The Weather Veo ‘ fo THE PONTIAC PRESS _ ee w ; j 44 7. 2 "es ‘e Py ¢ i i ; Weather — ee Neat | Details page two Edition - 4 11th YEAR * *& & *% = PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1953-32 PAGES ASSOCIATED. PREGA UNITED PRRs ae 4 7 ~ , + Pair Admits Plotting Slaying Before Kid + Yugoslavs Beat U.S. Envoy ‘End of the Trail’ AP Wirephete| Commies Say JAMES FE. FRASER Noted for his busts of famous people, of a tired Indian on a} horse ‘‘End of the Trail,"’ and the ! design of the Buffalo nickel, James Farle Fraser died Sunday in West- port, Conn., at the age of 76. Nab Turnpike Killing Suspect Arrested After 20-Mile Chase in New Mexico, Man Ciainis Innocence ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. ww = John Wesley Wable, 24, was ar- rested late last night on a Pennsyl- | gent request”’ | been handed the Neutral Nations {John E. They Are Set for PW Talks U..N. Charges Shipping of Aircraft Into Korea by Reds PANMUNJOM (AP) — The Communists indicated today they are ready to start interviews Wednesday for North Korean and Chi- nese war prisoners who re- fuse to return home. The POW repatriation commis- sion took steps to get the delay-plagued explanations under way. The development came amidst charges by the U. N. Beaten A AP Wirepheto KING WILLIAM B. U. S. Inforamtion Service Chief | |in Belgrade, William B. King was beaten by Yugoslav thugs who in- | |} vaded U. S. I. S. headquarters | Tito ls Seeking 4-Power Parley on Trieste Case Also Informs U. N. That Row About Territory Threatens Peace (From AP & UP Dispatches) BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (UP) — A Belgrade mob seriously beat an American diplomat today in fhe most ‘United States and Great Britain decided to turn their zone of Trieste over to Italy. At the same time Presi- dent Marshal Tito called for | |an urgent conference with | Command that the Reds’ there today, in new protests at the | the United States, Britain | | had shipped crated combat ‘aircraft into North Korea! |in violation of the armistice | terms. A UNC spokesman said an ‘‘u for investigation had 4 Supervisory Commission, the four- nation body charged with policing the truce However, at the same time, Gen. | Hull, new U. N. Far East- | ern commander, told newsmen he | knew of ‘‘no serious'’ vialations of the armistice by the Communists. | “There bave been some indi- | | British-American decision to turn | over the northern part of Trieste to Italy. Group Suspends Eligibility Rule But Status of 10 Youths Who Accepted Awards Is Still in Doubt LANSING W—A legislative com- | mittee today suspended the Michi- | | and Italy on the crisis and | linformed the United Na- | tions that the Trieste situ- ation is a threat to peace. Angry demonstrators stormed the United States | | Information Service build- |ing and beat information officer William B. King, |who was an_ Associated | Press sy peel during World War They seized news bulletins and burned: them in a bonfire while | | others stormed the British reading | room. King suffered a possible broken serious incident since the} N All Alone vania warrant charging him with | cations of violations,” he said, gan High School Athletic eligibility nose and the United States Em- the “Phantom of the Turnpike” New Mexico state police Wable, described as’ ‘highly dan- gerous hours after his capture as he lay shivering in a small, dark cell in the Bernalillo County Jail “I'm not guilty. anything about the marders. I'm just cold and tired.”’ Only a while before the lanky. medium-sized Wable had led state police a high:speed automobile chase and then escaped on foot af ter two companions “‘who I picked up in California’ were captured Wable finally was captured when a woman notified police she had seen him hitchhiking on the out- skirts of Belen. He gave up with- out a struggle. He is accused of shooting Harry F. Pitts, 39, Bowling Green, Va., and Lester B. Wood- vard, 39, Duncannen, Pa., last July on the Pennsylvania Turn- pike, a 327).mile superhighway running from the Ohio border to near Philadelphia. The two truck drivers were shot in the head as they slept in. their parked trucks. Theu bodies were found within three days of each other. Police said they had been robbed ° Wable, alone in the 4-by-7-foot denied knowing any- thing about the foreign-made pis tol used in the two killings and believed to be his “1 don't know anything about lightless cell, any gun,” he said. “I'm just cold.”’ Sheriff's officers said Wable threatened to kill himself and was put in solitary confinement, Wable, lying down with his knees huddled about his body for warmth. said “I told them if I'm ever found guilty of any kind of murder, then I'd kill myself. I'd hang myself I didn t mean Id kill myself now But I'm innocent.” He said he'd left Pennsylvania “Monday a week in a car I bor- rowed from a friend after a drinking spree.” He said he didn't know anything about the car being stolen. “I went to California where I picked up the two guys.” he said ‘Then I was heading back to Penn- sylvania.”’ The two picked up with Wable were Marvin H. Parson and a 17 year-old boy. Both gave their ad dresses as California, but would give no home town Cardinal Off for Rome; First Leg by Helicopter NEW YORK (UP) Frarttis Cardinal Spetiman left Sunday — by helicopter—on his first leg of a trip to Rome. The cardinal was whisked away from a parking !ot in® the heart of New York in a helicopter that | took him to Idlewild International Airport to board a transatlantic airliner. I don’t knew -. | with unexpected | “but I know of no serious ones murders after a 20-mile. chase' by | at present.” The U. N. members of the Mili- | tary Armistice Commission assert- told a reporter @ fewjed in a statement that the Com-| munists had shipped the crated aircraft from Manchuria to Uiju! airfield on the south side of the Yalu River, just a few miles from | the huge Red air base at Antung, Manchuria - The U. N. statement gave no numbers of type. Hull flew to Korea Monday in | his first visit to the battered peninsula since taking over the top U. N. Command post from Gen. Mark W. Clark. He first met with South Korean President Syngman Rhee in Seoul, | then went to the Allied base camp Munsan for conferences with Allied officers over the postponed “explanations’’ to reluctant POWs Spokesmen for the repatriation commission remained silent, but these signs pointed to a break in the dispute that has stalled the start of explanations since Sept. 26 1. The Communist Peiping radio | said the Reds are ‘‘willing to make (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Mrs. Albert E. Sleeper, Governor's Widow Dies | BAD AXE w — Mrs. Mary C Sleeper. widow of Michigan's Worlc War I governor, died at her home here Sunday. She was 92 Her husband, Albert E. Sleeper, was governor from 1917 to 1921. He died in 1934. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday from the Sleeper home. \ rule but left in doubt the status of | —. made a {10 youths who had been dectared | ineligible for accepting merchan- | dise awards. Members of the legislative ad- | ministrative rules committee said legal confusion over | there is whether their action automatically reinstates the 10. youngsters, but | that probably they will have to go j to court. George C. Dean of Hastings, attorney for six of the youths, said he had not determined their legal status yet but that he be- lieved a court suit would be necessary. Rep. Harry J. Phillips (R-Port Huron), the committee chairman, after a two-hour closed session said, ‘we have gone as far as we can go. We have suspended the rule and that’s as far as our authority goes.” The committee action was a re- buke to Dr. Clair L. Taylor, state superintendent of public education, | who last week refused to reinstate | the boys despite a rehearing on their cases and an earlier meeting of the committee at which suspen- sion of the rule was threatened. Sen. Edward Hutchinson (R- Fennville), a committee member, told Dean in the presence of re- | porters that there were doubts of the constitutionality of the legislative committee and that if the case went to the courts there was a possibility the com- mittee’s authority to suspend state | agency rules would be voided strong | “‘stern”’ protest to | the foreign office. It was announced that, hal tien to reinforcing hif occupa troops in the Yugoslav area of Trieste—Zone B—Tito has moved warships into Capodistria HMar- ber, about 10 miles down the | coast from Trieste city. It was reported ‘they included 15 motor torpedo boats and two sloops. { Tito, to the United States and British Embassies proposing the four- power conference He called the decision to turn over the Allied Zone A to Italy ‘‘a | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Columbus Day No Holiday for Pontiac Kids Pontiac school children are sa- luting today a chap who has caused them more trouble than any | other fellow. The person in question is Chris- topher Columbus, whose exploit in finding America in 1492 has been a standard school test question for decades. ‘Although students are observ- ing Columbas Day in their class- rooms, officials apparently fig- | ure that if Columbus hadn't dis- covered ghe New World some othe. fellow would have. For Columbus Day is not a legal holiday and banks, along with fed- eral, state, county and city offices, | are open today. AEC Committee Head Urges U.S. to Put H-Bomb on Wartime Urgency Status INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — Rep. | W. Sterling Cole (R-NY) said to- day the United States should as- sigi. wartime urgency to its hy dro- | gen bomb program because, he | said, Russia may shortly have | ‘hundreds or even thousands’ of H-bombs. Cole, chairman of the Senate- House Atomic Energy Committee said the Soviets ‘‘exploded a hydro- gen weapon’ two months ago to- day, and he declared: “If our own hydrogen effort falters, as it must not ard need not, the Soviets have it within their capacity to outstrip us — and outstrip us decisively— within a relatively short period of time, ‘Here is the stark. arithmetic | of the matter: Seven years elapsed between Hiroshima and our own hydrogen test’ of last fall; four | years elapsed between the first Russian A-bomb that we detec ed | and Moscow's hydrogen test. These | are not very comforting statis- tics “The Soviets have progressed | speed because | : 4 they have assigned supreme and overriding priority to their project from the very outset.’ Cole, whose committee posi- tion brings him up-to-date in- formation on the U. 8. atemic program, spoke out in a speech prepared for a meeting of state | and national officers of the American Legion. America’s large enough ing reprisal on any aggressor” dares attack, he said, adding “But is our existing atomic and hydrogen effort big enough and bold enough to answer _the chal- atomic stockpile is “to inflict devastat- who In Today's Press Billy. Rese .. 7 Birmingham eaipinloveie pinvelesisciese(eg Bed Considine : bs] Comics “ County News 25, 27 David Lawrene.... 4 Dr. George Crane. . 6 Fditertals 4 Emily Pest a Hal Seyte 1 Markets % Patterns .... wae as i" i EEE Ce ee “ Sports is 22, 22 Theaters u S Radia Programs ih} Want Ads 27, TR, 7%, 3a, 21 Women's Pages...,.....28,.19, 2, 22 lenge of the hour? My own re- ply is no... He urged ‘‘a hydrogen effort |comparable in scale, dollars, re ; sources, daring and speed to our | entire atomic effort of World War II." Cole said that “perhaps - the most ominous point of all” about the Soviet H-bomb test is this “It more and more appears that the harnessing of hydrogen energy for military uses may be far easier than was commonly supposed a few years ago. “If hydrogen weapons could be | | manufactured only at great cost, | jana with great effort, we might /console ourselves with the notion | that the Soviets could manufacture these dreadful weapans only in | small quantities | “But I fear the real facts are quite otherwise."’ Cole presumably referred to re- liable reports that U. S. scientists i have- found a way to trigger the | H-bomb without employing the tre- mendous heat of a conventional | | A-bomb, in his new doubie-action | | diplomatic move, first sént a note ; at a strange ype S; 'Protests Drunk Charge, but Can He Prove It? A driver questioned by Oakland County Sheriff's Deputies Merrille Finkle and Charles Whitlock after | being involved in an accident a tested that he was not drunk. “Where are you?” they asked | “I'm in Clawson,” he_ replied. A 10 mile miss—he was in Au burn Heights. Quiz Programs May Be Supreme Court Agrees to Review U. S. Efforts. to Outlaw Giveaways preme Court today agreed to re- | view government efforts to ban radio and television giveaway shows. The Federal Communications | Commission appealed to the high tribungl after a special three- judge federal court in New York said the ban should apply | where contestants were (A) re- quired to furnish money or any- thing of value, or (B) have in their possession a sponsor's product. The special court knocked out | @ commission ban on program schemes which directly or in- directly require audiences to listen to shows as a condition of being eligible to win prizes. The commission rules were in- tended to enforce a federal law which forbids the broadcast of lot- teries and similar schemes. Sta- tions which do not comply would be | denied renewal of their licenses. | But the ban was held in abeyance pending final Supreme Court action on the FTC appeal. | National Broadcasting Co., lumbia Broadcasting System, American Broadcasting Co posed a Supreme Court review of the case. In briefs filed with the high court they asked an immedi- ate order upholding the special Co- and op- court’s decision, without the cus- tomary hearing of arguments In another action, James P. | Finnegan, a confidant of former President Truman, today was re- fused a Supreme Court review of , his conviction for misconduct af internal revenue collector in Sy. Louis. Finnegan was sentenced to eis years in prisot on two charges of receiving money for aiding two firms in dealings with the federal government. Frank Flagels, Navy Vet, Dies of Polio Attack TRAVERSE CITY (UP)—Frank | Coach Division, and Henry Stack, | Martin Flagels, 34, of Onekama in | Manistee -County, died Sunday in Munson Hospital of bulbar polio- myelitis Flagels, veteran and cherry orchard opera- tor, was brought to the hospital Tuesday. Jury Indicts Unionist WASHINGTON uF — A federal | grand jury here today reindicted Hugh Bryson of San Francisco, president of the National Union| of Marine Cooks and Stewards, on | employe contacting in Pontiac Brooklyn, Mich. charges that he filed a false non- | tional. Labor Relations Board. HOPING FOR A HOME—Snuggling together their carrying case, these five little kittens peer out world of clattering typewriters, jangling tele phones and Hashing bulbs that | Humane Soc tety in a Strange Big World make up the wed of the Benton Harbor News- | Palladium. Needing good homes, the kittens were | brought .o ee news office by a delegate of the | in tele- | Police Hunting ) Convicts | Who Escaped Prison Camp : GRAND RAPIDS (AP) — A state- wide-search is on | today for two convicts who escaped from a controversia} state work camp and abducted two men and a 15-year-old | boy in their flight from Traverse City to Grand Rapids. | State Police identified the convicts as Daniel 8S. Ocker- | man, 32, sentenced from Kalamazoo in 1950, and Gerald Ainsworth, alias George Albend, 36, a Detroiter sentenced from Macomb County in 1944. Both were serving 14 | -_ > WASUINGTON. UP) — The Su. only | and fined $10.000 | a World War II Navy | Commumist affidavit with the Na-| to 15 years for burglary. | Ockerman and Ainsworth | escaped conan 4 \from a Conservation partment work camp va wee Hills outside Trav- je e City. fore Dr. Joseph E. Maddy, at Intericchen, had obtained an | injunction against the state's con- tinuing construction of a work) camp which the two had been help- ing to build for themselves and others now at Hickory Hills Maddy complained the pew camp, La Victoire, would be less then four miiles from .he music camp and that escapees would be a menace to the hundreds of girls and boys who go there every summer. Circuit. Judge Charlies Brown or- dred the state to show cause Oct 16 why the injunction should not be made permanent Using a toy pistol that looked like the real thing, Ockerman and (Continued on Page 2 2, Col. 2) | | revenue in that year (1955, equal | UF Announces Plant Captains leaders to Supervise Contacting of Employes in Area Industries Pontiac Area United Fund today | announced captains who will super: 7 in | Pontiac Manufacturers Association | vise contacting of employes plants during the 1953 fund drive Oct. 20-Nov. 6. Earl A. Maxwell, personnel di- rector of GMC Truck and Coach | Division, is chairman of the cam- paign'’s industrial division Factories which are not me bers of the Pontiac Manefac. turers Association are meeting with Maxwell today to map cam- paign plans within their plants. Plant captains named for asso- ciation factories include John F. E | Brady for Pontiac Motor Division; ' Owen J. O'Neill, GMC Truck and | Fisher Body Division, General Mo- tors, Willard L. McRae will head em- | ploye canvassing at Forging and Socket Co; W. L. Whitefield, Consumers Power Co.; Neil C. Dostal, Dostal Foundry and | | Machine Co.,:and Alex ‘Clark, Baldwin Rubber Co. Jig Bushing Company's captain is Thomas Mair; Nelson Manu- facturing Company leader is Harold J. Bauer will supervise puller more than an hour be-| presi- dent of the National Music Camp | Predicts Budget fo Stay in Red. Director Dodge Holds Little Hope for Balanced Books Before 1956 | DETROIT (UP)—Budget Direc- tor Joseph M. Dodge held out little hope today for a balanced budget before fiscal 1956 despite ‘‘vigor- ous” efforts at governmental economy. Expenditures already authorized by law, he said, will hit their peak | this year and next while at the | same time the government will be faced with: reduced income from authorized tax reductions. “If the revenue conditions remain favorable, the tax re- | ductions now in the law will | cause an estimated less of to or exceeding the amount of savings we expect to make in this year’s expenditures,” he said. “This means that the budget balancing problem in the 1955 | fiscal year (beginning July, 1954) | is at least the same in magnitude as the one we faced this year,” Dodge told the Economic Club of ’ Detroit. “There will be the same vigor- ous effort to meet it, but the |farther you go on the road” to government economy, the more difficult it becomes,”’ he said He indicated the biggest cuts will have to come from the defense items in the national] budget which now account for 70 per cent of all government expenditures. aping Hall Confesses HeKilled Bobby; Over State Line FBI Returns to Case as Drug Addict, Alcoholic Describes Murder ST. LOUIS (AP) — Dope addict Carl Austin Hall and his alcoholic woman friend confessed today they plot- ted 6-year-old Bobby Green- lease’s slaying even before | he was kidnaped. The government immedi- | ately stepped back into the ‘case under the Lindbergh | kidnaping law. The 34-year-old Hall, a | ne’er-do-well son of a re- _svected Kansas family, and Mrs. Bonnie Brown Heady, 41, signed statements say- | ing they took little Bobby across the state line into Kansas where Hall killed him shortly after the kid- naping in Kansas City, Mo., | Sept. 28. . in his new confession, ad- Pe he fired a bullet into the right side of the little boy's head. Only a short time before Bobby had been playing with schoolmates. It was Mrs. Heady who lured Bob- by from a nun at the boy's school on the pretext she was his aunt. Their confessions were an- nounced by the FBI, which said the two kidnapers admitted dig- | ging the boy's grave behind Mrs, Heady’s home in St. Joseph, Mo., before the kidnaping. Thus the couple plotted the little | boy’s death even before the kid- naping took piace. The FBI dis- closed the lime found over Bobby's a en ee ie ee “he FBI said it has been de- | termined that the boy, abducted from an exclusive private Catholic | school, had been killed about 12 | miles from Kansas City across the _line in Kansas. As a result the Lindbergh Law applies. It carries a possible death penalty when the victim is harmed. Earlier when it appeared no state line had been crossed the govern- ment had decided to turn prosecu- tion of Hall and Mrs. Heady over to the state of Missouri. State charges of both kidnaping and mur- der are pending against the pair. Hall absolved Tom Marsh, 37, the tattooed ex-convict and sex of- fender, in his new confession. He had been named by Hall as the killer of the bay soon after Hall's and Mrs. Heady's arrest here last Tuesday night. The FBI said a mechanical pencil of a type known to have been in little Bobby's possession (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Outlook for Area: Cloudy and Cooler Partly cloudy and cooler weather is the outlook for the Pontiac area tonight and tomorrow, according to the U. S. Weather Bureau. The low tonight of 38 to 42 de- grees is expected to rise to a high near 60 on Tuesday. Sunday, the mercury climbed rom a low of 51 to a high of 76 degrees Today at 8 a.m. the temperature stood at 48, but by 2 p.m. in down- town Pontiac the reading was 61 ' de aree s Weekend Traffic Accidents Take 12 Lives in Michigan By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS At least 12 persons died i n traffic accidents and one hunter died of accidental gunshot wounds in Michigan over the weekend. Traffic victims to be report 25, of Lansing, killed early S 'on US27 14 miles northeast ed included Mrs. Veda Main, unday in a two-car collision of Charlotte. Indalesio Polendo, 28, of Marshall, was killed Sunday American 45 his car swerved off a rural road and smashed into a tree on a curve three* i miles southeast of Marshall. Joe Pasyk, 62, of Toledo, was | | fatally injured as a car driven by | | his daughter: Mrs. Alice Heine- mann, also of Toledo, failed to make a curve on a rural. road between Monroe and the Qhio, state line Sunday night. Howard J. Danbeck, 23, of | became Jackson {struck a tree a mile north of Brooklyn on M50. John T. Demchuk, 17, of Detroit, | was killed Sunday when his motor- cycle rammed a car on M97 in Warren Township. Russell Hoge, 28, of Lapeer, ty | Sunday in a Flint Hospital in- juries. suffered when his < “ 5 Re | <4 oe i " ¢ I ‘a4 Be a o +: i ” . - re \ } on / > 4 / am to Consider t Ordinance Change House, a “‘ginimick” program will i Pils (jal. | ub meeting r it 7 ire 3 ¥ if g 8 p 23 4 Tie 3 Lit 17 ete? z F rf > 6:30 m. Twelve iVities; Club diner; Vide pm, Benior ‘et i i | fil Friday, Oct. 16: 10:30 am.-3} pm. Ben. for Astivities: & p.m. Beverly Hilis Im- it Association 5. provemen: Saturday, Oct. 17: 7 p.m. Hofticultural Society; 6:30 p.m. University of Kentucky Alumni Dance. . Fowler Gets Quster Letter Birmingham Postmaster Plans to Fight Removal, Hires Two Lawyers BIRMINGHAM Bernard E. Fowler, Birmingham postmaster, today announced that he has re- ceived official word from Washing- ton informing him of his removal from office.. The from . as- ot U. S. Postmaster general tn fi { i : , F Fi i TF Eiie : i | 1 silt ‘ H é g came N. R. Abrams ! i sistan P. the office t The notification stated that the 2? reason for the firing was “a re- : sulf of unsatisfactory conditions disclosed a recent investiga. tien at your office.” igi it in Rouge Pollution,| a MISS SARA STRENGELL Miss Sara Strengell last week opened a Teenage Theater in Bir- mingham to aid young actors in this area to study and work on a professional level. Two-hour classes will be held Thomas | @ch Saturday morning in the Community House, she has an- nounced. Miss Strengell taught last sum- mer at Cranbrook Summer School of the Theater. Pair Plotted Death Before Kidnaping (Continued From Page One) at the time of his abduction was found at the murder site. The pencil had been put out by the Greenlease Motor Co. as an ad- vertisement. The boy’s 7l-year-old multi-mil- swanky apartment rented for him by a taxicab driver, who later became suspicious because of Hall's spending spree and tipped oft police, The gun was turned over to tie tests in Washington showed slugs found in a blue station wagon of the couple were fired from the weapon. The station wagon was found | abandoned in Kansas City soon after the arrest of the pair here. When arrested here Hall had more. than $295,000 in two suit- cases in his apartment. He said he couldn't remember what had happened to the rest of it because he had been on a drinking spree. But today the FBI indicated Hall, a drug addict, had given its agents additional information about the The station wagon, the FBI said, i | lif The communication informed Fowler that & successor would be appointed at an early date. Fowler revealed that he has hired two attorneys to check into his right to appeal the action under Civil Service law. He said he plans to fight the ouster Initial word of Fowler's re- movel came Thursday from Rep. George A. Dondero (R-Mich). “Postmaster irreguiarites” were cited as reasons for the action. Fowler, 535, a disabled World War I veteran, has been postmaster here since 1948. Police Hunt Felons Who Escape Camp (Continued From Page One) Ainsworth forced Claude Snow, : : iy Aj neth Day, 15 to drive them to Grand Rapids. Walking away from the prison was man outside a restaurant and > and | foreed them into Snow's car, with orders to obey traffic signals and police. | l drive toward Kingsley. As he drove near his-Traverse City home, Snow asked permis. sion to tell his family he had if —e = g ® PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partiy| been called out of town. The con- Low lenteht S8'to tf tigh on Teeste, | Victs let him stop, bat made him near 60. Northeast winds 1¢ te 15 miles yell his message. When Day ee eee ee ane ont, becoming | walhed out of the house, they or- cpa | dered him into the car and made wore tanpeeiure preceding § am | Snow drive off. At $ am: Wind velecity 1 mpn | En route the men recounted their “een is Mes a sa0 on papers when they got to rises y at 6:42 am | Gra pids they took $11 off, a. HA |Snow before leaving the car in ——— midtown. 8 o Beerense.. ie m........ 4 _—_— gem ppm cio Hay From Wreck Sold BE Miegoresnsee “ | Quickly on the Site af in Pontiac - ; (hs downtown) SEDALIA, Mo. #—R. E. Callen é SILI sf | discovered an eager market for Se 635| his hay the hard way. His truck ae | pied high with the stuff and en One Veer Age in Pontiac - | route to another county, cracked ngheecaunanyy 41 | 4M axle and toppled over a few seevseeeseeees. 945) miles north of this Pettis County seat. Almost immediately, hay-hun- gry farmers began converging on the trucker, who escaped injury. Before either the. highway’ patrol wrecker 4 arrived, Callen had unre know Pettis County needs hay so badly.” he said. ‘'! several offers almost , efore truck stopped rolling 6n_ its —Susegeseessss s had blood stains, Yugoslavs Batter |American-Officiat—- (Continued From Page One) situation which is likely to en- danger the maintenance of inter- national peace and security.”’ He said that if a friendly settle- ment could not be reached, Yugo- defense by all possible means.” Secondly, Tite In a 2,000-word cablegram formally advised the U.N. that “a danger te peace” exists in Trieste. because of the Allied action. This would mean an appeal to the Security Council for emergency action. But Tito told the Western powers that the four-power conference he sity for U.N. action. troops into it—Yungoslavia will re- gard it as “the passing over to open aggressive action by the Re- public of Italy,” the note said. A copy of it was sent to the The attack on King was the first anti-Western violence since then. however, though huge crowds of Yugoslavs paraded in orderly dem- onstrations against the Trieste ac- tion yesterday. Following the rioting Thursday night, the government had thrown protective’ cordons around the U. S., British and Italian instal- lations but these were later with- drawn. The American Embassy's pub- lic affairs chief, John McGowan, called at the Yugoslav Foreign Office after the attack on King and protested it as a ‘‘very seri- ous situation." He reported that the minstry's protocol office had expressed its apologies for the assault. Tito's speech yesterday was followed a few hours later by cancellation of all military be recovered. on the Trieste territory, where the end of World War Il in- oil peas igen. wee | ge ee eee claimed that she abducted the : bey from a private Catholic ee ee ee neal te ing of Sept. 28 " ergee agate were reported by posing as the boy's aunt on a ee the belle! Bobby Was his son, Pell : : Paaad Giuseppe in the custody of a former wife. ee no reply | to Tito and was reported taking | the attitude that the - Yugoslav threats were something for Britain and America to worry about. THE PONTIAC PRESS. M slavid will “have recourse to self- proposés might forestall] the neces- | ONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1953- 9 Educator Dies in Pontiac Home Miss Mary S. Herrington Was Bagley Principal for Many Years Miss Mary S. Herrington, 89, principal of Bagley School here for many years, died Sunday at her residence, 105 Franklin Blvd. Miss Herrington was born in Four Towns on Feb. 13, 1864, the daughter of E. C. and Sarepta Warren Herrington. Although she resided at the Franklin Boulevard address for over 40 years, she still felt a deep Tavern Bandit Steals a Kiss After Hold-Up CHICAGO w—A kissing~ robber gtook time out during a tavern hold- up éarly Sunday to kiss a woman patron. es The gunman, a teenage youth with a missing front tooth, placed a smack on the cheek of Mrs. Edward Stalder, 33, after scooping $225 from the cash register of a tavern on the northwest side. Then he robbed her husband, Edward, 35, of $40 and took $10 from an- other customer. He fled with two companions. . The three robbers also held up two other taverns. interest in the community of Four Towns where her father and grand- ,father resided. Four years ago, | She and a_ sister, Mrs. Elmer | Charles, donated several acres of | land for a community center there. In 1947, City Commissioner Wil- liam W. Donaldson suggested changing the name of Diston and Gillespie streets to Herrington Boy, 4, Attacked by Great Dane SS Sex. ese Child Suffers Serious | Miss Herrington Head Gashes in Ordeal at Traverse City TRAVERSE CITY (® — A 4 year-old Flat Rock boy is in a hospital here suffering from head wounds inflicted by a Great Dane MISS MARY 8. HERRINGTON French Farmers Block Highways Protest Gap Between Prices From Them to Consumers LUSIGNAN, France w—Farmer Pierre Rousseau dragged a two- wheeled farm cart onto Highway No. 11 this morning, stood defiant- ly in the middle of the road, | raised his right arm and shouted | to his comrades: ‘‘To the barri- cades!" j At least 200 farmers took up the inspiring cry that once rang dog. One gash measured seven inches. The ‘child is, Ralph Sheer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Sheer, and the dog which attacked him is owned by their brother-in-law, Francis Newman. The giant dog apparently at- tacked because of excitement anf fear that his nine-year-old master, Leroy Newman, was going to be harmed by the smaller child. Leroy shouted and ran after ithe Sheer boy as he sca into a street. In the excitement the dog snapped the chain that her life, she was a member of the | | First Congregational Church, Grace Charles of Pontiac: | Funeral will be Wednesday at 2) pm m. from the Sparks-Griffin | Chapel. Burial will take place at Four Towns Cemetery, with the | Rev. Malcolm K. Burton of the) First Congregational Church offi. | | Mrs. Berthilda L. Coan | held him and dashed by Leroy, , : sinking bis fangs into the boy. | _ Mrs. Berthilda Light Coan, 8, of Nawinen bent tertng to « pound | 1258 Spruce St., Detroit, died Sun- a d her ” | for ation. alt he had | ay at Receiving Hospital, Detroit . | She was born in Canada on April | been vacinated with anti-rabies 187 I i serum. After the observation | 1, ©. the daughter of to have the animal destroyed, ‘‘be- married John Coan in Detroit in . r . , : ” 1951. cause I don't want it any more Surviving besides her Weekend Accidents srs et Gartune lot, Auburn. are three daughters and two sons, Mrs. Lefa Stewart of Rochester, Kill 12 in State Mrs. Alice Krause of Traverse City, Fred Light of Detroit, and Delbert Light of Grand Rapids. (Continued From Page One) kin Township, was killed in subur- Funeral will be Vednesday at. 11 a.m. from the Pursley Funeral | ban Detroit Saturday as he was struck by a car. Home. Burial will be in Perry | Mount Park Cemetery, with the) Rev. Paul Havens of the First Methodist Church officiating. Baby Girl Beckett | The infant daughter of Herman | and Alice Taylor Beckett of 2445 Sneilbrook was dead at birth Sun- day at Pontiac General Hospital. Surviving .besides her parents a sister “@aret—at-home. Funeral will be Tuesday at 1° | Elmer Jacobs, 84, of Albion. died {p.m. from the Huntoon Funeral | Sunday of injuries suffered Tues- | Home. Burial will follow at Perry | day when he was struck by a car |Mount Park Cemetery, with the Myrtle Kirtley, 52, of Okemos, was killed Saturday near Lansing as her car_ment-out.ol control and | hit a tree off M78. ~ | defiant call a3; When confronted with the new in downtown Albion. Rev. Andrew Creswell of the Oak- | evidence, Hall and Mrs. Heady | broke down and told what had Nor was there any indication in Rome that Italy was sending more camp after an 8:30 p.m. bed-check | — The Bitteriey | the two encountered Snow and _ Bo- | troops to her northeast frontier with Yugoslavia, where the finest soldiers of the NATO-pledged Ital- ian Army already are stationed. Reports from the area said not even routine weekend leaves had been cancelled. happened Joseph E. Thornton, FBI agent | in charge at St. Louis, said he didn’t know how mafy slugs had been fired into the station wagon nor whether the boy actually was | killed in it. | Mrs. Heady, in her signed con- | fession, admitted she was with Hall at the time of the killing. Mrs, Heady, an alcoholic, at first claimed she was so drunk at the time the ransom money was dropped over a bridge near Kansas City by a representative of Greenlease that she didn’t even remember anything about it. Hall, a man of thinning hair, is | held in cell No. 40 at the St. Louis | City Jail. He is under guard day | and night and is kept away from | other prisoners for his own safety, | Warden E. E. Hensley of the jail | reported Mrs. Heady is confined in an- other part of the jail in a large room with. four other women pris- oners. A spotlight is played on her bed, in the center of the room, | throughout the nights so that/ she might be kept under constant ob- | servation There was no announcement as to when the pair will be taken to Kansas City. Russia to Receive Big 4 Talk Invitation PARIS (UP)—The United States, Britain and France have agreed to issue-a new invitation to Russia the Trieste territory yet, but Washington sources expected the U. 8S. and British forces would not be withdrawn until the Ital- jan soldiers had moved in. _ In Trieste, Italians and Yugo- slavs watched each other through barbwire road blocks closing the zona) frontier but there was little evidence of nervousness. Set for PW Talks, Commies Tell U. N. (Continued From Page One) concessions’ and start interview- ing the 22.600 anti-Communist POWs Wednesday in an effort to | persuade them to accept repatria- tion. : | | | 2. The Indian command said the rules for “explanations” had been read to al the POWs. Last week a Indian spokesman said the reading of the rules would be held up until just a few days before the interviews were to | start. and Allied teams were postponed after each side rejected facilities built by the other. The Commu- nists demanded detailed changes. The UNC completed 20 tempo- rary ‘‘explanation’’ booths Sunday for Red use, but the Indian com- mand said the Communists wanted a complete camp of 32 winterized tents before starting the ‘‘explana- tions."’ to attend a Big Four foreign min- isters conference on Germany and Austria next month, a high allied _ Source said tonight The Western proposal will be contained in a new note—the latest in a long series—which will be transmitted to Moscow later this | week, the source said. | The note will suggest that the meeting be held at Lugano, Switz- | ertand, during the second week |. of November, it was reported. | | my own satisfaction.” | The United States. British and! The City Commission is expected French governments previously | to act on his res#gnation Tuesday. | had invited the Russians to attend Briggs served on the City Com- {a foreign ministers meeting at mission since April, 1947. He was Briggs Plans to Quit as Bloomfield Mayor Walter O. (Spike) Briggs Jr portéedly plans to resign as mayor of Bloomfield Hills. He was quoted as saying, “I haven't got the time to do the job | Lugano Oct. 15, but the Soviets | appointed as mayor by. the com- ‘evaded the issue. mission last April. 7 4 No Italian troops liad entered | The explanations by Communist president of the Detroit Tigers. re- | John Copeland, 18, of White |!and Avenue United Presbyterian | Cloud, was fatally wounded Sun- | Church officiating. | day in what police described as | | “horseplay with a shotgun.” The Mrs. Lucy Jane Wheatley gun was accidentally discharged | ; : at the home of James W. Lewis in| Mrs. Lucy Jane Wheatley, 75, died | , | Romulus Township, outside De- | Saturday at the home of her troit , | daughter, Mrs. Irene Engholm of j 344 Going St. Mrs. Wheatley was born in Els- berry, Mo.. on May 20, 1878, the daughter of Alexander and Fannie Veteran Nurse Dies at 95 in Grand Rapids Watts Benear. GRAND RAPIDS #—Jennie A.| A resident of Pontiac for 23 Farnham, a Community Health| years, she was a member of the | Service nurse here until she was |New Hope Baptist Church of Els- | 87, died Saturday night at the berry. age of %. Surviving are two sons and two A native of Ionia County, Miss | daughters, Mrs. Frances DeSmith Farnham was instrumental in set-| of Indiana, Mrs. Engholm of Pon- ting up the clinic for infant feeding | tiac, Charles Wheatley of Cudahy, in Grand Rapids in 1914, and | Wis., and William Wheatley of helped to organize three other chil- | Clarkston. Also surviving is a dren's clinics. | brother, Martin Taylor Benear of | St. Louis, Mo. ' Girl, 4, Treated for Cuts | Funeral will be Tuesday at ° A |p. m. from the Pursley Funeral After Being Hit by Cor tome. Burial will follow at Perry ; , Mount Park Cemetery, with the Mary Christine Johnson, 4, of | . 