Dee or retina 1 iy, Ba ties sh aie oe . ish Foreign Office eS ee a ' awards rule = Street. y { ~ . ‘The Weather 4d Friday: Showers Details. page two "y PONTIAC P | | ESS. a cm llith YEAR TIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEM BER it 1953—72 PAGES ASSOCIATED P ; Te q = re fo ; | | ii | | . ; a } rf | ; . | . | To Halt Spare ngine Order ws ate Separate | Louisiana ‘Siamese Ty Ba CONDITION SATISFACTORY — Eight surgeons | _ separated -Louisiana‘s Siamese twins, Carolyn Anne | Mayor and Mrs. Ashton J. Mouton of lafayette were (left) and Catherine Anne Mouton today, in a two- | joined' near’ the base of the spine. hour operation. The | eight- were _peugiters ‘of hopeful that both little girls would live, ins ; United Press Phote Doctors were oe ls Auto of Missing Wife Found in Switzer LAUSAN NE, Switzerland sedan in which missing British Diplomat Donald Mac- Lean’s ‘wife ‘disappeared ‘last found today in a- Lausanne garage. The garageman said it | ‘was, brought in early Friday “night by a woman with three’ children answering to the missing family’s description and that the. g Pup, rushed across the street to the railw He said the woman told him she would | lederie back for the car in about a week. The disappearance of Chica lall terday. Her husband and gaather shud of the Brit- Lean, 37; and her three s Envoy s and (AP) —The! black Chevrolet | | | riday from Geneva~was station. |Surgeous | ‘for Lives of. Siamese Twins NEW ORLEANS |P—A team of eight surgeons sep ated Louisi- ana’s Siamese twin jtoday after operating two hours ‘“Fhe condition o very satisfactory” separation, a staff § ed and expressed fk girls would survive. . The eight-week-old| daughters of the twins is allowing the geon report- pe that both ie born Mrs. Melinda Mac- hildren was revealed yes- Guy Burgess, are generally believed in the West to have fled behind the Iron Cur- tain after they crossed from England to France in May, 1951, and dropped from sight. ‘ : _. There has never been any of- ficial ‘confirmation, however, that the two men had gone over to the Communists. Mrs. MacLean and her children —Fergus, 9, Donald, 7, and 2- year-old Melinda, born three weeks after her: father disappeared—had ~been living in Geneva with MacLean's mother, Mrs. ‘Melinda Dunbar, | The Lausanne garagemat, Marcel ‘Micheli, said Mrs; Mac- | Lean and the children arrived at his establishment about 6:50 p.m. | Friday and that she told him she was in a great hurry catch a train. The only train’ ipaving Lau- sanne immediately after was the 6:58, arriving at Zurich at 1:06 p.m., with stops en route at Fri- borg, Bern and Olten. From Zurich there are almost to daily.-gir connections to. Prague, | Czechoslov _ but Swiss air line officials said Mrs.; MacLean had not -been on any Via to Prague Friday. Until the discovery of the car . today, the only clue to the fam- ily’s disappearance was a tele- gtam filed early yesterday from ' the Montreux subarb of Territet . to Mrs, Dunbar, Purportedly from. her daughter, it said: ‘ Terribly sorry delay in contact | you nnforeseen circumstances have \arisen-‘I am staying here longer. Please .advise school. ‘Boys return- ing about'a week’s time. All ex- tremely well. Pink rose in marvel- ous form. Love frorn all. Melinda, “ Suspended Athletes to Get New Hearing LANSING —A legislative com- mittee today refused to suspend the High School Athletic Associa- tion eligibility rule on awards but recommended that, the case of nine athletes rece tly suspended be re-heard. Chairman Harry J. ‘Phillips (R- Port Huron) said the committee on administrative rules found “not |in) conformity with the statute” because the one- year suspension penalty provided was inflexible. { Refreshments and) Deor Prizes ~~At our annual ‘House. Today /|is the last day. pen tonight 7 until | 9 Thomas| Economy Furniture Co., 361 6. 1 | staff,* the ¥emainder of the season. -| would take to Hornsby F Fired by Cincinnati First Base Coach | Will Handle Team for Rest of Season (CINCINNATI (®) — Rogers Hornsby today ‘was removed as manager of the Cincinnati Redlegs. Gabe Paul, general manager of the club, | said Buster Mills, first base coach, will handle the team | | (Paul, ina. ‘statement, said Horns- by asked him Tuesday about his |status for 1954. | “He was told a decision would he-made very shortly and be- (ause of his request he would be dvised as» soon us a decision as reached,’’ Paul ‘said. i'We have, advised Mr. Hornsby today that @ change in managers. will be made. Because of the fact that Mr. Hornsby has been notified he will not manage the, Redlegs ir,’ 1954 it is advisable that the chanye take place immediately.” ‘Paul said he was not ready to an- nounce the new ine Churchill on Vacation + NICE, ‘France W—Prime Min- ister Churchill arrived on the French Riviera today for a holi- day, He left his doctor in England — an indication the 78-year-old |the lower end. | Mayor and Mrs, Ask ton J. Mouton of Lafayette were j base of the Spine. | Doctors were hopeft overly optimistic would survive.” \ Hospital spokesrtie bald yester- day the girls, Caro Anne‘ and Catherine Anne, are|{'bright, alert and normal -in every respect ex- cept for the co . The only organ. thi in common was the lower tract, spokesmen saitt. They were joined at the fourth sacral verte- brae, which is fu | twins had Plastic surgery each twin’s lower The twins apparently have sep- arate functioning nefvous systems and independent) spinal cords,. ex- cept. a junction in dural sac, the covering of the Spinal cord at pounds, eight have gained since. . They weighed 11 ounces at birth and about three pounds /$ The first born, Carolyn Anne, was the longest, 17) inches. Her sister was 1642 Inc has grown about : three-quarters. At one point in{\the delivery, Carolyn Anne stopped breathing and had to be revived by artificial respiration. The twins went into an inewbator at birth tron Mountain ihe En Route Back | States HONOLULU (UP): seph T. Gardner, Mich., was among American war pi baek to the United pitals, left Tokyo Wednesday night aboard a military transport sched- statesman is feeling fit again. uled to arrive here. # noon today. Chrysler Gets $50 Million Order for Tank Retrievers | DETROIT (AP) $50,000,000 defense contract struction of M51 tank’recovery vehicles: | | — The Chrysler Corp. will receive a in the near future for con- The Army announced yesterday that the v hicles are to be built at the Chrysler-operated Detroit T Arsenal in nearby Center Line. Chrysler is nearing | ompletion of a tank construction contract at the arsenl _ The M51 is a square tank- like vehicle ‘with a derrick instead of |a turret. It is used to retrieve damaged tanks from) the battlefield. The Center Line plant currently employs approxi- mately 4 000, P Brig. Gen. ‘arroll H. \Deitrick, commander of| the Ordnance Tank- Automotive Center heré, declined to estimate number of tank recovery vehi les to be built for the army) or long it fulfill the contract. ‘Deitrick| said, ‘however, the M51 {| uh Pa a is a new type recover ty vehicle de- signed and engineei by the Army Ordnance Army announce of the new contract earlier re- port by Wi latthews, di- rector of the Ci of the CIO Uni eto Workers Union, that was. to get a new contract that work would be done at the arsenal. Chrysler recently Hpst a $200,- 000,000 tank-making) | contract to General Motors Corp, which the Defense said jsubmit- ted a bid 12 per cent! below that of Chrysler. ‘ wo | Wy | | Se ah Oe intestinal | Motors Proving More Efficient Than Expected Air Force Will Cancel Contracts for. Old-Style Jet Planes WASHINGTON (A P )— The Air Force plans to can- cel contracts for possibly 6,000 spare enginés costing |- a half-billion dollars’ be- cause, it says, jet engines are sturdier than at first thought. Secretary of Defense Wil- son and Secretary of the |Air Force Talbott told a /news conference yesterday the cancellations will “not affect the -production of one sirfgle plane,” " They said the engines, all spares or extras and mostly for jets, are not Ionger needed for two j sulet reasons: 1, det engines arc thick more durable than had been expected —the result of ‘accumulated know-how” in operation, mainte- nance and improved design. - 2. Attrition rates ‘have fallen. off —that is, fewer accidents and, ot ‘course, no losses in*combat since the truce in Korea. However, Talbott said the Ko- rean-truce was not a direct factor. ‘Talbott said production of the af- fected engines will start tapering off immediately and will come to ‘a halt by next spring. He said the number of cancelled engines might run as high as 6,000 with savings between 400 and 500 million dol- | lars. f Commenting on the durability of jet engines, Talbott said some (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Sen. McCarthy ‘fo Wed Sept. 29 Miss Jean Kerr, 29, Di Riseorch Assistant, ils Bride-Elect WASHINGTON up—Sen. ‘Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis) and Miss ‘Jean Kerr, former research assis- ‘tant in his office, are to be mar- ried. | i) Mrs. William P. Kerr, mother of the bride-to-be, announded the engagement today. The wedding will be Sept. 29 in St. Matthews (Roman Catholic) Cathedral here. Miss Kerr, 29 was employed in MeCarthy’s office from 1948 until 1952. A brunette, she was voted the most beautiful girl, at George Washington University in 1945 while a student in the school here. Miss Kerr also attended North- western University, Evanston, Il. McCarthy is 43. A former judge in Wisconsin, he was elected to the Senate“in 1946. Miss Kerr, a native of Wash- ington, joined the senator’s staff on her graduation from North: western in 1948, Her name has been linked romantically | with that of the bachelor senator since shortly after that time. As a staff assistant to McCarthy, Miss Kerr helped in pteparing material for: his various pamphlets and speeches. During hearings last year on McCarthy's fitness’ to’ re- tain his Senate seat, it was ught out that Miss Kerr did research for, controversial booklet on housing which McCarthy sold to the Lustron Corp. for sas cis In Today's Press Bob Considine Heboceccveserderderss 2 Conaiy Were ea Bi, | PHILADELPHIA—Detroit Lions,” De. ‘George. Riagued by! 2 sees pl, inuuries ' Eéiterials were. the under-dogs | r tonight's: Fold! News... battle here with ot Marmote Eagles NFL team. | Coach Buddy Polterns Parker was quoted as being péssi- Sports... ‘ia — mistic ‘over; the possible outcome. TV. Di ie | a - || The gaine will | be televised . a le oe GUESS WHO SEES HIS CHILD? — Lieut. Joe line ee iad paeomhote \WJBK) | and broadcast (WJR), | Bed (second from left) of. Gilb , Mags., | D. Beall, cdisblen, Ga,;, Bednarz; > apt. C. M. starting at 7:30 and. ty You Are Invited to Attend gets! first glimpse of his wife and baby’ daughter Osborne, Minneapolis, Minn.; Capt. Jogeph ‘Smolen, OW | oH etal, Boot ne y's tani | 28, the transport Gen. William Black, docks at- Ft.| Tacoma, Wash.; and Lieut, Harold %. Stahiamn, tos hee pre ee ebb’ y.| Open tonight 7 until % Thomas Maspn, San Francisco, today, bearing 428 repatriated | Nashville, Tehn.| Only two of the other men have. pee aoo prizes. Open fenl (onight 74 til rea a tana hella Sal Pacinaw | POWs. Left to ore the happy heroes are Lt ‘William flenec relatives;-the other two are st looking. & alegre eecee™ a amram naa a ek . i | | | \ a | | | 4 | | | Tee | cee! kil |) | me ‘ | : oe ad 1 Pau | | | My oe . a | | { | | rh. | i 4 aw 1 i Bat a > a Poi Tocco i Elen etsaitltil | | i ity Medical fecal Society : C I resident Dies in Auto Crash Dr.| Oliver MacKenzie on Way Home From’ Me ting Near Utica’ | Dr, Oliver R. MacKenzie, 44,.a| well known Walled Lake| physician and presi- dent of the Oakland Coun- Society, was fatally injured early today in ‘aj highway accident at Utica) Rd. and Moravian Dr. in Macomb County. Report New. ‘Jewish Purge Sources Behind ‘Curtain’ Say Reds Wage Secret Campaign | | VIENNA, Austria eA pew out: break of Communist suppression of Jewish minorities—with dozens | of top Jewish community leaders | being tried secrétly or under ar- rest—was reported today from be- | hind the Iron rtain. ‘Reliable sources said that so far-the new anti-Jewish campaign has been re- stricted to Romania and Czecho- slovakia. It has not reached’ Hun- gary, Poland and Bulgaria’as far as is known. | : But in Romania and Czechoslo- vakia, the Red regimes have ap- parently reopéned the .campaign of Jewish persecution which flared throughout east Europe in 1952. The difference is that today the drive to wipe out, all Jewish op- position to communism is being carried out with |as much secrecy ~as possible, | Dr, MacKenzie was driv- ing home from @ medical meeting at Hillcrest Golf Club jnear Utica, according to Macomb County sheriff's to Mga when his car col- lided| with one driven by Edward Schroder Jr., 27, of 44749 Brockton, Utica. The \doctor was dead upon ar- rival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in Mt. Clemens, deputies! stated. Schroder _wWwas treated for ‘bruises. Macomb County ted for Fred Nicholson will take a statement, from Sphroder today, deputies said, Schroder told deputies he had started forward after halting for a stop sign when the doctor's car came through the intersec- tion and their cars collided. — Dr. Mnekenze had practiced at Walled} Lake for the ae 15 years. He was named Citizen| of the Year for 1952 by the Walled Lake Rotary Club, which cited his } studen and hi in the community’s schools incorporation of Walled a oY, the staffs of. bots St. Jbicgh’ *y Hospital in Pontiac and york among leadership in|a eampaign According to reports, checked against those ot refugees and traveling businessmen, this is General Hospital. Mary William, R.S.M., adminjstrator at St. Joseph, said, part of what has pepecnee in re- cent weeks: 1. Five prominent Zionist and Jewish leaders in Romania have been secretly tried and given pris- on terms from 10 to 16 years. Another trial of Jews including Romanian representatives of the World Jewish Congress, is in re- pafriation. . Nine prominent Jews and Zignists have been tried and sen- tenced to long prison terms in Prague. Some 60 prominent Jewish and Zionist leaders, jailed for some years, are being concentrated in one prison in Bratislava, evidently for trial, Husky Worker Catches ‘Child in 50-Foot Fall NEW YORK «—A husky work- man raced from a nearby construc- tion job yesterday to catch in his ait a 2-year-old boy who fell 50 feet from a lower East Side apart- ment building. The child, Francis La, | Madrid, was not hurt. Neither was ‘the 42- year-old workman, Louis Sarno. The child’s mother, Louisa, 28, who learned what. happened after taking ‘another child to school, fainted. “We've suffered a great loss to our medical staff. Dr. MacKenzie (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Palmer Trailing as Upset Looms OKLAHOMA CITY — Don Al- -bert,, the Big Ten golf champion from Purdue University and Alli-' ance, Qhio, threatened to pull off another of the upsets that have marked the 53rd National Amateur Golf Championship when he led ‘‘Giant| Killer’ Arnold Palmer of Wickliffe, Ohio, 2-up| after nine holes of their fifth round match today. | Palmer defeated defending cham- pion Jack Westland and Walker Cupper| Ken Venturi yesterday. Sam |Urzetta of Rochester, N. Y., the 195) champion, led Angelo San- tilli of [East Greenwich, R. I., one- up at' the turn. Monkey Has Twins AUCKLAND, New Zealand H— A monkey in Wellington Zoo gave birth twins today—believed to be the first twin monkeys born in capily since ita | | JOHN FOSTER DULLES Is Up to Russia ution Unrest Claims Sol of Global State Secretary Tells U. S. Policy to General” _ Assembly of UN. . -UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — The world is at a ‘crisis, Secretary of State Dulles said today, and t is. ‘up to the: Comriunist to , Temove the roadblocks that * stand in the way of peace- . - ful, [solutions for Korea, BA O'Brian Quizzed and there can be in Detroit Death Police Checking Alibi for. Jan. 2 When Girl Was .Raped, Slain Donald V. O'Brian, held here in the rape and death of Mrs. Hallie Perkins, «was: questioned | for’ an hour this morning about the rape- Slaying of JoAnn Gillespie in De- troit the night of: Jan. 2. ‘He has denied any connection with this crime. ‘Set. Glenn Coller, of ‘thd Detroit police hamicide squad, said results of the. questioning this morning were ‘“‘inconclusive”’ byt that Q'Brian | had furnished (‘partial alibis ‘for his whereabotts that night.” | | Neprian was returned to! ‘jail and 1 face furtheg, questioning after his statements this morning are checked, Sgt. Coller said, He claims he was home with his 19:year-old wife and two children the night. the | Detreit girl was slain. | 0’ Brian was arrested | Sept. 9 after attémpting to attack a Pon tiac housewife, and under ques- tioning by Pontiac and State Police | he confessed the: rape-slaying of Mrs. Hallie O. Perkins, 55, of 76 W. Longfellow Ave. Mrs. Perkins’ body was. found Aug. 15 in a field at Beverly and Baldwin | Aves. oO Brian also admitted the attack on a 16-year-old girl Aug. 15, and four other _attempted attacks ‘on Pontiac | women, said Pakland County authorities. : Detectives Glenn Coller and ‘Art: gus’ McIntyre of the Detroit’ Police Department said the questjoning+ was ‘ “routine.” Showers For cast in Pontiac Fri day! | Cloudy | skies with temperatures ranging between the) 50s and 70s are forecast for the Pontiac ares tonight’ and Friday. | |, Mostly | cloudy ski with show- ers are forecast: for Friday by the U. Ss. Weather Bureau. The tem-| perature rose from early today’ to 70 at 2 p.m. ind Renter Pon-| tiac. | ‘| A low of from 52 ‘to pected tonight, ESR is ex-! from 74 f 78 on Fri ay. R } | + Indochina and Germany. ere words”! are not enough, Dulles |told the . General Reeabit no “new world climate” unless the Communists ‘con tribute to it by changing their i cies, | The United States, he declared, stands’ ready - to to dnd tension and bring worl ‘peace—before scien- tific | | discoveries - wipe life off Ithe surface of planet.” Dulles accused the | obenaciak of dilatory tactics in| ‘Korea since the‘atmistice. And he added: “We are forced to agus that the Communist side ly wants to: comply with the a mibtice | land face up to the problem mi’ of wi drawing their forces from the and creating a united jand indepen- dent Korea.” | _ Dulles spoke for Is7 minutes before a packed audience, |in- cluding top-ranking diplomats from 60 nations. Russia’s Andret cy. Vishinsky listened intently “and took notes, but. the Soviet “bloc delegates did not join in | the applause when the sccretary | of | state concluded. Thi " { explore all possible means | his % Se | was Dulles’ \state ent,, in behalf States, before the A bein which began Tue major policy , pf the United ’ sembly ses- | sday., Vishin- wit ii of|Horces in Indochina, as well’; ; Korea to be united sky Will present Russian views within a few days. | Dulles mentioned 'P re mier Malenkov’s recent statement that the ommunist and || _non-Commu- nist systems can coyexist ce-" fully. He commented “such | ex- pressions are welcome.” Fe But he added ‘mere. words i not reassure us’’ in view of fact that “since. 1939, 600 million people of some 15 nations have been brought. into ithe Soviet camp of dictatorships. ” | when the need for more urgent, Dulles sembly: harmony Was. told the: As: avoid any word or deed which might needlessly aggravate | the P Pot state of cancerous i" si at the Saviet leaders are est, they must recognize that, if there is to be \a, new. world climate, they must contribute contributed.” He. accused the soviet t Union pe- || ically of “dilatory, tactics”! in Korea and of sponsoring tbel failure to cooperate on the German and Austrian questions. The secretary of state laid the following points, which he said would ‘‘go far to end the preven tension:’’ | 1. Policies which” will permit “wee. > 2. A peaceful ceo ie es In- dochinese problem., 3. Unity of Germany and a free | “Ahtia. | | 4. Polices which will “eas Raseia’ s neighbors to enjoy na- - tional independence. i the 5. Policies which | will end dedication of the Soviet : Commu- - ‘|nist party to the violent over flaw of independent governments. Then Dulles observed: | “Governments which exert ‘them m- (Continued on Page 2, Col. Injury- Plagued Lions. |Face Eagles Tonight “The United States, will seek to. “more to it than they have yet : 2) [BR Saying there never was a time | a TWO Definite Pledged ‘From Our Birmingham Bureau _ BIRMINGHAM—A concrete pro- posal for serving the proposed Pembroke School with storm wa- ter drainage is promised by City Manager Donald C. Egbert for 4 meeting of ’ Board of Education members, city commissioners, Troy officials and engineers to- night. Located outside the city limits, in Troy Township, the site has been a problem since jits purchase last March.. The City. Commission offered | to. supply water and | sanitary | sewage. services on the condi- tion that the school solve jits own storm water drainage problem. ing development of the much! needed school to serve the growing, northeast area of the city until! the storm drain problem is set: tled. Egbert met ‘yesterd engineers and Troy Township en- gineers to ‘work out a’ solution they will both approve. The Bir- mingham + -City Commission has stated that their -existing storm drains are incapable of {ang any more flow. » Oakland County Drain Conn: missioner! Ralph Main has put ‘forth a temporary solution to | ‘ the problemi, and City Manager “Egbert favors a more permanent solution in the area. The meeting will be held at 8 p.m. in the. Board of Education offices, Hill School. According to school ‘beard member | Richard Sauerbrun, thé immediate gdal of the meeting is an agreement which will allow ae to begin. * Fourth aiddb room 218C Quar- ton School, mothers will attend a coffee hour at 10° a. m. tomor- row at the home of Mrs. Vernon Lee, Shirley drive. Coffeés are re- placing general PTA meetings un- til completion of. an addition to the school sometime ” November. | * * Birmingham, along “with Bloom- field Hills, and Bloomfield Township, has been asked to report to the State Water Resources Commission Oct. 30 their progress on ending pollu- tion of the River Rouge. Members of the Troy Township Board of . Supervisors have also been invited to’ the session ‘‘in view of eriwine problems in sani- tation in’ séctions of Troy Town- ship adjacent to the city of Bir- mingham,” Adams added. * ¥ * At its -first fall meeting, Bir- mingham Council of Churches vot- ed to sponsor several | religious projects, among them the Billy Graham -Crusade, the local Ref- ormation Anniversary Service. World Communion Sunday and an Ecumenical aime sHeetne, Board of “tdacation members have approved a pay boost) for| substitute teachers, from $12 to ~~ $15 a day. This Was necessary, Dr-~Dwight B. Ireland. superin- | tendent of-.schools explained, to - Meet the salaries pud | in nearby areas. | , * % J * Representatives ‘of 131 institu: tions which -sponsot Boy Scout troops, Explorer pasts and Cub ’. packs in South Oakland County _ elon . T4 & =" Lowest temperature will meet at 6:30 tonight in the social hall of Royal Oak's First Methodist Church, . iw. Seventh | street. Occasion will bel the ‘annual charter renewal meeting of Dis- trict One of the’ Detroit Area Boy Scout Council, * = _Bisingham Police Chief Ralph: Moxley attended; the Interna- ie “Association of Chiefs of Po- lice annual convention in: .Detroit this week. ; * * Birmingham YMCA is seeking Birmingham Reports Fourth Polio Victim ‘BIRMINGHAM — A 64-year-old girl has been reported as the city’s fourth polio case this summer. Mrs. Anyce Gillecte,) city -health nurse, said yesterday, Mrs. Gillette said it was too early to diagnose the severity. of the “ease, but ‘that so fat the young- ster, who has two pre-school age sisters, has a non-paralytic type infection. She was taken to Henry Ford Hospital Tuesday. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINIT¥—Increasing finess and warmer tonight, low 52 to 5@. Friday, mostly clogdy with show- ers a temperature, change. High | Today in Te Peotes i ene 8 am At!8 a.m.: Wind velocity, 3 mph.; ¢ irec- tion | west. Sun sets. Thurscay at 6:39 p.m. Sun rises. Friday at 6:15 a.m. Moon rises Thursday at 3:20 p.m. Moon sets Friday at 12:25 a.m. Downtown, Tempetatures 43. Ga Madecceee 43 Weabm........eL TE Mi. ceccses- 45 12 m..| ATOO BB. Mecceveoes I ph MM... 200055568 OB. Mecagscerer- $7 2 Dp, m se 70 10 BUM... ca eeee the crea- tion of ever more’ \powerful methods of mass destruction, which tolerate no delays and-spare no expense in these matters, and which at the same time are dilatory, evasive or negative toward curing the situa- tiong. which could bring these de- structive ‘forces into play, cannot but stand morally condemned.” He said there-aever had been a time when the néed for har- mony was more urgent. of disharmony more menacing,”’ he continued, ‘‘The fact of tension cannot be ignored. That would be dangerously unrealistic. Also, the causes of, that tension will have to be explored., ‘Otherwise there can be no cure. | | or deed. which aggravate the ‘the planet, : es conarved: “The destructive power inher- ent jin ma must be controlled by the idealism ‘man’s spirit and the wisdom of min? They alone stand betw us and a lifeless planet.” po! Until the [world develops ‘‘the spirit and the institutions that will enable man to dominate matter,” Dulles said, hations are forced to | develop ‘‘community measures to deter | .”" With such or- ganization as NATQ. obviously in mind, secretary of state con- tinued: | “Soviet leaders have complained of.. these arrangements. But they —_, is within a single nation can be used off tely at the dictation of one soa Se some- times: of man alone. Dead | tad. tise stamps’ sield to chemists a substance known as|'pine oil.) It is not obtain- ail from liye pine trees. ill be the,° and ithe B57, and ve R3350 and | “Never were ‘the consequences } Ford Division — Promotes Three }O. L. Wigton|to| e Sales Head of Tract r Unit in Birmingham wi a be tor | general man- * r of the trac- tor, division. ; romoted to » O. L. WIGTON assistant general sales manager in charge of field operations, |the position formerly held by Wigton, is bemaia B. Rob- ins. John J. bzorni, | tol merly dis- tribution control manager, succeeds Robins as western sales manager. Wigton - joined Dear mm Motors’ Corporation, formerly tHe national marketing * organization) for the j ROBIN Ford trac equipment, eastern e assistant general er. Prior to that time, | ee ‘other executive sales positions jcompanies in thé farm eqttip- men industry. Robins has served |} I sales manager since the tion of the ( Aug. 1, 1953, a position’ which he also had held with' tors since June, 1951. Dzorni, ° with Dearbo Motors from 1947 to 1993, dev loped the efficient distribution system which moves tractors and farm equip- ment to distributors | throughout the United States, cars da, Cuba| and Mexico. le Dr. MacKenzie Dies in Traffic Accident (Continued From Pa e One) had been an active m since 1939 and was "president of our staff jn 1949 and 1950.” Dr- MacKenzie had iplanned to leave Friday for Philadelphia for a year of study in intérnal ymedi- cine at the University 6 vania. He had arranged for Dr. Harry L. Munson to /take over! his practice during his) absence. Born at Escanaba June 18, 1904, he was graduated from, Marquette University in 11934, and] came to Walled Lake 15 years | Besides his widow, Marion Burns, two daughters, Ann, at home, Besides being a tle Oakland County sociation, he was a ot the Walled Lake Commerce, Rotary and ed Lake Lodge, F & 4 ki The body will be at! the Donel- n-Johns Funeral Hame here Mtl noon Friday, when| i ‘taken to the Richardson-Bird Fun- eral Home at Walled Ld there it will be taken to'f Lake Methodist Church Saturday to lie in state“until time for the service at 2 P: jwill be in Oakland vio !Gardens. Members of the Oakland County Medical Association will act as honorary bearers. Search Continues for Gun in Rive Pontiac and State Poli¢; ed a futile four-hour seal Clinton River yesterday automatic used in the s bartender Silas Chaney, Center St., who was kill ‘in a gun battle at the E1 | Pontiac Municipal Court and are scheduled for in Oakland County Friday. — | +f Short Ride WILLIMANTIC, Conh. (UP) -—Eager to try out) new bicycle which he. _ Just ao Youn birth | day, J om a sidewalk fe it Begin Probing Convair Crash | of the 25 passengers and | three |.damaged slightly, and part of the plane’s wing and part of the tail t Pennsyl-| 5: SS ost: Gyo * ¢ujommphaly. y + 1 | } i} Phiad, Lid, | Dental Group Criticizes False Advertising Claims CHICAGO # — The Internation- al Assn. for Dental Research said today that published articles about ‘so-called anti-enzyme ‘tooth pastes’ have ‘‘served as a spring- board for distorted advertising claims.” Officers of the association said that ‘fas yet they have seen no|’ public evidence that: watrants: claims of great reductions in oc- currence of tooth decay through routine use of any dentrifice. ie cine ‘and fasting. It is the Jews Prepare for Yom Kippur A liest Day of Calendar ins at Sunset Friday, | A Services Sill i Kippur, the holiest} day of .the Jewish calendar, will be ob- served with religious services in synagogues throughout the world from) sunset Friday to sunset Sat- urday. . . Yom Kippur is the day of atone-* ment; / traditionally observed with cli of. a 10-day period of penitence which begins with Rosh Hashana, the Jewish New Year. Federal ? Seek Cause of Accident That Killed 28 ANY, N, Y. (P—Federal in- vestigators start poring over the twisted ruins of an American Air- lines Convair today to find out what caused it to clip two radio towers and slam to earth, killing all 28 persons aboard. 1 The twin-engined craft burst into flames yesterday morning jas it crashed within a few feet! of a trailer park, scorching the bodies crew members. Joseph Fluett, regional chief investigator for the Civil Aero- nautics| Board, called a meeting ithis morning to organize “an in- vestigation of structural parts and the scene itself” that) will take about two weeks. Airline of- ficials and state police alsa are investigating. Some witnesses reported the e seemed to encounter engine uble as it circled Albany Air- port after its landing had) been delayed by a heavy ground fog. ‘American Airlines said its mete- orologist found, just before. the crash, that the fog had begun to clear and that the ceiling over the airport was 500 feet. Minutes later the 40-passenger Convair struck two in a row of three 365-foot towers at Albany station WPTR’s transmitter. The plane ahattered on the ground a half-mile from the radio towers and 343 miles from, the airport control tower. A shred of wreckage clung to one of the radio towers, which was pk were found on the ground nearby. ROK 8th Division Gets Eisenhower's Citation | SEOUL — A U. S. presiden- tial unit citation was presented to the ROK 8th Division today for its heroi¢ stand last July against the last big Chinese push on the East Central Front. The citation, signed. by Presi- ' ‘dent Eisenhower, was the first U. presidential unit citation to be piven to the: ROKS. 5-Cent Rate Considered by Postal Committee WASHINGTON () — Sen. Carl- son (R-Kan) said today a special advisory council to his Senate post office committee is considering*a five-cent rate on first class mail between cities. It would be aimed to cover ‘ley. pedited’’ handling with air trans- portation for most such mail. The present three cent first class at would remain for purely local WN, EVERSHARP SCHICK INJECTOR Investigators ,.” | Which -the ;worshipper asks divine | Errors ‘| ice is;at 2. p.m. and the closing ’ The day of atonement ritual is inaugurated. on the eve of the oly day with the singing of Kol Nidre; the celebrated hymn in forgiveness for trespasses and committed . during the year. The liturgy for the holy day con-_ tains collective admissions af guilt’ and supplications for the power to overcome sin and wrongdoing. service is concluded with a bait of the shofar, or ram’s_ horn, symbolizing the cry for divine compassion. .- Rabbi Sanford E. Saperstein of Temple’ Beth _ Jacob announces services for the holy day at 8:15 p.m. .|Friday- and starting at 10 a.m. on Saturday. Children's serv- program is at 3. Rabbi Henry Hoschander at Con- gregation B'nai Israel reports that the Kol Nidre service will be at 5:30, p.m. Friday, with a sermon by him at 6. Saturday the sched- ule is for Shacharis at 8 a.m., with sermon at 11 and final blow- ing of the shofar at 7:10 p.m. Ortonville Man Treated for Accident Injuries Lional O. Ward, 53, of 3600 Sher- wood, Ortonville, was treated for head cuts and bruises this morn- ing at Pontiac General Hospital after a two-car accident at Sash- abaw and Oak Hill Rds., Oakland County sheriff's deputies reported. Ward’s car collided with one driven by Clarence Stapleton, 24, of 4030 Rollins Avé., Drayton Plains, deputies stated. Stapleton |THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER-17, 1953 {Dantiar Naathe | Pontiac Deaths. David Lessenberry © Service was held today for David Lessenberry, infant son of Jess and Dorothy, Rollins Lessenberry: of 197 W. Huron St., in the Huntoon Funeral Home, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. The Rev. Edward Auchard, ; associate min- ister at First Presbyterian Church officiated. The baby died .at birth Wednes- day at his home. He is survived by his parents. Charles R. Robinson Pontiac Lodge 810, BPOE, will hold a lodge of sorrow for Charles R. Robinson tonight at 8 o'clock at the DeWitt C. Davis Funeral Home. Funeral service. will be at the funeral home at 2 p.m, Fri- day: The Rev, Easton Hazard? pas- tor of Wilson Avenue. Methodist Church, will officiate. Mr. Robinson, who was 51 years old, died Tuesday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. He resided at 31 N, Shirley Ave. °| Antique Autos Chug Info Motor Capital DETROIT W — More than 400 ancient automobiles Stanley Steamers, Pierce-Arrows, Model T Fords and many others—arrived in Detroit under their own power. Most of them’ were participants in the, renewal of the famed, Glidden Tour of an earlier day; others were the prize possessions of Michigan. old car hobbyists. All came to participate in an old car festival at Henry Ford’s Green- ARTHRITHS RHEUMATISM Pains Relieved At Once citis, cheumetiom, sclotice of neuritts, our few formula called REMATRON, ‘wrecker your eching jolats ASTER thon’ ony ae pred- ect that you heave ever used, the — Lier sem Wied tetura the your % beck, REMATRON ‘costs $240. Gnd i pola ee this strict money oy hock convenes Mall was unhurt. Simms Bres., 9% North i |feiew. erders filled. | IME Step right up, “The name $4.98 Value SIMA S i folks, and get A GENUINE PEARL WICK in. Hampers” te BROTHERS LAD New LAD 98 N. 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PHILADELPHIA ¢ fe al Reserve Bank here, which han- dles millions daily, a vice pres- ident named Mr, Pop an, almost Noni- Flying Kiwi Bird qeh Takes Off for London AUCKLAND, New Zealand w— One of New Zealand's non-flying Kiwi birds took off for London to- | Tons of Arms, Ammo day—in_ a plane—with a trans-| GRENOBLE, France u |— Two America supply line of big’ fat| French cave explorers found tons worms on tap for mid-flight snacks. |of arms and munitions hidden in The rare, Ostrich-like Kiwi is} an Alpine chasm. Residents of the headed for the London zoo. area said the arms were|-hidden The Kiwi, found only in New| by French resistance fighters dur- Zealand, feeds almost entirely on| ing | the Nazi cceupanion of World earthworms. About the size of an Wart IL. lo | ordinary domestic hea, it i wingless and has a very lo Cave Explorers Find Simms’ 1s: OPEN NIGHTS—Fridoys, Soturdary and Mondays That People | a gains They ALWAYS ‘Mention SIM | 1s” COMPLETE WITH - OUT A “VISIT | TO S SIMM’S SIMMS oe SPECIALS Guaranteed First Quality 100% [Wool $8.98 Val ue. *6*3 | Buy) now! Blankets Choice of solid dolors in wine, RPavy or green. Adtual $2.00 sav- ings on ja 100% WOOL blanket. Nationally Advertised—Famous Brand ia x 80 deg ~ 5% Wool Blanket --- $4 Value famous for wear and warmth. Have Mehy Home Uses Bleach Flour Sacks _ Regular ) ] ¢ 34c V alue Use for dusting, Polen’, drying towels, etc. 36” x ’ open size. Choice of cherry or hunter green’ colors. (Slight irregulars). Double bed size—70x80-inches. i $5 “Beacon” 10°/, Wool Blanket } | Genuine “BEACON” brand — § 3” hy Pay ‘More | Children’s ipper Front—l - PIECE mp aly Genuine “ESTRON” With Quilte Lining Blue, green, brown and red. 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SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 | i ; | { 4 | } 1 No Need to Call SPCA, Won't Use Live Animals Australia (—Aus- lovers can relax. inister Howard Beale questioner in the House of Representatives today that no month’s British atomic tests in the central Australia desert. e Clippers @ Scissors @ Comb | clipper R egular - Barber Outfit $ ie Instruction Booklet ith: barber cheers and comb. It?s easy to cut hair at | home and save. ‘Hi. me eatherweight BINOCULARS / $2.00 Value Powerful binoculars have’ coat- ed lens. Ideal eling, theatre. 79 Hi-Power Coated * 49 for sports, trav- (Fed. Tax extra) Regular $9.95 Front of \case (Tax extra. ) $2.19 Value © Loud ala ratte ——~ 5 be Clock $3.50 Value Regular $2.95 $22 Pull size bey with playing in- structions, now @ low. low prick. Telechron—Personality Electric Clock | Value to permit use of your favorite snapshots, Factory op nnteed. INGRAHAM ‘Salute’ Alarm Clock A dependable timekeeper with 30-hour windup ent Round dial . easy to read. 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Taz + Maker’s Own Price Tags Show Regular ty Included In This Lot Are Watches With | Luminous Dials $ uy now for Christmas gift- ving. You save $3.00 to $6.00. “| l | | { i ae Prices wis to 10% | —M ain Floor { $8 N. Saginaw Chrome plated, seamless steel, gold finished nurses’ watches, stop-watch, sweep second wtharids| etc. Biggest Savings in the Sale! Reguiar $9.95 to $14.95 Met § Syet Watches | | | | Al and Regular Dials Hurry—only 61 in this group. Saginaw ¢ ‘Exactly 283 watches at the” ; || first served . : 4 + ai ee se RE FOUR ? ¥ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, | - Oatis Gets 10- Yee After Trial’ Full Editor’s Note: William | In. is, writer of the following articie, jis Sel ed Press correspondent) whojwas im- orisoned for more than twd | years in Sommunist Czechoslovakia. | This is fourth in the eertes. ‘ By WILLIAM N. OATIS On Monday, July 2; 1951, I stood up in court in Prague, | Czecho- slovakia, and said I had spied for the United States Embasiy. I was not a spy. I was an Asso- ciated Press foreign correspondent, and the three men J scsioa i fas me were my “i verge oon Czech employes. ; And I was not: testifying, as’ I+ should have testi fied in a court in : my” ~ewn country —out of.my... own | heart, aiming to |. tell “the truth,: the whole truth and nothing but @ the truth.” William Oatis . I was testifying as the Cammu- | nist secret police wanted | me to , testify. I was following, in sub- word, a script they had written: “ for me and rehearsed me In._ sL This script, prepared during my 70: days’) interrogation and | com- pleted perhaps 10 days before I took the |witness stand, was called ay protocol. tions for| court and prosecutor to .| ask! me,} and. answers for me. to give them. | 4: That morning, we four went on trial before the Senate of the State: Court at Pankrac Prison, in south- east Prague. We were brought there after breakfast from the prison where we had been interrogated. (I did not find! out till after the trial where at prison was,) We made the trip in a preen van, each ‘locked in a blind compartment with guards crowd- ing the aisle. Other guards with || submachineguns watched in a courtyard as we) were led into Pankrac~Prison. _* * We passed ‘through a sub- terranean corridor and~ upstairs stance and sometimes word for to a. row of separate cells. I It consisted of ques-, ar Red Prisdn. Sentence of Twisted Testimony waited in my = cell, smoking nervously and guarded by a ‘tall uniformed policeman with a big pistol. sod * * * Then we crossed a hall and have looked quite decent, for supposed «criminals; Before our journey, we had been shaved and had changed from prison uniform into street. clothes. (I wore the dark blue suit and brown bow tie I had on when arrested April 23.) But each of us had his guard. ‘I scanned» the courtroom for ’ familiar faces. I saw none of my friends. (Only after my release this year did I learn that Vice Consul Richard G, Johnson and Private Secretary Mary Horak of the U.S. Embassy were ‘in the back of the‘rodm.) I recognized two Czecho- slovak press officers — Dr. Ru- dolf Popper of the Ministry of Information and Bedrich Runge entered the high-ceilinged court- room by a side door. We must. hage charges. .The foreign | for him. correspondent ‘confessed’ to many accusations, iN _ JUDGES IN BLACK+-AP artist John A. Carlton | hoping his septence would sketches scene as William N. Oatis jfaced judges in | answers were distorted to sou Czech: court on eéspiot as black as possible of the Ministry Pat Foreign Af- eee | I noticed there, also, two Com- | Prague—an effeminate [Irishman from the party-line Telepress agency and a Negro girl whose fairs. ‘They sat stolifly in the}in my 10 months of treedom in| were = grii press section. plight. Upstairs and downstairs, the house was packed. Specially chosen inning broadly at > my munist correspondents He had seen ‘affiliation I did not know. They e Boys’ and girls’ styies| | slacks! cold _winds! 9 Sizés 3 to 6. hats! os j LP EGEL EE or navy In sizes 8 td | 16, Save to 4. 08! Reg. to 12. 98° 2 pe. Snowsuits ®@ Sturdy washable estron or wool! - ® Quick zip closings | ‘with suspender © Knitted wristlets to heae out .the all with matching Teenager’ $ chinchilla if wool shorty oat with 100%, wool interlining. ‘Smart for dress or casual wear with belted back. Red, charcoal t ye vse our LAY-AWAY Water Repellent _ Pram Suits Teddlers’ estron prom suits with snap on. bootees and mittens. Water repellent and fully lined . they're as warm as toast. Pink, mint or maize in sizes 12 to 18 months, ho , Open Friday Night ‘til 9! 98 : ) 9y | | | | \ boys and bonnet. for girls. to 4. | Regulatly 5.98 ‘Estron Sno-Suits Water repellent estron snow suits with 100% woo]|interlining. 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And near me sat another in- terpreter to serve as intermediary between! me and the court when I i should testify, Now ithe judges entered, four men one woman in black robes, and the trial began. State Prosecutor Josef Urvalek, also in) black, read the indict- ment. It called the Associated Press a spy agency serving the United States in a “war against the Soviet camp of peace.” It said all AP bureau chiefs in Prague | since 1948 had been Spies. | It charged my employes and me specifically with espionage. Presiding Judge Jaroslav No- vak then called me to stand in, the . horseshoe-shaped witness | stall. He referred to the indict- ment and asked, “Do you feel. ale “Yes, I do,” I said. Seventy days: of questioning had taught me that was the right answer. The judge had a ulky docu- ment before him, It my pro- tocol. An\dnow I x . the first: question in it: asked me to looms a small card introduced into eviden e. I said it was my 1944 off-duty pass from the Japanese language school of the Army Military. In- telligence Senike) at Fit. Snelling, Minn. * / ee After b few unprogrammed ques- tions on my birthplace and such, I explained in answer |to protocol questions that I had igone from Ft. Snelling to a} similar school at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and, |after a year’s study there, had |got lout of the Army. | ° | re * * #) (I studied language, not espio- |. tary Intelligence Service, but on the detached enlisted men’s, list.) I gaid that Lt, Col. Geo Atwood, U. S. military a in Prague, had been in the/ Ann Arbor |school while I w tere but that we had not m . testified that I got acquainted with him in Prague and- had “espionage meetings”’ with him. (Actually I was speaking of occasions when I had gone to him for news or background in- formation on military matters in Czechoslovakia.) I confessed I had gathered “espionage news’? from: my em- ‘ployes, other Czechs and diplo- | mats,’ and gave details. - (I was talking about reports on military, economic and po- litical subjects not published in| Czechoslovakia, The police had sold me the idea that all this was espionage material.) I said that the bartender at. ferred fro © Prosecutor , nage, and I was mot in the Mili- ; {the start ¢ the Alcron Hotel in Prague once had interpreted for me the Czech conversation of two government chauffeurs talking at the other end of the bar, jand that it had to do with the arrest of a public official. s ‘was a fiction built up” ee a kernel of fact and trans- the bartender’s pro- tocol [to mine: In reality, ome chauffeur had told him about the official; Ot cana aa pe ba bar before I came e report/from |the bartenler yy I testified that I got reports ‘ from’ a man using the name of Antonin Kratochvil and claiming to work in the prime minister's office! (I knew he was an agent of the secret police but said nothing of this. I was playing)their game in the hope of a short sentence.) That afternoon my three em- ployes related they had helped me get unofficial reports. They also said they, knew a Czech refit: Vladimir Komarek, ho sometimes returned illegally to his homeland. It was testified that he was) a spy and that ian | accomplice jof his had shot and’ killed a policeman, (I had never met Komarek, and I insisted ] this throughout the trial.) 2 Next day, 11 witnesses testi- fied. One said he had Killed a po- liceman with a pistol Komarek gave him. : nates Stransky, told how he had given me a letter for his former el ployer, Russell Jones of the United Press, noting his suspicions that a Czech in that office was aj police spy. (I carried||this letter to Jones, not. knowing, (what was in it,) Nearly the other withenses testified they had given unof- ficial infort employes. : both fact and f ‘and my employes’. Se Prosecutor| and defense Counsel spoke. (My| lawyer gaid I was guilty but there were alleviating circumstances.) And the next mor ing we four were all convicted. I got 10 years. Svoboda 20, Woydi-. nek 18 and Muntz 16. ” A big black sedan took me to. Ruzyne Prison, five! miles west of Prague. On: the way, I noted a big car just ahead with a man and boy in. t — Col. Atwood and his young son. (To) Be Continued) ‘Birdie’ Not a Captive; It’s Call for a Dance ATHENS, Ga. ( — Many Uni- versity of Georgia students who at of the summer term thought ‘‘bindie inthe cage’? was.. a captive | if nary are finding ou a few thing F Fag a new lcourse in lsquare dani- ing is, packi y them in at the Stu- 1 under direction of the tion Department. - “Birdie in| the cage” is one of the calls used by the/ caller to di- rect the dancers to change forma- tion. fas All wi coiors emma t i nts... Delightful regu- af, length or rty coats by AARKETTE in St. * | , famous,’ murmur, tilig ht ; fleece, , ye yy il atl meng Pe eee ae | Lola tN ; " rh aoe ( ; | | I ‘| . : . a | | i | | | q = | | ___THE PONTIAC PRESS, | THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 __ —. + | 4 —s — tal ee — in Cr Ty : . ° ; | a | | mor yr | p (i | | 1 | | OLN 7 - | | _~Your Carefree 100% Nylon : Blended CASHMERE and Lam ~-Luxuria Coats © . g | . aye int _— | 4 ; site ey | } 4 | oes » 33 - 4 : ‘ . | j | ae, At An O83 Sizes 12 to 20 , | ; | ms - ee : ij Incredible | | 1442t0o 2472, £%Bee oN | ne | | [ | . . } | } | Precious cashmere forms the cloud- | Sh , soft surface of Luxuria blended | . | 4 with the finest lamb‘s wool for , | sturdy strength and cozy, warmth! But QUANTITY IS LIMITED. | F for this fabulous fabric of 10% ly _cashmere and.90% wool... so | _[ you'll want to rush in for your Luxuria | i coat before our allotted stock j. runs out! Smart styling, beauiful. tailoring . . . each ¢oat is a remarkable value ‘ at this unusually “low price! (+ i Be one of the lucky ones,.. * : ” get here early and get — 7 all your Luxuria coat at this very | | e é ‘SHOWROOM SAMPLES meee lal Evicet a the inh > — : ; ° . 3 | | on the job | on the go | ) l / _ | | | | pens jJeweitry sale! | 7 | . || | ‘ | ie | - | | | ; How right you are ‘ta choose this fashior, that keeps pace with - - | | ! : \| o| + | busy girl .. . and is as|easy to care for as it is Carefree in spirit. - | Nude or Navy | food Delightfully different from the ordinary Sheltons washable, | Or | iy |, i! _ * _.. guaranteed not to shrink . . . luxuriously . ’ MI ri | 1 smooth, it has @ gentle spring-like motion that neatly turn wrinkles | } | ler 8) | | i . aside, seldom needs the touch 6f an ite. || | 57¢ Each. | | Use Waite’s Gonvenient | \ Added attraction: the on-ina-jiffy zipper front.* Red, ‘brawn, uit, ; | | [: “|. 4p 4 | 1 | green; each with black. . | Save on famous showroom samples of new fall jewelry. | Lan Pl r | & | t | cS | * Begutiful pieces for Fall in gold or silver necklaces, brace- | ayaway an. | | | fi | | oll | . 1 | lets, earrings. Necklaces and earring sets or pins sets. | | I . a | Hurry in Today or Call FE 4 2511 ° Howp earrings, toof Brilliant colored stones also!:): | “| 5 es i A as Wf : e || a | veral Exciting | . _ |Waite’s Better Dresses—Third Floor | T - Wdite’s Jewelry—Street Floor ‘ | Waite’s Coats—Third Floor . | Styles! | | | | | ‘ = el | : . 4 | | Oy | | : — ———— | — TS Nou! For the first time Waite’s Introduce Now! for the first fume Waite s introduce i |* | d | ae : | | all oy = i r sae LUXU RY SHEER | - i | INSURED | & L A | | I UW ? (] » ae | | t ! | Ve f | ~ } es | . | | , NYLONS Le | . | _ @| ° ° , | «the hosiery that is insured - | against runs regardles of cause | a the wth? 1 ! , , Hah | , ah | | | 60 Gauge for Beauty ~ 59 to h | ‘ ‘ . ” | | | goes to your head and Service ie | | ui ig 7 } ieadls : — / | | | me \ M : Nox | i | Joe ; ene PR C | re 8 4 Others to 11.98 Join the millions of women who wear ¢ : SI OOTH CURVES AHEAD in: | ~~, | . lronwear INSURED Nylons with confidence .| | - i | | | | picy new color to accent your Fall costurne and ... you'll save t 0 : ff | | . ii add a glow to your complexion! Find the perfect b a g iL vie o 2 of your hosiery t | ie og [ one for you in this fabulous-collection, All , udget an go your loveliest dt all times! | Wh WHE | | 5 | ; Ns fevorite shoper ~. shells, profiles, é a Be pre's why we DARE 4 . a | , ta dp _ Pixies, pillboxes! Feathers, beads or. jewel — ga ‘ ‘ 1 | . : ‘| . i | | he ISrims! Size?2? to 23. . . , ree lpok be eee | FGIRDLES and PANTIE GIRDLES , Walle's Milinery—thind Fleer ew Colors: | ark Beige or Terrace Tan, | \ | | ‘t ia | j [| 1p Patented protective ' | 95 | | _ | bipck over saeming . "| | | 1 | | cmpoewwe MISS MAY WESTON OP each a | Straight seamline! | ’ | Vassarettes .. . aimed to take you from the. | . 9 tbenletn pore lronwear fashion and fit consultant, will be in’ our office nip oh 3 " ne : sarin _Desianed ' | | High twist yarn éée- department, to help you with-your hosiery problems. Alw if PErteCs COM TOE Gna Sa54 jn sport, pee! | ‘sheerness and strength! sod | aya keeps your ¢urvas Under careful. contro}? § ” e H ‘ ! . 5 | | i : oe ; H { j danpclantes” mo Masa ng Nall bl i pcere = ad Looe we | am 2 #5 fits and flatters in sizes small, medium and large. i ; cart oa a we give you ir! Additional pairs are insured for t ite only, ree ey lf Tr fare I = weeks. A p de bly vl taco ln tn eae bens! with | I Pye I | ae a | us bal | attached |. insur: tard. . : | | INSET: #17 pantie with satin lastex front pknel . . . white only. : bogs i a A in for every woman's wardrobe. | te “A lat l my ‘s Hi 1 “1 ocd fp. He | Fas | ie | ; ~ . ‘ion lorie Steet Fleet...) | Waite’s Corset Dept—Second Flooe A ~~ \ | Ss | ; au bo ie] a Seay ; | | A io LB Le this crippling. disease. Who’d: Have “it But a new and surprising light on the fair sex. as motorists. ba | pssortate’ 14,000 ton ships was heavy, . Among those enjoying the Pana- ma trip were 36 members of Lae House, two Senators and one delegate, 38 of their wives and 33 of their children, | 7 Her& it seems to us, is a fertile field - for: exploration by ‘economy advocates with a view to plugging : an indefensible ‘ tax leak. bs aoe * Polio Peak tel | “Both national and local figures indi- cate the peak of the 1953 ‘polio season jhas passed and the outlook is for a ~ diminishing number of new cases. A U.S. Public ‘Health Department release showed 2 .130 new cases in the Nation last week, the second successive decline.from the preceding week. The report also said the peak threat of the disease countrywide apparently was. passed during the week of. August 22: *. a re Oakland County and Pontiac. figures now also are showing. a decrease in the number of new cases with only 18 reported last . week, 14 from the County and four from Pontiac. In the pre- vious week there were a total of 31 cases, the high for the year. Nine of these were in the City and 22 outside. . kt ok | This is welcome news for everyone as "is a recent announ¢ement that the new polio serum on which scientists pin great hopes may be ready for field trials before many months. When the re- sults of those trials and the mass tests, Thought 1? drivers aren’t: going to like report just at hand! ~ Women Made by W J. Tors, of New York Univetsity’s Center for Safety Education, the report ‘is based on a summer long anal ot ‘ratte in} D Northeastern States. | Rade other with the aid of in 15,000 miles “hed | | i | | i} at 50, in ordnance work sete he got his title. throws ried attach the list. to ap piece of paper bearing your name _ list and| _ games: Sept, Sept, 26—No ~ Oct. ‘Oct. Nov. 1—Michigan ‘Nov. 1 ‘Nov. 21—U. Cc. L : aati High vs. Flint Central | os | 25—De d address. Or you can write out the - indicate yper choices. Here are the teas 4 & M. vs. Kentucky ° Dame vs. Oklahoma g_-¥erduald vs. Detroit , ta vs. Mlinois it. ites vs. Forty-niners. ania vs. Michigan | State vs. Ohio State vs. Nebraska A. vs. Southern California ae sylv: alnarad A ase aah Nov, 28—Army vs. Navy iit Send your entry ta so it will Sept. 19, That's * Savings | Bonds ‘given the win otfice contest. | compete, sheet. the” among outside the Pontiac; Daily Press be received by Saturday noon, only day after tomorrow. U. S. of a face value of $300 will be ner in a_ straight elimination Every| member of your family can but each entry nqust be on a separate_ ‘Last year a five months old child was er: two year$ ago the $300 was divided several who tied. No further publicity of this column is being given the contest. Recently chosen president of the Michigan Hotel pecan Wd ' Howard V. Heldenbrand _ snodbathy (loughes it off. But your home folks ' know, Howard, that the association wanted a man qualified for att job—and they have one, and ~ you ll be a credit to Pontiac. Incidentally, Michi- gan’ 5 hotels are near the top when we- enumerate r 8 * varfone Tines of big business. st issue lof the’ Bermudian Magazine “contains a double ‘page, illustrated story ~sBrig Gen. Alfred R. Glancy, who some years § Pontiac: ago was General Manager of Division of General Motors. Mr. and Mrs. Glancy now divide. their time between a cottage ale Vert ) near Atlanta, Ga., and Bermuda. Retiring‘ he later| answered a call to serve his ng his present activities is looking after h he built for the natives in . cropping district. ¢ school youth, George A. Burrows > suggestion award winner in the recent tion at Pontiac Motor Division, He © his idea. Cae perine Dis was Webb Griffith . | and 76 other men and to $313 each. and Cohatty city, E Berkley, which heady o be the alii city in the nation, claim for national honors. = | Wilson Smith, yeservationa Seca sade Sor & high umn oe See, rian for Proposed Amendment ‘I should like to take this oppor- ~ tunity to give my view of) the proposed ‘‘Bricker’’ amendment. May it read as follows: sages act, agreement or treaty, made by clusions will be a long and tedious process, and at times, most discouraging. Especially so when Mr. Vishinsky spouts words for over an hour. | | { Yet, I felt that here lies the proval of its citizens. If that ‘ap- proval is not forthcoming, then ‘that agreement should not be made. Theodore J. De Groff 1890 Ward Road | Dulles Gives Warning to United Nations That Armistice Is Only tepping | Stone By DAVID LAWRENCE WASHINGTON —The aggression in Korea has not been ‘ended. Communist China's armies still occupy North Korea, The | armi- tervened with their armed forces aggressors, | in aggression. | power and seize the plic These simple facts fecplieabed by of Korea. r the Secretary of State, John Fos- ter Dulles, in behalf of the United States at thé meeting. of the Gen- eral Assembly of the;-United Na-— tions, tell realistically status of the ‘Korean problem. | It is a statement that ought. to, be read carefully by |those who have argued that the Korean armistice was a great) victory ' and that it “stopped’? ithe ag- gressors. The exact words of \ brief address by Dulles are so impor- tant that they are reproduced “That. fact of aeeression has | comed throughout the wae | where more than in the United ” States. created by the Communis sion in. Korea. Armed J Communist China still | remait here, because this co ndent cannot find that they have been widely disseminated put the United States. | The. full text’ of w t Dulles said is:as follows: de "| move that the Getjetal As sembly postpone for the} ‘duration Gf khe ‘eighth seasion| for! the cur rent year the considera of any ee the mates’ gover represen so-called Central Peopl ment fo represent the Rap of China. “I make this mo- tion of ent so that we Sethe) | Aunt Het —; e in. | 7 There is a hint in, the - |high ‘in the abdomen. ' |the back — perhaps calls it “lum- 4 ‘an attitude of “‘inflexibility’’ in- | dealing with the Communists over | the problems of Asia. | | He conveyed the impression that | it would be wise to indicate a | willingness to compromise on such | issues: as admission of Reg China | to the U.N, But it should be no thet | even if the Western Allies wanted | to bargain, it would be a gross | | mistake to say so in advance of | , the political conference at which | the fate of Korea is to be-settied. Dulles | speech that recognition ‘ofa ‘country and indeed admission to the U.N. is not a legalistic matter at all but is related to the behavior of a regime which seeks to be ac- tional organizations, |, The air has been cleared by the Dulles speech, and the plain warn- ing abeut further aggressive be- havior by the Communists in south- east Asia is significant of the at- titude of the United States. | (Copyright, 1953) corded the courtesies of [nterna- . Not to be enenortened in southern hospitality Russia has . taken no ba¢k-steppes. It touched off an alphabetical whizzer that added another qupit to Saturn. The needle on the Georgetown | seismograph went past the grand- oa twice. Our atomized experts say Rus- sia has added the H-agate to its fissioned marbles, There is.noth- . ing to fear but everything: \ Before furling our ‘fruit-stand tate that 15 Arab na- France of ru ling of terror uted with violence. . im Korea ig no more settled than furniture in a meving van, Down in Indo-China the apes, tigers diles haye left the Civilized man. They’ll en the calm cools off. East and West Berlin are so peaceful the inhabitants are es- caping in roth | directions. There was a dress rehearsal in the Bal- kans for ¢ b-to-curh nna THOUG HTS FOR TODAY . My folk have tailed, and my familiar friends have forgot- ten isa hee 19:14, | . Ce oe Our chief creat in life is some-. body who shall make us do what we Can; neni Em kerson. “this is the! service of a. You girls from actions, “line.” lems of lope, plus a to the real | True love i morality, not | (Copyright, | fg ‘| | rH ' . d. fot del toy L LI a || ae | | | | oo ‘i Pal at | _ 4 © = | | | | ) ONY on i | | 5 1 J ! i | ty [ | . | . | I ; . . | . J : | } | Nas , | | 1 f . SIX | | | im __THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 | _ | ley | | | ! | i | : , THE PONTI AC_PRESS | the ladies are anything but the * Case Records of a Psychologist ( 4 \ peotine 1k iavenipss |, . slow, cautious drivers they’re ren ee is Reg. U.S. Patent Office = | Daity enlace popularly supposed to be. One eet: Loan NORE EES Bg rte C or S O 5 | om” | ' . | Sgn Ses SORE A CE ONE SE, ~ oo 4 eed Eunos A. Prsegy, Puner i | test made in a New England | “ _ rac ertain uitors ve r y | ly Conma> N.Cwurce = Hoaacr P/Baovre «= RUSSaLL Basser? State revealed that 53 per cent of i D mM di Ss ¢ io ; Editor Advertising M Nat'l Ad re . ¥ | ) ? | Vers pne Maneess . ald . a speeders warned were women. |S ; 2 on ING, | ays rane» = 4 ‘Bptered at Post Office. Pontise, Mich. as second class matter | x * * | a | (= : Lots 2 just one o}-thousands | MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Andther fact uncovered by the sur- | a ' oe abeut tonal gone ih | 1c pains re potas exaesray tglom Yey| sould be pf interest: tovoftieiais of (Ry eivord tn hour seroplonk, and | Daper. as well as all AP news dispatches. | small| towns and villages. Two tests ba furs yee nave the outesre | f Tas, Powrine Pusss ts delivered by carrier! ton! 40 cents show that 99 per cent of all vers mention, ed ee le irge , ; | a wee ere carrier service is not available. by mai ® e no asead on eaking: She becam | i hed } = ‘ €, e e Oskland and adjoining: counties it la $12 00 8 Fears ele ignored posted speed limits of a ae laws to “prove” itself. - to drop out of | Eat” Podas ronthetpe aac ees Pmt 25 miles’ an ‘hour. : \~ RY Die GORGE Wi CnaNE! tbe. Tas ster epee lee) || — At the other extreme the researcher gd Case H-388: Lois B., aged 17, ents’ hearts; for they | MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS clocked open fra speeds up to 92 niles - fe Se - aot a co : ” deeutt, nat = nn oY I ml ‘an hour and found that five per cent i to do,” she jeaid and began to ! _THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 19 aie pinata meg id of all drivers on rural eee exceed “Tm a with a boy in the ' army. He is now home on furlough, . | i ~Legislative Grav Boats. el ar gies oti Re __ STEVEN but goes bayse fm w few days, t S y finding that night ttme speeds were.- Se “i a on “He says he loves me with all ~ How would | you like a ‘free two. weeks’ higher rather than lower than during | 3 his Jest ut - se that I | sea voyage to] a and return? the daylight hours. . ove for hin, move my - You could have it were |* * * . ; 4 . “Dve argued against it, but he | Bes des criticizing the single license ' keeps demanding that I do as ‘ a member of Congress and he wishes : Gee : _piate ystem as a ppabeice to law en- 1 a letter from the Vice President, Ricreeden?, Tors this t t th “He says all girls do that, any- ‘Speaker of the House or the obese ab he BBY. Oy ete ®@ way, and he will never beliéve ficed and skimped as poor folks do chairman chve ur standing“com- .40 ace idents he saw during his tour: I love him) unless I do give in to to give their daughter the breaks. ¥ e “At least f 7 him. | They had liyed in the hope she : mittee of Congress. eas Qur persons were : = | “So what| should I do? He means would gradua and finally marry | You ¢éould even |take your wife and _ Killed and dozens were injured in te wos me and I don't want happily, boi children along at the reduced rate of - these mishaps, in 90 per cent of ie | - : ho tion Rg end cn rag ras | \ ndition.| He c y | $80 round trip for! each. Commercial; whieh high speed was a factor in (aie 3 Portraits formed her that it was her prob causing them or increasing the es “Ortralts lem, and deserted her rei | rates range from $288 to $324. Panama| Sage " MES if | severity of injuries and damage.” : . x > By JAMES J. METCALFE. So Beth was ostracized socially. Canal Zone employes also get discounts ~~," Biiey ceca 2 i Wy NA iD ‘Constitution ~~ = and forced to have her baby for these trips ranging from 25 to 75 This report was made for insurance Sea ; at ae —— Hl miN There is| no greater document out awe k, which is an tat | : per cent. ol i comp ies, but it should be a warning $e | uty A | ‘} > a eels the do f eee a ie cared paby, ae wer ee é mie F ‘ot MBSE Eas . C ay ij oo at which fram ernme i x * le to all motorists : m. , ai HH { * . «. Of ourjown U.S... . The Con- Would you is take a gun fae 7) ~~ osu sg: | All this is possible because the S stitution, eee » + In 1788 a4 hela up a bank or rob a store q | | ; With freedom and equality .., For a n just to “ m| your steamship line is a subsidiary of THE| most recent rise in the cost of | : every town and astute... Yor: love tor a. y ind ; the Panama Railroad which is living |was due y to advances in |. “Giddap!” . . \ every-individual . . . With liberty = Then why you think | owned by a Government corpora- the price of foods) and. of medical care. ~—— a eure my an gt Rey may vaand smi it sna‘ ai ' : § to “‘prove’’ your } tion closely affiliated with the But) don’t peat you can cope with ‘Voice of the, People f t- reach . , + Although ‘we have Instead, mi out you take thes | operation of the canal. The line both these increased costs by eating less. bE, Li | amended if. . _In‘twenty ways initiative and see that your boy § = =~ idered a = Sh B lj hi U. N. lj / _../ and more|... It is ‘the-fortress friend proves) his love for you, as Td is considere an essential Gov- i imi e e eves Vit in eS ar are of our faith..." That guards.our by treatiig you as a gentleman | emment service, Since the Canal . ° 1715 expected) that soon there will be every shore . . So let us give our ~ shoul? L is operated by the Army, the. - 2M°eruption in Trieste of considerable » That Will: Eventually Bring World Péace thanks to God. Ane tet us boy poy by ‘tend ever ships perform ¢ertain essential proportions —/Trrp is rumbling. the world al ‘shee - "Our Can- aan | ‘by ililt sexu isan | Toth ae | - (Letters will be condensed when neces- type of ‘“‘warfare’’ that will even- or for the Pretidedt or any elected titi; re for hin by illicit sexual af- defense functions: though other 4 | sary because of lack of space. name, si +e stitution Day . fairs, then be s t i : The M n Ab t T writer | mane eceueany lentere Dee these thally bring us “peace. or appointed representative of the * (Copyright 1953) outset it he does not love lines cover the same route. Wia i pu own | will not be published if. the! writer so To me, the U.N, Building in its United States, between the United ° — y ton, hal nie hotest Toudl x , Ni | ome its Seetre the letter is (eritical in structure alone is like a living States and any foreign nation | B ne D ! oe but that’s See betk! vs | x | * * | | TI Ac 9 D | monument to the many boys |who | shall be: subject to the approval aering Own, Pe | As might be expected this subsidiary ess | in ays Disparaging remarks concerning have died on the battlefields of | of the legislature and such act, B ARTHUR-“BUGS” BAER He is sim ly trying to inate , 35, i 1 Prize f $300 A Y the United Nations Building and ‘he world. Let us not condemn | agreement and/or treaty shall in . .News Servi nia juvenile Pye scual | operates at a loss., For fiscal | 951, r Ize pT Pt waits Your New York City iteelf sHould not too readily the writing of the first no way take precedence over the tote oakpine the (quaker § gray quest so he can think he is a great latest year for which an annual report Action 1n | Football Contest ; . Chapter of a book that all) the | rights and privileges of the indi- interim for gentle clues to anemic big he-man. | has b sblished| it 219 000 i | mn al be taken as a general opinion. world hopes will be entitled “Dawn ' vidual citizen or state as set forth co onity is using you exactly as rai as been published, 1 ran $212,000 in aftynition On a recent trip to ‘New York of Peace.” — in the Constitution of the United ° lions of timid fellows employ the red on a $5, 000 000. gross business. —_Footba . (What can|be worth $300 to you, even City I had the extreme privilege, The ‘melting pot’ of this nation States of America.” Never before “has there been cigarettes ot whisky, namely, to Special discounts on fares alone cost i! you n't know mpch about the game. through a friend who is an in- {8 to me symbolical, for which sen. Bricker is to be com- such an pver-subscribed lull be- try fo prove that they are fully 825,000. | ; terpreter for the “Voice ot Amer- the U.N. strives, peace for all... mended for his stand in this fore the gelf-winding tornado, ‘Town and no longer children. $ , This the last tine the list of games in the “i093 to see and test everywhere, |. matter, since he is in direct con- “Oh, but Dr. Crane, he said he B July, 28. 