huron ; @W._Husos PE 3-710); Lo Studio couch " oe SURPI U marie sett “Hundreds, io use, ta tie GI } nee To =e rich car- | Acre rH . — | 2 pe. ving roopr suite "" Sig 95 ial -US LUMBER area. Demon: tratio.s datly. Asso- Brick, 3 bedrm ranch Avnell fa . Garsie Ona eu cut O hou ; shi tne “ee oa gums sae et 4 $000 Wighlond a theo, Om a 8. te ce ay rere me house i] roums d she | | - GMing TOOM = Nee eeeee : 8. eer neste Wad alésteced SE Ta | oa Keown ak ‘08. ree “ ve with 3 freee Maat “bath” Ber Pp to aan guarantecd seme laces $20.88 Open 8 to $30 Except peal Huron” pad Open eves. end . | ai houses have baseme its 2 | *. FONGO =... nce eeeeees erate emt tes} ravicy Disten A ieee ere note. 38 ncies Silane | | ey Refrigerator, ccc gama | STS Ep aaa TUS heat, he or ravton ains ! t excelien uy fo om eo 00 CASH : ot drawers > etter iusts #08 down “oie Bn A avteges wa Callan’, cone entre ue \ ; SMALL "DOWN PAYMENT’ | Combination gost, Plywood mmerTenae: SOS: Sere» sees hoes ses 63000 down pure for Yot! Today Tm tog UO Pm On BS «” J WYMAN'S. | Cou! lumber end supptice Large like-new $ room bur 30000 FAMILIES IN PON 11-207 cope 1984 by WEA Cornice, ine, “4 | N'S | kinds. plain & _— e John K Ir in | Ce emia a ten202 Gi TrOUX & Hicks and Oakiand . County have se . a ad }_Pike e Only | M. A. hope “enchen ‘eatioe doors werd ee W ael aralurelneke andl Rick rowed from Buckners in the last ‘I love cafeterias, lady! May I carry - WESTINGHOUSE ne RANCHO ee rae wood co. REALTOR rv) treeal UA) bird iparndiie 4395 Dixie Hwy oo Plains 27 Years Wichen?” - Slay ry a tray through your range. electric New floor mod Saginaw CPEs 4-2521 | hans Bala PE 22543 tt pear Full price only $9 600. SEE 7 OR 3-701 siicuwena! ‘cals, Sew fee chen? Decial now only 6118 95. MI 6-1300. | CutPPED SINKS. ALL SIZES IN- win Sos . vhaxiaie st WROUGRT “Inc aatRON B ee 4 low as $6.96 EVE FE 2-1804¢ The Neiht 6 ROOM RANCH TYPE GUMPANY WHERE YOU “ARE For Sale Cloth a Daron 44 save fubri 100 8. ‘SAGINAW | 6 RooM PHILOAS FLOOR FURN- le Neighbors SeTKCRES Gd MILES NORTH 1650) e en) e WECU TREATED “or Othing 56 Sale Househ roiture, 42 Orchard Lake | bad SuALLOW-WELL JET Sener ¥033. ; a ad old Goods 57 _Avenue. pum | RE SEPTIC are al! talking . they hope ft frontage on paved road. 6 OO Ue | Sate Ds $18.95. | REINFORCED CO! RETE that some ni fami ll room and bath 3 bedroo ch When fllness comes: Wh GRAY ! = J oe So flat wall paint $2.79 gal tanks. Ph. OR 37686 $100 Dn. bur te, Best home on the home with 25 ft glatsed in porch, | Sf@ levotts oF chest ume om.| sele dn ke Geen ae ee “es | WAYNE GABERT'S ee o” tal ROMEX BY TH? COIL J\sc PER S pccaee: Meagan Mies tae Meseeees. anes Peet ee | ployment you will be gad you | _Ressmebic pee on. | oe eee Fe teen APPLIANCE SPECIALS McBride Hardware _ft_G. A_ Thompson, 00 8 Perry. Cin oun heave « Feeeroon ~| 3 bears Sesenes: f ees | = me. 7 elds gravel and | ore ere alors Deakeor + shart a —— | | El LECTRIC ne NOE DELUXE Frigidaire refrig. S cu ft. . $30.00 OPEN oonpavs ® Ld 12 PE 27-8302 | USED ELEC. RANG $32.50 type home built on yo minum storms. screens barn gabe r dairy | considerate treat \ utomatic oven. warm- | Deluse Kelvinator refrig. A- 1027 Auburn Rd. (at Crooks: Used Television 14.95 & u your free and ® and | 14 stancions 8 box stalls ment LADY: aerr } ing drawer Perfect condit ig. A-1 $68.00 | sv 3 ct hea lak wits (nae heat tnd awnings Also, recreation | SL nal ants SOROS Gal EHEG j i DY's OR GIRI 8 COAT | $125 MI 44930 condition. pe washer ‘-ade in $25.06 EXERCYCLE PF —— sy gALE AL 43 W Sate meet 8 ati terials and workmanship This room rane price $8975 on 3ia16 ft chicken coop and park | BETTER SAFE THAN SORRY | cacti Petes fength = with EASY SPINDRY WASHER premeiory 17 inch console, TV $79.00, _most_new FE ¢103 STEAL BOILE® CLEAN! — home is complete on the exterior easy A or GI terms 50 assorted fruit trees. 