155 Branch St, was treated for | — —— = ime cen: cuts and bruises at Pontiac Gen- | #0" Lutheran Church officiating. | eral Hospital Sunday after she was | . (hit by an auto at Clovese and Say Ukraine Red Party Branch Sts. Wk - | Driver of the auto, Evelyn Wood, Undergoes Cnange 18, of 230 W. Wilson Ave.. told) \OSCOW Ww The | Pontiac Police the child ran in front; Communist Party has been re-| of the auto organized along the lines of the | all-union party, the newpaper State Newsmen Elected [Ukranian Pravda Ukrainy has i | announced. WASHINGTON —Two Michigan; The paper reposted yesterday the men are among those newly! action was taken at a full meet- elected to membership in the ing of the Ukraine Central Com- | American Society of Newspaper | mittee which ended Saturday. The Editors. They are J. Evans Camp-| meeting heard a report by First ‘bell, editor of the Argus Press. | Secretary A. I. Kirichenko on | Owosso. and Ralph ‘H. . Bastein, | all - union organizations. ‘‘Appro-} president, Booth Newspapers, | priate decrees’ were adopted, the Flint. paper said. 9 « Ukraine LUNCH PAIL... Remember when you carried your lunch in a discarded lard bucket with lettering on one side? You did a bit of free advertising for one of the major packing companies as it swung from your hand going to and from school. Anyway, your lunch from that lard bucket tasted every bit as good as it does today from your deluxe vacuum equipped lunch box. Remember? bd J }) William F. Davis | » FUNERAL HOME FE 4-0652 t throughout France during the, turies ago. They began tugging and pulling | Surviving is a sister, Mrs. |4t carts, wagons and all kinds of |i, farm machinery. A huge, broken down thresher was dragged across | the highway. Within minutes, -National High- way No. 11 was solidly blocked at a point seven miles west of tHis village. No one was allowed to pass and trucks and automobiles soon lined | up on both sides of the barricade. | Thousands of other farmers | throughout central and southwest | France were shouting the same | early this morning. | They blocked both main and sec- ondary roads leading into the heart | of France's farm belt. They were protesting against the wide gap between the prices they | get for their produce and the! prices consumers are paying for it. | “This is only the beginning,’ said one cattleman. ‘We'll go all the way to Paris if it is neces- “We are not satisfied with the government,’ said one farmer, but he denied that Communists were involved in the demonstration. The farmers are seeking relief, from taxation and middleman prof- its. They say these multiply the cost of beef on the hoof at least five times before it reaches the consumer. | iS Detroit Bar Backs Airman Lt. -Raduylovich Accused by Association, Lawyers - Subcommittee Says DETROIT (UP) — Lt. Milo J. Radulovich of Dexter, charged with being a poor security risk because of the alleged Communist leaning ot his father and sister, had the | support of the Detroit Bar Associa- tion today in his fight to retain his reserve commission in the Air Force, Probate Judge Patrick O'Brien, chairman of a special association subcommittee, said his group had decided that the airman had been accused of guilt by association and that his Constitutional rights had been violated. O'Brien said the subcommittee will subniit a reso- lution expressing its feelings in the case to the association on Wednesday. Radulovich, a Yniversity of Mich- igan student, defended himself against the charges before the Air Force Board of Officers at Self- ridge Air Force Base. The Air Force is expected to announce soon whether he will be forced to sur- render his commission or be al- lowed to remain on the reserve list. Launches Fund Drive A resident of Paptiac most of | French Revolution nearly two cen-| GRAND RAPIDS (UP) — The United Kent County Fund Drive with a geal of ‘$1,239,639, which $61,630 more than last year, was launched today. Wouldn't You rather own a Hamilton Watch? iil } } i ; | lewelers 17 WN. Saginaw St. Hy BESS ERESEEE HAVE ~ SUNDAY DINN = as, aa Lad = i AS = a Ye ee - H lie HIS APLLLD) . A a = e z NOW SERVING OYSTERS @ N THE HALF SHELL Limited Supply of 1953 Models *58°° |uewrr THE “NO DUsT BAG TO Es‘PTY™ VACUUM CLEANER GivEsS YOU automatic AWRY rug cleaning! Sove work, sove your tugs, too! The new Lewyt withNo 80 Cor. pet Norrie cleans rugs 4 woys with every stroke! Comes with off tools for Roor-to-ceil- ing cleaning pivots on “Cireulor Track" bose quiet, no roar WI fee +4 fag to Empty t SAVE $24.95 THIS WEEK ONLY! HURRY IN TODAY! and your old cleaner Only Lewyt's No. 80 Carpet Nozzle gives you WIDE-ANGLE SUCTION! 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And he declared that ‘‘Soviet rulers are attempting the impos- in trying to mold the citizens ‘to their mater- sible of satellite nations alistic and repressive rule.” » «* + *We beheve that the peoples have faith and hopes which cannot indefinitely be repressed,”’ he told an_ interdenominational community meeting. About 1,700 persons attended the meeting, which marked the 150th anniversary of the the first Presbyterian Church. Dul- subject and tolerance within our nation we — | our alliances."’ | comfenion of thinking whith needs | to be dispelled.’’ nation into a purely material fort- ress founding of | les recalled that his father preach- | ed there for 16 years Dulles cautioned against he termed the view of ‘ a small minority’’ that the thoughts and expressions of U. 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Saginaw St. 36x36" Opened {Kg BROTHERS OPE 1 TC bs ales = i 4 NE lO Ge Pa —_ a nega ae SS Ns ae IE ai. 8 vliniainaiiet ail inteatie a 1 tact ct Meaamae, ies ee Claes Coll “Bud’’ H. BR. Nicholie 39 Mt. Clemens St. Women Drivers .. . Hew Much Do You Understand About Auto Insurance? How ebout the policy you now carry ~. , d® you know what tt covers and to what extent? Can you enjoy com- plete carefree driving? Complete. information is as near as your telephone. H. R. NICHOLIE AGENCY H. Delos “Bud” Nicholie Ph. FE 2-2326 a ees Psychology Aids in Correcting | Speech Defects BUFFALO, N. Y. (UP)—Twelve years ago, an understanding teach- er embarked on a specialized ca- reer-here that has since been rec- ognized nationally. Miss Helen G, Rochmord estab- lished the first training class in the coufitry to use scientific speech education for children with cleft palates. The originally was set up by the late Dr. J. Sutton Regan, who had specialized in palate sur- gery. It called‘ for the combination of scientific, medical; education- al and psychological studies. { 70 Since its a more than! THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 12 ey students from western New York have been enrolled in the : school department's speech class. There are now 24 children with speech ‘deficiencies at ~ Public Sehool 80 here who participate in reguiar classroom programs, in addition to attending Miss Roch- | ford’s class. This system, she ex- oaug the Suez Canal Zone plains, keeps them from develop- ing complexes. Miss Rochford noted: that her pupils combine their tongue and breathing exercises with simple little games, such as blowing feathers, or ping pong balls. One of the most important fac- tors in encouraging the child with a speech impediment, added the | sacha. was understanding and cooperation from the parents. “Attitudes are caught, taught.’’ she explained. not Two British Airmen Wounded Near Suez airmen were wounded slightly yes- | terday by pistol and Sten gun shots | \fired at them by three = Ravotions jof Ismaljia, the British Embassy | announced, The attack occurred yesterday afternoon as the "RAF men were! returning from Ismailia to Britain's big base outside the town. One airman was wounded in wr shoulder, the other in one arm. third RAF man with them ran fa help to a nearby British army post. Patrols combed the area but‘ , could not find the attackers. | Three-fifths of all traffic deaths | occur in rural areas. center | | targets, a buck deer ran across | their line of fire unscratched. 4ty'’s 25th | year when he died Sunday of in- » 1953 fs Marines Find It Easy to Pass Up the Buck conetyade POINT, N. C. (UP)— two red-faced Marines at CAIRO, Egypt - 8 two Reith | the wa pam here came back from the firing range recently without boasting of their marks- manship. As the group blazed dway at His mate waited until the nerv- ous Marines ceased firing and then ‘walked across the range. Dies of Crash Injury IONIA (UP) — Charlies Bos- worth, 28-year-old Sunfield furni- ture worker, became lonia Coun- traffic fatality of the juries he suffered in a highway ' crash last Wednesday. A VALUABLE FREE BONUS WAITE’S BONUS APPLIANCE SALE! WITH EVERY APPLIANCE PURCHASED AT WAITE’S! Football! With Every Radio A Regulation Type With Every Lewyt e A Lady’s or Man’s Deluxe Wristwatch! With Every Stove a A Telechron Kitchen Clock! With Every Washer or Dryer e 16-Piece Set of Dinnerware! A With Every Refrigerator 6 A 52-Piece Set of Silverware! 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Security Quiz Lures McCarthy Bridegroom Cuts Short His Honeymoon to Fly to Hearing NEW YORK (UP)—Sen: Joseph R. McCarthy cuts. short his honey- | moon to fly here today for a hear- ing into the recent suspension of | several civilian army employes at Ft. Monmouth, N. J., as ‘‘security risks." | McCarthy, than two weeks, a bridegroom of less described the in- vestigation at the Ft. Monmouth Radar Laboratory as “‘a case of | | current espionage of an extremely | dangerous nature.’ He was scheduled te leave Ap- pleton, Wis., by plane and arrive in New York in time for an afternoon hearing by his senate permant investigating subcomit tee. McCarthy said his staff had been working for several months on the investigation of alleged information leaks at the secret radar lab. The Wisconsin Republican | his bride, the former Jean Kore,| | have been visiting friends at Mc- | Carthy’s home town. They called off plans for a three-week honey- | moon trip to the Bahamas. Detergents, most of which are made with petroleum, bubbled up | in popularity in the last five years, and production figures rose from 400 million pounds a year to 18 bilticn pounds. Ratti Creek énnel User Lest 17 Lbs. weight ‘with the help of trate was a wonderful | | eset treatment for me,” writes| 12 Hulbert Lane, Mich. “Before takin t, always ti ow I am down 135 from 152 Ibs. and I am really | gold on Rennel. I rely on it because it is a wonderful tor, been » |her what she wanted it to do. If not pleased with the very first bottle return it to the manufacturer for your money | back. Price $1.40. Insist’ on 1. MATTERS OF DOLLARS & SENSE... iN “lth it i) 1 Ny } 4. fauver Senators Hit Talk Proposal Hickenlooper, Kefauver Sdy Big 4 Talk Must Have Definite Agenda WASHINGTON W® — Senators Hickenlooper (R-lowa and “Ke (D-Tenn) today opposed Winston Churchill's call for a Bir Four informal discusion of world problems The two senators said in sep- arate interviews they believed the United States should demand ad- vane agreement on specific topics to be discussed before approving any such meeting. Although both said they were speaking only for themselves, their expressed views coincided with ex- pressed White House and State De- partment opposition to any free- | for-all ——— te 7 Prime Minister Churchill said in a speech in England last week that ‘one good thing might lead to an- other’ if the heads of state of the United States, Britain, France and Russia got together and talked things over. Hickenlooper, a@ member of the Senate Foreign Relations Commit- tee and of the Senate-House Atom- ic Energy Committee, said he is against ‘‘round-robin discussions.” “They never lead to anything.” he said. “If we participate in any meeting of this kind, it should be limited to discussion of specific questions. If the Russians are un- willing to agree in advance on the topics to be studied, then there couldn't be much hope of succéss | from such a conference.” . . s | Kefauver, a member o° the Sen- ate Armed Services Committee, | said he thinks the groundwork for such a high-level conference would | have to be laid in diplomatic ex- changes long in advance. | “Unless things have been worked out so that diplomatic negotiations have reached the point where con- crete agreements could be ratified by the heags of states, I don’t be- lieve any meeting has much chance of success,”’ he said. “Of course, we ought always to keep the door open to confer with the Russians, if it appears to us that there is any real chance of accomplishing anything.” ~_. Say 101 Americans Still in Red China | WASHINGTON W — The State | Department estimates that 101 | Americans are in China — 33 of |them in Communist jails — de- tempts to get them out. In response to questions Satur- /day, the department gave these ‘figures and pledged that it would | overlook no ‘‘possibility of obtain- | ine the release of all Ameri- _— unjustly imprisoned . or denied the right to leave.” io — some of the Americnas for two bel esi te ae hee Three of the most ae mis- ting — Donald Dixon of the Inter- | national News Service, Richard Apllegate of the National Broad- casting pel and Capt. Ben Kras- iner of American merchant marine — me ene seized March 71 |} aboard a yacht by a Chinese gun- boat. 7-Year-Old State Boy t Hospitalized With Polio | GRAND RAPIDS (UP)—Seven- }year-old Terry Lieffers of Route 3, Stanton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Lieffers, today was diag- nosed as suffering from poliomye- litis, A MONTH-BY- MONTH SAVINGS PLAN PAYS OFF! Week by week, month by month .. , every time you pay your bills +.» pay yourself FIRST in a Savings ac- ee, count, Start Your Savings Account Here Today! SAVINGS INSURED TO pil 16 EAST LAWRENCE STREET { { Santa Catalina laine tecatdd © oft | the coast of California is 22 a anal canna ta ani Shean one. er mile to seven miles. Bynes to Lead Charter Drive NAHOCANY Governor to Speak ot | U. N. Today in Debate | for Revision UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. w| |The U. S. delegation in the United | | Nations began pointing today for | |debate on proposals to revise the | rtuxury, BUILT |U. N. Charter. South Carolina's | |Gov. James F. Byrnes was set 4s | | principal U. S. spokesman or. the i|major East-West dispute. | Byrnes returned from a weekend | trip home to renew diaper cover for day or Regularly 1.19 mgt ae White Pink Blue Maize Sizes 1 to 4 . won't bind, @ Can't crack, peel or stiffen @ They're ideal training ponts later @ Worn over single or double diaper Regularly 13.98 Bathinette 10°° Sturdy wood frame baby bath- nette tray. 