193 d Man | About Town fogtball contest will be pub- , : hear hand Bertha M. Roth flict with the attitude of an ad-: As mutokrepbed proof of our loved me y!’’ many pregnant etween Ju y| » 1952 an . lished. The prize is $300. Put a check mark on 8¢ of the sessions of the Korean 25 N.' Marshall ministration made up of men of flattened Yucca doldrums we are girls have as they tried to} ‘August 17, 1953, Congressional the tnd which | you jthink will win each of the conference. 7 | . . his own party. lighting ourselves to bed with the keep up an alistic “front” so ‘ traffic on the line’s three modern following games. If| you think the game will Even as an observer, at was Commends Sen. Bricker soveement. entered into b noses of WAX dummi they could avoid facing the bitter . Any agree y fact that they had been end in a-tie, do not check either team. Then easy to see that any serious con- this country should have the ap- , act that a duped, | thust separate words © If your boy friend really loves spe he. will put a wedding your finger. And he will consider your wishes, | for true Tove lis unselfish. So if he v4 tries to do and force into making jall ‘the concessions, then that v ess. posi- tively proves he does ‘not love you. It shows him up as a high-pres- sure salesman, just. giving you a So, send for my bulletin, “Sex Young People,’ en- 4 closing..a stamped return enve- dime, and get wise -of life. | always proved al by violating laws.. kins Syndicate Inc.) | |~ From Press review. | ANNEXATI toed by Cz Our Files Years Ago Rie _GED fred P. Sloan MOTORS head,, Al- praises yoanee at Shea ‘| ; nation. will fight | to nycain control, >, last foreign final ‘round of ee reaches es tennis championship at For " 99 " WORLD M ling champic pear Pon 2 balla pada | j yi ears Ago Lol | IDLEWEIGHT wreit) | Gus Killio to apy 3 BANKHEAD, stage | | By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. | iw dw espeaain cry. physician in general practice to see, from time to time cadougee in appearance, who ts the doctor complain- ing of thirst, nausea, lost appe- tite, lassitude and restlessness. The man may or may have’ noticed a — in girth. He miy believe that, though he has long had some dder trouble he still empties blad- der completely, when in the t it is He complains of dull aching in Dr. Brady: Discusses for Men Having P if anything frightens be worried tsa ube wore e who shouldn't Ae as der or kidney whatever be len PTEMBER 17, 1953 + | | — | i 4 | | | im | | * | No matter where you go... look your. ; ta | ge e f. i, .@ | veg | . loveliest in Federal’s. value-wise || | | Wherever you go, you're headed for chy fa bobopilinnbts when your wardr ate ve | features these fall dresses! Glamorous after-five styles . . . one and t vo-piere | & fashions for busy career gals... 53 fashion scoop coat styles! ‘Rayon jerseys, : | ~ 6-ply failles, matelasse, wool jersey ‘and flannel combinations! Taffetas, denim | and crepes! Luscious fall colors . . . stripes, plaids and checks, too! Sizes) for , everyone in our new fall collection . . . 9-15, 10-20, ait Mies 4 Hose: ftemembet, rs a Federal ‘shopper i is a thrifty shopper! BUY ON FEDERAL CREDIT! USE PURCHASE couro s! 7 | x. : | 3 . Women’s new “5 Cotten, rayon, S 5 ‘Women’s fall 33 Smart_fall 2 $ 5 _ Proportioned 9 1 50 7a Coro 4 00 Boys’ | bool | $3 | omen's i $15 | COTTONS. tw nylon SLIPS” | BLOUSES ‘SKIRTS ae NYLONS ms. | | Ss PEARLS* sport hirts i. - SUITS ! | : , a 4 | Plus U.S. tax ° | 4 | Easy Terme | Dresses, brunch ae | shat Lace trimmed nylon of ray- Tailored or dressy in San- Rayon gab, taffetas, cordu- Famous ‘Empress’ propor- | _ Terrific sale of famous - Sanfori cotton . sueded PSinart ray cetates, flan- - \ ernity styles, smocks, others! on in many styles: [cover forized broadcloth, shirtings, ‘roys, failles, menswear, part tioned nylons in 51-gauge, pearls* in all sizes, shapes, flannel with welt pockets. nels, sh checks, bou- 4 Easy-care percales, | broad. bras, camisoles, v v-necks. 32- novelties, tricct nylon, oth- _wools! Many’ styles ,and col- 15 denier. Short, 814-914. styles! 1 to 8 strands, ear- rit sae convertible’ cles, novell es,.New styles! | cloths, plisses, etc. An sizes, 40. Nylon trim plisses. 42-52 . ers. Solids, plaids, etc. 32-38. ‘ors. Solids, checks. 2 to 30, Med.-814-11. Long, 91-11. rings, others. *simulated collar. Sizes 6 to 1 9-15, 10-18, 1644-244. Ht | i | Hin) Pye! | | ‘No charge jor alteration ' 7 ; ll y /) i | Oe hs. a poet RE : | T | Zip-lined Girls’ cotton , 3 - girl? fall 9 $5. Tots’ warm 1 00. Tots’. warm 1 00 Full panel “96 _-Men’s Waldorf | $5 Big Yank | OATS BLOUSES dm'* WJ DRESSES ter PLaYTogs «= a SLEEPERS 1 aU 6 yr. CRIBS =O = sport sints 4 WJ. Work SHIRT ms, | . Easy Terms = | All- wool fleeces, poodles, Broadcloths, embossed ‘or "|. Gottoni plaids, solids, ‘tweed Washable corduray| | Bib- Heavy cotton knit or print Double-drop sides ‘and toe Stock up at big savings! Kiows for ; |: cashmere blends, checks! | polished cottons, | novelties! | novelties with full, flared’ or style overalls, elastic aist ' _ flannel. Gripper or button release. Steel adjustable Rayon gabardine or novelty savings! § Te 4 '. . Wool zip-in linings, Many — Short, long or %4 s athered skirts, Big | hems. longies, 2-6. Snap - + crotch closures, some footlets. 1. “pc. spring. Stabilizer bars, Map- shirtings, expensively detail- shirt collar style bee cham- | : ‘metallic lined. All sizes, Whites, pastels. ew colors, 3-6x, 71% crawlers. Infant sizes, 2-6; 2-pe. 1-4 in group. | le or birch finish, ed. ‘Lang Sa S-M-L. bray: Non-ri ip seams. 1444-17 || No charge for alterdtiqn i | | i eee i; | . | te yl 7 | Ff Pie st! tt ) i EY a a The thy EYE — | — f be ae ‘ | : if ie : fF | ease I, ; ; Men’s cotton # | 1 ~'-- Boys’, girls’ | Drawer style $4 a Your choice! Your choice! ‘4 , Cannon, Cons 1 1 ile 00 UNDERWEAR 4&”* —. SHOES _ dram TABLES I CURTAINS |. DRAPES r. Bath TOWELS &™ 5 j . | A | asy Terms | | | 2 ‘ rat ; | Combed cotton rib knit ath” Sturdy oxfords, straps, roam- | Mahogany veneer 20” ‘Dun- 41x81” 42x90) traverse antique tay- 20x40 bigusct sot absorbent 66x80” | letic undershirts, 36-46. San- ers.at important savings! All ean Phyfe drum tables at a sets, roll top brea i boxe, | ' mar |_| om satin in 14 colors. 36x90 famous « kets. 5 | forized b’cloth shorts, 30-44, soft leather! Brown or wine, | ‘new low price! Superbly ies waste baskets | cotton roughtex florals and _ Many spe cra leolons, self | Briefs and a S- 1-L. i 814-12, 1214-3. S ve ow! oe for long service. decorated! Tat F rayon damark firapes. ~. borde seas | and i ma | peo ae val J oat, | “| e | | | ' | er AT WARREN, neal ie ept. storeS OPEN MON. FRI, SAT. NIGHTSTO9 [i i i j \ | | { hy | 4 | Girls’ Poplin | Now 3° 98 Only Thetity buy — | fully ‘Hned jacket of woven cotton plaid with solid color po k and sleeves. Sizes to 14, nniversary Shoe Save on Biltwels | to i aed “at Sears! Goodyear Welt cons ruction assures smart play shoes Ss a THE PONTIAC PRESS, _ THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1958. nC : - as le | Many Styles - Reduced to) i Assorted Stes Goodyear Welt Construction. 67th| Anniversary specials— - shape retain-appearance and longer wear. Scientifically. designed lasts give Accent Fall costumes with zestful. proper fit. Made from color . , . and pamper your busy feet, . the very finest materials to too! You'll find just the*styles you’ re give hae child the most wear. looking for at low cost. ring this great sale. , SEARS ROEBUCK AND co. look inches slir immer --- and be savings ahead! } Kerrybrookes with new Sear-O-Foam soles “Classic favorites for _ every casuql acca- 77 sion.| Red or brown, | leather, black suede. bil: Save at Sears! - Pair -Nu-Back all-in-ones Styled in white: cotton, rayon batiste — nylon marquisette up- per-bust. | Well boned for excel- 5 . on . lent mantic. All sizes 34 to 42 genre / | : F and 44. Buy now and save 1.10 “ ie —only at Sears! Se ee ee ee er ee ‘and Twill Jacket — Ips Denim. ibs EJ See them at Sears today! use Sears purthase fempon books! | | MANY, MANY ‘MORE: UNADVERTISED BARGAINS |. Miss Joan Clarke Nationally- -Famous Corsetry Silat Visits Sears TODAY—FRIDAY—SATURDAY | oft » : : 9 8 8 We extend a special Sblegioah to you a consult ie | 7 Clarke |for a figure analysis. e wi ow ‘ Regularly | ai whee freedom really is when you wear Nu-Back. orset Dept. | Priced at 6.95 | : | PR. Every pair features Sear-O-Foam creat soles, Smooth, supple leathers: . ideal for dress and casual wear. Regular 10.95 | \ All-in-One. slic mode Nylon TRA pubes woet ene bat) Our finest quality in love- ly, lightweight nylon. Properly boned for figure flattery. All sizes from 35 to 42. Once-a-year , savings .|. . buy today at . Sears! Comte gble fleure contral |. . at a low sale p ice! Nylon and leno elastic to ease § your \curyes. White, : 27 to |36, Big News in Fall Comf " Footease : 2% an 12% re ust ankle , deep in pure woot so cozy, Delightful | | in ‘bright colors: Foam rubber insoles. Sizes 5 to 8, 8 to il. eee teres ganoesaell | | | ' | Pos | | i lod | \| f i ...4 tA eee oats Cotton Anklets’ Regularly Sold for 29¢ Pei j bed mercerized catton © in your styles. Pastels, sport-tones and white. Si 7, to ll.’ Bay today! dl ’ Beautifully, sheer ae be proud to wear! Many new fall tnades in sizes 8Y2 toll. Buyn e! Hosi | Seeiten s oor COME IN! “SATIS FACT! ON GUARAN, | | \ = = 4 =< ~ en ee all AO, “THE PONTTAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17. 1953 _ STORE HOURS: For Your WB Tom: oO r row!! [ Shop Friday want Until 9P.M eek pays ¢ Charmode man-tailored Sanforized* 4 broadcloth jamarettes 4 HUGE PRICE CUTS! SPECIAL PURCHASES! SAVE DURING THIS BIG SALE! elebration savings! one suckle. ? playtime corduroy creepers this sale, only 19 8 You'll celebrate tod. with savings! Mites’ creepers with double fabric bibs, padded knees, snap crotch, elastic back and many other features to make these ; Usually 3.50 A 4Star Feature—Sold Only by Sears Smart and comfortable with short sleeves, adjust- able waistband. Prints in assorted colors and iplain colors including pink, blue, green, lime, | melon, aqua, cinnamon. Regular sizes, 32- i | 10. Tall sizes, 34-40, — xtra sizes, 42-48... Reg. 3. 98.. 47 | | | {| i | te corduroys a grand value. 6-18 months. 7 dainty dresstime non PEC LOW PRICI - 8 , Prints . ; y | | oo Solids! ‘Lovely yoke style. ditton batiste dresses, low ‘phiced l T to fit your budget) needs! Dreamy pastels, spite, | Sizes 6:12 months Shep these specials now . hyo i | Save as ve celebrate! | Infants’ Department—Main Floor | Charmode Jamarettes Have Built-In Features: Seldom Found at This Price! @ Scnforixed* vat-dyed cotton broadcloth @ Collar and lapels are lined @ All major seams arejdouble needle e Individual pliofilm wrapped * Max. Shrinkag 1% 1} i "e | | || wi | | | | * Lingerie Dept. Main - Floor | Las | ant Cotton Blankets Training P nts Special | |Purch¢se Savings Large '90x40-Inch Receiving’ Lightweight Cotton ‘Knit | Special Purchase Savings | ‘Reg. Lig —6«B9e You Save at | 6S. y | r bald 1.3 9 : 5 Pair $] { Saniforized, only: 1% shrinkage Dainty pastel and white cotton Cozy sleeping for infants. Light- Lasting, eusy-to-wash double | i | tem vat-dyed, washfast pastel receiving blankets, ideal fof weight cotton knit sleeping bags fabric pants for me 1 to 40) | -egtton sheets. Mitered corners gift giving? Smaller 26x34- inch with) mitten cuffs, Pastel colors. . years. All around elasti +— for smooth aiid size available. | One| size only. | i White cotton. Fitted Crib Sheet / Boyville and Boyville Jr. - Washfast Cotto Flannel Mites’ Bootee Sets Polo Shirts ° Imported From) Belgium Bright Patterns, Stripes fom Size 3 98 8 for $1 e of the sweetest sets we've | Wonderful cotton pola| shirts © en! Delicate digg of tin that take lots of wear and it in ruffles on 96% wool, wash easily. Strong rib knit | 4% rayon pastel sets, = neck. Many colors. 3-6x. | teys ft Uy WPhate i loom, : eo ; S| ; ae ; | seats wa tt i A ail . hate a pec ao IME f We've got ‘em! Sdods and scads of VRS : = ONS ON aw A _ plaids—browns, blues, reds and — greens. A\ll are first quality Sanforized* shirts loaded with lots. of extra wear. Get yours while selections are complete—but hurry! * Max. Shrinkage 1% , : ‘ EVO S ros K ae) *- ead t a re ASSN ES Wn oO So footig for Favorite Babies! Honeysuckle Quality Diapers @ Regularly 2.49 97 | / | sot @ Birdseye cotton Dozen 4 Specially | Pied for Annivrtary Sal a The perfect yarn for everything bee because, it’s practically indestructible it’s so strong... yet so soft and dainty, Keeps its-shape, . or flannelette | ° Already hemmed Hare's something biby needsTot of at price that meons extra savings. “Our good quality cotton diaper, no blocking! Buy all we knitting men ‘ a. now while you save 10¢ on every ball! 4 x27-in. before hemming. Be sure to buy today and | how much you save at Sears. - | a ie = oem Fleer : ia 4 a “FEED OR YOUR’ MONEY BACK” SEARS . . . 154 NORTH Lilones STREET . . . TOYS. FOR THE KIDS! A: NEW BOAT FOR YOU! Ideal for the hobbyist... for tun, enjoyment. . Save at Sears! tion! YR) BUILD CHAIRS, TABLES, SHELVES, CORNICE | BOARDS! it’ booklets in Sears departient: build . relaxa- “Inquire! about Sears “how-to-do- ardware Fee Onaga Rae. ITEM. rT Craftsman g. ‘in, Bench Saw Craftsman Capacitor | V2 H. P. 3450 RPM Motor Craftsman Power Tool Bench | Cratreman Work Light | Two! Table Extensions TOTALS ae Ws (OU CAN EVEN BUILD A |. NEW GARAGE ... |. TOOLSHED! =, Tine of the mitney you can e! nak Sears about build- FINISH OFF YOUR ATTIC NTO AN EXTRA ROOM! ke this dream come true - NOW! Power tools pay for them- . selves! | | | | | / COMBINATION COMPLETE . Save | | | | New Plaza Design Stainless Steel Te leware © Reg, 14.95 VW é95 Here’s| the last word in! ‘stain- less. steel beauty! Tt: " can't dven rust or tarnish!) Never needs} eee 24- -piece set. Stu rdy_ Lawn Rakes 22 Teeth: Wide, 18-in, Spread Reg. 98¢ \. 88s Easy to us¢ Chattambn we just sweep the lawn! Tempered Rust-resistant eriameled firfish. Rubbish Burners No: Delivetios! ‘Friday Only! neg. 198 1.33 Sturdy, medium gauge steel wire. _ Rust- resistant green fin- ish. {deal jto |burn paper, leaves peal Get yours now! 6-Piec Hollow Ground Btainle ’ “Reg. Handy, cludes utility, roaster ‘Husky steel con! for big Ly steel tines. Hardwood handle... Rubber _ Gbeoehs Leos 12 paring ai narrow bladé slicers. "We tolls Luction Made” = and hard use! smoothly, Hand grips. “REGULARLY 109.04... BUY NOW AND You SAVE 12.04 Join the thousands of | me carpenters who have discovered “how to save money” by doing the job themselves! This saw combination saves | labor . . . speeds up work . . . and makes build- ing easier and _more accurate. See it in action .-. learn all the features at Sears! | . electrical yo" Purchases Tetaling ) $20° Or More Can Be Made On | ‘126 to Sic Regularly 9c to 98¢ | | | 1 | | | | .i Here are 7. good reasons why you'll save | during Sears * big Anniversary Sale, Shop and compare | these savings today! ‘Allen- screw wrench set, thin nose pliers, ball pein hammers, hack saws, ‘dual : purpose | screwdrivers, cross rim wrehches and 3- “PC. screwdriver sets, : | Hardware Departnient—Sears Basement é u Hip-Roof Tool Box With Reinforced Corners 419 Holds 50 to775 sockets and parts! Roomy 19x7x834-in. size | sockets, universal joint, 18-in. - made of] 24-gauge steel ..,. speeder wrench, tool box, and | much more! Spe it today! ew Low Price! 21.67 ..|| Ata Terrific Reg. ‘0 Reg. 26.50 ly welled. Size Jobs in Minntes With David Bradley Do M Economy Tractors @o0o Buy Yours on Sears Easy Payment Plan Thee Reg. 171.00 vim Grow ar enj realy garden. fresh foods. | Your David Bradley tractor makes gardening and many downright tough jobs easy as pie! See it, ‘’Work-Test” it today. 134 H.P. 4-cycle engine. Easy, effortles ss operation! SPECIALS Windsor Fence Cross Country Single Picket 42-In. 1 r Cc Fu | Height Reg. 22c acai ‘Bay a now! Fatm E | —Bepqment ty raed ex— “| 367. '* "_ ee ~ ' a 154 Notth Saginaw St. Ph, FE 5-A171 Pm ! Dazzling ss ortieel of piamorts glitter! | ; Have 49 be yours at Sears low, unbeatable price! rainbow! rhapsody of color next springtime! OTHER HOLLAND BULBS INCLUDE: Noveiebie if... eeeese+ 1G foe 1.09 Crocus . iene sneyes es WG ROO BES. i Pree ri. Hype i LLL for 88e Parrot Tulips ecenes ccs HOMO 98¢ 4 “32-Pe.. So kets Sets | Ten dle quality forged . Ibs will transform your garden into a : is } ads and 180 miles east of agreed. with the J ment. Given reasonably good portation facilities, Peta would be ove ,an attraction to w bby the holy cities “and Bethlehem. As a photograph was _partcalarly and particularly into a craggy cany some kingly monuy the face of a toweri i difficult to save any film fo countries on my i Once the capital that stretched as turies a truly lost ¢ity known my | | to roving desert Bedouins who kept: its secret for fear that publicity would attract outsiders to upset their lives. In 1812 John Louis Burckhardt, a Swiss disguised as a Bedouin sheik on a religious pilgrimage, made his way to the ruins and brought out news of the rock- carved city. Even se, few others found Petra over the next cen- tury because of the inhospitable nature of the. “-sert tribes. Today, roads that Mr, Boyer as- serted would “make good proving grounds” for motor vehicles lead to within a few miles of Petra, but final entrance must be made on horse or muleback, | ‘or on foot, through a long gorge several hun- dred feet deep and only a few. feet wide in places.) This gorge, the Wadi Musa, re- AMains the only entrance to the || city, surrounded by towering sand- | stone mountains, just as it was iV two thousand and more years ago. t,| Then the Nabatean pepple of the You Don’t Need Cash PAY AS YOU WEAR LIBERAL CREDIT CLOTHING CO. 6 N. , Sasinew st. to Dress Up Your Family FE 2-4418 + : Romans, | who conquered Petra in A.D. 106, ei | WANT A GOOD USED | WASHER? Low. Prices—Fampus Makes S14 95 Good Honseke ing Shop Street © | $10-$15 Ores et ites da | i cat desert made Petra a_ stronghold supported by tolls from caravan traffic ‘betweencthe western world [probably used thiese artificial wa- ‘ Now they have fallen into ruin, and Mr. Boyer reported that the only water available for washing is in a spring-fed pool a 20-minute walk from the city itself. Drinking water for man and animal must be ‘brought in/on pack mules. its ‘numerols tombs and temples ‘and the manner in which they were cut into the) brilliantly colored gee ! served is the temple El Khazna, whose magnificent facade, com- plete with pillars and bas reliefs, es in color in the changing desert light. Under the, moon it appears marble-white, while it is brilliant red in noonday’ sun and rich mahogany ‘at dusk. | Disc Jockey Reverses : | Send Piel Routine i W—Ted Brown, - CUSHING, . western disc } y on radio sta- ition KWHP,)| has reversed this “send me yo picture” Toutine with his radio audience. ' ous requests for his picture, now has asked his jisteners to send him their pictures, “‘so I can get bet- ter acquainted with my listeners.” i { } re | il L phil | Hi- ae 9 | 'The attraction of Petra lies in spectacular and best. pre- Brown, who}said he had numer- — cs | SR ee, eee I a EE —— i Flees Gera THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 EVEN . | | E /Put 75 Per Cent D on Automobiles in ine a | NEW DELHI (2) — india im- poses a standard duty of 75 per _ cent on the ¢ost price of imported ' small automobiles with less than eight horsepower" | in | assembléd form, ‘Commerce Minister Krishna-Machari ‘says. The figure compares ranging as hign as 94|per ¢ certain parts of the same ¢ knocked-down condition... A merce ministry _spokesm with plained that ‘‘the duty om varies, depending on |wheth 1s. or * Lv .[ produced in the country to a suf- fictem extent.” Memiphte Dog Uses | Ladder to Chase Cats \ MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP) When Pepper, a for terrier, chases a cat up a tree he’s likely to go right up the tree after the cat. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kerr, own Pepper and they said he begah his bing while just a pup ‘| about |five years ago. He’d jump around into a tree and wander b to limb. | a y, he tackled a pear tree that was a little too high for him from so Kerr fixed up with a lad- der. Pepper § the ladder to get to the first limb, then clambers on ‘up from one limb to another. The Kerrs also built Pepper “a an address while off terra firma. Oldest labor union in the U. S. is that of the cigar makers. tree house. They want him to have Grafting in Moonlight CULVER CITY, Cal. @—If you want to grow avocados which measure 15 inches or more in dia- meter, take the tip of Glenn R. Kershner and learn the art of top grafting—and do the grafting in the dark of the moon. | small because there isn’t enough top grafting. A tree on which he did top grafting yielded 50-60 jumbo avocados. ° tha yield. Kershner says most fruit is so As for the dark nights, he says is the best time to do the : and be assured ‘the king size To Sponsor Wrestling HOLLOND =e Henry Wal- ters VFW Post obtained a tense from. the "Biate Athletic particular: component Seen. F lor. | m5 ee _3 SUPERIOR QUALITIES IN A PRICE FOR EVERY BUDGET! "Ged _Reg. 8.95 Twist [ pBROADLOOM CARPET from 4 widths, 1 t | ' Cte ke — All Wool Twist BROADLOOM CARPET Right for the homemaker who wants ettra, wear as well as added beauty! per square yard than above quality. Sedmless 12 and 9-ft. widths cut to fit any room. Harmony House Sage Green, Dawn Gray Beige. A better buy, a wise investment . . Pye — All You" ve never seen a you've feasted your eyes on this decorator Completely luxurious — over 9,500 tightly twisted, carefully blended imported all ‘woo! yarn square yard. Top quality far outwears other grades Seamless 15, 12, 9-ft. @nd 27-in. of twist carpet. widths. Sizes cut to any rocm size. mony House Sage Green, Spice Beige, Tuscan Rose, Dawn Gray, Spice Brown =! Light Green. at Sears! ta Only at Sears Is this luxurious friezb st carpt| | so easy to afford. Tightly twisted yarns are blended, | of wool and carpet rayon. | to give you the long, hard service you war from such Harmony House colors as Sage Green, Dawn Gray, Spice Beige or Rose. Save! one ET } Sa For a more able home—here is the carpet you wart rf | 24. 74, Carefully construct t. Select Choose j 88 sq. y - Reg. 10.¢ 25% more wool yarns rhoose in nd sel re z Wool Twist sq. og Reg. 11.95 really beautiful gorpet ‘til ’s dream! sin every Chpose Har- Red and comfort- ++» only Mint Green beautiful, mor nip oin pastel pillowcases 42x36-in. each pastel cnlssline sheets, ‘lnaible nate oa ‘Reg. 2.59 fs pastel muslin sheets, 812108. Reg. 2.79). etl pastel fitted sheets, twin size... ....2. 2.89 pastel fitted sheets, full size... 2.06.50 40 Bed 9 pastel sheet blankets 72x108 in. 59¢ w SEARS 70x90-in. each ‘bale Starts T omorrow! | Prices Ever! 2.98 Bath Mat, 24x36. . 1 88 . fringed . mats you’ ve ever | seen. In versatile colors to match the Super-sized . . expensive | this low! -_ cotton | thot blends g leize | bath mats at these specictly reduce t Aue year, “ | | erat king greatest event (2.37 _ Reg. 2.89 154 North Saginaw St. | Feabous 4. Bar Feature Foam Latex Comfort and quality fit for a wrge budgets! lows |... outstand _ NOW at-aitremend movable perca or white. Finest 4- $ COLORS Marya 27x48-inch r= for every room atja orice xing! size bath usually | sold at | 4.98 non-skid-bock! ut we know you decor of beautifully in any ‘setting. | P “Domestics Dept —Sears ae Fl | Ph Baa aa | ae | Loe leds ihe at a new low price ct : | ng in qua ity at regular price, yours ; ifor more sleeping pleasure. “1.19 Lid Coyer. .. All features of the most. Quality | llows \ | | | | | | + ar Feature foam latex p savings. Sanforized* ré= cover in pink, blue, green Plump 19x27x5 V2-in. size Buy severed today and save. < eee shrinkage 1% ; |Ready Boxed | % Dark Mint Green Gray unequalled: «| mats— - 88¢ ve never seen a price . « . buy sev- rice during Sears. in: | 8 8 | Me, | pry reer ee te \ pe Got Ee - 2 i . =| i ~ . vg { a 4 24 | + | | | | ] a ‘* i | bee + t | | - | i TWELVE i 7 THF. PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, ‘SEPTEMBER 4 1958 | i ao ——— — ' i } r— | ia | the dinner tables of Australia and| ,4 a fender of his truck. sah Medical School the rig’ safeguard children . from* oney in the Air es FASTEST KNOWN RELIEF Large Cattle Hetds England. The cattle are in great F y! : 4 Truck His brother Paul found a use i sraeli Ss Disp ite to dissect unclaimed. bodie oF cae, disease.” ‘ health | on Move in Austr Glia herds averaging 1,250 head. rom borrowed iruc for the truck at the same time ahd Di ssectio} n of was vehemently oppesed oh ena spo eager ee Toenerd! ° FOR GAS. ON STOMACH DARWIN’ WH + About 150,000)- ~ This, _ year’s movement of cattle} FRANKFORT, Ky. — It was| drove it off, The wind did a thor; religious grounds| by Rabbi | zienist Party,” who introduced THANK HEAVENS pe Ei attacks are acid puede dame ete cette orl is the |biggest in the history of the ne raining Eumcy) heist ip wisp job of peataues the money | -H uman Bodiés |Ben-Jacob of thé religious: the bill in the Israel Parlia- | | ; i n star own wit e woman who turned in part of |: “ yh had | ey “yt tg tors for the relief |be on the track five months be- Hontherl Lest ory because last! in an envelope. In his garage, he| the $60 Maynard got back said JERUSALEM, | Israel (AP)— omhodas Agudath — Isra@l eee. ee ° have satisfied. send empty farton to Bell-ans, |fore, (hey teach the railheads or | year's drought pEevented all drov-| decided he'd wear a'coat and went | people were fighting for the money|A parliamentary: bill granting | Party.” . behind him, declared, however, iahiaiaees aia ie mee enema wweey- a meatworks as a stepping stone to ing. back for it. He put the money on “‘all the way down the hill.” the Hebrew University--Hadas- Maintaining that any dis-| that insufficient anatomic in- , — — ; section is a dese struction by prohibiting, dis- | # 3-Speed Phonos - ' Electrically Amplified Tone “ge” 22.88 pose needle eliminates chang- ing. Sturdy leatherette covered wood | ‘case. SAVE! Compare’ Sets Low Price Regularly 8 iss” = 9.88 set, ideal for! kitchen or bedroom. Direct) tuning, 4-in. speaker, . brown or Mang finished metal cabinet. Light; handy’ | Crysta} pickup with dn all pur- Table Model Radios | i Since 1916... a leader and television field. More Silvertone home entertainment products sold than any other make. , Now Cl eyeeny start. your | Silvertone radios are in session with bigger values and fies seb lock Radios & UA Practical Electric Servant eee you and can even*. breakfast , automatically. ‘Come in and see them at Sears. greatest name in home entertainment Silvertone has been in the phonograph, radio New: Clock Radios ’ Awakens You Automatically Regulaily . > (27.95 ‘ze §©=6. 19.88 Start your day with music! — | Turns -itself off after 90 min- t utes ‘of playing. Dependable Sessions clock movement. . all Low price! @ Smart plastic cabinet ©@ Ideal set for dorms Rates “A” on every campus. (Silvertone has a built-in radionet an-, tenna. Housed in~brown plastic tabinet. See it at_ Sears now! © REGULARLY 229.95 © 55 DOWN DELIVERS © SAVE OVER 31.00 d Better Service "SAVE OVER $31 DURING THIS iS GREAT E EVENT $2 ee | i@ Jon big. 2i{ believe better b tone! mf Better Q Amazing S. R. O. ‘chassis cuteroticolly tunes best reception. aaa Silverton -21-in. Console Regula rly Priced | $10 DOWN DEL _Here’s a wotld of entertainment’ at a) | special low Sears price! | TV as you want i. clear. |. easy to tune!» | Housed in a handsome mahogany veneer | | cabinet hand rubbed to a satiny smooth | finish, Better reception in fringe areas. | ere today. and see th ‘ * evel save! - | Use Sears Easy Payment Plan. «ale lnagine! Over 10% Savings @ Extra large built-in Radionet loop antenna | Hearing is believing and we Brown cobinit, and ‘goed ality | 1 inch rec | | | } | | | | | | e | at 279.95 | IVERS e Silvertone | | m= | i | { ey 88 | os ps au |can’t find a at this low price! | jae he as | is said: Talmudic Law whi the dissection of body only as “No reason can override detecting a miarderee or ta cration, he ch permits a means of a human section might impede the full medical training of | students now at the Hebrew University. Only about 2 per cent of the American people pee persect eye- sight. | / Y * yt \\\\o e | SS (252) ONE se eee . ( a spony | TS down qa J t} om J ecm So ees SP ienay < s iz Nf te ey ; al * | | “| : Ye | ft | ee esi’ | B Py | Pe be Le THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1953 ama THIRTEEN _ ~~ Adenauer res BE HERE EARLY —THIS GREAT CELEBRATION STARTS ° TOMORROW! YOU'LL SAVE! will + Push for Election to Get More Favorable Bundesrat Vote BONN, Germany (®—Chancellor . Konrad Adenauer is striking fast f - after his sweeping election victory ‘ to eliminate the last internal threat to: West German participation in 5 the defense of Western Europe. : This is the; possibility that the federal supreme court might rule unconstitutional the arming of half a million German troops for the proposed. six - nation yrorean army. of | o x! * * The court. is now considering a suit filed’ by: the opposition Social- ists and challenging the | [Constite- : Hecality of rearmament, a) Parliament has Lpargvel the Eu- ropean. Army ‘Treaty: but President Theodor Heuss has withheld his signature of ratification until the court rules, probably next/month. With a. firm mandate from the people to join the Western alliance cay Fitti ng against the Soviet menace, Aden- auer and his‘ Christian Democrat party are working to clear the way |] uphiqned | for quick legislative approval of a | j constitutional! amendment if the|f En ® , —.° court rules against rearmament. | g I nee r ' An amendment .requires two -| f° thirds approval in both the Bunde- stag (lower house of Parliament) BOOT: d the Bundesrat (upper house). j hn the Bundestag, Adenauer’s | | te) 4 114 © [yee forces are practically assured of the necessary two-thirds backing | | 4 | 44 m on thé rearmament issue. The Reg. { : Christian Democrats have a one- 11.95 | ! vote majority and the three other | pr. anti-Socialist; parties would vote with Adenauer on the resrmamielt issue even if they are not included ! ! in the new big coalition govern- job good, ‘Iboks| Sturdy ment, now being formed. ° leather uppers for long Pg se «8 ‘wear and comfort, Sizes But in the Bundesrat the govern- for men. | ment does. not even have a major- ity. The lineup now is 20 opposition votes againgt 18 for Adenauer’s last three-party coalition, Since the state governments ap- point the members of the Bundes- rat, Adenauer ‘and his Christian Democrats are pressing for new elections or changes of government in two big states. | The chancellor's forces argue that the present regimes in Bad- | | en-Wuerttemberg and lower Sax- | ony are unrepresentative in view of the sweeping Christian Demo- cratic vigtory in the! Sept. 6 na- tional election. Your best shoe buy for one the-job comfort:.). . olf-the- heel to toe comfort! WEARMASTERS | 44 | pr. - No rub, no rip, seamless back, Vul-Cork Soles. | Reg. 6.95 + Boy, 9, Learns Not to ‘Catch Shoe Dept.—Main Flose’ d fina combed cotton. Strange Snakes | oN . J fall cut shoulder WEBBERVILLE — G mf Snyder, nine} years ola, aplained v tour popular ics rT. he likes to catch snakes ‘‘to scare the girls in the neighborhood.” A snake he caught in his back yard yesterday bit him on the hand, George didn’t know what kind of a snake it was, but thought ‘it wasn’t a garter snake. His parents called a doctor and the doctor :called on state polige to rush’ down snake bite m from the health laboratori Lansing—just in case, ’ George has been tald he musn’t +} play with snakes any more, A 4-Star Feature . "SAVE NOW DURING THIS EVENT! | Ges , REIN FORCED with 12% Nylon for Longer Wear—Greater Strength ROUGHSHOD ARMY Indiana Woman Dies in Michigan: Accident GRAND RAPIDS (UP) — Mrs. Helen Tinker, 60, of Fort Wayne, Ind., was killed late Wednesday when two cars collided southwest of the city, Shirley Mae Grove, 19 of Wau- “tl geon, Ohio, driver of the car in which Mrs.' Tinker was a passen- ger, and Mrs. Edna Kopas, 34, of Grand Rapids, operator of the other auto, received only minor in- y 3)" ¢6 SQ TWILL ouTrits juries... ' | — | | Buy Yours | Frankfort Holds First : ] on) Sears Easy | Post-War Glider Meet ge NO Payment Plan FRANKFORT @®—The first gli- Regularly priced | der meet since pre-war years will be stageli here Friday through Sunday. At least 15 pilots of the graceful motoriess aircraft will soar above the bluffs along Lake Michigan beach in search of dis- tance and time-aloft records. Depending on wind conditions the sailplanes will take off ro mE]- berta, Sutter’s Beach 12 miles north of there, or the Frankfort airport. —— —— eee ’ . : | ae | ‘| | | & eo | | oy) RS im case your | ae | 5 { \ 4 ea } | ig t | * iS { { bi Nis Carrying Charge) | |. | < at 3.60! NOW. shirts Regular 4.40 Matching Pants.......3.88 = Something new has been added. It’s Nylon, the miracle fiber that makes work clothes 50% more durable for wear. | Neat, better fitting. Neck 14-17. Waist 29-44. Gray. ~ HERCULES HERRING BONE OUTFITS Postman blue Shirts 2.49 - pants 2.98 . HERCULES TWILL MATCHED OUTFITS Silver gray twill Shirts 2.49 - seal 2.98 | | ||. MAN | COME RUNNIN’ WHILE SELECTIONS «| at ARE AT THEIR PEAK! Slip: irito bne of these special flannel suits nd |realize more style, prestige, good lboks right from the start. Soft, se textured , wool fsee that |, drapes and fits correctly, Your choice of all wanted shades intluding steel Oe and tans. See them... ‘ buy t now at Sears. | See why we "Soy they gre one of the best suit buys we've | eve offered! Visit Sears tedoy! | 's — Floor 4 t | | | DEPT. oT hi Your favorite quality is here, re i ; Conf | | u fAILORED a ready for you, It’s dustproofed, “ Peaher Fess tanes To we eee evens | to oon 50 ! cleanly sized .. . and backed by einforced at all pointe e better fat Our guarantee of yeer entire |} , epeisipctinn. a @ Sanforz on Ga] one guanantbod 0 your money back” SEAM == -—_—=s«154 North Saginaw St, Phone FE 5-4171 ) 1175S. Cass FE 2-8386 |} — : , i | Pt peed % THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 4 Mm SAVE UP TO 10%! J. C. HIGGINS ‘Boys’ and Girls’ Bicycles (@ YOUR CHOICE OF REAL NEWSPAPER MAN ass i Fimes. In just a moment, he’ll/be in Porter County, and a.few minute printer, compositor, or an an es the role of publishe as he scans an eflitj writer of letters to t:e editor. The aper boy for his 11-copy circulation after that he’s apt to be reporter, Forged high cars “4 bon steel blade, 4 l4-in. x 31/2-in, Handle riveted io semi-stif blade. . Buy now during this. Anniver- sary Sale . . . you save 79¢ on every gallon of first qual- paint, .Choose from many new colors; get better cov- erage: up to 450 sq. ft., 2 coats. Brush or spray on. o? ity Master - Mixed house’ Each stapled to pre- Ideal for clean- ing wood, metal. wite tuft vent falling out. 4 weather, m ture. Rem solt, pliable. Cuts fuel; bills eals ou . sealed can. ~ Mi “154 he | HOUSE PAIN This Master-Mixed white paint is whi It maintains its whiteness as it continyes to give real 1. Protection. Applies smoothly with no t ark Idew proof, fume proof. « Sold exclusively by Sears! ' . Paint Depertment—Main B pement 4 ONE-COAT | ng 19% So Mildew Proof, Fume Proof—1 Coat Hide mame) Sale! House q " Compound: o One of Sears 4-Star Features 3.25 ca ¥ CentnavasSelt-cloanag action i | | te all the time! brushmarks; | ‘@12 months written gharantee am $3.95 Quabty Expansion Band. | $5.95 Modern | 3) Expansion ©. . ales 298 Styles for Men| and Wo white. Prices plus F.E.T., { | Watch Rep en—Take- advan great sale! All| bands“are:available in yellow, pink and, ir—Main Floor} $3.95 Gent's)» | Expansion Bond $6.95 Exquisite ‘Band by Fos a : | ¢ . Atl 348 tage of this | * | Rela | ies 154 N. Sayinaw St. | } | | | i con pce mor act SE re 4 } | | } | " | ’ A | 1 * @ | \] } | ee | + 1! | | ix “i at + hie | ‘ po | s i 7 f ' we t w St. Phone FE “ 54171 i | |. peer 3 ND Phone FE5-4171. |. i Li aa | a | circulation manager (Graham Jones) Jooks for an increase in copies } . sold. — = =| . | | | ; | le! 26-in. Bicycl nt ae | yy Sa e- 6 ° cyc e ( -f ei ° |has adopted many Chinese man- : : > | e c | om Oser S in nerisms. She jspeaks English with S——s 43.95 24-in. Bicycle iJ De , § Ja faint Chinese accent and loves © F “| ‘ee | exh Ea -- |! | to break into Chinese idiom—if she . 41.95 20-in. Bicycle || Shoulder | - Pee 1@ | ‘limows you uhderstand Mandarin, : a 4 Maximum Protection for Youths: Vd eS USIC iss Rims -Korsakott came to | ot. Le ee | Low Priced| 4.98 os | | | Australia at the initation of C. P, | Economy. priced J. C. Higgins bicycles. 26” Bicycle , Lt | | Miss Rimsky - Korsakoff | Fitzgerald, one of the world’s lead- | | Heavy fiber |used throughout. “4 has coaster. brakes, troxel saddle, and Crusader Quilted’ cotton padding helps’ Is Research Assistant. in| 2% cxPerts 08 Chinese history and balloon: tires. Red, or-blue with white trim, 24 has gbsorb shocks. Fiber epaulets as ¢ | |Politics. Fitzgerald first heard of : 2 ena © ouiiae 1 tiveted leather hinges. * | Australia | her. during hig 1946-50 stay in Pek- , spring suspension saddle, parking stand, big bal- ol | | | |ing. Much of his recently published : loon tires. Enameled red or blue, white trim. Pinker- Pecmrmeairg alia’ ae ' Beetles 3 Ghina”’ is based o el) ef ° ~ - | s | 4,4 u v ing ‘ a ton registration. 20” has welded tubular steel frame, : ne ee ) hl nat oe a sa ypewriter is just part of the dayjs| Fitzgerald now heads the depart- : | troxel saddle, coaster brake, chain, guard. ‘Red— work for Svetlana eT -|ment of Eastern history at the’ " Boys! Green—Girls! ‘ note, lL Lad || National, University. a y | The bulky machine was special Miss Rimsky-Korsakoff’s main : l imported from Hongkong. The |type | Job is copying and translating ar- — : oe ty surfaces are all upside down pn ja/| ticles from current Chinese maga- , 4 . Juvenile flat surface and the carriage js|7ines and other) publications. She - _ # moved'around to the required ¢har- eile ane to ‘give private | ter each time: Enese Ss : F ootba lls Ve “Svetlana, 2, is a research assig-| _ She a play Gy alo! cook i : | , me tant at the Australian National | CHinese food, or/read Chinese poet- %, Molded Rubber Camatrach os a P| TT 1 | University, which is growing up n ah uae eich Whee oe ay 7 i astic Helmets the national capital. The composer | ©, ' : . ia ! Dur able 8 R< ro . al ns int _ #)of “Seheherazade’”’ was the brother | expected me to be brillaint, be- 4 : ne | tices! Foam Rubber Pascoe of her father’s father. wah ake races ar ae seat uncle, so I : oar le ! ' { | | wy... y { . Use Sears Easy Cre dit | wu pass and Kick jas aoc || Reg. 4.98 | .3 77: Svetlana a Rreat-niere. : \ Pree f ae | , | | rately as larger footballs. i ‘ : Miss Rimsky-Korsakoff—“ ° gt | eas All durable Tenite plastic. . pe Payment Plan eed errr ck Paap | White lore can't| wear off: Front, with a ‘v’ or ‘ff’ makes no di te Stripped Victim of Thug : pes. | i back, ears are padded. Leather Jf} ence,” she said — came to Aus- | Not Too Convincing | Btrap. Sizes sm., med. and lge, tralia from Peking in 1952. |Sh c Na oe & ' ; ‘ ; | | was born in Peking, where|h /SLAH' CITY Mh — Marry Basketball, 6-Pc. Juvenile Cather was & peoteaver of andica jaa lk eld Denice sila Aa Ke ory at Tsinghwa University.: . . ' | | t ° 1) | ; ; | A robber overpowered him, stole ioal and Net Archery Outfit Instead of going to foreign a 1] $50 and then ripped off Lawson's <~ eit - like other European children, |Svét-| trousers and drove away in his) | | ‘ L : Entire.Beginners’ Sets lana got her education in Chinese. | truck. : heh ca | anne ae ie 7 She went through primary s hopl,| | ‘That wasn’t so bad but the pant-* ~~ . | | 99 NOW 39 college and then graduated |frqm | less Lawson said he walked for | i NLY . Peking University, where sh ma- | blocks knocking at house doors be- Reg. 5.95 can 0 Hien in languages |and literature. fore one of the startled residents i . in Chinese. _ i finally let him in to use a tele- ei All a youngster needs to - A quiet, soft-spoken girl, Svetlana | phone to call police. | Regulation ball of one plece learn the elements of arch- AV Ww Wwe ; construction. No stitches or ery. The set consists of a F b , Sh ~ \ | if | faces to. break, No |cead 39-in, hardwood bow, three ootba oes Wat a | ) Tala bn? ' Le: “th ¥ mae Watertight Balle in 18-in, arrows and a Kraft- Top Grain Cowhide Uppers Low Priced. |; . Value Packed! . atch Repair Sale ’ get soggy, always lively, t paper quiver. For children ne | Molded rubber tering T- E-© under seven. ae e || | Oply | 2.19 pce. rubber bladder. Steel ¢ S 9 peuple ticked aprey oak qu size, official) meigt, foot- é 4 : ; t . ol _ ae. 5.98 eather soles. Special last de- alls! Tough Pebtex ric is { rim 18-in, in diameéter. 7 to 10-yr. old Set 5 tion mnore-cobion Dytache Iba voml. Buy one 4t ROEBUCK AND CO. Aa Cotton net. | 10 to 14-yr. old Set. . .9.98 able cleats. Sizes S-11)/. - Sears Sports |Dept. today, J less | | : ; [td | | | | : = * : ae) Purchases Totaling r Or More Can B a PRICE CUTS IN YEARS! THIS SALE ONLY! ayers . | SEARS EASY PAYMENT PLAN - | | a | ; } “ee i aa I * 1 | e, e / G Pure Linseed Oil eck Enamel Bi. = : Fine_Quality Raw Linseed Oil On Wood. |Metal, Concrete! : | ie ap ee i carn co 2,69 com) 4.49 |! Pactory Style Watch Rebuilding} _|Why fumble with messy con- For extra_tpughness indoors a i | rouners! bens ral ae get ‘ out! Repists, hae) rey, \@ movement completely 8 8 irst quality ‘oil ,sealed in | hot sun. (Gan be washex “y . | d ' 4.98. any other day cans at a money-saving price! / without injury. ‘Many colors. overhauled 2 rystal ° = s | \ 4 © new ( hand is end el “+ il” Tf Save 79c this sale only! > so mae f | | Aged Brothers Keep Business; Claim Pensions ST. LOUIS Three“ brothers, ranging in age from 74 to 79, have put in claims’ for. social ‘security payments, but they don’t plan to retire, They're going to continue as thé nation’s dnly exclusive man- ufacturers_of tént poles. Fred, 79; Harry, 76, and Theo- dore Evers, 74, put in their claims here yesterday to help publicize the fact self-employed persons are entitled to the benefits after | their 75th birthday regardless of earn- ings. Fred would’ receive $71 monthly and Harry $69. Theodore would re- ceive $69 a month after his bifth day next June. The brothers claim to be the ably exclusive manufacturers of) tent poles in the country. Their firm, founded here in 1874 by their fath- er, has been turning out tent! poles since the Spanish-American War. Their last big order was for 30,000 poles for the Boy Scout jamboree hid. this summer. The brothers said they learned by chance from an acquaintance they could collect on the ol insurance on which they hav paying social security taxes., been Teachers’ Pay Raised GRAND HAVEN W—School teachers here have been granted a $100 yearly salary increase by the board of education. | | this ¢ountry pledged its mutual |se- Money Down for fine SCHOOL CLOTHES | CLOTHING | 8 N. SAGINAW EASY TERMS CREDIT | ference Ite to start. next) morith, tioned against threatening | U, THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. SEPTE seen 17, 1953 | Wiley Asking Far East Pact Mutual Security, Would Be Aim of ‘Third! Treaty, | Sena‘or Says | NEW YORK (#—Sen. |wiley (Re || Wis), declaring ‘‘our ‘i t | Far East has just today for @ mutual di ‘eal - rangement with’ that area as sopn as the nations ‘of Southeast Agia are ready for it. [ | “We should use our great in- fluence to) help develop the con- cept of collective security in the Far East,’ said Wiley, c of the Senate Foreign Relati Committee. “Security in the Far East ; is every whit as important to-world peace as security in Western Eu- rope or Latin America . . .What we need to do now—as soon the countries of the Far East are ready} to |assume the obligations inves ed—is to move ahead | great pact for the ask * * * ‘In| speaking of a ‘' Wiley referred to the North A tic and the Rio treaties, in which curity with the nations of Western Europe ahd this hemisphere, spectively, The senator, in a speech pre- pared for the National Fountiry haan a; trade group; also clared: 1. Russia is seeking to divide the Western Allies, and Americans should not help. her by magnify- ing. differences between, for ample, United States and Brit- ain. '“‘The fact that we disagr with respect to a‘particular policy, he said, ‘is not nearly so im- portant as the:fact that we con- tinue to} agree on our commion goals and ork together to achiéve the 2 The lsdciet Seat “is in ithe throes Gf an acute attack | of totalitarian indigestion’ whpse “symptoms “approach ._ those | of ptomaine poisoning. ” Wiley thay: if the free’ world does ¢ lites and eventually notin break out within the- mother ot try itself.’’ i 3. More information about atom- ment should be made public cause, he said, “if the ne time before taking achon might provoke the United St to take agers messes will not be maneuvered into sédat- || ing Communist China. But he ie Ss. | withdrawal if Red China should} be seated, | BONUS GUN CASE WITH EVERY STEVENS 820 Nag # Xy e% 6-SNOT, 12-64. PUMP REPEATER! ITHACA __MODEL 37 Qa: + TTHACA LIGHTWEIGHT 12, 6, »” ge. @ Fast 5-shot | pump gun! @ Walnut stock, checkered grip! Featherweight! a $7.50 GUN CASE! or FREE PARKING | M5 N. Saginaw | | SHOTGUNS Stevens Model 311... Remington 870AP.... Browning Remington 48A...;. G4 Mossberg 190.....00. pe 23. RIFLES Sovnes oy ee dshet 7 S-SHOT REPEATER | 95 ie 29 ° Self-cocking’ bolt action! American walnut stock! 20-Gauge, M288, 100.27.38 1 | F ' SHOTGUN SHELLS a 9 Sage Box of 25! ‘ Famous Brand! FE 2-9234) lpedoid Guarantee guarantee WW road haze oan (fer specitied number of months. -- e Lifetime guarantee against ail materials manship- e Policy guarantee \senat eet ie or @ Service of Regular. 15.95 Allstate Deluxe Fiber Seat Covers e Allstate Deluxe Fiber Covers! e Allstate Plastic Covers! Save! ae WondeFful, woven Saran plastic seat covers or woven heavy fiber with a plastic coating. experts at nc-extra charge. 14.88. | Buy now! 6-0. "Home. Pak Allstate Compounded oi Heavy Duty 1,69 Not excelled in quality by any ‘other passenger car motor oil . certified by an independent oil “testing éompany+ At Sears! Tum : Signal Kit Simplified, Self Cancelling | aot com - 9,28 Why roll car windows up and down? Signal turns from in- side your car! Easy to install Many cars already wired. LL egeaee Installed by Sears Values up to 16.95 now “Windthtel Washer. Simple. Easy to Install Only 6.25. Two clog-proof) jets on cowl squirt water on/windshield... wipers 'clear away grime. Un- derhood mounting. Save! Allstate [Absorbers New Supramatic Direct Action Each 3.98. ' More comfortable, more effi- cient, lower priced than ofigi- nal uipment, Adapt Auto- maltoaliy to qny road. , SALE PRICED! “Alls tate Fi ' oa tie afe-T Tread Tires ||, | | irst Line a a * | ‘ | e * ay 14.95 tack (Without Trade-In) | a receive 14, 16 trade allowance on sy £4 ifs of 4 only 45.64 e poate Size - Allstate Safe-T t each in sets lof 4 and save more ot eo = nod tites, [} 4 al 6.00x16... - Regulorly 14. 95 now 1 4) Buy ‘Allstate First Line Safe-T Tread Tires now | lome in today and get yours, | EACH IN SET OF 4 Plus Fed Tax and Old Tires | | | | | ' : | [4 | | 1949-2 Ford ~ &nd an neidious ae Allstate Toil Pipes . | “1A rusted or dented tail pipe j|worn muffler. | Allstate heavy quiy tail | Pine: size eer ao N ie YOUR ghee 600x16 (59.80 | 414.16 | 45.64 | 650x16. 75.80 ' 18.92 _ 56.88 670x15 | 67. 00 | 18.16 | 48.84 70x15 | 75.00 | 19.02. _55. 98. 760x15 81. 1.80 | | 21.86 59.94 USE SEARS EASY PAYMENT PLAN Gn Smell ttem Purch ases | Toteling $20 or More... ‘Allstate Muffler | For Safety, Silence, Savings 6.98 , moisy leplace ’ resistant, rte sizes. A worn muffler is foday with efficient Allétat For Safety, Silence, Savings 1.98 » 1949-52 Ford can be qs dangerous os a @place with today! | | } CHECK SEARS’ LOW PRICES! SAVE $3.00! | | ly | fain } 24 Months Guaranteed ALLSTATE BATTERIES Regularly 15. 45 ® Automatic No-Spill safety ‘vents. @ 45 heavy duty, Chem-Set plates! _ @ Fits Chev., Ford, “Plymouth and qthers. SAVE $3.00! 24 Months Guaranteed ALLSTATE BATTERIES Regularly 17. 45 LONG TYPE: @ Fits Buick, Packard, Olds, Pontiac © Guaranteed factory-fresh for power @ 51 heavy duty, Chem-Set plates SAVE 4.00! 36 Months Guaranteed ALLSTATE BATTERIES | Regularly 18.95 Battery 14%, . | e110. or more amperd hour capabiny. | @ Micro-porous life-weat separators | @ 51 heavy duty, Chem-Set plates SAVE $5.00! 48 Months Guaranteed te, a | L ALLSTATE BATTERIES © “Regularly 22.95) : tT 995 set e For all popular cars, 1940 to 1953 /@ 120 ampere hour capacity | .@. Power-channel construction “Cold Weather | se = sie | Trade ‘In 7 _ That Old Battery Now! Get set for Driving. ‘POWER. Allstate batteries are made to sala ability and low cost per mile servi out io. At Searst iad ft Saginaw Si. YOU a COUNT ON! er battery life, all- Allstate batteries are jrpralied with» ‘Phone FE 54171 | Allstate j Batteries ~ Installed a Nee No o Charge ZZ oO pather depend- ee a a oe a tte a | r | | | Ps eee SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER if, 1953 | | ; | | | | | Beautiful Wrought Iron Base FREE! ‘ | ry 7 | { | | aL “NO EXTRAS including wrought iron base & 400 day clock free! | | | | | | | # @ Full year parts guarantee @ Big non- glare, easy’ vision tube pictures @ Easill converted to UHF when needed — | @Gleaming mahogany finish cabinet i | @Snap tuner for steadier ry 1] 1| Ambassador Electric ‘ Ambassador ood00l Your, Bonus! | | -e Large 7 qua rt deep well cooker unit @ Big 18” oben with rounded corners . y 4 4 \4 \} i I i i Range = 169° 53 piece set of | et with your purchase of | _tri¢ range. | . provi Regular 249.95 | and plaid dinnerware the Ambassador elec- ei . _— bag Hes seven speeds. -gccurate thermostat: . insures precise temperature ang 1 heavy fibreglass insulation . jconberves ny at. ° © Waist high snokeles broiler. ‘cleaned. } ie ; | lds os —, loot in oyen and easily Waite’s Stoves—Downsiairs| Store I it mye ° Overall size 40” wide x By" dedp x 36” | 8. Dies. re Philco Freezer 0 Down PAYVINENT | @ Holds approximately 300 pounds of food - ® Two removable rust resistant baskets | le Gleaming white finish on rust resistantsteel. @ Buy now and receive your bonus of bso foods - ..»aonce ina lifetime opportunity for you! . | | Waite's ToT Store | * MODEL GH825 is Plus up to 400 Packages of | New Frozen Foods With Your Purchases! | | | | 4 | | | With YOUR PURCHASE’ : _ of ANY | 2 “Clock | FROZEN FOOO 4 wt io anes, RON <—— ‘al 53 pe. ‘Set Green Plaid Dinnerware with. your purchase of the Philc Kelvinator or Ambassador | Electric R of New. Frozen . Foods _ oF pngr : ee ane oe eee Se ae hi | | } \| | } | | |] | « - __ THE PONTIAC PR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 ESS ' | | — Buc get Item for Su li | ervisors’ Legal Question Faces Veterans Can Armed _— Forces Seize Ex-Gl for Crime Committed in Service? By DON WHITEHEAD WASHINGTON ® — One bullet} among .ajl the millions, fired in the Korean War has kicked up a & legal: storm over how much power the armed forces should have in ‘scizing honorably discharged vet- evans for trial by court martial. The echoes of that one shot, in theory at least, may affect: Army, Navy and Air Force vet- erans discharged from service curing the, past two years aiid in years,to come. Involved jn‘ the argument — ‘which may yet reach tne Supreme . Court—are these. questions, among oiners: i 1. Does: the military have the right to arrest a veteran, a civil- . jan, and transport him without a preliminary hearing or advice of counsel to a distant country to stand trial for a ¢rime allegedly | committed before he left the ser- vice? ” Cana veteran, using hjs honorable discharge as a_ shicld, dodge trial for a crime he might have committed before his dis- charge? | Last May 13, Air Force Sgt. Robert Toth of Pittsburgh was at work as usual when Air Force military policemen suddenly ap- peared at the plant. The MP's per- mitted Toth to make one telephone | call before they put him aboard a plane. Toth called his mother. He asked that. someone pick up his work clothes at the air- port — because military i were taking him-back to Korea They had giyen him GI (cloth ing for the journey. And then the story heden to unfold: In Korea, the Air | Force | said Toth; was being returned to! stand tr ial for the murder of oye Soon Kil, a South Korean] Soon | . in the, silty Clinton River /for aj j SEARCH FOR WEAPON ~ State Police Detective | Sgt. Charles Leaf (left) and Pontiat Detective John | | bartender Silas Chaney, 45, was killed. Charles A. DePauw\ conducted an unsuccessful | four-hour search | 33 automatic used in the Aug. 29 shooting at the Ft Chico Bar in which ‘Pontiac Press Phote ' Cunningham, 22, charged with first degree murder, told police he threw the gun in the river. The search will continue today. ‘By FRED SPARKS NEA Staff Correspondent SEOUL, KOREA (NEA and mentally to meet the dangers | of foreign battlefields. Proof is found here in) Korea in piles, of statistic: of physical Oo Brien Still | Without Country ‘Aboard Liner MARSEILLE, France (?—French | | We are |] | Not preparing our sons physically || | studied during this time of the | truce. A careful examination of United Nations soldiers coming back from | Communist prison jthat our itake the shocking barbaric treat- iment than their allies. camps. shows i ibasis, it is positive that Veeeks of forced marches and star- vation diets. } A released British officer ex- there were announcements tliat (40 | author ities) puzzled today! where | ‘plained it this way: other airmen, still on activa du had been arrested in the same case, Airman 1:C, Thomas L. | Hinder, 21, of Cleveland, Tenn., and Lt. George C., Schreiber, 21, of -Hol- | lywood, Hl. i _. The official story was that Kin- der was on guard duty wht n he caught Bong in the restricted area and. Toth, the sérgeamt pf the guard, pistol-whipped the Korean. Then, the story continuest/ $chrei- ber, the officer on duty, said |some- thing: about, “getting rid’ of Bong, which Kinder later, testified he the man ghot. (Schreiber issuing any such order.) — But Toth never went on (trial. A few days after his arrest, an attorney for Toth charged the Air Force had denied Toth his,” constitutional rights to a) pre liminary hearing and ‘benefit ot counset. A federal court was ask: ed to free Toth from Air Force custody, | On the other side, the Air Force contended it acted merely in: ac- cordance- with the laws approved by Congress—and that Toth was given every legal . consideration under the, uniform code of mili- tary. justice. He was not arrested, the Air Force “said, until the action was approved by the secretary of the Air Force after a careful re- view of the facts. foi f In life, Bong Soon Kil was not a man of! ‘importance. — |The mili- tary has not yet pen able to find _ any next of kin. But his .death may have! its place in history as the start of a legal tangle that could be unraveled only by Con- gress and the Supreme Court of the United States, Pair of MPs. Solve Problem --Tem porarily CHICAGO —What will I do?’’ tearfully asked ‘Mrs. Sylvia Barker of two young military policemen, ~«T must *be'in San Francisco by Saturday.- My husband has been a wat prisoner in Korea for 27 months ‘and now he’s oming back. ‘But my wallet ” is gone, Someone stole it from my purse. How will -I | get there ins time?’ { | Mrs. Barker, 35, told the MPs she left her son, Harlan Joseph Jr. at Huntington, W. Va., al- though her husband never has seen his son, picaies the bus trip would be too difficult with him. She said ;she thought het wallet was taken: when she was jostled |. near &*° @ escalator in the Greyhound bus depot. ‘That left her with legs: than a dolar in small change. | A telephane call to the|Red Cross was futile--it was late at night. Red Cross to carry on today s}up in Brazil. next to ship Michael O'Brien, Pattick | The “el without a country re- | ‘mained ld¢ked’ in a cabin on the liner Bretagne while officials tried || to find some county that would take him. with the liner after being | denied entry by Brazil, Uruguay, Argen- || tina and Italy. France also refused to let him land. He previously had spent almost a year shuttling back and forth on th: Hong Kong-Macao ferry when both China coast colo- nies closed their doors to him. ‘The United, States refused to récognize his claim to American citizenship. O'Brien got aboard the Bretagne after a sponsor offéred to set him When) the ‘liner: ar- rived at Rio De Janeiro, the Bra- zilian government. changed mind and denied him entry. County Clerk L. D. Allen Named to Committee Lynn D. ‘Allen, Oakland | | County Clerk, has been named! to |a com- mittee seeking to; create greater: mon causes of city and county clerks. _ This first attempt jat_ mutual en- deavor was announ¢ed jointly by R. Stanton K&patrick, Grand Rap- ids city clerk and president of the Municipal Clerks’; Association of Michigan, and Anthony Stamm, dent of the Michigan/|Association of County Glérks. spective associations; ed the following me joint committee: (@ Allen; Albert Wagner, Macomb; Howard Murray, St. Clair; City Clerks Frank B. Niederstadt, Sag- hinaw; Everette D. Ca and Thomas D. Lead they appoint- imbers of the the perpetual passenger. ; O'Brien’ arrived here yesterday | its | understanding and. furrther com-|] Kalamazoo county clerk and presi- | Authorized to act! by their re-| ounty Clerks |, ttell, Jackson; | | “The Yanks went to pieces in the biting cold faster than we | did. They were used to softer liv- | ing and were not in as good physical shape, not as tough. As | a result they suffered more and | lost the will to live.” As long as the United States imeans to be the policeman of the \Free World, more and more of jour young men will be sent to far loff places and exposed to the same ‘primitive field ¢onditions found here in Korea. | | As a correspondent I have seen our troopers in every. one of their foreign assignments from World War Il and on. Once again I have/ become terribly aware that while ‘the GIs are well equipped mes chanically, they are poorly pre- pared in body and mind. Having visited Korea’s Bullet Boulevard during the costly win- ter of 1950, the victorious spring of 1951, and the trench warfare of 1953 I am convinced thousands of young Americans died of sheer exhaustion and suffered - mental collapse because they were im- properly trained, | “ Our Gls learn fast, but’ if their outfits were attacked during their first days on, the! line they paid— with their. lives—for the mistakes of easy-going;generals and com- plaining mothers back home. | After we got, pushed off. Pork _ Chop Hill in the last Chinese shove befere the truce, a: bushed and limping GI |said: ‘“‘We used | to curse our platoon Sergeant | back at Fort Bragg for making us spend a night in a rock filled foxhole. “If I was back there now 1| ‘would curse him) for not making us live in a foxhole for a month with shells whizzing overhead. I ‘wasn’t prepared for what we just better, Wayne. i went through. * | Charges U.S. Sons Unfit f ‘for Dangers of Battlefield Nehru Blass | breakdowns and mental crackups | GIs were less able to | 4 q U.S. and Allies Indian Leader Hits at American and_ Latin Vote Barring Neutrals NEW DELHI, India (?)—Prime | Minister Nehru slapped at the h For example: On -a percentage | United States and her Latin Ameri- few er | can Allies today for keeping India 'British Tommies died! during the | | out of the Korean peace conference “against ie joint will of Europe | and Asia,’ Speaking at the opening of a for- eicn affairs debate in Parliament, the prime minister asserted, how- ever, that. Indja had ‘‘absolutely no desire to participate in the talks.’ Nehru avoided a direct stand on Red China’s recent demands that India and other countries that sent no troops to Korea be given seats at the parley but he de- clared: ‘‘The only real question now is whether neutral countries should be represented.”’ Neutrals he said, could help in bringing about ‘‘a certain at- mosphere.”’ The U. N. General Assembly last month approved a U. S. - sponsored | plan limiting the U. N. side of the Korean peace conferecne to na- tions which sent troops to fight under the international organiza- tion's banner. A previous move to seat India at the parley table failed to gain the necessary two- thirds majority, largely because of U, S. and Latin American op- position. “T have the’ greatest respect for the countries of Latin America,” Nehru shouted amid cheers of Par- liament members, ‘‘but the fact stands. out that nearly the whole of Europe and Asia wanted one thing with regard to the confer- ence, while some other countries wanted another.: “That is their privilege but the question we are considering is one of Asia,’ he added. K. of C. Official Killed MT. CLEMENS. (UP) — Joseph Turner,| 34, grand knight of the | Mt. Clemens Knights of Columbus, was killed on M-97 Wednesday when his car collided with a truck |. X rays. A piece about the’ size of a flint in) a ci driven by Kenneth Miner of De- troit. Miner was not injured. | it 7 i Republicans See Veep in Contest ‘ Barkley in ‘54 Race may have to contend with 'former Vice president Alben W. Barkley in @ critical 1954 contest involving control of the Senate. Democrats leaving town ‘after a two-day rally here/ said iene is little doubt that Barkley, a Veteran of 30 years service in Congress before he was vice president for four years, will be a candidate for the Senate in Kentucky next year. * Ed * | man Cooper, Republican looked upon with high favor at the White House, will face the stiffest ‘kind of opposition next yearrin a state President Eisenhower lost by 700 votes in 1952 while Cooper was margin. * * & To the incoming Republicans, who are aiming thejr forthcoming conferences here primarily at re- | taining control of Congress, it was |j obviously gloomy news that Bark- | ley probably will run again for aS Senate. The Kentuckian, who | served! everal terms in the house, was | Democratic leader of the Senate | and a frequent national convention | keynoter ‘before he became * ‘The | Veep” in - i * #* Cooper's Henite ky seat is one of the two now held by GOP mem- bers in which Republican) strate- gists are doubtful of the otitcome. The other is the scat held'by Sen. Ferguson (R-Mich), scheduled as a fill-in keynoter at the combina- tion meeting of party women from 18 states and 21 GOP state chair- men. * * * | Control of the Senate may be determined by a single rdce next year, sincé the Republicans and Democrats now haye 47 members each, with one independent/and one vacancy. The Democrats will out- number the Republicans |if Gov. Frank Lausche of Ohio, a Demo- crat, names a member of his party to succeed the late Sen. Taft (R-Ohio), Recognizing this situatibn, Vic- tor A, Johnston, director of the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee said in an ipterview he believes Cooper will give a good account of himself | against Lany Democratic opponent. Cooper's seat is before the elec- torate again because he was elect- ed to fill out the unexpirt ‘d term of the late Democratic Sen. Chap- man, 4,000-Volt Line Shocks Fire Chief Into Day Off SAN LEANDRO, Calif. (—Wil- liam Wolters, 49, chief | of the Alameda County. Fire Patrol, was fighting a grass fire when he brushed against a 4 oa power line yesterday. The shock threw the ck the air. He fell and rolle a hilt. : i After being treated for shock, ri took the rest af the day off. ief into _ down Senator John Cooper fit | May Face Popularity of | | “e* CHICAGO (®—Republicans arriv- "oe ing in Chicago for ‘regional party | conferences discovered today they This means that Sen. John Sher- ; being elected Py a contfortable a SEIZE. eae PLANT — as high as 15 feet, jhe added. | Pontiac detettives, displays a 10-foot m ive Raymond Meggitt (left) and Patrolman Donald W. Brown (extreme right) yesterday. Officers found the tall weed growing in a vacant lot oh Portland street.’ A largé amount of marijuana was found in the same lot Yast year, according to Wheaton. The’ plant sometimes grows | eet EY AEA TIER IT 8 M f CY gimmeee % Pontiac Press Phot /o Chpts +Clark M. Wheaton, chief of juana plant seized by Detect- 4 Can Be Av By’ ARTHUR EDSON | WASHINGTON (PR — The Chil- dren's Bureau proved by statistics today what paren have known all'along: that a child is:a con- stant worry from the time he} is] born, | “True, vonte drugs have taken som the fright out of many. childeore diseases, ut the b Lee report said accidents continue } to be a major jeause for anxiety. Right now, it sad, more. chil- dren are bette met by acci- Artillery Shell Explodes Killing Indian Soldier | INDIAN VILLAGE, Korea (P)— An Indian $oldier was killed today by the accidental explosion of an artillery shell and his body was cremated at sunset on a Korean hillside with age-old Hindu rites. ‘It was the first death among members . jf the Indian force sent here to guard’ war) prisoners willing to | return to their roe lands. ‘The soldier, a priv ate named Paltu, stepped on or kicked- the |: shell, which aie all | \ ~ ‘Pocket xX has| been made pesnibie by say! ‘ the human body can he with the instrument, Dr; Jd. B. of Iowa State College « Institute of Chemical Engineers, }the work. The metal is gating thuli _hews Ray Developed | SAN FRANCISCO (P) ee A peielneed to be a life-saver in battlefield sur atomic: -ray instrument, designed ry and in civilian emergencies, esearch twa chemical eh oe % Pictures of breien bones, of bullets or shrapnel wees deep in ‘made on the spot in a matter of eat Powell and! Dr. Joseph Bockinskt len yesterday at the American A rare metal, little known to scientists until re nantty.® supplies the ret lighter’ does um. al F atal Misha| s to Children ided by Care dents than dié of all the ‘\nted- tious diseases of childhood put together. These include influ- enza, pneumonia, polio, tubercu- losis, rheumatic feeyr, measles, _ddiphtheria and whooping cough. The trouble starts immediately. life, the report said, the chief ac- During the first year of baby’ s nue as formerly planned. | to establish Camp ‘ Group! Face s | Crowded Calendar A er 3-Month Summer La Off One of the heaviest agendas in the history facts Oakland County Board of Supervisors as ‘it prepares to open its fall s¢ries of sessions Monday. _—- | The 85-man boa d, meeting at Oakland County is Building, 1 Lafayette St.; rill answer_ roll call at 9:30 amj/— a half- hour earlier then formerly. Committees are still working uled to be submitted for board | approval at Monday's session. _And.a stack f other matters has piled up since supervisors’ last meeting J 22, | Monday’s agentla also lists a salary report for 1954, progress report on the planned new court- house-office building, drain report, and report from ithe auditor gen- eral | ‘committee, } Also on the ag¢ are resolu. tions setting ant fo Franklin. election on ine ration as al village and election on Royal Oak's annexation of part of Royal Oak Township. | Another resolution will as that the ‘new county market be rated at the county service cente along Telegr raph Road ard, instead of on Oakland A eR obert Y. Moote, chair nan oO} the county board of auditors, and\ Harry J. Merritt, | Roanty c rpora-— tion counsel, are | xpected |to re- port on a. prdposed. annexa- tion pf county service center prop- erty to Pontiac. | Part of ‘the Rervice center, chosen as the | site for| the, planned new churthouse-office | | building, lies in Waterford own: | ship just outside . Pontiac} City’ Limits. | 1 4 ‘Other reports jnclude a) move Oakland as a temporary detention home and. Oakes on, additional ome for and Hounty Sheriff s Peperts ment. The | bokkdls cif doteriee com: Lo hae headed | by Hiland M, Thatcher, is, expected to bring, i recommendation to appoint; a oo ty civil défense director under cident danger is the “inhalation ot ingestion of objects,’ Freely translated, that means baby picks up something and either sticks it up his nose or down his thr ab Then, between the ages of and four, he can run around nd. picks up. Such as poison. _But at almost all ages, the No. 1 villain in-accidental deaths js the same: The automobile. The infant is its victim, and so: is the grammar school age child. When he becomes a_ teen-ager, and maybe starts to drive the car himself, the rate jumps up start- lingly. More children of from 15 to 19 die because of motor.vehicles than from «all other aevidenia! causes combined. 102 Auto Crashes Recorded in August | A total of 102,auto accidents curred in Pontiac during August, according to a monthly traffic summary by the shia Depart- ment. Fifty-six persons were inyawed but no deaths were reported. $o] far’ this year 385 have been injuted and six) persons killed in 862 auto accidents. During the firs eight months of last year, fiv persons were reported killed an( 299 hurt as a result of 1,830 aut accidents. at — Scientifically - Computed Blueprint for Tomorrow { 11 { This is the fourth in a series of sizll, articles on how man wil make his first! trip from Earth to Mats | By JOHN GEIGER NS Science) Writer iT, NEW YORK (INS) — A sleigh-| to Mars in June.. i In the dry language of Lotend! | it sounds relatively easy, aon like this: “Once the space vessels are a ‘sembled, fueled and ‘in all respec ready for space,’ they will leav earth and begin a |voyage which + will take them out jof the earth’$ field of gravity and! set them into | an elliptical orbit around the sun, “At the point on this | ellipse! which is~furthest from the sun’ but touches the orbit of* Mars, the vessels will be attracted by! the gravitational fleld of } Mars.) “Their | ‘rocket motors then wilt decelerate them and swirg them into a circular path around Maj Actually, it’s about as ea “| putting a ping-pong /ball on a is - ————— in Von Braun Estimates Tr ||'the United State ride in September \will get mani 1 ning phaeragtl record in New ‘York and ‘getting it to fly off across $ to the edge of ‘another spinning) phonograph rec- ‘ord on a turntable in California. But a growing jnumber of scien- tists believe it can be done, ‘and director of the United’ State's \Army’s'. guided missiles develop- ment project—has shown how. In a forthcoming book, ‘‘The :Mars Project, iihdes Braun ex- | plains that a flotilla of 10 rocket- | powered space-ships must swing | away from earth at a precise sec: | ond, plotted in advance. For one hour, roar, eating up of nitric acid and a-single gigantic the space-ships— miles-an-hour—w} sleigh seimming 4 ‘ a = aaa six minutes and 48 seconds, the. rocket motors will mearly 3,000 tons hydrazine fuel in push. Then-the motors will cut off and traveling at 23,220 {ll - coast, like a across friction-less ‘one — Dr. Wernher von Brau And ‘coast, and coast, and coast some more ,. . for 260 days. Actually, scientists have tenta- tive answers to some of the prob- lems spacemen will encounter once they leave the earth’s atmo- sphere on the long trip. . Am artificial or synthetic gravi+ ty might be created by hooking two space-ships together and ro- .tating them around their common Or special. fast-spinning spheres might be. attached to the space- ships. In these, too, the centrifugal | force created by the spin would resemble gravity’s ‘‘feel,"”” and might give each crewman at least | a few hours of normal orieritation each day. Air Force’s department of erace medicine says ‘‘bioclimatology-’ the science of creating an amon phere that can sustain life—can Pa Dr. Konrad Buettner of the U. S. | add 0 to Mars Would Be 0. Month Sle solve most of the air-toniiitioning problems, and along lines quite similar to| those now em Hipyed in submarines. | A special heat: radiating metal _ might form the cabin’s outer skin to protect against the sun's fierce heat. The crewmen’ 's own body warmth probably | | would | qattion for internal cabin {meating. Layers of air, plastic and and metal in the cabin wall, Goths be- lieve, will protect | against ultra- violet-rays and ate nic, ‘Particles “Fuel tanks and cabin | will be ic pa 1A thick “meteor bumper’ give some nal safety. Beyond ‘that, the Ee ‘oll collision “with a meteor isa ¢alculated risk—and a one. For if cabin wall is the Ides | | | | open, | ~ | |. | ‘| | [ wil have | enough system for only 15 sciousness, And— mospheric| pressure of space—his hlood will begin ito boil 7 his body may literally explode, - He will have (small boats,” Von Braun predicts, for intership visiting. |But most -of the time he will have nothing to do but eat (specially condensed ra- tions, about three|pounds a day), drink 4.4—pounds|a day),. sleep, rr talk to earth by radio. | All this while, months and more miles, Mars—rudd dloudless—will be larger in ‘the view cabin portholes, At a certain point, the isace- ships will be pulled strongly into Mars’ field of gravity—and, just as they have been circling the earth eight months before, now they will circle Mars, like tiny oxygen in his seconds of con- | at the ;Zero at- ; ‘apace- than .50 million y-colored, silent, looming larger, | from the space- ide’ Through Space through eight | Martiafi “moons. ” To make the path around Mars) circular and even, a brief rocket thrust is necessary, and so for the first time in eight months the rocket engines will be turned on for a few seconds, | Below—1,000 niles down—Marg surface will be spread out for first close look by human eyes It may be, perhaps, the first loo by) an reasoning creature in al the planet's ory. “ Sounding mis iles will be droppel to test the Mar an| atmosphere’ an _it again i in hand, Maps the surface—from pole to equat Perhaps, even at this distance, _|mystery of the Martian ‘‘canals| —the long, thin earthly telescop A new world lies “below, | ‘landing rockets’” will ‘be ma ready. heed sie Erp lort show more versatility in what he |: rtdays” d ew law. AF Sécking HA trengthen ‘Backbone’ RAMSTEIN, | Germany | (P—The U. |S. Air Force, reversing its usual drive toward ‘the newest in warfare, set out} today to turn) the | clock back to ‘the “good old when sergeants were the. backbone of the iservice, #' ‘h The Air Force] | began a “cam, Paign ‘ ‘to increas the -participa- tion of non-com Hisioned . officers in_the administration of the com- mand, and their esponsibility to lead and train enlisted hirmen.” -- Opening the ve in the 12th Air Force es here, Maj. Gen. ‘Dea STtrother deplored the fact that ‘‘the stat- ure of the average NCO before the second World War ha. suf- | fered throu; ht the Aw ar-inspired rapid cpsnsion of the Air Force. = ; “Why, back’ before the war,’? Strother told a’ committee of seven: NC ‘a newly commissioned officer depended on the experi+ ence and| devotion to duty of: the veteran NCO to right track. “The NCO was proud ‘when an officer made rapi strides under his tutelage. This) was and is an ‘ extremely healthy relationship. An: officer fresh out of school, young — in years, could h rdly be expected - ‘to know the mili ropes like an on 4 final budget for 1954 sched-| . and West Bowe- i him on the | |experienced line ¢hief NCO with | ‘20 or more years of experience.’* \The seven sergeants attending the conference agreed ' with the general that the NCO’s no longer play such an important role. Strother emphafically rejected, _ however, any suggestion that “we ~ don’t have the caliber of men we had in bygone days.” “We hi ve the people,” he de-. clared, ‘tThey are well qualified to be trained intq their bilities. It .is noj utilizing them to bility.’’ stad ‘Never Went Church, | buti Leaves Money toM ALLEGAN: (UP! — A childless | widower, who never hétlonged to a i “they always willed his es- go churches and ent for the de- unicipal athletic the local gove velopmgnt of a field. Wright Hadden||- a farmer who died at the age of 81, left an es- tate valued at abdut $40,000. It ine cluded a- 99-acre farm, and J number of city lor and houses. | _ nsi- | Ww a°matter of | maximum capa: | t a eee canteen ta nea | | { , THE LUISE PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 4 _ RIGHTREN | OPEN FRIDAY Until 9 P.M. 1 HI Next Door to Sears {N vie Wool VARSITY JACKETS _ e Quilted or Reversible Lining ; 99 Sizes 6 to 16 _Men’ s Sizes 4 - 899 Black, navy, blue, | green, and maroon — pit with white stripes. Men’ s Fall and Winter TANKER JACKETS Zipper front, quilted lining, water repellent =—=slack pock- Wa ter Repallent DUCK - HUNTING Sensational Purchase_ COAT Made to sel for $9.99. Water Repellent | DUCK HUNTING - Brown, grey, “maroon, blue, maize, scarlet, "1 99 ee ieee al ‘Seeerresapareener | ~~ Large . Selection Bone Handle Hunt Knife a is 3s 99° | 51-95 "Advance Layaway Sale IRENE DOLL Large Size 100% may Filled with foam 99 rubber, rooted $ 50c Holds Your choice ef the hundreds of toys, guns, dolls, in our big tey department, hair done in ‘$ ony tail —— can ee combed and rled, | | | | | A Boys’ 4 ‘Well Built. Men's Work Shoes Reg. $5.95 Value , io Dress Oxfords 43° s time for: aa if FREEZE os : dae int art Teer Ts ve a “ 4, caer 1@] ial ; ‘Sling Our SEAT COVERS Including Our 1953 Yr. Sets Saran Plastic SEAT COVERS $] 188 7 canes ee iS Plastic. Coated Fibre SEAT COVERS | “Values to $12.95 FREEZE‘ Reqular 3.49 Gallon Value From |} many. Like a mearan| history cannot |e Zaaec,, cepenct rather upon moods and impul The impulse, SWEATERS | UP Foreign News Editor — Once more\ Europe faces a mo- ment of decision.) As has been true throughout modern times, haw that decision goes rests upon Bons and Ger- this time, caine from |Germany. The mood is being set by France’s partners in the European Com- munity, The decision 1s frivether there -Is to be a European army. The mood, except in France, is | that there should be one. Not at: some distant point in iis future, but now. Therefore the pressure is on the || French, | It comes primarily from, two sources, either of which both frighten and infuriate the French ‘namely, the United States - and West Germany. The immediate. de | cijsion has been forced by West Germany, and it couldn’t have come at a worse time for the French, After last week’s ‘elections, West German Chancellor Kon- rad Adenauer emerged. un- doubtedly as the strongest vbice on the continent Gi Western Eu- rope. Adenauer had campaigned ona the West. His election cut the ground from: under French charg- es that the Germans were dom- inated by nationalism alone. Adenauer’s electoral) mandate was for four years and he lost no .time in exploiting | ‘it by de- manding immediate ' action on ithe EDC, or European Defense Com “munity; Back of | Adenauer’s Degg nd was the threat that if France re- fused ‘to join the EDC,) then Ger- many, possibly with the United 4 States backing, would go ahead with an army’ of her own. Scarcely were the| |German élections over when the United States cut further ead from _French objections to the EDC. Though the EDC originally was | fear an eventual German dom- clear-cut issue of cooperation. with | |Pressure. Forcing French |Decision on | By. PHIL NEWSOM fed white by the war in Indo- EDC Issue china, pense of the. EDC. Last week, in Washington, the t the| United States increase its aid to the French in Indochina by sume almost the total cost of the| Indochinese war. Tuesday Adenauer attempted to make the West German position | _ clear. He said that’ France need not ination of the EDC because the \pool was the best way to harness the German ~ indastrtal aoe “Spiritual potential.” The -two developments have placed France in a most unfav- orable position. | Internally, her condition is such that She. is in little shape to settle taste of last month’s strikes is still in her mouth. Taxation and’ soaring costs are problems still. to be met, and until. they are met the govern- ment of Premier Joseph Laniel can be regarded as little more than a caretaker government. But, despite all that,.| the- bet- ting now is that the French As- sembly next month must at last lface up to.the EDC. ‘Therein’ lies Europe’s | moment of decision. , Major Eisenhower fo Report October 17 - hower, son of President Eise hower, said at Fort Sheridan ] night that he has been a signed to report for duty with the 30th infan an at’ Fort Benning, Say on Octe taal Eisenhower, who! retugned recently from Korea, said he and his wife and three children will fly be wiff’s parents, Col. and Mrs. Percy W.| Thompson, at Fort Sheridan. ion later. had swung to) the oppo- sition on the grounds | that the, chance to dominate the} continent, a French proposal, French opin-| | EDC would | give: Germany the | already at aj. Eisenhower said |the chil- | will visit in ‘the White House while he and his wife go| to High- Falls, N.Y., to close their could not” afford the ex- |’ National Security Council proposed | 3 nearly $40,000,000. It would mean ‘ that the United States would as- Eoin a problemg externally. The bitter]: CHIGAGO (P—Maj. John’ Fisen- ; to Washington Saturday. They have a visiting, at the home of his| ; [The vehicles carry | California School Uses Buses for Classrooms - ate Calif. W) — Fontaha High School students go to scha in buses in more ways than one. them to schgol and then serve as ( emergency: classrooms. | Use of 10 buses as classrooms was necessitated when work on uilding additions was not com- pleted in time. for the opening of the fall term this, w week. = === Oxfords $2 | | Sizes | 1 to 6 | fe Boys’ Ton | | Tan Oxfods $4. lan home ‘in preparation for his stay ort Benning. 7 hildren’s or "73 WISE - “Econo oi are Shoes, ize with that French economy, ~ a eee a a Gh th A.A enact ipe se 26-36" high. The best GIANT DARWIN Ps Ign UNNI. igs, agg specmings tied I. he Bloo ALL BU IMPORTED from HC ee That's ‘right! The biggest, bloomin’ est bulbs to lease your flower: | faricy-ing heart! At Kresge’s ‘wonderful down-to-ear Sn from Holland, the bulb mecca of the world... from.: (Boy em and plant now for spring cen bea ’ DARWIN & BREEDER, May tulips, in’ dolor! DOUBLE EARLY TULIPS, 4p-it blooms, peony-like blossoms. 12" high! Py | ‘ PARROT TULIPS, seautitul, whim- sical shapes, fringed petal, 16-28” high. 59 LILY TULIPS, the of all tulips! White, yellow T HURON at SAGINAW T he Best! ‘The Biggest! Tf Of rliest to bloom bin 8" high. ez. SS 7 A gor- geous new variety of giant flowers! | INDIAN TULIPS, Mojestic. 36” ‘’Breeder’’type in rich brown. N HYACINTHS, Largest flowers, biggest spikes! Fragrant April blooms. | CROCUS, charming little first heralds of sprinal March blooms. DAFFODILS, bloom for many a year! Cheery, erty spring blooms. KING ALFRED DAFFODILS White, dependable early blooms. 8 LAND th prices, t too! Ju i w varieties to > choose yy! 59 » 6-69 ¢ 3 to S8e I ‘est! ro 4 / THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER wf | t aes | ae 17, 1953 So arkr | | | | -- Toda “ ay's Television Programs - - Channel 2-WJBK.TV Channel 4—Wwd av, | i by "Channel 7—WXYZ-TV TONIGHT'S TV HIGHLIGHTS © | 6:30—(4)—''Eddia Arnold,’’| The Duke of Padu¢ah | visits Eddy. ()—"“Lone, Ranger,"’ reporter poses to get aj story about .the Ranger. (2)+'News,”’ Doug Ed- wards. Py 6:45—(4)—"‘News| Caravan,” John Cameron Swayze. . (2) — ‘‘Jane Froman,” Jare sings ‘Good News” in a neWwspaper office. I Bet Your Life,” h Groucho Marx. 1,” ‘western ad- venture with Cisco and Pancho. (2)—'"Meet Me, McNutley,’”’ Ray Milland as college professor for- ' gets to.imeet\a ,train; meets strange woman}: «. * :30 — (4)’—-"T-men in Action,”” Treasury men investigate ‘Case of the Silent Men.”’ (7)—‘‘Door- way to Danger.” agent Carter discovers fountain pen is minia* ture atom. bomb. (2)—"*Foot- ball,.”? Detroit Lions vs Philadel- phia Eagles at) Philadelphia. :00—(41)—" Dragnet.” Jack’ Webb as Sgt. Friday investigates petty swindler previ on families of servicemen. (7)—‘‘Quick As a Flash,” Bud: Collyer ce on panel game. * | 8:30—(4)—' ‘Theater, " Joan Leslie, John Agar in |story of an ar-' ranged marriage, “The Old Man's Bride.”’ Nos “Wrestling,” :00—(4)—""You comedy quiz wil (T—""Cisco Ki aes | be) film. | 9:00—(4)—' Marth Kane,” Mark Stevens as Kane, investigates blackmail-hijacking combination. (7) — “Boxing,” welterweight bout, Andy. Anderson vs Tommy. Mathews. | 9:30—(4)—' "Orient Express,”’ Paul Lucas in “Red ' Sash, "film drama. 10: 00—(4)—' Michigan Outdoors,” Mort Neff with films. (7)— “Black Spider,” Henry Stephen- son in ‘The Mantrap,” feature film. . 10: 30—(4)—*Adventure in Livine ” film. (2) ) leit riltea drama. 10:45—(4)—"‘Time off for $ports,”’ Bill Fleming. | 11:00—(4)—‘‘News,”” Paul Wil- liams. (7)— ‘Say There) Neigh- bor.” Betty Clooney} sings French folk songs with the Don Large. - chorus. (2)+"'Telenews Ace.”” Ken Cline. | | 11:15 (4): —'Weathercast. (7)— ‘**Motion Picture Academy,” Nel- son Eddy in ‘Northwest Out- post,” feature film. | (2l--"'The Hangman,” ‘‘Blockade,”’ |feature film. | 11:20—(4)—"‘All About ‘Music. ” | 11:30—(4)—“‘Wrestling from Holly- | wood Danny. Savich vs War- ' ren Boekwinkle; Baro} Leone vs Fred Blassie. ' FRIDAY | MORNING ee 00—(4)—Today. (7)+Wm.: .M. Kelly 8:45—(7)—News. (2)—News 4 9:00—(4)—-Playschool. (7)4-Cottee n’ Cakes. (2)—Fortune Wheel 10:00—(4)—Hawkins Falls); (7)— Playhouse, (2)—I'll Buy That: 10:15—(4)—The Bennetts 10:30—(4)—Three Steps to Heaven. (2)—Strike It Rich | ' 10:45—(4)—Follow Your Heart. 11:00—(7)—Charm Kitchen. (4)— Glamor ° Girl. (2)—Bride and Groom ‘LU: 15—(2)—Love of Lita 11:30—14)-+Movie Quiz. (2)—To- morrow’s Search | | 11:45—(4) L, News. (2) Guiding Light - ° | = |] 12:90—(4)—Ding Dong Sch bol. (7) —Comics. (2)—Murphy Calling 12: 30—(4)—Cinderella. /(7)}-Lank- er Show. (2)—-Moore. Show FRIDAY AFTERNOON r1:00—(4) —. Jean McBride. (7) — Theater. (2)—Doutle or Nothing 1:30—(4) —- Sallye Show. | (2) — . Houseparty 1:45—(4)—Nancy Dixon ‘| 7230—(4)—Life of Riley. (2)—Man | §:30—(4)—Soundstage. (2) — The- 2:00—(4)—Break the Bank. (2)— Big Eee Is 2:15—(7)—Strictly. Female . (4)—Welcome. Travelers, (2) b Crosby 2:45—(7)—Hometown Hoedown 3:00—(4)—On Your Account. (7)— Stars on 7. (2)—Ladies Day 3:30—(4)—Ladies Choice 3:45—(7)—Songs and, Sonnets 4:00—(4)—Atom Squad. (7)—Cow- boy Colt. (2)—Lindlahr, film 4:15—(4)—Gabby Hayes 4:30—(4)—Howdy Doody 4:45—(7)—News 5:00—(4)—Willie Wonderel Auntie Dee _ 5:15—(4)—Sports Closeup. Kid Kartoons — 5:30—(4)—Adventure Patrol. (7)— Rootie Kazootie. (2)—Lady Dooit 5:45-—(7)—Newsreel. (2) —Sports Closeup} FRIDAY EVENING - . 6:00—(4)—Songtime. (7) — Det. Deadline. (2)—Capt. Video’ 6:15—(4)—News. (7)—News + 6:30—(4)—Eddie Fisher. (7)—Stu Erwin. (2)—Doug Edwards 6:45—(4)—News. (2)—Perry Como 7:00—(4)—The Goldbergs. (7)— Ozzie & Harriet. (2)—Mama ()— (2)— vs. Crime. (7)—TV Theater 8:00—(4)—Big Story. (7)—Theater. (2)—Playhouse ater 00-- (4)—Sports. a sions. (2)—The Norths >> 30—(7)—Down You Go. (2)—TV | Golf Pro ; 45—-(4)—Fight Scrapbook :00—(4)—Meet the Artist (7)— | Club Polka. (2)--News 10:15—(4)—Adventure. (2)—Sports 10:30—(4)—Man About Town. (7) (7)—20 Ques- | Heart of the City. (2)—City De- | | tective 10:45—(4)—Time off for Sports 11:00—(4)—News. (7)—Say There. .(2)—News 11:15 — (4) — Weather. (7)—Mo- tion Picture. (2)—Movie 11:30—(4)—Theater Today's cresranis rata by siations: a tn this column S. Radio Programs - - pre subject to’ change without notice. CKLW (800) WWJ, (850). wean qf WXYZ) (1270) WIBK (1490). WIR (760) TONIGHT nae Fred Folfe | | decal Aunt arony WJBK, Bob Murphy ‘ ; . ews! ww, ran Harris | Seo ite pene WJBK, News, Lenhardt } - CKLW, [Austin Grant Sis” Doctor's wane WXYZ, Wattrick, (McKens. WCAR, Coffee With Clem WCAR, Noonday Caller CKLW: News CKLW, News I 6:145—WWJ, News 12:36-—WJR, Helen Trent '_ WJBK, Bob Murphy WJBK, Horsemen | WXYZ, Fred Welfe || WWJ, Cinderella fe ww. CKLW, WJBK, 8:30-—WWJ, 'Fathet Knows ai XYZ, Music CKLW, John: Steele 8:45—WXYZ, Vandercook 9:00—Wwi, Counterspy WXYZ, Mike Malloy CKLW, tod & Gun Club ww, CKLW, CKLW, 9:30—WW4J, Eddie Cantor WCAR, WXYZ, Time Capsule CKLW, On, Off Record 10:00—WJR, American Way ww, WwJ, Judy Canova pallet WXYZ, News — A WIJBK. CKLW, F. Edwards WCAR 10:15—WXYZ, Amer. Legion CKLW, June Chi istie 9:30-—WJIR, Mrs. 9:45—WJR, Pete & Jbe WWJ, Here's the Answer 10:00—WJR, Arthur 10:1S—WCAR, Temple 10:30—WW4J. Bob Hope WCAR, News, Ballads ; } WXYZ, |News, Crackers 7:00—WJR, Dick Burris CKLW, Your, Boy | Bud FRIDAY EVENING 6:15—WJR, Clark Quartet WWJ, News \ » WJBK, Don “McLeod ww, Bud Lynch i ‘ WXYZ, Fred. Wolfe | WCAR, Club 1130 6:00—WJR, News WXYZ, Lee Smits CKLW, News, David WWJ, News CKLW, Eddie Chase a WJBK, News, Lenhardt 1245—WJR. “Jack White WXYZ, .Wattrick, McKenz. WCAR, Sports :WCAR. News, Clem WXYZ, . Talk CKLW, News . i . WJBK, Horseman :30—WUJR, | Id | 15 WIR. Music Ha . Ww f “WWI Harntes Rating ||. WXIYZ, Dick Osgood FRIDAY AFTERNOON P a Oi Gtk ‘ean ; WXYZ, ‘Ed. [McKenzie |" 1:00—WJH, Life's Road Le . Tk Quarte WORK) Ronan | TSO LWW, Listen and Live) ows wows . WWJ, Budd Lynch WCAR, Ballads || CKLW. Austin Grant WXYZ, [Charm Time WXYZ, Lee Smits ji } WJBK Gentile Bing CKLW, Austin Grant CKLW, Eddie Chase es stellen Uy rnomas, ‘ : ' | Week News, merece WCAR, Sports J3;.FPran; Pettay :45—-WWJ, News ne News, Club \ | CKLW, Toby David | - an. 6:30—WJR, Bob Reynolds 7:00—WJR, Guest House | ' 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins WWJ, Fran Pettay WWJ, 3 Star a |{> 8:00—WJR, Jack White CKLW, Waltz Festival WXYZ, McKenzie WXYZ, Bill Stern) — WWJ. Minute Parade WJBK. Horseman * CKLW, Fulton Lewis ~~ WXYZ, Fred Wolfe 1: if Dr. Malone WCAR, Ballads ~EKLW, News, David | Wx INews, McBride 7:15—WWJ, Alex Dtier WJBK,_News, Gentile] ’ CKLW . Your Boy Bud 6:45—-WJR, Lowell Thomas % WXYZ, Show World WCAR, News, | Week, rom, Crerte . 7:00—WJR, Guest House CREM, uy MEAS) 8:15—WJR. Bud “Ouest 1:454WJR, Guiding Light | WWJ, 3 Star Extra :30—WJR, Lions Hy Phil WXYZ, Fred Wolfe ~~~’ ¢c » |Your Boy Bud one Bill Stern 7: . . WWJ, Morgan Beatty WCAR, Coffee With Glew }.2:00—-WJR, 2nd Mrs. Burton | WJBK! T Nel ‘Genes WXYZ, Starr of Bpace $:30—WJR, Music. H n WW. News . , CKLW, Gabriel Heatter WXYZ, Dick Oszo0d | ly eee eel Water 7:1S—WWJ, Alex Drier WJBK, Bob Murphy WCAR, Lady, Clem) ~' KUW, | Your Boy Bud WXYZ, Show World oe eave . { § . WCAR, |News, Club CKLW, Guy Nunn 7:45—WWJ, 1 Manis Family) g:45-wcarR. Revival WJBK, |Tom George * CKLW, Three Suris WXYZ, Breakfast Club aw 7:30—WJR, Family Skeleton : | | 2:15--WJR, Perry Mason WWJ. News - $:00—WW3, ee Rogers... 9 beers News CKLW, | News WXYZ, Lone Ranger , WXYZ, Bylin ews. | ‘ 7 | CKLW, | CREW. Official Detective CKLW, Good Neighbor | Set eon paiene W, Gabriel Heatter WJBK, Bob Murphy WJBK, Gentile, Binge | WXYZ, pies elated 7:45—WJR, Ed. R. Murrow ‘ al WCAR, News, Rhythm ; rocker WWJ, 1 Man’s Famil 8:15—WXYZ, Sammy Kaye CKLW, |Your Boy) Bud CKLW, y 9:15—WJR, George Morgan WCAR, |Sports | Perry Como Bob Maxwell | aes Gabriel Heatter } i "Muinoland. Don McLeod | CKLW. "Gaahur > Page * WCAR, Club .1130 Bob Maxwell | | ' 3:00--WJR. Hilltop Kitchen Club. i tite winalitut cKI by News, Billy Graham : Part Temple Academy CKLW, Purnace y CKLW, True or False lodfrey WWJ, Road of Life WJBK, Bob Murphy Welepne Palbley 3:30 WJ, Pepper Young 8:45—WXYZ, Vandercook News, Homechats pat) Paul Winter 9:00_WWJ, Gavilan-Basilio News, McLeod - ie Chase WXYZ, Gavilan-Basilio News,’ Temple poy . Gal Sunday ight to Happiness $:00—WJR, Mr. Keen |: WWJ, Eddie Fisher | WXYZ, Byline CKLW, Take a Number 8:15—WW3J, R. Clooney WXYZ, Sammy Kaye 8:30—WJR, Muste in Alr WWJ, Name Tune WXYZ, Platterbrains House CKLW, Great Day - 9:30—WJR, Motor Melodies WWJ. Bob & Ray 10:30—WJR, Wizard of Odds WXYZ, Whispering Streets News WXYZ, Bob Edge. habed tle ariel ackena CKLW, Mary isdoreaa ; WWJ, Backstage Wife CKLW, On, Off Record » & ; WCAR, Harmony 'Hal ne WXYZ, | McKenzie 7 =n Mews 10:45—WWJ ‘Marriage Pa; 8 Bc fees, MeLecd °: Bare Bporis (Rayort 10:45—WJR, Here's to Vets WXYZ, Girl Marcies 4 NEAR, |News, Music . 10:0 LWIR. Blue Serenade WWJ, Jane’ Pickens CKLW. Mary Morgan. | 4:15—WJR, Deland Show, Were, Seine WXYZ, Top of Town . | WWJ, Stella Dallas Prue CKLW, Quist Sanctuary 11:90 -wWi. Strike 1 Rich j ‘| CKLW, Prank Edwards f | Curtain Calls :30—WJR, Matinee — | ‘ 11:00—WJR, News © CKLW, Ladies Fair | WWJ, Widder Browh ee a ae outs WWJ, News WJBK, News, Murphy | WXYZ, | McKenzie - CKLW, Fran W pk Sh Fred Welss - | WCAR, News, Hall 4:48—WR, Happen F eryday ; — “re WJBK, News . 11:15—CKLW, News |. | Wivs, Woman indflouse | "OO WIR. Wiserd of Odds 11:15 WIR, Bob Reyn.™*s 11:30—WJR, Make Up (Mind _}- ae. Nene 7 CKLW, News Ww, Navy ow rase Pays : 00—W News - : WXYZ, Top of Town WXYZ, Dbl. or Nothing WWJ, Plain’ Bill WL ie ce CKLW, Manhattan | Music CKLW, Queen for a Day WXYZ,| Don Wattrick CKLW Quiet 8 ty WJBK, Bob Murphy|, | |; CKLW, | Eddie Chase , BUCCUBTY 1: 30—WIR, Japan’ Society | | | WJBK; |News, Mc 11:00—WJR. News WWJ, Laura Dance 11:45—WJR, Rosemary. 4 WCAR. |News, Ba aos WWJ. News, Laura WXYZ, Ton of Town WWJ, Second Chance | { WXYZ, News CKLW, Phi} McKellar la wow JR, Wendy Warren 5: ew ee ita CKLW, Art Laing RIDAY MORNING WW), News Bee WCAR, | News | ’ 11:15—WWJ, Dance Party U, ighks WXYZ, Turn to a |Ptend| 8:90—WwWy. Lorenzo Jones | WX¥Z, Top of Town 6:30—WJR, ‘arm Forum WJBK, News, George,” =| + CKLW, | Wild Bill Saiccse WWJ, Bob Maxwell WCAR, News i WXYZ, |News, McKenzie 11:30—WJR, Midnight Musie flew along thé Florida West Coast . f Fdna Curving Away from Cedar ley southiwardl trcagh Child Draws Own Dad the lower||Florida’ Keys as an for Grand | Jury Duty | _ From U. S. Mainland “MIAMI, Fla. Hurricane Edrla swept off_toward the northeast to- day, curving away from the United States mainland on-a_course that would fake ‘it well out to/sea. Still packing winds of near 100. miles an hour over a small area near the center, Edna was 670 miles east of Daytona Beach, Fla, at_5 a. m. WEST today. It was moving at about 18 to 22 miles an hour and was expected to in- crease its forward speed as it pushed northeastward. * 4 Galés etended outward 200 miles in the eastern semicircle and T miles in the western. The ‘hurricane still was coh ered dangerous and Weather Bu- reaw forecasters advised ships in its path to: exercise cation. 4 area of squalls brought torrential rains t9 a wide belt extending across the middle of the peninsula. Can Pay Parking Ticket | } by Giving Pint of Blood o ~ SANDUSKY, Ohio (®--Anyone whe gets a titket for parking Fri- day or Saturday can get out of | paying the) $1 fine—but it \will still cost them, - | ~ City officials have satel a-park- ing ticket |will be quashed if the} holder gives a pint of bl _— e the Red Cros” next Monday. visits that migratory birds passed the winter on the moon. | ae a A mg nih gh NEW BERN, | IN. C. @—Six-year- old Joy Carpenter was brought into. the Craven County Courthouse to draw names of citizens to serve on the grand jury. Among others, she drew , her father’s name. He was required to leave his florist shop across the street from the use and take up jury service. So Joy and her mother are run- ning the shop in his absence. An 18th century belief was [Actress Faced — Failure, Death But Rallied to Become Susan C. McNamara, ‘Private Secretary’ NEW YORK—To look at lovely,” one | would never fin that not too long» onde young woman | failure and unhap-) poised Ann Sothern -today, ago this | bl faced dedth, piness in her personal life. ge Ann was born Harriet Lake in| Valley City, N. D. Her mother was | singer Annette Lake and her father | was a motion picture star coach.| @ In other words, young Harriet was| @ steeped in dramatic tradition, But Ann’s thespian debut did | not take place until the young | comedienne was 23 years old. In artistic circles, that is “old’”’ to be starting out cold, cruel world of theatrics. Pretty young Harriet had no sur-| face trouble getting her big ‘break | —she was attractive,. vi tious, and lo and behold, talented.’ She had the light, bubbly quality which' one visualizes with all beautiful but dumb blondes. Ann was‘far from dumb... , although her specialty |: was the ‘‘my: friend Irma’ type of role, ‘ In fact, much of Ann’s success was due to her hilarious portrayal of Maizie whom she made famous, both on radio and in movies. Mai- | zie became synonymous with Ann |} Sothern’and vice versa. Too soon the public was flooded with dumb blondes climbing on the bandstand of this new craze. It began to pall very soon. Maizie was discarded. . . and everyone thought Ann Sothern’s career went with her. She still got roles of course, but &trictly supporting, , , things were going - from bad to worse. To top it all off, marital trouble began to rear its ugly head. Mar- ried to handsome young actor Robert Sterling and mother of baby Trisha Ann, Ann found herself un- able to cope with domestic prob- lems, and was soon HEpeEANES and then divorced. Things should have gotten bright er at this point for our golden- haired heroine, but they got worse. Ann developed a serious liver ail- ment and for months her condition remained balanced between life and death, Then as the situation reached its drarkest point, Ann began to _Yally, Improving constantly, she was soon able to undertake a TV show that became an instan- taneous success. Personifying young career eile the- nation over, Ann put her heart into the light and gay characteriza- tion of Susan C. McNamara, star of the new comedy series, ‘‘Pri- vate Secretary.” At the moment, Ann's career couldn't be better. With a season of top-ranking entertainment under her belt, she is beginning her new fall series on TV. On the surface, Ann Sothern was always the pretty, blonde star born with a silver spoon in her mouth. Now you know the story behind her smile. Federal Agent Would Arrest — Bird-Killing Cops BILLINGS, Mont. ‘I'd have to pinch the cops” if they tried to carry out a City Council order to shoot blackbirds, a federal game agent told the Billings mayor and police chief last night. The council Tuesday night auth- orized police to use shotguns to rid residential areas of the pesky birds, Kenneth Roahen, federal game agent for Montana, said blackbirds are protected by a treaty. between the . United States, Conan and Mexico. | Roahen advised the officials to ‘just wait for the weather to get cold and the birds will be head- ing south.’’| Impromptu ‘Duet’ Joins Singers in Matrimony SAN FRANCISCO (P—Opera star Jan Gbur married Broadway Sing- er Dolores Hecht in an impromptu ceremony at City Hall yesterday. | The 23-year-old bride flew here from New York. She plans to re- turn in time to open in November with a new Billy Rose revue, Gbur, ‘a 30-year-old basso, is a native New Yorker now in his second season with: the San Francisco Opera Company. Italian Children Become | World War Casualties NAPLES, Italy W — Giuseppe Napolitano, 8, and his brother Domenico, 2, became casualties of World War I Iyesterday. They were killed when an ar- moa) ee exploded... Nearly 2,000 ' of them childden—have been killed by such accidents during each of the eight years since the war ended. MEDICINE oie we 393. CABINETS. Large 20" mirrer. All metal cabinets. $7.95 value . $3.95. tly f marred. Also large selection of medicine cabinets with and at exceptional bargains! MICHIGAN FLUORESCENT Orchard eh shag ) » BUICK | | ‘ | | ja | | {!| ||] | .| | || il | | 5 ame | | i ein iinet tha SR eR Ahn roe Rtg AB Hae at Ce Se ee Jf sees | aes fee | 1 gee yee aeFID eS a AE Falta ta tet POISE IA em , the annual membérship meeting | _ TWENTY i al al 2 eb 6 wl ee : { | | | k / a RSDAY, SEPTEMBER M, Group’ $ Success Revealed ELK RAPIDS (MEd C, Loomis, president of the Elk Rapids In- dustrial Development Corp., told that in the group's two year his- tory 54 | terviewed, one new ind} been established here, $7,000 had been accum a tract of land] for future de- velopment purchased. had | | been, 2 in- try ‘had fund’ of ted, and prospects New Course at Hope HOLLAND (#—A socology. course entitled “Life After 60’ will be included this year in the fall term ot Hope College’ $ evening cl Reg. $1 39.50—Save $20. 2 Compartment Laundry Trays Reouler $26. 95 — Save $5. Complete with stand and. mixing faucets.: Shower Complete with shower head, mixing. faucets, soap dish, cur- tain, pins and drain plug. Only: SQ Ass 2 sw 2 Drains por 2 drawers on | rollers, 4 doors - ito | : ‘Bonderized cabinet acid resisting enam el, | chrome mixing faucets with spra and 2 strainers. leet G =| China Lavatory With chrome plated mixing faucets, chain and stopper and} drain plug. $19°5 Reg. $19.45. Sove $5.55 52 Gallon Electric Heater Regular | Price $109.50 : Special — Allowance $17 NO MONEY DOWN! Up to 3 Years to Pay — On FHA Terms or Use Our ee Plan! | / fP.ur Free Parking 100 S. Saginaw TTT SUPPLY CO. Open 9 to 5:30 Monday through $athrday—Open: Friday 9 to 9 FE 5-2100 — FE 4-5831 Free ‘Delivery THE PONTIAC PRESS. THU Berlin's Police Ready to Cope With Commies "BERLIN Berlin's 3,000 man to cope with any Red violence in West Berlin. on Headquarters said - the ranks built up to help the regular police have reached scheduled strength. They are armed with automatic | weapons and quartered in barracks on around-the-clock alert. Frisco Voter Changes Registration From Red || SAN FRANCISCO —The only San Francisco voter carried. on the rolls as affiliated with Communist party changed his registration yes- terday, - John Sedak, a tailor, appeared || before the registrar of voters and } got himself listed as unaffiliated —ptiot police force was ready today Back I nt LONG BEACH, Calif. w—For-, mer postman Efward S, Kropfli, 44, is back in jai Wooing Sends M by Mail fan, 44, Jail he can't stop wa Kropfli was sel in jail July 29 ol orderly. conduct says she never | A condition of from jail was that he refrain from ening Mrs. O’Betz. writing or telep But three days | leased she recei ter. Two short and Kropfli was Was sentenced yesterday. | arising from love letters written ta Mrs. La Vera R. O’Betz, 26, a dental assistant. She *today because oing by mail. itenced to 30 days » a charge of dis- encouraged him. Kropfli’s release ter he was re- ed a 23-page let- t letters followed jailed again. He another. 30 days ~with any party, S YEAR FREE SERVICE GUARANTEE e MEN!...Your old electric shaver is worth $500 on the sensational new — SHAVEMASTER BIGGER SINGLE HEAD SHAVES CLOSER Reg. Price 27.00 Trade-in | | Pay Only 5.00 2.22.50 1 N. Saginaw Park Jewel —w o FE ers 4-1889 See us and save on the model you want! ood | | iil | | , | mone =savin truck 1 on a money-saving truck! ‘Buy a Che vrolet now and k 2€ mo ahead all ways on ¢ . | MONEY NOW q ci plemleend . CHEVROLET / +] i = e WV, | BEL CHEVROLET co. TRUCK EADQUARTERS: South Saginaw St. Corner’ Cottage Phone FE 44546 "MEETS “STORK IN AIR—Mrs. Loraine Donofrio of Cleveland, Ohio, kept her datejwith the stork, high in the sky aboard a North- western Airlines stratocruiser 15,- 000 feet over Alaska. Mrs. Dono- rio, who was flying to Anchorage, Alaska, to join her husbahd, Pfc. Joseph Donofrio, didn’t expect the baby for another two months. Imagine Joe’s surprise when he met two members of his family at the Anchorage airport. 1 { Durkin Amazes Labor Senator No T-H Agreements to H. Alexander Smith WASHINGTON —Sen, H, Alex- former Secretary of Labor Martin Durkin that the Eisenhower ad-, ministration broke an agreement ' on Taft-Hartley law revision. “I know perfectly well there wasn't any agreement to break,”’ said Smith, chairman of the Senate | Labor Committee who has just re- turned from a Canadian vacation. * * &* " Smith said prolonged talks look- sion bill continued ‘right up to the | time. Congress adjourned Aug. 3. Representatives of the Senate and | House Labor Committees and the White House took part, he said. * * * the divergent views of labor and | management groups were not ful-; ly resolved, and it was agreed the parleys would be resumed this fall with an eye to introduction of leg-4 islation in January Durkin did ngt contend there had parties on proposed revisions to ber. He said at St. Louis Tuesday he had discussed them with Presi- dent Eisenhower and the President “agreed with me that the 19 amendments should not be with- to Congress.” * * * _A*few days later, Durkin said, a White House staff member no- tified him the administration would not be able to go along with the proposed Rmiencient. i - * * ‘When he cuit the cabinet! a week ago, Durkin gave as his reason what he called White House failure “| to abide by an agreement ‘i the Brongeals, Ex- Halian. Consul Dies ‘GRAND RAPIDS. up—lvincent. De Modugno, native Italian grocer here for maty years whda-served as an Italian Consul in Grand | Rapids from 1907 to 1942, died Tuesday at the age of 84 “Break, Says Chairman | ander Smith (R-NJ) said today he | was ‘‘amazed’’ at the assertion by ing toward agreement on a revi- | But, he added in an interview, | been full agreement among all. the labor relations law—19 in num- | held, that they should be submitted | Suitor Kills Girl, 15, Then Shoots Self ECATUR, ' Tl, A 15 year old girl who spurned her boy friend's pleas to quit school and marry. him was shot and killed last night ‘| as|'she slept in bed with her moth- | er! The rejected suitor then fatally shot himself. Mode The « shooting occurred in. the farm home of Mrs. Mary King, who was awakened after her daughter Janet had been killed. Lying unconscious on the front room floor-of the King home was | James Jacob Bolt, 18, an auto sup- ply store clerk. He died about three hours later in a Decatur hospital. * * * Deputy Sheriff Sam Pulliam of Macon County said Mrs. King, her daughter last night and they that Janet quit school. Pulliam quoted Mrs. King as saying Bolt was ,‘'getting jealous because Janet had boy friends at school,” ‘Bolt walked into the cient objection j is entered, a widow, told him Bolt had visited |. had quarreled over his insistence termed the d rr and suicide. Outhouse Thinks Dean Is Much Nicer Name | FREDERICK, \Md. (P—Kenneth M. Outhouse thinks the name of © Dean would be ‘‘more appropriate, genteel and elegant.” So: he petitioned Frederick cuit Court yeste rday to change name to Kenneth Morton De Associate Judge Patrick M. Schnauffer approved the change effective Oct. 6) [Proviged no suffi Acid Stomach? Get TU MS Quick! Top-speed relie MS gas, pasion acid raged 3 : | | | | | | | | il This Is What You'r re Missing Each Day You Put Off | This New Rug Pe | BROADLOOM TWIST At | ‘a Price You Can Afford TWO PLY TWIST | - 795 sq. yd. @ Grey @ Beige e Dusty Green @ Sherwood Green. THREE PLY TWIST 9.95 sq. re | 40 Oz. Double Waffle Padding $1.00 sq. yd. : 7 Easy Budget Terms Available! | HLL Smart Division Oakland Ave. FE 4-4567 Lawrence Fleischman Inc. Bobby Leighito on | | likes his cornet! gel | | RENT « trumpet, cornet, flute, main clarinet, | or trombone! Ask ‘About Grinnell’s — . a | Student. Rental Plan! " (He plays in the school! band at Weaver Junior High, Pontiac) Bobby Laightos of 1130 Lake An- Shores, Pontiac, says, “| liked music very much, and wanted to study an instrument. Some fellows |in the : band said that the cornet was fun ae and| easy to play. I decided that I'd % likel a cornet, too, and am very happy that I am ‘learning to play it.” Lots ‘of young people like Bobby have got- - * in music in the school good way to begin. And tell’s Student Rental Plan y to try before you buy! Buying | \ at a a j i i RUGS. | | | 1 ii | | | : | | bw | THE PONTT AC PRESS THURSDAY, |: | | | 1 | | i | | SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 Revolutionary New. Radar May Lighten WASHINGTON (UP) The ‘Armed Forces are developing a new, kind of radar| which may revolutionize U. S. defenses against surprise atornic attack, it was learned today. The secret new equipment, known as ‘“‘doppler’’ or ‘‘audio’’ radar, may be the forerunner of a completely automatic air warn- ing net stretching far into the Arc- tic wastelands. A high Defense | Department official said the Eisenhower ad- Chiefs Give Plaque fo J. Edgar Hoover DETROIT (UP) — The nhiBa! s police chiefs honored FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover Wednesday night -for his ‘outstanding etn —_— —“to the law enforcemnt profession. ‘Hoover was not able to. Attend the 60th ammual conference of the International Association of Chiefs of Police and assistant ne! or H. Ho Clegg accepted a plaque for him. -An_ inscription oh the) plaque praised Hoover’ $ ‘outstanding contribution to the) law jenforce- “ment profession through: leader- ship, example, services ahd © co- operation for which we extend our’ sincere thanks ’ and our friendship , NATO’ s Climate Poses Clothing — Choice Problem PARIS (®) — John C.| Hughes, U. S. representative to ihe North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NA- TO) told this story to the American Club today: .. Aboard the ship bringing them to Europe, a woman passenger asked Mrs. Hughes why ibe was guing to Europe, “My wife replied that: I was go- ing to take my post as United States _Tepresentative in |NATO. “*Thé"woman turned to) me and . said, ‘So. you're going to NATO. It must be a problem) to know what . clothes to take with you. |Tell me, what «is the cli mh ate like in NATO?’ ”? | . ‘warm Direct-: Defense Job ministration Has assigned top priority. to development ce new plane-detection ap as one of the answers to presaing problem of © air fense. The administration is. kr be gravely concerned abo@t the need to improve U. S. air defenses | now that Russia has an arsenal and has. conducted bomb test. Development of the new radar, however, is the firs licly disclosed decision rpgulting from numerous official studi the subject, and is an infiication that the administration is | relying ments to meet the. air eierae problem, Audio radar would differ from conventional radar in that it would give a “‘ping’*—or an|audi- ble sound—instead of a ‘pi or a visual] seen on a — when sky- ~sweeping ele beams detected a) | Plane allot “The advantage of the new type lies in the reduced number of men required to man 4a radar. jnetwork across thé top of the American continent. | The advantage of the new type porter it had" been determined | that it would be impossible just | from a manpower standpoint io. set up a ‘‘sufficient’’ warning net- work against an enemy air} pee using present-day radar. This oficial pointed. out that’ with present visual raddr| it is | necessary to have a man ¢anstant- ly watching the scope. Be y Because of the: monotony of the task, a frequent relay of radar scahners, is required to maintain the efficiency of the detection. system, i | The military is works on completely automatic comimunica- tions system whereby the! radar signals will) be channelled fo cen- heavily on technological dévelop- | 2a: ; NOT A PRISONER—Lt. James | _|ing to Wilfred Burchett, a Commu- ‘|edge he perished when his bomber Aj Van Fleet Jr., above, the son of former 8th Army oer Lt.-Gen. James A. Van Fleet, | not a prisoner of the Reds, ancokde nist newspaper correspondent. Van Fleet’s name was place on a list aceording to, the U.S. Army. Burchett said, oner), and to the best.of my knowl- crashed.” Floyd Verlnette| Wins Club's Speech Honors Floyd Vermette’s speech on ‘The Fascinating World of the Ant’ won honors as Pontiac Chieftains Toastmasters Club |met Wednes- day night for its) first session since summer recess. Other speakers for the sesdion at Hotel Waldron included Frank ‘and Its Causes’ and Don E. New- man with the ‘‘Icebreaker”’ spedch. Newman won the table topic tral control points, this eliminat- Ming the need for—any men fat the | more nemote radar outposts. - “The doppler’ radar ‘has~the added ‘advantage of being) ants said ‘it is so good it the number of, propellers) on a 4. Frank Knight was toastmaster trophy for his comments\on ‘‘What to do about the slum& of De- troit,”’: with Frank Webster lead- ing discussion. accurate than present radai} in de-| of the evening, with Maurice Hav- |: termining the number of an types | | ens as general critic, | 4 of planes flying overhead, |] form- | Anyone seeking Information Club” may contact George Luen- “I know| =, that for a fact (he is not a pris- |“ Van Atta on ‘Juvenile Delinquency | ; about joining the Toastmasters’| Scoop Operator Killed in Industrial Accident DETROIT (UP) -— Samuel Ar- gyle, 23-year-old Garden City, scoop operator, was killed \Wiednesday in an industrial accidént at ‘the Light- Weight Aggregate Corp, in subur- ‘| ban. Livonia. Argyle was crushed when a con- ‘lveyor caught his high:lift scoop and pulled it own (on him while he was loading a truck with coal. He died at Wayne Connty) General Hospital. Furniture Men Strike “GRAND RAPIDS (UP)¥— About United off’ of k Com pany Wednesday. in a dispute over 40 members of the Furniture Workers walk ‘their jobs at the Schoon a new contract. Metamora School Lists, | Enrollment of- 181 Pupils METAMORA—A total of 181, pu- mora Elementary School, accord- ing to Principal Harold Edson, ‘Edson announced that there will be no school Sept. 24. A zone meet- ing for teachers is. scheduled to be held in Hadley with Mrs. Ruth Thompson of Metamora’ as cane pils have been enrolled in Meta- | * of U.S. prisoners: being held [by | * = ithe Reds, ... specially tanned , : soles...tops in easy- walking comfort! berger, FE™ 5-5887, Every Step a pleasure ~ «in flexible, feather- weight wedges! Supple elk leather uppers _. with neatly stitched accents @ SHOE WEEK .. . SEPT. 14th to 19th Special Selling For DOLLAR DAY Regular $6. 95 -FEATHERWEIGHT — \CERS Group of Junior... @ CASHMERE and a @ BLANKET FLEECES . COA i . Actual 49.99 vatues. Milium at heavy interlinings. we offered such fine quay gt only $29. Birthday Sa le Sensation Misses’ and Large Size @ WOOL ZEBELINES ° @ POODLE CLOTH TS_ | | at only ‘29... Never have ' We Give and Redeem Holden Trading Stamps YARD : GOODS Regular 1.9 Plaid Blankets | for sent seks se Sk Be 7 ae _ Regular 1.99—SAVE 99¢ 2-Pc. BATH SETS ‘f “Regular 5.99 — anv CHENILLE — - SPREADS | Raguler 6 99a PART WOOL BLANKETS Bed ae Regular 2.995; LOOP Regular 1 A9—SAVE 496 ; PANEL CURTAINS 4 Reset : Wrap» __ Regular iz. 99_—SAVE 99¢ 4 bomber. | IL | | 2 ; + Regul + ige—SAVE 90¢ | save 38c for | "Blankets aH - BIRDSEYE = i fa | Warm, Snug, (100% All Wool Girls’ Coat and Coat Sets Choose from coverts, checks, meltons and poodle cloth. In red, beige, rust and checks. hee Boys’ Zelan All Wool and Satin Campus Jacket Popular campus coats ‘ with contrasting . sleeve atripes. Sizes 12 to te ie 4 * ie Sizes 3 to 6x, . ers, blouses ani 24 to 30. Men’s Satin ‘and Wool: Lined f ne} Campus Jackets from Our Large Selection of ‘ Sweaters, Skirts Blouses, Polos ag All new fall colors in ceweat. polos. ir}: sizes 34 to 40. [Sport skirtS in solids and plaids. Zelan Ly Contrasting sleeve stripes, knitted, collar, cuffs and bottom. Reg- ular $7.99 value. Small, medium and large. Sizes FIHBRIMTS 2 Perie ft? ive : SUITS — _ LADIES’ " MEN'S | With a Record S Regular 5.99—SAVE 3.99 - EIREE 24. | 95—-SAVE 9. 95 : LADIES’ $s 415 Reguler $25—SAVE fe ‘10 ail Regular 35¢—SAVE 40c if SOK Climaxing Our Birthday | mashing Dolla r Day |= Regular 1 09. Regular 1 99 Regular 1.9 —SAVE 1.08 2$ . 21SAVE 96 for P| AGKETS LADIES’ HANDBAGS SAVE 9 99¢ | 99- -SAVE 1.99 1 SAVE 996 i ny | je . r | penateiriiteatinet sehen ie Ws PA Bl A Bhat nde acta ea ee ee ae or eT Tm EL) eee jail pat a ed pe op Sea Sete, eee eaematenniiiitetiediemeimmaiial TWENTY-TWO ¢ THR 'PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 ae é Beef Eating Delégates Run Into Beef Shortage OMAHA | (UP) When the 'Ne- ‘graska Stock Growers Association neld its “annual convention here. streamers wi ithe, wort Beef’ emblazo in gold ° ! them. A large atid of qd egates ‘crowded into a downtown ant, and began looking at 1 enues. The management was en sed when they discovered delegates | all -wore long b t ue'of any kind on We menu, “Eat ur | | | | Have already been consigned. DAIRY SALE FRIDAY, ‘SEPTEMBER at, 8:0 ?. : HOWELL Livestock AUCTION. Fine selection of Holsteins and Gilernseys dairy cot If you are, in the mar- ket for good dairy cattle, don’t miss this monthly dai All cows will be guaranteed as _epresented, - Jim Lothamer, Owner Ed. Gotchalk, Auctioneer _” Floyd Kehrl, Clerk He. ry Prices Advance in Food Stores Vegetables to Reflect Cooler Weather; Some Meats Offer Specials | By The Associated Press | The economy-minded housewi will have to shop a bit more'c fully in the nation’s food stores this weekend. Meat and vegetable prices. generally will be higher than a week ago. _ Beef, pork, lamb and veal went up at the wholesale level week, and many stores oni raising their prices on these meats for the weekend. Prod{ice men , the rise in vegetable prices be laid to cooler ‘weather, Which has peaugnity a proxy in cooking. Egg prices also will be higher this weekend. The same goes for frying chickens. And some stores will ask more for butter. The situation is far from in- tolerable, however. Judging from reports from food stbres, the housewife will be able tq find spe-’ cials on items such as legs of lamb, fresh and smoked hams and various cuts of beef if she watches prices closely. | Many stores don’t plan td hike beef prices immediately and some e | Plan features on chuck, ,Poast, pot roast and ground beef. Bargains in pork chops, how- ever, will be hard to find. In gen- eral, they'll cost a few cents to around a dime more per pound than last week. Stores advancing prices on frying chickens will ask 2 to 6 cents more per pound. Egg price rises will range from 2 to 8 cents a dozen for large grade A white. Butter adyances will amount to a penny or two. Complete coordination of the eye muscles is not believed attained by human beings until they have for a fift ‘“‘because I have an ap- reached at least their fifth year. Appointment Is. Kept by Chance Meeting NORTH WINDHAM, Me (UP)— Bill Bolton, ;was in a ‘hurry but he couldn't in consciente pass a motorist mired in a ditch. He stuck his head out the window of es car and yelled: “tl “I've got an appointment in 10 minutes to show a fellow my sum- mer camp, but I'll dash back and pull you out.” The bogged-down motorist asked pointment to see a camp in 10 minutes, tdo.”” They found their appointments were .With each other. j New Commander Named GRAND HAVEN (®#—Chief Fred- erick Dubruck of Chicago has as- sumed command of the Grand Haven Life Boat Station Group, including stations at Muskegon, Holland, South Haven, | and the Muskegon patrol boat. He succeeds CWO. Harold A. Glynn, transferred to Norfolk, Va. e Fashionable, functional | e lr rehbeble percale| | Copied all the | shoe cobbler, big roomy pockets, perfect, clothespins, etc. . 4 ties and butions in back, fits neatly Gay prints ceoresig binding! | “ | 54"| size ofl serty tovehy ‘enetion Loce” with i for neal & BR rectal «eit, -le . f a See cage ¢leans like magic!: 4 at. open It} pots, 5 qt. utility bowls, 6% qt. Washable linen-tex- tured.36’,withrolier! Metal Cortain Rods _ Single oeevogeccdncece VEE Oeuble sscccereceowes eRe | | 4 { &. ot rN QAR. \ for better fall living! | ge 2 a naaiicitati rpatreeesgecaaecge these .. Glas Tumblers Special! | 3 m= I: Real household necessities, priced! Buy ‘em by the dozen! + Now amazingly low 42a, Ses Mixing Bowl Set Reg. 55¢ Time to start baking again! Get glass mixing bowls in 4 gradu- ated sizes... 33° for 33c! 1 Quart Saucepan Reg. 35¢ Polished aluminum that _ holds heat well! Double-lipped sun- ay as inside. saves 23: newest, too! Has gayer-than- _ Springtime flowers on white. Saucer Set | - tossed (out of a. window. The of 18 miles per hour. The ship 7 other States, | Bob Considine Says: to Jilted Lov NEW YORK (INS)—What lever happened to love in Tin 7 at | ch ley? : I took ‘this problem th “Hal Block, a star of electric pictures, the other day and he said love had been declared non-commercial. “The way to be a success in the song-writing and record busi- ness these days is crystal clear,” Block said. “You've got to ibe, or write about, a guy who loses his best girl.’’ I nodded. ' “Don’t interrupt,” Block snapped. “Not only that, but this bum loses his best girl to his pest friend . | . ‘Like. ‘Tennessee Waltz’ ani. u “, . . and a zillion others, |But that isn't all. Now, here's the new dodge. This bum who has lost his ‘best girl to his best friend doesn’t go away to Grossinger’s or some place, or take up diesel engineering with the Internatignal what he does?” “Don’t tell me. I'll get it. " “He shows up at the wedding,” Block said. ‘He not only shows up at the wedding but he- walks behind the poor broad who) is trying to make: it the happlest day of her life.’ ie) wedding . . i “Doesn't say so’in the lyries, a Block said, with a faint baring of his teeth. ‘This bum just shows up and walks down the aisle, sing- ing at the top. of his lungs.!’ “A choir boy, maybe.” * “No choir boy, this bum,” Block insisted. ‘’All he’s yelling is ‘I’m walking behind you.’ Pretty |un- nerving to the groom, I'd gay. Pretty unnerving.” | “He'd get thrown out of the church I go to,” I said, with the wit that made me the toast of a continent. (Atlantis.) |... “‘Wait.’’ commanded Block, who, incidentally, is waiting to open) his new show ‘Voice Your Choice.” “You know what this bum does after he finishes walking down) the center aisle yelling his exact loca- tion to the broad? He busts jout crying. Crying in the chapel. Z| There must be some other way to appeal to the lovers of popular music, I suggested. “There is,’ clusive understatement. ‘‘You can die early. Matter of fact, that might be the best way to make a success. Just look at the way ‘I'd Rather Die Young’ jis going. | We asked Block |to go on, one of the all ame penne sad gestions. “A guy who tied! tnta| a music publisher’ s place today with a ballad named ‘Let Me Call You Sweetheart’ might be publishers seem to like, instead, a nice, warm, cozy, endearing thing like, ‘Hey, Joe!” or ‘Stranded: in Deep Water,’ or the mood music from a horror show—!‘Dragnet. pap | ail asked about Peewee. ‘Hunt. Did — Ship Returns td Duty LUDINGTON (P_The Chesa- peake & Ohio’s carferry Pere Marquette No. 22 has returned! to | Lake Michigan seryice after be- ing lengthened 40 feet to an over- all 400, and repowered to.a speed Hal Block Laments Trend Correspondence School. You know - “Maybe he was a member of ithe . ’ Block said, in an| lex- | lelodies hold the flyweight ch We ~ “No, he's a singer,’’ Hal said, | “He’ a got a new record out name ‘Oh.’ I said “Uh?” Hal said “No,” is didn’ it seem to be getting anywhere about this point. So I Block if he had read “a fine simile I wrote as a/boy, i describing a ballplayer: He's a colorless as the reverse side of a hit record. “No,” he enlarged,’ hanging up. || lawyer. [Birthday i in lhe Year Really Does the Trick COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP)—Mag- istrate ° Temple H. Morgett | didn’t figure 77-year-old Em- mett Maxwell would have mucheof a defense. when he appeared on a charge of driv- ing’ with an expired driver’s license—but the farmer came through like a Philadelphia Maxwell ‘said | the license | expired after he had celebrated | two birthdays trom the date of issue—June 30, 1950. His next birthday, declared Maxwell, is Feb. 29, 1956. The magistrate the charge. NEW 1953 DESIGNS... _ STYLISH COLORS Choose from hundreds of patterns all in stock ready to carry out at these typical . Rosenberger prices: ©. sDeWal and BORDER ail 0 t¢ ir an average: 12x14 room. little as ' | PLAIN TINTS on heavy em- bossed paper yo choice of pastel shades. A big bargain at only KITCHEN and BATHROOM PAPERS ts A wide choice of colors and i meen 1.25. RICH DEEP TONES || eautiful and durable in Ma-. roon, Forest reen, Blue. | Rosenberger cial at — 1 complete wallpaper tool kit | | a ie FREE & Professional” | get your ore skits | FREE COPY t | of “ABC's of {t HANGING WALLPAPER’ BEDROOMS ond LIVING” dainty or distinguished. A ' ah really wide variety. me 15° ‘ » 45 = ae i -DOlT YOURSELF! | rs “FUN! IT’S EASY! As “ : 14-5 9° S see how easy it is _to do the job yourself — 37 anion As 8 states Ro ) Cup n went into service | originally | in = i | 1924. Special! 23: ! Pennsylvania has 13,327 ib | | church | buildings,, more than | “Carolyn” is the pattern, our are to be found Sy any of the: SENBERGER’S 34 S, SAGINAW STREET Src cnpite ney of Pte Drones od Ct So : = White Kitchen Bowls Special. Bowls of a thousand ond one uset—for cereal, soups, storing left-overs, etc.! Save! _ ~~ OBR | 6: ... : Novelty Dishes Special! Clear glass—you'll wont several! Leaf-shapes, ovals, squares, for iN candy, pickles, celery, etc.! oe 5 YEAR FREE SERV 16-bar; armature, crank-shaft drive. mechanism. B Sunbeam, offers you a Fi Guarantee. ry iJ an Vos 2 0-Cel-0 Sponges Reg. 69 | 3 Two big, colorful sponges ina polyethylene bag! Clean vene- 4a tian blinds, woodwork, cars, etc. ! c pkg. of two ai 59 6 c | | | . | | | | a ae _ HURON at SAGINAW ite linac ns tatittiaaes Miei dlbiistiitien jaite, ‘emia, stmniten - lene. ~ mage hii y cto Dish Clothes 7 ws | Shaves closer 1 any o wet ar dry, ris OT Sunbes m Shavemaster Is the bey shaver with a REAL | /motor,| which has a powerful brush type, service wound, and exclusive other /superior engineering features and weekanieriatie SHAVEMASTER | Only the Sunbbe; avemaster has the ‘ bigger, single, smooth | er and powerful 16- 7 ar armature REAL ha seat oaisa taster hod, ICE GUARANTEE long-lasting nylon ecause of these and YEAR FREE service © 45 NORTH Cc — Terms Arra / JEWELERS SAGINAW STREET WEN! $5 TRADE-IN ON YOUR OLD | ELECTRIC RAZOR REGARDESS OF CONDITION dismissed | ROOMS =. | Traditional or modern...) | er ee ee ee | | | : | | \| | ~- + —teaheren e 7 in obs : ____'THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 | | | TWENTY-THREE ie ' J i) ; . rye ‘ Peay Wl Z Autographed DHidnse Airlines sk Penalty ares Shortage Hurry! We've Just Got ae) phe Aer pope in ana) Burry Safety Hatch Prevents Jee als “8 ae eared the! How About a Fremstor? | | Leads to Culprits ant ; Is Based by | Ito Catch That Streetcar | they wanted to get aareied be.| Beer Tank Drownings The new door makes virtually) MEMPHIS, Tenn, (UP) — | | DOVER, Ohio @ Tip to the on Cance ed Tickets | MILWAUKEE (UP) — Many | fore the time limit on their street-| ROCHESTER, N. Y. (UP) — | inipossible the chance of a man scape att aul re “ea hil youngsters: If you must leave ali | | ty Automatic Device young couples want to get married | car transfers expired, | _ |Glassed-steel beer storage tanks| drowning in beer or being over- al Toe ake waalt |_| i mark in wet concrete, don’t make WASHINGTON =| foe 20 CHICAGO (UP A “mechanical in a hurry, for one reason or an- ven are ‘how being, equipped with an ome by, gases. me me GHSHOF ; hod | }! "it your autograph, The Juvenile | Scheduled airlines winch joperate | nyse» has been developed| that | other. An executive session of a “escape hatch. ; | ital’ elevator’ ibe handed the || | Court judge lowered the boom on| coach services have pgreed to Pem| 1 be used by hospitals plagued This couple rushed into the | Congressional committee is one| The Pfaudler/Co. said the special} Ten inches of snow equals| élevator operator a dime. “Oh, I , | three teen-age boys the other day. alize the passenger} who ffails to with a shortage ot help, courthouse and asked the elevator |from which the public: and|door can be opened from the in-|in water content about one] gave you my stre a tare she | | | ater. They readily admitted | they not | aappear or who cangels his space The “mechani dal wivget ts/ en ‘ only wrote their names on the/| less than three hours be lore flight automatic signal device that | in newly poured cement surface of ajtime. stantly alerts the urbe wh ex i street but did a lot of tramping; The ‘penalty will a charge of patient is und uly, active: oe lak around, leaving two-inch: deep foot- | 20 per| cent of the. value nf, the un- tempts to leave his bed. | prints. used part of the air coach ticket.| 4. monitor can be [| | The judge called it malicious The minimun charge will be $5, | ,, a ean tithe hens id destruction of. property and as-} or the price of the ticket if that is| nurse call system and eli ee ae sessed them a total of $10, the| jess than $5. | the necessity of a nurse remaining cost— of refinishing the cement. The passenger who cancels his| at the patient’s bedside all ‘the } ————- | ride too late for resale| of his | time. | : American coins made at) ticketiis considered the mpst seri-| | When a patient is overly active Philadelphia generally bear no | ous problem affecting ca th serv-| .or attempts to get out of nee operator to whisk them up to the ' press are Ls deshrecnh | side and eliminates accidental im- att of rain. ; - exclaimed a min ' | 2 | } i | | | f i ONLY SHAVEMASTER | mint mark, while those Of! jces | ‘(movements which may © e fi Denver and San Francisco! The agreement has aan pre-| harmful to his medical conii- , | bear the letters D or Ss. sented to the Civil Aerpnautics| tion) highly sensitive swi aS Qi ig sing @ Cad vy Notice ot Intention ta Construct Board, If approved by thé board,| are activated. | 5 | Street Lighting on Baldwin Ave- |'t oie into effect almost im-| Fiectrical impulses turn on|a red t | nue from Walton Boulevard to | me a y s | lamp on the nurse’s intercom don- 4 Colgate Avenue. , dothried | that at ' trol station and a soft chime ro ou are ereby 3) le a a a ath | regular meeting of the Commission of Railroad Workers sounds. | the sch of PB water Michi igan held on Wherever the nurse may be, she th t: ay oO eptember, resolution, it was aeeeeeh fe re ve M G { p Hi is immediately notified that ithe ntion 0. e y ommissio: : i construct (street lighting | on Baldwin ay e ay patient must be attended to.) | "Avenue from aon Boulevard eo Pe Ordinary motions of the patient te A an | estim «oy f 5 $1 700. 