6 acres most all the way aiwaed HOL- mire! table model TV, like PREE STANDIN { Ms BOILE" CLEANER, RE- and ready tat you to finleh the ws Rack ¢oamerial iowa. “olfeced Vou) xan) obtain un) tc) ose) Ae: dows the front. High styled deaeee Fare bec 3 pr. lined! new $49.00 Washbowis poo Lge TOILETs $1 $17 95. | move rust and lime. $2.62 per John Kinzler ealtur al $16400 $3000 down A GOOD day or any day at Buckners bie ouren @ ilttle on the | fereet um traverse sods walnut | Many others to choose from. Floor 21232 double ittings $11 05 G . a tid ec ans eaters i Sasa am* “\Gerice Oven os | Pves. e7-6163,_ FE reo | For Rent Lpeinell Prop. BA across from Post Othce _ HOLIDAY SPECIAL, |“ "aa ae on et ae ee | Aron ns “is "Sagan Po Mm oOTT ia D ~~ > ~ MANS TAN OVERCOAT. NEW. a . inal sect 008. Sell for $18. FE VOR RENT-FOR SALE #118 GE RBaV After § Call OR 3203 | \WHITTEMORE ST. | favis "house "and “adequate TIL | size 42 Ladies black pabardine es Pe | oe | atc comprencrs and duck hem-| single phase, used omiy 3 diss: © seem frame, § bed lable. house and adequate barn =~; — ——— coat, size 18 FE 48441 madel ee WEAREVER COOKING. UTENSILS. | mers Sewer cleaners. sanders, | 1% HP Wil) sacrifice down basement and oil boat, to reat og Bg A TE AC aUE I E FINANCE CO. 2 gor. COATS, SIZE 40. CHEAP OF refrigerator floor model. $268 Teese bet a sen reg tN — oe ies ae ferichers. + 008 nes 1 OCKERE —— Make an offer Biood Rd Metamora. tn person 22 N. ‘ IN aUming seas PUR ; -— ner — => bed om lon maid | COMMERCIAL BUILDING 1800 FINAXCE CO. men's overcoats wee @. Phone} FIUNTERS SPECI. IAL PRES ESTIMATES PETIT | rE 5- yke Ra — ek rons : xd rm. 1 we FE ¢6203 ] basement. Elizabeth 7 W Lewrence FE 2-6249 Po a oe 5 SS - o-te71. G D — breereway te attached ean Real Estate Exchange acne aren PE 4593) _FE_ 20240 Pontiac ADMIRAL TELEVISION. 3 30 Inch Saito — ae meee, - | supruM _oy . get, Spe. babes Up: chesta, new | fC Ete _¢, 108) West Muren. CLEARANCE tyes, Reeds are batter | TEL TRAILER WITH te and bath ofl beat and garage ; —Erees._ Bos Ft & used. $5. up: bedroom suites JAMES AUTOMATIC PORTABLE | We guarantee to cave yes Wise tn good condition. Or ¥ $30 390 Whittemore FE 5-6589. $0 f. frontage on this bes GULF SUPER 202 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG | paige ta 5 Hiving rm. culten, 612.96 | $0" member. cncctient conteion. aut Ge et ae bel ee eee MI ¢716% —TALBOTT LUMBER ~ laze. Good dock and row boat \Vest Suburban SERVICE up. dining room suites, $1680 up | el Pree teen BO Gens | Smee bere fret and cave meneyi | COOD 22 I? HW STEEL FURNACE TALBOTT LUMBER 4 luded Priced at only 86.950 sy ICE ny other items. _train equipment. Call MI ¢0546 end pipes ye Auburn Rd..| Lumber doors, windows, hard With $1,800 down. & Sour bedroom home. one down Por lease. Well located. Doing | ee te PAYMENT KENMORE WASHING MACHINE. FOR MEN Phone FE 46510 ware plumbing. B. P 8. paint. > » heat’ aut bet basement. gas gare gallonage Call L. BH. Cole | WE BUY emul T De | 3 reuse ot. FE eee. 30 ‘Reming a ct ee HOLLINOSHEAD VARIETY | Sones Viet g basements. Mise FLOYD KENT. Realtor | icree ‘front water. Fireplace, | Oi Co. FE 20173. THING COME TRADE ANY. KENMORE WASHER ROUND | pod em inaton 1393 store. 7 miles out Baidwin Arm-| ‘7stem for wes basements. Sheet 4 W. Lawrence FE 5-6105 Driv porch, garage, lake = AROUND OUT & LOOK 4: oak table ard ¢ chairs. Studio | 95 set elec hair clippers 10 50 | floor cov and Mac-O rock. rock lath and floor and [, Lgwrenee FM 6-000 gece eves ogee on ns Labs Up. PHARMACY | $38 to, one 25 to $800) PARKING. «sean s i couch and stokes. ost Hillside Dr to Sheffield carving set #9 Lac paints. Phone 1-0045 prresces. 1025 Oaktand bate good buy at $2280.00 down (90 8 LAWRENCE - DAILY. FRIDAY NIGHT “TIL 9. | a 1498 Cory knife sharpene HAND CARVED BONE CHESS 4‘) pg Mg Drugeists—Here is, your chance cE FE 27131| L &@ 8 SALES KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR | 11.80 Helbros 14x wrist tT 1095 set. $18 set of golf clubs $25. 13 HP JET PUMPS 050 13 bec reed ere) tee! LORS FRIsNOLY Seay Pontiae; or 1 pag hay eae working condition, Oni god autowind w 32.50) musica! mantel clock $15 “wo, «= OP deep vet pumps with ‘ my nice posed besid Th of Aubura y ateh 38 50 Conveniently Located doing “over pasides This store) LOANS $25 TO $500 | Metshts’ on Auburn Ra. Mase, | S798 MA SLO oe © Fig| grafic. t# were reat an. 60 | 12 02 Tieupeen, Perry H ARI ES and Only $2,000 Do the SDD ‘license sione Nenas's| Baxter & Livingstone | cnustn PE 2-2008 fate Sal or 2 cae GAB 36.30" famous powerdril 1633 a omED. IL Gis tao COAL FOR- wn «prescription business as well : ONG VINOFLOOR TSe YD | = . ; “ WwW. : 39.95 ‘a famous | poor fn Ny Fag Fy ng with Just “tn ventory down i e yeu | eee OW ee x12 Linoleums .....