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Pincers Coan CHECKED for Day Long Charm “pee Checks in Black and Red @ Sizes 12 to 20, 141/2 to 241/2 Step in, zip up... . you're dressed. Simplest classic lines do wonderful things for YOUR figure. Novelty buttons and bias trim add just the right note of fashion interest Phone Orders Promptly Filled! Call FE 4-2511, on mail crders please add 3° sales tax Waite's Cotton Shop—Third Floor Saeeteesa ae ee ee, ee as 7 \ i , ‘eich ee + yen D : - + + SH Pete. eer pe ; Wee yt GU } 3 ga \ : 4 7 ob ‘ Siar vs a THE PONTIAC PRESS, sheateat OCTOBER 12, 1953 _ known to his restaurant patrons as ; baal : Case Records of.a Psychologist S ceaiiaigins aie } ; = : i f ? TAGE ON. MB PAN RS ng Bayne Posse Ao Pog’ oe ra baa Pgs ane cy , MONDAY, OCTOBER .12, 1953 a —_—— Save Your Child’s Eyes All parents of pre-school children in the Pontiac area should take advantage of the vision screening program which starts in Steyens Hall Tuesday, October 13. There on Tuesday and Wednesday mornings from 9:30 to 12, for the next three weeks parents can learn if their children have any sight defects and how and where to get corrective treatment. - The screening program is open to all children between the ages of three and five years. No charge will be made and no appointment is necessary. a This valuable community serv- ice has been arranged by the Junior League of Birmingham in co-operation with the National Society for the Prevention of Blindness. The tests are given by having the children play a number of enjoyable sight games under the supervision of trained ~* personnel. Also co-operating is a Pontiac advisory committee which includes professional personnel from the health and educa- tion departments and Drs. Rosert J. Coorer, CAMPBELL Harvey and AARON D. Rixer. ee ee No effort will be made to diagnose de- fects, but if any visua]l handicaps are discovered, parents will be referred to their own eye doctors. Last year’s pro- gram resulted in the discovery of 49 chil- dren who had faulty vision — more than 10 per cent of those examined. . difference between a happy, use- ful life, or inefficiency, ill health and even eventual blindness. —_—_—————— One More Parking Hurdle The State’s Supreme Court decision in a Detroit case is important to Pon- tiac for its effect in broadening the pur- poses for which parking meter revenue can be used. ) Two Detroiters had sued in an effort to prevent that city from diverting $216,000 of such revenue to the estab- ‘lishment of off street parking lots. * * * In rejecting the suit, Pontiac's City Attorney Ewart points out, the court recognized the need for more parking facilities in crowd- ed areas. He added that the de- cision sets a precedent which un- doubtedly would sustain similar use of meter revenye here. Moreover, the at Lansing up- holds a decision handed down earlier this year by Oakland County Circuit judges. In that case an attempt to block use of Pontiac meter revenue and sur- plus funds, for the establishment of two off street parking lots, were thrown out. : * * * The result of these decisions is that only one more legal hurdle needs to be cleared before the City can proceed with its long needed program. That hurdle, of course, is the already authorized con- demnation suit involving that part of the Slater property on Parke Street sold to a private buyer. ——_—_—___. Diamond Jim’s Successor In the old French Quarter of New Orleans is an Italian restaurant whose proprietor could claim to be one of the - Kimberley diamond mines’ best cus- _ More than that, Jans Brocaro. is a aistering mid-century edition of the “DiaMowp Jim” Brapy. He evén is: aa \ * * * — Lona, nobody can deny that he sparkles from head to foot. The $210,000 worth of dia- monds he wears while playing Mine Host are topped by those in the rims of his, eye glasses. There’s a diamond in his tie. His shirt buttons are diamonds and there are diamonds in the zippers of his trousers and on the tips of his shoe laces. Diamonds also adorn the back of his watch, the clasp of his wallet and even his false teeth. | * * * Besides gems, Brocato likes mink ties, of which he claims to have more than “any other human bein’,” and he has them in all shades, including plati- num. His shirt wardrobe is also some- thing to be marveled at. Every one of the 700 has his name embroidered across the front. . Despite all this, New Orleans’ Diamond... Jim denies he is a show-off. To prove it he points out that he wears his bejeweled chompers “only in front of com- pany.” “ON A percentage basis, there is less polygamy in the country than ever be- fore,” says a statistician. This shouldn't surprise anyone. At the current cost of living, a man can scarcely : afford monogamy, even. ———————— The Man Ruoat Town Learning the Way School Groups Visiting Farm to Study Methods Daftynition Bore: The guy who always says, ‘‘l've heard that one before.” The autumn season for entertaining groups of school children at the farm of Miss Sara Van Hoosen Jones has commenced. In past years thousands of young people from the schools of Pontiac and other cities and villages have there been given their first in- sight into the operation of a thoroughly modern farm and dairy business. With the assistance of Miss Alice D. Serreli, manner in which their food is grown and pro- duced. A delegation of 93 from the Péntiac Wilson School recently enjoyed the privilege, and two groups from Webster School soon are in line —_—_ - Fer the past 54 years, one out of every six inventions listed in the U. S. Patent Office has been along the automobile line. Patent applications of this nature now are running at the rate of 8,000 a year. When a large partridge flew through a window in her home, Mrs. John Neph of Lake Orion suspected an A-borhb attack crash killed the bird. Entitled “GM Lives Here,” a booklet just released by General The munities where it has factories. eAs usual at this season of the year, we receive many reports of ‘‘tomatoes’’ growing on potato vines. These are not tomatoes at all, but seedling potatoes, and nothing unusual. Let's call them “Potatomatoes,”’ and stop accusing Mother Nature of not knowing her stuff. The continued warm weather has been a boon for late season camping activities, according to Edward H. Leland, executive secretary of the Boy Scouts, and others interested in such work. Locally, it has been camping’s biggest year in every respect. With a lot of new paving, a new city hall as- suming shape and many other local improve- ments, Mayor Arthur J. Law wonders if Pontiac isn't far ahead of the average city of its size in what constitutes a good place to work and live Acting Chairman of the Oakland Couniy Board of Supervisors, Floyd Andrews says it sometimes is difficult for our residents to appreciate their county's growth. The 303 in the Man About Town football contest who picked Flint Central to win Friday Night's game will carry over until the next contest. The 136 who predicted Pontiac High to win and the 11 who forecast a tie game are eliminated, as Flint won by a 22-7 score. Verbal Orchids to— Miss Katherine Herrington of 559 Lennox Ave.; eighty-seventh birthday a Mrs. G. A. Tabor . of 115 Elizabeth: Lake ‘Road; eighty-fourth birth- day. Mr. and Mrs. Frink R. Nichols of Rochester; fifty-second wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. A, E. Phelps of Drayton Plains; fifty-first wedding anniversary. a, King. While he denfes ever having been a body guard to the late Kingfish Hury Brocato has made. a sizable fortune 4 j ori aN : : 19 ies = a Ae } } ll _— Middleman Voice of the People OF i, ! WING] 27 Reader Chides Dems for Criticizing Ike’s Golf After Resenting Digs at Truman (Letters wilh Be condensed when neces- sary because of lack of space. Pull name address number of the writer must accom y letters but these will not be published if the writer so requésts, unless the letter is critical in its mature). I am sure that no Democrat has any thought of depriving any- From Our Files 15 Years Ago GRAND DUKE CYRIL, preten- der to the throne of the Czars of Russia, dies. : PONTIAC ENGINEERS combine smartness, with mechanical im- provements for modern ‘39 cars JAP LAND armies near Hong- king, seek to cut vital Canton- Hankow line. 20 Years Ago CHANCE OF Russo - Japanese war arouses anxiety in America. REDUCED COUNTY salary em- ploye list given to board; wage cuts general. Combinatioa A young married couple, Mr. and Mrs. Barr, were devoted to played the piano. They had a son, and both desired to christen the youngster with a name that would embrace their favorite pursuit. Alter much thought the husband exclaimed “I've got it! We'l call him Handel Barr!” one of a vacation or a little game of golf. We all know that the Presi- dent needs relaxation just as much as you or I, but that is beside the point. The main issue in discussing this subject is that a year or so ago the Republicans were criti- cizing the same thing in Presi- dent Truman, How does it feel now that the shoe is on the other foot? The ones who criticized a year ago will now keep quiet for at least three more years about va- cations arourid the White House. Chiet Mrs. George Sanders Praises Pontiac Press Don't tell mevanyone really lam- basted the Pontiac Press! I'd take that as a personal insult because I rate it better -thar any other paper, My favorite article is that writ- ten by Murielt Lawrence. That boon to parents everywhere. Here's another bouquet. for the manner in which happenings are publicized. Things like women re- ducing, newsboys, and community sings, makes one think that Pon- tiac must be a homey, little com- ynunity. . The Pontiac Press is a tribute to all who work for it. Mrs. George Sanders Milford. * Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE How would the world have dis- covered itself . . . And what of our history . . . If the Santa Maria, the Pinta and Nina. . . Had never set out to sea? .. . Columbus was human, he m&de his mistakes . . / But always his spirit ~7as brave . . . and he kept his faith in almighty God .. . To conquer the highest wave ... His was the courage to face the storm .. . His was the vision to dare . .., That hemispheres might become a globe . . . For all of the world to share . « . Whence are the maps we use in school? . . . Whence are the They are the ir respective column should rate front page globes we turn’... cubama (Tae eae OREN MMO AER Strange That’ Christopher struggled to learn . « « These are the reasons we honor him . . . With the grateful praise we say... And why Amer- ica celebrates ... A special Colum- bus Day. (Copyright 1953) Administration Mulls Over New Plan of ‘Pay as You Go’ to Finance Security By CHARLES F. BARRETT (For James Marlow) WASHINGTON «—Congress and the Eisenhower administration are mulling over a different way of fi- nancing the vast social] security retirement program. The idea under study, so basic it could alter the whole complex- ion of the government's program for the aged, is called ‘‘pay as you go.” Under this system, Congress or the administration would estimate the cost of social security benefits to be paid each year and then levy a tax to-pay the bill. > s . ‘ As Rep. Curtis (R-Neb) once put it, ‘When the year closes, nothing is owed and nothing is promised.” Tax rates and benefit levels might vary from year to year, de- pending on economic conditions, the number of persons reaching retirement age, the attitude of Con- gress, and so on. Or benefit levels could be held constant, with taxes varying to produce whatever revenue is needed. . * s * This plan, which has some influ- ential advocates, contrasts sharply with the concept on which the so- cial security program has been operating for the past 18 years. Aunt Het The law says a has to go with her husnand but I declare if I'd do it if I kmew he was headed for the poorhouse and wouldn't lis- ten to me. : The present system contem- plated that relatively few persons would qualify for benefits in the first 20 to 30 years, but that eventu- ally the number would be several times greater than now. So it attempts to strike, far in advance, an average tax level ments greatly in the early years, with this surplus piling up a re- serve called the ‘“‘trust fund."’ * ¢ ee Later, when the steadily increas- ing payments rise above tax in- come, interest on the trust fund is expected t6 bridge the gap and keep the program solvent. Theoretically, the tax rate, the trust fund and the level of bene- fits eventually: would remain al- most constant. Actually, to avoid too suddén an impact, the tax rate is stepped up at five-year intervals until it reaches 6% per cent of pay- rolls in 1970, Congress was expected to make minor adjustments as needs devel- oped. But the theory, at least, called for a permanent and happy state of equilibrium extending well beyond the year 2000. If a bad year cut into the trust fund, a good year would build it back. >: # * Here are some of the arguments pro and con, which may be aired with considerable heat in Con- gress: Supporters of the present system say its biggest asset is that interest from the trust fund will help keep taxes down when the program reaches full costs. They argue “‘pay as you go would produce violent ups and downs depending on the political complexion of Congress, with aged people never -knowing what to ex- pect from one year to the next. Even if constant benefits are at- tempted, they contend, the tax rate would be prohibitive during unusually adverse years with large numbers of workers unemployed and not contributing, costs would be greater than normal, and there would be no reserve to fall back on. . * > In effect, they say, ‘‘pay as you / go" is an effort to whittle down the program. Critics say the trust fund concept attempts the impossible by trying to estimate now such things as the number of births and deaths and economic conditions in 2050, They insist political temptation will be too great and the trust fund will be raided to provide bigger benefits for current voters, thus cemmitting the government to a program it won't be able to sustain in the future * . ° They claim each new actuarial gtudy already pictures the trust fund turning downward or exhaust- ing itself, instead of remaining al- most level. They doubt tf present voters will consent to raise taxes enough to build up a trust -fund for future recipients. The habit of using sleeping pills is unwise. Insomnia is not fatal. So why fret’ if you don’t fall into a deep sleep, for your heart gets almost the same rest whether you lie abed with your eyes open or shut} So quit leaning on chemical pills to give you an abnormal type of slumber. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE .. aged 29, woman. wy | a victim of constant in- somnia. And thé.more I try to fall asleep, the wider awake I become, Baering Down International News Service Almost impossible to believe that American soldiers would go for that. Commie line. But facts are facts and salt won't change the flavor. < There's an answer to everything except the seniority of the hen and the egg. And that's every organization has its malcontents and its crack- aloos. There's no poultice compounded by man or beast that will cure a sorehead on land or sea. We had them in our first World War battery. They walked around using chips for epaulets. Then there is the silly bird whose head is a button to keep his spine from unraveling. There is a saying that he who knows not and knows not he knows not is notty. You can do something with him if it’s only de-butting the parade area. But the guy you cannot handle is the GI who has blown his top like Mount Eta running hot lava. We had a squad of those turnips in our outfit. A couple of them were gold-bricking like Yellow Kid Weil clipping a mark. But the others were as batty as a Guano cave at twilight. If the outside of your head comes to a point the insides never do, And in an invasion army of a million you can figure at least a regiment of screwballs who will run a fish hook in their, thumbs and use themselves for bait. I'm no certificated psychiatrist experfing on twisted pompadours I'm just an old soldier trying to stencil a reason for an American GI going haywire. The Commies . arr perkatconis catesmeg: answer is you can sel] a prospect anything if you'll accept counter- feit money in payment. Just A Smile Complicated Jones ‘‘Good evening. Thought I'd drop in and see you about the umbrella you borrowed from me last week.”’ Brown “I'm sorry, but I lent it to a friend of mine. Do you want it?” “Well, not for myself, but the fellow I borrowed it from says the owner wants it." Smarty An inspector was visiting a vil- lage school. “What kind of arms has a black- smith?"’ he asked. “Big ones,” said one smart boy. “Quite right.’ replied the in- spector. ‘‘and why has the black- smith bigger arms than I have?” “He works!” came the reply from the back of the class Smart Lady A post office clerk asked an old lady who was mailing a Bible to her brother in a distant city if there was anything breakable in, her package. The woman snapped! “Only the Ten Commandments.” ‘Dr. George. Crane Says Don’t Fret: Over tnsomnia “Finally, I asked my physician for sleeping pills, and have been taking double doses of them, “They help me somewhat, but I am taking such big doses I wonder if it is good for me. “But what else can I do get a good night's sleep?’ Beware of sleeping pills: They are the disgrace of modern ica. er you sleep at night or lie awake, providing you stay in bed. For the main purpose of sleep, anyway, is to keep you off your feet and in the horizontal plane, That position lowers your blood pressure and slows down your pulse ate, so your heart thus obtains a double rest. And that Is the primary aim for sleep. So if you can't close your eyes and instantly drift off into deep slumber, don't fret about it. Lie there and think. Or turn on a bed lamp and read some educational book. Try the Bible. Read a few chapters each night in the New Testament. And don't prod yourself: with caffeine beverages just before you go to bed. For they act.as a nerve stimulant, which is just the op- posite of what you need at bed- time. . Some Americans will fill up an coffee or cola beverages just at bedtime: then fret themselves into a nervous ‘‘stew’ because they can't relax enough to sleep So they swallow a couple of sleeping pills to offset the excit- ing effect of their caffeine drinks, In cases like this, just omit the drinks and you will probably relax into deep sleep. A cup of ho’ milk or a bowl of milk toast will likewise pro- mote sleep,-so it isn’t a bad idea te eat before retiring, unless you are trying to diet. If you'd say your prayers at night and team up with God Al- mighty in a partnership arrange. ment, you could also relax more completely and drift off into un- troubled slumber while God takes ever the ‘‘night shift’’ for you. Many people grow unduly wor- ried about auto erotic sex prac- tices and in their mental debate over their feeling of guilt, they awaken themselves. r Others, as married couples, may ” not low technique and hence be left tense and jittery. In which case, send for the vari- ous sex bulletins offered via this column. But in any event, don't fall back upon sleeping pills: If you are married, send for my bulletin ‘Sex Problems in Marriage.’’ enclosing a stamped re- turn envelope plus a dime. (Copyright. Hopkinae Syndicate Inc) THOUGHTS FOR TODAY And let the peace of God rule in your hearts, to the which also ye are called in one body; and be ye thankful.—Colossians 3:15. : Ld . . Perhaps when the light of heaven shows us clearly the pitfalls and dangers of the earth road that led to the héavenly city, our sweetest songs of gratitude will be not for the troubles we have conquered, but for those we have escaped.— Areelia Barr. Show-Off The small daughter of a tele- visionless household regarded the arrival of a new piano with little enthusiasm. “Can't we put something on the roof to show we've got it?” she asked her mother. Brady Doesn't Seemite Be Too Worried That Diverticula Will Be Diverticulosis By| WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. From Philadelphia comes a |et- ter that speaks for itself: Dear Dr. Brady: If you can spare the time from the bowling green (such imperti- nence could. happen once around here) and your mind from next week's harangue on hydrophobia, why not write a couple of encyclo- pedic (the saucebox!) Philippics (now see here!) on diverticulosis. This would offer you a beau- tiful chance to show off your Latin scholarship; besides, no one else is covering this section of the bedy s waterfront anyway, in spite of the long line of suf- ferers waiting on the left. Also, all you lazy ‘‘sawbones’’ prescribe a bland diet for this condition. (On which section of the uncovered waterfront?) This seems silly to a layman be- cause most foods ought to be so altered by the time they get to the diverticulous part of the colon that stomach ulcer pap seems hardly necessary. . - Or am I a stupid oaf io seek a special | diet for diverticulum? And thanks, (Signed) — s s Diverticulum? That reminds me —two or three years ago I had an occasional bellyache—or at any rate vague distress hither and yon above and below the equator. While the uneasiness wa: pres- ent (maybe 20 minutes, more or less) I considered numerous in- teresting possiilities. When it subsided I got back in the game and forgot all about aneurism, sarcoma and such things. Finally I had one at home, lasting half an hour or more, and before I could say fiddle-faddle. the hired girl hac made an ap- pointment with another doctor. So I had to submit to a thorough examination, including enough X- ray pictures to illustrate a serial ghost story. One X-ray found a diverticulum. The doctor prescribed antispas- modic medicine to prevent or re- lieve colic’ or cramp and _ some slight dietary rules—I forget now just what. \. Anyway, when the examination - revealed nothing else than the diverticulum, I quit worrying about it and had less and less distress In the next week or two, and then forgot it. If you don't know what a diver- ticulum is, maybe what you don’t know won't hurt you, but if you must know: it is a bit of a pouch, offshoot or sac opening out from the alimentary canal, usually the colon. Sometimes partly digested food in the pouch sets up irritation and the annoying little colic or belly- ache occurs. In these days some victims of diverticulosis end up you know where—I. won't say because of bad judgrnent but because of bad luck. Before we adjourn it may be well to remind ‘doctors and people that nine out of ten persons who have diverticula: never have diver. ticulosis—that is they never suffer any discomfort or illness from the thing. Signed letters.” not more then one pege or 100 words iong, taining te personal health and ry Ene te disease, diagnosis or trestment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, eelf addressed envelope te enclosed, ete: (Copyright 1953) ‘ bas SOE OR: \ - The Coronelli map of the t too year | 4680 was the first to show that the Rip Grande emptied into the Gulf of Mexico, not the Gulf of Cali- fornia. (Advertisement) a r x * i ii i ee a i, i hl a tl ; ’ ; / ’ ’ - Crosby Hurts Back in Crash Injuring Three LOS ANGELES —Bing Crosby \is nursing a wrenched back today PAST40 Troubled with GETTING UP NIGHTS | Pains in BACK, HIPS, LEGS Tiredness, LOSS OF VIGOR If you are a vietim of these ata toms then your troubles — | traced to Glandular Inflammati Glandular Inflammation is a pons Stitutional disease and medicines that give temporary relief will not remove the causes of your troubles. Neglect of yma eh Inflamma- tion often leads to | senility, and incurable malignanc The past year men from 1, communities have been successfully- treated here at the Excelsior In- stitute. They have found soothing relief and a new zest in life The Excelsior Institute, devoted to the treatment of diseases peculiar to older men by NON-SURGICAL Methods, has a New FREE BOOK that tells how these troubles may be corrected by proven Nena- Surgical treatments. This book | may prove of utmost importance in your life. No obligation, Address xcelsior Institute, Dept. 5511 Excelsior Springs. Missouri COCKROACHES One Full Year Guarantee From Houses, Apartments, Cro- cery Stores and Restaurants. Re- main out only three hours. No ff. signs used Rox Ex Company | 1014 Pent St Bk Bidg FE 4-9467 ' —— | Crosby told him: after a traffic accident that ,;in- |jured three other persons, critically. The crooner was driving his $12,250 German car, a pale ivory Mercedes-Benz, whefi the collision pow: another automobile occurred early yesterday at an intersection. -Three persons in the other car aed taken to Queen of Angels Hospital. Frank Verdugo, 32, a Los Angeles city fireman, suffered critical head injuries, the hospital reported. His wife Lucy, 28, suf- \fered face cuts and bruises and a possible broken nose. Eulalio Perea, 25, Verdugo's brother-in-law escaped with minor injuries. Crosby's car was badly smashed. | California Highway Patrolman W. | L. Koehler said Crosby was driv- | ing alone at the time and after | the accident complained that his back hurt. The singer’s brother Larry said Crosby was in pretty | good condition but was to be given a checkup by his physician. The highway patrolman said ways, saw no cars and started across the intersection. There was a crash and I lost control.” Museum Guards Strike NEW YORK (—Thousands of | visitors were turned away yester- | day from the Metropolitan Mu- | seurn of Art and its uptown branch, | the Cloisters, because of a strike at 170 museum guards. ie hante Look for the Savings at the Stores with INDEPENDENT the RED, WHITE! XOOPS LO) :2R9 | and BLUE Sign! Armour’s ey TAMALES suesice cites 2D 1 OI Chili Coa Carne with Beans Argo Gloss STARCH Lb. eT c Krey Brown Gravy with Sliced Pork ... S: 59° ~—wse e e College Inn Tomato Juice Cocktail... . 46 oz. ¢c Cen LINIT LAUNDRY STARCH 12 Ox. Pkg. ] 5< Enjoy a salad every day Real Gold Orange Base 6 ox. con 17 Planter’s RLUE Blue Suds PEANUT BUTTER | BUG 4% price sate 8 ox. ¢c 2 Cc Jer 29 Pkgs. ] + GREASE-SOOT:-GUM.::: All vanish from rugs with this Glomonene a | Lo aie OLD DUTCH PUREX DRY CEEANSER BLEACH 27° | “wr 235 PALMOLIVE Palmolive SOAP BB oan sie Reg. Bars 23° 23° | VEL Gf ’ LIFE BUOY Large Pkg Ge) SOAP ; ee 25: A Stops “B.0." BUT. Sin. 27° “I looked both }. THE, PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1953 penEvery Mon Night: AS WELL AS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY N Take a look! See WHY you get more for your money at Federal’ s when you buy new for ’54 ere “ es OBE Re SEEK RIES, Boia us ee eee ea aay Costs no more than most smaller sets! 21-in. table model Handsome new Admiral 21” CONSOLE TV 21” table model tat cota ne mee tn most smaller screen sets of other makes! So power ial it sets a new performance standard . «. even in fringe areas! Acro- New styling plus powerful Cascode chas- sis that gives peak performance even in Matic self- foc ‘using picture tube gives the most life-like picture ever seen. . . just fringe areas! Single-dial UHF and VHF tuning. Mahogany finish. Easy Terms 4 Terms as the camera sees it in striking blocks and whites. Single dial tunes both VHF and UHF stations . . . no converter need- ed! Rich mahogany plastic cabinet. Sat Pay even less with your old small screen set trade-in Special low price on a big new MAGIC CHEF CA $ RANGE 129% Light and Timer Extra 95 Terms Bake fluffier cakes, broil tastier steaks with this new Magic Chef gas range! Red wheel oven regulator assures even bak- ing or roasting, swing-out broiler opens at the touch of your toe. Has one-piece top burners on popular divided top! Buy now on credit at Federal’s low price! Delivered, Installed and Serviced for One Yeer T2212—1954 See these games on Admiral! Mon., Oct. 12—U. of Detroit Films—WXY Z-Channel 7 Sat., Oct. 17—Alabama-Tennessee — WW]-Channel 4 » Oct. 17 — Steelers-Eagles — W)BK-Channel 2 sisal arte REAR y ” Broiler swings out at the touch of a toe! No stooping, bending! No Money Down! Pay Later On Low Easy Payments! esas kal ©=Exclusive at Federal's! Matching DRESSER-DESK and BUNK BEDS Exclusive! New DRESSER-DESK Dual-purpose desk in mellow, honey brown SOLID MA- PLE at a ‘big dollar’ savings: Yes! Use it as a dresser and desk at the same time! 4 drawers with center guides, dustproofed throughout. Lots of leg space. Matching Bunk Beds 54.88 PPrrrrrerrrrrrrerrrr ri retire So in SOLID MAPLE. .. SZ y / 88 Terms Eesy Terms When have you seen SOLID MAPLE beds at such a low price? Kids love ‘em. Solve that space problem and save . dollars! Like Maple? You'll love our specially designed- for-comfort bunk beds. Ladder, guard rail included. Sealy Bunkette 34.88 SAGINAW AT WARREN. PONTIAC OPEN MON. FRI. SAT., NIGHTS TO 9 anes eon carces AY | Mies : ‘j ' THE PONTIAC PRESS; / MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1953 , ra \ Thugs Beat Up | 3 ww lUflUdl “epee Their Job! Ba ALLA Romeo Woman SRM y obanetenane Quick response to sgve life and prop- erty when a fire starts... Bice | Grandma, 74, Attacked >-MAKE VACS AND SEWING MACHINES While Babysitting for Do your part to prevent the couse BUY DIRECT... SAVE MANY DOLLARS! Danghter._.