00 and that the plan, profile WASHINGTON ® The nation’s | do not activate the signals. and estimate of said imprdvemeerk and | 2’200,000 railroad worker's The monitor is especially yalua- file in the office of the City Clerk and : t may be fqund there for inspection. two cents, perhaps three* ents, an| ble in the care of certain) post- and Powerful agmarure REAL motor at’s why it shaves C and FASTER than any other me It is further inténded to construct A Aon said improvement i$ gpocordance with hour more pay when née govern- seat and psychiatric es «th lan,/ profile and estimate, an also he e nursin fee, Ee ee act aball ue cetrered | ent ne, Come figures gome out Mg & by special assessment according to| next week, | tabs on children too young} to frontage and that all of the lots and ! ize’ the need for remaini parcels of land trdating | upon either Rail management and realize * th n m ng Pile of Baldwin Avenue from Walton|resentatives reached quietly in bed. | Boulévard to Colgate Avenue shall con- | stitute the | special assessment _iistrict ae sly Paid ee ‘new rting their | to ray $ (+) e @¢stima cost | con e e | and expenses thereo ‘and that $007.80 The contracts have an ‘escalator’ ;|Bar Has Customers ete acl be pei from the. Copital clause pegging pay to When Owner Arrives oe ‘6 ae s as £ LiMn ah gill Fund. ¥ ¢ i OTI HER GIVEN ment's cost of living index, Tha ty the f Comisiamon of the City of| The government has atandoned SPRING VALLEY, IL. L| An- trnicivel Neca rol the Pasth 1p y at | its old method of calcul ahe living | drew | Taliani already La hi a September, 1953 at 8 o'clock p.m. to| showed |record living costs in June tomers when he went to hear suggestions and objections that 3 tave one mo may be gmade by parties interested. and July and is expected to rise | tavern one ring. WO. 6566 His customers were ware 3 6, 5. again for August. | & | Dated: September 1 ADAP. evans, | Rail labor sources said] the Au- that a burglar had left the door p ! . -) | » aot? SET gust index, due next w¢ek, will|open after making -off with | $75 a MORTGAGE SALE, 1991 PACKARD | Don ot rents tye tents raise sie case: ot whiskey conv. Ser. No. 2469-4149; .Motor No.| and maybe three cents, | Wood paneling in kitchens and ! J-420374 stored at 1265, 80. Woodward | oes | | bathrooms gives a lifetime easy- | Ave., Birmingham, Michigan 455 a: si2|_ Germany had 40,00) dogs|to-keep surface because of the | Michigan. | feader Bldg) |Mt. Clemena, trained for war duti as at the! great improvement in sealer and; s ) # Sent. 16, 17, 53 outbreak of World i q II. finish ~ preparations. " Newert Styles” | i chinwour- I q replies Lghming-fast, single, P oscillating! cutter shaving dtloes per ho ° ONEaUTTON COATS mT ,° SINGLE, DOUBLE- 9 | | ) BREASTED z ERS ESAIT « ALL-wOOLs, GABS, = .| : eT > ae Toile SHARKSKINS | } Shavemaster is completely different from : all other electric Teaver Shavesnasver has the exclhi iv: shaving ’ | en oe ) : principle that is patented by Sunbeam: Because of this patented principle you gét faster, clqser, 5 SMOOTHER COME IN LOO . AR OUADOREANES shaves than with any other method, wet or dry. But better than anything we might say—ask the men who fr | See Pontiac’ $. Greatest Clothing Values have tried them all. Or even better than that—use Shavemaster and see for yourself how ¢ ean and quick & — perfectly it fits every contour, and is best for all types of beards—tough, heavy or light. Your face will not tL. | 10 DAY $5. ALLOWANCE only LOOK better but FEEL better when you switch to Shavemaster. $27.50 with traveling | | SLEEVELESS | LONG SLEEVE | LONG SLEEVE FREE SERVICE _ HOME TRIAL | - ON: YOUR OLD = SM ALL DEPOSIT HOLDS I IN LAYAWAY _ picks up the beard the way it grows, how comfortable the big smooth oval head feels on your face, how 5 YEAR | WwW SWEATERS | MEN’S PULLOVER | COAT SWEATERS : | | Nationally Advertised ‘Nationally Advertised ' Nationally Advertised , GUARANTEE - OFFER ELECTRIC SHAVER . | ' ! of $3.95 to $6. 95! at $5. 95 to | at $8.95 to $13.95: Sunbeam Shavemaster is he Only shovel Take hed new Shavemaster home. If, withia NOW! Get $5 for your old Electric Shaver 5 D9 $ 9 $ 95 . with a REAL motor which has » powerful ten days you don’t agree you’ ‘have had the | fegardless of make or condition. Start 1 brush type, series wound, 16-bar armature, smoothest, closest, fastest shaves you have _— enjoying the faster, closer shaves of the | Yo | and exclusive long-lasting Nylon crank- | ever known, return the Shayemaster and famous Sunbeam Shavemaster and get $5 | , ALSO BOYS — A , SIZES bo. ‘shaft drive mechanism. Because of these | | your money will be refunded. If you believe allowance for your | old electric shaver. It | Ist ladality’ 100% virgin woo V-neck sleeveless pullovers, long sleeve pullovers, and .other superior engineering features electrie| shavers take too long, and won't makes no difference whether your beard is | button front. coat-sweaters, | reversible swea eH! Solid ang fancy-knits in navy, and workmanship Sunbeam offers this , shave a beard like yours CLOSE enough, _ tough, medium or light—not a whisker can grey, beige, green, maize, blue, black, brown | grange, white and maroon! = Shavemaster with a FIVB YEAR FREE - you can find out for yourself i in yourown ~ escape Shavemaster smooth, continuous- _ service guarantee. | home without riskidg : a penny. round shaving head | Save to. Y2—Men’ s, Young Men’s DRESS AND SCHOOL | ”° grain" a WP de PoP Je dd Po | oleae 1 | | | | on ns 12 ! OXFORDS Be abhor pes | | Boys’ $5.99 : OF BEARDS TOO TOUGH OR CUTS Tf _50c Men's Hose, 29¢ . . Light, NO SKIN » NO MUSS TOO TENDER OR FUSS eel Ray YOU PAY ....; | ; | $10 Men’s $ 95 PANTS | ls JONN’S SHozHES | | i 4 | 4 | | 5 SUNBEAM DEALER | | i | jie Fa e } |] iy . | t t i | | | i i } = |: | ver Ee i ie wake ont naan agth calibedited Ridhitadh voctioamermenamarmasetanessaa iemamentiiieiaiin did nied niin tide iin Se i a al a i OGD mR YI eR Oc eR RNa FR lh AN et | Ay elaine om oat ae te one oth deaetineaineienath cit tnadiietiaah aimemmeiemnemmnanel 4 ~ ee ee _ or ee ae a ee anh t (| He } = i | 14 | | | | | 2 fect ea a <) } } . I i i c Pee Het cl Pie oe | | | r Fl i | _TWENTY- FOUR THE: PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER. 17, 1953 } | | | 1} | CoE ies, Face (Pe VI , | te | | | } | | } | | | | | | | | eae ik Removes, Egg Stains Egg stains can be removed fabric by first scraping with |d ‘knife and then sponging in % ele | | a water. Pepsin powder rubbed in and allowed to remain in) fabric for ahalf an hour before rinsing is helpful in removing stubborn spots. 1] | — Nationally Advertised Permanents PERSONALLY Styled for YOU Mildred derne| Moderne Beauty Salon | Ruth Hoskins—Manicurist FE 2-8366 ‘$11 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. wnt anti lieeene Plan on Comfortable Sleep This Wi | What kind or mattress do Is it ‘old and sagging, robbing you of you sleep on? good, restful sleep? © it over, then call us, @ ‘Mattresses r) Pillows Ren OXFORD MATTRESS 00 332 West Huron St. @ ‘New Ckstom- Made Mattresses | i | | | I | | | { nter! | Teen E 2-7695 We'll! return your old | mattress rebuilt like new that SAME DAY! Look Rebuilt | Pip Ft | ovated | 1 i | | wl m =) ~ Oe Sa a Doctor Need Not Put M.D. Alter Name| Except Whe By EMILY POST A girl writes: ‘‘My employer jis a doctor who thinks his signature should include-M. D. \Accordingly, he signs all letters John Smith, M.D. I think the M)D. unnecés- sary, perhaps even bad form. “Will you write about this your column so I can ghow it to the doctor? He wants td know the right way because he! spoke about it the other day when he received a/letter from another doctor signed thout the M.D.” Answer: Ordinarily, he does not write the M.D., but when writing to a stranger who does not know he is a doctor, then it is correct to sign it for in- formattion. Dear Mrs. Post: When my hus- band and I eat in a restaurant, he always wipes the silver on his napkin before using ‘it. Saleslady of the Week ae -MARJORIE RANDALL ~ is- proud) of this Draytori Plains Ranch home at $1,500 down. All large attractive rooms. Picture win- dows. Dinette plus dining r 4 Light, dry basement. Automatic” oil furhace, electric hot water heater. . Large two car garage, overhead doors. Over 12 acre ground. In won- derful location, too. THELMA M. ELWOOD, Realtor 5143 Cass-Elisabeth Rd. | FE 5-1284 EM 83-4539 lp I have told him time and again that this is not good manners, but he continues to do it. Perhaps he will stop if I can show him some- thing in print from you. Answer: 1 can’t: imagine any- thing so rude as doing this in a IF thin type— No skimpiness but entirely pleated from neck fo. hem bound to your waistline with wide sash or belt will replace your missing curves. Miss T. T.—Pleats that fall from a collared neckline; waistline with a separate belt or sash that can be adjusted acperd- ing to the whims and figure af the wearer in the ever popular jersey /--a wonderful plumper-outer, this dress. bound to the! n He's Writing to Stranger first-class restaurant. If you hap- pen to stop at a very untidy place you might have to wipe the silver. Dear Mrs. Post: Is it ne¢ to call and thank send greeting cards, birthday, anniversary, suppose it would be a nice ges- ture, but it certainly vent take a lot of time. I have been criticized for not doing this and would appreciate your opinion. Answer: There is no such exac- tion. You. perhaps send other cards in return as opportunity offers! and it is, of course, polite to thank the senders when you see them. Dear Mrs. Post: If two| young eouples go into a resta and sit in a booth for four, i it best for the girls to sit on pne side together and the) men across, or for a girl on each side with her own friend next to her? Answer: There is no definite/rule —generally a boy and girl sit next to'each other and the other boy and girl opposite them; married couples are apt to sit opposite each other. Falls-are the cause of a lot of |—- las hurt, injuries—falling for someone often caused a person_to get too. A Re ee ee SoS Vere [a How did your shortening weather the ‘hot weather? Did it stay fresh and sweet and firm? If not, don’t wait... change to the one and only Crisco. Whatever the temperature, you can depend on Crisco to be snowy-white and fresh and creamy-smooth. _ Crisco is different from ordinary { i hah ibn anette nal ee Anal fii mien (~ 41-2096 LR) NEY- TAKE THIS COUPON TO YOUR DEALER WORTH lo¢_ « } | | | | '@ Shin D SEE FOR YOURSELF WH’ PREFERRED MORE THAN 210 = Crisco stays firm yet aw “creamy and snowy-white! Crisco keeps fresher on your pantry. shelf—it’s digestible all year ‘round! WHEN YOU 3-LB. shortenings. It;s packed fresher than any other shortening you can buy in cartons -{ or cans. And.it’s made to stay fresh on -~ your grocer’s shelf or your kitchen shelf. Crisco doesn’t vary. It’s always right, al- ways ready to give you light, crisp, di- gestible fried foods—high, light cakes— and wonderfully flaky, tender pie crust. CAN OF CRISCO sco H £ ¥ BUY A By ELIZABETH HILLYER How many plastics can 1 be used in a home? As many .as 125 are used in a new model house in the National Homefurnishings Sho .which opens today in New York | City’s Grand Central Palace. The all-plastic, all- washable house has walls, floors, furniture, curtains and draperies, dinnerware ‘|and accessories, even bird cages and dog collars, in plastics of all types, from the simple and ine pensive to special materials if high quality. | if This is one of a number of model houses to be seen in the huge New York show, Sept. 1%- 27, which included countless mod- el rooms and exhibits of at kinds. A star feature of the show is the series of outstanding model rooms by members jof the American In- stitute of Decorators called Th- teriors International. i Ideas from all over the world aad their adaptation in high: style interiors by jeading decorators are important predictions of home furnishings and decorating trends to come. | * * * | Mrs. D. obtrusive geometric pattern in aqua, and the woodwork matches. The floor-length curtains are deep red. We have a small boy with 4805 14V¥z—24% by fone Halas | Hurrah for the. lower waistline effect-—-it makes you look so much ‘ |longer and slimmer through the torso! Designed .just for the half- | size figure — shorter-waisted and fuller! Proportioned to fit —no time-taking alteration worries. Sew this now! Pattern 4805: Half sizes 1414, 16%, 18%, 20%, "22%, 24%. Size 16% takes) 4 /yards 39-inch fabric. ‘Whis pattern easy to use, simple sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions. nd 35 cents in coins for this ttern—add |5 cents for.each pat- _| térn for first-class mailing. Send |. to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print size and style number. All-Plastic Model Home| M. C.—"Our television | .|Toom is papered in a small, un- plainly name, address with zone, |. irdn Reacts to Darken Some Wood — “By HUBBARD COBB that tain dark and rather unattractive stains jappear. | These stains in the finished job are the result of articles of iron coming in contact with 'tannic‘acid many woods. h | Ai | | the iron come. from and. haw to get rid of it. | ‘hs ver’ much of it, gets into the wood '|/by using stel ewool) on the bare wood rather than sandpaper. This is especially true if the~ rug should we buy for this room?” The new tweedy mixtures are excellent for this room, both be- cause it, is possible to find one that combines 'the colors of the room stheme and because this type of pattern shows little soil “or damage, Tweedy mixtures come in ‘all kinds of rugs including the sturdi- est. Another super wear and dam- age resister is the new carpet || made of 100 per cent saran, which is much [talked about now. §o far it comes only in plain colors, but one is a blue-green which would look well in the room. Another idea is a fiber rug. Fiber mixtures and plaids, and are tough and: inexpensive. Mrs. R. — ‘My living room is schemed entirely in green and gold, with a green sofa.and chair, a gold chair and draperies with three shades of green and gold. “Would ‘it be monotonous to. repeat these colors in sofa pil- lows, or would the contrast be | too sharp if I used another color, | ‘perhaps, a deep orange?”? _ | The orange is a good idea, and you will like the effect! even. _better if you also add gold Pillows with isteel woo] many friends and a temperamental little dog who use the room. con- |/solvent stantly. What color and type of |/an i rugs are well styled in tweedy|* wool has been used‘a good imany ain and has begun to fall Boasts Full Washability stk ' Shellac happens to be a godo | Little slivers break off and into the wood. Rusted steel s another cause of trouble. for iron and if stored in m container it will dissolve enoug of the iron to cause stains in the wood. .- Best thing to. ido here is to . buy shellac in gass containers and keep it away ‘from iron in any form. | E Seems that jpxalic acid will pick up iron if it ‘come in contact with it so if you! use this chemica for bleaching wood, be ‘sure it is not | mixed in a metal Hpntainery ) hehalehatetataNe Tig Beautiful SAMSONITE LUGGAGE |For ‘School or ; Vacation $14. 50. te ahs 00 | - PHILIP’S | Luggage Sporting Goods 79 N. Saginaw on. 5 Eltzacere Lake Sa es ee 29, 95 Pure wool and fully lined : skirt. In two rich, solid It's a wonderful buy! | Located one block west “ne , | > t's in [GE — it’s here | acony “Flabbergasting Flannel” how Sacony produces these superbly tailor | under thirty dollars! Yes—you saw this one in LIFE. It has Fall’s important new over-sized collar, slim | ford, or beige with brown heather. 1 Sizes 12-18. Ite a Wonderful Buy! 5 it is truly flabbergasting suits at tones: light and | dark Ox: Ly i Sizes 4% r 10 AAK-E 511% 12 Weat Aurea. St. pens, SHOE SI The eet Friend Your Feet Ever Oh, What a Comfortable | Feeling to Wear oo le they are per shoe! , too . _ to any a) sleek step-in pump, 'e pls ‘fashion foot-note costume. Black suede or kid. _ like this fe es oe el | | | ie A ee a oe Ne ee piled ae Pot. which is foud in some degree in | Neveereserecee’ the orange’ ones. CLL Like a 7) 7 Blin ved it | j A Pontiac, Mich. | ¢ ‘One of the major troubles con- | nected; with refinishing certain | woods,/oak is a prime example, is ter you are all done cer- | The question is | i ‘where does | A lot of iron, and it doesn't take | el l | ti F | | | . | + - | Poa | | | , | THE PONTIAC 1 PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1258 | | | ' We would sore your shoppin Friday | | | | | FREE in lobseanek of Q Rl Holiday | | eee’ | | ;. | io | | | | | | ane | fy} I | \ 28 NI Saginaw St. 3 |onvenient 4 RICH FABRIC. STORY i * Z = \ i * aginoy ° Locations | | | | | | # |. < | 1} ' ‘ | aa | | | | 14 | i . | rr || | |. { | voxunous TAX FREE across from P MATY 1 r | A FS ES i ce | f POST OFFICE F mani 4 | ~ Collectors iherds sos dr sses designed to fill many | big | | across from enga ements oe ci | | \ 9 | fea ji lee : ae ‘+ PONTIAC: | ee | bf) | | | ; | bod | ! 118. QO | HOTEL | 24, 95 and 35. 00 , t | | | } | aa Others 58.00 to 229.00 | | Othe to 79.95 || | i ie : RIKER : i | seal | | ® hi | | ’ GARAGE Bl . : | | Finest 00% wool fabrics combined Fashibned from lush, apatly looking fabri¢s. 4 : { with precious genuine Beaver, Have Your Priced to accomodate any budget. 100 74 N wool | dyed Fox, dyed Muskrat, Silver Fox, Parkina Ticket J knits, jerseys, tweeds, also smart’rayon and a¢ etate | | ‘dyed Persian Lamb, Mink S 9 sed | crepe, velveteen, taffeta, satin, faille, pure silk I] and others. Boxy, a al, ! ae | Effectively trimmed with velvet, jew Is a varied len ths. Rich black and autumn for One Hour ee i i i kG . Parki other flattering details. Rich black, autumn jewe | shades. Junior, misses’ sizes. Free Parking tones. junior mibses’ ond women’s sizes, 1] | | | : While in Our | | 1 Store | | | : ' | | | i ae - Better Dresses—Mezzanine Floor | SWEATERS | ' : : | si eeeeetlle: 6 the right circles = | _ SHIPONS | pet 98 fate. | | It CARDIGANS . - 898 jc , | | | ; \~ | i | | J | : " a aa f | | : \ aS | | J i : | | . aan | Other Convenient | @ FLUFFY YET fu ueicuess WARM OAT ‘ : Ways to Buy se al © WASHES AND DRIES IN A JIFFY ] | | ! | | " } ETCH , | Sj |e CASH e WON'T SHRI OR STRET it Lil ls | | | fe DEFERRED PAYMEN’ r “Luscious pss and white | Others: 35,0 00 | [ {I | | | | t | et 7) | | nh OLE sHlATS and ol] iy Our proud roup of if | | coats about town) in po ‘Are. Smart Fashion | | fitted, boxy, i ‘ | | semi-flare | Tabe | "| | | No Matter How You Mis Them admired] in 100% © | sketched | yO wpe, tweeds, From SLIM SKIRTS | to boucle, chinchilla, | Stock ; FS. 98) 12. 98 | bs Kama-Kurl, veltona, | 2 Hip slimming, yet easy to walk and sit in. Fabrics || broadcloth, ee and others. a are gabardine, solid and two-tone, noveity and |British Sinart eoflarst( a fs ond “| * type tweeds. | Junior and misses’ sizes. pockets, warmly Milium lined or SHIRTS (borrowed from the boys) interlinings. Nude, winter i, { pastels, dark color 1 : ! e bp dee oo 24 3.98 to 5.98 Black. Junior, tis isses’ sizes. | | In. solid or printed broadcloth. Check gingham, floral | Coat Salon—Main Floor 4 , or stripe tweedy effects. With long sleeves, French . | | : | cuffs. Three quarter or short sleeves. Sizes 10 to 48. | | | | | | \ EXCLUSIVE de . | le : nile ; | Sportswear—Lower Floor | _ ‘ | | | | JEN : I | | If, | | | | i : ‘i | I \ | t | ik ; | j : | + (l2.95 LAYAWAY ._ . | P| | . | | | | a | Long gleaming box of softest calf with me NOW | | | a handle, and inside zipper pocket.| Black, "| : l. | | i” | i | £ | brown, red, A Small Deposit | Beautifully Styled | | Hendhogf—Moia Fig or Holds Your ~_ | . | | | : scpipanamenasares Selection Until . All Wool ; | ; Wearing Season! ss, i |’ | | | a i ie = | . | | l rT JERSEY FASHIONS LATEST TREAT | | y | a a | \ : | AGH FABRIC SU | TABRIG OUITS | | ms * oud Emdrt enough foe dinner, afternoon, . bridge or very casual, | i 7 . | . : . | Soft fluid lines, cleverly trimmed with ~*~ and 7 | genuine leather, satin, self tucks ,or esos 39. 95 an 69.9 | r 1 | jewels. Long, three quarter or i Others to 149.00 7 | Hl LUXURY BEYOND fous | short sleeves. Fall colors: pe ed | . : | | camel, red, navy, black... i | | | | ; K | ] ] E Hl | . | FT | Junior and misses’ sizes, | _ Rich dressmaker, 3 pieces, boxy, and classic i | | | | | * types. Some with matching blouses, or ) i | {| contrasting fabrics. 100% wool, imported | | F ye | 5 | | tweed, flannel, hair-cloth, rib’ wool, — | | | ? ‘a ands | lee HY ~ “woven cord, Worsted, also rayon acetate | | lL | ‘syDa ‘Sapous. ||04 ‘Spua | : Exciting new, elegant cies of Paris originals | | : tris br eae . ete nes | ee : dn soft wood tones, ' ‘and pastels . 4» to | = i | Pest P u " . | — | | . sovearrenyvee fall 4 aoe | | ia lial — at: i ‘ : | | yaa bininery § Joal~Secoal Floor ”. | | yl i se a a | 44 . en en | Budget Dresses—Lower Floor | | ld | Suit Salon—Main Floor \ | ul ies | : | | | | I | i F | | a | | * ; ir | M | a, ‘4 oe a ss | penny ae senarntl Z re . cane sie Lampe | on | a La ac 5 eee, a | sana on insite ihataina a" ensciphetegnnysing * = Feulligte poly meena eee ee te soy i ae ace wr ~~ Lote napgtooe + aloes derhreatehnceghiti | White or bibe. Sizes 10-18. ._—s Arthur D. Tilton of Franklin road.|) |: | ; D , | f | | ~~Mr,_and Mrs. Edwin J, Ander-)| | [: } in resses | | son will be hests at) dinner |Satur- || and Peacock day evening at Bloemfi ld Hills Country Club for | players < ~ and. th ; | $ | ' * coachés and their wives fram’ the |"): [ » Detroit Lions football club. | AS SEEN IN Mr, and Mrs. Robert Craig i | SEPTEMBER entertained a group of friends | | GLAMOUR for cocktails last Saturday/even- |); | Sizes 10 to 18 i ing in their home on Cranbrook _ de Ti | road, | | hE | ot oe Mrs. E. R, Breech is) still atid of) | ~ her summer home, ‘‘Woodsmere,” |) |}; 5) } bal at Wequetonsing. She is expected): || - | | at her Long Lake: road home early *{: IO i ; || next week, | 1 Y | i Mrs. R. E, ‘Lawidr wag Lostest at a tea and shower on Tuesday honoring bride-elect |Pat McGinnis. Christine Caren Smith left Thurs- day morning for her home jn Wil- || ha Del. She has been visit- for the woman who wears a half-size 14142 to 2412 | | | Peggy’ s New Fall | | | | | } i 4 | 14.95*519.95 | Maternity Dresses an Country Tweed Crepes! are here! In faille, tweed flannel and novel fabrics! } Sizes 10 to 16 : $10.95 | ; | Failles and Casuals! * ing) her uncle and aunt, “ and Mrs, Dean A. Draper of B arden | drive. . | | | ey an Activities Plann d a by Webster PT eS Planning the yéar’s Listed . received the: attention of| Webster | School parents when they met with | . |: homeroom. mothers, fathers and be teachers Wednesday evening. * Activities will include a) Fall Fun Frolic’ to be held Oct. 14/at the school. ‘ Announcement was madd of the resignation of Mrs. Ray| Caughill ras) president. Mrs. Ralph Dawe was appointed to serve jin her place, assisted by Orrin Huntoon Jr. and Mrs, Alger Conner Jas vice presidents. . | Greetings wére extended to the new officers by Dr. Ed th Roach Snyder, Webster principal |: | { . | | { I | | | } + ' { i j Our Ensemble Coat with Mouton Collar | ¢ | | | le ‘ : } | is’ ear | and it’s | | matching a Mrs. James Rosenthal ahd Mrs. Irving, Gordon. planned! the cof- | fee hour assisted by the execu- tive board, =‘ | | a i. 4 ip with your , ps fo forward in ak $39, os. a Perky back -bow pump. In black suede, grey kid trim, Eipwa Suede, gold kid trim. - $12 5 Mrs. Paul Salzman |! Hostess to Guild 10 po Plans for’ the year were discus- | sed by Guild 10 of All copal Church eras . "| @ avenue. Amy Harper attended ,and Jessie Bréwer i For day diecmning . . « for double- dating . . . for anywhere |. . every day ... your beloved CARMELLETES ehle fashion favorites ifor fall. 3S wen = Pn ae Speer Pe AN INC os : HAIRCU' | For that dry brittle LS omaner . , try o SCALP CONDITI NI G TREAT | BOY | 1S Smceky fleece in 10% cashmere and 90% wool, with a rich mouton collar, in beige, blue or pink, Sizes 10-18. ™~ We Are Proud to 2 NEW Members of Clara Ann Lucille Thome pson AVON | BEAUTY SALON | Phone OL 2-811] 1908 N. Main St. _—_ Rachester Eva Bailey, Owner . PT | Our new suit sandal in pol- _ ished calf, high boulevard heel, Red or Ginger Brown Calf. | $12.95 High - riding bandéd strap. Black suede with gunmetal kid, Brown suede with frosted browp kid, : me | $14.95 Dressy suit pump smartly tained . with white. Blue,’ Red or ' Ginger Brown Calf. bo | $12.95 SE sights alg safes aves dilen Pom | ll fe ote debe mtn [Ryts ate siiessigminr le ite gy eee =? peg Staaf *| THE PON‘! 1953 | ‘ _4+—~ ld | OPS id go places | i i} i j i { stripes newest and| co for any today @ colors i 4 and feel of cas N ylon Sweate shpover ‘ : * oe The smart look’ of. casheneFeT. . the soft feel a | cashmere! _Nytdn knit beauties. s0 easy to car 4 for perfect fitting , ... compliments to you ae Hurry in today and choose white, blue, navy, greer 4 8 we ele Ce ‘te rdigan By Glengarry. skirts! Tightly looped ‘neck and sleeve bands. red, black, mint, pink or moins in sizes 34 te 40.: 6.98 . . novelties or scdid jcolors, separates Smart’ totton. blouses by Majestic in pin The little boy callars, Peter Pan collar nvertible collars. of your skirts or slacks.., h alee 30 te 38. ges | , ° wear fla |° | | from PROPORTION ED hipli Ape (y | | | | | | { nel. The perfect top Hurry in n choose from white and many Made. for you and perfectly tailored to conform to your height and proportions. fect fit skirt, fashioned of 10040 wool mens- | The slim line carries through | ihe outside stitched,,darts at the ; ne, down the center front opening - 2 to,a double inverted walking pleat. | ~T The skirt is topped with its own leather belt. i 10 to 20. | oh | So with concealed zipper, front and two) handy pockets. Pinwale favored for a smart appearance, durability and rich) colors. Black, green in Bi 10 to! 20: |. Waite s Slacks—Third Fl red, Fine pinwale corduroy expertly man tailordd slacks | vent back, double pleat luxurigus feel, corduroy own or odr roy Slacks 598 SKIRTS Here is the per- ; Choose grey, | charcoal or jie in Sizes | Waite's Skirts—Third Floor | | Manners MAKE FRIENDS When someone dogs you a favor and you want to express your ap- ; preciafion, don’ t také the jeasy way out afid buy a printed card of thanks and simply sign your hame to lit. Take the trouble’ to write your own note in your own words: i : It’s Not Too early 'to Start Those Christmas Gifts Now! fi ‘Come .in and se@ Our won- derful selection of. Needle- joint, Stamped Pieces, arns_ for *ks, Hats, |Sweaters, Mittens, etc. ‘OXFORD SHOP | Acress from Detroit Edison ae KP W. Huron FE 4-7: | * 4q : Lal . CT! vy, Population Up 1,200 Per Week in Washington SEATTLE, Wash. (UP)—Popula- tion experts, studying current trends say the population of Washington is increasing at the {rate of 1,200 per} week. - The nothwestern office ‘of the National Association) of Manufac- tures |said that. ‘‘Washington's population will be | 3,020,000 by 1960, if the current | trend con- tinues.’ tion of| populations made by the U. S. Bureau of the Census which shows a 3.7 per cent rise in W ash- ington’ population during the first two years of the 1950-60 decade. Washington's 957,611 wage- earners| will have | their ranks swelled| to 1,208,000 by 1960, ac- cording) to P. G, Lewis, Seattle lumberman and a member of the NAM vashington pdvi sory com- | mittee. The | necegsz ‘ers int JAM study | was deliened y to put these new, work- jobs. The ‘Survey estimat- fed that $12,000 is needed to put} jone man to work at present-day | casts, | : it 4 Tomatoes belong :to the same | plant family | as. ‘ tobacc |and the egg plant. eee t ba ry better positions. JOB. ed NIGHT SCHOOL SECRETARIAL ~_AECOUNTING. “MONDAY and THURSDAY. We recommend EVENING SCHOOL to employed men and wome become more proficient o jobs, or to thasé who seek f prepar ation for peeery ees we ee ee eb aleve eelbee ee eeeeeapes | Phone FE 2-335 who Ww ish to their present | } | | | | | | | It is a fact’ that atts ancement is sordbeinnes _ earned off oF job, cals tek oF THE PLAN NOW fora fall entrariee Call in person jor return this ad for information i i 4 in the Pacific Northwest,. The figure is based on a projec- potatoes, | for your old electric razor when: you trade i in on’a , 44 | \ @ ¢ SHAVEMAST ER 10 Day 5 years free service guarantee, Waite's Shavers—Street Floor will be in Friday Sunbeam Representative Housewares Dept. Home Trial! Take} the new Ignavemaster home| If-within ten days you don‘t| agreé you have had the smoothest, closest, fastest shave you have ever known, return the Shavemaster ito us and your! money will be refunded. ly Sunbeam Shavemaster has t bigger, . single, SMOOTH head | and powerful, 16 bar, armature .REAL motor |, . . that’s "why it shaves clos- er and faster than any other method wet or) dry . 27.50 our C PRESS, THURSDAY, SEE au LISTEN, MENL-ffow « don voi hea handed hosts who pour those stiff drinks to get everybody ‘ high.” Suck generosity-1S 1 to be adinired, but let’s men! ees Cauliflower } i Green Bits: Cheese Adds Tang to Vegetable Recipe by Mrs. |MacFadyen, by JANET ODELL| Pontiac Press Food Editor | | Atea jrecent dinner the hostess . served | a delicious cassergle of eaulifiower with cheese $auce, Small” pieces of ithe tender peal leaves were included; they) both color and flavor to-the “ith, Mrs; Arthur M adyen con- ipe for cauliflower L“Chikiren, Mrs. MacFadyen is an active PTA worker at the, Whit- field school. An expert seam- stress, she makes many of her young danehjert and Ber own clothes. “the vm of four school | She conducts. ai/sewing chs for the YWCA wn Day ort pro- wr gram and during -the winter she and her husband} are regular at« tendants at a square dance club, ¢ AULIFLOW ER AU GRATIN i ractice q _lutle mod- ‘By Mrs. Arthur MacFadyen Double Talk Is Employed uce 1 recipe medium lwhite s é, grated ie 1 cup medium shafp chee Salt and pepper | | | Cracker crumbs | | | | | Butter or margarine ~ | 1 large head cauliflower : gee cour new jon of Fall ‘jewelry for informal or “dress-up"’ wear. Gleaming copper, flashing rhinestones, Come collect leather, silver, gold . . (this season's = newest iptyles, De’ Cor Shop 48 N. Perry | _ Pontiac Hotel Lobby Dorothy Eickmeter te Pp t a | R ! ti hi _ Separate into flowerettes, sav- O ro ec e a 1ONnS IPS, |; ing the| most tenper) green leaves. < b U I] D Or /Cut the leaves i smal] pieces ut Usua y oes Opposite = = wi ep ome 1 ‘ook cauliflower in salted boils iY tin at BY ELIZABETH WOODWARD — ing water. Boil uncovered 20 min- s strange how two people who! talk the same lan-/ utes and drain.) Make a fyedium guage can make su¢h| a botch -of understanding each | white sauce (2 tablespoons putter, other. Of course, utter perplexity is|to be expected if one|2 tablespoons flour, 1 cup) milk, deliberately sets out to confuse the lother. salt and pepper}. Add the grated And that’s what happens’ too often between boys and| cheese slowly t9 the sauce} — girls who date each other. | Put the cooked cauliflow¢r in a | buttered casserole, cover with the Why does it. seem so hecessary—and such fun—to play seese sauce, | dot : with | more guessing games whiks as My be gained. by hiding. what checse and bits |of butter pr mar ba ai y a ‘wih ou ¥ other girl had | devastating ef-' garine. Top with cracker crumbs. ancy disguise® y mus fect, so|why shouldn't she? | Bake in a moderate oven gne-half there. be 50 aia of this It's algame, this double talk. hour. Serves 6.) | ‘double talk? It's aimed at protecting a rela-| — That's what i very neason-|'tionship|— and it usually falls Wash | in Wdchine able young man wants to) on flat. {| ce "Dear Miss Woodward: Why How cpn’ there be any deep and| It’s safe to toss most sneakers, there so much double -talk be-| sincere junderstanding when all tennis shoes or foam rubber scuffs tween boys and girls?! Why, es- k communication has to be filtered into the washing maching. They pecially when they go steady,! through |a screen of “guess what | “need to be ret fond. often-by thor- can't they say what they) think| I'm really thinking?” . thorough soap and water) action, to each other? | = 4 a iy ACROSS = 18 os “When my girl and I have a | 1 This bug is a, 12 13 | yf fe 7 je | Fo je jt difference of opinion, we talk it | , TE esi Zz 1 is 7 over. There is none of this ‘won 9 Common dering what she really thinks | 1) Aver ® | |. le 7 ry about it.’ business that causes so | 13 Kind pf i — _much woe between boys and taachecs: \® Uy Y Aw a thet gine Laem va . : “I have found few bthet giris| Ee. i | who follow this prartice. When I a German city, Bo \ | GY ws GZ 3 ‘did find one, I grabbed her fast!’’ | 3) Sispen a pat id fi on gz ae 23 Flspen yy WY Yy GY Ger Girls aren't the only offenders. 3: 5 ty bt, AZ There’s the type of? boy who is| 59 conc 37 ty tics Ly GY socially affable, full of ,easy chat- 2 Stinging. bug Uy Ws OE Gy oe fs Z, ter, brie adept a cies be wid 35 Youth HO by] Z Yy at sidestepping- all issues that de-| sh eggs am F yy Tagg Te mand ine i aaa of his inner- - Oat lecale " |. ° i" most thoughts 38 Diminutive we 149 yyy, yy, Wy: 52 He hag a dozen lines with which , 39 Barsate” . Yj WOW to confoind his audience. He dons | ,, %o0d sprite 55 Se |S! | eo 1) fg a disguise and plays whatever mile _ ; part the situation demands, Basse = i | i° | Neither the girls nor his" boy |i heat | 1. a | (* friends know what he’s all about | 46 Drone bee | a Es | \ Sas Ee) | ‘cause he's simply not. telling. | ® Many [insects ; . DOWN 10 Lions 41 Emmet But he’s amusing company, mad ote i, 1 Many insects 11 Cravings 4 Blood toney M | y es i Hy 4 atural) fat nobody’ s close friend! | | - u eeEnes 2 Goddess of “) 49 Conese point 4 muerte ‘His reason for putting | ion such | 56 Doctrine 3 eeey tiahel 135 ce ecket | 48 Versifier an act is largely self-protection. 2 Tanpee eopns 4 The praying 24 Muddled ; “e Level Liké the chameleon, he ch nges | 62 Puff up a emede ates. a | 62 Osi of his colors so he won't | be! vul- A poeeriaee bugs 26 Inactive Pg ween’ nerable to attack, And the jsame! — explosive Ree or Habel 34 Tardy | J excuse holds for gitls: who| hide | 65 More mature 7 Cravat 31 Italian river 57 High pries : : f |_|) 68 Bhort their thoughts and feelings ehind °° jane “pb. ° Brat inset 33 Foadies ‘4 33 Summer (r.) a barrage of double talk. ‘ ° ' A girl will dish it out because) | | she’s afraid honesty will ST APP’S tl him away. She'll say things she 17 ‘ childfen S fashion centre... doesn't really mean because they're what she wants him to believe. Or Z because they're what she think | he thinks oe ought to elieve. | She's seared to disagree with) him — or point -out the differ- ences in their opinion, It's peace at any price — just ‘so she doesn’t lose him, Maybe she's trying on an act she read about in a story. That ‘Answer to Previews Pussle : | vm engine, | 1 velour velvet BAlsie] [tT] Ise] [ele Detachable eiais jel fAlol@in} fojoje " AINITIE AT elmisl_fsltin cape with regal clolelRisVAAicluin| itle broider St tA INT pearl embroidery PAIR Eo ielepaetr ior jor Whi e Fur Elvie|Nl@|RPAPlAiRlolciel | Trim. Rely |slelaolrlelNielx| Ti/R]! {P} jololripyzslolo) Staley jul ete Colors:| Red, ojeit OINISEZAINIv le ‘ Nlelof |slelel™|c|lels|r Royal, Emerald, TIAIN] [SlA[clerlelelsio}| | Plum. . olFis} felelsit) [slrlelw 295 Fall Fashions in - al {4 | s izes 2-4 including bonnet, slacks, oF muff. TAPP'S § Park free in the merchants’ big lot across from our store % | | | ! | | | CENTRE pe "93 W, Huron, St Dish Uses. ~~ oe cauliflower in cold was CHIL REN'S PASHION \ 4 | a 2p teat, i= ee a ee | f a | | | | THE ‘PONTIAC, PRESS, “THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 17,1953 There are more than 3200| fasteners, including nuts, bolts, screws , rivets, efc. in I typical p passenger automobil : smi cesnteen die Duin eon > ij | STOP MASON RY DEMONSTRATION | - Conducted by ¢ | ae Factory Representative on) [| Fri.-Sat., § 4 North Saginaw St. ROS. pt 17-18 FE 2-4242) | week for the price of a carton of }} cigarettes! ‘perity pie is the basic reason why ‘By FRED SPARKS (NEA Correspondent) CAIRO — Imagine working all That’s the payoff for millions in the Arab Middle East,. many of them citizens of this newest of the world’s republics. Their razor- thin slice of the world’s pros, any political big mouth who'll ‘|All Is Not Golden Barges Along the Nile’s Banks vived Middle East shake the) itrad- er: If each shoeless citizen could buy one pair all our shoe factories would work overtime and) Christmas bonuses. The Iffifis slep on. pressed stalks and Mom cooks on a sene lamp every other day, being that costly for their wallet. The give corn kero- fuel thin menu lists unleayened Pre eee bread, raw onions and beans. Meat is a vaguely recalled dream. The water buffalo contributes milk and cheese. The dreary diet, plus 4the fly-borne germs, is |why no Iffifi expects to celebrate a 50th birthday. . Introduce | Iffifi. to aver: age American home and /he’d be: as confused as his water buf- falo. He couldn’t flip the light switch or open the refrigerator and thé mad movements on the TV screen would sive) him the shakes. would give you the shakes — his own primitive existence, the every- day sight of other fellahs like himself, harnessed to sailing ships they pull along the desert canals, Every few weeks he goes to town for the luxury of a thimble of Turkish coffee. There he hears Mohamed Naguib, Egypt's strong man, whose promises of plenty are blocked by the simple truth of too many people for too little! good earth. Unable to read a paper, Iffifi can’t tell you what the U.S. is, where or why. boy “TWENTY-NINE | Picture Tube Too Small?’ Too Weak? OES YOUR TV NEED REPAIRS? TRADE IT IN! GET A NEW WV! \WE HAVE ALL FAMOUS MAKES | _No Cash Needed! Terms Available! HAMPTON T-V 286 State St. — Open Every Nite — Phone FE 4-2525 But he is used to sights that promise three squares can: send a mob on a House-burning, throat- cutting spree. As you read about U. §. con- cern for the Suez Canal, the des- ert oil fields and Middle East Defense, you should know some- thing of the area’s citizens, for people are politics. To meet an average Egyptian I motored 25 miles from Cairo along the River Nile. For 6,000 years before the first el ic blanket this river has. watered the only substantial Egyptian soil. (From the air the Nile Valley looks like a green ribbon of tooth- paste on an endless sand-white carpet.) Near the river we stop by | the half-acre farm of Abdullah Iffifi, one of 14 million Egynpti farmers who scratch for the skin- niest life. We see a water buf- falo cow with a blindfold over her eyes walking in an endless circle threshing grain with an) an- cient wooden wheel contraption. | Iffifi’s smallest son, naked as a picked chicken, straddles the beast, the family’s most prec- ious property. I’m told the ani- mal is blacked out becaase if she sees she’s getting no place after days of endless plodding she’ll go stir crasy | Irrigation ditches fork from| the Nile like veins; one cuts through Iffifi’s lot. Two of his daughters (who'll never use \lipstick) pump ditch ,water for the wheat field using two tightly woven baskets fixed on.a pole. It’s a 14-hour- daily drudge that would exhaust Charles Atlas. Iffifi’s one room house, large as 15 sedans tightly parked, is made of dried Nile mud with a doorless break for air and entrance. | Be- sides the family there are hun- dreds of flies buzzing collectively like a B-29 and sticking to your Iffifi expects to celebrate a 50th face until slapped dead. Some personal odds and ends. are pitched ‘in a corner but there’s not a stick of: furniture. ‘The family’s clothing conists of _ white. cloth, and some pepper- .mint striped pajama outfits. * The market possibilities of a re- 24 N. Saginaw St. “TRADE-IN ‘ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD ELECTRIC nt REGAR MAKE OR Sk APE ESS -“Michigan’s Largest Jewelers” S JEW ELERS—OPTICIANS - Pontiac State Bank Bidg. OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 9'R. M. | | FIND OUT FOR YOURSELF _ Take the new Shave- master home. If, within ten days, you don’t agree you have had the smoothest, closest, Se | | | i i | Only Sunbeam Shavemaster has | the bigger, single, SMOOTH | head that shaves closer and faster | than any other method, wet or | dry. Only Sunbeam Shavemaster | has the powerful, 16-bar arma- | ture REAL motor—a masterpiece’ of precision engineering. ¢ 27. 50 fastest shave you have Shavemaster to us and your money will be refunded. 1 r known, return the oO meer = eo eee ee ae Pe ara? eet wae Sey, », a) oe ». Soe" wey Corduroy Slacks 5.90 Pleated. Sizes 29-36. Boys’ Sizes ....,...4.98 .3.49 Jr. Boys’ PROVE IT YOURSELF! PINWALE CORDUROY SHIRTS Look! Fine shirts of husky, colorful corduroy at | | | thrifty-for-Fall Penney prices! They’ re styled | with new spread collars, rayo -two-button adjustable cuffs. Penney’s has them in | royal, rust, teal, maroon, kelly, gold, scarlet and IL toast. Hers) sizes 2.98 MEN’S CORDUROY SPORT COATS 9.90 finely tailored of wale corduroy .. Penney’s has the shade at Penney’s Fine quality cotton Handsome. sport, coats, - They’re styled with rear vents, full rayon linings, leather covered buttons! | Choose your favorite | | | = | nine handsome colors! | | | | Boys’ Sizes 8.75 "Se, Boys’ Sizes 5.90 98 q e n stain yoke linings, & pin- - and m in ALL WA now! £ in colors t as luscious Tangy Fall Fashion - ; NEW FASHION COLORS! H-FAST* COLORS! Penney’s Pinwale CORDUROY | Fashion’ sto ) priority pal for fall | t will literally make your mouth water! Be sure you buy your. corduroy at Penney’s though, and regal be sure, even after ma- | chine washing, the colors’ jwill stay — when they were new! 16 rib quality in silky-soft durable pile~ideal for separates, sportswear, robes or ome decorating. if | | | } | | iF || Neatly tailored, i if ll zipper, ~ slash pockets and snug fit elastic -waist inserts, plaid lining. Perfect . for now to late Fall in red, dark, green, royal. Sizes| 7 to 14. J ACKET STUNNER 7 30 Here’s a real beauty In Penney’s| classic casual . fashion line- up! In fine pinwale corduroy, this stunner has all-around pleated bottom, ‘superb- ly smart convertible col-. lar, pleated sleeve with button cuff. Red, dark - green, runt, golds 1948: | | | 2 a ere See ee | “ ¢ : } 3 wader WB ial aime pas a ge gai ig AN yt a secant ane VaammReESAnaINN fH ee ee q } | THE PONTTAC PRESS, _vengpay. SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 = ge 2- nes SDE mone ae | HANDS ‘PROTECT YOu You an our phari be sure adherenc! doctor's R | gend you experience, thei hi ompounding. | You ca of their conscientious —to the letter of your skill to ¢ ch | oy here | | | | | | preserietion) FE De confident when r prescriptions here # r macists devpte; all their oat trained DONAN’S: Quality Counts Shah Turns Down |Coronation Ritual : TEHRAN (®—Sah ‘Mo med Reza Pahlevi says this is no time for the gala coronation ceremonies: many Iranian merchants and bus-| . inessmen have been urging upon him, , | A royal statement last night explained that a. celebration was not suitable ‘‘when the majority of the people are deep jin poverty and despair.’’ He promised, how- ever, that. a coronation will be held oh some future Aug. 19, an- niversary of the nine-hour uprising a month ago which swept ex-Pre- | mier Mohammed Mossadegh out of | power and brought the seer back ee - a The Shah has held the | ‘throne since 1943. but has - never been, formally,’ crowned. ‘LENDS HAND TO OLD ART—Renne Minn | | from a brief exile, shows the oldest French lacemaker, 90-year Detmonte that she’s not too young to les youngest and oldest of; France’s lacemak some of the country’ s lovliest prods , 6, of Bailleul, France, d Mrs. Octave Suffys- arn a beautiful art. prs are currently making “The , Veteran Policeman Bies GRAND HAVEN w_Ewnit HE Klumpel, who became 4 police of- ficer here when there were only a dozen autos, and speeders,could be caught on foot, will retire Oct. |. 1, at the age of 64. He has béen a member of the force ia 36 y' ears, ‘ % n| Neighbor Stole Electricity From Doctor's Office WICHITA. Kan. UPp—A doctor charged today that he |made an incorrect diagnosis because his neighbor had wired his air condi- tioner to a line supplying current 2-01 The mule deer is so called be- | | | | i ‘North Saginaw St. = _ | to an X-ray machine. cause its ears resemble those of a Dr. Emmett Rouse said he had mule. — i treated. | looking Tay mac only ainent was stomach. a patient fort | toons after at prints mate of his X- | hine. He said| he patient's gas on the According to a complaint signed by Dr. incorrect because his Hester, tioners had hooked! his air condi- Rouse, his. diagnosis was Ge Al onto a line supplying 220- volt current to the X-ray machine . Hestey was charged with the theft of | electricity. WE GIVE H RED TRAD STAMES 148 North. Saginaw Near Sears Ww. Heron Telegraph OP eee, a 4 | 3 HAVE YOUR NEXT : cs ‘f SS _ ' “ Nebuli onal yy money- ba 74 directly into the affected ed ar ug tell you about the Welcome ‘Felief thousands of © with AsthmaNefri had failed. Giant 5-Ib. Box EPSOM SALTS Regularly 37c | 1 7: : , ! | a You Can Safely REDUCE. I with AYDS | _ 35-Day Supply | 298 a 8-0. Bottle PEPTO- BISMOL Stomach Remedy 98 OIL ae Therapeutic $6.50 Value Pd Try inhalation therapy iwithll the _ ASTHMANEFRINe and Solution *A’® 1 back guarant easy to us¢—just inhale the mist-like DIS 100 COD LIVER =a FORMULA TAMINS $549 LDEN’S. NG. “1 6 OrcHard | | Lake at Green Have you really - tried everything» tor ~ ASTHMA? , 35¢ RU ALCO Full Pi 2 Wa ie | \ | (Only 6c a Day)- Isopropyl BING Reg. 20¢ Carton BOOK MATCHES 50 B looks in All 13: ‘Kitchen WAX PAI 27¢ 12 4 | 100 | -RYBUTOL | GELUCAPS $595 Free of Extra Cost i (25 ie ae J ts | meni belie + Charm’ ED ER 5-ft, Roll UNITS ND DRUG] QB 9\ 00's = STORES Une srr Yos Toa ee PRESCR Vit tamins wien OVER D2 NEW OUTLOOK FOR OLDER MEN AND WOMEN 100 Capsules © GI FILLED BY US QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE PTION Why Join the Men anc Suffer? Women Who Know Relief ief and Comfort! RUPTURE-E EASER pon U.S. Pat. O€. 2 ou owe it.to yourselves... ¢ 4 with this NEW VITAMIN CAPSULE _ GERETS || Don't suffer from lack of pep, jittery nerves, | Heil cit digestive upkets and loss of ap- etite Over 400,000 Grateful Users! Designed to aid Noture r@lieve affliction of hernia in most etfective w with gentle support.| Strong, '-torm fitting, washoble—with soft flat igroin ‘pad. Ne steel or leather in front, . bock lacing. oround of nd state nd lewest ert or Moll Orders these’symptoms are due to lack f essential |vitamins and iron known to be || Necessary in| human nutrition! 7 may find is NEW vitamin. capsule . . ERETS . || helpful in promoting a HEALTHIER, HAP- _PIER advancing age. | ¥ NT SAL Piss Strength accharin } Tablets 65c Dr. Miles ALKA- SELTZER Bottle of 1,000 For Upset Tummy , J 2-oz. Sterilized | ¢ PURE COTTON Regularly 33¢ $1 Giant Bottle HALO. SHAMPOO Glorifies Hair! 54° | 89 ‘250 “BREWERS | 500 IODINE RATION TABLETS 19° | 1° | 59 | “Serute Can PINT MIN ERAT perutan ff BEEF, IR | Granules WINE CAPSULES “Si arly $3.25 $5 VALUE 199 | 7 | °379 | | ) rr0 ) 100 COMBEX HI-POTENCY | MULTIPLE VITAMINS. *T 98 CAPSULES $432 VITAMIN E VITAMIN 100 mg 7 om 25,000 UNITS | | 49 W J A pon, like @ baby, mest be “Borped” before It ean be filled fell. Evershorp's VENTURA, with Air Jot Exhews?, does just that = automatically. Holds up te @% mere|ink. tt | . | | Leads oil other | At All | ns in ayting smartness and performance. _ THRIFTY DRUG - SHAVEMASTER Only Sisnbeata has single smooth head th closer, any other method, || | BIGGER | Single { Head | for | Closer, ‘ : Cleaner Shaves’ $ 27.5 ti e bigger, t shaves tleaner Sore faster than wet or dry, ‘$ smart popular electric shaver. | | | ran 5 YEAR FREE , ERVICE GUARANTE 10 DAY YEAST HOME TRIAL TABLE : ! _|By-Passed by a ._| Sities of civil war and the d {of international conflict brought Soldiering Not Any Chinese | TAIPEH, Formosa @—All g vating college students on Formosa now must take military traini gZ— and thereby hangs a story of a great reversal in old China tradi- tion. | An experiment born of the! ibe ger the change in this island bastion of Chiang Kai-shek’s Chinese Nae tionalists. * * turies they had considered selves too precious to bear But under the present order her re, no able-bodied student graduating from a university or college may get his diploma unfil he has had one year of military training. Whether sons of Cabinet a ters, industrial magnates or cooks, they are equally liable. As aj re- sult, soldiering has found a new respect. It is no longer despised as something on which a sch a is and gentleman would turn | back. -* oe fm In former days on’ the China mainland, before the Nationalist government retreated to Formpsa, there was a conscription law which required military service by) all males;, but it was not rigorously enforced. Sons of influential peo- ple, especially scholars, escaped it. But not so here in Formosa. The graduate training program now is in its second year, This year 1,686 graduates | are due for military training. About one thousand of them ent-ained for military school recently and a crowd of more than 10 “thousand gathered at the railway station to see them off. Likes ‘Acting’ So Much He Wants to Drop It | | SACRAMENTO, Calif. (—Good- win J, Knight, who has been acting governor of California, 56 times, likes it so well he wants to. trop’ the ‘‘acting.” Knight, a two-term Republican lieutenant governor, formally an- nounced yesterday he is a) candi- date to succeed Republican Gov. Earl Warren, who recently said he won’t seek a fourth term. Warren's third expires in January 1955, Knight has piled up his remark- able 56 times in the governor's | 'chair while the widely travelled | Warren was out of the state. Bombing Shatters | Phystcien spice KANSAS CITY (Kansas City’s “seventh !mysterious bomb in the last: three. weeks exploded in a suite of physicians’ offices on the 11th fl of the downtown Bryant Building | yesterday. Two women on the street below were cut by falling window glass. | The six previous Masts aemeged business | firms. Police | have found ag _clues to the nature of the bombs or the bomber’s ‘identity. Most baffling is the lack of pieces of the bomb casings, fuses or detonators, There has been only . the smell of black powder. Two : other blasts ceed in rural Jackson County about five miles east of | Independence. Ho ever, officers found evidence of dynamite in those cases.. A school and a school bus were damaged. One-third of the cigarettes made in the United States come from three North apotina cities. é Now at ENGGASS! i IT's WATCH INSPECTION TIME (September 10 to 19), | | | Your watch serves you best | y when you have it expertly serviced | | A simple checkup now may save you time and mopey later on. Let | our | expert Service Department inept your watch this week. | | Balance Wheel travels 4,000 mile yearly, Jeweled-lever ticks 432,000 si daily. | | Escape wh | fame turns nearly, 600 : cy ig aeuain | ES . Creeps &' otta C. ra ble Creeps never have fling at fun ’cause a creep is definitély and decidedly a le collie! So, if you want an exotic Edgar to get excited over rite | must never, ever be a creep! Just hop into Maling' s flats (really gone) qnd ee ne and happy! is | 50) NORTH SAGINAW STREET | ; | | Open Fedex Evenings — A— Black, Brown or Navy su ) or Black or Red smooth B— Black sede, or Black | C— Block, Brown or Novy suede with contrasting frm. en, Busy Life led by Envoy luce Many Are Afraid That Ambassador Is Taxing Energy ‘Too Much | | | ROME (INS) — In only a/|few months, Clare Boothe Lucuce, America's ambassador to Italy| has] }7 charmed nearly everyone with her energy and ability, but intimate. collaborators fear that her haath may not hold out. Sleeping an averagé of only | fe] hours a day, Ambassador Luce, say'| Italian government officials, | has | “tasked more questions and lop! d| into more! corners of the Ttplian scene than any predecessor.’| | This eagertiess to learn, her ek: change or formal protocal ee | with the other diplomats in Rome and the jtrips in southern and | northern Italy have greatly taxed Is her‘ stre ngth, But all attempts to get her to! slow down have been useless, \j Italian reaction to this first |fem- inife envdy has been blossoming favorably and the press has /been largely devoid of criticism, | On the eve of the recent Italian) elections, Mrs; Luce made her only/| “intervention” in the Italian politi, cal arena. She spoke in Milan warninf that American aid: to Italy would |have to be reviewed if this country should capitulate to a dictatorship of the left... or right. | The Communists kept mum. But the monarchists and |neo- Fascists unleashed the only at- tack leveled, at her since | her arrival, The confused situation afising from. the narrow majority of the canter parties in the Italian Parlia- ment will undoubtedly add addi- tional burdens to the many thé U. S. ambassadors to Italy would ordinarily have to shoulder. And Italians and Americans aliké are wondering how long a woman can continue working so much and resting as little as Ambassador Luce has been doing and apparent: ly intends to continue doing. |: She, herself, says nothing. If one asks, she merely smileg. Capt. Samuel Morey invented the first internal combustion é¢nginé in Orford, N. H., in 1826. He was given a-patent April 1 that) year “on a gas, or vapor, engine.” The engine. had two cylinders, 180-degree cranks, poppet valves, carburetor, electric ‘spark ant wa- ter cooling device. |during''a demonstration at thd an- inual International Autumn Fajr in dkiving at night or in ent .FIRE RESISTANT—Flamejand- water-resistant coveralls, idea} for, workers in high-heat or wet gccu- pations, Stand up under extreme temperatures of a welding) torch Frankfurt, Germany. ‘Sun Squinters’ Given Proper Eye Care Advice BUFFALO, N. Y. (UP): -tErie county health commigsioner | Ber- wyn F. Mattison warned, |‘‘sun squinters’”’ to wear sunglasses} dur- ing bright days. However, he of fered the fotlowing warnings to sun bathers. | 11, Never look directly into the sun, even though you are) wear- ing sunglasses. 12. If you wear prescription flass- es, regularly, you should hav¢ spe- cially ground sunglasses. 3, Never wear sunglasses: when twi- light. Sidi WANT A GOOD USEE [EEAMERATS Lowest Pagetar: amous Makes | 739 ‘Good Housekeeping S op 51 West Huron Street PRICES GO UP MONDAY! NATIONAL OVER-PRODUCTION ‘SALE 909% IN WALNYT, olla... + FORA free HOME DEMONSTRATION FE deral 4-1515 AS Et Pike St. WE MUST REDUCE OUR Iy- VENTORY 20,000 SETS ON ALL: MODELS, STARTIN{ NOW!! THESE ARE BRAND. NEW, FACTORY-FRESH | RECEIVERS!! | | ALL PRICES LISTED ARE CASH. TERMS AVAILABLE] INCLUDES | 1 YR. WARRANTY ON PICTURE et | sooar WARRANTY ON att ren (Optionol} . $40.00 ALL PRICES PLUS FEDERAL EXctse Tax TRADE-INS ACCEPTED “OUR FACTORY REPRESENTATIVES USE 21° TABLE MODEL ¢ DEMONSTRATORS | | Will Now Baptize Him Christianity when he was 16, The elder Shimada, a retired grammar school teacher, didn't like it. . “When I was 21 and decided to become a minister, he asked me to leave,’ the son said. ‘‘That was long ago, and he feels; duferenuy about it now.’ | | Jap’s Disowned Son SPOKANE, Wash. (PB — A 72- year-old Japanese who disowned his son for becoming a Christian many years ago came here to be baptized by the son, now a ‘Meth- odist: minister. The Ruggles Mine de Grafton, The Rev, Shigeo Shimads said]. i. first operated in 1803, was | breaker that is capable of| PLATTSMOUTH, Neb, (UP) oc his father, Tatsutaro Shimada, the first ees eine in the United | Shutting off in ‘one-twentieth | A resident of the Nebraska Masoni ASPH ALT P AVING rH 1] . ;{0f a second: more electrical : 8. Bianied to stay bere /alout (oun States. The mine still operates but | months, “I'll teach him about, the energy than any other break| in 1882 that he baked bikcuits "2010 Dixie. Hwy. FE 2-2227 work of Christianity, then he'll be| now produces feldspar. Uranium | jn yse at! present in the world. | ‘‘just like mother used to make"’ |’ oe . baptized,” he said. The 80+ton guard will begin | for a fun-loving cowhand trom the was identified at the rpine a half - The son, said he was converted t century ago. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 17.1953 | | Giant Guard Will Work for Ohio Power Plant BEVERLY, : biggest guard in the electrical business work for at its Muskingum River plant. The guard is a giant circuit this fall “‘THIRTY-ONE 330,000-volt power transmission system whenever short circuits occur: It will act as a giant fuse, like the ones in your ome electrical system. Hh Ohio (AP)—The LACK TOP © DRIVEWAYS © PARKING AREAS FREE ESTIMATES—EASY | TERMS is getting to go to a a . the Ohio Ppwer Co.|T. R. Knew His Biscuits, Says Proud Cook, 88) Home for the Aged recalls the day G :W: to protect the plant’s ' East. ~~ = our store. ARCHIE , BARNETT Archie. Says: SHOP HERE FIRST! We've proved you make more customers with low prices and small profits than with high prices and long profits. That’s why we're called ‘“THE CLOTHING-VALUE KINGS OF PONTIAC.” Your friends will tell you to shap here firstif you want to save money. woccccccccccecceceseccscccusccveceeneneeeeee, See tlow You Save!} NEW FALL SLACKS Piles and Piles of All the New Fabrics $6* 5B $Q* You’ve Never Seen These Priced So Low! The mew nubby tweeds, gabardines and Bedford cords that are so smart. Many with belts to match. Take your choice—they’re all great buys! Sizes 28 to 50. Here’s More Proof How You Save : at / Barnett's 3 i j oe 4 lyou save here! SENSATIONAL IS THE WORD =| — ARE Our 250-store buying syndicate again brings you tremendous savings on new fall clothing! We emphasize—only our 250-store buying power cou ld get you such great values! and every day—you always save at Barnett’s. | Compacts) mre how you save! eee DAIIIIIIIITIT ITT TTI t ty) 0000050000000 000000000000080088880 04 Loeccesceccccccncccccccccccccccooobooers AN EXCITING COAT VALUE! The Coat With ae the Features Men Like! LUXURIOUS QUILTED ‘ZIP-LINED — Q and ag ackets Sizes 34 TOPCOATS 2 in ali eolots woe 87 I heavy ‘water re- ‘10 We Could Sell These For $42. 50. 4 Bellen’ saparaine OUR PRICE. Warm ceca} Here's another terrific value | 97 | JACKETS § Bis that you'll wear anywhere | | Scarlet, royal 87 eee © ae you go, in any weather — | blue, wine and $ | hat Fall, Winter, Spring. Com- | and black. You'll 1° : pare—you'll see how much like these. ; { ry a THE SAVINGS --- ON THESE } | | | Friday, Saturday | That's why so many men buyge all their clothes at CO GANAT Ha rd Finish, Year-Round Weight -PAN SU All Model 5~ All. Sizes! W eC ould Sell Them for $60 Our Low Price — ‘il 9 P. M. Saturday "til 9:30 Well panered suits with snug fit- ting collars. Nationally advertised brics that will give longwear and Hold their, shape. Be sure to see these! | | } M SEE HOW YOU SAVE! All Wool Reversible Men‘s Campus COATS ©0000 SOOO OOOOHHHOHHHOHHHOHHEHSOCE , | | | We must repeat! Only our 250-store buying y power could possibly brhig you such Sv Ings as these! It pau pay you well to be here early Friday or Saturday! | i | | | | AMZ DS OF MEN'S STORE 19 N. SAGINAW _ THIRTY-TWO BASE: FOR BRACES + Wright Patterson Air Force Base in, Ohio, is where M-Sgt. Herbert Nord-| strom builds braces like this, Air Force Men | Help Vets Walk 2 at Wright- Patterson’ Base Build Braces for Cripples WRI G H T- PATTERSON ATR, FORCE BASE, Ohio (NEA) | The Air Farce has two sergeants, on the run, here so that others’ may walk.) For out of this Air ss base come braces of all sorts, shapes,} varieties and. sizes to| help the nation’s crippled and paralyzed re: turn to ia useful life. The . highly specialized job is done by twa men — M- -Sgt. Herbert, C. Nordstrom and his assistant,: S-Sgt. Warren A. Shaw.| In the 18 months sin¢e their shop opened, | they have turned out 500 pieces of apparatus, | : . Most braces are made for Am- erican servicemen and |veterans.” But many have been) sent to _ their dependents. — P \ Nordstrom and Shaw have mare od on splints and supports for a 10-day-old baby and a 74-year-old grandmother. | Although some braces can be made in half an hour, the two specialists spent 214 weeks making, ” a complex bedy-length job of steel, leather and cloth that} will re- store motion to a man left help- less from the neck dawn by a polio attack. | | Nordstrom has been) credited | with designing and building a> unique brace used inj treating palsy of the hand. It straightens | out the hand while allowing- for | the exercise that eventual cure. He is a veteran of Ba years’ service as an Army and Air Force medic. Nine of those years he spent in orthopedic ‘work. In January, 1952, he opened the Wright-Patterson brace shop. The only other Air Force shop of its kind is located in Texas’ Lackland Air| Force Base. Nordstrom’s skill has been used ‘by the Army, too. In 1946 he was sent to'the Philippines to train natives in the manufacture pt arti- ficial limbs. No one has yet built hole for, this man, who a pigean! needs for his job an understanding of anato- |’ my, welding; and sheét-r netal work | while; he doubles as a pattern- maker and a seamstress. | Scnbole hes the SMOOTH heed thet shoves clespe! aw ond faster than ony other method, dry. Amerita's most pope! lectri 5 YEAR FREE ° - SERVICE GUA ANTEE $500 TRADE-IN ON YOUR OLD ELECTRIC’ SHAVER, REGARDLESS OF MAKE OR SHAPE | 7 laa CLOONAN'S “Where (Quality | Counts” | 72Z| ‘North Saginaw St. FE 2- 0160 | || streams, the clean-living ou; '|not tolerate pollution, says the Na- : | tional Geographic Society. | wings) brake its fall. it the swiftest. water, walking ||the stream. bottom on stout web-| | less feat in search of aquatic ins sects and shellfish. Intricate, y acca ~ WASHINGTON _ High | in the ountains of the American West, |a solitary robimsized bird flies un- Ge water and walks on the |bottom foaming pools. Winter ar sum- er, it charms lonely trappprs and a anglers ‘with torrents of song. ‘This borrower of a waterfowl's | ways is the water ouzel pr dip- ||per, relative of wrens and thrush- \|es. Nesting along cold “ee el will An aquatic acrobat, the | water ouzel does not fear crashing cata- cts. It literally can fly |under ater against the current for a alf-minute or more. lf carried over rapids, its It: f strong, eds in along uatic Songbird Although sometimes frequenting ponds, the ouzel seldom strays far from streams. Its oven-shaped nest is usually found damp with spray in a rocky, streamside cranny jor | behind a waterfall. Dry inside, the nest on the outside is ‘made | of living, growing moss. Three to six pure white eggs compose the ouzle’s clutch. Two annual broods of downy young quickly learn to swim, dive and flutter in the current. Parent ou- zels keep the nest premises spic and span. The jaunty gray bird with perked-up tail is the only North American member of the dipper family, which includes a dozen or more species in Europe, Asia and South America. The name ‘‘dipper’’ probably stems from a characteristic bob- Walks, Flies Under Water These calisthenic curtsies are thought to be signals for the bird's calls are often drowned by the roar of water. | q The ouzel’s thick plumage of down and feathers, carefully preened with ‘‘waterproofing” from a large oil gland, protects it from cold and wet. Ranging from Guat- emala to n ern Alaska, this nonmigratory sings as hap- pily on an ice cake as on a sum- mery bank. It has been known to endure, 50 degree cold. A taste for the roe and fry of salmon and trout has added fish hatchery managers) to the ouzel's natural enemies. it likes secluded haunts jt is not particularly shy around’ people. Ouzels have |nested near a whir- ring saw mill] and one has been observed singing within range of flying chips from a woodcutter's ax. 1 H 1| i \| | | THE. PONTIAC » PRES s, _THURSD LY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 The ouzel’s fearlesst mean that it can do tection or can adapt modern civilization. slowly disappearing m some of | jits former haunts, where it can. ino] longer. lead its spartan, water- sprite existence in ii wilder- ss does not biaaias t pro- felt to ea ird is negs. | i Neurotic Pooch leads Rough Life in P und POC aESzEr N. Y. u—People forever calling the} City Pound and complaining a ut barking aos Wardens Herb/|Scakett and Mike Cliente calm | ithe callers with: “All dogs bark. rows they're healthy.’ But a woman stonped Cliente. . le reported that her dog was]. rotic and became |upset when he heard the barking of other dogs. i | | Women Work Longer Hours 360 Activities Each Day Make Aregee Load for Housewife | NEW YORK (UP)—Next) time hubby complains about how hard he works, suggest he take your job as homemaker for ja _ while. Chances are you work harder. If you're typical of one group. of homemakers, you work a -nine- hour day, six-day week, The nine- houf day is the average computed by the New York State College of Home Economics, Cornell .Univer- sity. . ‘The figure was reached after a |study of 250 women living on farms, doing housework |in ao or keeping house|and also hold- en report 360 activities on a week day and spend more time — an average of one hour and 36 min- utes—on food preparation than any other single job. The women, whether farm or city dwellers, like|. cooking best. -|The farm women pac eee ic! ‘| the house the city omen indicate the greatest dislike) for dish-wash- | ing. Farm women) also do more cooking, and prepare more com- plex meals, than city women. Dr. Wiegand said all types of homemakers _ average nearly as many hours for. care of clothes ; and housekeeping as for cooking. ‘Less than one hour per day goes for dishwashing, such-odd chores as paying bills or balancing check pks, | There are 70 nL non- food industrial uses ae sugar, arketing and| @ | Steel accounts for 70 to 80 { per cent of , weight of <« modern .. Diesel; locomotive units. TI} meauaue ia) | TABLETS 1 | | | i | Federal or BOX { | Top this one! Del | hox spring.’ Price own top-quality! | 's 4-Star _MATTRESS SPRING hdxe 4-star mattress or slashed on |Pre-built type con- bing and. dipping while perching. x ederal's ¥ ° S Futlawideh | | @Hydrator i | Roomy 7.4 | > | | i NO MOREY oa Freezer holds 27 Ibs. : | ©‘Chill-drawe r’ holds extra ‘ice-cubes es moist. storage space u. ft. capacity eo tad * of honey brow RODE IR oc At ne tee | 15 | | | @ Lounge Chair @Studio Couch Another F ederal exclusive! Compare this value! Blond 7 limed oak venéer arms. with brilliant background colors and hunter green in tweed,material: Sturdy spring construction guarantees long wear. Federal’s exclusive, modern 3-pe. limed oak veneer arms‘ STUDIO ENSEMBLE g | oo e Lounge Rocker LIBERAL | TRADE- IN" Your old refd- gerator is worth more at Federal’ s - OPEN FRIDAY NICHT TO9 as well a as Sat., Mon. nights BONEN NAPALI TNA PSS, NLP UONAa Mts an AGRON GIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR Super-Freezer chest holds 27 lbs. of fro | «+. chill drawer for ice cubes, frozen orange juice, etc. Hydrator provides moist storage... keeps fresh fruits and v 5 yr. warranty on Meter-Miser unit. Hey on ~ Federal’s credit ... » r PAY later! | DERAL sent. stores Full-width Super Freezer | ‘ |holds 27 Ibs. les fresher, onger! 