$1.98 16 scm. RCA WITH DOORS 909 50 O08 6) femens eee sae s100| RAVE A wno burner foot furaaces, weet KEY TO MAPPINESS! we sn-| {is comfortable 2 bedroom home | “utu? Uvewen’ WHEN YOU NEED iss “teal ais Rags 8 Ot WAL 7250 tas famaus ties ew $89 Newby 'b Supplier’ ciacst | Wayne” Meating ‘na “Air Seed Neve you will emjoy| With earpeted living and dint | =: Ot OS WALTON TV oo K . 7 fie 2 tioning a —~< jooking at ng Tile z enned r box. 760 ation fer ideas on Christ- Co., N. Fete, t eeaeanese wet | Catand ba Sec pensd'sttn | hom gown te att ters te O gst We gaomaw © | wane Cor date Pe oaan| ES korce naerat Ra] Ge Stata | cat ecectme: ree island . type A home you'll enjoy, see for | es very Free r) GsED ELECTRIC MOTORS, ing box. the 13 ft. long ee- yourself. Call now ms nd Lad be in this profitable market and ‘Drab Red Stamps Today LATE-WIDE BINS ee ROTTL | Sec lta "ot wees PS | Petes warmer ww” NE ees tater geen Ci Nil — fod ‘$4,250 with new Mans- on resign Punch = — return Real ee Service of Pontiac | FE 4-1574 | nstatie ta E GAS new FRIGIDAIRE CYCLAMATIC. 40 Fok —— oe — | a aean - Pe +1501, : * sheeting per [adore $13.08 = Pager : ae a q nec a, int added iclugy res“ everiment. Merry this woes nimenc? Beer, —"Moripage Loane 54 bine ter 0 won rochgns, pose | 2S e8. poree aici | HH Dormerer sice miners 1266 INTERESTED TOR, PROTOORA.| lini lerterty Hy : race. Good pt pelghverhood Us ute a nig I Year ‘around bas! | £18 zs Mortgage od | econ fe 2 | - om Lent, en at jes N° wenetee ce if ja = ly Bee ar: i. ie aban Shakes waned: own payment. us so Ae rea EC- | . o case ts yg ree | 7 mediate pos- ecle offer conside a son | LOW INTEREST - sates — Pa bia vinsi mt New | w Furniture Spec ials mi full slee. bieente et _CAMERAS &. EQUIPN “dia. = Do ed , | Khia ieee wins: em & Wee A. aritri ige Cnitmited funds tor sinele tam AGTOMATIC WASHER, | Buns ‘Deda, wrought 12.68 elec ‘belhsoom heater 14/2, FOUR ROOM t Yourself 6 | 4 room & bath home lot | que ae ee gpl ges $44.95; soha maple ee comics. | 05 3° 3. wristwatch 27.50/ stn 600d condition. 00 jo0r430, ‘Equity. is $3100. “pay. aylor should "borrower od only 140.98. oi er. Manet 200.50; cote | oe Gruce IT). wristwatch ... rs 9051 vag ey AMAZING TRU-SEAL AWN. | ments $45 per mo. Ask about Is THE “BIRD” “TL G. ere ae, oS beds. 630.8" up. cotton mattresses | ss oe crit... 1805 | Sat & Sun, EM 33025. | ine window pesehes this & several othe; low priced |, REALTOR - INSURANCE 1210 Pontiac State Bank SELTs BAGS BRUSHES FOR | {11 9" , ,imnernorne mattresses, | 19 9s isanter 8 ad homes — some with low down 100 Oakland Ave LAKE GROC., I Bide. voor e 19.95 ap; roll away beds com- ; blender .. ..11.96 payments. | Open Eves. Free . Parking Busy pele ions JHOME, Phone _FE $9408 of FE 5-6772 SUPPLY co. $16.95; davenport bed full | sundred: of of =—" es ee | : CEE WEEDON | aa aT ty w © & win matiress, $148.; sofa rT items at dis- " Sale > takeout right | bed frieze covers. ; count fai us which does a B. D. CHARLES, Realtor | Suburban Prop. 454 Goxi'butlaleg a6rbe'R. basement | Swaps 55 cami Fon ag glia piston yo ess rnp i a FE 4-0521 | a. @ ELLIOTT @ SONS ome | peg og yin pA em — i | Case = RN po N— = stoves, “4 “ EN tod Foul e on > apt. ‘ . yrs . Telegraph, open open EIMUNE Jordan 48s Ot taytele 6-253 | eee ae weal combination that's WILL SWAP FOUR YEAR OLD) -00l8 CR_ 43717. OR | 8 pe. chrome $39.98 up: WA jas AL 2 coed A ___MATIae 20 Si lock NY MAO Sewn) O Rrtinome ef acual valoe. eer | Stet O° LSTMSTS “Ailes! | Bs estore tet ae oS aca | ane Dose rapes tengo Close 2 Completely \ ISY , > aha ef equal value. Pn | chairs ene” lable $00.08 value.| §s\s6; $17.98; Oxid rug peds, MOF PREE PARKING _ $$.800 TOTAL aoe Se ene ee) es _— Se, ene ete Feritse | BANK F Open Petr set Sender : WATKINS LAKE ROAD-2 bea-| MOde™@, Masonry constructed Excelient location a mod- | WILL toos ie ‘pepoee Stan Gee a | @ URNITURE CO AN : Wareine MARE PONT tot | Rome, Yat areeetaigr'as | ite fmeanza an ‘sag Sonus Ta FRADE CONRATON OG, | ER, Raabe ted ene | "20" FARMER ae ree” eee ee Seteinon OA | Sie “oniysi'eatn pus ats | "amt bare tou Pesos | Gicieat “Pigerewnend SS Or| EM TERMS. a on Bs a § . 