[n. Detrot of fire! Are‘ you adequately insured against DETROIT W — A 14-year-old Roémeo woman was beaten and joss IF a tire should occur? terrorized by two thugs last night attr being trched into admiting DANIELS Agency ‘the “hoodlums into her daughter's 845% W. Huron St. Ph FE 4-7644 | INSURANCE COVERAGE Il, MEASURED TO.YOUR Mrs. Elizabeth Metz told police she was baby sitting at her daughter's home in Detroit when she heard a woman screaming. She opened the door to investigate, and a young woman rushed to ie = ; the porch and said two men were | - FE 9-9143 Fold 4 ale a) lel ERC e-CSlelN Mm | chasing her. ! Pre Phone ARE a eleh me) :1 alc? 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Right now, at the start of the heating season, is the x ¥ Bee ’ ’ Cleanly mined, properly prepared at the mines , . - ‘ and delivered cleanly to your home in our mod- time to try better quality, deep-mined Gee Poca a curves cull Wucks. Gio Pétahortic Nua hontas Nut and find out for yourself why this fuel WONDERFUL WORKLESS burns cleanly in your furnace leaving no soot is preferred by a greater majority of thrifty WASHDAYS No heavy, wet Stringers and very little ash families. clothes to carry . . clothesping, poles o tines to fight... . no weather worries. Relax if you wish, or start ironing from a previous load. Truly Economical! There is no substitute for quality. . y : Adaptable to all types of warm air turnaces, Gee P ocahontas Nut responds readily to automatic PHONE FEderal 5-81 furnace controls giving an abundance of heat when ‘wanted, holding a long, low fire as desired This makes it the most economical of all Poca- GEE COAL 0, hontas coals Order in load lots of 2 ton or more and save 25¢ a ton! see eee ee — eee oe eo eH HO ome eee m ewe ewe ee eee ew ee eee eee See your ELECTRIC DRYER DAYS DEALER 9) LAKE tr | / a) 3 \ é j = ‘ ‘ a / < a hy J THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1953 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY $1,590.00. T0"$7,950.00 CASH REQUIRED (Secured by Iriventory) WANTED, a from one very simple mechanical machine. Every cup made business establish. a ror yg ge etc. Earning power un- : ra your spare time, earn depending on number of units you are eapalie of Rami my instructions and supervision of a large National Company, you should become financ pendent within a very short time. *f “y ae. Catholics Pray to Convert Reds Public Mass Celebrated in Philadelphia Sunday Before 250,000 PHILADELPHIA (Some 80,- 000 Roman Catholic men marched in solemn procession through downtown Philadelphia last night reciting aloud the rosary of the Virgin Mary in-a public prayer for peace and conversion of the Com- munist world to Christianity. | At the end of the line of march, a crowd estimated at 250,000 gath- | ered on the vast stretches of the A flat tire? Fluorescént Stand Sign an Aid in Tire Changing NEW YORK (UP) — Ever get stranded on the road at night with The device is easily stored in the trunk of your. car. More than 4,000,000,000 pounds | of meat and meat-food products destined for military consumption _A new gadget won't change the tire for you, but it will help to pro stand and arrow red under ‘ the headlights of wwe apa ‘peeps Honors Elks’ lvan Lake Lodge, baseball team. were inspected before purchase by Army Medical Service inspectors | during 1952. Of that total more! than 127,000,000 pounds were re-| jected as failing to meet safe stan- dards for issue and consumption. your stranded car. An arrow, which may be turned in any direc- the first paper manufacturers. odge 723 Ball Club A large gathering in the hall -at 153 Bagley street, Sunday, honoted members of the Elks No. 723, Syl- A banquet and program of in-| formal talks was held, starting at 2 o'clock, Chief speaker was Arthur King of Detroit, director of the) Metropolitan organization's athiet- | ics. He talked of athletics and their | value to young people. j Chairman was Alton VanDyke. Charles Chester Korean Boots - Guaranteed to keep your feet warm at 35° below zero with only one pair of thin socks. Sizes 6 to 13. C. A. THOMPSON The lodge team was captained by | 69 Prot Ph. FE 4-5825 © Benjamin Franklin Parkway to as- sist at the first outdoor evening mass in the history of the arch- diocese and the second such serv- | ice in the United States. | . * * The religious rally was dedicated | | to Our Lady of Fatima. According jto Catholic teaching, the Virgin | Mary appeared to a group of Por- | | tugese children at Fatima on Oct. | 13, 1917, and asked them to pray | |for peace and the conversion of | Russia to Christianity. The parkway had been converted | into an amphitheater with a huge, | giass-enclosed alter erected in the | | center-of-« traffic circle. Atop the | | flood-lighted altar stood a statue of | Our Lady of Fatima, some 62 feet | above street level. The Most Rev. John F. O'Hara, Cc. S. C., archbishop of Philadel- ;phia, who delivered the sermon, | asked for prayers for local, state | and national government officials | in the great tasks of their office, | and finally for peace and the con- version of the Communist world. | * * * | Before the archbishop spoke, the Rt. Rev. John J. McKenna read | a telegram sent by Archbishop | O'Hara to the Polish ambassador to the United States, Josef Winie- | wicz. | The message mentioned the rally | which had assembied ‘‘for public | worship . . . to pray for peace and | to beg God to elighten the minds and move the hearts of the terror- | ists who have imprisoned Bishop Maczmarek and impeded Cardinal Wyzynski in his functions . . . in solemn pontifical mass tonight we pray that Poland and her sister states now enslaved by commu- nism may soon be restored to the dignity under God they have earned in the past as saviours of ee Salen PENNEY’S OWN NATIONWIDE SHEETS Bishop Czeslaw Kaczmarek was { : @ Perfect Quality sentenced last month by a Polish @ 132 Threads Per Inch Square military court to 12 years in prison on charges of spying for the Vati- 81"%x108"... 2.15 Please do not answer this advertisement unless you have the required amount ef cash available and are a person who can make and give a definite decision after you know the facts!! 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(SAMPLE: U SHUD B ABLE TO RED THES SHORT, WORDS) (This wes written with just mine strokés—a werd to a stroke!) bape Schuman Nations Postpone Meeting THE HAGUE, The Netherlands, ®—The six Schuman Plan nations Kave postponed the nieeting their foreign ministers planned tto hold here Oct. 22 to discuss organ- ization of the proposed European political community. The ministers had been sched- | uled to take up the statute their | deputies now fre drawing up in | Rome for the supra-national politi- cal authority, which would control ee _THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1953 er particularly meeting delayed. inet is split over tional sovereign < bers want a debate in the National Assembly to clarify. the French position before the pact setting up | the political community is signed. Of the 238,539 miles of railways in the United States, Texas has the greatest share with 16,496 miles. Illinois ranks in secand place with a total of 12,063 miles. ‘ — Fm Bure Duke of Bedford men combed the wilds of his 12,000- acre estate, He was found shot in the head, his 12-gauge shotgun at his side. His body lay beside a footpath, The police spokesman said death was Believed Hunting Accident Victim |, ISTOCK, E | instantaneous. 7 preven yas The The duke's outspoken political gunshot-blasted body of mis& views -and pacifism. brought him ing Duke of Bedford was found | wide publicity, especialy his oppo- yesterday’ in tangled untergrowth | sition t ‘Britain's fight against | on his vast Devonshire estate. | Cormeny in World War hall | , once police spobestiien said nothing in- Petre oe five million pounds | dicated that the death was ‘‘any- Mi thing bet én accident.” (14 million dollars) came from | The 64-year-old duke one of great land holdings and property England's richest ‘men,’ went in-|i2 the center of London. The duke’s : titles go to his elder son; the 3% | to the woods Friday. It was be- ' istock, lieved he was hunting a hawk that yourcld warques of Tavis | iving i th Af- | nad been bothering his collection reg has been living in Sou __ HOMETOWN, U. S. A. w—Every 1 Hal Boyle Says: Poor Peebles Can't Win Quiz Test Is Boomerang “Oh, goody, goody, now I am up married woman today is interested to 6: chortled Trellis Mae. rip- in who is divorcing whom ahd | ping an item out of the paper. “It why—particularly why. says here a gal in Detroit- got a Trillis Mae Peeble, America’s|divorce because her husband average housewife, had no inten- | made her take intelligence tests tion of ever divorcing-her husband, | and called her stupid if she didn't Wilbur, but she did like to let; make a grade of 98.. You called him know she had plenty of rea-|me stupid once.” sons if she wanted to. | “Well, anyway T never made By avidly reading the newspaper you take any intelligence tests,’’ ° 4 cases she had assembled a box score ot 67 different situations in remarked Witbur, then a gleam ‘came into his eyes~as~he~addéd craftily- of-tame parakeets. After he failed whieh a wife had won a divorce PONTIAC’S OLDEST “Do you really think so?” asked Trellis Mae, flattered “Sure thing. Look hol easy you guess all the answers on those TV giveaway shows.” ; ‘ Sensoal tacten. ov : Gort, Pord Co., BB y boy viel to return, 200 Marines and police- Ei h ree W d d from her hysband for doing some- | “Not that you'd have ue ag : GMC Truck Employees Mr. Rosenberg, director of TV ight Marines ounde thing Wilbur, too, had been guilty | batting 100 per cent in any ald for J ~ ns lig oe Motor Employees |) SERVICE DEALER! 9 of, - one time or another. test I could dream up, honey.” contact Mr. Meyer. FREE LIFETIME PLACEMENT SERVICE PHONE FE 5-6116 FOR INFORMATION OR VISIT CLASS STENOSPEED SCHOOLS Old Company Expanding |While Training in Japan TOKYO w—Eight men of the +U. S. 3rd Marine. Division were | wounded today when a 105mm. | | shell fell short and exploded “The | | Wilbur thought this was gruec- some of her, and would have preferred she follow some more pleasant hobby, such as studying poisons or collecting used murder weapons. Authorized Factory Service for 15 Different Manufacturers BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE | 3149 W. Huron FE 4-5791 EXECUTIVE-TYPE MEN WANTED FOR PERMANENT POSITION. CALL FE 2-0219 |a group training in Japan. Their | names were not released. said trap. “Let's try it—just for fun,”’ |his wife, falling into the “Give me five questions.” “Okay, ready?” ' | “Ready!” | “What state has the largest pop- ulation ?"’ a ‘That's easy. Texas.” “Wrong. It's New York. Whose }picture is on a $20 bill?” “You have't brought one home in years. How would I know? It must be a Republican. President McKinley? No, Teddy Roose- velt!” “Wrong. It's Andrew Jackson, a Democrat. He got on by mistake, How do you spell etiquette?”’ “E-t-t-i-q-u-et-e,"’ said Trellis Mae. ‘“‘And I know what it is, which is more than some husbands I could name do.” ~Most-liked low-priced car ...among people who want more for ther money } , when they buy...and more money when they sell! | Wrong again. Now, can you | identify Beria “Of course, silly. It's one of those cute little hats Frenchmen wear.” | Wrong. He's an ex-Russian lead- er now missing. Last question. Who said, ‘Give me liberty or give me death?’ ” “Henry Patrick! Henry Patrick!” yelled Trellis Mae | “6Well, his friends called him said Wilbur. There’s a big reason why more folks are buying more Fords than ever before. No other low-priced car offers so many of the things people want and need for today’s driving. In fact, to get such “Worth More” Ford features as a V-8 engine, completely automatic transmission and fine-car power steering in any other car, you'd have to step well up from the low-price field. =e Patrick Henry,” f | “But I'll give you half on that Of course, Ford owners will disczver (if they haven’t already) that i _a-_ oO eosin Ford's worth more when they sell it, too. Surveys of used car prices | “You cheated!” cried Trellis | Mae. “Asking me al! that junk! show year-old Fords returning a higher proportion of their original cost than any other car. | You didn't ask me a single im- | portant question.” “Okay,’’ said Wilbur coolly. ‘Go ahead ask me five questions more important then. Think hard —. | “I don't have to think. Ready?"’ “Ready!"’ *‘When is my mother's birthday? What is the price of butter ‘a pound? What vegetable will give | you the most vitamins for the jleast calories? How can I pos- | sibly make my_old cloth coat last another winter? What department ; Store is having a sale of men’s $5 white shirts for $2.9 tomorrow, and I'm going to buy you three they're such a bargain?” Wilbur just stared at her, and slack-jawed. silent from you im this state, do you know how much alimony you'd have to pay?” “No, do you?” “Certainly,” said Trellis Mae. |‘And now just one final question. If there is somebody stupid in this house about things that really matter, who do you think it is?” “‘No comment,” said Wilbur, al- though he knew the only possible | answer. Firemen Work Swiftly to Prevent Big Boom ST. ALBANS, W. Va. ®—Fire- men got there with minutes to spare And in three frenzied minutes they put out a fire yesterday in a tractor trailer on nearby Coal Mountain Then firemen fanned their brows, nearby residents came out of hiding and truck driver James K. Morley breathed easier—now the fire was out. The truck was carrying 25,000 pounds of black powder, DID YOU | KNOW? That you can park in a Downtown Heated Garage *-« Ford Master-Guide, available on all V-8 models, makes turning up to 75% easier, retains the natural feel of the wheel on the straightaway. +«-more and more people are considering Ford as the one fine car in the low-price field! It's hard to believe that a car which is built like the finest still sells in the low-price field. Yet a Ford with its hulltight Crestmark body, its Full-Circle Visi- bility (most in its field), its new fine car ride and roomy luggage locker (roomiest in its field) delivers at a figure that keeps it right dewn in its price class. See ... Value Check ... Test Drive the Ford of your choice at your Ford Dealer's. Find out why Ford is America’s “Worth More” car. GREAT TV! FORD THEATRE, WWJ-TV, 8:30 P. M., Thursday aa SEE YOUR NEAREST FORD DEALER : ——If you're interested in Lan Ford’s 110-h.p. Y-8 is the same type of engine now powering America’s finest (and costliest) cars. And Ford’s Mileage Maker Six is the most modern Six in the industry. for as low as 29 Ford’s the only low-priced car which: offers you a choice of a completely automatic transmission (Fordomatic), Overdrive or Conventional Drive. Worth more when you buy it Worth more when you sell it Special Monthly Rates with in and out privileges We Invite Your ~Patronage HUBBARD GARAGE 16 S. Perry St. Outdoor Parting used cars, be sure to see our selections! ir Fae es eee a s i SS eee eee ‘ _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1953 eee cmeenerey een ee ee J . . bo te, Buy Now es You'll Save! FE 5-6159 Jl sooo nu ts rent : lit tr ad coldehoulder _ iJ ; > FIC BUYS! cs vit 9 t 4 ment “because our country has | VS hy i, been invaded by foreign troops and | our democratic rights have been | Fuel and Paint Co. | iSitcna v0 toss won Once-a-Year Extra Savings .. . Beauty TERRI Fusiliers here from Jamaica last 436 Orcherd Lake Ave. week and kicked out Jagan and Cabine meee rE TE Geek) TLE PR f ) “H i - (Advertisement) a hae ewe an | Reiss. Bebe ‘i or r¢ | ousetime * eee Tie Worry of | Plotting to bring the 83,000-square = a are re ee mile colony of 438,000 persons un- pe FALSE TEETH |ax sonteten ot” Sommnien coors aa of ae linked with Russia. | ar tert be -t. Bans : Slipping or Irritating? | ‘The Privy Council in London also j 5 RE ee } ae i oe Be > F See 4 Don't be embarrassed by loose false | suspended the Constitution granted : ot LL - ss 4 b font slipping. dropping or wobbling | the colony five months earlier and f +> 3 2 Fas. ee 4 . Tt ie sprinkles lite ‘PasT#ET''es, yout | €Ave Colonial Governor Sir Altred | awn Kael” cin rae } Plates. This pleasant powder gives a | Savage wide emergency powers. i bbb se ee H ba | remarkable sense of aded comfort and * ss « rome : wig ; — - security by holding pilates more firmly. . ; pes Obs Sa 8 RI oe : . A fo gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feel- | The surprise move astonished ‘ Pheri at cayerce mance” O% FAB |the colony but was carried out | wR? 4 ug Se j 3 et > « . - : ae | without disorder. The U. S. govern- | A Bese ane 2 - ; ment emphatically approved the ra | ees & TTT b eeoee es RA British action. ‘ E ; SRIF ane a ; 3 ~T* "It also won support from the C _ oe eee rs | HAVE YOUR strong-man leader of Jamaica's a2 ee * : = Regularly : 1 tee Se San - laborers—Prime Minister William | ‘ee “1 : ~~. i 44c 1h + kites As ie, Fale Alexander Bustamante. it + Sak on” J squore *S ae ci res + Bustamante, whose voice is in- E eee ne . : foot } bi Ree ete es ots CLEANING fluential throughout the Indies, ee os od Ce 4 aad said in Kingston the Guiana lead- | ae - ge * ae x aes ers could expect no sympathy from el aa F i YOU SAVE OVER 1 %! +4 SO ety a 2 ; > . the free-thinking world. However, . aia ON tok. fa. a if they had been fighting for self- : rule “within the democratic na- - at —_ om Sevngs you con’ the your both, Cat Winter Fuel Cost as Much as 25°, ! 2-Light! tions” Bustamante declared. “I _ : kitchen, or powder room .. . give them a would have paralyzed the entire es o a » beauty you'll be proud to show! Best of Storm Wi d roars (Jamaica) to help bp tlavie Petas Ohare R all, it cleans with just a damp cloth. Easy in ows . ek A he ED to apply to new or old walls . . . and lasts Jagan yesterday labeled as “‘just Vi. for a “housetime!’’ @ 28x55-Inch Size, Only 75 nonsense’’ the British charges that oe}. om 5 You'll look better, your he had tried to turn the rum and y 7 any Sizes Available clothes will last months || S&F Producing colony into a Red 10% Off! Homart Vinyle eg | rith puppet state. ‘If there is any Com- 4 / Ponderosa Pine in frames is tr ted t onger with our expert [/ munist plot,” the handsome 35 °° —_ © resist warp- eee ja | ©6Asbestos Floor Tile ng. Wood beads held glass, last longer than putty. dry cleaning and long- year-old East Indian told reporters er-lasting press! “why haven't its leaders been = — Oth i : ° jailed and details of the conspiracy ag F r * Amazing new floor tile . . 1 5< nm er Size Homart Storm Windows in Stock __ | revealed?” ” P| ; resists acids, and fire’ 47. 4, The British Colonial Office ac- . h » Ebert f sttiitiniit Marbleized! 9x9-in. size Ea. 28x43 ees steiaidliaatierhi GM | ioe Seon : 7 | eel 43 ASS 28AT 465 says 5.90 . born wife, the former Janet Rosen- i > ‘ ose ° 28x63 ..,. 5.90 28x67 6.15 r oo. berg. 32, of heading the Red plot - 4 jase H m rt! As al il a : but did not arrest them or other ‘ rar: : jess eomen es ph ; T © 30n63 30x59 Fax . Fy | RS 5.95 3255 5.95 5.85 PPP chiets. London said Mrs. Ja- KE. seeee tenes ) Lasting glamour for 34 . . oe 9 x59 oe 6.40 36x wan and others of the FPP wore ae es a all rooms Available | 02 Off 55 ..6.65 32x63 .. 6.55 closely associated with interna- : : n | tional Communist organizations.” ue 3 $ a. Seo aes Sit Pk é te 28 = ae cones i ale Oe beers Utility Save! Rock Asbestos Tileboard fear Bm ii 4... ees Fee + * 3B 719 West Huron Consumption of gasoline in 1952 Phone FE 4-1536 rae is oe all-time peak of 46.4 Mixers Windows Stairs’ Wool Botts Siding Panels —— | 57.95 17.95 39.95 3.49 cm 4.59™ 34+ *" Nervous? Run Down? For smal! mix- Aluminium Fold completelv Bag covers 50 12- = 2- ft Streamline and | | obs repa Won't rust, warp out of sight into > equare feet straight line tile designs in D, peak sdiod phere gi shrink _— ce : > — -" bgenac oe pita sortenggs Bosses citstnerRemndt comer: ile aes Oe fran Fire restr bie Blend oy te r — 7 2-Panel and almost all types of homes. Department for full Grade A Douglas Fir Asphalt Siding | oe) fie pele 1-Panel Doors caSY PAYMENT | ae Pa EM Regularly Priced at 12.95 PLAN * z si . . ‘he H {) yap 2-0x6-8 95 te ¥ 5 ook 2-8x6-8 For off purchases me , * : : teteting $20 or more. a | ‘ Ba - ag _ ; Decian ! “ws : pes I) #8 ; ‘i Stop in ot your neor- | if lack of thiamin and riboflavin is 4 ‘ were t Hn wail & bal i Test Sears Credit Sales b the reason, here’s how you can feel Ri intormetion. You" de a) ‘ntl frame has plywood panels. Gives Any Home Greater my cover the coy wey Te stronger, peppier, in just 7 days Constructed by experts. — >) te buy the things you Gly need — when you need ja there most! € without risking a penny! | pe oh his Ready to paint, stain, var- 100 Sq. Fi. Roll 4.39 nish or wax. Other styles. Give your home an attractive finish, Never needs painting Choice of colors. Parkerized Nails .,,,.. 24c ib. 1b EB a an Adequate Power to Fill the Needs of a 2 Acre Farm! Garden Tractors resin $210 oe eb Asbestos Siding ' \ 3 cat | ie ; oF . Monthly — - . Less Tires—Easy Terms Snow Plew Sears Applied = Low = Rubber Cove Base df Does 1001 Odd Jobs Around Home or Form For Snow Removal Jobs , : Perfect for . Kitch if New Homart straight-line asbestos siding gives the , poe Baths ons Dovid Bradley garden tractor with 4 cycle engine that geey te Use 19.95 lf effect of hand-split shingles. Makes your home look Sectica 98s develops 2'/2 H.P. All attachments can be put on and Tine: Sede bled esl ele younger Never needs painting, stays lovely. Expert .inishes of!” floor and wall taken off easily! Gear,and chain drive sealed in oil. 1. cieaning average side- | application! Materials and labor guaranteed! = Nort rubber fits Large wheels for better traction, crop clearance! walks. Can be engied ‘left te | Building Materials—Perry $1. Basement arta r ot toc... Be qt Garden Shop—Sears Parking Lot right. Useful as bulldozer Yes, FREE! Regular $1.98 RYBUTOL Is Yours At No Extra Cost | _—— — When You Buy The 100-Size RYBUTOL At Your Druggist. You Must Feel Stronger, Peppier in 7 Days, Or Return The 100-Sixe For FULL | - CASH REFUND. In Any Event, Keep The $1.98 Size As A Gift! ry tf you are tired, nervous, run Nothing te lose but your NEE down, simply because you're not miseries—because amazing . getting enough energy-releasing RYBUTOL gives you precious thiamin and riboflavinfrom your thiamin and riboflavin in high- food, get in on this wonderful potency amounts, plus supple RYBUTOL give-away- mentary amounts of other vita | = We'll give you $1.98 bottle of mins,plus certain trace minerals, ae PER ye ae 4 RYBUTOL FREE when you buy Tiredness, weakness, or irrita- ° ° ge . . . | the 100-size bottle at your drug- bility, due to lack of important Insulating Siding Chain Link Fence Windsor Fence Oaklawn Fencing gist. What's more, you must feel elements in RYBUTOL, disap Protects as It Insulates 42 Inches High: Priced Low Cross-Country Single — Ornamental Double-Picket stronger, peppier in 7 days, or pears fast! ; Fr. di-i. Height ¢ Fr. des: telah Fe. return the 100-size bottle for full Act new! This FREE ; ser = 89 Only 35¢ = Height 21 | vice §=28¢ ; cash refund. In any event, you RYBUTOL OFFER limited. Get Protect your home with a new Homart roof! Homart Sturdy Homart siding is attrac- Long-lasting, beautifully orna- ag Dg ely“ Boa Rust-resistant galvanized steel keep the $1.98 size as 0 gift your gift $1.96 RYBUTOL—today! hexagonal shingles are long-lasting, low-priced! Color- tive . . . looks like real grained mental, 11 gauge steel wire, JOU" Une crimped for extra Kailabt ‘money bogie at : 00s a owe fused granules of Vermont slate gives years of beauty; wood shingles. Many attractive fully galvanized. strength. Buy yours now! a nd er t catches basement colors can’t fade. Fire-resistant. At Sears! colors to choose from. 48-in. Height... 23e Bh. Prices! TRIED RYBUTOL — START THE 7-DAY RYBUTOL TEST TODAY! : . to (@-in. Heights .........98e & : back” inaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 | “Arar CUNNINGHAM'S DRUG STORES Ot You 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone f AT ALL ; \ ' ~ “+ t = yd + i ee RRs Shae, - ~ ie 4 i he ee | i ee geek geoge — > ” + % “YSUPER-RIGHT” SHANK PORTION — SMOKED i AT Ducks COMPLETELY GLAANEED @ees oe 0 ™ 4% Beef Liver TENDER, NUTRITIOUS ee0eee is. 29 _ Pork Chops conte curs, ee0eevee wu. 7% Sliced Bacon UAN, RINDLESS eeeee mG. 79 “Roll Sausage sacrst mar... . . '% 35¢ Smoked Hams sirrrontons «ee % 59) MEDIUM SIZE—FINE POR SALADS AND COCKTAILS Shri oe. 6% MICHIGAN SNOW APPLES 4» 75 » « 2 45 19¢ Cauliflower wrote swow wut neans , , EACH 19¢ SIZE 2%4-IN. UP THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1953 7 Ls as chdirman of the Nobel Prize TRY A PAIR OF | eee _ FOOT-SO-PORT SHOES » « « « 3 ® 25¢ Green Beans crise rresh stack vaienrine 2 us. 39¢ Broccoli cauroema . , . . . . NCH 25¢ Sweet G . « a 58! EAU CLAIR | | | | " LIBBY'S FROZEN FOOD BUYS DELICIOUS FRESH FROZEN Strawberries A x 9X ‘xo, 19¢. .6 or 1.09 — Peas eeee oxo We ee 6 por 97¢ Spinach ee © © @& PKG. ‘ Peaches F45¢ Vegetables “0 "227 Qe. 26 ror 1.25 04-02. 45¢ | Broce come TE 196. 6 me 1.09 Pineapple... ... . .2 22 a TENDER, 10%-OZ. CAN o ete oe ec 6 0 0 oh eee wee . TE JANE AEE. SAARI Cheese . . .°% 29% Donuts “= = Kraft’s Velveeta... ..... «2 ionr 89¢ Strawberry Pie “cramer... , san 49¢ Cheddar Cheese so wsconsm, .., 49¢ White Bread 2m rancen—wucrm, . . . 188 17¢. ANN PAGE TASTY A&P CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL 10%-OZ. 16-OZ. Tomato Soup 4 CANS 35 Golden Corn 7 2 teat 2% dexo Shortening aars Au veoerame = LB. 75¢ lona Peaches MaLvES on suiceD 6, , 2 Cans 49¢ Margarine coon... P| 19¢ All Detergent .........10 ch 2.49 STOKELY’S FINEST amet 29. Tomato Catsup 3 19 Stokely’s Pickles