2,05 AUTOMATIC THERMOSTAT AT NO EXTRA COST! . (Limited Time Only) | | L zen fodds i | t Comfy warmth to 5-room size & DUO-THERM OIL HEA BNO MONEY DOWN§ Here’s heat by the houseful! 53,000 BTU’s worth ... enough to heat five rooms comfortably even in the coldest weather! A real “economy model”, this Duo-Therm heater gives more heat from © for homes up > @Includes automatic thermostat on @Stand just 4412” high, compact Ss e Dual-chamber burner § gives m more heat Crown finish, smart brass trim, | SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC 4 OPEN MON. FRI., ee ee vse mages: Nt + ‘ | | | cc Ota: il * ——— ee | every drop of oil, burns cleaner, too. Buy now © PAC, cold weather strikes and save! @ ) | | { = | \ = . | y \ eS ‘ > + nr: Into tt iat. famous MAXWELL HO! 1 | coffee! This superb, roaster-fresh coffee is Actually brewed for you in the » &e_ (™ ee) famous Maxwell House kitchens. At the exact moment of perfection the »" 09 3 er cw” ds re) “You just add hot water ...and th bursting “Flavor Buds” flood your cup utterly different they are from old- flood of delicious Maxwell House | with coffee as delicious as the best’ you’ve ever brewed. One sip and you'll , style powders and grinds. Secret _— flavor. This is coffee—as perfect of true coffee flavor is locked in™ as any you've | | ! | | never go back to old ways! » | these ‘tiny hollow spheres. ever tasted! | compared to three pounds of grouy dcoffeel | | _| 4 ; le . | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 | A a & Not a powder! Not a grind! But millions of tiny "FLAVOR E SUDS ‘of real coffee... ready to burst instantly Jz SEFLAVOR! _ UTTERLY UNLIKE OLD-STYLE “INSTANTS” . . . 7 | 7 | rr _ JUST AS QUIC¢K BUT TASTES SO DIFFERENT! | I lg Lom ie | pens u | See how Flavor Buds “come to life” in your cup! Swept into top | place ‘almost overnight! Already Amer- ica’s largest-selling instant coffee! And no wonder! For this amazing coffee discovery has that wealth of deli- _ciousness—all that deep, rich coffee taste—that you’d expect from the 'Maxwell House people with their half-century of experience in making fine _water is removed —leaving the millions of miracle “Flavor Buds’”’! THE INSTANT you add hot water, SAGNIFUC VIEW of new mira- | vor Buds” burst—releasing 100% PURE COFFEE—NO FILLERS ADDED! * | | | : cle ‘“‘Flavor Buds” shows how Saves you money, tool The large economy-size jar saves up to 75¢, 100% pure coffee ,.. the only instant coffee with that | t , | | | | GOOD-TO-THE- LAST-DROP flavor! | } R ae 4 | ; || | | | ' - Ly i | | | I | | | al $ | | | | | Li | | i b ; fy i | | | | ie | | | t . { | ‘ | i] ba | ‘ ; | || t r i] it ~ ; | | | | ' | ; | | | | I, | | % | b | | oi . | rocrranernaxscrespes | t a | te ran ¢ rene eo ee ee y Firman pean pl TT Lay — Ph nt a QP TA ert hm a ne a 0 Sle lg ag ; ro THIRTY-FOUR j 1 | THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 Seasonings Flavor Beef Beef stew slowly simmered over _ an open campfire has a flavor all its’ own. Seasoning salts make. it easy to fix., For 3 pounds of beef add 34 tdaspoon each of onlion and celery salt and 4 teaspoon garlic salt, Slip in a bay leaf if you have it.The longer it simmers the better) it'll taste. LIMSTANT PUYUODING —Mrs. 4. David Covell Rochester JUST MX WITH wot LS, Ni ‘Individual Salmon Dishes ce for. Two Here's a tasty casserole item that’s just the right size for that luncheon for two, Individual Sal- mon Casseroles are easy to make, yet are most attractive with their | Muffin Ring toppings. First combine 1 cup salmon (1 8-ounce can), 1 cup cooked toma- toes; % cup cubed American cheese, % teaspoon salt, and 1 ‘tablespoon lemon juice in order given. Mix well. Put half of mixture into each of 2 individual casseroles. Top with, muffin rings, To make these; sift together 1 cup sifted enriched flour, 1 teaspoons baking banter aud 4 teaspoon salt. Beat 1 egg and add 1+3 cup milk and:1 tablespoon melted shorten- ing.| Pour milk mixture into flour mixture, stirring only enough to moisten flour. Drop batter by spoonfuls on top (of salmon filling, making a ring! around edge of each: casse- role) If any batter remains, bake it in small, greased muffin pans. Bake in 400 degrees F. oven about 20 minutes, Makes 2 indiv- idual casseroles and 2 to 4 small muffins. | | Spaghsti Is the Answer Macaroni products | are excellent to keep in mind for group feeding —especially if you haye to keep a\ latch on purse strings. For a spaghetti supper for 50 people for example, you would need to allow about six or seven pounds of spa- ghetti. Or, if the meeting is pre- dominantly men who have hearty appetites, better allow about 10 pounds of spaghetti. Breads Can Be Luncheon Extra | Breads, flavored with fruit or jelly, are rich, tasty and versatile! They make popular adjuncts to uncheon or .dinner. menus; are considered a necessity when plan- hing tea or party sandwiches; and are perfect toasted and served with butter for breakfast. Apple Butter Bran Bread 1 cup ready-to-eat. bran : 1% cups apple butter 1 teaspoon lemon juice Y% cup shortening - Pit sugar 1% Toape sifted flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 44 teaspoon soda % teaspoon salt 1 cup seedless ‘raisins Combine bran, apple butter and lemon juice; let stand until most f moisture is taken up. Blefd lhortening and sugar thoroughly; add egg and beat well. Stir in ran mixture. Sift together flour, baking powder, ‘soda and salt. | Add together with raisins to hortening mixture, stirring only until) combined. Spread in greased 914x4\j-inch loaf pan. Bake in 325 oven about 14% hours, Makes one loaf. World’s Biggest Omelet SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UP): — Poultry specialists on the Davis campus of the University of Cali- fornia are busy testing the world’s biggest ‘“‘omelet’® — 17,000 broken ggs. The-eggs come from 50 Cali- fornia breeding flofks and are roken and tested in a project to e if a whole flock of chickens can lay Grade AA eggs. The ‘‘ome- let’’ may contain the secret of what’s involved in setting up a breeding project for egg sone Breakfast Muffins No Trick at. Nippy Weather Will Call for Hearty Roasts As the days get nippier, you'll be welcoming such stick-to-the- ribs main dishes as hearty beef roasts: served with oven-browned or baked potatoes. You'll welcome, too, the fact that many beef cuts continue to sell at attractive prices. Here’s a quick round-up of beef _. | roasting Pointers: You can roast rib, rolled rib or top quality rump roasts. | . (Remember that lower quality rump roasts should be cooked with added liquid—pot roasted.) Here’s how to roast to perfection | the beef roast of your choice: _ Sprinkle meat with, salt and pep- per and place rolled,rib or rump roasts, fat side up, on.a raek in a shallow roasting pan. (Rib roast needs no rack.) Do not add water, do hot ‘cover and do not baste while ‘roasting. Roast in a 325 degrees F. oven to the desired degree of doneness. If you are’ using a meat ther- mometer, insert it into the center of the thickest muscle so that it does not rest on bone or fat. When the thermometer regis- ters 140 degrees F., the meat is rare; at 160 degrees F., it is medium; at 170 actrees F., well-done. Roast standing rib roast 22 to 26 minutes per pound for rar®, 26 to 30 minutes per pound for medium and 33 to 35 minutes per pound for well-done. For rolled roasts, add 5 to 10 minutes per pout. it is | ‘Get Out Supplies Evening Before If you meagure out your dry in- gredients the| night before, putting a batch of muffins in the oven before bre t is no trick at all. Light the oven as soon as you get up and the muffins will) be temp- ting and © ant by the time the family sits dawn to eat. You may | substitute uncooked rolled wheat |cereal for the rolled = oats if you like. | Oa 1 ¢up rolled 1-¢up sour - 1 ege ‘s cup brown sugar % jcup melt Muffins oats, uncooked ik 1 cup sifted all-purpose flour 49 [teaspoon ‘ 1 teaspoon king powder 1g teaspoon soda Combine rolled oats and sour milk; add egg and beat well. Add sugar and mix. Add cooled fat. Sift | together! ‘ae salt, baking powder and pada rolled oped mixture, stirring only enough to dampen flour. Fill well-greased | muffin pans two- thirds full. Bake.in hot oven at 400 about 15 to 20 minutes, i | Beoutify Baked Potatoes To make baked potatoes look attractive make a crosswise gash in the top of each when you take them from the oven, then squeeze the potatoes on each side so the pulp will fluff up. Garnish tops with sprigs of parsley. 5 o- ye a in a matter of m made with fi #,, you whip up cakes with velvety, homemade texture. These new mixes are cake-makings, including flour . illed the famous Swans Down way. q In National Home-Baking Tests WIEN ON HOME MAOE << MOWSTNESS <> ww ‘ fi You ‘ Make ’em Sure Make ’em Easy and USE THE MIXES WITH rd of Gold THE HOMEMADE TOUCH! eake that stays as eating-fresh as cake made the old-fashioned way . . . stays as fresh even after 3\days—if there’s a crumb left! On: size alone, housewives gaye our Our + New Racipe ‘Swans Down Mixes an over-all preference vote of |2to-1 over other Meeting gaia! Just add water Swans Down Mix | iH { 1 } \ ’ and your own fresh eggs. Our w tev-Renpe Swans Down Mixes. ‘protect ne freshness of their ingre< LOCKED-IN FRESHNESS, plus your own fresh sure you luscious cakes with teal homertiade flavor. dients. Yes! Our excliz in- N |. Mix bread cubes, milk and egg. “Dissolve ; bouillon cube in hot .}of coconut alongside for dunking. , | ro > fi eS ie, | \ - ‘ “Seer OATMEAL MUFFINS — Make, sure the family is eager for breakfast by serving occasional hot breads like these Oatrneal Muffins, Made with uncocke’ Try them the rolled oats, they are a delicous early morning trea’ next ‘time you have an milk on han¢ — eee eee | alt al Two Cups Chicken | Serves Up to Eight Put the chicken Tight in ‘the ring mold and fill the center with creamed mushrooms. With only 2 cups of cooked chicken you can serve eight people. Chicken Ring 144 quarts ‘soft, bread cubes | 1 cup milk ! | l egg, beaten ! 1 bouillon cube! | ' 1 cup hot water i 144 teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon sage | 14 teaspoon peppe 2 cups chopped cooked chicken! Ky (cup Soreet neoeted salted haegpaghae finely chopped | Seen 3 fabioreocns pepper water. Add to bread mixture along with remaining ingrediants. Pour into gerased 142 quart ring mold and baké 35 minutes in 350 oven. Let stand 5 to 7 minutes. Unmold and serve with mushroom sauce. Makes 8 servings. : Dip Pineapple Chunks |For an interesting and flavorful | ; addition to a refreshment’ tray, serve pineapple chunks-on-picks in a bed of mint or parsley, with a bowl of yellow cheese and a bowl Light and good for evening re- sgt with mentwiches and , fall canning. Peaches, pears, plums She believed children learn best Oh! That Delicious jelly Made of Concord Grapes BY JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor | With school well under way | and summer vacations only a mem- ory, we can settle down to our tomatoes, apples and grapes are still on the abundant list. « It is grapes with which we are concerned today. One of your editor’s fondest food memories dates back to kinder- garten days. Our teacher was years ahead of her time, we are s by doing. | One day we all descended to school basement and on a two-burner laundry stove miade grape jelly. After it had cooled, we ate it on crackers. | No grape jelly in the years since | has ever tasted so delicious. | 'Médern jelly is such a ewitt id easy process that anyone can ickle the job, Commercial pectin es all the guesswork out of jelly making and relegates it to al simple seasonal process. ‘It need not all be done at one time, for summer fruits can be bottled and used later in the year. ‘But back to the grapes! Grapes we growing wild in America when the earliest explorers landed on the shores. The Pilgrims cul- freshing t _ Maple | DAI 20 E. Howard St. ‘tivated the vineg and later in- “each quart supplies f full fl daily quota of body-. building, tooth-protecting ee D. (400 “only milk is both a nourishing food —and a Mat cones to“ i | U.S.P. units) it’s extra delici —with cream in every drop, not just on top | || | .; . | it’s so-0 easy to digest ' | | } | | | Leaf RY Ph. FE 4-2547 “| boil the parships whole, then |them up, shape them into little habitants brought new species to plant. In. the beginning, and until the middle of the 19th century, grapes were used for little but wine making. Today, grapes rank in importance among the first four fruits. © Blue-black Concord grapes make excellent jelly. If} the cook allows the juice to stand overnight, tals will never form in the jelly The econormical,homemaker ‘a the residue left#after extracting the juice from cpoked grapes | to make grape “paste” or grape but. ter, both delicious. We have found) two rather un- we should like to share with you. | The first is for a Grape Catsup | that is excellent with hot or cold game and meats, «= ‘Grape Catsup tran pase Concord grapes, washed and mm 4 brown a cube cider we. 3 ‘tablespoons powdered allspice 2 tablespoons powdered cinnamon 2 tablespoons powdered cloves = 1 teaspoon mace 34 tablespoon cayenne pepper 1 teaspoon salt : Cook slowly -until soft, about 25 minutes, Put through a colander, Combine with remaining ingre- dients and boil until thick, about 45-minutes. Stir frequently. Pour into hot_ sterilized Sere.) Makes ts pint. ; e.#| « Every bit as good as Apple tute ter is grape butter. When you serve Spiced Concord~. Grape Butter, you have a food that/ is definitely out of the ordinary. |. Spided Concord Grape Butter 3 pounts Concord grapes 3 cups sugar % cup cider vinegar ite cen powdered Mantas % teaspoon powdered cloves 7) teaspoon salt Wash | grapes, drain, press out skins, saving. skins and pulp. Cover and about ten mae utes, or until soft, stirring quently with wooden spoon, cooked jpulp through a isteve to remove seeds. | Heat vinegar, sugar, spices and t together in kettle; add skins d sieyed pulp, Cook over low heat about 20 minutes, stirring constantly, though slowly. When of jam-like consistency, pour. inta hot sterile glasses. Seal at onre. Makes 2 pints, | Way to Serve Parsnips. | Here’s a way to serve parsnips, without their woody core: First, lit them lengthwise and strip out the tough center. dip the halves a flour and fry them in fat golden brown. You can also m \cakes and fry. Bacon should dvayh | be ke lin the refrigerator. ia never freeze it! PORTS AO PE mE 42 te ADD a FLA Op = eee. us] - usual grape preserving recipes that te mene / f Dixie Highway 0 PERRY FRIENDLY ie ay FISHER’S MARKET . SUPER MARKET Bal win Av sae MAZZ ie 118 Feldwin Avenue | % LOTAN’ S DIXIE & Tere MKT. 2135) Dixie aera Edison Street | EDISON FOOD MARKET — 183-185 Edison Street . Mechanic. Street| MARKET 27 Mechanic Street Fr nklin Road | JOHN PHILLIP’S: SUPER MARKET bal frankin Road f ahery Street MARKET | | | 1220 | N. Perry Streqe Perry Street | ELLINGSEN’S FOOD MARKET 332 N. Perry Street Orchard Lake Avenue CRAWFORD'S FOOD MARKE 701 Orders Lake Avenue | COUNTY Au burn Heights 333 Auburn Avenue | | | - Auburn Heights HOLBROOK GROC. 228 Auburn Avenue bemiighant 2 12 ! So. Woodward Clarkston Y's MARKET 12 Se. Main Street | i° eego Harbor | ERBINOFF GENERAL STORE aiaz Orchard Lake Road | Lake Orion SCHICK'S 331 So. Broadway | Milford © SOUTH SIDE a) “MARKET fe aie ree) 65s Figs only oes | Union Lake | | B -MAROEN’S | R MARKET | 15 0 in Lake Road " & M Candy Coated Chocolate 25: 7 oz. Cello Bag. Seoe 25° ee i oe ef | Defiance + | Mixed Sweet . * THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 17. 1953 __ - THIRTY-FIVE #303 Can Peas.. e ba ecc . Nabisco | | | | Sugar Honey 1 Ib, Pkg. Grahams | Nabisco Swiss Cream 1034-oz. Pkg. | ¢c Sandwich / 36 | Domino XXXX Powdered Su Ib, Box gor eee Bab-O Babo Cleanse Pe cseeeee 225 Defiance Kidney Bean ea Secareepees’: Birds- tye Frozen 8-oxz. Pkg. , Downy Flake Frozen Chicken Pies sam plot 30 Tl 6-or. Pkg. , Waffles beet 19 e@eeee0ee8ee Birds-Eye Frozen F Broccoli ise we 29'\ , 10-oz. Pkg. | | Deriouse | Sse see “Mets, || | #2% Can | | ete a | oN | Flavor Kist 4- in- 1 Saltines , z :| 1 Ib. Pkg. “95° | Burnett's Pure Vanilla . wees | 2-ox. pottie! 39 i | | Odorless — | | | Renuzit ... +--+) | Gallon 198 | Hormel | | Ib. Can Sil Con Carne eee | bath Beans 33° SNO- r Pint Bottle , Quart Bottle ed ee = Me * ae ed wee ee ay ele i 5 ... 23 48) Defiance ascot Sections] No. 303 Can BOL | | | \ | | | | . c _ | : - | | Betas StS ! a ___ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 Lemon Cookies Treat for Tots For these afternoon ‘‘teaparties’’ children love so well, here is “a, ~~ finé recipe for Rolled Crisps—the kind of cookies everyone likes to find in the cookie jar all year long. : Cookies | i 2 cups fortified margating 1% cups sgar Grated peel of 1 lemon 2 eggs % cup milk 8 cups sifted a-purpote, flour 5 teaspoons baking po 2 tablespoons lemon Lies de Cream the margarine; adding | the sugar gradually and continue creaming until light and fluffy. Crunchy Spinach . Goes With Meats \y It you want your guests — aha jyour, family too — to smack their lips, serve this glamorous spinach concoction. It’ s made with spina croutons, and spaghetti sauce mushrooms, which gives disti tive @avor to a really delicio Open Sunday —9tod9 | PRICES GOOD | SEVEN DAYS! Plenty of Free L _. Parking h is as g pa with meat balls it is with|a prime roast of or with baked ham. “| Spinach| Crunch 1 cup croutons 1 package quick-frozen spinach (or ‘from a pound to « gan and a half White Lily ne p Bix fy te lemon Soe and eas, of fresh spinach, cooked,‘ drained Cc H EF S E beating until the eggs are well _ VEAL aS about a delicious Ttallan dish for din- ot tee blended, ner? This tempting combination of veal, tomatoes and mushrooms will | “1 jerge can or 2 small cans) jot 2 |b. loaf : ._|’be a change from the usual spaghetti sauce. The recipe calls for veal’| spaghett! sauce with mushrooms osdeet corctina tk 6 miei shoulder which should i it ecrpamical. Put cooked spinach in shallow milk with the creaméd margarine- casserole or baking dish. Sprinkle croutons over the spinach, and pour | : ead is ae Sa ben ion Add Antipasto, Spumoni sauce over all; Bake in 350 oven|25 chill’ in the refrigerator. minutes, or until bubbling and ‘_ i q sg thls = Deming’s | Fancy Red Sockeye light brown. | . Roll to one-fourth inch. thickness te T ] | li Di ; Bl | Mich. Graded, Guaranteed Fresh BM os tighuy toured board or pastry |LOT ypica ta lan Vinner| - = | cloth. Cut with fancy or plain} If you would like @ typical garine; cook until pnion is tender. Liver Patties Offer cutters. Sprinkle with sugar, if de-| Italian dinner, serve Veal Scalop- | Gradually add mushrooms, toma- i . sired, Bake in a 400 oven for 12| pine on spaghetti’ and add other | toes, sugar, 1 teaspoon salt and || ot : ii | ) to 15 minutes. Makes about 100 two | Italian dishes, such as antipasto browned veal. Cover and cook over Variation Fr om SU ap | : a inch cookies. | (appetizers) and spumoni (a|low heat, or until| veal is tender. i a | | | * heavenly tasting ice cream) OF|~Meanwhile, add 1 tablespoon As a variation from fried liver it : Doz. Be e tL Pp ot at oO: fresh fruit and cheese for dessert, | salt to rapidly boiling water, Grad- slices, you'll like the tenderness | , Veal Scaloppine on Spaghetti) | ually add-spaghetti so that water. and flavor of these ground liver | Burger Makes 2 lbs. boned veal shoulder, sliced thin continues to boil. ° and ‘onion patties. | | | Ni C h Be eee aear i Cook uncovered stirring occa- Liver and’ Onion Patties os | 1c ange | i teaspoon pepper _ | sionally, until tender. Drain in 1 pound beef liver | Ba nq uet Br and | € g | | fr etive parte, winced | || colander. Serve eal scaloppine | ie erackare ar | | Instead of serving separate po-| 4% cup minced onion | over cooked spaghetti. 8 OEE cand milk Fric Asse tatoes with your nap burgers, try anaihea can sliced. mushrooms, || | T tanepeon shit 4| | | : this combination pattie for a] 1 No. 2 can tomatoes 14 teaspoon pepper y il : ~ Lard | change. | tablespoon, salt , ' | | Okra Is Southern Cover liver with boiling walet | , feet: ieee Burgers dicunces epesneltl | Way to St u f f and let stand 10 minutes, Put liver, i i's pounds ground bielted unpeeled} Have meatman flatten veal for onion, and crackers through food potatoes scaloppine. Dredge veal , in’ flour Large Tomatoes chopper (fine grind). Add slightly 2 tablespoons grated | | onion | 1¥a teaspoons salt combined with 1 teaspoon salt and beaten eggs, milk, and seasonings. | : f Yq teaspoon) pepper | r. In a skillet, elt butter e Northerners; are fot so ap rop by tablespoons into a little : t : Ppeppe m We North t t| Drop by tabl t little | i ings ie can Combine all ingredients and mix | or margarine over low heat. Add to make use of fresh okra as are | hot lard, Flatten with a spatula pny | well. Shape into 6) or & patties. | yea}; saute until lightly browned. | our southern cousins. If you are| and fry each side until crisply > | Place patties on broiler rack. . Plmtve veal from skillet. Add wondering what.tp stuff tomatoes brown. 6 servings . | | : | Set regulator to| broil. Insert | garlic and onion to butter or mar- | With the next time they are on the | beoller yack and pan aoe top | ——— — | menu, try this recjpe. Serve Ham New Wal surface 'o e meat is inches | 4 | : from the heat a nehes Pl Sh be t Tomatoes Stuffed With Okra Soften ereRa cheese and mix m e eat. um er e 6 large tomatoes 1 oj ; | 1, cup cooked fresh corn, cut from cok, with a little grated horserad- When ons side ig browned (10 Ls 12 trash okra pods,| cooked and diced ~ ish; put. tablespoon of the } to 12 minutes) turn and continue Gr eat F avorite 1° 44 cup bread crumbs Duy P P -_ broiling until other |side is brown, ; |. 1 tab espoon chopped green. pepper mixture on.a very thin slice ha about 8 uths. | lq S Coateanu ercund bs \ham and roll) up. Serve | with spf Syne: Sie te out ay Summertime | *,gtpeen tround pick peorer | Ooruiaw as the main. course | It seems like-d fruitful season to Remore an ike ee om en g|4or lunch, or ai the first cpurse > repeat the popular recipe for a iro m for a buffet supper. Spruce Up Dressings colorful shérbet quickly made from | f tomatoes. Scoop out centers. Re il a base of either strained plums serve pulp. ier and drain for) or apricots. For faster freezing 10 minutes. . shill the fruit before! combining | Combine all eters includ- : of equal ts mbByonnaise and | ‘°° bedaal al of. waxed paper. This waly you rrench Pe cesing-t ee eh just 'a touch with the other three ingredients. ing tomato pulp Stuff tomatoes | won't have to wash either your | of mustard“pr horseradish for em- Plum Sherbet HL NSN rolling pin or your board! Many salads flavor-respond with An easy way to roll cookie dough a zing when'the dregsing is a blend \ gr pie pastry is between two sheets With Coupon.,. 59¢ On Page 24 phasis—or a.garlick’ rubbed salad tate, strained plums with h tapioca’ or Magee in baking dish in which | A kitchen’ scissors does a good | 4 ° bowl for that special touch ‘only | | 7 ebleepcons lemon juice as been placed|3 tablespoons of| job of cutting scallion fine) when _ [ " garlic can give. | ecg whiten: beaten until stiff - water. Cover and bake in moder-|' you want to add the green onion ii Ever thought of adding scoopers| Add lemon juice and sugar to ate oven for 25 minutes or until} to salad, a cottage cheese mix- I or ‘‘dishers’’ to your kitchen uten-| the strained plums with tapioca. tender. Serves six. ture or a soup. sils? They come in different sizes| Fold in beaten egg whites. and are convenient for filling muf-| Pour into a freezer tray ane? G Id C d B | , fin pans with muffin or cupcake | partially freeze. Remove to a O ef I uS te ananas batter. They're hanily too for dish-| chilled bowl and beat thoroughly | « | g out m potatoes. A very | until mixture is smooth but not S | Li k V b! a | small scoop is helpful in making | melted. Return to freezer tray and er vea : 1 e egeta e ; drop cookies of an even size. freeze until firm. Six servings. Steak dinners afe all the fashion,; when cooked. A slightly green- _ and with good |reason, as any/|tipped or all-yellow peel means : LOTAN’S | . en, 39¢ With Coupon | Jiffy —« FBisquit —Mix.... | 21/2 Ib. box woman knows who does her own | the less ripe banana. . . the ideal marketing. Steak/is selling at low- one for cooking. est. prices in years, In fact, in | Golden Crust Bananas | many localities steak is priced: the 1 egg, slightly beaten, or = same as Harbus 'ger just a year| 7% cup undiluted evaporated milk = | q |1% teaspoons salt 3 ago. | 4 firm bananas*' 2 What is your | favorite food t Atos aoe scuanea corn | flakes, | serve with steak? French fried po- 3 tablespoons ‘putter Por mafgarine, tatoes? Green salad? A big baked | melted —. potato? Those’ are all just fine. Mix together egg or undiluted But now comes |a delicious new evaporated milk and salt. Peel accompaniment for steak. It is bananas and cut into halves! cross- Golden Crust Bananas, a way of | ise. Dip banana halves into egg serving bananas| cooked that is | milk, then drain 2 to 3 manus: | simply delicious. ll Roll in crumbs. . Place crumbed banana halves Golden Crust) Bananas are | into greased baking dish. Sprinkle mellow halves of banana, baked | pinanas with melted butter or mar with a delicious crips crust of garine, Bake in a very hot oye crushed corn flakes, break or | (450 degrees) about 10 to 12 min- cracker crumbs. |This is the type | utes, or until bananas are tender of food that shows real imagina- | | easily pierced with fork. tion. and will do * hostess credit. Brown under broiler 2 to 3 Goden Crust Bananas go well| minutes, just before serving. Serye with almost any combination of|hot as a vegetable. Makes 4 sefv= foods... . meat,/fish or poultry. | ings. Se Serve them as 4 vegetable, and} Important: If desired, bananas ~ you will find thpir different de-| will brown in the oven if baked ° licious flavor very mtch in de-|at 450 degrees 4 minutes, then mand. For cooking, choose a less | baked at aia for remaining ripe banana that will stay firm ‘8 minutes. | mr OMADER The Sign of Quality FOR DELICIOUS FOODS That you like to eat'— it’s HOMADE — Pontiac's finest cafeteria — jench, and eC counter. * CHEF'S: SPECIAL DAILY - Fvery Wednesday and Thursday from ; 4:30-7:45, P.M. | | ROA$T [YOUNG TURKEY with Dressing, | || \ Cranberry Sauce, Potatoes, choice of 79° | Salad or Vegetable, Roll and Butter... | SIRLOIN, ROUND STEAK With Cannon Eee Cloth Lean, Meaty | | . Spare Ribs 39. Well Trimmed, Lean, Fresh Picnic Pork Roast ™ Home Rendered Lard .. 3% res Picnic Roast... .. %45¢ enna A aamietiv eaetied sithed eh cleat, aamaattd dl atid , - _ Detroit Banana Co. Golden Ripe | 2 Ibs. BANANAS 25¢ bb. Mich. No. 1 "POTATOES 50-Lb. Bag 10 COUPON See Page 24 BAKERY, DEPARTMENT : | Lg. Orange Chiffon Cakes... ea. 80c sy ; Butter Top Bread .........1f. 18¢ Lunch Stix|...:..........6/23¢. Pecan Syrup Rolls ....... .6/33¢ Cinnamon Rolls . Peal ease Chocolate Brownie: .., ,6/35¢ Peanut Butter Coo es. doz. 39¢ Date[Bread ............. If 35¢ Wenders Pon Binhdey — Party Cake t 4 cups for rental. { a . ———— ne .: ‘aD DOD SHO | ‘ 7 144,146 NORTH SAGINAW STREET The Sign of Quality NIBLET BRAND WHOLE KERNEL cont 2 tiles | xie- Telegraph Market oo DIXIE HWY. AT TELEGRAPH _ LOTS OF FREE PARKING | | | { | | [’ \ Ein tet \ | oe | | | | | : t , | G ST tl | \ : ; | It . | | | # ature mpe ¢ ed - THIRTY-SEVEN Keep At Room Ne itdanneataneeen ee Sults .69¢ E REFUNDEL + Tall Cans ; ee © © 6 6 @ @ oe ' Bring to Spadafore Bros. Tear Coupon From Page 24 and 4 QUALITY food bargains during our Birthday! Every item guaranteed or Yes, hurry in and enjoy these wonderful YOUR MONEY WILL B eee eee reat foc y RENE ete: Te 4 ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ‘SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 | NES... ~ Shop and Save at Spadafore Bros. _ WITHOUT COUPON ...,...... eee sao 7 % Bros. | Anniversar i | Another Wonderful Spadafore al ILE) 1 Mi s. No Luncheon Treat for the School Children datore Bros. .. S i ichigan P | New Potatoe i U Tender Pascal 10 Shedd’s Creamy Soft | | Tomato It He funded pa Tender or Your Money Re Tender Meats at § Buy Delicio Be | | t MAI t ilton Grade “A” Butter d of Fat and Waste Well Tr le Whip irac 3 RE BROS Ham () I70f WEST HURON STREET ing We Rerserve the Right to Limit Quantities bs) SPADA Dress Extra Lean . and delicious Steaks BS |e c ib “tb for the Oven | | | | | | | | ies eee ; pa 1 | } { | lia Yh ¢ oh ‘ | } i i icious, Te: Fresh and ust M Chitinuously Ground, from LEAN meats Tender, lean, ready S BONELES Well Trimmed, a | THIRTY-FIGHT | | 1) i { } | Tax-Happy Missourians Request. Names on Rolls. Count officials blinked their | ST, JOSEPH, eyes, b there | Four people asking |to be on ‘the books as taxpayers. Good! citizenship wasn't the only motive. Three wanted and there’s @ law that required a holder of such a license to “be-a_ taxpayer. of hig land. Mo. (AP)-— they were: in the office|a $75 valuation. fellow ,wanted to the. county didn’t The whole thing out to be costly anyway, None | of them asked for make. sure didn’t turn You don’t need- dish or pan. may! lHquor licenses The fourth for gelatin salads or mold, When you are making a big! salad or dessert a loaf pan works out nicely and) gives good-size even Friday — -§ | ee ERR “IMPORTED WINE ICE CREAM—Pt.. e Genuine Pinconning © Imported Bleu Up Gal, , Milk "296 — ') Gal.. ; eg Cheese Reg. 37¢ Everything t9 make yoet pbrty a ccess old Cuts, Rare Cheese, Homo. | | 38s Relishes, Varieties of ont and e CHARCOAL Mien | ‘Nuts, Candy, Soft Drinks, | ixers. Party Time Foods plaim some’ | . more than | By JANET ODELL hig Press Food Editor | It's smart ta.eat breakfast. You eit hear that idea expressed often '| this month, since September has been designated Better Breakfast | Month, | As your food editor, we are for better breakfasts all the time. Everyone needs breakfast, Chil- that build strong bones i day’s People on a reducing diet need breakfast so that they will not be tempted to snack in fhe mid dle of the morning. Everyone needs to break his fast after | going without food overnight. ~ Let’s face it, Mrs. Homemak- er: It is really up to us to set the pattern) of family meals, If we | put our minds to it, we can have such an attractive breakfast on the table each morning that the family won't be able to leave with- . ‘tout eating, It may mean crawling out of bed ten minutes earlier, It may mean even insisting upon everyone’e eat- ing. | We think that liking or dis- | liking breakfast is as much habit ' as anything. Since our main in- terest is |in keeping the mem- bers of the family healthy, we shall do all. we can to insure their interest in breakfast. There is} a basic pattern to fol- low. Experts agree that break- fasts should supply one-third or one-fourth | of the day's food re- quirements. | It should include fruit, with em- phasis on the citrus fruits; bread- stuff in the form of cereal and/or dren néed it to supply the essen- juscles. Adults need it -to} “7 More. Breakfast Proteins Healthful Move for Family toast; milk (coffee only for adults); and, in the opinion of your editor, protein in some form. | tionigts have found that the and then is help burn up fat, ye growing children as well calorids-as provided by both cereal Hie ro see teote ates and d for breakfast in place ‘kinds of cereal products. w that the protein foods 3 g the, most expensive foods. |Yet there are ways of us- ing a |jsmall amount that will not upset budget, toast can be made with fewer than ome egg per. person and | serves the double Perpebe| etl etting proteia bs the meal | using stale bread, Cottage cheese makes a good spread for toast, Creamed dried beef need not always be saved for lunch menus. | } Bits of bacon or pork sausage can be added to scrambled eggs, waffles or pancakes. Bacon ‘sandwiches would be a treat to the youngster who does not have sandwiches for lunch wey, day, ~ Again it’s a matter of using our imaginations, Let’s resolve now at the beginning of the school year to serve good breakfasts every morning. Let's have whole family sit down for a i ly meal before taking up the affairs of the day. | ure =Serving Way fo Figure cessfully reheat macaroni dishes for a second meal, most cooks prefer to prepare only the amount which wil] be eaten at one particu- lar lunch or supper. So what is the best way to plan so as not to have leftovers? ghetti or noodles. _ A good average for combination dishes such as casseroles ig to al- low one ounce per person. Of course, you may find that hungry teenage boys will eat as product, even through It is com- bined with vegetables and meats. In dishes like the popular spa- . | ghettt with meat sauce—when the} ” only accompaniments are hard it is best to allow about two ounces of spaghetti per person. Incidental- ly, it is easy to ‘‘stretch’’ a dish by adding a little more of the macaroni product. It obligingly picks up and extends flavors of other foods. Salmon is packed mainly in the one-pound tall can, the one-pound flat and the half-pound flat (7%- ounce weight) can. The one-pound sizé can contains two cups and makes four servings; the _half- pound can contains one cup and makes two servings. Less common is the quarter-pound flat can, con- taining 3% ounces, drained weight. Although some homemakers suc- ; The ages and activities of family| |. members are both determining] | , eration isthe other foods which} ; are served with.the macaroni, pa-| | rolls and a tossed-green salad — , os daar plate of fresh vegetables with all kinds of fresh vegetables, dish. California Vegetable Plate a pound whole ™% cup French dressing 6 small whole carrots, cooked 1 head endive CALIFORNIA Ste PLAve—Here’ 8. a Cooked vegetables are’ marinated in ‘French dressing Time Right Now to Serve Big Vegetable Salad Plate With the markets overflowing a vegetable plate is an excellent snap beans, cooked ithe Far West. and ‘served with cheese stutted clive Hot and a dessert will make an elegant luncheon | Sunday night oxo | | % jar smoky cheese ($-ounce jar) 3) small zucchini) sayead, sliced ‘and cooked | 6 tomatoes | 2 bunches scallions, cooked 2 cups eggplant ‘‘caviar” | 1 cup cauliflower flowerettes, cooked Head lettuce | Marinate all cooked vegetables in .French dressing for one hour. Stuff endive leaves with cheese. | Be sure to ibe’ the CRISCO cou ROUND BONE WHOLE RUMP. STANDING RIB poge 24—you savel0¢ on 3 BLADE |For extra-flavor, for, tender goodness— Our Own Home Dressed Beef Granulated § Tall Can Pet Milk Our Own Fresh Dressed Well-Trimmed | SIRLOIN — STEAK — 69 Our Own Ge nuine | Honte HICKORY SMOKED PORK WHOLE HAMS “69 t 2 ‘ I Hickory Smoked, Lben SLAB BACON 69 Hickory Smoked Small, Leen, Shankless PICNICS teeeee Gold Medel, or Pillsbury Take Yous Cheige Water Maid, Fency “lo Rie | 2 Ib. Cello Bag RS.-FRL-S/ SUNDAY ..... T. oe * ee *@ @@ Our Own Strictly Fresh Made ‘G round @ ” Beef OPEN MON. -TUES.- WED. . ALL OUR BEEF IS FROM OUR OWN HOME DRESSED ' GOVERNMENT INSPECTED YOUNG STEERS Modern feeding methods on our form mature these animals especially for butch- ering. That is why the beef you buy in our market has such a gor flavor, such fine texture, and is uniformally tender. We reserve the right to limit quantities Fill Your Locker! Young Steer Beef Hind eartars . * BOOK MAT sen ores 50 count aan 15 ee eee eeees LADD ROAD WALLED LAKE ees - { Re tg ee Sg eg eee Uy 1 small egeplan 3 cloves garlic 1% cup salad 1 large onion, salt until ae Add onion, . adding - salad| until very cold. tpeet tomatoes) if desired and and Rowdy’ for Big REDWOOD C moans about a Is Barbecuing into eighths cutting almost the way through, but Jeaving sec- tions joined at| the bottom. | Arrange a tomato ‘flower’ | in center of each Plate, Sent eee er eggplant ‘‘caviar vegetables in te oo ihe the tomatoes. i ree in avin” | 3 ate doh chopped | ground black eater of finely chopped Wrap eggplant in foil or. gre wax paper. Bake in 350 oven a one hour. Cool and peel. Place in wooden bowl. Crush garlic tomatoes, eggplant , Calif. (UP)— The next time the | little woman a hard day over a small fee. : Even at that, nl parti 1,500 persons; = Holmquist at 45 is owner of wood City’s joldest business» cern, the Redwood City. Store, but he still finds tir donate his services and equi for most outings. | However, cently the demand |has bee great that Holmquist finds it sary to charg > be pte grou serves are’ considering gE quite a equipment He has two stainless steel trays and sil} service in San he said. steam table, 17 navy tables, 1, alk er for 350 pe It might be work to the is to load equipment, ha to a pichic site, set, it up and personally barb chickens for 1,000 or 1,500 food, volunteers /are assigned | assist by spréadin bread and to watch cooking 4 But he personally hantiles the becuing. Holmquist said ithe only time capitalized on this hobby was year when a professional ca tainless steel garlic on fi hot stove tell her about H, E. (Rowdy) Holmquist, | whose is outdoor barbecuing—for about ‘ food Here’s an easy dessert: -canned applesauce and fold it whipped cream. Spoon this cious combination tbs int PRbcaSkaee 8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER e 1953 - | | a Commercial. orT nderay | | | | a | } | | | | U. . Govr. GRADED i | 14 | “| | serps ret mm a a ce el eg St | o 39¢ 31.00 _. Excess fat and bone ‘removed before roas is weighed and priced. Always a center cut. | _No stringy neck beef | U. S. GRADED “CHOICE” Chuck ~ Ground Beef BLADE: CUT ‘oust Ib. “119 TENDERAY ’ Kroger’ Finest a Ib. 43c .S. Govt. Grades. FOR KR STANDARD OT Good nourishing beef at a monby-saving Kroger at | u fe | 1 | | -U. S. GRADED “COMMERCIAL” IDENTIFIED WITH THE YELLOW AND BLACK LABEL Nourishing beef at the lowest priced! Contains all the food values of higher grade beef but has less fat marbling. AVAILABLE AT THIS STORE ONLY. 178 NORTH U.S. Large Bologna ee aereieist = 39° { U. S. Govt. GRADED “CHOICE” wrocer-cur ! Tender [0 Te out of (9 | IDENTIFIED wiTH THE BLUE AND WHITE LABEL Koger ci Tenderay gives you more meet, tess bone—less waste. The Kroger Tenderay method makes U.S. Choice Grade Beef tender without . without loss of flavor and juices. y ‘ageing . | | | X U. $s. G , | eae | | ‘ } | : Ve | | | | } | prow SI AQ Kroger “Heat & Eat” a * | Cod, P — Hac “Cooked F sh. SHOP KROGER AL YOUR FOOD = AND LIVE BETTER FOR LESS | | | / | | | ‘ | | “ii 4 _ Sirloin Steak 1.4 sil ' | | 2] | ral | I ls OWE HOUR FREE PARKING HAVE YOUR PARKING LOT TIC CET STAMPED AT KROGER FOR FREE PARKING | WHEN YOu MAKE A PURCHASE Lyn | | GSEx= = KROGER PARKING: >Ef: (HOUR FREE PARKING) - oE@s | qpfOs 4 Ege? g a=: : 3| KROGER == | STORE E4 | | . EB EGO FIN je| —_ ij | FRROGER PARKING — = (\-HOUR FREE PARKING) I Air-tour rree PARKING) a GOVT. GRADED “COMMERCIAL” ‘Sliced. Bacon a ; 4 a | | ,, Long end cut of jee fat loin b removed before stea is — Had ) Priced | | DED “CHOICE” TENDERAY | join Steak i. b. 10-oz. Pkg. Kroger - | Breaded Aree a | -Shrimg Hygrade . | etd , ; Lb. 79° i aint ia = ‘ a a ii. ++. —_ FORTY Curious Breed Formula: Ram and 15 Tame Sheep HELENA, Mont. (AP)—Mon- tana transplanted a, wild big- horn mountain ram with curious results. The ram and 15 other bighorn sheep were planted onan Eastern Mon- tana ranch with a view to restoring the! breed . .in that region. f The ram associated with a group of domestic sheep with! thése~.congequences: : A Jordanm*rancher wondered what 11 wool- less ‘tembs in his | herd would bring onthe market. Sportsmen wondered if this could be the Start of a new game species. And Montane state biologists __ planned to learn if the hybrid - "offspring would | be sterile. Find Dog They Harbor Is Really Wealthy Pooch PLACERVILLE, Calif. @ — A pathetic neighbors after the death of its)owner, Mrs. Marguerita Mor- gan. | i r it was learned Mrs. Mor- Cairl terrier, Chief Dhy Jon. In |disposing of Mrs. Morgan’s estate, Superior Judge Thomas | Maul] gave custody of the dog—no | ieneer poor — to the neighbors, Mr. ee Mrs. Vernon Allen. li Peanut Brittle in Sauce | peanut brittle in apple sauce. | Roll the brittle welt-and stir into hot | apple sauce. Serve in-sher- crean It’s real good. ad bequeathed $5,000 ‘o her) poor dog was taken in by sym-| THE PONTIAC. PRESS, THURSDAY, SEREEMBER 17, 1953 best [lasses topped with whipped|_ VANILLA WAFER. PUDDING—Here is a dessert that you can dress up With whipped cream and serve as a pudding; or you can slice|it and eat \it \like-a_regular cookie. Cookie crumbs, nuts, dates and marsh- mallows add up to.a yummy concoction. French Locomotives Too Wide in Brazil PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil ® — The state-operated ‘‘Rio Grande de Sul railway recently bought several new locomotives in France. The engineer of the first of the joco- motives put to use halted his freight train just short of a bridge be- tween Santa Maria, where the loco- motives are being assembled, and Cacequi. He got out ang verified that the iron superstructure was about two feet too narrow to let the loco- motive pass. Rail officials are busy with tapelines to see just where they can use the new: loco- motives now and what bridges will have to be widened. 77-Year-Old Gets ‘Bath’ - That Lasts Two Days HUTCHINSON, began as just another bath stretched into a 48-hour soaking for a 77-year-old Hutchinson man. S. E. Drummond climbed into the tub at his home, where -he lived alone. Then he became too weak to get out. Two days later, neighbors, wor- ried because they hadn’t seen him, called police. Officers entered the home and helped Drummond from the tub. Drummond suffered no ill effects from his ordeal, but he ad- mitted he did get ‘‘sort of hungry.” “I. guess I drank gallons and gallons of water,”’ he said. Kan. + What | Wafer Pudding | Easy to Concoct You'll like this Vanilla Wafer Pudding, because it’s easy to put together, requires no cooking and keeps well in the refrigerator. Make up a roll of it now your- self, or let your small son or daughter mix the ingredients. Vanilla Wafer Date Pudding we cups. vanilla wafer crumbs (about 1 cup finely cut dates % |b. cut marshmallows lcup nut meats, broken Ya cup top milk whipped cream , Reserve 4% cup crumbs.’ Com- bine remaining ingredients, mix- ing well. Place on waxed paper and shape into a roll about three inches in diameter. Rojl onto another piece of wax- ed paper covered with remaining crumbs and coat all sides with crumbs. Chill overnight. Slice to _|serve. Top with whipped cream sweetened | slightly if desired. Yield: 8 servings. Salad Men Like Hearts of lettuce with Thousand Island dressing is a salad men usually like. To make the dress- ing add a quarter. cup of, chili sauce, a little finely iced green pepper, a hard-cooked egg (chop- ped fine), and some minced pi- miento-stuffed olives to a cup of mayonnaise, Cook frozen chopped spinach as’ directed on package. Drain thor- oughly; reheat with a little heavy | PO cream and butter or margarine. Easy and delicious! offer an unusual way to serve a tempt appetites with a different) and delicious variation of an |old Crunchy almonds provide the surprise taste. | favorite. FRENCH BEANS WITH ALMONDS—French beans with almonds KS 2 e Beans, Aimonds for Gourmets reat green oats are! perene| nial favorite. When you them up with browned chopped ® you put them in the gourmet classi Don’t be scared of the word | “French;’’ it just means; to cut | Thing ls Te MME AS TES es AM, ¥ the beans in long narrow strips. | favorite vegetable. Its smart to Danish Eaterie Air-Ships Sandwiches Across World Danish open-face sandwiches are flying to cities the world over these days, Citizens of Chicago, Rome and Buenos Aires alike can dine on & famous Oskar Davidsen sandwich without ever setting foot on Danish soil. Modern air travel has made it possible for a world wide clien- tele to enjoy these delectable cre ations. It was about 80 years: ago that Davidsen sandwiches first grew popular. Oskar was a Copenhagen wine, merchant. While customers , / e~ ‘Sweet, tender PEAS | quick-frozen right off the vine! ', You can taste the sunshine and fresh, ' country air in these green, extra-fancy, sweet peas, frozen minutes after picking that right on the farm | | ‘so that all of their garden-fresh, | vitamin-rich goodness can be held: \ grows theom— | | There’s a delicibus ‘world. of difference in farm-frozen vegetables from Seabrook— the world’s biggest-vegetable tarm, j the world’s biggest freezing plant! | { ~ ite oe a ee --------=5 ee aoe eee Sa I a es es ca ee ae a oe ee ee ee ‘|Trim Party Crackers a sipped wine from Oskar’s cellar, ' Fru Davidsen served them sand- wiches. The Davidsen sandwiches were made in the Danish fashion—one slice of buttered bread topped with meat, sea food, good: rich cheese and other tasty items. Evidently Fru Davidsen was a true artist. The demand for her sandwiches grew unti] husband Os- kar opened a restaurant next door to his wine shop..- _ The sandwich menu of this es- tablishment has grown until it . is four feet long and offers 172 varieties ot sandwiches. You may take your choice of white, rye, crisp or sour bread. All sorts of enticing sandwiches appear on the menu at this fa- ‘mous Copenhagen eatery. ‘‘Hans Andersen's Favourite’: is one of the offerings. It is described as, “crisp bacon, tomato, liverpaste with truffles, meat-jelly and Horse: radish.”’ Daily at the Copenhagen aitpekt, cartons carrying Davifisen sand-: wiches are loaded on planes, and started on their way to hungry customers abroad. Quote from Oskar Davidsen’s astonishing menu: ‘'Totlay there is nothing (except currency restric- tions) to hinder the delivery of Davidsen sandwiches in the Amer- .tcas and other distant. countries.”’ Here’s a different way to deco- rate crackers: Fill a frosting bag or heavy white paper funnel with soft cheese or cheese spread, French Beans With Almonds Pts pound green | ‘beans, cut in lenghtwise “ bar (2 tablespoons) margerine | tablespoons | coarsely cut blanched | ‘almonds Cook beans in boiling salted wa- ter until just tender-crisp. Melt | margarine in small skillet over low 1 -heat,-put in almonds and ‘brown | lightly, stirring constantly. Add to drained beans and toss lightly to- gether. Serve immediately; Makes — 4° servings: Salem Folk Gi ve Goddess of Love Cold Shoulder SALEM, Ore. (UP) —Nobody loves the Goddess of Love. By virtually unanimous * voice of the citizens of| Salem, the buxom statue of | Venus, done in the altogether |by the French artist-sculptor noir,| iwill neither grace nor disgrace} the Marion County coyrthouse| grounds in the heart of Ore-| gon’s capital city. | The tizzy over th nude’ came about because the late Carroll L. Moores his estate to the city for a’ fitting memorial to Oregon pioneers. Moores, a bachelor and a frugal man, was a janitor and . elevator operator in the Ore- gon Supreme Court building, but he left an estate when he | died in 1936 that has grown . to about $30,000. | , | Two beneficiaries | were willed the interest an the estate as long as they lived, which is why the tempest did not arise before. A committee was named is choose a fitting memorial to pioneers. After a continent- wide search they came up with the suggestion of Venus, now reposing’ in New York. The howls started. What, asked enraged Salemites, did Venus have to do with the pioneers of Oregon? Straw votes were taken. at service club luncheons|and the Goddess could have |counted the votes she got on her 10 fingers (yes, Renpir’s Venus has hands). , Other | citizens wrote letters of indignation to the paper. None wrote ap- ~ then press the cheese = onto crackers in any designs you wish. proval. So Venus is out, and the committee is trying again. Club Crockers by Hekman— w There’s a rich, hearty flavor -., Crisp, delicate texture... and an inviting ‘‘two-bite’’ shape that makes Club Crack- ers the perfect complement for every eating occasion. NEW cracker! Peseccccccccccs a fresh NEW: flavor! eeegeceeoereose a smart NEW shape! IN CRACKERS! Different from anything you "ve ever lostedh smort NEW shape that's the biggest news in crocker history | Hekmans ; ith the fresh NEW flavor and Test the grand NEW taste yourself! Club Crackers by Hekman—neatly | shaped for two perfect bites . . . flavor baked for a new taste thrill .-. and popped hot from the oven into Hekman’s famous 3-in-one cellophane wrapper - t= Pe ee FRR Rese EE dt. pe THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 i ____ FORTY-ONE | -|STOCK-UP | and SAVE! | , FOR ALL YOUR FOODS at PEOPLE'S 2. Great SUPER MARKETS! : i- hoy - Yooadb dtr AT Low Prices in This Ad Are Effective for \ oo) in I ONE ENTIRE WEEK... 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Or . - buy first tire ond get second at half a pricel Gucranteed 2 years ogdinet all rood hazards} Mounted freel Luxury Ride, ee 6.70 x 15, Reg. 18.75 each in sets of “ Only, $14. 09 (lus tax and old tire) | Super Safety, 6.00x16 Reg. $17. 45, _Each in Sets of 4 §=2A2144 f r | | ’ ayy Get sensational $9.95 6-piece ~ Amazing offer! Up to 24 en- | Cala accessories yours with Flint | mpok | fovife i Plc whe rd-ized engine! Guaran- ar 8 teed |trade-in on old engine! Country Club Premi tics! Our first line seat coversl win tones $f | BONUS ONLY 5962 95 SS elE% "9 yi Speedome er & Mirror With | oe Bicycle! 26 Western m Fiver trae WITH DOUBLE 0. BONUS $5 0 i Down $54.50 ist 25-Wk “102 N. SAGINAW STORE HOURS: . thm Thurs... 196 Friday . tes eed 9) s | az acre ~ ri | | ee eet re | | I & | 114 a FORTY-SIX | pp? |. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1} 11, 1953 | ai. a aa I ’ : TT U. 5 Aid to Df velop rote ren larceny (VA Moving to End [scat amare ot cars| in Thefts From Museum | new ors — 4 zxeuraa| Hospital Segregation ase. scer wae te war dn Aug. 7 letter what he was doing Brooklynite - ha been, arrested for seen ctealtt WASHINGTON W—Veterans’ Ad- o end segregation in veterans’ allegedly stealing more than 30 2 ie ministrator Harvey Higley said to- hospitals in line | with President ||, } i mostly small but rare objects from Eisenhower's. stat! ed | stand against ; to develop strategic Quemoy |™ ural History, | 28¥ his ageney is moving “as rap- d — within’ sight and. easy|the Museum of Na segregation in any federal institu: lrange of Communist China—| Policé last night hooked. Robert | idly as possible’ toward wiping | tions, will |get under way spon, it was Kennedy lon a, charge of petty out! segregation of whites and Ne- | t . i] ‘ i ; = | ‘ | anngunced today, larceny and said his |loot included: | STOPS in veterans’ hospitals. © | Red Newsmen Ignore © This will be the \time U.S. “Wy, find bl f ‘. | ! Six ceremonial masks, four Maori e Sembance Ot seg : : dollars have been spent on the regition unbocial,| jmecoriomical Indian Order in Korea in of offshore islands held by | war clubs, nine Filipino figurines, i ists. Previous | three whalebone knives, two Java|and undesirable,"’ he said, ‘‘and MNNSAN! ur—Seventeen Commu- | {i U. S. Still Raids Cause. Inflation in Moonshine HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Reve | nuers are making a good run on He ! stills in the lush moonshine liquor district ‘of Logan, Lincoln and || Mingo Counties. But their activi- ties. are forcing higher prices. 1] | | William.R. Harvey, chief inves- I tigator. here for the Federal Alco- | . | hol Tax Unit, says the going price | *| for moonshine has climbed to $16 | __ a gallon—roughly the price of some | bs legal brands. | DR. +H. A. ‘MILLER: , “Optometrist 2 —— tet — 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842. . ; . | - §. aid has been limited to|dolls, and three knives. _. . we hope the day is not far {fist newsmen showed up to watch | He thinks it’s because his agents | “Better Things in Sight” Authorities anid Kennedy sold Ded i - mid will be no| the transfer of) anti-Communist have been knocking of so rftiny || \ | Remove ea ere prisoners to Indian custody at |! | s | quar t t of the items for about $100. f{ticial ter pecaete. aa: eessu v_ mk522aed 7 semblance of racial segregation in| 'Indian Village today, ed for the | VA' hospitals,"’ Reminded that) the Indians yes- Chen) lana whith lie south} Marine organisms of a red-| Higley made the statements in ||terday ordered the number of cor-|/, shanghai and are the northern| dish color, which |tint its sur-|an exchange of letters, released |\respondents cut to five from each a eee hor of the Nationalists’ off-| face water, gave the Red Sea | today, with |Clarence) Mitchell, an|/side the Reds protested that the}, QUITS G \POST—William L. || stills lately. They eernoyed five || oar : fe the last 30 days. | Closed Wednesday Afternoons ‘TOUR oi HE : RIC shore bases. its name. _ official of the National Association jorder ‘had not reached them.” Pfeiffer, abdve, of Albany, N. Y., |. m — = : Republican i Chairman, has | | “SHAVER REGARDLESS est pleading of ‘President Eisen- | hower. | Pfeiffer, who directed the | successful ampaign in 1950 for] |Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, said the press of private business fo ’him to give] wp the job. > |General mith Asked to Head POW Group © t SEATTLE] w — The commander of the! American ex-Prisoners of OF mace oR pace ) | : : . | | A : — “— ' | resigned his/|post) despite the earn- | | il | | ik J. H | ‘wr SS tion of honorary national com- | 4 [ mander whitch was vacated by the j :, death of Gen. Jonathan M. “Wain wright: The invitation to the Koréan war {| hero was sent yesterday by Ken- neth Day, Seattle, who heads the lliam F. Dean to accept the posi- War Inc., : asked Maj. Gen. Wil- ' | : | | | ’ ceganlsation of former war pris- ae semRONT DOOR lF “dat Ss d 0 ly! USE the BACK DOOR | |)" ——_— | | ee lle |, | | Reaches Airport Lat | | | | 1L.N. Perry St. | ¥ FI ay ani atur ay n Hast Alley | [sotseu/tfand lone Sirti ct 1 tai * ALBANY|@—An 85-year-old Mas-| 97% gst ton ony oe re ever | || sachusetts Woman reached Boston] | T — | || airport tog late to board the ill-|' | 5 YEAR FREE ° bh a i nn -Maid | fated American Airlines plane that } | Goodyear Dodge Vinyl Surface | Bonny-Maic By aie Rneriean, Air tines ERVICE GUARANTEE Vinyl Tile | Linoleum Tile | | Cork Tile | | Versa-Tile — | |ihoueccecars:) SE SHER ‘tives in puburban Colonie, but Natural’ Finish | Vee 9x9x 4 | < . | missed ‘thé flight by minutes. The| SHOP of PONTIAC | ia ; i é | ! : '}| crash here killed 28. 51 West Huron Street iL Reg. c Reg. | Reg. | ¢ | rah 30c | 45 | . i each | ‘sq. ft. each Ooc | yey i. | PX | | ry | 4 ft. each | sq. ft. eae | i. of 2 Quality | Random Linoleum Tile. 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Split second eac | Slightly aretaht | | | set @ toter, foie | oo Group II | Marbleized’ Vinyl _ Finished Household Gauge | TV STYUNG | | omen de | oii samen ond {| 4G 4 ; | aA er. ng; cotoe cabinet Asphalt Tile — Cork I ile Cork Tile — | - Rubber Tile | a rir reervimaaeia 9x9xY, aol OxOx 9x9x lf | | 9x9x3/32 rote hemo Doct, exgn, Your choke’ tow aifaret oe «J Oo: 65c . sq. ft. each © Ceshet Seat Opes 4 i et Remnants y _ ) OWN FIRST QUALITY CARPETS n | | i P Description | | . ‘Size Ww as Now Savings é Beige Twist ..............05: Locebessecs 12 x 28°6” 437.00 . 323.00 © 124.00 | ( | Beige Leaftone .......... nae + geysiele dees ys 15x 4’ ' 96.72 41.11 55.61 ro | Gray Floral ........ | dle tleweslbewebs Jos eeee 12 x 18°3” 266.41 196.61 69.80 a Gray Floral ...... 0.) csccccseccececeeeess 12 x 14'2” 208.05 136.80°° . 71.25 Green Scroll 65. si ahi che ce laslegs fines «12 x 22'6” 295.50 195.00 | | 100.50; \t . 74 : Green Twist .......{.. Losenuveloaies Lak hia whe 12x11’ 189.85 146.52 | 48.33 | | i Beige Twist ........)...0..0s: 005 lawn be ww 0% 12 x 66” 87.60 54.06 * | 33.54 | | 52 GAL. DELUXE AUTOMATIC | Gray peroll Leal side: dl Misi orele areele eo ule 2 [ioe se ta hee i 58.50 | 27.00 | e H t W 4 H ray Floral...) 0) )sseduscdeends bepsae.. 12 x 22710” 143 ° 161.14 110.29 | || ’ . Gray Twist 0.0.0.0 jo ccec ccs sete e sess s I2ZK 911" 5 149.50, 87.85 61.65 |. L| 1] AL ater eater Green Scroll ........)..0000edees as ee 12x195” ° 258.70 169.00 ‘ 89.70 | | WITH 5-YEAR WARRANTY Be e Round Wire ..|.......4..... Lis evees 12 x/3’6” 717.05 = 82.69 44.36 || | Green Twist .||:....... [aed y biel wn oc 12 x 10°9” 164.79 96.86 67.93 Use he | | | Ned Only Cinnamon Round Wire ...... Joeeleblleseees 9x 12’ 198.00 105.00- —-,-93.00 | se the 1) Reg. | "First Quality Green Round Wire ..|........ lee doblefecees« 12 x 3'6”" 68.88 30.34 38.54 | $139. 95 - O- Beige Shag |......| ee SU: 49” x 5°5” 63.00 22.50 | 40.50 F tD D | Inlaid Linoleum Beige Round Wire .......... 0s. sceccceeuss 9.x 12’ 219.00 114.00 105.00 r on oor— ) B Roll Gray a hee tpceibbeoveced sterea ls 87h lel dy eles x x af ely es sue 65.45 | Installed FREE on Detroit Edison Lines . slance o s | Gray. Scroll ........ l code ne ducvvcbldleseses = 17°10” 286.80 _ 156.00 | 130.80 sas | , i Beige Florat.........ss0sssiscsecyeneenee 12 x 12°6” 149.20 180.75 68.45" il N. Per ry i oo B 66 Gal. $124.95 82 Gal. $139.95 7 | EASY BUDGET TERMS | Use the Back Door oot AVAILABLE eg “Standard and ie | Entrance in East Alley “HLH. SMART Division | + 1/8" Gauge | haw Range— Pontiac’s Oldest Locally Owned Floor Covering Firm! Bet. ‘Lawre ce & Pike Oakland Ave. —_—‘ FE 4-4567 ‘ ’ ‘ qo il N. PER | | - , rT re j . 7 F | ii : ‘ i ; yd | ia, rai | | 7 , = ey =. sax pocnsant dite mivnnalalilcen Jad =\oenitnop cent ecen|s cl He. Oh’ th: damn Ad analy “so son ek a de tte PO ere eer Gata emer (Oe . a ee ee ee ee ee e L Pe | i ; {| Oe) oye, alle eed be THE PONTTAC PRESS. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 | ‘ | | | | | | | -FORTY-SEVEN + Roosevelt High ~ Faculty, Parents Attend Reception | KEEGO HARBOR — Roosevelt: # High School faculty members were introduced to parents this) |week at a reception in the school’ s) /gym. Jointly sponsored by the local Mothers Club and PTA, the affair was attended by an estitated 150 persons. The. entertainment featured a baton twirling exhibition by Shar- on, Arlene and Marilyn Dreyer, re- cent award winners at the Michi- gan State Fair. Also on the program were Jack Horner, tap). dancer; Ann White, acrobatic . dancer; Eddie} Collins, banjo and ukelele solojst, and Mrs. Myrtle, Kolten, vocalist. Most of the cockroaches| that are pests in America have immigrated _ from other countries. Auto Insurance Specialists Immediaie Claim Service DALE and NINA MARTIN OL 2-976! 412 Main St. . Rochester ROCHESTER INSURANCE AGENCY 308% foie $e., Rochester OL 2-0011 Up 33 Per Cent on October First| Sewer Bills Also Hit; ‘Must. Meet Increased Running Costs’ | ROCHESTER—Water and sewer rates here will be raised abo 33 per cent effective Oct. 1 unde at its third and final reading by the village council. : The rate-increasing | “ordinance was drafted in-arder to meet in- creased costs of |materials, equip- ment and labor.) The rate boost is expected to bring the income of the water and sewer departments'to a com- bined total of $52,000 per year. sent for a public hearing on the new ordinancé, They were Mrs. Marion- Belden and Mrs. William Lasco. } siderable saving to the village could be made by reading meters once a year instead of quarterly readings and that a closer check should be made on various services through the village. Councilmen agreed to investi- gate Mrs. Belden’s recommenda- tions and, if feasible, to in- corporate them im an amend- ment to the ordinance at a later date. | ' ' Village Presidént Frank Rewold ordered that' a amendment to the zoning ordinance) land notices of a public hearing. 9n Oct. 12. at 7:30 p.m, be prepared after a petition was heard for a change in the zoning of two'lots in Albertson subdivision 7 from two-family to multiple dwellin ling, | A petition for rezoning of Lot 46, supervisor’s plat 2 (on South street) from heavy industry to multiple family. was also heard. Village Marager(Robert Slone said With F lower s” ROCHESTER | GREENHOUSES Member F.T. D. 210 £. Third, Rochester OL ive 2-9411 | David Geer of Geer Associates had recommended that the property |be changed to light industry along with properties on the south side of the street. The change would insure future property values, ac- cording to Geer. The matter was tabled until the “i regular anenine of the coun- ,° : ‘Club Meats | at Rochester ROCHESTER The Alpha Gamma Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma held its: first meeting of the school year at Avon Township Park here Tuesday. Laura Figgels and Mrs. Julia VandenBorghe of ochester and Mrs. Vena Kirk- trick of Lake Orion were in harge of the picnic. — About 434 million acres of forest land in the U. 8. are ‘ f | 5 HM 330-332 Main St., Rochester, Mich, Olive 2-2121, Olive t's Better from ..% privately owned. . 1-9642 Two property owners were pre- , Mrs, Belden stated that a con- | Ir Ae i a daa) + a new ordinance approved Monday | ° ; 2: Mark 50th George R. Lindsey. 3 p.m, Rochester Council OKs Hike in Water Rate | Mee me * IMR. AND MRS. GEORGE R. LINDSEY Anniversary ROCHESTER — Marking their 50th wedding anniversary Sunday: with an open house at their 130 E. Fifth St., home will be Mr. and Mrs. The celebration, for relatives and friends, will be held front 2 to Mr; and Mrs. Lindsey have one daughter and a son. They are fMrs. Floyd Harp of 80 Colgate, Pontiac, and Roscoe E. Lindsey of Livednois road, Rochester. THe couple also has three grandchildren. Residents here for the past 20 years,-Mr. Lindsey has been an Oakland for 14 years. County Road Commission employe Junior Bibte Pupils Use Drayton School DRAYTON PLAINS — Enlarged tion of a.new unit will make con- tinued use of Drayton Plains School necessary for Community United Presbyterian Bible School junior students, Supt. Gerald Rustum said today.’ According to Rustum, the de- partment, which includes grades 4, 5 and 6, now has an enrollment of 110. Total Bible School enroll- ment is 600. Mrs. Gerald Shell, church build- ing fund treasurer, said the new unit will be completed early in 1954. Delegates Chosen by Brown City Club BROWN CITY — Plans were made to participate in the East Central. District Convention by members of Brown City Women's Club which met this week at Mrs. ‘Lloyd McKay’s home. Delegates, named to attend the Oct. 6-7 event at Deckerville were Mrs. W. G. Bennett and Mrs. Daune Carman. Alternates are Mrs. Harris Liebler and Mrs. Har- old McNally. In other business, the | unit Town chairman and distributed programs to members. Rochester High Mixer Set for Friday Night ROCHESTER—Ruchester High School’s first student mixer will be held*tomorrow night following the Falcon-Grand Haven grid game, the student council re- vealed today. Featuring the event will be danc- ing $e) the pebodl Sy on = 12. p.m. More fish are luca in the U. S. each year for industrial processing than —= food. Pp i | Lm | @ ORYER Automatic-flectric Clothes os Bryer gyeuruauee This new Frigidaire Electric Clothes Dryer with | built-in ‘|Ozone. Lamp) dries la whole - enrollment and pending comple-|. named. Mrs. Lester Scott Girls. for all types of fabrics. “washerful of idlothes | in 15 to '25 minutes. | And they come ‘out fluffy- soft, sweet-smelling. New variable temperature control provides the right heat Start now to have perfect drying - weather all year ‘round with this new Frigidaire Electric Clothes Dryer. It’s available now at a new low price—see it today! | FREE: INSTALLATION On Detroit Efison Lines! ee BURR HARDWARE ES Brim 429 MAIN ST., IN ROCHESTER, MICH. JAC Clayton Slieff Jr. Marries Miami .- Girl at Imlay City METAMORA — Roberta Vivian Partridge of Miami, Fla., and Clay- in marriage Saturday in the par- sonage of Congregational Church at Tmlay City,: The bride is the daughter of Robert MacKeeken of Miami and the late Mrs. MacKeeken,. Clayton ig the son of Mr, and Mrs. Clayton Slieff Sr. of Hunters Creek road. The bride chose a dress of navy blue brocade with black ac- cessories. Her corsage was white. _ bebe mums. Attendents were Mrs. Edward Deacons, sister of the bridegroom, and Clayton Slieff Sr. | A reception held at the home of the bridegroom’s parents was at- tended by 50 guests from Oxford, Detroit, Bad Axe, West Branch, North Branch, Lapeer, Otter Lake and Metamora. . The bride has been employed as a nurses’ aide at Miami Children’s Hospital. The groom is a corporal The newlyweds will return to Florida after a Canadian honey- moon, Ss Rochester Church Plans Anniversary ROCHESTER—Plans for a 25th anniversary dinner marking the reorganization of Rochester’s St. Phillip’s Episcopal Church ‘ were completed this week by members of the church Women’s Guild. Grant, news editor of a Detroit radio station, will be speaker for the Oct. 22 event. An estimated 160 parishoners are expected to attend. The’ guild also announced that the church’s annual Harvest Festi- val service has been scheduled for Oct. 11, County Calendar . Keege Harber Local VFW Auxiliary Will sponsor bake sale Saturday at Orchard Lake road and Maddy lane. Mrs, Harold Schingeck of 3181 Orchard Lake Rd. will host a meeting sot VFW Auxiliary tonight at 7. the home of Mrs. Kay Sweet, Metamersa Metamora PTA will hold its mont | meeting Sept. 24 at the school at p.m. instead of this week as | scheduled. MEN’S * Heavy Fleeced SWEAT SHIRTS White or Gray sy? ‘Sizes 36 to 46 Colored .. $1.69 , 320 Main, Rochester | | OLive 2-0811. of Waterford Township Schools, .