2 HOUSES | ROY KNAUF, Realtor | yi Jesh mil So Sooo | oy ~ ATTENTION GRRE DINETTE GET O-Fe | PRACTICALLY NEW ELECTRO. SAND: FILL, 26 A TON . Huron ; ear. "T. ies, Good z [D: F ’ | 9000, MEME Sa ie teh nou. WACK PURNBMED | REST. DRI a Re Misr eet resi te ae | PLATEAU 2.3438 ePECTALE” bungalow with basement | Modern hore Square Lake privi-| / VE-IN DAVENPORT. EASY | WASHER room ; volt, Thermostat con- 2: - “PALL and a 2 bedroom home without| leges. AacacinA ay wth build es an te ENGLISH POIN’ ER PUP, MODEL misc. used Down | trolled. FE 40763. 1x8 white ee ee IED Se sez, tant. Discount for ways out of Boye the mete hich : — fly 10d. OR 3-633 septirter, weester, estes maker, PRICES SLASHED Ee ad oy more, caatoenah tmoesse. "oases, corms, |_ MY 90001 ao.) Se ee Se oo Fr. SeTORA Guarton Ra, Bloomfield Mills, ist , , A A. _MY_ 2-04 ests tor sal trad A 60. $2.30; wail PPRONTMATECY ACRE WAH | Ente! Bodies se Wes | Exe onstage hr menay | ou gael eqworect 8: | pont Malte RAPT: WEIGHT fate, sor oo, te sare s bath r orders sale. V EXCH wouR | 7 $4.50 5 J. R. HILTZ out buildings for chickens. and mannan rY | tract «Where vee have» : DROP 1 LEAF TABLE. 4 CHAIRS.| ail you want 0&6 ft. + Sea pot dnore Ext storage. Ail in excellent erty ve sold Oceassional iable. $5. Bird| ate Ss ze doors $1.80 & up. 2x4 to 2xi2 No. REALTOR ons B gondition. 117 , late motel car & cash cages aheat ourtame ctrolchors Pt gy ee cs 2 & better resan BEAL na “netwesn Roos, WARD E. PARTRIDGE | _8_2._VenWert_on you want.” 26e Row trpe’ Sseataved 011 W. Huron St corer eed” ya Heights - . ~ 3 Stes 31386 _FE 5-067 serene wn min. price now New insulated Open Eves. NINA MARTIN. REALTOR == REALTOR FE 2-8316 | ee eon, #10 SiN S snoTatn | DAVENPORT AND CHAIR, RED a ering. Seq ae ter prices. OL 26781 | @ W, Huron & Open Eve, T to 8 | #160, vith MA . Good conartion. sie, 1886 | PRE-CHRISTMAS P hooks stee! clothes post $6 48 For i t TRADE INTRACT, | DAVE AND CHAIR. CUS CLEARANCE Ang 8 drain tile & anor Sale Lots TOURIST COURT IN FLORIDA O new 7 a Resesn- rh ae Mines od . F Sale te iN or good housetrailers at 484 Harper st, |6°" ft. Serv pats coast, o must sell. Py EXCHANGE . 6. Py ze ay "weer : - BIRD" to see. For Sale Clothing sed ns : Red Horse Sores ed ined a GROUP OF Mars wen ee tes Series on ere | SS oe Peso ats nga, street, near Bt deena and trick ‘hore equity in $25.00 SELL THE SURPLUS 5-964 * nett, ‘Heal Fess Api senrigatat Wels | 4 poseodary group avalible through Classified ads tor. 170 w.Pae 45005. at 945.) Pe Dolla: ae wis Es! PPA . 4 or any build a tum: | ~| __powntown store Owty,_ | Land, livestock, machin- < NEW ¢ ROOM AND BATH WITh WILLIS M. BREWER full basom ; . : FE SSis1 or PR 38892 Per cone aoroot 0 come ie | Rr erua te igen ery, anything! Dial FE = 2-8181. ” wry O’NEIL, Realtor +) For Sale Ci hi % tho ant i en ‘\ b , _— _THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 a . witger ie a EN For Sale Housetrailers 78 l 2 PT. MET ———e OSA as For Sale Used Cars 91] , saa 8. FORD CUSTOM 3 : " gig Wag 1980 CHEV., ¢ DOOR, conan = was pat oh eescsserion Cute | ~ dition. Low «radio, beater |™#)Cwner, 61.106. MI ¢0s00. | Es |" te | NONE BUT THE BEST TAYIOR CHEVROLET | Y' 1 C “24 ape teeter See Us! \\ , : . Sagem. he 3 ayy Bet a. 4 ar. | ; ; S e | I! - . j plana. Rest piano Tor the bali For Sele Livestock All trailers om band ot Dig savings ;» TAYLOR’S We Finance AN, TU Sa ae ONE Ne | Livestock 72 Demos 1540 Lapeer B- AT WALLED LAKE r , ve | ~ 7 _ ve tO AND EPAIR |, RIDING HORSES AND PONY. _Borth of Lake Orion ; roeng tat ous EVERYBODY'S . . : By CONDITIONED MEDIUM size $611 Halsted Ra, off Pontiac = Pp ti Ss ee. ; “BOOR Credit Is Good Here | ‘a a LU : ae Lew . Ni : : HIALL USED greLiWAY sPiNer GUERNSEY. FRESH 3 MONTHE on 1aCc Private owner. Mornings wall Pe ee ee | 211 S. Saginaw St. ) VER i = +-0566./ Jersey, 1 Holstein cow, milking. ise CHEVE. ar . : : with bench to mien a att 1 Helin ‘eter freshen Feb. 1. hi { f=. ie, Sean, DORE __ 171 S. Saginaw St. | i W . , . ifers, + tS. OE id BaP ice Winton ane | sensei eco Chie SHARP "CHEVROLET DECUXE amy rand Putota: bows teat e Workingman's Lot | —Delaghers. TE eh Uouiing dairy. Steve Wiuniowns600| _ MOBILE HOMES meee WP engine. “Walvsacrt: | beay., This” ty 1a eng owne beige | 54 Plymouth 4 Dr '46 De Soto 2 D : Instr uction 62-A GENTLE °POTTED HORSE. gh gh ft. wm length. Up to ene mt Sp n male tie pemiealee . ware to The tamily is sure going to uke Good secboaten wus ie - Sax amb Grammer inpranc | NOLNYEDY WivER_Ts WOFOCE: | romieed! euler MOOS serie eS SE Sa'E, | Saran SE ER | : 520 W. Rd. $50 down = “ __ | new. nandle. : Equipment 63 |! i 7 ANOTHER 1 OWNER- $1,439 17 ° ; ~ | due in Feb. 3 fesders, and 3 sows. Hutchinson’s Trailer Sales , ee ten. ee sstce New Trades —— vad : TWO TYPEWRITERS | 300 5: Meiney Ra between Jone | Prone OR vise ne Auiomaue'*tfenaminion, “Cream We're getting some fine 51 Nash 4 Door now toe OFd 2 Dr. Torti For" Sou "lw° zach |" Wanted Livestock 73) so» ee oe wCoed ie wASttat Rage Be'saie | eu Ueagee aaa Piymacctna, | fun, comfort far everzohe frm wap tonide one and try i ble cheap Gull coameen and ? ead ~~. oc _ 73 2830 8. Dort Highway Flint 68 Oa Oakland io one — FE Come itn today and see Grandma to Junior. Always re- The proof is in the driving day all dav ae 23-2351 | . these cars, thelr qualit able. $1,079 dav PE 3401. 30 'N.| WANTED LIVESTOCK DODGE "40 WAYFAR > yeu! ee ye ae SORE Sw WAYFARER. .popn | “ odaricewat amane you} g580 fuel afer! ta For Sale Poultry 74 ae aaa aga 53 Buick Hardt pte et tua te condition —_— -. - - Por atop el, radio heat RETARIAL DESK. METAL. #0 ig elgg Hg Na SOBER Dae ca jae CAC LAG COTTE DEVILLE. || ncalons: toe sone acne ea Hyargimatic 3, tone ergen ‘come 2 re Excellent condition. FE gl west BRONZE| Available pon turatched. 26 Ad tow teeqes wa A pease One MO, LOADED WITH | on its owner aecaey aed oe et top, loads of Aa ad = veal kaa te is eral FYPEWRITER DESK. IN Soop | BRAD ~ BREASTED TURKEYS Edw. M. St Real | sd LAAS=— ie — , motor sates | —— es the es See ee Fete. for only _ condition $25 PE ¢ ise) ee TN. taal sa ol “I hardly knew Mabel today. She had her face and hem wot of Duckbore Lk. MY 3261! Now at $1,595 | oe $1,589 yp Sporting Goods 65 gts hy E— 4008 Open evenings ‘ti) 8 30 lifted, and her hair — , | i * SZC _Sale 68 , ae cut and brain washed!” acobson 53 Chevrolet 2 Dr ; ~ LOCKHART iss PONTIAC CHIEP 3 FT. 6 P oy ge : | 1953 BUICK SUPER FOUR DOOR 'S? Chevrolet 4 Dr This deluxe model has redic A BEAUTIFUL SET OF weaLpina | TU months old. Sn-ll down payment | Tran: ontiac’s Exclusive 170 bp V8 engine gives Pan- . al and heater and will give you ive Faas) bees @ te W. ke | page pers KEY FARM ood take Over eon vre. oe | er oe al For Sale Used Cars 91 ses Hudson Dealer | rg ie ied | weaty have te weit transportation. “It's a beausy! A one A cane puesane — od turkeys fresh dressed, all Tr ailer TRANSPORTATION oF. | CADILLAC, 1981 “Ge” | SPECIAL a SE -__FE 23-0380 ee aw at $1995 Ee Soe ae eee te fe = $1,219 4-8186. 6872 Elisabeth Lk. Rd PEs ise ~ ae Pe. pooh gg e cisiring 8 white walls “raat, heater, owerd Over 180 vE nay -r models | $939 "49 Plymouth 4 Dr = YOUNG ROOSTERS, FAT HENS, E h Lake th h Keega Harbor 0” sgt Ege ss than 28.- — $45 to $3400 with smal! i949 OLDSM - . Radic, heater, seat | “ eae ee eat “226 E. Blvd. North yC ange to Pontiac. ¥ ease phone FE Bncellent” condition," orivete en wn finances arranged to suit se hs aoe ee 50 Stude. 4 Dr. mink See rune like t top only East te. Est ie21 Ew: ~ Sale Farm Produce 75 (Estab'ished Since 1932) phone MA 41741, for_selline’ Dial MYrtle 543, | 1941 je or i ee | vaste sealteh wang Of pee new meer Thee iT * S31 meter i. ‘ Center Ra. Andersen Royal Cham Ritz- | CHEVROLET 1954. 