| suggested ways of breaking | meeting held in Grace Lutheran ton McKinley Slieff Jr. were united | and a cook at the Miami Air Wing, | According to the group, Austin’ Lam | Lum wscs meets Friday -evenifig at | {| | Detroit Aitorhey Soci u at Waterford Rotary Cl WATERFORD TOWNSHIP . John MacLillan, Detroit attorne ; was guest speaker at a meeting of ‘the Waterford-Drayton Rotary Club Tuesday at the Com- munity Activities|Building. = ys McLillan told of his experiences in Korea as a lieutenant commal der in the Intelligence Department of the Navy. i; - mes Ways - to Break the Ice Shunck Talks to. PTA on Bettering Relations of Parents, Teachers William Shunck, superintendent \ { barriers between parents teachers at the Sepfember Bhi shop meeting held Tuesday by the Oakland County, PTA Council. | Shunck, guest speaker at For | Your Next | Emergency | Church of Pontiac, sugges square dances, potluck dinners an similar get-togethers to be held along with regular PTA meetings as ways of getting parents an teachers better acquainted. The workshop meeting was at- | tended by some 200 PTA officers from clubs throughout the coun- ty,, as well as those meres in PTA work. | A business meeting was co ducted in the morning ab con by a luncheon and communi singing in the church parlors. Workshops were held in afternoon on the topics of presi dents and parliamentary pr cedure, hospitality, room mothers, |. membership, sat publicity and program. assurance of our dependabi s Deaths Last Night lis WASHINGTON (AP)—Maj. Gen. Jay Li |] PURDY’S , Benedict, 71, former superintendent of | Mell military, seen’ ob. at West Point. DRUG STORE We stand ready to serve you: © COURTEQUS SERVICE, e ACCURATE PRESCRIP} TION COMPOUNDING @ RAPID DELIVERY | | SERVICE | Rely on us—the best healt habit you can make , . wit +S Neb BRADFORD, Pa.—J. Russell Case, 74 chairman of the board of W. R. Case & Song Cutlery Co., and president of iJ , the W. R. Case & Sons, Ltd., of Canada, || 321 Main St.. Rochester the Case Nashville Corp. of Nashville, i i} Ark,, and the Case Shear Corp. FOR THE BEST OF LISTINGS IN BUILDING SITES LAKE OPERTY HOMES. FARMS Consult ROGER B. HENRY 13th | | | Just a few Of the WONDERFUL VALUES! $5 50 Value—FOAM | PILLOWS: Full size, muslin, covered with zippers. Trregulars. eal e. 98 Each 80 Square 51 Ga., 20 or 30 Denier Percales | Nylon Hose BT. r : Yard : TROUBADORS America’s: ‘best women come for miles to buy + these Percales! | Sells Regulatly at $1.35 and $1.65 under A FAMOUS BRAND ‘NAME! PLASTIC “DRAPERIES iis These Clopay Draperies are dis- continued patterns of, their $1.98 numbers , Se weesigaaieehs see PLASTIC SHADES 36” x 2” «: a includes Rollers. Cut to pize | je eee eevee eip ee ee eee & kas SAVE ON SHOES $3.98 Boys’ Suede end Leather OXFORDS. Size 10 to 3....,....... on $4. 95 Girls’ Brown iand Black BRACELET STRAP Up to $11.95 > i | . Men’s OXFORDS $5.95 Parkhill a Ladies’ CASUALS Ladies’ Busken Biuejientie CASUALS oe PARTMENT MAitzel Fela, eeeeeecereeses eee ee) ee ee Ce Te 2. 98 3.98 6.95, 4.95, 3.95. td | 5 tt q ‘ } . r : | u Hill ‘ 5 i l | (ye ie : From 7 ee —F ——— a Sieg — REFRESHMENTS. | | | } 4 —_ until 9 - THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE 00. 361 S. Saginaw: ‘Street 7 A. useful gift for each family \ | Dipwing of. Door Prizes 9 P. M. You Do Not Need to Be Present t ‘Win! Lh | | esto Broke: and General Salou Agent | 312 Main Street secmtead OL 2-2531 308% Main St., Rochester | OL 2.0011 ae ue | | : | | | . | ‘a | | i; | | ! \ [ : id | an) ' You are cordially invited to attend our ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE. : | Se MEN get $599 for ES RE ERT LN A PT eet een te OAKLAND ~ Fuel and Paint-Co. " ° FORTY-EIGHT } i] | } | ri ee i ~ 4 | | | | | | | MOS A 30-ton humpback whale will produce about seven tons of oil. your old electric shaver regardless of make or shape ON : SHAVEMASTER » $27.50 Only Sunbeom has the bigger, single, SMOOTH heod that shaves closer, cleoner ond foster thon any other method, wet or dry. America’s most popular electric shaver, 5 YEAR FREE. SERVICE GUARANTEE Optometrists-Jewelers REDMOND'S | 81 N. Saginaw FE 2-3612 NT “1 GRADE® ; FURNACE OIL PER GALLON ¢ 6 NO. 2 GRADE 14 C FURNACE PER GALLON OIL FE 5-6159 ~L Traces of Early Colonies Found Writer ‘Uncovers Lore. of New England Towns in British Namesakes WASHINGTON — The only liv- ing thing to greet visitors in New York one drowsy summer day was a solitary black cat. Eight miles away, at Boston, fishing boats were stranded, high coastal river. the great cities of the United States’ east coast, but their name- sakes in England's Lincolnshire. earching for traces of the Eu- ropeans who first peopled New England, Sir Evelyn Wrench visit- ed them -recently: and writes of_his quést in jan article ‘‘Founders of New England,” in the June Na- tional Geogtaphic Magazine. He found little of value in New York, ton ce || Many other towns the writer saw bore names familiar to New. England ears. Hingham, Ded- Braintress are a few. And in “parish .registers and mossy cemeteries”. he found family “ndmes with an American ring: | ' Bradford, ' Brewster, Winthrop, Eliot.” | ea He =e. i ored in. history, Sir Evelyn | un- by his strait-laced Massachusetts neighbors. This was Thomas Mor- i|ton, a lawyer of Clifford's Inn, London, wh'o settled at Mount ‘| Wollaston (mow Quincy), Massa- chusetts. | | Morton. was no Puritan. He built an 80-foot Maypole.for danc- ing and gave parties to whieh In- tlement, ‘‘Ma-re ;Mount,’’ Moun- tain By the Sea, quickly became khown as “Merie Mount.”’: {~ The Pilgrim Fathers accused him of selling firearms to the Indians andj eventually rid them: ~ selves of him. The Morton story was told by ‘Nathaniel Haw- thorne in The Maypole of Merry Mount, upon which Howard Han- son based: the opera Merry ‘Mount. \ jo | Old documents read by Sir Eve- lyn give. an jinteresting picture of early relations with Indians, who 436 Orchard Lake Ave. Were termed ‘Savages’ by the LOOK AT THIS Talk About SLASHING Prices At Mark Jewelers |e OAMOND | BRIDAL PAIR These places were not, of course, | ham, Norwich, Dartmouth and °: Along with traces of men hon- is covered the trail of one early set- F tler who! was not) highly regarded dian women weré’ invited. His seét-|-% first explorers and settlers. In one account Indians taken to Britain were described as ‘rude in their demeanure and Beestes,” but an- other observer declared their civ- ility was ‘“‘farré from the |rude- nesse) of our common people.” Many of the men responsible for the founding of New England never| saw the New World.) Among these | were Robert Browne,| John White and Sir Ferdinando Gorges. Browne was a fiery advocate of the righ: of free worship, and his preaching was a factor: in the decision of the Pilgrim Fath- ers to|flee England. White, the rector of Dorchester, saw New, England as a home for | Fa | British unemployed and a fair field and dry by low tide in a a for the spreading of Christianity. Gorges made elaborate plans for. a colony in Maine — plans which never were carried out but stimu- jated interest in thaf section of America. | | Not all the accounts. concerned _men, | 5 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER, 17, 1953. Eat Fried Spuds for Breakfast. to Attract Birds WASHINGTON (UP)—Eat fried potatoes for breakfast if you a a yard full of songbirds. ho. That's the advice of Dr. A. Rem-' ington) Kellogg, director. of : the Smithsonian Institution’s national museum. . A | : Kellogg is a ‘biologist and a member of various organizations. dealing with such things as mam- mology, herpetology, and’ zoology. | | not only from his educational back- In a case, however, he ‘talks but from years ot experi- groung, pence of eating fried potatoes for breakfast. Kellogg explained that . there usually are some fried potatoes left} | and these he throws on the lawn |° Kellogg said the fried potatoes attract more birds tha the fancy the nozzle with hydraulic pres- of his Chevy Chase home. Im- cardinals, and, red-bellied w peckers gather around. 2 bird-feeding stations put up by some of his neighbors. * These birds ‘like the) frying fat on the potatoes, he explained. bu robins do not like it. - Spray Painting Method Doesn't Require Air CLEVELAND, O. (UP) —A new way of spray-painting has come: put of the experiments of a Cleve- land firm painting without air, Billed as a method of spray- painting to eliminate’ paint waste and health hazard, the new system heats -the paint to lower its vis- cosity, then forces it out through sure. Bede, Products, developers of the process,. claim it cut time and labor involved, cuts paint loss and coast still has fisheries | Canadians Puzzled | by Disappearing Tuna OTTAWA | — The mystery of the missing tuna off Canada's west : officials puzzled jalter three years. First there were plenty of tuna; then there ails none. | In 193 | riety, a , tuna of the albacore va- streamlined fish won from 10|t9 20 pounds, mpved into British (Columbia waters for the first time in history. There were not many at the start and the war curtailed’, commercial possibilities. However, from 1944 on {the catch increased and during the 1948-1950 peak perigd, 6,500,000 pounds were landed with a value of $1,300,000. Then |the fish began {o vanish. The poun worth $33,000. Factory Items Bring Money . : hd to Connecticut, — HARTFORD, Conn. —_ It's pretty hard to- spend| money with- out some of. it going back to a Connecticut factory. _ The state development commis- sion has put out a list of products of which Connecticut makes “a considerable part’’ of the total na- tionanl production. In the case of a good many of them, Connecticut out-produces all other states com- bined. i I This is the list: | Locks, hand tools, rubber foot- wear, hats, bras and |copper goods, aircraft parts, ' casters, graph records, firearms - para- chutes, brake lining, buttons, vel- vets, industrial sewing machines, submarines, - ‘gatch was a mere 190, @00\shachine tool parts, s | airplane engines, machine tools, | | | | (ee | printed textiles, elastic. webbing, phono-. dictating machines, rugs, ball bear- : ings, marine hardware, electrical appliandes, hardware, silver-plated flatware, chains, brushes, springs, gun sights, time pieces, and elec | tric razors. A i; ee Diet Change Sought , | ANKARA, Turkey —Turkey’'s | | government has sent a 3-man team) | to tour the Black Sea region of the | country to persuade people in the area to eat wheat bread rather | than corn bread; the newspaper | “‘Hurses” reports. Turkey now has “ a large suhplus wheat crop. A | | TV REPAIRS | Work Gucranteedi | HAMPTON TV | - 286 State St. | i but a wealth of material in Bos: | | | a: arge It at No Extra Cost mediately mocking birds, catbirds? HERE IS A BEGINNING OF THE SEASON BUY THAT YOU WON’T WANT TO MISS. GEORGEOUS ~_ALL WOOL LADIES’ COATS BY ONE OF THE — FINEST MAKERS IN FABRICS THAT YOU JUST DON’T FIND IN COATS AT THIS LOW PRICE. ONE , LOOK AT SUCH FAMOUS FABRICS AS STROOCK, FORSTMANN, BOTANY, AND JULLIARD AND YOU WILL BE CONVINCED, EVEN AT THIS RE- MARKABLE PRICE YOU CAN CHARGE YOUR COAT AT THE LION STORE AT NO EXTRA COST! Morro URNS A METICIOGS ROO SE 80'T oo 4 WE WILL OPEN -AT 3:30 AND REMAIN OPEN UNTIL 9° FOR THE, CONVENIENCE OF OUR CUSTOMERS. . protects the operator from vapor. ‘A SMALL DEPOSTi' HOLDS YOUR CHOICE -IN LAYAWAY | i | al New ; Name Fa te a br ics | | | BR dy | ; | ub | | THR PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 17.1953 | __ - ||, FORTY-NINE | $a ve . | - -al | MISSES’, SUNIORS’ FULLY-LINED fT FALL Dressmaker suits,. casual suits, all of ‘em in fine acetate and rayon syitings that were loomed for higher prices! Crisp sharkskins, butter-soft flannels, silky gabardines—checks, Ale stripes, textured boucles! Tailoring you'd never dream of finding at r | only 10.88—handpiped buttonholes, | shape-retaining canvas, rich rayon | | : : USUALLY a crepe linings. Fall colors. 10. to 18, 2 lh | |p mA Hurry! Not every y style in every size and color! | 19 9S | | que 50% F Orlon-and-Wool i / , Permanently Pleated RTS | | | POODLE COATS USUALLY 7.95 Imagine paying so little for J. P. Steven's famous Kilton plaid! A‘ miracle fabric in a blend of /DuPont's fabulous 55% ORLON _/ and 45% precious WOOL that { wears beautifully! The al-around ! pleots are PERMANENT—wash ‘em, ot ‘hang ‘em to dry, the pleats stay | ‘pleated! Bright Fall: colors. Sizes 24 to 30. = Se All-Wwool iridescent poodles! Fine wools with 10% costly imported cashmere or "luxurious | fleeces!” Sweeping flares with | 'B L U $ E 5 raised yokes, swerving arrows, 1 stand-up collars! Handpiped buttonholes, | | 100% wool jers y iridescent rayon taffeta linings | blouses in go-with-all 59 —warmly interlined! | stripes! Dolman sleeves, Natural, Ice| Blue, Angel Pink, | ribbed turtle neck, | _ hugging waist. Heather | tones, 32 to 38. | Grey, Royal Blue. 10 to 18. | | Usually 2.89 Robert Hall makes news every | day of the year with top fashions at rockbottom prices! Robert Hall does it with its modern low overhead | supermarket way—bringing you America’s top-styled top-value clothing at prices . TOTS’ & GIRLS’ 2-PC. , COWGIRL SUITS & GIRLS’ FALL DRESSES impossible to match anywhere Cotton rhode, woven Friepe-edged skirt and t else! H in NOW and cet i gingham plaids, weskit vest! Vest ‘with | | i urry or aoe embossed solid cattons $ “bullet holders and | on these sensational savings! —in ‘whirl-skirt, bow- bullets!’—skirt With } | | ' : 1 | sash styles! Pastels, h = trimmed patch au | / OPEN EVERY EVENING TILL 9 P.M. fight and dark colors. , | pockets. Sturdy cotton ) ” Lk Sizes 3to12. | Usually 3.49 | twill. Black or Red.'3 to 8. Usuatry 1.99 if : | | Bete | byl, . H | | pes | | | | iV . 6 fF | Ly | | | i a _‘twhoops’”. and “whistles” ,and ye! THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 195 ere eet SPURNS. $1,000,000—Movie star Rita Hayworth pictured here with | her daughter, Yasmin, has_ in- dignantly rejected a | $1,000,000 divorce settlement froém Moslem Prince Aly’ Kahn. Under the terms of the agreement she would be re- quired to raise the three-year-old girl as a Moslem. Scientists Get a Bronx Cheer Record. ‘Whale Sounds Records Whale Sounds —Also: Squeals, Mew & e one that weighed 20 —Did you hear about got away? Must have} i | | a i WOODS HOLE, ot — (NEA); pounds, and had the | nicest bari- | tone voice, | | ;, Fish story? Nonsehse. Bcien- tists have long known that fish’ ! meke noises, and | nowadays they’re trying to find out) how, why, and which fish make what noises. And they’re kucceeding. A man trom the Woods| Hole, Mass., Ocpanpiraphid Institution took, himself up the | lower Saguenay River, at “tle mouth of the St. Lawrence Gulf. This is a hangout for white whales. He got boat, am underwater micro- phone and a recorder and lis- tened. _ And he came to the conclusion that white whales make a noise like a Bronx cheer. They also squeal and mew, This whole business 4 loud fish goes back ‘to 1907. Before then, most people thought ‘fish were deaf and dumb—hard) of herring. Byt, in that year, Krum- mel, a German, wrote that fish make sounds like ‘‘zischen, schnurren,; kurren, kKnauen,| grun- zen, trommein, und pfeiffen.”” Pretty smart fish, speaking Ger- man that way. Latér scientists of other nations “heard the sounds, too.’ They re- ported all sorts of weird | noises coming from the uceans’ depths— from high - pitched sounds to bass voices. Gradually, more and more different sounds were cat jogned. ‘The latest expedition, by the institution’s vessel, Caryn, went to the Atlantic off Bermuda, southeast of ‘Filletdelphia.| They were eqyipped with a big reel of cable, several underwater mikes, a battery of Gray Audograph re- corders and plenty of deep water, because the ocean floor is two miles below: he surface there. They let the varyn’s motors stop, to give the fish no compe- tition, and the 97-foot ketch just drifted. And: then, up m the|- briny, came amazing sounds.; The scientists! find it difficult | to de- scribe what they heard; they rely on such unscientific words as sereams:” 1 \° Seine Spinet Pianos Displayed dt the -about after a careful study of the} ‘‘Thus, slowly, differences be-|cial unit authorized by this year’s | out on'the ground. She suffered only. manding smoc ther, more econoin- TELEVISION - - RADIO REPAIR - SERVICE © All Work Guaranteed © All Makes | Expert, Trained Technicians Bussard Electric | Phone FE 2.6445 | 84 Oakland Avenue —Free Park oy ° |. } factor in evolution ‘and responsible nD: ' lPhen thé paroled prisoners .will Le! Study of Birds ~ |ittaxinean te wace” |New Parole Method |tantetedo tie mar aren Auto, Designer Gon Aiding Research ‘| Writing in the museum’s month-|'— . : > a The’ experiment was prompted Effici ny,’ Not Speed | | ly periodical De. Rand seid that Tried in California by the fact that the parole violation DETROIT (UP) = Mitomobiles About Sexes “| in many cases the two sex have , fate, ie ciency eee ee bein, ide ed for higher and ia ; different food creferecices, oF if SACRAMENTO, Calif. — ‘rhe three months of freedom. are Ing | sign 0 4 af CHICAGO (UP)—Dr. Austin L. the preference is the same they | California Department of Correc-| , higher speeds eee c ays but Rand, who used to think the bat- get their food in different " ways. dens haa begun en intensive < Wife’s Long Locks Get real aim of such design is to p tle of the sexes was a by-product “It is possible that further study | |... ; are 'Trim With Pocketknife vide more’ efficient performance |at of civilization, now believes it is| may pring to light additional cases | V1? experiment in an effort tp ie moderate jspeeds says Jack Wolf- “probably as old as sex itself.” |of sex differences that are of ad- reduce the number of parole vio- OTTAWA, Kan. — Mrs. Karl) pa gern eral fnanager of the Olé Rand, curator of birds at Chi-| vantage to, the species in enabling | lators. Johnson] got a pocketknife haircut. | yobile division of General Mot cago National History Muséum, | the sexes to eat different things,” | Fourteen experienced parole of _ When ithe Johnson car-went into Corp byisic . eS said his change in thinking came |he wrote. ficers have been assigned to a spe-|a ditch,| Mrs. Johnson was thrown Wolfram says. motorists are de- e- feathered fauna’s feeding | habits.|}tween the sexes would accumu-| legislature. Each will be responsi-| minor abrasions, but a wheel of the | jeal engine performance in the |30 He believes these habits so im-| late.’ ble for about 15 paroled prisoners, | car pi her down by her hair. | to 60~ mite hour range. To portant that ‘‘competition for food} However, Dr. Rand conceded, |Normally parole officers supervise| Her h band quickly set her free | achieve! this ormance, he says, in part for characteristics . . .|‘‘this sort of evolution would be|90 persons.each. 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Fe A / . r _ Porterfield (20-10) in the ~ (20-14), eles peereee e THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 1953 1 LANSING w—A idbstisdve! com- mittee today was prepared to su- spend high school eligibility rules and’ then work out new anes with _the state department of public in- struction. dis * * * | Committee on jadmi rule met for the second the cases of six Hastings High School athletes and three from the Upper Peninsula declared ineligi- ble in what their attorne “harsh. and ar bitrary rulings.” Chairman Harry oh Phillips (R-Port Huron) said the commit. ; tee was convinced | after all-day hearings yesterday that the pres- ent eligibility rules do not con- form ‘to the law. | | * * | * nistrative day on | ok At the same time, ithe committee is reluctant to suspend the rules and open. the doors to the cor- ruption of high school athletes, he | said. The members met today with Supt. De Taylor to draft a new tule to be submitted to Gov, | ilfiams for ys called | of Public Instruction Clair‘ to fill the a} | ontenzency ‘agpreval breech. si » « | Committee was. also seeking to force Dr, Taylor to reinstate the ineligible athletes. Phillips said if he refuses, the etes could go into circuit court for an injunction to force their reinstatement while the ineligibility rules are in suspen- sion, _* * & “But I-don’t think that will be necessary,’ Phillips said, The. six Hastings athletes, all seniors; were declared ineligible for a year last month for accept- $2.44 from a tackle manufacturer who sponsored their softball team this summer. * * * The Uy pper Peninsula youths drew the same penalty at the same time for ' accepting merchandise prizes for participation in a junior galf tournament. | Eligibility rules forbid high school athletes to accept merchan- | dise when the eligibility question More 20- Game Winners _ Likely tor 1953 Season By BEN OLAN | NEW YORK: (®—There didn't figure to be many 20-game winners in this year of record- breaking home runs. But the major league total is ‘almost certain fp exceed | Mickey McDermott of the Red Sox | | | Whitey Ford gf the Yan- | that of 1952, . Four big) ragte plidhers al- ready have reached thé 20-wins mark and the prospects are for at least four more to get into the charmed circle. Last year, six made the grade— Robin Roberts of the Philadelphia | Phillies, Allie Reynolds of the New York Yankees, Bobby Shantz of the Philadelphia A's and Cleve- land’s big. three’ of Bo Lemon, Early Wynn, and Mike Garcia. With Roberts (22-14), Lemon Warren Spahn of Milwau- kee (20-7) and Washington's Bob fold this year, other potentials. line up as follows:' Mel. Parnell! of the Boston Red Sox (19-8); Virgil Trucks of * the Chicago White) Sox’ (19-10); _ game Sept. 26. Coach Biggie | Mt areca plans for the ease-up /after a two- tee r _linto the fifth round af' Brooklyn’s Carl Erskine (19-6) and Gundry Wins: County Barber Golf Tourney Birmingham | IV’ et Takes Title With 81; _Ex-GI Finishes Second. a Jack Gundry of Birmingham de-| the fall campaign, it's likely the’ grudge to settle wi | Tugged Flint sophomore |will’ be| Not only have t throned Everett Arthurs of Pon- tiac Wednesday in! the Oakland) County Barbers golf tournament | at Forest Lake Golf| Cl Gundry,; at 53 4 oldi st player }: in the tournament! younger rivals with an 81. George Dimitroff, a Hazel Parker recent- ly returned from Korean service, was runnerup with. 83. | Defending champion Arthurs slipped to fourth plac back of Frank Holman. The} other former ‘champ in the firld, Pere Secord of Pontiac, dropped out of the low 10 scorers, Dimitroff won the ativing con- test, Howard McKinney of Pon- tiac, the pitching trophy, and Jack Devereaux of Rojal | Oak, the putting award. George Nault of Birmingham was named chairman for next year at a dinner which followed the tour- ney. Awards also i made at this time, Ray Palmer ; 5th Round of U. S, Test OKLAHOMA CITY u_Ray smond Palmer of Grosse Ile, Mich., was one of the 16 who battled their way e Nationak ships here Amateur Golf Champio yesterday. Palmer whipped Stanley E. Bish- op, Weston, Mass., 4 and 3, in the fourth round, after having elimii- nated Donald M. Justice, Okla- hhoma City, 3 and 1 in the third. | Glen H. Johnson, Palmer’s golf- ‘ing pal from Grosse Ile, lost in the third round to Robert W. Kuntz,,| ‘Larchmont, N. ¥., 3 and 2. Jack Kistler, full bac |row, entertained the coa k for Duke’ Cardinals | (18-8). Those with an outside chance of | aining! 20 victories are: Billy | Pierce of: the White Sox} (17-10): | (17-9); kees (17-5); Gerry Staley of the | St.. Louis’ Cardinals (17-8); Wynn (17,12) and Garcia ae 9).! Branoff Shows Kicking Talent inM Practices Flint Soph Is ‘Likely to Do Footwork for Wolverine Eleven of kickers in the Michigan} football /man he’d be in pretty go kj shape for a player to handle ki punts, conversion tries ahd field ' goal attempts, Halfback Tony ere im- | pressed the Wolverine staff with | his’ proficiency at all these chores. And. when the whistle blows on | doing a lion’s ehate of the foot: | | work, | However, Branoff isn’t the only | .candidate'for the kicking job. Half- oO tshot his! back Ted; Kress and quarterback Louis Baldacci are both high among the candidates. Kress averaged 29.6 yards last year on eight tries but is rated improved, this year. te did no punting last year. And Baldacci has only high school experience under his belt despite the fact his practice work has been impressive. Y Also challenging Branoff in the place-kicking and kickoff phases of the game are guard Don Dugger and end Bob Topp. Both have drilled hard on the job and are making serious bids. Topp did much of the var ‘ity kick- off work in the last big scrimmage and was peqanaes as gi at the job. Kicking’ received coniialatte in- dividual attention during |Wednes- day’s practice, that. was ¢limaxed by a long scrimmage. Topp, for the second day, in’ a hes and spectators with a fine een of pass catching. Apparently finished were the.two- |, a-day practices that prevailed since drills opened Sept. 2, There was only an afternoon session’ Wednes- day to,premit the players to reg-'- ister for classes, which begin Mon- day. |: Calling Charlie Burgess NE! IN, Mass. (AP)—A call for golfer Charlie Burgess can get plenty of response at the Woodland Golf Club here. ‘There are four members by that name—representing four Harvey , Haddix of the St. Louis ANN ARBOR AP—There’ 4 no lack | was raised. They all'said they ac- cepted only on the save of adults. Dr. Taylor, under Whose au- therity the Michigan High School Athletic Association executive committee held a |hearing and recommended the | suspensions, said the committee determined that the eligibility pales: had been violated.) | + eS “What has jarred the people of the state about this,” said Sen. Edward Hutchinson (R-Fennville), a committee member, “‘is this fixed and harsh penalty. Apparently you did not take into consideration any degree of cuplability. a »* George W. “bean. attorney tor thd Hastings youths, claimed that the MHSAA executive committee had no legal authority to interpret or conduct ‘‘trials’’ on its own rules, “That's not the American way,” he said. * * * Rep. Gerald W. Graves (R- Alpena), who has interested him,. self in the case, said the associa, || \! | f j tors Prepared to Suspend licibility instruction themselves have been violating ne Jaye. * They failed tad three years to file written rules and they still have not complied with a 1952 law requiring them to set up procedures for appeals from their decisions. | “ 7) = These points are the basis for the committee's contention the rules do not conform to law. tion and the department of public }- ~ Charles A. Semler, Benton Har- | i y | ie i 1 bor High School orincibal and chairman of the MHSAA executive committee, defended the present rule as less stringent than in most other states. | * * * ! He and other members of ithe executive committee contended ithe rules were what the great majotity of the pchool men in the state wanted. | |« ie * **° &* ‘ | “we're not going to let a bupch of Chamber of Commerce ‘men smal athletics,’" Dr, Tey: lor said ii 4 private Brive, ing rejectéd fishing rods worth’) _. ‘ cer oe By BILL MARTIN Wyandotte’s|‘defending Border Cities League champions, who Fri- day night play hosts to Pontiac High's football squad in the 1953 season opener, havé a particular the Chiefs. Dots failed to win in three encounters ‘with | Pontiac, but their opening loss to | the Chiefs ast season ruined an undefeated slate for the year, The two teams have met only three times in history, with Pon- tiac coming out on the long end > of the score eara time: They first tangled in 1925, with Pon- tiac winning, 2-0, Chiefs won again the following year, 20-0, Sct s Dots Seek ‘0 and, _ a 25-year lapse, licked Wyandotte, 20-13, last season, — Dots rebounded from that) set- back to win eight consecutive’ vic¢-. tories and the Border Cities Con- | ference title. Dick Hoffheins, st g his ist season as head coach/ has inine lettermen back from/the 1952 charm pionship squad. Hig all-letterman backfield incliides qu ck Joe | Jelsomino, halfbacks Erwin Sadan- | owicz and Bob Jeffry and fullback | Dave Barkey, Jelsomino is the! only | regular in the quartet. Anchoring the line will be vet- erans Dave Sturgeon and Jack | Emerick, tackles, end Jim Hardin COLUMBUS, 0. 4 — Before another season, some solutions will have been reached jon realignment of teams and leagues and the part television and radi are to play in the game. | | That's the pro of George M. Trautman, president of the minor leagues. 3 intelligently, trying to solve the problems facing ips,’ autman said. Trautman admits the abaincies in the path of bringing minor league baseball back to the high pom it uchieved in 1949 are High-Scoring Smiths * DURHAM, N. C. (— The In- dividual scoring ¢ pionship in Duke University football the past two seasons has been won by a guy named Smith. )In 195] Charlie Smith the scoring crown with 42 points. ;Last year Charlie fin- ished . second to | James ___ (Red) Smith. The latter had 50 points to minor league baseball gets into| “We are diligently, and I hope! and guard Bill Katz. Gordon Rich- 1 Trautman Believes Minors Will Solve Ditticulties many and varied. But he is quick to add: ‘‘We’re not hysteri- cal.”’ Most of the work on the prob- | lems is being done by minor league club officials, who most strongly | feel the impact of the troubles. | But the major leagues — which Trautman says must give greater | recognition to the ills of the smaller | leagues — are doing some work | with the minors. “These troubles will be solved— they must be solved,” Trautman said, Vit | minor league baseball, is | to tay alive. If baseball is liqui-! dated, hundreds of other agencies | which) find baseball a good vehicle | will lose out.”’ .| “Realignment is | come | ‘about by the wave of the magic wand. We must have ah} orderly procedure, and to this date we have found no one clothed with | authority to say who is to. bead where," Baseball Results \f 3 ‘University, carried thé ball from/ generations. Often they are at |\Charlie’s 48. Red returns for the By ‘The Associated Press | scrimmage 72 times in 1952 and! the club, at the same time. And 1953 season but Charlie is now in| _| AMERICAN ict on didn’t lose a saul He} gained 390.\all are: _ pretty ‘fair golfers. ‘the service. ‘| | New Work.......... eae | Chidage ae e ‘535 13% ‘| | | | Boston ..... casos 7 Biggie Non- Committal © po Wasbingten sic I Se 8 " | Phiipdetphia xe conte ol .372 4B Mt. [Leute 5. 95 Bah AB Munn Cuts MSC Drills to One-a- Day:|tleeescss bel Another By ROBERTSE. EAST. LANS Michigan State’s football Luss cut back to one-a-day workouts today as the Yous date of the opening | game with Iowa crept closer. [| 4 Just a week from” , a 38 man traveling stquad board a chartered plane for the Iowa City in preparation for. Mich- igan State’s first “a Big Ten hour long: scrimmage ‘Macklin Stadium. Saturday. “We may tn a sliort ad ® fight to session in | “of ‘the interceptions Munn said the overt will stage | Scrimmage Slated but it'll be into contact sdasioll on peed a light one if we go work,” he said. Mun was cautiously non-com- || mittal about what he thought of the mid-week scrimmage. ‘They don’t look too good and they didn’t look ,too bad,” he said. Michigan: ‘State’s number one eleven alternated against two sets of junior varsity and sophomore players armed with Iowa plays. ‘Two top teams moved well al- were by Ray Eggleston of Jackson... __ ‘Fullback Vic Postula’ of Mar- } Shall carried over for a touch- amin | Steal cen though they were set back three |: times by pass interceptions. Two | back Saturday | down, after the ‘second Lacceest Detrei ‘tion — the only score by the out- se Sets 2 New ew Tork x4] fit working as Iowans. | ington n DAY’ Ch aaee | Be Tommy Yewcic was at quarter-| ‘Np coma soho hse a | back for the number one outfit | NATIONAL.L LEAGUE, with Flint’s Leroy Bolden and| prépatyn ..........9) 4 oe On Bert Zagers of Cadillac at the - auine Sort ++-87 ba 4 12 halfs and sop! Gerry Planu-| philadelphia “.22..:.78 67 [538 20% tis at fullback Now Fork. ......+..€7 pe ee | “ead Morral oH ‘Museen ran Melleeeses GL 83) 42487 the second team. Jimmy Ellis of | Pit TODAY's Gites, Firciens || Saginaw and Gene Ages ‘of | ,:troetize ot st. a 188 mere phia | at Cnieage, 1:86» - ons (“Gabe Ba bflmage oe | . | WEDNESDAT’s RESULTS Mitre shee 7 Pittsburgh 3 York 4 Cincinnati 3)) a Neos ; he oe epee Ue Htroit at Beston, 1 p.m.—Garver (11- vs Hudson (5-9); St, Louis at New r, 2 p.m.—Latsen (6-11) vs McDon- || (9:6); Chicage at Washington, u bg ~——-Pieree (17-10) vs Porterfield HO; [Clevetand at a =] pat Garcia (17-9) vs Sehieb (3-7). en maeUETe indicated,!’ t Trautman said. “But it does not | ihr Sts’ Oia ER ap pI. or Stal -- sie CHIEFS HUDDLE — Pontia¢ High’s starting eleven that will face | Wyandotte Friday night in the 1953 season’s opener are shown above in a huddle. Back row, left to right: end Leroy Moore, halfback Bill Rose, fullback ~ Gracey, halfback Homer Harrison, end iy ‘Wiscombe. Front row, from left: tackle Jack Hopkins, guard Ed Shaw ‘center Ed Hoban, guard Bill McLarty and tackle’ Tom Metzdorf. Quarterback Dipk Ayling is calling the ai ettle Gi { ,ards,'a punter, Is the other re- ‘turning letter-winner. Dots’ line, averaging 190 pounds, will hold a 10-pound per mam weight advan- tage over the Chiefs.’ Dedication cerémonies for the inew lights at Wyandotte’s’ Roose- velt Stadium will be held. before pa Cause Fewer Deaths 9 7 nq | i LANSING wm — The supercilious fly fisherman had another excuse today to look down his ‘nose at those who take trout with worms. The state conservation depart- ment said experiments indicated that the hooks commonly used in worm fishing cause’ much more death: and injury to trout than do the hooks used in fly fishing. This, of course, refers to trout which are returned to the water after being. caught. The finding was reported by Drs. L. N. Allison and David S. 'Shetter of the Institute for Fish- eries Research at Ann Arbor. They are to present their findings’ .. this-week to the American Fish- eries Society meeting at Milwau- kee. The department , said fly hookings caused death ‘to less than four per cent of all brook trout caught, while fishworm hooks ‘killed 37 per {" | cent. i | Pouuac Press Photo eee | udge the game, which is scheduled for 8:30 px fans at ending the game is to take Telegraph Road to Eureka, ithen turn lett, Stadium is located be- hind Roosevelt High School, on Pureka street, A Cath. Central Favored in GR | Wide Open Battle for Fyrniture City. GRAND RAPIDS W — It's the | \general opinion) in Grand Rapids schoelboy centers that Catholic ‘Central again will be the team to {beat for the city| league champidn- iship. | t | The battle for second place | should be wide: open, with the || league’s four other teams—Cen- tral, Union, South and Ottawa Hills—figuring in the chase. Coach Ted/Spwle of Catholic 'Central lost same fine players ‘from last year's) championship out- ‘fit, but 10 experienced boys are | returning to fil ¢very position ex- ‘cept fullback. ‘However, there have been several | conversions. Biggest onés Were moving Jim | Jacobitz feom quarterback to cen- iter and grooming southpaw: half- iback, Dick hardt, for the quar- 'terback’s job, || Vic JanowicZ of the Pirates iwears No. 31 ‘on his uniform. It 4 Bra Second Place Seen in _| back. Sees Hanes nott's Taped Knée Belies His Actual Condition ANN {ARBOR (® — You'd never know if, but there’s nothing wrong with the knee of Tony Branoff, Michigan's highly-regarded half- The jentire leg of the rugged youngster from Flint is swathed in tape and gauze to the peint where | the casual visitor in |the Michigan football camp is start- | led into. thinking a maior iny ry has struck. . Best route for Pontiac In experiments on brown trout, there were no deaths among fly- hooked fish, but 20 per cent of: the browns taken on worm hooks died soon after being released. For rainbows, the death ratio was 11-per. cent on fly-hooked fish Tatum Changes Single-Platoon ~ ; Working System Maryland Coach Will] Sub by Position, Not by Team By GEORGE BOWEN COLLEGE PARK,. Md. ® — Coach Jim Tatum has’ found out that his original theory of coping with limited football substitutions didn’t pan out in practice and Maryland will try another system of “wearing 'em down’’ in its 1953 opener at Missouri Saturday. On paper, Tatum had thought it would be a good idea to get to- gether the best 11 players he had on offense and defense for his first team, another 11 who were ‘second. best in both departments, a third team which shined on of- fense only and then .half a dozen specialists who could do either. “The boys didn’t develop that “way,” he reported today. “So I decided to pick the three best guys for each position and work on them as three Separate teams. F “That way we can throw three teams at ‘em. Of course, the sec- ond team won't be as good as the first or the third as good as the second.’ But they should make up for any weaknesses by being fresh. “TI believe fatigue is going to play a big part in this year’s football.” _ The Maryland coach still is con- vinced there also will be more scoring. ‘I'll bet you that Mis- souri on’ Saturday scores more against us than it did in four previous games against my teams,’’ he said. Coach Tatum opposed Don Fau- ‘rot (from whom he learned the split-T while under him in the * Actually, the taping. is a preven tive measure, harking back tp an injury’, suffered by Branoff in his’ senior "year ‘in high school. Now in his second year in college, he! still tapes the leg up before every prac- tice segsion. The ipines they do tor footbpll! 'Two Sets of Un forms Provided for Spartans EAST. LANSING W — Michigan State will have two separate |8ets of football uniforms this fall in- stead of just the traditional parb of white pants and green jerseys. The change comes as a result é Fa of the Big Ten regulation requiring | times since coming to Maryland. Tatum has won all four and Mis- ‘souri scored in only two games. | Williams Lake ‘Harness Racing | Driver Injured Elmer ‘Dutch’ Going, 64, vet- eran harness racing driver from Williams. Lake, was hospitalized |. Wednesday night following an ac- cident that marred the opening .race .of the Wolverine Raceway card. * Going was taken to Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital witha broken right leg after piling into a broken sulky & Ho \ a Study Shows Fly Hooks Less Damaging to Trout Season Friday i | Yellowjackets won.five of eight Navy) once at Oklahoma and three | | BATTING—-Vernan, Washington, .839; | DETROIT, and 35 per cent on worm: ed fish. The research men said the me- dium- sized No. 8 hook was shown to be the most damaging to fish. They said. ‘the ‘mortality from worm hooking could be a factor jin keeping trout populations at minimal levels.”’ Shamrocks Open | | | | at Wisner Field Notthsiders Expect Stiff Test Against Avondale Eleyen St. Michael s Shamrocks open their 1953 football season Friday night against Avondale in Wisner Memorial Stadium. Kickoff time is set-for 8 p.m. The big_and experienced Avon- dale eleven is expected to provide | a stiff opening ‘test for the Mikés. | starts last ‘season and were run-— |nérsup in the tough Oakland 2. | League. Shamrocks, on the~ oth | hand, won only one game and t anpther in eight contests. | s _ Spear-heading the Avondale. ‘split. -T attack are Joe Schwerin, | all-conference guard in 1952, and halfback Ron Shore, an outstand- ing performer as a freshman last year. © Three other regulart : from the 1952. squad join Schwerin and Shore. or! Coach Frank Crowell’s ‘Starting lineup. They are end Toby | Aldrich, tackle Al Hill and: full- back Marv Evans, a. 175-pound converted tackle. NO | St. Michael squad will make i opening appearance in, new silver uniforms. Coach Bob Mineweaser plans to start ends Joe Wilhelm and Dick Adams, tackles Al Wil- helm jand Larry Maison, guands Dick Fleming and Mike Campbell and center Bob Schmidt: In the ‘backfield will be Russ Shindorf et quarter, Mike Lauringer and cat Clever or Bud’ Schwartz at h backs and Wayne Magnan at [ back. i Blues Have Blues — at Ticket ( Office perion Blues, who have drawn only 30,000 this’ year, will remain in tthe Northern Baseball League n ‘ season only if major league ation jis arranged. That’s the wed of General Manager Billie Berg. Superior is unaffiliated. In 1952,; when the Blues won league all-star game, the penn and, the playofts, they drew 75; fans. | \ a Berg said. if the franchise is sold for about the $15,000 the club has lost this season, the - money will, ‘be banked with an.eye toward getting back into the Class C cir- cuit — if a major league comiec: tion can be arranged. league Leaders By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE the ant Rosen, Cleveland, .829; Mineso, Chica. .312; Goodman, Boston, New York, ago, -310; : ‘Woodling, -309. x UNS—Rosen, Cleveland, 103; Washington, 102; Mantle, New 100; Minoso, \Chicago, 99; Vernon, ington, 98. | 136; Vernon, Washington, 110; BOONE, ios; Berra, New York, i, ‘Ver- Mineso, Chicago 97. HITS—KUENN, DETROIT, 200; non, Washington, 196; Rosen, Cleveland, 186; Philley. Philadelphia, 182; Busby, Washington, /171. _ DOUBLES—-Vernon, Washi gton, i 42; Kell, Boston, 41; White, Boston, | 33 Goodman, Boston and NIEMAN, IDE: troit, 82.) | TRIPLES—Rivera, Chicago, 14; Were non, Washington, 11; Piersall, ston and Philley,: Philadelphis, 9; Fox and ‘Minoso, Chicago and BOONE, E- TROIT, 8 ge fOMe BS [Ne Resen ‘38; “Berra New lh aes rn e| a, Tre, York, 27; Deby, _ ‘Cleveland, "Boone, DETROIT, 23. | STOLEN BASES—Mineso,| Chicage, 2m; Rivera, depts pie Panne 21; Jensen, a Philadelphia ten, 17; Busby, ‘is the same numeral he wore dur- visiting teams to wear white) jer-|on the second lap. Sulky, driven Washington it \12. = ° ing his collegiate football days at|seys. by Dan Fisher of Mendon, 0., had| i7CHING—Lopet, ne York, 14, Ohio State, | On the road, Michigan State | collapsed on the Ist turn, pitching New York, 18-5, .722; Parnell, Boston, players) will wear white jerseys|Fisher to, the track. Fisher was 1956, tet Sain, New Ye gS, | Joe Sulaitis, one of the few men| with green numerals ‘and green| treated for a‘ slight concussion at bi eaees rine i haa (Cleveland, in pro football lacking college ex-| stripes’ on the sleve and olid’ Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital. | Boston, 123." reins eh Rete perience, will soon start his 10th! green | ‘Pants with a pola white hoo horses escaped Reripus in- NATIONAL L iekdce season with inl ae York Giants. | stripe. | BATTING-+Furille, Breoklyn, .844; Irvin, New. Yor -342; Mueller, New York, 386; Satéer Brooklyn, .835; Scrib Feels Ma jor eaves Are Lien Boat On eae tein oh got UNS—snide Beeokipar 12 ker, Breokiya, 176; Ot 117; Musial St. oats, 116; Robinson, Brook. , lprscniva ite k Di Miweahoe tert | Se fecitans cee Brooklyn, 120; ” " nn ‘ ° / H | hit e-Acern, Philadelphia, ise; j , . le Snider, Brooklyn, 189; Dark, New Yerk, | NEW YORK—To show you how stupid all of these Los Angeles and San Francisco are two of the 381; Musial, in ‘suggestions for big-league expansions and big-league most sports;minded cities in the world. Look at ro se cckine ae St. Louis, | | 48; lchanges re are, consider only this one angle— |their footbafl attendance figures from 80,000 | to Sng Fortiie reckiva she Bl bodes both Los Angeles ae San Francisco are still in the | 100,000, in spite of television. Race-track attendances | Chicare, 86. ; minors. F range from /40,000 to as high as 60,000, and even | Fondy, ell and. Braton, Hea al * * * | 85,000—figures New York and Chicago can't ey te | hiladelphia and Hemus, | They are ti -league cities and should have been , CHOME LUNG Mathews, Milwankée 46; ‘in the . big le _ years ago. There are now 16 We have unfortunately forgétten who once sald— Cinclanss” We ‘ * salder, econ major-league clubs and these two cities are as good | ‘“Westward/|the star of empire tak its vat “ reek Chicage, ruse las:any itwo le paders and better than at least twelve | Westward, the sporting star of empire, is takir ob: Reese: eae ne oy ten. Broek- - | major-léague | its way in| a hurry. The tine is coming orien Wyn, 18: obinton, ‘brockira, 16; Saider, | ee en those contrpliing the destinies .of big-league base- | ,PITCHING—Erskine, Breokiva,” 10-4 | Milwaukee has shown the need of new blood. ansaid ee Mefer, Brocktyn and Burdette, mast | Milwaukee js a fine, hustling city, keen for ad- oe 14-5, 781; Haddix, St, Louis, 18-8 | Venture. Her itizens have city loyalty. They love | Milwaukeemay break all National Le ole ean OUTS—Rederts va | sport. | + | This is happening in. Milwaukee, with attendance | Louis, ie "tiadai, St. 1 183; ro | = = * Ha | figures unknown and even undreamed /of in many | M!!waek i | | ‘|| But Milwaukee has nearly 700,000 people. Los | big-league cities. No one connected with baseball | DNESDAY’S STARS ‘Angeles has more than 2,000,000, with a like mumpber even sensed this happening. <, bi | PITC fe Marrero, Wash- packed in the same neighborhood. Now we have Los Angeles. and San francisco on | aeent race ee eee San | hasn’t this many people, but it has | the outside looking in, capable of crowds even larger Oe crannies Deby, Cleveland In- ore ® jit in Tet netedbechondy alas aad than Milwa' ee, which will continue to surpass most dians, got » home run and s single minded. | ate eonry nee Ud Nesionel Sane ctr: | lS oan ee | | | | t { | j ! | 7% | i, | ' | ae x lost, ork, Wash-- { \ RUNS BATTED IN—Rosen, Cevehea; ia SUPERIOR, Wis. ( — The Su- . pe ' Ee Dien reer er NaI a Io FIFTY- Twa. , cae | ees “. THE ENS PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEM. BER 17, 1953. Atter 70 harness, racing nights at | Roosevelt Raceway in N, Y., the record ath that horses in “Post Cne position have won 127 times. |~- ''VILLLLLLLL eae ee © Remove front wheels and _ Inspect lining. ® Inspect, close and repack front wheel bearings _ FRONT END ALIGNMENT TERMS ‘CAN BE_ARRA & leh cr al arta ah ahah, 146 West Huron Street Ln omaearhenhemchonr HERE'S WHAT WE DO:. Le } ° Inspect brake drums. Check | and add) brake fluid if L needed ® Adjust brake shoes to secure full contact with drums, © Carefully test brakes. che isd veranda (LEB) ED FOR ‘ALL woORK STORE | FEderal 2- 9251 CA herteadaearhadeudl Nee eddd By HUGH FULLERTON aR> OKLAHOMA CITY p—The com-| mon people todk | lover the National Amateur, Golt Championship today at the plush Oklahoma City Golf and Country Club. | * * me, The former champions—with one exception — the Walker Cup stars and the affluent! ones joined the galleries as the field’ was reduced to 16 players for the second ‘‘double death” mt that will bring the tournament down to the semi- final stage tonight. | Those still competing included: Two parr links | players—the champion aH | _ he: rig ail alaive Oe eat cleanest, § ever Yad. die sen ia Oe a os ay shaves. But pits” your f 4 razor using iin _ nye pogo tomo d! you | di ee bet menta fe = . 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CERTIFICATE 1 | This jertilicn thet | pordhuned| © 904 SIN Ikjectes Roses: Ke, ond: hove complied swt Melina: Uf alter ! _ |} Enclosed is the instruction: sheet from my new Schick Injector Razor and the empty 12 blade cartridge from the Kit, ‘ | Pleese Send me $1.46 worth of Schick Injegor . oF C] Refund’ my 98¢ - | 1: * Blades—2 packs of 20's i | 3 To.be Filled in’ by Dealer: ' | p DIALER NAME ' Losgs ! SOLD BY_. | eee = to the in { ony party. To Box 12, Brooklyn 1, N. Y. | g_Te SE VALID REFUND CARTRADE. 5 — o-. = = ow npions, | Three college boy: | “A Coast Guardsman) and a Navy airman.whose main duty is direct- ing recreation, A steel plant—worker. A covey of salesmen. * s' £¢ ™ | ‘And an unemployed politician. who doesn’t have to worry about the shortage of votes. : The bracket of 16 wasn’ t entirely Fall in devoid of name players or golfers financially able to hold up their end in the country club set. But it definitely was a tournament for the working men at’ Ain stage. * * none the waretace were 1950 ‘champion Sam Urzetta of Rochest- er, N. Y.; three other members of the. 1953 U, S. Walker Cup Team; il bL.. Moraes, ard most success- tion, and Jim Jackson of St. These four survived the third ¢ of the tournament which, saw \ Doce Calif., "Navy J 1 Amateu | feng champion Jack Westland, ex-champions Charley Coe, Ted | -| Bishop and former British ama- teur ‘champion Harvie Ward, knocked out of the running. The duel between Coe Ward was the big event yesterday. When the winner, Ward, lost out .| to Bobby Kuntz from Larchmont, N, Y., thé last of the ome en disappeared, All 4 Arrowhead “League ll’s Have Chance at Title BAY CITY (-—There are. only four teams in the Class A Arrow- head Football League, Alpena, Bay City Handy, Midland and Traverse City—but each one has a chance} for the title. Each school has a new coach and each coach has installed a new system. That: makes it an uncertain, wide-open race. Alpena is the defending cham- pion. Bill Beach, head coach of the wildcats, |will have to find a replacement for Dave Kaiser, an all-state back. Traverse City is the league’s newest member. Coach Irv Men- zell saw 137 boys turn out for practice opening day—but only have a ed ‘squad ready for the season’s opener this Friday. d 17 juniors and two sophs on jlast year’s squad and most of those players are back again this eeaecn. It’s a good-sized club which could| go a long way. Comorrey— Sasi) aw Valley), | | et in and Meet JAKE A veteran of over 35 years in the automotive business, Mr. ' bring your car ‘troubles to. JACOBSON’S Motor Sales Your Hudson Dealer 58 W. Pike at Cass Jacobson is just the man to [| Prospects | ‘in Meet | rican and Aussi juthwest tennis tournam ‘into the first stages of d, the; American and Au lay tralian Davis Cup prospects still very much in the. picture; Cent er court matches fea of thr e dct ent the quarter finals in men’s singles it O- S- e y, stocky Lewis Hoad, one sensations, playing against ‘sou paw | f who the Larsen of Californ United States champign 18 year old Australian has wanted a berth on rican Cup team. Other quarter final match pits | Victor | Seixas of Philadelphia, walrio} dena, All 16 lad scare, | Tomorrow. Ken Rosewail, | other | agains | tional || plays Hugh Stewart of South Pap bledon champion, agaifi , Ted Schroeder of neak ada. ; champion Tony Trabe Calif: ' ‘ived yesterday's round only Rosewall, the No} m cow under, receiv } % the 18-year-old Aussie, goes t Bob Perry of UCLA. Na- wt the st a of x , a | Over Football Cal, Texas in | ‘Legal Battle’ SAN FRANCISCO The Calit- ornia-Baylor football game Satur- day at Berkeley brought this unusual request from Texas Atty. Gen. John Ben Sheppard to Califor- nia Atty. Gen. Edmond G. Brown: “Our splendid record for legal codperation on tidelands cases will be forgotten Saturday | P. m. on the gridiron, Therefore, we must) re- quest a 3-hour éasem nt of the 10 ‘yards just behind your goal line. Our Texas boys will use.the area so constantly! you may as well, give us the title. to it.’ Brown telegraphed back: | ' “The -only way you will get be- hind the goal line is by another seizure of land without constitu- tional authority or precedent.” {| Roomie Johnny Lattner’ s NOTRE DAME, Ind. (AP) — Johnny Lattner, All-America halfback at Notre Dame, hada five yard per carry, average last year. His roommate, Bob Rigali, however, had a better average. Lattner made 734 yards tn 148 carries. Rigali had a 14- yard average. He carried once against Iowa for 14 yards. | here’s one A HUB Exclusive— | FLANNEL imported | and Fleet @ Open your \ CHARGE , ACCOUNT. (in « a matter off ] ae ; op” | t | | 1 | 1{ j { } | | } | 1] I i | f | | | || —————— You may ‘ Cadillac, but you suit of t right now— Ridi from England,}and tailored with the same hand details you see in quits costing $10 tol $15 more elsewhere. Choose from Oxford, Cambridge from England | styled by ve to wait for your can afford a luxurious world's finest) flannel fate Flannel, imported Street greys, browns and _ Dives. Tattersall flannel vest, 8.95. Paisley silk vert, as \ H Dow Rebande te aut dig | | PONTIAC'S LARGEST EXCLU IVE a. STORE| i 7 i k | | | u hs t t i ‘ 2 | Pai et! 18-20 North Sagir ry you. can ford right now and; | weight ™~\ soundly at Had Better Yard Average 's not so_old Davis Cup |: by George Wilson and “bo pois nga eines ter Ramsey starred with the Chi- : _|Flanagan Hands: Boxing Lesson to Young Moody St. Paul Veteran KO's Chicago ‘Youngpter | in TV Bout By JERRY Lisi | CHICAGO ® — Del, Flanagan | gave a sensational rookie a brutal | ring: lesson last night, but the St. . . Paul cutie |still is a long way from a shot at oe SSE waicery ‘went real into 8 touted Chicago kid, Alan Moody, a protege. -of veteran manager Pian wha/had won 26 of 27 pro starts. | ‘International Boxing | ‘cub to- day talked about a late October date at |. | Detroit for | | Flanagan against Chuck Davey or ‘Billy Gra- ham, both of whom ve seen better boxing days, iS But Davey wants a return shot against unheralded Al) Andrews who whipped TV’s former darling spc, Mich., Mon- on night, dy, a game 20-year-old for- mer Iden Glover tried to keep pace with ‘Flanagan before a paid crowd of 4, 453 at_last night’s na- bout. He Tocueded for six “rounds, holding the Fi of two of the three officials. But! in the sixth Moody-~ opened a cut over the dancing Flanagan’ s right eye. Flanagan danced no more. He came out swining in the seventh round. A right to the head glazed Moody’s eye. Then a vicious left- right combination to the jaw felled the Chicago Negro for a manda- tory eight count. After Moody got ‘up Flanagen then quickly forced him to the ropes and sledge-hdm- mered him into a soggy, slumping sack in 2: pe of the round. Grid Reports From Midwest CHICAGO Ww — Briefs from the Midwest. football training camps: OHIO ATE—Bob. Joslin, one of the| Buckeyes’ dependable kick- ers still has been unable to take part in drills due to an injury, but coach Woody Hayes says he has three exceptional punting candi- dates in John Boxton, Paul Ludwig and Bob Watkins. MINNESOTA '— Halfback Bob McNamara still: is hampered by ‘an injured knee and pulled leg muscele: NORTHWESTERN Co-capt. Dick Thomas sparkled in punting and passing in a long workout. ILLINOIS ~—- Coach Ray Eliot, fearful of more injuries, dropped further scrimmage sessions until Saturday's regulation. intrasquad ‘game. IOWA — Iowa’s punters and kickers came under the watch- ful eyes of coach Forest Evashev- ' ski. Binkey Broeder handled most of the punting and sopho- mores Roger Wiegmann and Jim Freeman - worked on the _ place kicking. WISCONSIN-- Wisconsin. varsity passed against Penn State defen- sive patterns as the Badgers pre- pared for their grid opener in Madison Sept. |26. | " INDIANA—Coach Bernie . Crim- mins transferred back George Crowe to fullback because of the injury to Les Kun. George Bell, of Gary, Ind., who has returned to the squad after army service will take’ jover Crowe’ s halfback spot. | preparation for| Saturday’s intras- quad game. NOTRE DAME — Johnny Lat- tner, senidr right halfbadk, still is out of action, He ee heel Sept. 5. | a. Tech, Norther Grid: Prospects Are Bright The state’s two. “‘cold country” football teams—Michigan Tech and Northern |Michigan—could be hot numbers on the field this: fall. Both. had ‘fine records last sea- son and,;\ with a break or two, they should-do|as well this year. Michigan Tech| had a 6-1 record while Northern | Michigan was 5-1.’ a few problems solve them. | 5 Meanwhile, at Northern Michi- gan, coach Red Money doesn't know too much about his team. They started | Reacting only Wednesday. | Forty-seven players, incl luding 15 lettermen, turned out the, opening practice—the largest number in Coaches Pro Veterans } DETROIT a — pr five mem- bers of the Detroit staff are veterans of ieserine. | Foptball League play. Head Coach Buddy! Parker’ played with . the Lions and the Chicago Cards. / Forte Bus- Cardinals. Russ Thomas was” eter the Line, At Tech, Coach Alan Bovard has . but he has some - {25 lettermen returning to help : seventh a action to knock out | tionally televised Chicago stadium eemmgpen PURDUE — Coach Stu Holcomb ) | split the squad into two units in ~— Money’ s seven years vat Northern - eons areasebenie yt mnie ee ILC OTT Rc “Oe ete eae eS eenpOR ENEMA ngs City Employes Title ~.Hendren of police, and Lloyd Mend- _ incoude Art Hilliker, Tech Had 3 Coaches Tech has. had only three regular f Z , of the police department the win- Browns’ By BEN PHLEGAR AP Sports Writer One of the brightest prospects who will leave St. Louis with the Srowns at’ the end of this season is young Bob Turley, a strikeout tist fresh’ out of the army. ‘A big, husky 22-year-old right- '| Turley turned up) unher- mid-August and went to mediately. In a month he’s in! eight, games. '|His 2-4 d lost record is nothing to bout,’ but some of his other es| are quite impressive. 4 innings he has struck out hander alded i ik appear ron) | = 48 men. He has pitched complete games in his last three starts, two of which-:ran 12 innings. In these three contests he allowed ony i5 hits while “striking out 30. * Pitching tor a ‘et place ‘club is one of the toughest jobs in base- ADJUSTS HEADGEAR — Heavywelght champion Rocky Marciano adjusts*his headgear before entering ring for a few rounds workout with a sparring part- ar - _— ~, ~ & United Press Tslephets ner. Marciano fs in training for his coming title bout with Roland LaStarza later this meth Hilliker, Koren Win Art Hilliker of the department of public works and Joe Koren of the police department are -cham- pions of the Pontiac City Em- ployees Golf league, League action concluded this week at the Munici- pal course. } One point back in second place were Ed Latozas and Dave Warri- low of the fire department, while } third place went to Don Ogg and Dick Smith of the water depart- ment. Annual tournament was held re- cently at Morey’s with Bob Gaines ner with a net 59. He shot 81-22—59. Tied for second with net 61’s were Lloyd Benson and Bob Gay- lord of the fire department, Gene ham-of DPW. Police won the team trophy. : Officers narned for next season president; Bue Hubbuck, vice president; and Jim Stelt, ‘secretary-treasurer, ATLANTA, Ga. (® — Georgia head coaches in the school’s foot- ball history, John W. Heisman led the Yellow Jackets from 1904 through 1919. William A. Alexander piloted the squad from 1920 through |. | 1944. Robert L. Dodd, present coach, has been at the helm since 1945. . — fel concn asst oy, {| We've “Frankly, I don’t know. _ never been behind or lost a game since Coach started that system!’’. Ohdededdedenil Gym Trunks 95c up QT Hose .....44c up All Star Basket. Ball Shoes, Football Pants .. $3.75 up. oys’ Plastic Hel-. mets .......$3.75 95 Spalding Football ... $2.90. \ WELDEN ‘Sporting Goods Si: Me. Clemens FE 4-621) Cd, MPs * Biitish Stock Car Tops 110 Speed Records | | Jackie) Cooper Among |Driving . ‘Team’ Over 30- Hour Reriod WENDOVER, Utah (P)—A fleet British- built stock car flashe aq across, the Utah Salt Flats yester- day ahd wrote 110 new American and international speed marks into the record books as the interna- tional) speed trials wound up nine record- smashing days. British designer Donald M. Healey led a group of five Brit- ish and American drivers who toppled many long-standing rac- ing ¢ar and stock car marks in a four- cylinder 100". The drivers, including film star Jackie Cooper, alternated in racing the car 3,100 miles in a 30-hour marathon. The average speed dur- ing the run was 103.94 miles per hour, Other drivers were Capt. George FEyston, Roy -Jackson-Moore and John Bennet, all British. | The American Automobile Asso- laustin « Healey ciation confirmed the 100 records } set inthe marathon by the Healey’! Special. Most of them were es- tablished in the 24hour period for the American Class D., unlimited Class D.,. International Class D and the United States Class D. Paul Waner was |the only major leaguer to have banged out 3,000 |. or more hits during the past 25 years. He garnered 3,152 hits from 1926 through 1945. aid | 5 | i \ \ \ » N . ae hahahah, “You look good... | a in “Brushed Blue Free Flex Comfort $16°5 Button-Down $1] 295 Barron $1399, 1) | Freeman “Brushed Blues” put you right’ || iin step with the new Fall Blues and Grays... | See these new styles in superbly comfortable _all-occasion leather, bufted to the finish that men of good taste are wearing. Just a flick of a brush Kees. them oe like new. ie , j "You ok desio bade | hal | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. ball. Turley, fof example, has lost all four of hig games by one run. He lost ‘one of these last night to the champion New York Yank- .| ees, 3-2. He gave up only four hits, all singles, but the Yanks com- bined three of these with two walks to get all of their runs in the sixth | inning. Turley struck out cent and 4 walked eight. | Although he’ got beat, his Browns broke even with the Yankees in their after dark twin bill.’ They won the first game 5-3 against an assortmenf of second stringers.. Ed | Lopat, one of the few regulars who | started,’suffered his fourth loss and was forced from the game in the fourth inning when he was struck} on the right foot by.a line drive. a a In other action yesterday Cleve- land beat Philadelphia 7-2, Wash- i { | 4 ‘ington deteated baled 4-2 and] Detroit thumped Boston 8-3 in) the American League; St. Louis efi Brooklyn 5-4,, Milwaukee whipped | Pittsburgh 73, New York sh Cincinnati 4-3 and Chicago defeated Emilee TA an ihe National. Bobby Feller eaters eight hits in winning his ninth game fox the second place Indians at’ Philadel- phia. Eddie Yost. celebrated) his “night” in Washington with a isingle and a double as the Senators | beat Virgil Trucks who was trying ‘to win his 20th game. Yost hasn’t missed a Washington Bame since July 5, 1949. * * ® : ‘ Eddie Mathews hit his 46th home run and raised hig runs batted in total to 131, bettering the preyious club record for, the Braves, | Battle Creek Is ABC Favorite BATTLE CREEK (P—Undefeat- ed Battle Creek was a _ strong favorite today tq take the eastern amateur playoffs of the American Baseball Congre$s. Only Kalama- z00, Mich,, and San German, Cuba, remained in the double-elimination tournament. Both are once-beaten | and one must fall by the wayside in their game tonight. The Kalamazog-San German win- ner will take pon Battle Creek, \which must lose|twice in a row to be knocked, out. | Battle Creek ¢liminated , Jellico, Tenn., 4-0, last night, after Kala- mazoo had sent Ashland, Kyi, home, 15-2. Winner here will meet the winner of the western! playoffs at Water- town, S. D., in the ABC’s ‘‘Ama- teur World Series” in Battle Creek next week. Fall Classes Start in Obedience pig: Fall casses of the Souttern MichiganObedience Training |Club ‘are slated to start Thursday, Rept. 24, at 8 p.m. in the Daniel Whit- field School on Orchard Lake foad. A. demonstration of on | trained dogs, will |be| given} and registrations for the. icourse) will be taken. Further information can be had by calling John Hicher at FE) 2-4867. Pubic is invite at- tend the demonstration. |.) . Jones Family Enjoys Net Title Monopol ASHLAND, Ky. (® — Wh it comes to the city tennis title} the Joneses have it. More \specifidally, two fellows named Rives Jongs — Jr.jand Sr. And they’ve had it for eight consecutive years. Rives Jones Sr. has been cham- pion or runner-up in each of those years. He won the title’ in 1952 but lost in the finals this year tq his — ‘SEPTEMBER ‘Sla 17, 1953 i FIFTY-THREE _ UP’s lop Game ed Oct.9 Mei jominee “ lronwodd Clash Features Grid ‘Above Straits | that the ‘‘game of the year’ Upper Peninsula high school | football season will be 9 when Menominee meets wood. The| following week, a game between Menominee and Sault Ste. Marie will be almost ‘as int, The UP season, only eeks old, already has pro- those three border town itstanding Among Class impor three duced teams as ou B schools. | | Ontonagon, with victories over Marquette Graveraet, Lake Linden and Wakefield, looks like the class among) smaller schools. |; |Menominee ran over Kingsford, QUETTE wp—fhere is little |}, | ? 5 57-7, last weekendd for its 17th game without a defeat. The UP champions are idle until they meet Eapanaba, Sept. 36. _ Coming up this weekend will be a. Michigan-Wisconsin test for Iron- wood, which plays Park Falls, Wis., Friday while Sault Ste. Ma-|" rie ‘entertains once-feared New- berry, a Great cial conference opponent. Ex-Spartan Is Winner \CHICAGO ® — Jed Black, 147, former Michigan State star now fighting out of Janesville, Wis., stopped George James, 149, Chi- cago, in the first round of their scheduled four-rounder here. last night. ‘Black and James met in a. pre- liminary to the Dell Flanagan- Ajan Moody welterweight fight, Millions Now In Wohlfeil Dee 2274 = Telegraph Rd. : Is Your Car Burning If so, let us install the| famous ““Ganes’ Air Flow Needle in your carburetor! Guaranteed to Increase Your Gas Mileage OF. ig Money Back se—FREE FNSTALLATION 8-Cylinder- Cars Take ar. 6-Cylinder Cars Take ‘1 Too Much Gas? 12 Engineering Pontiac, Mich. Call FE 2.4907, for Abpoinfmene ‘. T Fst Men in BLACK. Sizes 6tol2 son in straight sets. For Women ao = = il _— an ei MEN/S AND wom and Smoked Elk ' Sizes 4.t0 9 : ~ | EN’S REGULATION ty Red OPEN FRIDAY 9:30 .