310 2 DR | dition Firs = ooo CON: atm. . an * eal APPLE a Crait Beemer | TinrHeme "ang | Wanted Used Cars 88 heater, 1.000 mies OM owner, | _Marbor ‘willow Beach. Keego Now at $495 #o "30 Olds 4 Dr. “88” outs; 38 sine cae target panel band picked but A” sprayed” and eee ae es eee | CALIF, BUYER HERE | | jest caver ne | "48 Pontiae 4 Dr. Red and ivory finish — this ike ew. 3 ‘canvanses, bel rg -- SS Or- bie terms New trailers as tittle NEEDS 50 SHARP CARS. glide. radio 4 DOOR, FOWER | Pj t 1954 PONT AC EIGHT -—- TWO Radio, heater Hydramatic, — oo + Bia, ef ek FeO | Ettore OE) Be ate care aa ree iste Sdaeen N ea. a | ee al Sak S08 Titherech UE 3-400. | APP @ rales i PRICE $ CHEVROLET ‘51. CLUB COUPE ow at 1495 $2R9 , Song BOY SEL TRADE | eovreeucha nectar "HN | prety for oy, ule [Pi ae Tree | Ber tie, oot, Hes Yourself , 49 Chevrolet 4 Dr. a ex—most calibers” |GET ¥ r the traile r free Dome ‘x : ; Delu 2 _ Me 2 * il ‘OUR APPLES pally LG Wheels to rect inside and out ‘ te SPENCE | in folk chetem, Musca triple te: On The Open Road ise Ton CUSTOM EIGHT — Two 30 Chevrolet 4 Dr. fate geld well te gee: meas Sand, Gravel & Dirt 66 _Open Tues. Thurs. and Sats. | Across fae Smee | 2 Osklan Ave ee yg oy tie The | engene fot Seas tte Oe 8 eet ee en of extras. radio, heater, apot- ~~ CARGE POTATOES, $i PER BO- _Opea_Eves ond Gueaae Foe. THE HIGH DOLLAR case On Sees Cheap if taken at With This | SESS Sees, Mie sor bee || eeeetien thet looks good—here light, glare shield. traffic find- aqrasrTios « GAYS MONET!)] cutaue Bl ioe Gane | oa AND MODERNIZED USED | For ni (CHEVROLET ies) BEL ‘ Yours for $495 . 7% $389 ah — ps ogy ng_containers fret farm. Geod low priced wood ence A gn heed Ahem. Drive thy exire mile am | = eri an ie Mites FTONE 93 DeSoto | " x i Po os - GU Girt, top soll. OR 24197 OF |“ scuaen Se tee VER BUSHEL as $80 down Move in immediate: | Mwy 4 So OR Firedome ‘8 1982 PLYMOUTH FOUR DOOR 51 Chev. Panel '54 Chev. 2 Dr. Dix. ii tor 660i. BLACK DIRT tb. fo By own TRAILER EXCH "HL J. NV VANWELT = Anot fr jet biack beauty This ty ton with Deep tread tires, 6 tube cleat | 2 ert wos lecrees | Open = a .| 1952 Chevrolets. F ly POUR DOOx MODEL. A car has 1985 license piste. All || ¢r geod rubber, shiny tone radio and the best heat- Greve! and fil) dirt. Late Conte Seymour Lz and corney ves: and Sunday PM. $1305 Je s. Formerly poner house with its per- the late car features Hr oe as et gee er. The caz is blue but you rs 32-0572 or PE #1112. =| Sale Farm Sectebe v4 ) WANTED Are MODEL WRECE wWrece| taxicabs. Reas. 101 W. scliy Guned V4 Meter ond Now at $895 miles to go. re ee . y FILL, AMD GRAVEL. SCHAEF: eroRD penaveon, 0000 Oxford Trailer} Bagley Auto Parts ‘Huron. malcnithe 3 tone green fin. | : +014 PE 8-0s80. FORD FERGUSON, GOOD FE 56219 or FE 5-6201 191 CHEVIE. DOOR. POWER ish, Custom radic and heat- 1952 FOR! °VERDRIVE SIX CY “\ ror CHOICE BLACK DRT ARD oe SALES 170 BAGLEY T. glide radio heater directional er Of course, only your | _INDER Th & } BUY A USED CAR YOU CAN "EOIN x Sas pe een on. cotwm, |CALL CY LOCKHART poe epi basa | Hest My oes’ wsi"erre| SOMERS reins eiure by aameeone ou, — ital heel Siena er FE D001 between con va when in need of parts wih Jalcale window ee eon er CARS. 22 AUBURN. a REVS ..--..-..------- buy it NOW POR 8.295- | found te ‘ca las, per coat ta It is a great feeling to shop for a used car and < ie CHOICE TOP SOIL We also do truck repair-| J2.cf n't Comme, Bel | 2627 Dixie Hwy on late On 31603 Pron Se” aoe dee | UEZ MOTORS IXC, | We Have HARGREAVES! . § Yard Loads $9 Delivered. ing and steam cleaning.| Lakes Used trailers ad Gros |W ANERD: LAE MOD EL! Do You a walne Eee sl uasiee Cae ae vE +0688 All w renta: plan 6 per cest up te wrecked cars, end junk cars. Hol- | WANT A GOOD USED ood we Birmingham | running used cars, aND-a work guaranteed. months New trailers hag wt | _lerbacks Auto Parts. FE #101 car with no money down? Call OPE N PIL 9 P.M. tp and look them over. : var Gee, Fer toe ee S| = PONTIAC FARM «| “™ 9%? Seno per | SCRAP cane 08 ey Cana, | ponte, MSS ee: | Per tewr_conreteace | Matth ROAD GRAVEL AND FILL DIRT AND rts and WTD. SHAR 11____| ‘radio heater and defros -; PETA LN i ; a eCWS- PE atest _ ANI Pe accessories WTD SHARP USED CARS a | ter 3178 BARGAINS Riemenschneider Bros Bengt soap a parvewst | Industrial Tractor Co. stue soutn os Get your bigh bil and Soe Wothine Lake. O8 | iow Medcen ‘Meck’ c | grated, FS cur OS end cuties PE sol FE 4 142 Mae wy oem? O* Turon Motor Sales _ ios Cainer Sauire station ‘wagon Dodge- Your CHEVROLET D / een Bales : await se SAWS HOUSETRAILER IDEAL FOR a ee ute Ford senay te oe vee | Pl h vot YDs. AWORE. 618! J paisa aND 7 rentals, MY 35821.