- 9:00 somaseersth a ae coat EE Quantity Size Make 4 hice Sale Price 8 670x15 Firestone DS) $14.70 2) 670x15 B. F. Goodrich 670x15 US Royals 710x15 | 3 05) $14.70 Dy $14.70 B. F. Goodrich $16 30 Goodyear $16.30 “US Royals | | Firestone White Sidewalls : eae ee ee ‘| Firestone US Royals Goodvear White Sidewalls US Royals White Sidewalls Firestone Atlas. ae A nm an SS co US Royals White Sidewalls i Goodyear White § idewalls Above Prices Exchange, plus tax New car,come and ‘let.us show you how ‘ATTENTION New Car Buyers | When you buy your Tittle! it costs_to change overto-- > General . Safety Tires and Puncture Sealing Tubes — aa || GENERAL PUNCTURE SEALING TUBES ve. 7 | lly Owned ERAL TIRE C | Pontiac, Mich. } | | } a ae ee eee Scam “i Z __ FIFTY-FOUR j | 1 BER 1, 1958 te Avonda + By JACK SAYLOR ~ This could be the season that the o Arch-Mold \ ‘ocala ay oe Sure-Grip rubber suction cup soles» for better troction “men s & hoys’ regulation BE Basketball 23 N. SACINAW ! OPEN FRIDAY 9:30 TO 9:00 Oakland B-Conference shakes off the shackles of its bondage to Roseville—and it. might be a sub- urban Pontiac team that turns the trick. | While league football coaches jagain namé Roseville as the logic- |al favorite, ‘all point to Avondale jas the team that! could end the |Wildcats’ three-year domination of ithe Oakland B. | Avondale was beaten, 18-13, | Im the ‘waning. moments of last | fall’s game and this year’s show- v * oN (CROWELL SCHWERIN | down is slated Oct. 16 at Rose- ville, Fitzgerald and Troy are _ apt to be troublemakers in the ase while Clawson and Madi- son both will field young teams ated Top Threat i THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEAL ‘Oaklane that are erenhbly a year away from contention. Coach Frank Crowell has a husky line at Auburn Heights an- chored by guard J oe Schwerin. The 185-pound seniior is one of the area’s outstanding linemen. Tackle Al Hill and end Toby Aldrich also were regulars last year. End Bill Strobel, tackle Don Moshier, guard Don Krupp and center Jack ‘Greenlees round out the Yellowjackets forward wall’ All but Schwerin and Strobel are only juniors. Backfield js built around Ron Shore, a 5-11, 185-pounder who blossomed into a running star in his freshman year. Marv Evans has switched from e to full- back and Dick Kramp is at quarterback, while right half is a toss-up between John Eng- strom and Bob Kuhfeldt. , Roseville’s hopes for keeping its fabulous winning streak intact ride with Class B all-state end Bob Wagner. He and Jim Berger, 63, at the other wing give junior quarterback Jack Ranstadler two fine passing targets! Foremost linemen are guards Hartley Vezina and Evan Dalton. Paul Smarks at Fitzgerald is banking on. backs Tom Sip ‘and got and Jack Perona and ends T rvs Cunio aha Del ‘McCrary to carry the load for, the Spartans. Troy || failed to win last year, but Bob || ck is big Fred Bernard, pound tailback. Norm Norton, 185, is set at fullback. Line ould be stout with all- leaguer). Don Pechota at guard and Stan Carpenter (230) and Joe Jasso (200) at tackles. Top ‘performers on Ralph Cor- nell's Clawson eleven are quarter- back Jim Davis, tackle Ken Gibbard; and guard Jack Bower- find. Only three seniors are among the starters on Don set s Madison club. Four sophmores are in the lime- light including tackle Jim Myers and backs Dennis Koski, Dick Boice and Roger Archambeau. } Cook Wins 3 Races — DETROIT w—Jockey L, C. cox booted home three straight wine | ners at the Hazel Park race meet-| ing yesterday. Cook began his streak aboard Our Jan jin the fifth race. He won with favored Daiquari in the sixth home with Patio Patter in the seventh, © Kicker Tee Geerd © Sponge Cushion Heel | | . | By GAYLE TALBOT | ‘ NEW YORK w—There will be little personal animosity between | Rocky Marciano and. Roland La- In Assorted. Plaid Colors ia -' 4 q we. As ie ey 1S y veh The aN = L| 7 ane "\ \= ve ve) =\\e y ve Ve so) hes Vet 4 Ve wee ack Vo AW, Uh eh Wa WG ART * ve rN LS . For Solid Front and Rear Sects ASEAN New! An attractive cover of sturdy washable denim at a low, low price! Reversible for double life! Handsome multi-color plaid . designs! Slip on and off easily! Fits all cars! Get 'em now! | Only 44 | { weet uPe_s arts $k = F | Choose your faverite from | makes such os Browning, Rem- ington, Stevens, Winchester, Wtheea, Messberg, Marlity Saye | age! We'll teg ft In your name Ph and hold it ‘til Ocfeber Ist. | Come in—seé our complete department today! bern WINTER TREADS 1.09 Butyl Tube... . .88¢ 2.89 Bike eee 24 #4) WHY PAY su 50 viene BSc 0 Contains anti-rust Meth. anol! Long lasting! | e wes pay more elsewhere! LOW SALE PRICES! FULL PRICE! NO TAX! “Exchange 6.50-16..... seas .98* | ©. FO%V8 . ib esers5.8.9S* 7.10-15.......... 9.95° Fully guaranteed! Deep super-traction lugs! Long-mileage Cold ‘Rub- ber! if you wish te keep your present tires, add $2 te abeve prices for outright price! . WHY PAY 3.75? Collen Con y ed le.Petmarient type Anti. | Freeze! Won't boil away! @ paimilegs to motor par rts _ FREE PARKING | contempt for 'I | that his boy is fucky to be getting | that puzzles insiders is that De-' | publicized starg|in high ‘schoal | football in the Starza when they meet in the Polo Grounds ring a week from tonight. * * * The champion and the challen- ger seem to admire each other, at least in a limited sense, and neither has yet been , talked into calling his rival a nogoodnik. With their respective managers, * * * | however, it’s different. Jimmy De- Angelo, who cuts LaStarza’s purses such as they have been has a deép- seated and chronic hatred for Al | Weill, Marciano’ $ one-man brain | trust. Al, long the most powerful man in boxing, | xhibits a cheerful Angelo and says a title shot at | *| lave Grudge" This is just in jcase you suspect _ there’s a press agent in the wood-) pile, and that the current wrangle between the two pilots about a re-|| | turn bout in 'the event LaStarza | lifts Rocky’s vied as dreamed up.) It wasn't. The mly thing about it) Angela popped | instead of afte What happened a that La.|| | Starza's manager it ieee the fight! on Area's Star Gridiron Talent | | By ROBERT E. VOGES fh EAST LANSING (# — Michig State isn’t getting its.pick of the | high school football talent in this, “area any more, | The most son ht after, most. dwest now are going to the University of Mich- ‘igan, Ohie State! and Purdue —_ to name the top three cutting | into MSC territory. - You can’t find anybody willing to be quoted on it, but that’s the, way things: stand.) Observers clase |to the scene give these three main |reasons: 1—It’s all part of a cycle. | 2—The probation slapped on | thing to do with it. 4 3 — More akerpenive recruiting | by other schools. Holds Extra Point Mark DURHAM, IN. | lc. (AP)—Bob | Gantt, former Duke University | gridder from Durham, holds | the school |re¢ord for most | extra points) kicked in one season. He split the uprights | 41 times in 46) tries in 1943. | Gantt led the team in scoring | that year with 47 points. HK K A AK I KK Bowling Balls Custom Drilled - $9395 Up © BOWLING SHOES | © BOWLING BAGS © BOWLING SHIRTS © DRESS PLAQUES Trophies 115 N. SAGINAW PHONE FE2-9234 ‘SPIEGEL JER Auto Stores | } 4 ” « Sporting |Goods harry h. ‘@ckerman - Next te Oakland Theater LSE RASS LELELELELs: é * Garden: to pick up some tickets, was asked by Harry Markson of the IBC |when he might be ready to give Marciano a return in the event hig boy wins. DeAngelo be- came héated, accused the IBC’s managing director of fronting for | Weill, and spoke to the effect that “after we win it we'll make them sweat a while. ee - | * * * A couple of boxing writers | walked in on the row by the purest chance, and they helped Markson convince |DeAngelo that he should remember his bum ticker and sim- mer down. They then got in touch with Weill at. Rocky's training camp, and that is why Al intends to go before the Athletic commis- sion at Syracuse tomorrow and try to force LaStarza to post half his purse as a guarantee against giv- ing Rocky, the run-around, Chances are that Weill will not | succeed. : | | | | LOPAI OK FOR SERIES — Ed Lope vera AP Wirep at a ed jefthander, smiles as he sits on table at Lenox | line drive from the bat of Don Lenhardt of the ill Hospital in New York Wednesday night to have | Browns. ‘There was no bone injury and doctors said his foot -rayed. Technician is Louis Bartilucci. Lopat | Lopat’s. éxpected World Series starting assignment pet a bruise on the right instep when hit by a | will not be affected. Browns Receive. Ns § OK for Frat chise Shift i ore Still bable _Home for Vee ak’s Team: . CHICAGO (Bill Veeck has re- ceived , his first okeh to transfer |. the St; Louis Browns to another city— rebably Baltimore. A spedial American League com- ommend the shift bf the club to a ‘full league meeting which will be held in a few weeks. | The special committee was made up of. Charles Comiskey of the Chicago White Sox; Walter (Spike Briggs of, the Detroit Ti- gers, and Will Harridge, presi- dent of. the American League and Arthur Friedjund, acting for . the Boston Red Sqx and, the New York Yankees respectiv ély. No specific city) was OK'd for ithe new site of the Browns, but ‘Veeck, qresicent of the club, said nothing had occurred during ‘yes- | to go there,” said Veeck. terday’s conference to rule out Baltimore as hts preferred site. “We made it quite aoe we ver St. Louis club to Baltimore. The American League last spring | voted 5-2 against switching the Ranks | Other Trunks ALL L : FOOTB yee EQUIPMENT Supports . . 75c Foatbells oe - mets --~” sweat a shoulda Pads 1.89 UP Shirts ve $1,95 F. B. Pants: - $2.95 uP Pa Gym Tranks = [Satin stripe on sides.[ \ All school colors. : $2.95 Sweat Sox . 75c Tee Shirts .89¢ J Gym Shoes $4.75 up 24 E. Lawrence Street bs , calling at the; MSC Losing Out Michigan State might have some- } a a ee a iad | ONE MAN /TELLS ANOTHER . | clothes ) 4 bard | comfortably aie in Air-Conditioned ¢ 0 one appreciates Hickey;Freeman as much as the man who's to fit. For, no other clothes oe fit him so any . 50 atractoey a 10. | | | | { | | =~ Gtickey Preuat! cusrominep” ocermay } i } {| rh | } j j pon leh ee THE STYLE CORNER. OF PONTIAC set ne ee ee . good an investment as Kuenn, one _term those hopes ‘‘so puch wish- Yoone Wilber, — when he heard about it: | 2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBE ~ Harvey Is First in 10 Years to: Get That Many. | Kalinal Also Reveals Bat Power, With 3 in 5 as Tigers Win 8-3 BOSTON (P—Harvey Kuenn, first rookie’ in 10 years to collect 200 hits in his first major league sea- son, wasn’t the only Detroit “bonus -baby”’ walete congratulations to- day. Other was Al Kaline| ano made his first start as a major leaguer in center field and came up with three hits in five trips fo the plate. That was one better than Kuenn “did in as many trips while the Tigers were thumping ithe Red * Sox, 8-3. | KUENN Kaline’s hits all were singles, | but one of them drove in a-run. He scored once himself and fielded his one chance like a veteran. | In pinch-runner and _pinch- fielder roles to which he had been limited until yesterday, Ka- line had demonstrated he was one of the fastest Tigers and ‘had a rifle-like throwing arm. _ | Tigers, who lured the 22-year- old Kuenn from the University of Wisconsin campus with a $55,000 bonus, hope they got an even bet- ter bargain in the 18-year-old Ka- line, who cost them $30,000. | Detroit also plans to give its other ‘‘bonus| baby,” Bob Miller, a $40,000 investment, a fling as a starter ‘in the final game of the season against ‘St. Louis in De- + ngest Rookie i in Majors Wit | | | | | FIFTY-FIVE __ oe eee s Difference a By HAROLD CLAASSEN NEW YORK «Already: it is evident that picking) football, win- nets is as difficult binder one-pla- Gilmore Says Russia |; Cinch in Olympics — HOUSTON, Tex. (—A veteran newsman who has lived in Moscow most of) the past 12 years said today Russia is ‘a |cinch to win the 1956 Olympic Games. ‘I don’t think we have a chance,” ‘said Eddy Gilmore, who returned home recently after a long stay as head of the Moscow bureau: of the Associated Press. “The Russians began preparing for the 1956 games just as soon as they left Helsinki last year.” '“They are bringing in boys and i] enrolling them in the physical edu+ '| cation institute,’ he explained. ‘‘By ‘| the ‘time 1956 arrives, they will |. _| be} professionals. Each will claim to| be a mechanic or something # |like that in civilian life but he'll ' bela professional.” | N ebraska’s Bordogna Seen in TV Tilt toon football as under the two-pla- toon system. The only difference is that the spectators, will be as- sured of seeing players—not spe- cialists. , Here are the season’s first win- ners: * * * _ Nebraska over Oregon: Satur- day’s TV masterpiece. Nebraska has forsaken the T for the single wing and Oregon has ‘17 returning veterans but the Huskers’ Johnny Bordogna'should be the difference. | California over Baylor: A close fornia. x * * ington State* Kentucky over Texas A & M. | Georgia Tech over Davidson: Tech has gone through 26 games without losing and the engineers should make it 27 here... | ‘Maryland over Missouri: Coach 1a good team. nod. goes to the team with Worth (A Million) Lutz and Ed Meadows. | Villanova over Georgia. Texas Christian over Kansas. th} A Do} ‘MORE FOR NEW FALL - | | AND MORE FOR you! troit Tuesday. He has looked both good and bad in his few’ relief roles since he was sieped in mute season. , | | While no doubt the oni office | hoped Kaline would turn out ‘as could find plenty, of fans ready to ful thinking.’’ /Kuenn, they emphasized, is a only the only Tiger| first-year rookie to get 200 hits in a season in the last 10 years but the only one in the major leagues. Only six freshmen in the last 20 years have done as well, In; - cidentally, the last man in either league to hit 200 his first year was Dick. Wakefield, the one; . time Tiger problem child who got an'even 200 in 1943. | 4 |Not only is Kuenn the hitting» est rookie, but he’s tied for sixth place in|/the American League bat- ting rate with a .308 average. | Umpire Jim Honochick called for f the ball |after Kuenn got his second hit yesterday and pregmted it P the youngster. |While Kuenn and Kaline ac- counted for five hits between thern, their Detroit teammates whammed | } out 13 others off for Boston pitch- ers. Steve Souchock got four, one ‘of them his ninth homer. | Every Tiger except pitcher Ted Gray, who won his 10th game against 14 losses, got a hit. | Ned Garver (11-10) is scheduled to pitch for Detroit today. Boston will use Sid Hudson (5-9). | DETROIT j BOST 3 EJ ee Evers filed oat ter Delock in 5th. White popped: out rowtrin, oth. in 7th, Kell doubled for Brow s y po al 2b—) ne, Drope,_ chock, Wilber, Lepcio. eo Plersall. pP—Console, Lep- dio and Gernert; Le Gernert, Left—Detrai BB—Gray 1, Nixon 1, ‘Sullivan 1 SsoO— Gray 6, Delock 1, Sullivan. 3. “HO—Nixon § in 138; Delock 6 in 314, Sullivan T-tn_2 } 3 y ( 4 3-83, Delock 2-1, Sullivan 0-0, Brown 3-3. wP—Gray. “w—Gray (10-14). | L—Nixon 4-8). U-Henechich, McKin ley, McGew- hn, Paparella. T--2:14. A--2, 739. Trout Warns Williams Will Be ‘Walk’ Target. u Boudreau thusly: | wer next-season or Ted Williams ill total 0 ee on balls.” | Williams nodded = agreement | “When I hit .400, I had a big behind me. It made_a big differ- Montcalm Bowling Centre OPEN League Openings Still Available FREE INSTRUCTION P.M. te 5 F. 30 £ dontoater. | §E 5-2221 AB RH | | AB RA Kaenn, ss 5 1 2 Consolo, 3b 5 0 1 Hatfield, 2b 4 1 1 Piersall, rf 4 1/1 Boone, 3b °3 9 3 Olson, | If 40:0 Nieman, If 5 2 1 Gernert, Ib 4 0 1 Dropo, 1b 4.2 1 Wilber, c| 41-3 Souchock, rf 5 1 4 Lepcio, 2b:°3 1:1 Batts, ¢ 0 3 Umphiett, ef 4 6 6 Kaline, cf <5 1 3 Bolling, ss 4 9) 1 Gray, PB 0 0 Nixon,;p °° @ 0 6 Delock, P 100 Evers | "© 1 @ 0) Sullivan, p 9 0 6 White M IN Brown, p | & Tr. Kell ae ay ae ai —— ae fl “42.8 36 8 9] Brown 6 in 2. R-ER—Gray 3-3, Nixow- me | BOSTON (Dizzy Trout, now | Detroit baseball broadcaster, | arns Boston. Red Sox Manager | .| “Get some righthanded batting | — guy named-Jimmy Foxx hitting | ence,” Williams pointed out. Rie or Only fished) stitches a0 tHousanas of thet ) os. Can give soft flexiblity to a suit. Only hand- pressing, in dozens of separate operations, can mould a suit into the most shapely contours. Kuppenheimer lavishes such handcrafting on ‘every suit! | | | D j 4 | FS | H New for Fall.*3rd-Dimension” fobyet i Really different ar stimulating! cece now gives fabrics a 3rd-Dimension effect with’: He creation of raised ilies nubs, flecks and | ——s other lofty effects in ceeprl, richer colorings. yee, ag lge er eed | | Boston ;} * ‘These new Kuppeaneimer suits set you off in a fresh, » vigorous: way 6s sin: vigorous create | wists: ‘textures. 0 sin dressy, fuxurions’ worsteds from $8 5s | Wake Forest over William & iday night tilt. over Mississippi South- | vain over Gracall State: It also will played Friday night. Missouri Official Vetoes '} Bill Providing Bounties . JEFF N CITY, Mo. # — Foxhunters and foxes got a break when Missouri’ s v. Phil M. Donnelly vetoed a bounty bill. Donnelly noticed the bounty. bill would have covered only the gray “1 fox, an inhabitant of wooded areas and not | much of a predator. The red fox, sly quarry of the hunters’ hounds, | ‘is the oné that lives in the. farming. areas and grabs off a ‘lot: of || ipoultry. The giveltne said it looked* like discrimination to him. So he set- tled it by vetoing the measure. _ one but it is being played in Cali- Southern California over W ash- |, Jim Tatum admits, publicly, he has Duke over South Carolina: The and PRE re) Seconds — ‘No § IUM DAY | | No Tread Blemishes — No Rejects - jub- Standard Price Tires! hod gy BUT BRA D NEW FUL .LY GUARANTEED FIRST LINE ON THOROUGHBRED TIRES! LOOK at This UNCONDITIONAL Written Guarantee! + « » means that these tires are guaranteed unconditionally against all possible damage, such as cuts from glass, bottles, bolts, breaks, curbs, rocks or any other road hagard. Unconditionally means what it says! There are no exceptions. 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TILL 9 P.M.!. ‘ FE ze | | | | L | | é | istata ten reiconcet a 1 asa “ ee Ps _ FIFTY: ‘STX THE PONTIAC PRESS, TH URSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953: Marks Independence terday celebrated her independ- ence day with oratory, parades, fireworks and- picnics. ‘ BLUE SKY STARTS TONIGHT! THEATRE On the Biggest and | Brightest Screen -} EXCLUSIVE FIRST-RUN y™ rw Filmed at the Florida training camp of the N.Y. Giants by the producers of “The . ia Stratton pend, ! On 0 Stony semi ° road bre Protesed by MATTHEW RAPF cowok BY rr THE SAVAGE MIGHT OF THE SCALP ™ HUNGRY SIOUX SLASHED ; THE LIFELINE OF lapels ERONTEER! YOU'LL CHEER BIG LEAGUE HEROES! 2 | 2nd Adventure Feature! A : Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Block North of Telegraph FE 5- 4500 4 TONIGHT - FRIDAY < “ALL COLOR PROGRAM _ "HOT-TEMPERED REDHEAD... mm FIERY “SENORITA. ec battle for the llove of a fugitive! | NOAA BEERY. GRANT WITHERS Writon fot the Screen and Directed by LEWIS R. FOSTER Wased on a novel by Tom Ga | Y c Lamour Testifies for Her Friend Kay COSTA MESA, Calif. —Actress Dorothy Lamour friend Kay Williams looked like she had béen clawed the morning after Miss Williams’ ex-husband is accused of beating her, Miss Lamour. appeared yester- day at preliminary hearing for sugar heir Adolph Spreckels who is charged with felonious assault. “The actress said she saw Miss Williams the morning of last Aug. 20 and testified; “IT saw a scar on the left side of her face about three to four inches: long, bleeding very badly. I mean really very deep scratches. Blood was coming from her head protusely.”’ testified ‘her breaking the’ Italy Feels Quakes , COSENZA, Italy —Light earth- quake tremors were felt in the vicinity of cerisano in the southern making MGM, Italian region of Calabria last night. and Louis Calhern. No injuries or damage was re-| Recently MGM ported. ——— [OO WOO LOD OSLO NO GAINO/ IN | | Count the Hours” ‘ * With ‘Teresa Wright ‘ | and MacDonald Carey | Keego Theater §)/ ‘~. KE} ‘The Hitchhiker” ; i P soned. -With Frank Lovejoy bill LsO— Bickel.” pbbrbeobroroepopoepdod, $ STARTS 3| wyck,” added the actress. > “I've got you all beat,’ re- SUNDAY 3 marked the seal Calhern. $ sinishing Action... $| have an agreement with both $ Rousing Romance! 3] Mr. Schary and Nick Schenck > Gehert '2| (MGM top man). You will all be > $| listed, and then come the words $ TAYLOR 3| ‘however—Louis, Calhern’. 2 ive $| | Over the weekend he fashioned 4 @| for Miss Stanwyck a painted tile, > 2 GARDNER $| which is his hobby. Here is the 3 KEEL yt $ exact spelling: 3 le Mow's 6 $ “June Elison, 5 4 %| Deen Jigger, Walt Piddin, Shir- > >| ley Winner, Pi $ EAUTY AMY ecmanay 0 4| Heldon, Fred} Murch, Bobbie 2 runt ov ANSCO COLOR >| Stynack, However 3 Jechnicolor $| ‘‘Executive Suite.’ 3 : 3 dialogue by Mr. Calhern.” ; é ; Vane $ 4 Miss Stanwyck had DRIVE-IN 2 OE sPONTIAC THEATRE words to say about billing. She oe ee eee ee ee eee eee bod All-Star Cast Spoofs Feuds About Billing : By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD ( — The trov- ble with all-star ¢asts is billing. You know | what billing That’s the position of an actor's name on the marquee or_in the ads. According ta legend, actors are supposed; to throw fits if their names are not in large enough letters or|if fhey are not listed at the top of the cast. It’s an important legal mat- ter in the movies. James Cag- ney once |broke his contract with Warners hecause of the way he was billed at one of the Warner theaters, Now a bunch of actors {fs tradition about billing. They are) the gay group “Executive Suite” including | Barbara Stan- wyck, Fredric March, Walter | Pidgeon, Jun Allyson, William | Holden, Nina Foch, Shelley Win-. | ters, Paul Douglas, Dean Jagger Schary came warily on the set to inquire about how the actors would like to, be billed. ‘To his great surprise, he found no con- “Holden and Allyson were the first ones cast in the pic- Miss Stanwyck rea- Gis mem the top _ Of course, that didn’t stop the actors from | kidding themselves. Said March: billing is alphabetical, : ir’ back to my real name, “Well, I'm stuck, because my legal name is Barbara Stan- says she never|worries about it. ‘Webb's Real Southern Pit Barbecue 2001 Pontiac Road (between Perry and OC Ordi pdy ke) ; Real Southern Pit Barbecue, Hickory Smoked Ribs. Chicken and Sandwiches With Old Time Southern Barbecue Sauce Phone FE deral 3-9350 : dus v Last Time Tonight “ROAD TO BALI” Has Nor Been NOTE: ON THE GIANT FULL STAGE y FUTURAMIC SCREEN! Shown in the City of Pontiac! OUT OF HER SHELL — Screen actress Wanda Hendrix says she js} ready to come out of het emo- if ye b. eae Press| tots 'tofore known for “sweet” portrayals, Miss’ Hendrix lis shown here in a bathing suit she wears is her might get hurt is if some studio ‘bills some newcomer in great _ big type above those. wha may ‘have worked hardin this busi- ness for a long time. But that doesn’t happen very often. “The only control you have is . over the printed ads. You can’t -control what names the theater man will put om the marquee. He’s going to put) up. those who 7 ‘will draW in business. Or he might play up sone home town favorite. Or even his -wife’s favorite. eae learned. \ my, | lheston about ‘billing a good | many years ago.” That was! with a picture ' called “Night Nurse” . pee When the picture o at - the Strand Theater | ‘i Oe York, the sign said ‘Barbara Stanwyck and Ben ‘Lyon in ‘Night Nurse’.” Second day: ‘‘Barbara: Stan- -wyck and Ben Lyon in ‘Night Nurse’ with Clark Gable.” Third day: “Barbara Stan- wyck, Ben Lyon, Clark Gable. in / ‘Night Nurse’.” Fourth day: “Barbara Stan- *wyck, Clark Gable in ‘Night Nurse’.”’ Fifth day: “Clark (gable in ‘Night Nurse’.’ (7 /| Those five days marked the start of ‘Gable’s reign as the king of Hollywood: Postal Workers Strike | PARIS —French postal work- ers struck sporadically in ‘Paris and Lyons yesterday to show re- sentment over government plans to investigate workers who defied back-to-work orders during the big | august strikes. TOD tro RE and ON OUR REGULAR SCREE ome ’ ORIO A Cor. Williams Lk.-Airport Rds. Box Offic D q dD. ) | Phone e i = LAST TIMES Tenn Rasatiad Warce RUSSELL: as WILSON NEVER Wave |] COO Oa aa w Asi \ New Lake Theater \ \ [420 Pontiac Trail \ \ WALLED LAKE \ . “The Hitchhiker” Na With age | \ \: “Count the Hours” With T Wright and \ MacDonald Carey | Wwecwwwwe> Critical Period in Infant's Life LANSING (UP) — The first sik day are the ‘most critical period ina baby’s life, the State Hest! Department said today. ~- If a baby survives the first week, chances are he will reach adult- hood. =| The departnent said only one out of 38 babies born alive in the state today will die before reach- ago, one out of 13 died in infancy. Last year, 4,689 of the 177,835 babies born in Michigan died be- fore reaching their first birthday and of these, 3,042 died during the first six days. * More than half of the infant deaths were caused by one of three things: — jimmaturity, deformities at birth and imperfect lung struc- ture. 428 More PWs Arrive by. Ship at West Coast . SAN FRANCISCO ( — The seventh shipload of returning pris: oners of war atrived yesterday as the transport Gen. William M. Black docked with 428 former cap- tives of Communists in Korea. - Few of the men tarried long in San Francisco, The Army prop- essed them in n¢ar-record time— an average.of one every 30 secon —and released them to go home. Of the 3,597 Americans freed at Panmunjom, “nearly 2,800 ‘have been sent |home ‘by plane or ship. ’ Two more transports are due, one Sunday, and one Tuesday. | Soldier's Widow Enlists to Serve i in Germany HUNTINGTON, W.- Va, —Mrs. Eulah Maynard Luster, 21-year-old widow of Pvt. Richard Luster, en- listed in. the: Women's Army Corps yesterday ‘and made a request fo become an oF stationed in Ger- many. i in a jeep crash in Germany Aug. 2 after having berved there 22 months. i He andjhis ‘wite were married Qs days before he went overseas. Mrs. Luster left last night for basic training at Fort Lee, Va. | qa PHONE FEDERAL 2 4851 | : OAKLAND: MOOE RNLY AID TOND: Hono —— STARRING GUY MADISON FRANK [LOVEJOY HELEN WESTCOTT TODAY, THRU SATURDAY! ) “MEXICAN MANHUNT” | ing its first birthday but 30 years. \a friend, Bal F. ‘Swan. Th Pvt.. Luster, an MP, was killed, ‘tional shell and go in for some “‘sexy’ roles.| | Here- part in ~t film “House In the Sea.” | “What's th diffe a ch cans oe Spree ea irst Six Days’ Sen. Russell Cites Need for Air Power “WASHINGTON (B—Sen. Passel (D-Ga) said today the United States has more atom bombs than/it has planes and pilots to deliver them against any aggressor that might attack this country. Russell, top Democratic senator on the Senate Armed Services Committee and the Senate-House Atomic Energy ‘committee, make the remark in expressing concern ‘about Eisenhower administration cuts in Air: Force funds. “How many A-bombs this bounties has stockpiled is.a earetulls, guard- ed secret... Se ee | The ‘Georgian;-interviewed about the impact on U.~S. defense re- quirements of Russia’s~-anhounce- ment she has developed ithe H- bomb, said the best deterrent to aggression is the ability to. strike back. He said he felt, therefore, that the retaliatory power of long- range: strategic bombers‘ must be thé cornerstone of America’s de- fense. * * * Despite any defense network that may be thrown around this coun- try—with radar warning systems, fighter-interceptor p1 anes and guided ‘missiles — some | enemy bombers are.’ bound to break through in a Sateen! parteck, Russell said.’ President Will End Vacation Saturday DENVER «® — President Eisen- hower. gets in the last trout. fish- | Hing of his Colorado vacation today. He arranged to spend ‘the day at the South Platte River ranch of place is about 50 miles southwest of Den- ver, near Pine. Colo. - The President will: end six weeks of vacationing mixed with busi- ness Saturday morning and fly back to Washington.’ He will be off again Monday morning, how- ever, for two speeches in Massa- chusetts—one at the Eastern States Exposition in Springfield, the other a at a Republican rally in Boston. The speech at a GOP rally Boston Garden Monday night will , be a major address. =| | mq | day su || Police Could Get Stung With Honey of a Story | Wo police cruisers yester- ded an automobile con- taining two hooded men and a mys- terious box. The car stopped. The men protested. The police persist- “What’s in the box?” “A likely story.” “Look and see." As. the police drew nearer, the box buzzed ominously and several angry honey-makers emerged. The oficers withdrew. Wallace R. Parker of West Boyl- ston and Harold E. Swasey of Lei- caster—beekepers garbed in the mask of their trade—drove on. Missing Woman Wears Red Sandals, That's All PHOENIX, . Ariz. #—Sheriff’s deputies were asked last night to look for a/missing woman. “She’s wearing only. red san- .” dals,’’ the report_stated. ie alll lead J a | ~) Doon Open at | Ee Today # Starts At Through 12:40-3 :50 2nd BIG COLOR HITS Pennie At 11:10 = ~|2:20 - 5:35 - 850m r} ‘suanan NOW PLAYING] STDAND| AFRICA IN ALL ITS VIOLENCE HHUA UI Uy Drcogerterm Susan HAYWARD Robert MircU M ALSO — GIG YOUNG IN “CITY THAT) NEVER SLEEPS” STARTING SATURDAY | THE MAN § FROM THE § ALAMO WORCESTER, Mass. —Three , | | ot | | 4 | | | i, i | aie A rains Fa | Loc , : : THE PON | | ae Vie cal. Markets St NTIAC. PRESS, THURSDA Ng ; ou ely cks | Y, SE 4 A : | Produce’ . 0 Advanc Coun PTEMBER 17, 195 a 7 | Deat Business N 5 . | | | f Farmer to Con ti ss otes: . ; y | | CHICAG Beets, sumer “for Robert D.| Garrison , nL | Si f F Y. . 7 | | bu ia 8 ‘ bal | _ ‘Steady ey Fok — Grains opened Stee et aiieeecreets 10 rd a DRAYTON PLAIN eC 5 e rocers ‘apparently the maple : IFTY-SEVEN | dealings. on the re off in active uceleberriss. Quart ..es.te ~ for Robert D. Garri Se ee OW ou Euexet is being worked asain”, ce ady have two warran _ + today ard of Trade} Cueus peppers, J tor vss.-+ 0} NEW : . Garrison, 67, form { ) | He said 4 ” Nelson sai ts . e | Cucumber ‘ OF sseone 1 YORK (# Drayton Plai | ’ er { fyru laboratory ough ’ said. “But The rall c s, 6 ‘for . 10) m — The stock ains| resid | C e a. shipm analysis on to haves grocers . orn, d 1 aeeeseee * arket } OC: ; ent of . r] ent of a earned . . _ inspired Hy vegiendey apparently Tonmalian mua | sl seuaenswals vt third advanced today for the oer will be Saturday at 2 ure X ® LANSING. (B—Michi chased ed ign ii syrup, pur- | not to buy maple by this time ‘tion of everatgr good accumula- ree Pee "38 lof th straight time from the | m Marsh Funeral Ho p.m. | n [ | were warned tod gan grocers | Merchant from a Pic a Palmyra people they don’t eh from a TM Bae arenls at the start Radishes 150) ae move Rar prs rmall ba penige ng: He: in ‘Rive -" | /| maple syiup tr it i snlesmalt- proved fe ae ; at shes : e Eee . * + eal i i : * | ~ i 4“ in e + But reemirenet of rumbre a Carreis 20 | did it es ves tn not vigorous nor sejepacl He died) vterise ‘Consumers Power and oa 7m amiliar te or echace water.”’ Spat Korean Fund Set U : uction in Cana 3 for 25 ‘far, but all em . patel: : n iles i a % nt called i ' SEOUL port wheat, plus new iaige’ a Onions 1 Oona market | joined in rages and pena Techie Walter Michigan Consolidated satoeraeds Pei chief af - the pick ectors after he 2 , food Rescedtion ae U.N. oa rm of Canadian e Ship-| potatoes, bushel “10 ; wholegale to U Departm vision of the ous of the shi nbe sus: | proved creation of n $1. today ap- “Were on th oats and rye | Cabbage, en es 'a5| Rail firm in Ponti expeery p Gas Servi ent, of Agricul state| “I think ene creation of a $1 pang y eir W bage, be: qebeenes* roads, st ontiac for 33 ice iculture ; this stuff to loan ,500,000 f the rall vay here halt Apples. Bd feseeee 2.25 eels and m ; years, h ,, said] an was sold : small busi 5 ‘und t | y. : ed S bushel | Joc lecescses, ‘is; Were a motors oved to Sage | 2 He LAN: old frie sold by : usinesses : Wheat sear the end ce net derseoeeroe 1.15 to 2:50 groups. mone ee more | active | after retiring a itles near Hale | sé SING (B—The State Public nd of ours for whom ten cen to help Korean satel { ~ hour was fee of. ine first | ePPer® bu nal | vifeseeees 65, 70 “480 moderate at ae however, was Surviving _ besid as years ago. rvice Commission today. liberal . . recy wartime losse { | September $1.83 © cent lower Flawe. ceeee with th st. Gaining | alon Hilda,) are mt ‘his widow ized restrictions iz = _ : | 1 88%; corn was 4: cuisettonn qoass «k- 0: ose groups Ww Z| Bradley of. daughter, Mr | industrial on gas service t os 1 | Dele, September $1.5 as Y-| Geraniums, dante | bers, radio-televisi ere the rub- radléy of Battle \ Cres s. Pearj | industrial and commerci PO + were 7 Va-1 5 ] 7,,| land oats Gladiolis, ical ibe oils evisions and a f Harold of Lo | k; a son, | mers ercial custo- é Soybean @ lower, September 71% Ll (geeeesienns, 3sand '30| coppers, and aircrafts €Witer, Mi s Angeles, and a si : of the Consumers Pow ~ # | cen s were unchanged to wre | iG _ “| bion: iss Mable (Garrison of is- | and Michigan Conso ins Co. | eS ln | See ae Waa is cchte lta. spe os Wholesale New York Stocks bert Appa: gunyuiiig are six grand The commissi meet Gasca) — | was 15 c a napediny ee ddl oak on : | cents a h 15 cents to $1.40] , | DET Figures after deck utility compani uthorized both | Septembe undred Bounce lower, DETROIT bid tid PRODUCE Adams Exp Amen points are elghths John C, Law and ¢omm ues to add industrial A r $18. 19. . Mat lle el pceeh mark ke nelgssle prices on Ahr co 26.1 peeling vase 40.2 NORTH BRANCH — 500,000 a tae customers using ‘4 2 see Servi Grain P apples, Oreenings, Crab, No 1, 2-61-93 oy ‘Alleg I Stl. i he me 40.4 am Ac Law, 86, will ee per rhonth | t of gas. or less ti rices u; apples, Jon cy, 50 bus o 1, Allied veo, O44 LF wal. 18 rida at, ? cnc [be Seether tose, Oe ae AieS hak cate) Mirena "Burlington TT fle farm home ta) gore ees granted ERICAGO mage a bu. No 1 u; APPR, Wealthy, pales beh Ai Ltd ae z & py ; P rection of owe nip under the di ers Power permissi ayarrger eat g aieine ol, 2-2. 'bu; apples, W Co A { Lokh A , Cc B -!| custo ion to add Dec . , Sept .. bu: N 50 bu, . Cantaloupe olf River, | Am| Alrli m 466 Loew’ fie + 22.4 neral H rothers Fu- | stomers who had = cee citcd i pee Dec’ ....... 06 | i61.25 pi .2.25-2,75. bu. oupe, fancy, 3.60 | Am RICE) eee 308 MOew 8 ues ire 11 ome. Burial will be i “| ised. been prom- May ......1- 1.95% July oT 1.10% [400 bi pk bskt. | Peaches, Grapes, No 1, | 4m Pig . 3. one 8 Cem |... 26.8 lington-North B in Bur- service before the duly 2sc4. "119494 "Soybean 118 | ete rene 3-3.50 b Elberta, fancy, | Am Cy el ay'sig | Mech Tracks IL. Bo tanch Cemete tions we restric- Lj vo gece 287% Bept ns ale, fancy, 5.50 u; peaches, H. ‘1A syan 4 Martin Gl .“ : 2 rn at Linco ry. re imposed Au { Nov ..... 4. Sqry | POREES, | Fertile bu; No 1, 3.50-4 on al ed a oq May D 8tr ... 43 | and form hire, England, 41 others g. 11 and b | | 252% | 3 bu: Barvlett, ate see Mee Re bus | Am Ma&Pdy *. a Bere on ts 3° | died Tu erly living at Pontiac, h commitm also under previous { | a | Plums, Demsch. No 12.80. MP 8 bo. bu, Ant Gap 1. 338 Monean't Pet.. 66.1] Survi eaday ft home » TE) more thi ents who have need for Prune, No 1, Heal Ee hao aes | Am ba! hen $87) M an Ch.... #0 ving are | e than 500,000 cubic fe Nor gaspar Watermelons, Am [Rad .\.. 187. Mot mate st ana seph La titwo children, Jo-| moath. # uble feet per | elons Am 8tl F , 26.6 Motorola he ems) h w and. » JO le Ve id... 202! ere . rs. doz ead t misc: Beets, No 1, pe Tel&Tel ree ene! Br ... 22.2 Laughlin of No B Ray Mc- Some of thes bu, aba beets | topped; No 1, Tees Aes Tent . 12 ee aie, ‘* ¥7| grandchildren and 12 ranch; nine | said, will n ese, the commission 68 open’ oll [50-4 ous Beans, 230 foctu: No i Ake Cop aot ust cata) ee {7 | Children,’ 12 great-grand- | 1995. but i need the gas until r Be ef 1000 E88 beat" preen Roman, Ne 1 ‘Aleees 2000 eB BRE Baty #$34| Mrs, Adelin See ee aera anpension we | beans, boa aang fis. Muvncr aa Fe an Rati eee Nae Lead a 318 - AvOK nowne ene Gordon or construction Aa expansion’ Lod @ \ ) ee ee ete, ler, No 1: 3.89-6 bu Bald Lime. $1 Met Thee, >. 221 Mrs. Charles (Ai Pec Service tor ihe tie "AA : a en al wad Saree att curls variety. ol 60 seul ue 2.1 NY a ea i 17:3 don, 73, a ont. lina Ilene) Gor the blanket order, Meese to abb ; ge, curl 0. ~ i ¢ re Ww ic] Praterna | sprouts, ‘red, NG 1, 1-150. bi H'1.s0 bu; | Beth’ at |... 1.1 in MPS oes 33.2 | Sat 2'$. Grant, will igan Consolidated Mich- - 1 Order No i, 50 bu; Beth St? drf & W urday be ‘ to add 1230 Bowling Lea of age No. vate doz ea aye! bu. it _cauongs Boeing ee 467 No is ret 426 Chural wi Pr aie Methodist dustrial customers. promi ve in- this yea gue is bowlin bu, \) Caulifi rots, topped, N ond ‘Strs .. 13 or Pac... .. 55. 1 al ice bef ised serv- r at thi g | Celery, N ower, No l, a1, | Bord 5 13 or 8 son BET el G in White Cha ore Aug. 11 Bowling C e Montcalm | 9-1. 0 1, 350-4 ¢ 30-3' doz. en 53.2 ta Pw .. 12 emetery. S p- | wh and‘two oth enter on W 00 dbai\bebu; eelery. 20: celery, N Borg Warn 2 Ohio on S| Ponti he died tod o will nted ~ others 8:00 p. m Ww ed.| night at doz bchs. Co elery root, N . io 1, | Briggs Mf 66.2 Packard . 512 ontiac Gene al: . ay at 500 more th . We need bag cueuson sweet, No 9 1, 1-1.50 | Bri ee etn ka WA aa ; ral {Hospital aft ,000 cubi an the to fill our 16 several. men | bu; N ucumbers, slice 1, 1.50-2 6-doz st My .... | m W Air long illn er a c feet.per ui : , Brun B w- 18.1 Param Pi 8.3 ess. ? month limit. | Optional E ber who dees ‘so any mem- };° Panes ta Sree cenn ta ead | mike 7. 18.6 Parke Davis 252| Arr : it. | quipment and es to bowl TF, 5- 50-4 bu cuc ers, dill size, | C @ Co tan, N39 e Davis .. 13.2 angements 4 : 3 5° | Local Taxes E att pleas I 6.00 b umbers, pic : alum & Penne : ; are b : xtra. ae ne Shiegs tie ee et gases biti A Nd Wees tes bo'dos ‘behs. | Gan 'B Wy 1202 Pe ney Jc... 4a | Moore! Fines fe eeu Foreign Exchan ° | Secretary. —Adv. type, No 1 2 ai i: eggplant, lone n Dry... 40a eeoins Beas 4 Surviving besides her sii { NEW, YORE (AP) — For ge joes sont este cee Tot dar bone beska "No, 1 i ado | Eaptalaut <2 86 Pally Mor io are her mother Mrs husband joists i con Britain in’ dollars, f c Lodge 21 F, & on- | Onions ra, |No 1, 2.25-2. 25-1.75 | Cater vee 147 ip Mor..../ 61 app of Ona at . ne anadian doll ' : Sept. 18, 7% A. M., Frid eA a 1 50 pk bskt. | Cel Yae | 66 SO oe M way; a daught donne Ghee ane York 0 p.m. ay, | onions, green, fancy, 1.25 50-Th b eine «+ 46-6 Pit Plate Gi .. Led rs. George Do er, | 101.56 U per cent one degree. B Work in FC | 75-90 doz b ney, 1.00 doz’ be ag; | Ches & Oh / 222 p eGl.. 45.4 iman of A E 4 U.8. cents, un premium | or urness Spragu 15 pe chs} onions, hs; No 1, | Chi#& nio 33.6 roct Ga Townshi von urope: Great changed. 4 e, W. M. or lb. Parsnips, pickling. Na 1, | Chry Me” Gag Pulknan | 61.6 ip, a son,| He unchanged: Britain (pou ey, curly; Nee No 1, 2-250 + chrysler 663 F n .f...., 36 Pontiac; « Henry Godin of | changed: ‘30 day futur nd) $2180, - —Adv. Parsley root, N o 1, 50-75 do a4bu, | Citles Svc 1. 663 Pure Ott bce d 45.2 a sister, Mr a : 60 day futur es 2.79%, un- 4 black eye, No ; 1, 80- Non dee bose bens, | Climax Mo .. 73.2 Radio Cp |....; 22.7 Thornton * “Silasicd o cent 90 day fara 2.79%, up 1/16 News in Brief Seti Faye ete ees | Ek BN RE ROR EG brane, J Mefvor: and. three [3% "tt aan at in rie ; No. ly Bp tt -1.50 bu; 8 cers. peppers, | Con Fai eB Repub stl’ v+4 203 | wa R ames| Perkins, of Ona 24 ger unenhanced 14 (franc) ‘abiglot August H. | sweet! No i, 21230" Bere Pee. | Comsum poe See Bee Met ri tine (Ale Iph and William of Po "| ett unchanged. Teal (lira) t0% of DPaft, sweet, No 1, 2. f bu; pepper eh onsum Pw .. 3 ey Tob B 4 c. so surviNi M- | uncha anged. Portugal 6's of a | Courtland, De 25, of 2014 No 1, 110-1. 50-3 bu. . Pota s, Ted, | Con PwPt 4.5 76 Bt Jos Lead ss on wing are eight|cb nged. Sweden (kr (escudo) 3.50; | troit, pl d 1, 2.20-3'0 50!) $0-Ib bag: toes, new, Cont Can 101.6 Scovill Mf . | $3 6 grandchildren and ght), anged Switzerla (krona) 19.34, U to reckless dri plea ed’ ‘guilty 1.25 b 0 100-14 bag. Pu potatoes, No Cont M 52.2 Séab Al ..1 972 } 12 great grand 23.3415, unchanged. nd (franc) e n- 2 ving yesterd 125 bu. Radighes, wh mpkins, No 1, | Cont tty ta Brie Hore cat Miss Virgini , >| 16.62, Unchan aged, Penmark. (x shoal was sentenced t ay and A" 75s an he ite, No 1, '80- +00 a et a Sh On aah a VanRipe i rone)+ land Co ays in Oak- |2-2.50 oz bcehs. Ru bchs; Cruc 8 71.5 sim 68. NDALE—Se un 2-2.50 bu. 8 jaba pene t1 mons 4 rvic So To ty Jail: by Farmington ra-bu? squache Bi Acorn abagas, ° Na *. bass . ne Sinclair Of] , 28.3 Virginia VanRiper, € for Miss me light penet ee Justice Allen C: Ingl buy squash \Delidious, No Not 1 121.80 Ben te bed aoa bac’ 32-1) worth, will be Sal bl a i But a to a depth of rates Ve hi en he failed t gie| een us, No 1, 1.25-1, Doe Ae a ae nee i turda ut at th 000 feet, | 0 pay a $25 tin squash, 8u td, No 1, 1.25 75 bu; | Dow Chem 4 Sou Ry ...... 31 from Voorh y at 11 a.m. e depth of ‘ 280 s vg | e. | squash, met, No 1, -1.75 bu; DuPont — 5-4 Sparks W s+ 4 41.2 ees- -Siple Ch light can a mile, n . . Sa ; i ian 1-1.50 14- E 96 . 52| tiac, w apel, Pon-|- an be : , no ginaw Sh laaeipehalaisbeorss Fastice wil [PE Deke. “oniareey tan, Pal sont | BN, ak at Serre 2U8| tery te beara to Oak Hin beme-| | ; sil i St. elurgy yeste d ig-bu> N atoes, outdoo 60-60 astm Kod e 21.7 Std Oil C 26.2 Ag iyesterd | } Jt r Grover A. Mille rday fined]. 1238 O21, 1¢1.25 %4-bu; Maney, 2.50 | EL Auto L.. 4p3 Std Ol Ind. 67 residence aft ay at her FE 4-3566 2 r, 19, of Ne beh: $1.75" bu Turni tomatoes, No | Hl. & Mus .. 40.1 Std O11 nd .. 67.2] -Bo er a long illness.’ : son, $35 plus $25 w Hud- | Noi, N°so: 1:28 doz. bens: fancy, 1.80 doz | Emer R In 1.6 Std O NJ ../ 68.3 rn.in Pontia s. ile 5 court ¢ 1; 1.50-1.75 | bu s; turnips, E ad... 11.2 il Ohio 32 | Mi c, July 15, 19 : Miller pl osts after | . Greens: topped, | ESt Jone Studebak iss VanRi 13, ea s: Cabl E 26.2 er , | 23. per wa ariving.” oe ; Suilty to reckless Coltaid, Nb} 1. page, Not +e 2-1. 75 | bu. | Firestone red Bee bee . 387 sate High Was col graduate of Spinach, N nutard: Mo i, ts No 1 { Preept Sul ty. Sylv E] Pd ..) 3 ‘6| valedictorian of was , Three Sisters Mai 1-125, bu, aid 72.50 bu. bork Wek Gen ee eee (0a weaea Fes] 30.3) ing class. Sh of| the 1931 graduat- OP | | H arket,, 608 W urnip, No 2; ard; No 2, I- o 1, | Ge s 5f Sul ,./ 88. e was las' | | uron offers for their w sada Yippee wie Ge 1's0 bu. | Gen shoe <... 48". Timk Det. a.4|at the Bureau of Inte x cumcyes IGHTS | | iene ce x 5. hd dog 42. } | spews The Three ei ee cane nari) ag 1 2: 2,50 geeny canes cab- an Te a ape R Beat oak in Detroit. } nternal Revenue oO 9 | | clbbeine “ pouty top - quality. be bu. rca bleached. Np ae Gillette Rub 24 rrankamer | 13.4 ‘f as well as Mon. Sat. Ni h n read » bleached, No 1, 2 bu; esca oodrich | .... 2 Twent , 24.2 } oy . pan) only 45: y for the tuce, Butt x 25-2.75 b ~ | Go ot 0 62.2 C Fox 16 . 1g ts c lb. Ste hand er, No 1, 3- u. lLet- odyear . Underwood 4 P | offer a gra Wers, 29c. We _ No 1, 3.25- 3.50 bu; let Grah P ++. 450) Un | (34.7 ° try | nd sale o |No 1, |1.25- i 7§ 3-doz; let tuce, | Gt N aige .. 1.2’ Carbide .. 64 EO choles _ Dart se on OU oxire atte ld fab ite ihe Pe | Sa Un PRE ag aN pera eTROPL POULTRY ! eeain ue beef ‘pot roast dium, 16.50-17. 50: “20.00 ve ee ay baa! Holland pot 432 Ualted “Gp : 38. fours tar| No. pe per pound = , an Jub foe 50-15.50, ~ | Hook eos. 12.6 Unit eh * uality live . S Lean beef club steaks, 49e. eee ee Oe Heavy ‘bh | short Houd . 56.2 Uni G . 49 ens 26-27 fancy fresh ribs, 15c lb. Extra CHICAGO ; Hud eo 124 U8 finee 31.7 aehte broilers 6a: 1g ote hens 19-21: gro POT t i... 8 ds 3 fftryers u 89c. Leani, und beef, 3 lbs. for | 115, on track 23: Boratons! Big Ot oe 188 TE acer la | segse’| Kena hae 34: eT A cca | | Rabbits, meaty spareribs, 39c. aay On eee eae, = roratoes: Arrivals pt Cope ees OA GB penalt 3a3-| Toasters cae co ute’ “aun @ | 55c. Our grand ‘mat supplies “moderate; .8. shipments Inspir Cop .... . 3 5S Smelt Pt 562| =e ver 4 * whit Heavy ; 4 | special: Morrell’s re ejrocet | Raseete: ateny yt weaker, comers fair; ene eo: ad Ce oe id rept dll mers 23: |old roosters ley. 34. = p cnics, 39c. Th: ady- to-eat | 60: Ww. ah regon” Podeaceain’) for nt Harv sere 2 : Ww Pic 11 over 25 avy hens 37-3 young : mt ) oe 25.8 aukesh 1 lbs 33-34} 8; youn for their ree Sisters offers | 602°! ashington | Russet Ula BBO yet ocean Ww aM... 133/25 Ibs 31- + young tome” toms an Ss n Ponti s $4.50-6.00; > | Int Pi vee 38.1 est Un. T 32. g toms und for their grand highlights of the | °° Penis ge unt oe: | Bape ht Mae AB ie iia z | potatoes chiga | John Ma wh 47 CHICA | (guarante gan 7 Kel n..., 58.4 ite Mot . CHICA > POULTRY US ea Potatoes) 60-Ip, bag, adc Livestock xii. tee goog, 4 ps pte tat coope, #08. baying | g, 89c iH va Ze $3:1| prices eneven! .0.b. 1 ‘ 3 doz. wor el: ene fresh eggs per aa STOCK mith Rad .. 108) hene 21- one higher on ‘dueklin jower on 7 L | Ib. Tide, large eae oleo, 17g | ,, DETROIT. ratty, ae tinted Tan pheotey or broilers pine aide Sait uryent oe | — — 8 0 . cand fee ‘American spaghett 906, | reprecintatite ina sae en take. fale ree 0 eq by the Asso: foe roosters 18-20; duck- | is ( S mark u ' | : or $1, Jumbo, 32- 7 | 25 cents higher; Satad most sales eracha Net change Tnfust. Ral cu - , ; fa anut butter, 580. Produce: jac Of | eer aka aro Ss eae prise’ tan Noon, today... is Di, stocks | Geno cael tenee tee | or ancy sweet W ce: Extra | pote 3a q aro fatter price for | wanes a ‘3a'5 16:7 2 | 771,647; CABIUbuiter crn ei Celery, 2 atermelons, 79c choice 3s discount und 200-240 Ibs; som Week ago. ay! 111322 76.2 52.0 101.5| changed; wholesale | buyin m; reecipts | ; ; stalks fo: ea. | 175 Ibs 23.50-2 ed 50 cents; so e | Month ve aeJ843 | 97.0). $21 101.3|90 B63. 93 scote |AA g prices un- sweet Honey D r 25c. Extra | !% 21.75-23. -24.25; few sows some 160- hig lve au a ue S laa | 66.25: 92 A - i | par z od 9 C 63 . ; ca 66; 4 * ‘ Large seed] ew ‘melons, 29c Cattle 00; heavier sows 19.184 400 | 1953 Repke wo oe (139.3 roles 53.8 107.3 | 63.5. rs: 90 B 64.25. . ess grapef €a. | incl salable 600; cal Sai. 1188s lon” 151.8 2 62.1 10 Eggs firm; t : Sweet S j grapefruit, 49c cluded around ves 50. Re low : 93.6 5.6 | bu > receipts « < unkist doz. |ern gr 300 souther ceipts | 1952 hi Sepa {186.2 || 73 ES6 i163 | ckeet ae 4,716; whol | -To oranges, 2 grass slaughte n and west- | 19 BN... co 15 5 50.8 standa n¢hanged esale boy he Tokay, blue or green oe. Gas. | (2) masters Pani tae atte (late 1oW...c 0c. 1150.0 948 $48 122-5 | jarge ards J cents 4 iS Oe ee for 29c. 3 Ib. ba grapes, 2 Ibs. ows; market) {ull emainder mainly 66.7 50.7 be ards 48-51: U.S. mediums re USB. gir sage for Be. Three Sites Mar cotta Re eee eran ity male ero roca | carrot ete ||| is ; et open all d isters Mar- | Unsold at eers 25.50-27.23; bul lots | Figur ornblower & 5. A : : \ k gras: es after d Weeks 1 | nightly. until ay Sunday: oO cial cow sage t utilit seers ecir mal pol ; ; 10:30 men | ainih bison heady y and commer- | Bald nts are eighths | tO ' : : 7a. —Adv nly 9-11.50; ' hea, ers and cutters |D Pale Rubber* ig w oN s rm Near H Eastern D .| quotable up t y commercial b GNatgatoad cs iY son : P rong Ko é i Distric : load o 16.00; lat ulls | Gerity-Mi ODN ees 114 ng , ‘ Cc. ! j rict Missi choice 6 e Wednesd chigan* | ve evae Ol HON! Seay will be hel issionary |.steers 20.00 eh Ib Wyoming solerred Ringsron ghigan® jevees errs 28 ol wi G KONG uA tyoh esleyan Methodi bid at the | “enter? slow. (im Sia Te lend ee aed sco Screw J seeeee onde ae 33 nds up to 100 mi yphoon with i | N. Lyn odist Chur prime ve ak; bulk hi OG, | Midwest Abrasives). |... sy 25 22 | was (00 miles an f ynn street, Prid ch, 67 | low alers 22-28.00; gh good to | Rudy Mtg* wives! sy. 27 2.7 expected to hour r j 18. Th : ay, Septem good 15-20.00; cu K ee tarana | Wayne crew? «1... 0. 46) B2 | South : to pass 60 mi Mouton- . y be: nd speakers for the d Der). epesp salanie 60, Il and utility 6-14.00. oho agin. ie gud se eaee 34) 28 | toni of this British cro miles lemb x hag : 7 : : ‘lyn Birch; ay will ed, several lots resh receipts: lim- e; bid and aiked. 1" 14 15 onight, Resident wn colony collar, : oon Ww. tetera of) Sierra | sheep nominal Pebuebie ‘outlet ‘tor iam in inal *5 | tor the e rigid battened down button neck L . alee ig Gale, presiden ae are nally steady. Gr HPs; . 9 ! of the storm. a rd Traini e + | i Springs. s. ning School, ~ ~Hot CHICAGO a ‘ LIVEST n | ta 1 » §. D. Mornin |, CHICAG ock | ; aes tla Afternoon eevise (4 “tairy active egy te hogs 7,5)0; * INVITE s . & ening service, 7:15 p ae Ib. pute ood peys: mst ahotae 1b: th 3 ITE YOU TO TRY | : ‘a . ™. pate enoies: 25.25; around th so] 2. ry f 7 me 180 lb. 33. 930-250 Ib. 25.35; three |: THE ‘ our friend’s —Ady, | lighter 22. Meat Te. sana 400 Ib Gnd ° | NEW tp = bail, Ph in jail and 92.75; 75-24.00; bulk- 400 Ib. gnd | tT wes SH Veo a Ons: 7110. C. A. een palate ¢ Propet pam = Rapleltil ha ld . polis AVEMASTER | | “ : Rummage Sal ell. | choice and ie 3,000; salable calv | q “| | “ ata Pine St ad. obey rime nesre wrong, matances | Here is a closer, faste : + The savin, i pale ope: steady; heifers abo helow: with Ay r shave savings are terrifi | | ' « Rummage Sale, P a steady orn. to as sane font 71 t meld fuss or muss, New “Stay” but great repeat sale of ic, $0 don’t miss this lays Church, Sai , Presbyterian }prime. ak; bulla mostly” steady: @—stylin y" buttons + pell crease;resistan at » Sat. at 9 a.m “prime 15be 4 load lot t ly, steady) : ~ & makes it eve are anchore ent nylon-rayon t, water-re- i Ady. | fhotee tiers Is, seers: most pred ane ‘ to “handle. | n eneier won't ‘pull otf . with. hidden rayon aomaie ‘storm coats! Girl's — = Lornort ae ay to average c gs 20.50-27.00;| &@ | Green, red, bl oop and shirred b 4 : " DerRorr (AP)— ay ib. repped one lot A eee oe steers| 3 Add | On brown ue. Sizes 7 to.14. Bo ack. ~ } ee in — foe ieee paid per dcuen paeid 1 fers 4.00; “high-commercal Us 3 ne~ ta) Your snap , ht Sizes 6 to, 12, ee in navy, : 2 ites—Grad ¢ cows 10.$0-13 utility com- | P to ple * sa l aver eA jumbo 74- utters 8.75-10. 3.50; cahne: ase your ree. od Redium War, wd arg. 81, weighted | vealers 16.00 : Nemesereit commercial | Account j, CHARGE FOR vn hale NO“ vp oe. 36%; B anes 4 goe 35- 39, 10. 0015.00, Ecorse pa we prin ; Pay on Sallan’ =o r — Browns—G “63, wed. ave. | slow: fe sheep 1,500; ae Mini c e Pesce af; Girk ‘ M : ao 73, wtd rade A jumb few ear generally rath redit T is atch td tes = avk 69% o 72: lar or mo y sales spri er erms i Hats | 83; small 34-39, i mente f2-66, ara? tee | cate samere ewer shan spring lambs 80 . || gorse iannsns 2.95 | ium -62, wtd ay » avg. 35%: about yearlings; day; not seeees ‘ 39; ge 61; C B lar steady; 50 g8; slaughter | Sege ahin , AE | REM eh maine eae ! eit egaved’ 8 f. to choice Ileagit good 12. seine! aati | ter ewes 4.00-6.50 cull | TO ! | | | * FIT YOUR ° Free : ‘- o Servi | i. ce } : ‘ POCKETBOOK 4 Guarantee | : | Get $28 te e § r dl | A = on Signature, $500 | CRE | Furniture bd DIT-SHO or Auto e | P | @ When you ; | | ° : WwW * ot . dent, pool arch ts done loan at Provi- e Ladies! Lay-a-Wa ITH FEDERAL your individual needs. The ropa it to @ Sunbea | y 2a ‘PU . | © such manager, friendly »| m) Shaver f RCHASE | © sod you need , lee ‘Blagg. on exper in, money ma | or the ; &, and the best date to mal much you can convenient Tinaidetatinn how 0 your Christmas | COUPONS e 2s 9 Oi find your payments. M y repay each month, bd i} : ~ Provident Loan en and women el b e eames | w a hv “Wy — married or ' t Pr ! rite, or come in “t hv Certainly ! | 80 | e | e /@ : e e e ‘el ms Society of Detroit | “oat | and FI svevem_| | @ +» Lawrence | | 7 WEST LAWRENCE ST., PONT! Bids. TTA t am : fearon ares eam AC « FEderal 2909. ; | ~ — towns . SAGINAW AT) : WARREN, ; | PONTIAC, | ~L ¢ Dace | \- | ol | | | ie | | FIFTY-FIGHT | Soviets Now Will Trade— Oil for Consumer Goods LONDON (INS)--Twice in recent weeks Russia has offered oil and oil-drilling equipment for export, indicating a basie change in So- viet economic policy. | The first such offer was report- edly made to Japan and the sec- .ond to Argentina. The oil for Japan was to come from the island of Sakhalin and was to be ex- changed . for, Japanese fishing boats. The offer to Argentina was made in thé course of the current negotiations for the first commer- _ cial pact .ever signed between the two countries. In addition to the oil and oil, . drilling’ equipment, the USSR is said to have offered Argentia steel products and agricul machinery. Argentina in return would furnish meats, hides, wool, cheese .and other raw materials. The fact that oil has appeared on the list of products offered by the Russians for export has arous- ed considerable interest in Lon- don. It is believed to signify both a major degree of progress in Soviet oil production and an im- portant: foreign-trade. policy re- “versal. . Russia had not been willing or ‘able to export oil since the end of World War II. All of the foreign companies which formerly had: im- | ported Soviet oil had been liqu- dated. ; Even without the déstruction caused by the German armies in the Baku oil fields, Russia is know to have had a serious oil problem _ throughout the post-war period. Her requirements of oil have in- creased constantly as a result of her increased industrial production which has nearly doubled since 1940. According to expert Western estimates her oil production has risen by only about one-third. One of the -principal reasons for the slower increase in*Soviet oil production as compared to her industrial production is be- . lieved by western economists to be her« treasurer Desmond Walker of . Mansfield, Ohfo, and organization director Fleet) W. Perrine, Akron. Akron, vice president: The delegates heard. Gov. G. “had 80- convinced the Ameri- ean public of the baste- aah the: repeal of the act and . Eisenhower certainly char- codes it as undesirable and union- busting.” He said the ‘Taft-Hartley Act ' was not an issue in the last presi- dential election because both can- didateg promised either to “repeal or modify or improve it.’ “We must ehange this law if we the constructive _ potential of workers so they can ' achieve a better way pf life for | are to release Rubber Workers! their ddughter, | Lois MISS LOIS HUNTER Announcing the | “engagenient of Elaine, to Non- Residents. Help Pay Debts Out-Area Students’ Fees Paying Off Interest on New Oxford School ’ OXFORD — Part of the tuition money paid by non-resident stu-| dents in schools here will be used | to help pay off bonds and interest on the new Daniel Axford School. | % The Oxford ‘Board of Education |- inaugurated the new policy of seg- ‘regating| part of the tuition money into a debt retirement fund at its annual meeting in July. : | Under the: policy, 60° per cent it T i} | it Dean C. Hughes are Mr. and Mrs. Jess Hunter of Lysander aireet, ‘| Rochester. | Dean’ $ parents. are Mr. and Mrs. W iltiam Hughes of Sheridan. street, Pontiac. of ‘tuition money received ovér and above average cost of educating a non-resident student will be transferred into the debt retirement fund. : .A state law allows the tuition A Febrary wedding ig | planned. - rate tol be 25 per cent above aver- /age per-capita cost of education. | The 25 per cent. charge is allowed , HURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 1 17, | | : { FIFTY-NINE_ - so that non-residents may~_help SHIP— ~The Voters of West Bloomfield ‘Hold First Fall Meeting WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- League of | Women ship | held its first 5 meeting share the cost of construction and}. maintenance of buildings. . < UM MARKS One hundred |ye Tov™ | Breeder President Eastarnar Re-Named University of — certain to walk the Ta ii) uesday. | | Kits - were, distributed | \to mem- rs who will solicit citizens of e area for contributions during the league's annual | | financial drive Sept. (15-25. - fi T Gingellvill Garden Club |n 953 Flower Show 4 GIN ;GELLVILLE=The_ Gingell- EAST LANSING ww — W. R. s of engineering. it chigan will be oa special program/on Oct. 23 and alumni back on the campus for thr gineering building, which shares GINEERING C p4. ENTENNIAL — nstruction at the bserved | with a Engineering’ e centennial are ugh the arch of the West En- fame with the |; pillars of Angell Hal as a cantpus landmark. | The arch is pictured above with insets, at left (Alexander Winchell, appointed) by the Regents November of 1853 to teach civil engineering, ar at right of George Granger Brown, pf the College of Engineering. | . ( id | the present dean Prizes to Top Readers seventh grader, were awarded } Patsy, who read::53 books, Adolph L. Seibert Seibert, 62, who at this home, 4010 Broker Christ Lutheran Cemetery. Home, Ortonville. Born in Hadley Township, at home. BROWN CITY—Service for ‘| Stephen (Katherine A.) Adams, 33, : |‘who was killed yesterday when’ the truck in which she was a ‘|jereen Cemetery. are four | children, ‘Charles, Harold and Richard; parents,’ Mr. and Mrs. Amidon of Concord, N. H., was reelected president of the National | Association of Artificial Breeders | at the close‘of the association's. an- | nual meeting at Michigan State College. J. Stanley Earl] of Unadilla, N. Y., was elected vice president and Harry Herman of Columbia, Mo., was reelected executive sec- retary-freasurer. ~ | The- Connecticut Association of court. Mrs. the Community Center. | | Entries for the show lic from. 5 Arthur Bur p.m. to 10 p.m. | Weight- lifting, coding ‘ville Garden Club. will) Hold_its nnual flower show Saturday at must be, in ty ll.a.m. in time for the judging. The show will be open te the pub- BESS is chalyman: and Utah, ‘in that or Artificial Breeders placed first in| the judging of news letters. Otier | winners were—associations New York, West iVrginia;- ree from der>~ Mrs. ; and | | ‘Shows Hawaiian Films OXFORD—Three-D movies’ of his shotting ‘were the three most ‘trip to Hawaii last winter ‘were ‘popular sports in the United shown to the Oxford Rotary Club Senator's Wife to Be ‘Honored at Metamora METAMORA — Macomb County. Republican Women’s Club will hold |) a tea honoring Mrs, Homer Fergu- son Saturday at the home of Mrs. George Roberts on Grant Park Ferguson, visiting Michi- gan with her husband, will address the club during the afternoon. Holly Honors Ex-POW HOLLY — Albert E, DeSmet, Holly’s-first prisoner of war to re- turn from’* Korea, will be honor guest at a dinner—this evening at |the V. F. W. Hall. ‘given by the V. F. W. Autiliary, tals $94,883.70. loffice. Rochester Collects $75,000 in Taxes ROCHESTER—The village treas- urer’s office reported to the Vil- lage Council Monday night | that a total of $75,234.54 in taxes had been received up ito Aug. 31. The entire village tax roll to-| Arthur Kelley; The council algo voted to pay $4,975.46 in government bills which | were submitted by the treasurer's Twenty-Eight Attend | Cass City Installation - CASS CITY|— Twenty-eight p sons attended the meeting of Auxiliary |of Tri-County Americ Legion Post 507 here Monday Officers were installed by M Alex Tyo, past unit president. freshments were served by i son and a Hazen Guinther. Announce Engagement Markle It-is_ being | There: are more Motion picture | | other European country. Next in Silverwoofl. P tde the wedding has Mrs, Wilbur Morti- CLIFF IRD-Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clifford’ are. annourc- |er, Joseph, also of Armada. doseph P. Cook... at: his:home, 207 Oakland St., lies 2 ‘p.m, Sunday at Dryer side Cemetery. contractor here for 50: years. Mrs. Hulda. Rosseau ARMADA —Service for Mrs. { Ae i : oi By. Utica Book Club Gives UTICA—Patsy Topping, a fifth grader, and David DeLong, a prizes for reading ‘the most books during the local Bookworm Club's annual Vacation reading program. David, who read 40,. were award- ed prize books for their efforts. County Deaths | HADLEY—Service for Adolph L. yesterday will be 2 p.m. Saturday in Christ Lutheran Church with burial in body is at C. F. Sherman Funeral | was a farmer his erjtire life. Surviving is one brother, John, i Mrs. Katherine A. Adams senger overturned on Cronin road, _ | will be 2 p.m. Saturday in Metho- | dist Church with burial in Ever Surviving ' besides her husband ‘Katherine, Joseph Drinkhorn of Armada: two sisters, | Mrs. Nick Neumeyer and Anna | with final appeal to the (AFL) | Drinkhorn of Armada; and a broth- | HOLLY — Service for Joseph | Pater Cook, 79, who died last night | eral Home with burial in Lake- Born in Holly, he was building | Surviving are his widow, Wini- fred; a brother, Jake L. of Holly; and several nieces and’ nephews. da Rosseau, 90, was to be today at 2 p.m. from A. M. Tiffany Chapel with burial in Rose Hill. Cemetery. Czar Proposed © by AFLGroup a Would Aid Inter-Union Disputes; Smooth Way _ for Unification . » ST. LOUIS w—The AFL ‘Build- ' + | ing and Construction Trades De- i ‘partment |said here yesterday ap- — pointment!/of a sort of czar to ! resolve jurisdictional disputes be- tween rival unions could smooth the way for integration of industri-. al unions now oytside the AFL. — Officers! of the building trades group, in} convention here, pro- posed appointment of a jurisdic- : tional adjudicator in their annual! he | Teport to AFL President George. i, | Meany. The problem, cited by AFL "s carpenters as one reason for their “| brief departure froni the AFL . last mouth, is scheduléd to re- ceive a lot of discussion when the AFL) convention opens here Monday, } | “In a nutshell, we propose that | 2 | | top and. Rd., The Mrs. pas: all jurisdictional conflicts be re- solved by one duly qualified per- son,"’ the officers said. ~ “It would also seem advisable,"* | the report said, “to develop de- tailed prodecure providing for ap- | peal from the adjudicator’s deci- sion to the AFL Executive Council, her convention." The report, which tdok note ‘of the jurisdictional warfare that has long caused trouble among unions, suggested, that impartial AFL law- yers| work out detailed procedure for presentation of disputes, meth- ods ‘of conducting hearings and PS. f His Po lice Work | STER —Robert Rodgers ti'ac Wednesday began Rochester's newest ad- dition to} its police force. An- noyncemeént of the hiring was made at} Monday’s village coun- cil meeting by Police Chief Sam i | will Fun- of Pon duties as Hul- ing the engagyment of their daugh- | She died Tuesday, at the"home of | Howlett. or theaters in Germany than any) ter, Dorig, t Laverne Smith of | her son, Hugh T. of Armada. - “| j Other survivors include four Library} ‘ot Congress has more _ themselves and for all ‘the rest of States from the colonial period ee by Norman Roth, of the. and Robert Brummeler will be | | order come Great Britain,| Noa dat grandchildren and six erestgrand than sevén million bound volumes us in America, Mallams said, vuntil the Civil War. ; Waterford-Drayton Club. master of ceremonies, ‘France; -and Italy. A been set. J children, and 15 milion manuscrips.. | a Ve ft : / D T~ ' . en : . - | ‘Death Notices Card of Thanks. 2| Wanted Male Help 5| Wanted Male Help 8| . Wanted Male Help 5| [Wanted Female Help 6/ Wanted Female Help 6| ‘Work Wanted Male 9| Moying & Trucking 12 . EE AY ert fr A Pe “WANT TO THANK THE y . a | : ty wren ARR RRR “tice Sanmaer! HANK for hee NEAT APPEARING SUTIN (Cc N | : E Experienced . MARRIED VET WITH CHILDREN revive Mrs, 8 cer until the ‘ ] f N AN SEW ING MACH} E | + ; going to _ school wishes work | tn ruc S or ent RRB, SEpTEMDe, 18,2052, WEL~ | Gietor arrived: be vidting gure | fal gH eee, SALESMAN | ~ Counter Checkinig Girl | _Sie* ser 6 hours” Galt PE bsee?. , ) a ° m Ave TAC WAAL Davey. | r : ee Tyee Ruston ay Mies | au, for theit many wits the} = A It Up _FOR MEN'S STORE | ; OFFI 5 | Apply in Perpon, | UECPRICAN WA NirM Pan TRND eQUIPMENT Frances or Gear gon of Mr. | for their kindneis and sympathy Experience not neces-| Ambitious man between 25 & 40) | tt ra edt Be ‘LANDSCAPING oa PLANTING, ty Ton Pickups ty Tom Stakes of Terrance, Mary Louls ‘otn | inl our, bereavement, Roy C. ly i yrs, of age, for selling sewing | : free. estimates, planting, prunin, and Dump Tru y Louse, A d family. sary. Apply in person toO| machines. Musy be experienced | . | = 944 W. HURON BT. | hedge. shearin scleaning, light ep F d and Peter Erb:‘ dear brother of encer. an mily. 1G d hard ke ] 5 SG : 5 } ! rer K. ontiac Farm an Hugh, ‘Kenneth? Erb and | Mrs. 00 ard wor b us a Wm. Dickinson at Dick- saletmes & bere morcen Enow- | | SILK FINGHEE OMe KNOWL- | _ hauling. FE 4-988 4 1 Traet c 4 ‘ c se « chines. a , eo a ap . le Baie mae een ee aan WE wish ro THANE OUR, MANY good product and ar gani- inson’s. i pec eaenty, Fyne pues full GIRT ‘ don Doviein cloner a Oretiard Work Wanted Female 9A In en Eartor) 2 fd ie ely floral tributes,’ Also Rev. me employmep ral em- , % TON av Lake Ave., 1208 N. Petrv. LN LAL ALA LPIA " thd - x SPE hte tenerat pt ere een: cl) &, King for. bis! Berets zation equals good pay _Saginaw at Lawrence ployee benefits. wc OR \ C a Fp. worms PER TO}WTD. HOUSEWORK. CALL BE- SMITH MOVING "| : 7 service will be held Friday, Sept. i Bee pene Rigberdeen bid ens for you, We make 10 —— WANTED APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE priing perm ne’ with e604 sigh ‘tive soy ed gay week. Pvt.-room | “fore 2, FE 46928. , van or) Pickup Service. €-4864, oe, | a 1 —— cs . aw AMT pena Oe eet ee ‘Calvary (89, kindly helped us ‘path re- wild promises but we do ee eae Cheer BoE 2ND FLOOR . ing conditions 5 days a week. _pome. MI 4.57 tornenent Christian, COLORED LADY. wis HES DAY LIGRT | TROCEING. AKD pees ee __dustus 3. Wilson, yeey ®"| say, that if you will put)! OUTsIDE vote ALSO INVOLV. Sears, Roebuck & Co, “ee oe oe tars abot ba S| SALESGIRL ro he Le en ASHINGS —& IRONINGS. sa AKL EAT TR tole . | cCU 1 ee me . me fu culars abou! oury Tug store. | Fe e free FE ‘7259. . | RDON. SEPTEMBER 17. 1963. | "wish TO THANK MY FRIenps| forth some real j;effort} PONTIAC PREas, CIRCULATION |! 154. N, Paginaw bet, your your | gent position. Please apply in per: ncing_tree Fe 2 12. |_Rubbjen_hauled Poy Adelia Ilene, 3302 S. Grant. Avo F t| . WASHING AND IRONING: | Township, Age 73. beloved wife| and relatives for the beautiful) your weekly pay will be| -2eeARTMENT _ [one Fee Oe re ee ee ew | - FE 6008s. O’DELL CART GE of Henry Gordon; dear daughter | floral offerings received during y pay GOOD SALESMAN TO WORK FOR | BOY 18, OUT OF SCHOOL, WANTS ton Drug Co. Birmin gham. baa taeie PRACTICAL NURSE | Local’and Long Distance Moving =~. of Mrs’ Charles Knapp: dear! ™y, recent bereavement in the very satisfying. . If you| up and coming business, good, work. FE 2-2638. fe + | WOMAN WAN TED TO Se R | for pivate e culy, Call MA "63244 Phone: FE 6-8806 / mother of Mrs. George Dodman| 1058 of poy eae ed poeta x wo commission. Call FE 4-2690. 489 WANTED STOCK BOY FOR DAY | LADY TO WATCH 2 git bRay, 2 ehil CARE FO TRE 4 aa TRUCK WANTS and Henry Godin; dear siater of fig eenatortina ge “the al are an experienced) autoO-| N. Perry. work only. Lewis Spadafore Mar-; @6¢8 2 and 4, 6 dsys a wk. No ec see ont meraceien works | ‘RONG 1 sis THE ~vienity O2 Or wee Padi igs eevee \Mrs* Silas Thornton, James, Ralph | hearers and jchardson-Bird mobile salesm n, com Win. PURNACE INSTALLERS. ket, 197 Oakland Ave. thousework. Go eee nites if dq-) 7 m shift. FE ° | Weaver school, FE. 41301. 