| DEER HUNTERS 197 WTD. JUNK CARS & SCRAP [RON Get Set 1941 Chevror transpo ymout Ce ret Fa Gt ee ee ens | ALPALPA AND BRC a MAY FT. BOTTLE TEXAS. | PE 4-0583 NORT ere . : ee rere ert — nex “an levator we STOVE, FUEL Ol HEATER. 6 day tal PR ase f Wi 312 LTH, PONTIAG i err “The Cars With The Open Till fs) P. M : _Wood, & Fuel 67| Trector with rot w “crop. sbray et _OR Be ial CALL | Foe Used Truck | or inter West Side Used Cars | Forward Looks 11 <. SAGINAW ST ~ FIREPLACE SLAB 2v| Resi Softies te | Rent Trailer Space 79) riciure = pexur | With a Good Used Car | f° gk ee | recilalioies FF 4-4546 a lore ra PICK : = "S56 mode's re . mie $8 per cord. 9 tor $18, Delivered. tee nis : fs Rar large selection p Sigh agg st Krom OW BUYSELL AND TRADE. hone PE 29131 : arenes AIN S: REBURST makes and models = : GOOD ORY GLAB WOOD, | $6.40 atte aoe AM | ws ote pad “A-1" condition waa conde C ; | = = ape ENED IETS ~ = > bew cr shopping “Tq, . a agli igo chain "sats wien 30 och waode | — mies MY 2-401! we CY Nile ommunity It’s the Biggest Thing in Town!” 8 ‘ y SOT Seu-VanS_VERY $-4101 | emg en SO | gee | Ame scomenee oo “Recerca SMOtOrs areeDwAY For Ss a ATTENTION! | _Tratier"Saiea_prayion_Piina | THEY a EL Oi. Pine FE +07 FE ¢1112 =NTION! | GMC TRACTOR AND FRUEHAUP place canne! coal. Purnsce. fire KING BROS | We ere wrecking 1948 to 1954, train. Now wo ang fA rs . ° 2 ningins yood, Oaninnd 0): ae cars and trucks We save sev-| appt. FE awe 82 CHEVROLET ‘ Paint Co. FE $6150, YOUR I-H DEALER grel late mode! low mileage used | i631 GMC 420 TANDEM DUNE. | Styiine Detuze Club Coupe. Jet Trees, Shrubs 68) Pontiac Road at Opdyke Basis, and "bod. parte Rebar re aad wall tree et waite side A BUACEEELL apauce pon | Qe, me ORD TRUCE BED ma — Geno trade, Wile or without $845 you; also Blue, N ont | sane bet a SCHRAM AUTO PARTS | gee inievnoUEyT STK while. OL baat. a . Te eee ata Se | gc cua are eam | MS TTL SD a 1“ lial an : Mughe. Ne | MasticR Co. uti 4 Foap TRUCK The OVERHEAD |i TON PICKUP “@ FORD. $300 51 BUICK tive tree your own Bring erg or MU ant. Mise at MU- | 57" cash. Excellext poll Ao ae Super Riviera. ¢ door. radio, Bar ai ei et Mercary opictor but tor race | EM 34554 between ¢ ends Alet D7atery gains Rock-Bottom . Sommerce vilag: BP MONEY MAKERS!! |GLASS. GLASS, GLASS 4 DODGE PICKUP. $125. eal $995 Galo on all turns Open SS, GLASS, a _ ae ' _ : SN Wy “oeetias AUE | out cane van sreter, me! rr sey poet) "Gl Seanad FER “SO PACKARD _ POIESS No Experience Necessary - Fer Sale P @ | vees | Johe honored Glass installed | 369 ser ’ Sir wiewatia You can't go wrong on a se fine Saf nme ets 9 New Ides stalk ameuater cottee Xen customer, ——_— Used Trucks | er, rats te trans oe are stan all-time iow for tan eons cay saan Everything is bergai Tested Used Cars They hat one ue vist ts guaranteed. e allan Ghakenane | | e s «meal = ve n n s . y F e pies, * weens old. MI 68: —_ _ New Idea No eee —s ee Open Sai. ur = GMC $245 |] CAR” Becked by our famous warrenty Tae, MARRS SR: A, reconditioned and winterized for own sate ead & A. 8TUD $20 Hub Auto Glase Co 53 BUI 7 ( your sa ety an ie ch Beagle “Eberie’s | Used Oliver McCormick and John | 22 Catiand Aven_ FE ¢7008 49 CADILL: 53 BUICK SUPER "52 N ROPERS .” Lonedéale | AC 22 SASH Opdyke Ra. Rg ey Deere sp. caders. 1 SET HYDRAULIC VALVE LIFT. Triple Checked Piestwood 4 door radio, heater, | Tpectie ond poner (eee, | ce Me eens ws eH AQUATIC GAR S [seve tee tek 8 es oe pee | nee see eee a '] License No eos. ‘oiiais eis 52 $1295 \ ‘SO $545 - S169 Sot x 2 = * Yl W...... propia, pat two gurmute) | HOUGHTEN'S | unis, eatin BS cca $345, pucker Riera 34° pare: | pera 3 ot cunm,. oxee BLACK COCKER BANNIES, §9 00 iain_Rochester_OL_1-#761. generators . 98 40 m , , | ose chev 5 SOL ET iw. 9 tone green.” a | ody. good pars ar KER BANNIES, (2 gLiVER KING DIRECT DRIVE tote of is was “Wd acs | 1952GMC suburban 5 49 PACKARD $3 CHEVROLET con 3 CHEVROLET flow. 2 tone green body. good motor, radio and SL e Trail bl Saw Weighs only 25/| and " core | . Radio, heater overdrive. |] Pour door 210 model with ra- Sonercuae’ pe heater and ‘ Lack aD TAN POPs OL) Bes k wirsiton, croton wie lon Oaklang_Ave__Ph__FR_ 44513 1948 Chev. pickup ...$395| 45 |] Oe one tel 02-00" coos Noe 93 2... $1 145 ‘SO 5495 Saat PARAREST Ano) WES oe Eas eee ee ae ets ae | 1949 Ford panel $245. aii $1.089 Hudson Wasp 2 dr. sedan, Air | Buick Roadmaster 2. ér. : mart eesadaral © OL Canc: epai _OR_3 1007 _ , ™. | "Ord panel ..... o245 "42 CADILI r een — heates and seat reen, radio, heater and “ene BABY PARAKEETS WITH CAGE Dick's Air Cooled Erigines Auto 0 Service 8 81 19510 Club Coupe radio - Sabie & Ry. | Teo = MES J "S1 FORD V-8 flow. ‘body needs some dinging. This Week Onl $5.04 12_8_Séainew _ PE to ievrolet pickup SO4s camane \ y- | Tee door with overdrive and — § r $e! 4th _st_ PE faa pad gts OARDEN TRACTOR GEAR DRIV- CRANKEMAPT ORINDINO 1X THE 1947 GMC ; $345 Re EY license No. GC Teo foor model that 1s priced 5] ae $995 ‘49 $445 Gh Seite | ees ee eRe eee eee cusses $505 S347 ray alot geen out, | gas 4 fe srane oo | months _ Tove 64259. A fe = . , ee use quipped with eater, ov > é bo CORN ae oa CRIBBING: REPAIRS, BUMPING & PAINTING 1951 Chev. 1 ton panel $595 49 FORD V-8 32 PACKARD - radioWadduneass: heater, seat covers and maroon AND TAN PUPS. OL — aes, new and used silo FREE ESTIMATE Ratie & heoter. | Il Tee'deer medet with rai tari pe [UDE ' ' Saee—e WORTES OLD —PEDT | _Ortonviea Meh. PRG) AN YMENT PLAN SPECIAL Erueeiaeet mtg sgt igs ones tremene aa |] OZ $995 | ‘49 $445 [ome wita command trainin ONE M a . Welahhs $RRO x Hers Cocke } “BG wee eee ery with children E Max Chain saws | BRAID MOTOR SALES $298 ord Custom #4 ar with | Ford Custom # Coupe with Coll OR 30008 ox coe af stop mm for a demonstration, tim ig ys ig ae 1938 Chevrolet Panel] '49 FORD ; Tit a oi 7 MO. OLD SoLitn. VRES ae tn bos Miller's Gar. Cone ot Wert I Station Wagon radio & heater 53 OLDS SUPER &&: $3 WILLYS - Se oa Woodward "Norse tt. mies | Sale Motor Scooters &2 $395 Radio, heater. Mydrametic and gration wagon. front wneet || OL $895 | ‘49. ae _Birmingham, Phone MI 46008. 5 ers WILSON GMC $1,689 drive License No. DP 0 “ss es . $365 resny ate SFE Special Xmas Bargain | ORAS MOTOR GOUOTER. gos 909 S. Woodward 47 DODGE | $987 jue sue 4 acces | ae , cornet ‘ aa i 4 Bolen 4-4038 ve. a: ». w 'c - hody work. "33 Ford 4 dr. Custom line, radio, heater, fine condition. $9) Plymouth, — radho, heater, good transpor- tation. 3? $795 "$1 Chevrolet Deluxe 4 dr., radio and heater. $165 ’46 Pontiac 2 dr., radio, heater. v ’ and SATU UNTIL CHRISTMAS! Pu - f wy ee ’ . 4." ° ¢ ’ A he a PE ee BS i ha 7 A misses’ skirt riot at a give-away price! They're made from the same fabrics you'll find in 9.98 skirts . wool tweeds, broadcloths, flannels, plaids, stripes and worsted suitings. | Choose from a flock of marvelous styles in casuals, dressy, clever in-betweens! AND — they're here in your choice of 12 outstanding colors . . luscious Ladies’ Ready-to-Wear—Second Floor They're Regularly 3.98 Dan River Cotton and Corduroy SKIRTS 299 all-wool knit dresses the a oy eames it, Fashion finds .,. at a very special price! Sleek two-piece beauties in a riot of splendid colors! Long or short dolman sleeves. Clever necklines. Sizes 10 to 18. ‘ FINAL SALE DAYS! FUR SALE DYED PROCESSED MOUTONS, MUSKRATS, SQUIRREL, OTHERS 4 MARMOT, 4 to Show Country of Origin of Imported Furs Excise Tax a) an sain Tags Show Markdowns Your Credit Is Coed At Sears! Get These Sensa- tional Savings—just 10% Down, Balance Monthly! LIMITED QUANTITIES! _ £100 175 ONLY 1 and 2 of a KIND... 2.98 Kerrybrooke 98 Priced Low Warmly fur-lined for protection egainst, winter's worst! In a! sizes! imported capeskins 2” 3-point back, half pique séwn Black or brown and white. Sizes 6 to 8, Others Priced te. {1 Onl) . 4.98 gift handbags the way she likes them... * in fine leather Superbly cratted hanaoags, brimming over with fashion surprises! She'll love the gleaming butter-soft leather, the roomy multi-comport- mented. shapes. (Shown here ore jvst o few from our wide orray!) In tempting shades of brown, red, navy, block or briarwood. The pouch. 4? tax Now Only Goubie- compartment shoulder-strap bag 5 ples ten Here’s a collection of Kerrybrooke plastic handbags styled to your special taste—ot budget prices! Many styles and sizes in Fall colors to choose from! Save now! Accessories Dept-—Main Floor i . ye = ’ 7 Saliifaclion guaranteed ox your monty back” SEARS ' 154 North Saginaw Si. Phone FE 8.4171 ’