4 y : : La and Wiliam | Perkins. a snraay, | nereh Home, (Mra. Hloyd Btan- an, come in| “piu ‘and part time. Must have | BOY 18 TO 17 FOR KITCHEN | _Svtd. Cail FE 2-004 | GENERAL OFMICE Cotte ar] COLGRmD WOMAN DESIRES DAY Garden Plowing | 12A | service will be held Saturday, lake. holy and see ts and| learn car and tools. Appiy Wayne. Heat- help, fuil time. Apply 45 Auburn. EXP. SALAD GIRL. “APPLY IN | peu. Bar BLOCK CO. een ey, work Mon., Tues. & .Wed. §7 Posh apenteoend st eat ME | a church: eee iin a. - | if | about the many benefits ing & Co. $33 N. Malin. Rochester. EXPERIENCED (ZARM HAND BY ebb tlh ere Temple. Hts OF | jac’ Drive koay in person inal plus are. FE 47749. after 6. GARD2&N AND YARD il wal? | aa ee ha es ' oan : Colby officiating. Mrs. Gordon | Florists-Flowers_ 3 : Aa WANTED STOCK BOY. FULL) month. OL 1-3839. _ GAPABLE WHITE WOMAN FOR | WASHINGS & IRONINGS IN MY) disciriz, veveling. Any place, any will Hein state at the churrh | an~-- ne and fine future we offer. ume. que “work, apply” im pert | — Wanted F le Hel 6 ERPERIENCED GROCERY ey Adulte home Live in, good pay. home, Reas. rates. FE 2-9179. time prompt ser ere All er ete tiatet iy Wht. SPATS FLORISTS—FLOWERS Earl R. Milliman Co. Clothing Store, 19 N. Saginaw. ' eaeeana a ae ea Tom's Market, 888 Orchatd Lap | References, FE38s81| | RERINED er el Gee =e equip | Chapel Cemetery. Funeral ar- 123 every |__FE 2-3173 { MAN WTD. FOR LIGHT REPAIR Rd. No phone calls. |. Help Wantet 7 KER aeemor _FE_ pw WD. SLOWING, Dl i veld panei rangements. by the) Dudley H.. | } wort ir Pontiac garage Keego WOMAN TO CARE FOR cH | ~ FE 20013. JOBS, ¢ TO 11 P. in "Javcox, FE 4-9997. Moore Funeral Home. | Ambul nc Service aA , | Sales & Service. 3080 Orchard dren while mother works after-| || (3; 8. a5 GORE a i ance Service — A Lake Rd eego Harbor, Mich noons. FE §-3170._ ; . |MOTHER ‘WITH DAUGHTER mate PLOWING & FITTING, ALSO CO! ee en aie ete || BUMP AND PAINT ee ee “eheaners Sig, Wocawta pon tine Breve Box, ae Se ee oceans eee fo "As ! SENTATIVES 1 eaners ; wa ‘ S pono , H : beloved infant son cf. Mr, and ae eee aaietiished. Enraee: Permanent positions opened for | GIRLS 4620. MOTHER WITH SMALL SON oye i peal ary rassentan pidiee Ee fos ON Chevrolet & Olds Garage North. Lag le al some knowledge of Gia FOR MARKING & CHEC i 3 | psig “ypuetkeepion job. u| Business Service 13 - service was he 8 if " music Aill train applicants in- " ly Main Cl rs, . . & | charge. Nt ee NE e at 3 p.m 8t the tees ens | é ue. : terested in this type of work. pean. anit. Mose oe ty Apply in Hilzaverh "Lake Rdw We Are in Need of | wasHING, IRONING, NEAT SPE nera ome w ev cha i ust have car. y in rsop, : . | i t= officiating. Interment in Perry | | Aimbulance ervic€ | gxpeRIENCED WASHING MA-| Grinnell's 27'S, Saginaw, Wr EUDE RLY Wont bout + Experienced: | FE $-€598. to ateady customers. | xe ee ii FE #0189 fop wanes, vacation with pay, PIN BOYS WANTED, 15 YRS. AND TED’ ic “Work, ‘live in FE 2706) P| | _ || |RONING “DONE IN-MY HOME. | AJAX FURNACE SERVICE | | MACKENZIE, ‘SEPTEMBER 17, 1953, Wi __f9 Oak and Ave. Aout furnish references, Call F ghd ‘pay Detroit scales of 12/- WOMAN TO” CRE ~ FOR! CHII}- * | $3 pu. FE 5-7119. | Dr. 0. R430 Common, Walled =| __3+8413 for appointment.| cents per game. Report immedi-| wooqward at Squafe Like Rd. dren while mother works days, | SALESMEN WID. WASHINGS & IRONINGS, Expert service on all types of oe Lake. age 44: beloved husband | — in; Sopeery ately. Bloomfield Lanes, live in or-by day. Vic. of Cooley | — _long experienced. FE 5-0 gas, coal of Mrs. "Marian Burns MacKenzie; | | Funera) Directors 4 WTD. BARBER. 2577 DIXIE HIGH-| ward at Long Lake, MI 45125. HITE LADY POR LIGHT HOUSE: | Lt EM _38612_etter_ 6 p.m. for Jewelry é * ee WE ¥ a Seaned Sen or Me Milgrea tages | (Step | RR | REPRRINCED 0 AND Din | Weare Boers | tenes Fe TYPISE | | CARE FOR, CHILD. WEERDAYS | eating Equipment h 1 i| : nmerce. Kenzie: dear farmer of M ary Kay Brace Funeral Home must be experienced, Wohlfeil-| St. Rochester or pnone OL 2-7511. | _ 7.0028 after _4. Positions available. Many benefitd: | c| Atte =| SEWING. “0: BUILD| LADIES’ SPORTSW ‘0 SELL WHITE WOMAN TO CARE FOR Apply in persoh WASHINGS & IRONINGS, WORK| Free est FE 2-7188, OR 3-230. erie Wrasse || there were replies at | |_ Salen Heer adl"MagtRe | Nota compiee free abou e| SERCOMES FU AMICE RGR | Sear EoRW aren gs NT] | *° POE CAN Oe congins_anay:| ier Hehe” oe PE pel |w ev. reswe of- nths wor wages = = - ; : : | ‘ _ficiating. Mrs_ Owen wil le in| §> the Press office in LATHE OPERATORS! ANT APPLY right man. FE 2-0283 after 5. EED. APPLY IN PERSON. BUR. | DISHWASHER — DAY ORE} |. — ie “YAMLLY LAONDRY SERV. | © °25 or PE ¢7320_ state at the Voorhees-Biple Pu- Patera MANUFACTURING |MEN TO SELL PAST, MOVING “TON "8, 15 N. BAGINAW. _ steady. Aply in person 2 ody ; | ce Seo Pontias Laundry. FE | PLASTERING “& PATCHING. FE | peral Home. Interment in White the following boxes: 2677 bonnard| Lake Ave. iteme on credit, No eollectin PART TIME FOUNTAIN & E EIvGH- . a and se al «8101. 71-6678. i __ Chapel Cemetery. = CED GAS STATION AT Earn money;/ part or ful on help. White. 135 Baldwin. Apply SxPERIENCI ee eee aie LACE oP ORLAINS, BT PL sie OR | EXPERT TREE TRIMMING & RE- . ROBINSON SEPTEMBER 15. tendar A yee aa” br CAT: time. | Drawing secgunt @ NCED WA GHT IN BUSINESS FOR Your-| jutfied y Pon | “moving FE 17-6822, is ‘Tharles 31 N. Bhirley, age 5, 6, 8, 12, 13, 15, 17, Ryan's’ Pure Oil Service, “37e3| uberal commissions. per- | SP eRTENGED . Liberty Cafe se't, Distribute nationally -adver- | 8° Laundry Phone FE ssi. SUBURBAN GEPTIC TANE CLEAN. | -- ‘ aed on dear brother 1 18, 8) i et, Oe, ie be a Bae ae GROCERY. Sam. Pa Bout "Bept. * coe , etaces 08 Cane, part time ‘Apply 190'N. Perry. Painting-Detorating 11A | _ers. Lae Orion. MY 2-202. ARPENTERS 7 ™, a a an = 2954. | Be of Mrs, Earl Waite, Mrs. George 41, 42, 45, 49, 59, 66, 67, “frouse Boog Ela rE? pas real stock men. Previous ekpertent 20. 577 Auburn. MIDDLEAGED . T) PART TIME BALES RSON, WOMEN w . ELECTRICAL a Smith Mrs. Wallace Meade and 68, 73, 85, 88, 91, 94, 95, necessary. Apply Tom’s arket. % 2 school age : mhan or woman, must be exp. ANT {WALL WASHING, SEWER CLEANING : | Mrs. ast ied Fad tant 4 Rg shi 07 08 RT ote € p._&. {______| 688 Orchard Lake. No phone calls. CREDIT MANAGER more for home than wage, some _ Apply Conn's Clothes. 7 | painting. Sinks Sun Service Ph. PE 4-2012. seeticy pil be bed etc: | | ts PRE ne 23s, SALESMAN 25 70 @, MOST Miye. for targe Footied furnitare etore|| _ housemonh.. ee 1CoRS wrp. Four cor-| Wall Washing & Painting PLASTERING | Davia Puneral Home with Rev. | & | opportunity) Permanent | position. USED CAR SALESMAN An exc. opportunity for right) FULL TIME DAIRY & FOUNTAIK , Mer .unch, corner of Walton & | Pree ~estimates.: Ress. FE 6-231) a Hazard officiating. Mr. Robin- ! “>| The Good Housekeeping Shop. person. Write giving experience,| clerk. 3 to 11 v.m. Anply jin per- | _Rerry — FE 5-0626, FE 5-0025 Leo Lustig 7 | son’ will He in atete at the De- Ha 51 WwW arom We can immdediately place Teference and jsalary desired.| son, 024 W. Huron St. | _| DRIVER FOR PRIVATE scHooL. | Painting-Decorating, IIA} ati waxes OF FOUNTAIN PENS -- -! NAL dros quer cred pet OFFICE MANAGER, STOCK CON-| in & good earning position a Wothehive Fire agenene freee. LADY TO CARE FOR 4 YR. corny MI 4-6511, AAR nn | repaired by factory trained ment ge 0 Trow to nducte ‘ ‘ za - i $ to y im aere or, — APERIN at- our sto Genera) Printing ; under the ausvices| of Pontiac Wanted nee Help. 5 sare cred aed Fenietion expert oe ee Oy rater ry dort, in your spare time Pleas theca ater 5 p.m. | Instructions 8|” Mating” Pacer weaves” SEE Officer aupsiy - Co., 17 W. rays (oa tease, Ms; et Bor at ae sg benefits, opportunity: to advance. a wide assortment of popu- ant, dignified bot R 3-7606, ENCED NIGHT “Walt- wibto 1 ta EEAROC oye 2 wea o| _terice St Phone FE 3-0136. My | Commission on sales Apply 9 lar makes thoroughly HOUSEKEEPER, AY NIGHTS, | _ Fess. Sal A 8 ISH_OR| INTERIOR & EXTERIOR PAINT- : Davis Punéral Home. | Goodrich ed to of 4 e ired. REST HEL (ered - | Norwegian lan pri : EAVESTROUGH A ' WANRIPER, SEPTEMBER 16. 1953, REAL ESTATE _fotre, ‘lun No Perry. ° war aarecs gine sal “649. oft Ee hae Mt (pub We cong 908 ‘apes __tac Press, Bor. Me Fo eae ene nO. REP | cleaning. Novak Co. | Virginia. €. | 357 | Wordsworth. SALESM EN AUTO SALESMAN WANTED. Ae pensation plan for the man EXPERIENCED WAITRESS 3| _R4. e ‘Orion, || | ACCORDIONS LOANED ' wREE TO! 5-4520 FE | ve 2 Ferndale, Mich., age:.40; beloved w # ook al gressive & ambitious who qualifies, Ask for Henry Pm te Sundays off. | EXP. WAITRESS WANTED. beginners. Lessons at ‘your eal ; EE ESTIMA ON NEW FUR. sister of Mrs. Ralph Harmon, e. need one, mores sales’ | sell the fast-moving Lingoln vised Schinefer at the Brigh Apply in person, "431 FE. Watton | erty Cafe. home by experienced fencer tN TER1OR DECORATING, EX-| naces, oil coal or gas. Repair- Mrs, James J. Bree rs. Ezra floor pe has obra d — Mercury line of car Pred ake. GIRL FOR CREDIT OPPICE wo }_ 3 Loe i feriee, eos tt mechan: _ing and cle R 3-0593. ea en pa arated tray How, and be Willing worker.’ Foster at 40 W Pike O RVICE = EDUCATION aL cate GIRL & WAITRESS. NIGHT | Bee Mr. Squires, Lion Store PLANO tL ESSONS jor. “AND eae PAINTING & PAPER| |. FAVESTE ROUGHING ~ ard R. Chatfield. Funeral kervice|) CRAWFORD AGENCY stats ON ones tal aa, Oats | EPRESENT. Widiand Gr mui ace meek 6225 | WrD. WOMAN OL sae teacher. | “hanging, tree estimates. Mon goad, | Bryan P Prench PES-072 | will ke held Saturday, Sept. 19.) REaLTOP OPEN EVES om 31645 Southfield Rd Permanent positions opened for Exp. not necessary.| more for home than wages w Anintare WALLPAPERING AND PAINTING | Warm air heating & gheet metal. ‘metal, | at 11 a, m, at the Voorhees-Biple | 2141 Ondvke PE 46617; PE 41540| Bir’imcham. Must “fe pid Rd. | men with some knowledge of |CLERK FOR DRUGS & COSMET-| mother works. GRAD! ATE PIANO ee Call for est FB 4-0258 BLOOMFIELD W CLEANERS. | “Chapel with Rev. Mulder officiat- t ir™ingham. Must furp. reter- | music. Will train applicants fn- eT se Ney ee: re aker ¢ 0.m. wera on care | lesson PAINTI RR HANGING | Wells and Windows Cleaned. ing, Miss {VanRiper| will. Ite in TT Mer _ences. teres this canis ot, | _Meple- Birmingham, MI 43060" °| Ortonville. or phone i1SR2. Mr. | Myers, 86 Starr Bt. ee ee ee “ph. PE 2-1631 [i ‘state at the Voorhees-Stple Fu- . EXPERIENCED TIRE "CHANGER Must have car. Apply in person,| EXPERIENCED DRY CLEANING CASHIER. OAKLAND .THEA aucinG CLASES 3-9053. j i neral Homé. meary = for full time job Usual company | _G@ i's, 27 8. \ baip white or. colored, =, “ET a Daily from 5:30 to 10:30 p.m a atslo "ee PAINTING INSIDE & OUT FREE WTD BRICK. Loc fee ) STONE | to WHITMORE, SEPTEMBER ‘15,1953, Boys, 16 or older, not go-| Ddenefits. opportunity to advance, | 5 & APP CE FOR Beck be Many employe : "Jackie Rae's ios 216) estimates. PE 2-4137__ work. Call eves FET ne. ie L.. 3137 Vario . Court. commission on sales. Apply 9 —- new flower shop suburban codward, Birmingham er's Telegraph PAINTING, A-1 WORK. GUARAN- {ELECTRIC MOTOR R aeavicg, EE 4 | Hatbor. age 81: beloved | ing back to school, wish- Perry. . F Goodrich, 111 S| _ares._ 120, YOUNG LADY WITH SELLING EX-| GENERAL OFFICE CS CLASSES STARTING | teed. FE 2-4315 pairing and rewinding. sis &.-'- | hngband of Mrs. Cora M. it-! ing da work as arking erry. NCES SINGLE WANTED: G@ooD LE | perience for gift: dept. Pleasant pt. 14th — now! Green- | Sap G. PAINTS NG! REy Fa _Pike Ph. FE 4-3981. | , } | More; dear father it ‘Mrs. Archie & day wo P EXPERIENCED SINGLE Le MAN ON} man to oupply cestomors with | surroundings, LaBelle’s Gift ames, Bahr t d iscount to! ‘s_aso0. 1 : “SOM ETHING| NEW - ai ! Schinigeck, oan 1. J. Leste the attendants. ‘Apply Riker farm by month. OA 8-204 a Products _ oP 131 W. Maple, Birmingham gecko = efficient. Bette es (pore Ceramics. 222 M aii E 1 ki iz i . | ‘ rt itmore; dear broth- LATHE, HAND. GAUGE NED PIx- .or southwes fee GIRL TO W CHIL 3 I e St. FE 6-523 ‘ Movi in eaning-Sealing- /' ge lot Mrei Watson Mobert, Mrs. |- Garage, 9 :30 to 10:30 & ture, exp. only. Shaper hand, Southwest Li Counties.) shop, call creabigs. ‘al LDREN'S er inducements, Apply. IW k Wanted Male “9 Psiddibisld Py SAL Set oald, Cot are Rubber and ae Prenk Harding, Laren and 2 to 4, 59.W gage and fixture. exp. only,| Yyr¢, Raleigh's Dept. MCI-aA: NCED , ree HELP wee. ss 2 | HAULING OF ANY KIND. REa.| VALTER'S FLOOR ERRVICE Luther iit Whitmor Funeral (3) ayne. irinder hand. surface, OD AND a7, port, I wunte’ for time Sepctalt? aha a) NAAN AAA AAA AAA ble PE 26857 IND. =f FF 2-3362 service will be held Friday, Sept. EI 7 BOYS. FULL TIME. Hiliia Shop, nest to the Birming. oo tae WORK, ROUGHING | ree ear inr pickup 2 | JOHN’S TRENCHING 18 at 2 ipm. at the Trinity RATE CLERK Lakeland end Gauge Tool person. Auburn Fruit Market, 2175| ham Theater’ 207 8, Woodw: WK) | ane finishing Cornil!’ work, re-| POR FAST, EFFICIENT PICKUP & | “JOHN'S < Methodist Church with Rev. Bur- | experienced : to /handl : _ Auburn Rd. : 5 : mouel ng, small jobs. 8-5675. delivery and light paanae § at réas.| Pootings water and den and Rev. he officiating. enc andle rates. 0.8. ___.. 3375 _ Dixie Highway Birmingham. MI 6-2457.. ' — ng, tes i BE er a | Catnineves Lodes have charge | % , Work and tracing. Hours — | NEED 3 FULL TIME TIME PRAL ESTATE | EXPERIENCED LUBRICATION & | expeRieNCcED ____._ “ Saginaw ___| | BLDERLY MAN c Wants PAINT: |.Tates call FE 7-C7He anytime. __and drain tile tines. PB %-8843. q Dag tos el ts baer h enters a a m.. to m. No ates salesmen for growing office. Pien- pee car clean up man, salary |” “start wo once, age 25 to 55 Ey} garages and small homes. DUMP TRUCK FOR HIRE. FE ‘EXPERT TREE TRIMMING 7 2 Se ‘ment fn Canand 7 Fits ils Memorial tz SS: | ty ot ME IMB on Pringle Chsrreist "ors1 Dinie eS ee se pow J san aie aowr Roce NG| & "HAULING. sonvaTta ee nab a + Cemetery, Mr ] e oo : ; working ore 5 PART TIME WORK KIND : «| EXCAVATING BULL- dia tan. Nelson Manufac- - 4 Hwy., Clarkston. MA 5-5071. a =; WORK OF ANY KIND 3 | et mat node ‘he Sparke-Critfin taring Corp. | " 1111 Jost Fs WANTED. APPLY ai m. sound Poel home. fas §-6456| _ Reas. FE 65-8260. | dozing. road Ph. FB 3-5432. | : \ When he will be taken to the NCED SERVICE s8Ta-| STEADY WORK Sher 5:30, 1300 Oxtord, Birming- |" Laxe “Angelus and Baldwin, tor STEAM CLEAN ING a ch for service. | ea stiontan ae afternoon work. mere good mow ems men, | — eee 30" KoWw Gas 7 day week 1 anarnet Als 8 of steam ele done. . | | 2] eters cane Sane sai | after 6:30, EM 3-3160. station & share cottage in Plor- bend + Bm. Perry, Cooling Perm ane er cu 1 t ig \ aoe Hwy. patawer South Wanted! __ ida. 61 F ant St., Oxford, Mich. STENOGRAPHERS- i, ASHICS : we Lee) Zone | cue | ot wet oI appee eee macit ~ "JR. ACCOUNTANT | SALARY 8283 cteanee nn tandece WA sx ~ Mess. Mora. offerings | received | “7 Bowling Center. 30 Large national finence company has | Positions. Pontiac. ing. WE) 4.4088, | a ‘, | d i recent breavement in | {F goltd tool. WE 439390. rk opening for young man with|- > years ity Po Va. =a wrt Se uae aa —, - 2. | lose of our beloved! husband | EXP. SINGLE, MAN FOR DAILY bookkeeping background to assist leave benefits. ; : a and f ight |. PE} quality work. General Feels ee, Can ine ‘ general farming. M4 6-2021. com chief accountant. Many .| Apply to office, City on | Ask Ted at FE ¢-0461. her Jotin Cotten and the Purs- ITD. FOR SAR Savance,| § day week. For appointment call . Beh” os” fe. ' ee ae oe : tt Seen Boma. Mrs. ¢.. decter. my he expestanaed. Commission on sales. Row 9 mhav, 45000, ext. / SALESLADY roy gare Paper. ied't ROTO TI a. | | | ° a. m, to 8 Dp. m. pS wa Bros. 4H. naw 4 ] Coreen sad aan! see Se i | |} *) |! 2 | 4 a i 4 | } ' eee ~~~. Thomas Upholsteri ———— THE PONT THURSDAY. SEPTEM BER 17, 1953 | | Landscaping 13A INITIO NINA IRN BODDING, SEEDING, TR ‘planting, oe lte. landscapthg. E 41196. | CRANE’8. LANDSCAPE BERVI Complete lawn baling and ma | tenance, FE 7-833] FURN. ‘REFINISHING. _Antiqu 5 a ) specialty, “DRAPERIES. _ CORNIC covers, | ‘materials. 5-1937 | Beadle. SLIP: spreat: . MAKERS! 01 furniture; upholsterir ¥ Telegraph. COVERS. DRAFES & s; Your material. FE $-$791. “Phone. FE " CUSTOM ,_ FURNITU stering. | Est. free. $3. Yao EES 5.1296, ha 5-8390 GUARANTEED make. ‘B. ~~ TUCKER'S _ TV sk RVICE Honest. reliable ce: FE 5-0641_ days, or FE/|4-3690 eves MoD wl Fox i call $3.50. port Rd. OR 3-1647. Building Service | pee Doe ae. CON Radio & Iv é Service. '& Cor. ‘TV SERVIC d. call . FE 5- 6727. PADIO Hatchery & Ait- be tt AFTER © RV SERY. FE 17-7598, 15 anton TRIPLE | E | WINDOW 24426 GLASS, trim ahd storm | sash, $20. EM @-3122. oy: . 5 TRENCHING FOR FOOTING water lines, and sewer lines.) on _3-7640. | EAVESTROUGHING | Coal, Sheet Métal. oil & gas burners. FE 4-5051. McLain IF YOU'HAVE ONE OR MORE d alterations & | nome eal PE $e | | SHARE APT TO MIDDLEAGED repair, |call FE 5-9057. i BLOCK BRICK CEMENT WORK & fireplaces FE 2-2 8. : CARPEN’ & CABINET MAKER wishes new and tenjodel work FE 4-0720 PLUMBING AND HEATING pore Son. FE Com 3-883) GUARANTEED GEMEN porches | HM 4+4 GENERA, sane & cemen brick, 4-22 COMPETE | |LINE OF carpenter ¥ _ 3-804 cement Feet Ni 879 Heo ftreniaces an® sea- BUILBING| block laymg. EM | WORK. SCEMENT "a floors, drtvewavs ete 32-2340 QUALLY | ROUGH — CA Hi. 4-3767, on | Ps. y 1A BLOCKS jalls REPAIR t work.) FE MASONRY, ae brick 1 ALL “KINDS Jensen | PF RPENTER crew available ‘Ve specialize 1. contemporary & ranch ~ BASEMENT sep Nothing | 5-31vs, CEME “Nt WORK. drivewavs. too large) o- too small mation OR 3-0791 or floors. PLUMBING | BEATING alteratt ons Eg TERRAZZO | flag residentia BUILDER | , _ Churn WORK RES. camm,,; {ree estimates. tile, ABER | Commercia! terms. 2671 Commins, FE 4-9366. Jos. FLEMING sanding FLOO finishing Ph. PE 7-405 Peereatienn rps.. OL 2-1221 _ COMPLETE ast Lcae. M __brick. | bia lock ORK | " ization, Te ae we roofing, MILLER Sr BROTHERS ing, sandii service in Rg Gardner 2.7519 SouoLETE t | REMODELI modernizing service. At ehageet dorm plete apartmé AN! recreation. tions ¢ oO tions aeltis _financing._ [FE + =Custom Built ‘G hutch. | Free Estin br w- T550, R @. SNY sanding 17-4533 “FLOOR LAYING, SAND] finisnihg. 16 years & ng & fechas ‘Pontiac, FLOOR SANDING LAY Cen 49) Dy Hee Modern quipment. 4-0424 Phone: FIREPLACES, fireplace x BHEET RO tastett g 0367 | CARPENTRY, ‘ete BASEMENTS, FO rcehes, chimneys and fireplaces . Bait. EM 3+5506 EM 3-4581. , work, STONE epair. F Fe §-30' ck Fe" jane 7 BLOCK, FE 5-0782. ° ‘MASON & CEMEN1 ¢ estimates, our wor) .o 3-9402 | PA, 2 2. wernt & Son FREE ESTIMATES ON SIDING & repairing. OR 3-9593. | BRICK. BLOCK AND- CEMENT work. Als | chimneys Nb job too large or too Marien Gtarantees _wWork. Ph, |] E 16 - Builders’ “Supplie i Tee NG IN ARE YOU, LIVI Safe BASE: | 412 ment or ‘incomplete finance A-l. bldg mater rate of. interest. _Press Box 1 19. ~ Typewriting Service! 7 PAPAL TYPEWRITERS AND ADDING MA- repairing, irjinting and Office Sup- re WW. Lawrence, TYPEWRITERS._REN* ; _Mitchell’§. | (123, N ‘Saginaw St. chine P| Dressmaking-1 ailering PAAR ARARA expert wor manship. General wTD. SEW OF R mode REWEAVING, EXPERTL} Suits. superbly tailored. ¥ TAILORING ING plaster Writa| Pontiac | Expert homes.) FE | Free esti- ; (FE 2-7361. 3 |REPAIRS. |. Wernet FF, { CERAMIC and ELLIS “AND Raymond R| LAYING, 155 Edison RA- sidin ASONRY. PE 5-3004. FEGOR LAY- 16 years §-3162. NG FIN. rrat FE FE NG AND je rooms, ers addi- nt altera- |. Fr .8. A binets ates OR OR} LAYING NG AND kperience, | Johp Taylor. |. WORK, b6 after 6. ;|. PATCH ink «=FE ~}CEMENT JUNDATIONS ORK, FREE guaranteed BASE- 1 at low work. KINDS, 4-5232. DONE. 5-3792. TS, RE- ALL | Edna Warner, FE 2-26 2634. ~€ MAURICE, 1203 Po ~_Photo-/ - PORTRAITS Treas LoP: atin Stu Pics. dio hiropodists THOME, D. | mtiac State |__|. FE 2-707). o~Aecesso ries Restor Bant f FRA} 13 ~aRGUS! Le Lost -20, 35MM CA RE 42780 and Found RGE GERMat SHEP- ie seen Sun. p. | ik BUFF COCKER. FEM Children Tanctic PE 4-3849. . chas- ake Reward. LOST BROWN AN . COL- ricety x t Aiheral Mile & | ward. athoers rd *. Bier | Te- E PURSE A on Baldwin 5a turn other cantents Ee Rye D! us 5 a Pal us tal. Wed. | ase call hospital aati Kee a." Gooro per, oe ae (OP- ame — FE 5-6878 of FOgND FEMALE BLACK (& TAN Lost: LADY’ s BILLPOLD ON city bus i + rier coer maak fs _ st. = \ [ALL Notices and Personals 22 Are You Too Fat? Reduce easy, safe, fast, absolutely drugless methods. Our treatments are alsg wonderful for relief of arthritis, rheumatism, r ¢irca- lation etc. Let us help yqu dey FE 44131. SCHOOL GIRLS COLD WAVE. $5. E, $5.60 com pi ete Dorothy's, 500 N. Pe erry. DAINTY (MAID _ FoR spPLirs Mrs. Burnes. FE 2-814. 93 Mark. 100 WEDDING ae Cations .80. Printed napkins, 3 day | service. Suthertand Studios 18 W| Huron CERAMIC] LESSONS, CLASBES starting | Sept. 21. Enroll now, Walton 7-7206 & Perry . ater Wt 30. SHUT-INS) ‘HAVE YOUR examined at nome. Dr.!| Harold Bussey, Optometrist. PE 4-521. ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly advisor, cont Vernon Vie, Ph. PE 2-873 fidential| The Salvation | FREDNAS ‘CERAMIC 8 Custom firing. Greenwa ceramic ‘supplies. Day: a ning classes starting Se Pat 15. ei} 7105 C oe Lake Rd. EM 38212 or “EM +56 arene: (block ~ MACHIN uburn Heights will be § storage, t not nad for’ 30 da,s, FE 7-86 ~ KNAPP "SHOES FE §-6720. | SCIENTIFIC SWEDISH | “uapeack 72 ELM FE E AT old for within 1 BE TRIM a <0 SL BTRES _Reducette. FE 4-8868.-L. Cubley. Wtd. Children to: Board 2: 25 GOOD LICENSED HOME FOR iris under 5, yrs. of age. ‘Utual 4-2710. - Share Living Qu arters 26 SHARE HOME WITH Lites LOVED couple or 2 ladies. FE 2 NICE YOUNG COUPLE aC. wane lovey home with bus omen. 44-5044 day, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. eat SHARE MY 5 ROOM HOME in exchange for care of | school age ‘dest Call after 4 p. m. FE 4-4049 | WIDOW WANTS TO SHARH HER home with couple for child care. FF 4-6572. | coup) pvt. entrance. Near Pon- tiac | Plant. No drinkers. Refer- ences required. FE 4-5846 { or 2 buddies. FE 5-5836. Household Goods 27 wee ‘CASH |FOR SMALL RADIOS, working or not. FE 5-8755 NOTICE — {F YOU WANT TO GET man Wtd cae ae .the high dollar for your |.urnit- ture,| we either rer ‘ or auction it for you. Call:L & & Sales Co. | FE 740783. ml, wessccs i ; ‘FURNITURE NEEDED Entire nome or ddd lots. Get the |. top dollar. Will buy outright or sell {t for you B Community . Sales _Ph, OR 3- 2717. |. for you. OA 8-2681. WANTED TO BUY_ ALL of furniture Ph PFE 2-5523 Wtd. ‘Transportation Wwe Ne Y PES IRL WANTS RIDE FROM | | Dublip Schoot near Oxford to Pon- | tiac |Working hours 8:30 4 5:30 Phong-FE ue ses an- EM 43867 {i . Wtd. Miscellaneous! 28 AR AR AAR Rn nnn nen WTD. 1-3401 | WTD. EAR CORN. aS OL rO BUY 8 OR. hot water | radiators H. P.| Sutton. FE 5-8312 WTD. TO BUY HOUSES, BARNS, cottages, garages . and other’ buildings to. be moved or) torn H. P. Sutton. FE 5-8312. 160 for house. i} down _ FE 49740. CHARLES REALTORS 22% w Huro:, FE 4-0521 6. FE ¢- 6862 or FE 5-891 Mortgages gle Modern Owellings eterson rE 5- jac Sank Blde “E 5-6772 [ATE CASH FOR OUR ontract or equity in| your | Templeton, Realtor S3'a W.| Huron ___=iFE 2-623 CASH “FOR YOUR LAND CONTRAC Ralph B. ARNER Investments OL 1 BT Atte R406 G N ou ationa] Bank Bld 2-7611 _| Rochester. Mich. 7801 YOUNG IMMEDIATE ACTION Let «. |experienced man handle your gontracts, We have buyers \ With gash waiting to buy (con- tracts. Call FE 4-4525 and ask for Ted McCullough | ht REALTOR W. Huron St. 525) Open Eves Till 9, Wanday til 5 —— ae fe pai WE HAVE | $200,000 At our disposal] to purchase new or. seasoned Jand contracts for! our clients.. See me before you eell. ASK FOR BOB MAHAN | \ | MAHAN REALTY CQ., REALTORS (CO-OPERATIVE MEMBERS orn Evenings and Sundays 1075 Huron ~~. Ph. FE 2-0263 ~ Wanted Real Estate 31 indeed anaes Johnson |. The big dane, hew modern up a, is now, in “his your real estate problems. fre still selling 95_ per cent our listings | A. JOHNSON, Realtor Ph. FE 4-2533 | Our New apacation | 1704 8. Tioswhen in just south of me tshion 8h Shop “HAVE BUYERS FOR: : 1 5 6 room modern eit home with $2,000 down... 7 2. 5 or tom G. L resale 6 or out of city. 3. 6 room modern in eit good neighborhood. 7 tm| C i 40 to 80 fine at 8 000 down. 5. Large farm or vacant acreage futtable’ ‘tor subdividing. We can.get P bd cash for homes priced up- t eo ov ; your i giv ‘07 e you AMERON H. (CLARK — a W. Buren wate i Eves. \ : ¢ é 5 Cc Re RE "McKINNEY Office 8800. st, Phone Pontiac tg +3-11 oe Ceramic | [Hebby Studio, corner of FE. Call SHARE MODERN HOME | WITH | LET U8 BUY IT OR hot water heater. Low price & terms. West Side } 5 Bedroom Home New in 1951, 8 room brick +3 bedrooms and two baths | down. Two rooms up.- | Natural fireplace, full base- ment, of] heat. 2 car at- tached brick garage. Will consider trade for good city | property. 4 Pioneer Highlands ‘ bedroom Mh aes 1% tile baths in fine e. carpeted li oe room. Plus, ¢. This is home a $6 $00 Terme I yes: i red A low, oak For Sale Houses DAILY 3-9 P.M. SUNDAY I-9 P.M, 2314 MIDDLEBELT ROAD | 40 oe ‘Directions: Orchard Lake Road ‘% mile |west of Telegraph Road \to MiduPbelt ‘Road SEE THE LARGEST NEW. HOMES FOR YOUR MONEY Li ' Hi GRACIOUS LIVING NOTE THESE FEATURES: — turn left to model. FOR THOSE WHO DESIRE y. 3 BEDROOM. PACE BRICK HOME Spacious, ayy Shpensioe ia FULL CONCRET: Genuine stone “aills. ‘PLASTERED WALLS. Select oak floors. INTERIOR SLAB DOORS Ceramic tile bath. DOUBLE SINK — TILE GRAIN fs ciMineg toe knotty DINING SPACE IN KITCHEN Built- FULL Paved solid drive. i. RED 1 BASEMENT — POU E z: ACRES 5 room fra bath, eater, beautifully kitchen, p rches pee wate-, ca { | | : bedroo | | ey Se |5. acre mod | Ol furna in benches. - | | Y INSULATED | | & COMB. ALUMINUM STORMS SCREENS } 4 Recreation space in bash ment plus pine panelled laundry./rdom. i GAS AUTOMATIC FURNACE AND HOT WATER 17 One guara PONTIAC SCHOOL SYSTEM On lots with 60 to 80 [t. fro This cies MAHAN REALTY co. 1015 W. NEX _ CRESCENT A nice 1 | year written construc ntee, : ion thee attached ore Pze- brick garage $14,650 Complete poms, son with ¢ar REALT ORS Huron FE « T Doo POST OFFICE LAKE pine ejtghen |. .Coop. \ Clarkston |iC. Pangus \| Ph O..onvil Buys this owner. 5 roor s an running | $7.80. tic, gas AC water and sere Paved 5s $14,950 o 3 Village. BARGAT No. \ matic ga No. | all \ $18 per | $8,500 ca I 2. 5 roo separate. br mut. ft. lot. ttle 4 rm. home) With full basement and extra lot. Very | livable, but needs some work to complete. ‘For a quick sale. ‘a 500° with $7 ROY KNAUF, 2642 W. uroe r 2 sion. PRICE REDUCED > <3 bedrm. 1 floor, 30x13 living rm., brick down. Realtor . FE 2-21 ve. OA 8-3339. | Wilk: expansion gas furnace € Only $2,500 down. fireplace, large kitchen, §0x 165 lot Lake privileges, Now obly $7,700 | SUBURBAN LIVING 5 acres, close in. Fruit, berries, gtapes. etc. 3 bedroom home, cel setting. 2 car garage. 2, 700 ‘CORT M. IMBE R Ji Joslyn Hammond 50 S. 3 new rear summer. heat $10.500 with $2,500 d PAUL D. HAMMONH FE 35-7741 GATEWAYS t In WATER-FRONT_ | CANAL — CASS LAKE Spick and span lerge 4 roam ar bath, in knotty pine, oil heat, porch, miles SH BRS. LOVE THE LOCATIO AMID THE COZY —- ATTRACTIV) With privileges on Middle Lake, sCreene? hood, LET YOUR RENT PAY YOU BUY 7 IT WE't MAHA REALTY CO., RE CO-OPERATIVE MEMBERS NEW BRICK DONELSON PARK Cor. Noyle-& geod 2 bedrooms with “center stairway to large unfing | ished upstairs. | OPEN EV ENINGS KEN NEDY 3097 we Huron STONE - WEST SUBURBAN Fully modern bungalow, rooms, large rooms, excellent con: dition. Part basement. room Oi] heat. Extra large lot ba <0 garden space. ate very floors, plastered” walls, man FE 4-9524 ENS TP sii, Jessie Corner Locatio bedreom moktern huime porch - 1 Fuced meh own, Py garage. REALTOR 26'2 W. Huron i I Eve. FE 5-414 | APPINESS 2 bedroom home finishe enclos¢ 67 frontage on. canal} west of city. Offered | $2? 045 dawn ‘ | youry N..| | fe=s8= TRE 5 ruoms and bat norch, foced offered at $5,500, q = 8 a I dp. ‘OR IT. To irr ade L INSURE. ea ALTOR POST OFFICE i 4 WM: AL | | j REALTOR ay 4-356 Open Eves, Till 6 p. m. ' 2 bed Utilit NORTH SIDE ‘ | PQsges- | 4 | | | | y estigate. iF lt | t Office Op 1 ¢o-op Memb it {| i] (| 1k 9 ir: and by lee } | ims. and sl rms. Bx | (oH Bade Baldwit ms Tie Ht >| | | Month S heat, ionth, A $2,650 dow | 5 RO Tage and ment, gas For __For Sale | H Houses 40 YOUNG steam heat, lap lassed-in front porth, on beauti- ul landscape, large brick picnic $7500 with landscaped, 3 be home | 12x24 on 3 gara e 79549. 5975 Pontiac | Trail trom _Upper Straits Lake. $500 DOWN bath. pani oce floors. Brooder nous. | 1919 le 132. _Revktse charges. $2.250--8300 DOW | ; room home. 50 ft I pump. 6 mi. ne YEAR ROUND LAKE HOME BY On: Lake and Halstead Rd, water, dock, boat,’ $1.000 down. Warwick 8/1351. OTTAWA 1 he IL, 5 room brick, expahsion at- large kitchen,} ceramic tile bath, painted! heater. lt modern 3 basement, 2-4 furnished. 2 matic water heater$. 80x120 Paved ing $11,750, $8. 500 down. In- rick construction wi . jane. Full price p10, 850 with WACANT BUNG ALOW: Newly erent ul pasement, § — needs some finishing TIAT \\ RIGH: i | 222 8. Telegraph 5. Attractive semi-bungalow with g fenced yard! Full base- 40 me walhioe with tile hot water siding, and | stone grill, and for o y. terms. EAST SIDE 6 room, 2 story home with auto. oil neat, oak floors, & plastered walls on a basement 24x32 with laundry tubs, fruit cellar and poss. recreation room on (a lot 40x175, 2 car garage, gravel) drive. sidewalks, curbing and ble¢k top street, and all for $9250) with room home With oil furnace, terms. aaa aluminum storm sash & screens. | Abl peters large 75x150 {. lot 4 FAMILY INCOME | | with 6 “ree shade trees. 14 room apartment with private | } bath, 3-2 room apaftments) com $3000 down beaubiful six roam mod- plete'y furnished, showing incom ern home with large lot in -r a of $240.00 | per month, of) | heat Heights. ‘full Basement... Call today AN appointment. to Sah street and lar lot this bargain Russell Young: . REALTOR 412 W. Huron 4-4525 Open Evés. ‘till 9. Sun ‘till’ 5 FOR SALE BY OWNER 10 ACRES parlor, modern ireplace, | glassed sides, auta fruit trees and be $14,000 Ca — modern home, DEOT DORs Full ot nome. Basement. ce. Jarape. Chicken Gn | M-15 M-15 evel 2 acres. Small 3 Well. Electric out; FE 5-1284 e block ‘from Walnut furnished. @ bath..aut smatic| heat, storins; insulated, Yow taxes,. close in, (Open house. at » bsmnt., atitomatic stotm sash ens, §5x140 ft. lot, treet: £ Asking for r would trade for heat, bedroom ‘home ; Sylvan N! BARGAIN! 2 to 1 ) edroom, stoker Hat. aulo- $ water hebter. room bungalow, Renting for week Total price sh, \COMIt m and bath apts. entrances, Separate furnaces,,; 2 aulo- street. Ask-, XPERIENCED: SALESMAN WTD. Bateman & Kdmpsen en Sunday /1-5 p. m. 377 S. Telegraph. 2 blocks north of Orchard Lake Rd. FE als er Opén Eve. |'til 9 hed eee SUBURBAN \NCH HOME utility, 2 jcar garage, 242 acres VACANT: HOUSE and bath. Newly decorated. Full price $6950 with. iced for quick sale. | och $1850 down. aefer Ave. FE 2-4638 Offige Open from 9 to 9 $450 DOWN Acre — Auburn Heights. $40 per handy man's: eas || 6 ROOMS—87.950 . GOOD FRAME HOME ON West side tlose to downtown. Full basement, now leased) at $85 per good investment with mand $50 jper month. OMS—s7, 000 - a- heat, paved) street. §3,- ' » 000 "own and sma)) ieee pay- ments. bungalow piece. bath, PAUL A. 31 _Oakland 8: y bullt Lome the budget. located on ig IF YOU OWN An eal MODEL IN _ IN 4 ROOMS—$1.000 DN. Attractive 1950 two bedroom near. Williams Lake. Lovely Youngstown kitchen. Four oil ‘heat, ,oak floors and plastered walls. Clean as. an otn and well located. Better hur- iv £ KERN, Realtor Ave. | FE 2-9209 DORRIS | NEW HOMES | SIX ROOM BUNGALOWS Johnson Construction Co. of Big aver are the builders of ‘these Nhtional' Homes. homes you have read and heard much about. fa ily that ts anxiously looking for a beautiful, spacious and well These are the .Built “for every at a price well within } They are starting three homes that will be available very soon ’ N, Francis 8t.—three bedrooms with washer @nd dryer, approx, $1,650 down, ex all large and attractive enptooaiy bungalow on Seminole | Ave. off Ww. Huron with appréx, $2,650 down. { , We have pictures an all in- formation in our office — $3 Ww. Huron Bt. mold BIG Taav en Fo SPECTION | BR _DORRIS & SON REA LTOR Near Donelson School Almost new 2 bedroom home with large unfinished upstairs, full basement, oil furnace, au- tomatic hot water, sterms and Screens, Ideal for the hae’ family. See. for vautselt. day. Clarkston Area | Small chicken farm, spick and was Fra a this ho “B sd” Mi Hl | span 2 Lanta ioeeegoeos romp @ acre gr fe anes Realtee || BPE esas erate ! au Member Co-operative Realtors At only sieee anes, doa't'm miss Dally 9 to Pp. m. Sund to 5 p, m. igs i a gue Beautiful Lake Frort. Customer Parking Space in Rear 180 feet. lake frontage, spar- $1, 500 DOWN | ans dwelling with ere eae reezewa, bedroom ad ing room, spotless Litchen, d etl pe Botan am og ares overl lake, excellent Has e basement, of] heat, automatic gerten. tte fenced. Plas; hot water, ou 8. ; ‘ood A ay ‘home in qui - —— oil heat. Full amp ainet shown. by, ap- brewnewas to a 22x24 A : “| ek ssion. $8,450, $1, | _H, Delos, | EMBREE & GREGG || BUD” NICHOLIE. offi inion | Estate and Insurance B a sane . Clemens 8t. PE 5-1201 ook a Mr. Peterson| FE LOG CABIN, 3 ROOMS AND as : . itv and shower. 7 acres. NEW) 5 ROOM RANCH fwe Sroos, Fe raspberries: | ee oe Dining room. Siac LK, Rd., Pontiac, | view, 9003 Eliz. Lk. Ra. | RCTOSS: special { FE 5-0693 | r r y _ For Sale Houses _ 40 WN “We have only so hurry.’ Very well Planned two glee all two of ttractive and tdroom | bu: igalow. . pmpleted,"’ | pe. lect, hot water, double compart ent kitchen | s: well, elect. imp, septic tank, elect. wiring nd all interior feeding: Priced only $5695, $1500 down. 3 b . off Hast Pike eq el m pu ar a room modern, just, yn'|N. Shirley. “Ex: céllent neig' ahEerhood, full base- ent ne y Riding. Price $7890. $2500 down; Praptically new 3 bed- Y 533400 Rigot on Silver Leki front. Beautiful 4 bedroom brick ranch. bungalow; with two yall tile baths, Vist our office Wok look over our Many Photo-listings Convenient wR 3-126 Nagel WITH rougn plunrbing and wiring, SMALL DOWN PAY- iter, 924 Pontiac [A 4- 1554. $6, O50: located 2 bedroom Cheerful Kitchen. Glassed porch Partial basement. Kha room started. 2 lots. Near Holiday Waterferd school, AARKSTON in [buys this 28x30 “puilt shell. exterior. : Phone N lenty on this one. Mt) ELLWOOD abeth Rd. 8 4, Open 9 to 7 SURBAN riced vat. only CREA Ly FE *4-4091 : PEStiages ie NICINICY Ww EST ibe “SUBURBAN ' 8 rm. ily jhome, bedrms., eo ‘up, re tis lg own. attached) garage, |. Mént, oil ia neat, \ dsc iped Podergrouna.; sp Mkiers | fruit] trees, paved roads cl be te school, A real 24006 fo | do. Terms, FE 2-4. t P K 4-9584 ’ FISHER ca” EMPLOYES 3. bedroom, an well built house. Basement, adr Parave. work, 7 blo eka! to;scnool, 1 block ‘good house priced she |ithis outstanding offer. HOME YOU'LL LOVE A con housekeeper | will appreciate , this 3 bedroom home. A kitchen | to enjoy, large airy rooms, Umea vely decorated. 2 enclosed porches. rage. dement drive & , COTNE., Waik to . to bus. For a | ment at $9.5 \ a0 8 LL MOrt A DRESS 'Two separate 5 room houses—19 ' miles from) Court House, You cah look at .your ¢onyenience. Lake 4 priviteced on one. pon reasonably \ pricéd to: AWE lots, garage, ‘EV rything in tip- vend Pp iced at $8,975. is ARE E You RETIRED? You" aprecjate this west ; close-in income. § rooms -down with 2 apts! \up) that per week. This Aled ibeen owner oc- cupied — look, at ithe Price, $10,550. Act quiek., | | \ FE 4.9584 ; CUSTOMER. PARKING Open Eveg. and) Sun. P. M. ried | \ Sparkling, clean, | 4} | vi ht basemént, | lk. to ‘ op snap’ |" ‘This 6 E. St. Co-operative * Real bre ” Exchange 4 ROOM HOUS '& UTIL ILITY;, _ Reas. down pa We OL 2-1660, RANCH/ HOME 2B R., Fraser Haare cedar pan- eled ing ite arge glassed f fenced Tot! 3 breezewa car garage. Full b 150: Middle Straits oil bargain if substant! meht can be) m RRED J. RIDDE LL 6585 Commerce ae aad oect Lake EMA ((9. Rian House’ | 1 COMMERCIAL CORNER = Close Lake, to downtown,, many, net for this pronert lJarge root full bath down, 3 bedr om a a. 4% bath up. Lot 81x102 (Pavement, oil heat, carpet ie and‘ venetian blinds. On State Hy. Only $4000. down. INVES now. J. R. HI REALTOR 148'2 N, Saginaw Street FE #4181 PE. "36 EVE. FE 2-6578 Portr’ [ IS THE “BIRD IT'S NEATCIT’S CLEAN IT’S BEAUTIFUL Situated right! on| the shore of ‘a beautiful small ‘ake that has fish and everything. 5| beautiful rooms all on one floor, Biasared walls, cove| ceilings, newly decorated in side & out, carpeted wall wall in lving roam, | full basé¢ment, automatic oil furnace & large lot 160x135. If you jwant the! most home and the. snort enjoyable liv- ing $13,500 will fbpy, call) right now for an appt } # SEPTEMBER SPECIAL A Nd Fd ROOMS, $850 DN. year ‘round home at | White take with 4 large lots, garage, chicken house ahd fruit | trees. It's @ wonderful home value. You bei the surprise Pall your life yon Mt ies get MR. TANT AANy DOLL THIS UP Immediate possession of this 6 room bungalow that needs a little Rerpreveatt wey) Tanne, bath and kitchen ave Posed that neni? finish; hand |. it. the least bit ‘handy have |a 10 or 13 thou me WARD E. PART REALTOR | FE 2-8316 43 W. Huron St., Open INCO) parking “ight at! our. door. eae! 1. H, BROAVN: Realtor 1362 W Huron Ph. FE 2-4810 Member Co-op. Real Estate Exch, 312 ACRES 6 RM. HOUSE, BASE- nt, full bath) (3. mt. to Clark- | — ston, Only §1. down. $5.0 down... Neal 4 1m. Basement | house, vane bet and cold wa- _ with) 1 acr of ground, Rd. waterford | lake |. Walled Lake. OPEN SUN- |’ < For Sale | BPP NOT THE RIG ‘T IN BIRMI On a'nice |quiet s by a variety of picket fence. 3 seven room homp with. carpeted living roo and | brick fireplace. Three lerbe bedtooms with nice) closet. Gwher transferred and will give quick possession. Best of all, only $5,500 down) Shown by ap- | pointment-only, ¢all today. ! After | * 6 pm. Mr. Lewig FE 2-8375. : uyoT | he space in, this homp, full two pnt also garage. pr city Bosperal. ns. 6p OR. si075." Houses ° PO inson WHITE HODSE IN - ciminerutace k BIG HOUSE--SMAL Lots of good liv three bedroom story with) basem On west sidc ne to be sold jon terg call Mrs. Snyder | AU HEIGHTS A; BIG LOT. With trust and shade trees; this neat ahd clean 5. room modern home wit B SOLD! Own week —quick posses pay ment. After @ Inman FE 4-3473 OUR BEST BUY! Where else can seven room home Tro,ms on/| paved $7,450. Owne.: wag so only $2.000 dqwn. Hurry- —call ” for appointment.}) After 6) p.m, Mrs. Beck FE 40859. i A. JOHNSON. Realtor Phone FE|4-2533 Our New pocation 1704 5. \Telegrapt IR just jsouth of Bloomfield Fashion Shop Peay . $8,500 5 rooms modern with 2 bedrooms. Natural, fireplace Living |Toom 15x20. Breezeway) wi attached 1% car garage. | California! red- wood stortms and) screens, Wene- tian blinds. Upper S a Laké, 8 miles pest of Ponti . Owner, EM 3-24 YEAR aeoUN oon LAKE coltage. $2500. Lake 2-3011. RAVYCH TYPE 5 [R home with firep) y owner, « Inquire 123 Mt. Clemens. | GOOD OVERLOOKING RACHEETER and only 1 mile from town ig this new 6 room sdlid brick home with full basement, 2 car ga- rage, and 3 acres of land! Full price $28,500. 10 ACRE EsTate 8 room. conte home with ¢ place, large p «& 2 car) garage to sell. Full pr IMMEDIATE Poss} ‘Rad with the p "new modern 7 ranch type hom full peegment, ,and '4 acre sell quick. Moke WOODHULL LAKE) ‘FRONT. Mod- ern 3 bedroom |home featuring ‘tudio . type living rodm_ with p.m: “I Mr. 00 te | h big with three bed- street ‘for only. Ms quick action, including a new mporary ranch bedrooms, fire- icture windows, Owner see ice $29,500 ESSION can be urchase of this room 1 story with fireplace, hie car garage, land. Priced to us an offer, fireplace, large screened - in front -porch, '2 car garage, large lot. nic sand ea _Price~.$13,650. Wome ‘ PeRch 3 BEDROOM SUBURBAN located in nite | woodéd Subdivision ‘at edge of. city limits, Features incade pil hot wate heat, 133 car garage, outdoo fireplace, ee large lot. Price ae ad “pat ts?! full base- | acres on | at-). new pas hg at. Youlll never reget | Ha buy inks a room house, | bring in $35 2141 jorayne ial. down pay- |. “FAME S HaNy Wh ay LOR “RE AL ESTATE—INSURANCE 121° Pontiac State Bldj. FE 4-2544 pen evenings Co-op member 3 BEDROOM HOME IN WASHING. ton Park’ by ow. 4 ater Sy y ner. FE e088 ; $1,250 DOW X bedroom hane with. mice livin room. kitch &| dinette. Base ment wi auto. oil heat. 2 hee w'tn lake Privileges. ONLY $7500 5 ACRES 5 room home on, good fertile § acres of nani Small orchard. parce aes oom, kitchen, din- bed room, & bath. Full with hot air furnace. A good bay At $8350 with ,$1900 CLEAN | Ag A NUT Very "moderal: 2 bedroom bunga- | low, Large living room with pic- ; ture window. |Up to date kitchen & dinette. Tile bath. Full base- | ment with, gas heat. Landscaped lot. Pave street near school, stores & bus. A hom Bs Adee own. Ohly $10,300 with CRAWFORD AGENCY Tr Opatke| rit 48617. Fe oir) KINZI LER?» i he Of Daily & Sunday, 2-8 p.m, Cpreenpotary Living in Devon Hills Sesemant | \ 5 my m pants te pod fast be- e mos ular doe in Michigan. Rader have and 7 fan with adached 2 car garages. Lots average 120x200. A few choice sites still available, or, can duplicate on your | ‘oderate price ‘and tetms. (Directions: Just E. of} Telegraph Road, 3 bik. , N, of Long Lake Road), Nerfect Lake Front | with a Pleasing view poe oes ent beaca. Hud son, glassed “econt pore and inasiea down; 3 nic { drooms, sleeping porch i th up, Newer oil furnace | include new bil totaal ‘ . Tange, porch rnit . ture, draperies, ote ly and - | many extras. Price $23,000 easy dows \payment, or wi cheaper house 0: land contract in trade. | _ Sylvan Village—$8,500 Vacant, too, so Lis you can _, in. bed room le pungele f other si homes. Oak floots an newly decorated. Newer furnace, gs rear ere for children. car garage. 5 pane privileges. Only $2,500 1 o e 3 o < C Ch - mR isz es Pioneer Hightands: Fauftless 6 rm. white frame home. 3 extra size bedrooms. High int. Fenced ‘to change ° to small John Kinzler,- 670 Ww. Burda St st, Co-operstive Realiol : 8 RM. BRICK Located peal: tae fonts otf Ths Erde af apts..) cons:sting of |p sg & bath in e condition. _ heal T ares oe IOHNE. TWIN oo encereerner rmaL ALTOR 1 Sagina phoot re" 39-4031 “Ere. street 23-1806 Joe ty ' | _ you will - e So <- i ‘ | | : i } 4 Me | i| a: Poof | j« | in . ; : . | at | | a ] H | ’ | hy ‘ 4 | t | i 4 | | | SIXTY-ON E . it | ‘ , He, ' | * I i 50 | , | f | URSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953_ Maney to Loan’ 49 For Sale Housetral ers 1 | i _ of _ Z i ( 45 ne: 2) ARTS, Pho of ) i THE PONTIAC PRESS. as For Sale Lots 42|| For Sale Farm Prop, 45 CR ERA A | me ARETE ATP &e “ht ial, . : P | 40 or y a , WE FINA { | 7 D PRODUCING ; TROITERS. ‘PER : fot, , i: ale Houses eos SS 6edN ACKER, Goo modern | 2 OR % DOWN, 6 ue Taraer E For S a 6 room home, ba ood "| vs OR % | | | - { by Dick : eee 2 ACRES ge bedroom home, g me : > : BANK RATES. 1D i | Le [— \° | = . Drive} | kitchen, 3 h staitchion; | / ‘ HA SEVERAL N i —H : 40| CARNIVAL . nn, ee 1 { $15 to $25 down. yrs ae Easy tera. water as for alo Vacant . Loan Co. WE as . LOW L oun ‘ I Sale Houses | 40 Seed hee nee! . puflding “code, inj weeks. 8 wens, Broker, Pa. | Community FE 2. 7131] PAYMENTS, “BALANCE Loy e te ch a a a ae be 1 Estate 4. J. F, Stevens, Broker, t., ce RENT. Letina ee on : CET Rea Terms. J. 571. 112° Center’ St. E. Lawren we ~ mmirn | ' BRICK nowe ma CEL Fane ihiand, Mic. No ‘S |p D gobo Nowl — OXFORD TRAILER: I E | as 4 BEDROOM wea: Men's Es states | 40 ACRE ~ "$25 to $500 _ ES \y full bath down, 3 bed- | “4, orking Me ts in| é | $25 ; servite you| — * oA ) | . | Bedroom and tile bath up, spa- to 2 acre lo ME | talthe caah toast RIES | | + Nd rooms and tull te es | oe eee a aaile | north) | HO} pers een looking fpr | | PARTS, & A | epee one om with pullin ma. | pew sabi $500 up. 20 per: First time offered and | have b ‘YOUR LOAN ca Mem | fosetion 7 | a OFFERS COLN JR, HIGH DISTRICT. 3" bogey china’ cupboards, New eas| cout aown. 4 Redo 6-008), galee-({) iam rewith ful bases = [+ GET ONE VISIT | 1 Mi 8 of Lake) Orion | ' LIN home with fu oga lined kitchen, ga Weber. Tux im “farm home w IN a -° | i} bedroom modern and in good modern stream and fenced| Tim on premises after 3 p.'m. _ ment and furnace and hot ‘ tel] cars. Bring: ICAN - GENER = _ PALA | Wr asement, Clean ice yard, furnace. 2 car garage _ man ¢ = D LOTS IN Also a 2 car garage, On 46° to ‘52 m nee your D - CONTINENT $1,000 Dey "hea ‘path | bdeaats Bea treet sie ar perl bork nidi7,050 total price. SOhghland "Heights Bub. $40 1s |: ventas “hease,” bare 20x40, your title. Let us, present our |W nice iine of trailers G See. BRE mast Barbas | GSop: areca excend MATETAIW TERMS) BOS, Pe Stevens Brokey 113 || chlekes Sia ooo Sag | Leon Sonat, bret fait | BeMsurt and tee Genesee belare | wn ani Q : Pst’ : 4 miles wes an iM. e. sure * ; | "| Rate ee work! Hut a R HIGHLANDS. 3 bedroom | $6,200 doer 3 bedrooms, _ Ko Sunday sales, 1 hel handled wih acs ie ments: by wearaitrd: pignature, you eee me rE SALES | | good value at $5750 PIONEE! ranch room.” Large liv- lpreerimyyires gis tlet|~ SPECIAL |) down. other securities. Up to ja months | GENESE | r : ea flush We Lo Hwy. " ! ‘ , $08 Foon, ultre-m e, tile bath, aded lot, garage, -round not, it is true. Realtor to repay. 2101 Dixie OTe stana: Keego Hapbor | Ky Sect, EtSSea a Seip eoavered Fler petra | stare wo pow, subalvain. Fay, M, Siout, 28 ras |e roma ek be inh PEs | itso DOWA, GOS immediate: 8 lare¢ foom basement, 2 -1 condition, Lake priv sure home. Large 100x400 ft. c¢ have first 71 ag Eve. ‘til 8:30 ontiac St. Bk. Bil ace rent nt. | OSES aniet) fl te a aget be, Sen Lr Pana si aT a Sst Ue mae roel Gai ms | on oe ee | ater.| Close to | sc : rounde t a reduced price OFF M-59 m| choic Good county approv | ereal bargains. P. W. , 0 82 Telegraph | buses, crm cere eT! Gi $16,900, with” $5000 dows, Attractive _slleunite “two bedroom Sao, oo sore Recaleat sat _& Son. 110 8. | Ss, 2 FOOT BOCES TAD ER FOR a $7359, " , a home wi d with 40 rtation and store i i d Contrac sale. 3408 Hu | Aine jis family 5 rooms an don acre of lan lew| Po little farms. ‘ For Sale Lan ie K). | ville Mich‘ . | : EST SIDE. 2 acai 6 rooms uate nmoramic v. on i * 4 - Orton West ‘Side, ._ ~8. rooms ana | aa bet Up tagaes fori edaltion: se aarroreding eoeney. Only 3 L 1. BROWN, Regltor Sa aan pei cara be 25 FT. HOUSETRATLER | TO eae Zoned |C- ind| bath ad bat me Full basement of s from city limits. 1362 . Huron | « | or sale. “SLEEPS =< bath, J bedroo 2 ri a) eerie t, garage, black- Gai Ty RL $500 — 10 FT. | TRAILER, Dixie Hwy. =" Sore gece mee heat, 24 .with gas “el Se to schools and S & SON : SILVER | IT | botle ghs, $175. 4787, aha eps ae a: ee tee Fle sion.’ $15,900, DORRIS OP. MEMBER | .- t facing golf cdurse me tq or other) oR 3-202. : downe a "I with $3000, ee REALTOR w. Buren Biredt er Waterford ry wnship’s subdivi ET YOUR $ggss sss to : findnc nee rou thin po on. 32 TRAVELO 8 FT. $1,000 | FOR * i 152 R 3-2925 PS from ; 4 pu ts; pay bills; | sic our equity Lk. Trailer eae FE 41557: or O ks zs er payee tposes. | nts. Lot 27 Square 8y4 A—Walled Lk ing | SEDIOUE, BT ha witha We BUY. GFLL AND, TRADE Giroux & Hicks|**\ork ror vo sie oie ina eal Pare Space $i larg kmanship dl - BATH, Hit a foetal net, jt cufirst {oof including aad deh © CRS, at onsale. Or ee a ATTENTION CONTA caer Prompt, F riendly Service For Rent Trailer Sp matic w eat aa sement, dining room, r tdar lara bed- z i y ft A ‘ | 0 LIAMS LAKE, 60x) | 2 a ierket today. Large 1s ¥f URS ar ‘ALL 4 Slacks ike Saige Fetrigerator, med so i root “and Ie Me cloaet epee ROCHESTER ABE for |? Seg ech Invcine. _OR_ 3-6734, | discount, new prope tr ment SE TE b siness ts astisting Wane a . court. Sewer & Payal MY 2-4611. i rooms t space, space ? MILES |||) te today: | our th e pews seta rail Dor vay tui heceed arte ead 4 rod Dome Pchicken 10 ACRES ‘GOOD eerie bas dn..,| C4528. "Ask for Ted MeCutlougn. WAM ey ooobleae, Tak us help You. | TRAILER SPACE came 3309 Elis. $21,000, terms, | eee * recreation ieee a 3 lots” tended. “Price $6,850 | nofth mthly, OL 2 “2177, | Ec . money FE 5-612}. White, or! call G rdonis Trailer ; . i; od. é - ous 25 mon ‘ ind te ene | aes arage, Large we ful terms. end of} _ $2 43. al .§2 | | acaped lot. Here is ® beautiful | AGE home fp north end ot Fo Ss le Acreage e ound TO L DAN |= Accessories eeecre Highlands _ [ae scaped 'o unded by other fine 3 bedroom Recreation room, a 4 or 3a RA Russ HOME &. AU Auto ‘home, live | home surro 17.500 and Rochester pb, landsca a tao OR | reas ui ining L pone Fae peat eee A good Buy 5, 10, 15 AND 20 REALT FE 44525 COMPA) NY. | ing fore a ee Worth it, 10-day possess Sones GEL ha mete larprmeey RESTRICTED ns. Or ranch home 42 W ear st. till § ANK Sc5d. ‘ RTS © ll : Ye, 3 bedroo i i | y with conve the cre little farms, O 2 miles “Til 9 Sun. | MM. NAT'L. 9'axl0%, fireplace, onthly at $13.750 homesites in ac d M-24 about 2 Open | oe 407 CO ’Ma ae rt | te! tile bath, Ite INCOME. $130 m | homes $54 Sitfs on paved } a a point-| Leslie Fleisher, , 1} Tattle window sills. atte EAT jaa ee owner's living sing Oeinaster, ate SON sovre ot Lapeer. hner Lapeer. iP ities 47 Berkeley Voss, .Pres{d t. ‘ te 1]. New — Rebuilt — Used 1 Kitchen with tie sink, Break: | — come'p HpEntd: ts downtown "MAURICE WAT apt cell Me, Lechner, Business Opportun Hours 9 to 5 ry OPEN EVES. AND mployees | | kitchen; with hed | white Walking distance to Here'f | iL the | Earth’ 71 | MOhaw 5 Business Opportunities 4? H PROM Discount to a ¢ | fast bar finistiec B,, crea- dloxé*to “chools and bus. come . ! hh Ii | Olive; 6-43 11, ACRES | CAS Se Herback Auto Part lastic. Tied, Moor) ricrea- ur, chance ‘to wn in a |" | 428 W. Fourth hester kston. This BAR Get a cash joan of| $25 t tor a| Holler FE 3-947 | room | 26%2x50. 154 car yous Might considet goo | epee ~Roe /1 mile from Clarkston. OR tly. Phone a 2 Baldwin = | * ee ee garage, brick Gt wT as are Gown payne Chal different hocereg) tmp good high building LIQU NTERTAINMENT.| here th at alngih trip. Write or | 340 RTS & ACCESSORIES | |» face pxid. hluesin apprms, tonight at only $9.00. eefma, |< I'd think you’d want to do something R. oN Eth and 10 weres of excellent bar NO eas eo aices pen | oes ign toe ca cet NEW ARTS SPECIAL | | ladon had wale “Okay, but WD | AKE O 21¢ i 2,950, terms. "Two ipeople — $45,000 gross per | come e friend) Bpory TIME ONLY |: 4 block or me dies FI OYD KENT Realtor on Okay, you got patie om ieee _ USINESS SIT 7 ae Xx & Hicks frm Poaune | oe down, good Seu Taio Gnieeee here. Best Srade #00 prac! OD AR TS | | oy a : wr ’ “ B iNy oy «| J = | be = rye 5-6105 open eves | ROME * ROADWAY ‘Girou lease.| (1389.) N CHRAM AUTO 24 W. Lawrence FE ts. Power i | es 40 _ BR se. Wo Katona ton Plains | OVIDENT. LOI 5 } OR 3-2105 i “Next to Consume s : 40 For Sale Hous 90x120'. 5 room hou r 4380)Dixie H'wy Drayto: | \ AL ER$HIP PR “Detroit, 2539 Dixie Hwy RS \ ; CLOSE IN, GA Sale Houses ; e OR 3-9701 i AUTO DE. ; a Shvings: Society | of FOR PARTS, ‘46 CA SMALL HOUSE \stool, new cup- |. ‘| For aie ieee Garag 8. BROADWAY apt PDYKE _ Tt @ location in}, farming jan Lawrence Stl, Pontiac WRECKING Fords, Chevrolet: | ere eee ercdectalh. out beat. eee NCH TYVR ". Old .hopse. Goqd apt. | URURN & 0 TOA LEME CouMH, reer, locetian. euteneee | | 1 WS MMe reN Cd Bro Kl Sete Siikaeullee.” Poacesk: Oy Annet the. cr and. drum inched. "haven OWN | New s Ss room all moder > pres FO alte. onbwar u AlN ‘CORNER: ts ~40 ACR OR “LIN.| area. Should Oe aes af, snow. ete + ‘DeSoto, Oldsmobiles urfiers and R aymen | 76 | iN 1 1 q 8. BI ses . -- _ year, uipm P 2 | : | 1t gener : | QIEAETORS we gain | Sieh enaN er Ae | BENIMBLE! | Bergat O°? Argh bem: | gt frontage, 4 eres, 3[Rouses| | EB ed | too dben plus inventory, C21) | | GHOES Gc AnSAtE Ramen SI hi ' Dir 7 a a A very c = type bus % ACRES Ih, issions. New an BE aniegs nd Sunday 1 on = 4 B bedroom | fenced back yard, leased to show | Any type Dusen RD. odern | "down $10 month. ee | i -fand transmiss , ‘Open Ev mings a rail | RI LE ve right into this 2 ad- ing home we are ple excep- Wooded) 4 rm. Mm sin ' Pp. W DINNAN & 60! ae || MOTEL—HOM i springs. ARTS “NEAR PI | Mo home With space for ointment. Truly an 435x1000. site for rousing i = 8. Saginaw i Po 4 i 4ncome , ie LOUIE'S AUTO P | (7 RM. | HOME’ 0 per month. guchy modern upstairs. Located by app with $ fot equity house. Good si i 110 | : ‘trade for home, $n | / 6 OAKLAND AVE. "$2,000 down, $5 & 8t., Eee cite, LINCOLN ST. cational ford “t wnship on large} tional buy nth, plus small bai- project. MY 2-5831 | —— eloperty 441) wn, | land contracts)-€hc.. up | ™ } | #8 FE 4-4513 des | Realty, 290 South . : LENT} in Waterford To je and $58 per mo torm sash. LTER GREEN ; N usiness prone ‘ alue. Good ‘security A! N , 710x | LEE oe 1 G EXCEL f t dealy calling! on fence an aed ,WA D HOME fo}, ee eee to 1 ,000in v main (} \ OBBY RECAPS, —Veaa ii 2 r'AMILY PAYIN tment required |- lot. Don ance d, Realtor |" SEMI FINISHE session. | yw la mohey maker bn « TIRES, | 2 KN ls, $20, 3. 760x [ws , URN on investm d a : "VV empstead, Kez NEW Immediate poss 8 i Pontiac wheels, ‘ | F660) 5 are pater 0x10 i\AN UNUSUAL ae Yn k. coe lempstea Street nisin; fenced lot $545 down. oh 3-2848 1 ‘DUSTRIAL-BLDG. Righwey, (1332). | A ,i 1 WwW. Ie. We with tubes, $6 ea. { r : . i ao : +1317 |; oie tad tebe | | line : ra Reasonable Consider. small : rixl8 D hececaa) donn a nd sh FE OO ee aa By ier La Lake | ‘Prop nal 10} miles Ro 2 wceen Boon ey Ro | TE WIDE | y May Hotraiy Bee aL HOT 1 RODS! ' takes it Bh Gens as part njoy the sun-p - TE. POSs ale tated Trbnk R. d-3 load: |]. : ou Ma) i | d your OF wood | cae bt Leree Crk vely lawn and EDIATE. POSS. to. | nt block, 7 yrs. ol Kil t, INC (Ue é your blue glass and y: ny ectee ent Investigate \— this too.’ Large lot. Lo location. IMM . =s aii aaa ceme nclosed For quick |; , ESTATE cERVI . | i Ir pe have 9 b caps, caddie spin- 4 tooms and) bat down paym Suburban close to| St, ing docks, one . . Clare | REA BANK ‘BLDG. | : « |. dress up hu Ds, is ‘dress ge 2aNe, nortes ‘$6, x ce a 1 ACRE. $11,500, terms. 5 Michaels. "Remodeled with : M ACED AY LAK E ry yes g suksulact ng | Co., | na Office, J. Lanames. er, Song | ° J~= rai : pers. ate $12.95 set. Now eacn, Ful} price tl Pon- ; ‘TON i as furnace and ho , 0 hy nee forja rea- B a 82 gy oe domed “up s Co. tac, lake privileges fo Raa 3 ote se Oa howe, ; WHITE) FRAME a lot. $3,000 down, ° nee. Inke-trogt mat tt. uv: = BUILDING, 14x24, REAS, | PE €1902_______ 4 1 os ‘ | _ Hub Auto P yatte 4-7068 7% | lac, la \ PLAIN ; 7 | bedrooms | :, GALOW Large : ’ & e. 2 bedrooms cement _FE!2 pee Se 122 Oaklanc 7 e id i tered walls ” nice atic | BUN 4 VALE frontax full bath, base tor hee —— | | me - a SSI—GLASS! = ae WN , family Ft c pice Y% basement autom | | odern home 1s me RITT ing room, t and] motor} ___ | ~ ee ay | SS iD #7310,000; full pricé to pet oe gas" neat, 2 car garsue x “ott | This Ny decorated. throughout, ode CARROLL G. PORRYT eet at 86, ip, terms "Hy A ZONED MFG, Par tl | | ‘ x es snl nee aateyy a0 tt, Suman ant not “Fated, car tractor port., geld dowh coemene pe Mcichen with ar el teas 2614 Weal Huron. 2-6194 include Ir R ear. 2 SIRO AD SPUR IN - ee Enetalled wille you w |: furnace, re mmercia fot 56.) $10,950, reason : S Yes, @ full basemen 140. The al Estate Exch. KEN ¢ KA oh? aa | “BIRD” TO}SEE t hele your ith your insura work guary ares ArBe CO! 4 BY Db CHARLE and hot water, Lot 55x Co-operative Re tw. | FLOYD ees) FE 5-61705, : Pontiac Motor. 2% acres § THE RIGHT MAN WHEN iGroup your bills, prote nts ei “Ms. your signature. All w r 4 ‘i; feet. | | Exchange ? Only $7,100, 530 DOWN. $33 PER MO. Lawrence ! Near Po bldgs.. office, 6 car rare O THE: UY A BUSINESS it, low monthty payme 2 ee) t | ative Real Estate 90 price? } $1, $s and ins. at 4 per 24 W. en Evehings with storage your own’ siding You WANT TO B jcred jae _4§ ~enteed P rts Co. | 5 tooms ahd |bath, | Sooner W, huron Ph. (FE cludes taxe 8. Full Bath, Oil Op umers Power | with, arage, yo Only $22.- ae — “Hub Atito x P7008 DOWN ae we mel ery | | 22a We 5-145 or FE 2-1704, _ cent Ot. « room Iba car Next to iGons p BED-| and @ 2 family home. w this | ’ PRIC so | ay __ FE 4-706} ' oak floors, plas A dj buy at Eves F =) furnace and hot water. T LOG HOME, s. You must kno Ti AV ERN, were: 122 Oakland Ave. g00 al 1 TY ; with lake FRON auto. , | Terms. | . ' $8 800, Soar bud sto res and | ~ AD. AMS, Conn pone. rl S ey uk tice. AS OE8. EM 3-5737. EARE sree ts a brheut fences low Price means HURRY! RE UCE ‘D TD $}3.500 | | j : A TO. a ARTS. i | am 6 : a 7 a Water, 0 ) : ‘ry | | J sch -ol, | Unfinished 5S ped eam éll a 5 Co-operative Réaltors Exchang : SUBURBAN, Paley porch. stat) AR, RD E. PARTRIDGE lust al straight tavern nb dome al | ANCE CO, | 900 DOWN. Dandy 5 r p bunga- te ten neta e Only $5, 300. ‘SL. 83 N, Sohies coe Evenings S 3 larg® rooms with 2 dows payment, naeat Athens | WAT FE 2- 3816 wey good Sa op location about FIN v} 4$-0541| « New Rebuilt—Used | . $2, : | lake ie i ; | ip = ] arge z Ponti Siness 5. n’s i) Ez ; . ont sleges, “Targe lot. rp m an “G. SEATS COUNTI RY HO MF OA, car garage, se ids eur vobsek Ray ‘Draston ‘Plains. UNiversity RHALTOR Huron 8t. as ties ‘from ea, rite t won ape alent » daon Open Evenings & Sunday P Beivileg : ' FE 4-7530 Cl this| tem and lights Detroit. | NGLE|| fuchand decens ale. | GORNER N. | | _1-7489 Detroit. | TRIANGLE| Husban edinte sale. | © a All GM. price, | eee REALTOR ted north of Rochester, $850 dn AN viber . NORTH _ PERRY Ruitable | rifice|.for an for} home or] 0. 1s ount 9 her 000 DOWN. 20 Acre tarmn, bare, es ne 1s THE 'B ‘BIRD’ TO SEE toes of a Trant, hae epee Russell A. Nott, Realior i : Lakefront by O lge kit. i ance nee mene or act | ect orm or trade fe | c _ Di ¢ "Employ es ' | e | s = tr * 1 ate { i ieee _ BRICK OR FRAME: | sith’ sex" fe athup, Wagon 10 Pike ee toms Pine ee. Neig rd Beplaces aS a es DISTRIBUTORSHIP UAE MOTOR MART .. | + slo, oad | schedu t on your lo ‘down, 2 br : '6 ROO ih. Near ei terms: D Paewien 4-8230 : of road frontage a. J ust a few 2 or 3 bedrooms, buil $450 | tm. down, jutility room. ‘Ap- ated, ready to move on. $16,500. ~ 0| | SILVHRSIDE at} only $13,500. beverage. 4 M nealm | FE | to be bla¢ktoppe tidc on good interior unf't.ished ow a ‘dry|) tubs a _ downtown, ‘by owner. 257 Juds BY OWNER, 0) | 3 mileg N. W ' WILILS M. Be EE ini Nationally sdveriiset Ps operating «igi 21 E. Mo me ‘53 minutes’ drive to Pon down. Come and see mode! ie ipointment raat 1 Est ate SI LORE » ' Drive, Silver Aireaclive hpme, 2 Roogevelt Hotel EM __3-4898 || good | trucks rte only $2,500. Le FRIENDLY ‘Auto Service road. Priced right, : -ROLD GOODEL at Mi AGHE R Rea ‘ SY LV AN { Pontiac . Attr fgontage. |, Pig & Sup. Se eee equipment. All this of- RED TAPE, - m lete in o 00 ft.) lake L ce — in person a 8 ; ee rea es el $3.500 DOWN. 6 eal . Seat pe 3200 eer Ra. me Coe Cie ui ea OA e370 Lele 3 Can Hees iy {inished las Oe diate Low pone OF Sail, : SQ. FT. MFG. 2 fies. wae a? rensetSch PEREE ESTIMAT ATE | HO = OUS \ | Eves. d rear terrace, gi eceSSary, ediatchisterdids URaAEat Aer) + | , galow. good conmiti 2 lee lots | ROOM MODERN H 200 com- YPE, SEMI- FIN: garage, cnclose d arcni-| ment nec ~ 1B 5,000 manu- E WITH FR | | out, 2 caf garage r school Needs repair. $5 im-| 5 RM. RANCH~T 30, gor bar-b-que. landscape iProp.| 4 block building . in HARDWAR \ fAKES. OF CARS — In city ne warage, t be sold im-| 5 location. FE 4-988 u00r th dog run! & baby 1 Resort rn Brick and bi zone .in Pontiac. |} A ; Ate me partly oth ot full phi¢e. | plete price, Mus 831 _jahed good tect's yard, with d d evergteens, Sa e ‘ facturing No. 2 zo tem. Offered Y FUTURE B | and bus $11 _ mediately. MA. SA aaa OUT-| play yard. 50 6-yr. o! ts & drapes Se OWNER sMqLt. HUNTING New gas heating syste A ROS e row: ID MOT OR “SALE | — AST OF PONTIAC b) new wallto-wall carpets & drapes | - OWNER, SMAL at only $28, ted in one of the tastes stow. BRA we | | C ARK A Ss 3 MILES E CITY. YRS, OLD. luded. 30 day posse Yy FE 4-504 ee Loca 4 in Oaklan Co ST | 30 Years Fair Dea ng | CAM ERON TL A ||” SIDE oF 2 BEDRMS.,| inc) CABIN. BER} WITH RTRIDG E, {ing breas aod busy ‘hard- t West Pike St | M mver 4 RMS, LIVING RM, WALL 5-3109. RES OF TIM iles AR DE. PA a neat. clean stocked. | Cass a -0186 bale Realto: — Co-op. 4 ; D WALL TO ‘| ae V il ACI hurting, 23 m WAR ell equipped an firs | Phone FE 2 Evenings CARPETE KIT BREAK- DOW: | Good hun 41, OA 2-8316} ware, Ww active modern ANCE a NT 1362 W: plas Be FE) 4-6492 | CHALET PAST BAR TLE BATH Wie Well cat? trailer homie opt on | i south’ of Meriuert on YS [ RH. AL ys ne Hoch dao ah aa oll 63% FN Bt. | Fe PE 4-1538 CAPT Ge Ma- | o™ j AST * eT [3 y r -2845_ .BLE io” @ a for fixtures he ‘i “| car, cy id. COLORFD FIXTURES NS.| sold foundation, extra “Gront: | 8284 EAR tAESABL lo mo. $3,500 fo lstock at al hop, 23 Hoo KEEGO HARBOR. 5 ROO: ig Hunn. TY PE GARAGE STORMS & “SCHOOL. built on Ehod well. 138 in really PURN. CA nes ume aod ~ TM-59 FRO »N'TAGE Molesaie inventory ane $15,- WHE Ni YOU NEED y25e3 LETE 1 New pump a& FE 452 | + Gh 8S TO HIGH SCHOO ake on $3,475 ricity Good un READY FOR | oe Es io ine “COMP | | __down payment. FE a an one of the mos in dnete be hel ES. $7.000 DOWN | good buy. at AN D Electr KH 2-1168| __| -| 16 | [ FOR - } | 1 | Commanding in Oakland County LAKE PRIVILEG ACK L OVEL: __ fishing. a | , | our site soon in IDGE 95 to } 0 it N SERVICE lo beautiful views Lake Liveral lake FE 5-3458 TH, J Rd., Keego Harbor » UNIT Ss” See ‘and select our” commereial Ww ARD E. PARTR 3 COLLISIO? | = frontage, With, pet Pea S000! = nf PER [Os 2188 Cass Lake OR 3-8662 : 5 nicp year! this new con fast growin NAL UBINESS Ip "you with your money ainting, refinishing | } with fine s d | $1,000 down — ik. priv. -4875 ‘ 5 7 rm. home. nt. ‘tion of Pontiac’s tree ICE OF NATIO We can help -y ‘up to $500} Bumping,’ p tor at | Knud ' Four bedrooms, two mr New Gas | 4 roots lee Ch LE. Louse subs | PE TO SELL YOUR HOUSE? ee Couekes on reer | 6 wdet suburbs = W. Huron ft | ORTROKERS CLEARING HOUS problems. You sal pay: See Bob Rec Sales - 4 ‘and heated living Part. Includes | 1854, Sal y) M-15—2 miles south WANT Cecil H. Myers Rash Estate. Giese: tc Michi in, $ -59) at Pontiac Lake ‘OFFI IN_PRINC Tt and repay in sma is Oliver Motor ‘West Side ad: f00m | Gruncn, porch. umn, carpets; | Shien, Gir Ae-15—2 ie” south wee Ppneus t asp Mas det. W. BIRD, Realjory . CDAST-TO;CO} t | sug phone us or cal at our of le Ferre Pty sc! TO | drapes, rator, Own- i 4 C Pangus lreverse arges ! i i W. -Pike oo” | Webster Schoo! pistric oil” heat, | stove and large refrige s, (ask e Ortonville. 132. jrey =| CA a te Bldg, | es fice. os 36 ¥ 54) 2 story, frame ‘home, ndition. ae cooperating with eae | 2661 ~ Banch om | Ph. OF “WOODED -RESOR 516 Pontiac Sta es. FE '8-1392 | Wor 'S LOrg i , ry TT ~ Wanted Used Cars 2 car garage. ra st this | | Sour broker), Meee eS i574. Wil tically new Mod erm | fee cibue Wd 2 qoodk lakes FE 44211 a aia, FE 2-8316 : Only $ . Be sure ‘ iVerside! Phone GR 3?- ap Part | you will find this prac c regular property, ¢ County. Good deer | FE $-4 AGE BLDG' ‘3 w. Huron Open Eves. | ee pee Gar Wee Cal new listing. | take) suitable small house 2 bedroom bungalow lel cu in Gladwin FE 76537, | GARZ 10 | sa. | Price for Your | | e. Extra large i a untry,. $500, ore rage bldg. 16,00 staurant i= ilo 1x1 WY. Auburn Heights | an Rome IW TAKEVILLE, | Ia PP eioas “right at ousing GREEN. LAKE .OFBICE rer 1 parking its, aopat on 18. Rs )This_cptablinhed punen FINAN CE CO. i 4! AVERILL, 0 ONPE 46896 : =. with tm, Small down pay- urban location - EN LAKE) howroom,; available a _ | showing @ ¢ 11 modern Hot cu ?82 Rus, Dally CMe dn ‘a | partly rile [hl jie F dots. OA | 55250. $2,500 down. , ST M IKE'$ OTRS FOR ALL Lakes” | & ire 29 Auburn Ave. | | $80,000 per year, All modern Ph, FE 41 Tal leide. |. PVT. PARTY. WANTS f utility, nicely situa ee Bema ment will : EAR “HEADQTRS. FOR and Mstates| Inqui L BUILDING er | equipment, an ideal leckG 716° Pontiac State 2 Nl ila Packard. FE 4.7589 ere of Ind, Ol pent: sorms 82713 Loa] WN . es, Homes, Lots EB | COMMERCIAL B ding door. | | ed at long lease, Only| | R (CHEAP ‘CARS. aed screens $6000. with reason eal $450 pow! bunkalow § full rooms, newly Pea hae tp ooNsINCE 1928— LIST Poe | . with full or any business pe light. ‘$15,000 with terms, Modeatidibek 50 WTD: “SCRAP Ke 166 able terms. A dandy 2 ed rooms. Cedar side and out, gas Peeeiih | Price NORMAN ae EM §-4412/ suitable Aad ee mod. ranch Di ¢ Hwy Lk.’ Frontage For Sale he ae & "patie “CARS ° a es r with good. si Studdings up arage, large lot 53x ght | 1979 COMMERCE “WO 5-744 a ae this ‘on 8 acres ixi ’ ont 450 | ann | in-| WID WRE Idwin Ave. st, WM H. KNUD SED shake otis ema in. Im- ced ‘terms’ Witnin "owatd laces Line From aE ND DEER wre te “ie. a rontans oo Bat ae business fr Bye i “C8 li9 FT, CRUISER faba Trailer oll ea “OUT OF STATE Ls | for! partition Good ‘west der good car \ - BIRD A wit FE | ‘ft. deep ted -2 . 770 S. Telegra } Y FROM * | Realtor ssession. Go conside ' CABIN, GOOD all} lake Lk. Rd. Owner. F ; frontage, *Tocate quire at 1 | PART te model car, | Bide. mediate po ke. privi- nt. \ c hing) on sm _ beth Lk. lake iac. clean, ‘a } Pore ust’: “sie en bis 3759 EST BI Y S) || suburban locations with lake p payment. _ MA. Founting, cane peenyile ae .For Sale Farm Prop, |45 Bulldagy condi of 2 stores, ede ww OCEREL Np” , SILVER ait ne Appreciate a call Mi | Ph 15 leges 7ARM W ff M-18, about ; | u 1 double cottage, | T 2814’ at $2580° ig the bu -6898. aryl anal “FRU ae F © F nuac, FE 453 87. _ aammmaeananannaaaaiditd | 3 houses, ttages and boat Liner t Costello's) Trailer \NTED FoR” “PARTS. Y at all modern Y sf Fs 42 T 6 single’ co showing an} of the year s MY ey tral GaRs WA FE 4-8230, Lovely 3 eer es roan ED For Sale Lots RES—V ACANT ' "livery, Property $700 per| Sales, Lake Orion. OOD.| _E. Montcalm. FE 4- CARS. Nome with ena of fruits 40 AC tly rolling, * income of Paha, livery. | > WHEEL TRAILER. VER bY G -| WANTED JUNK & CHEAP ,SON |) private lake. All rolling 10 | prodnetve | foil eect) Fora jmonth. plus boat: I high 3 1063 Lakeview, Huron Gar FE 39467 - FE 2-2666, 3 ' e HNSON and berries on this t a few | LTOR i YTON PLAINS orner parcel suitable fo ‘Could be developed a $50.00, = LEAN CARS OF ; way it ORTH J 0 “ins good acre parcel. Located jus | REA FE 43569 DRA ah Sividin $4,950, $950 down, lass beach in addition _ dens, _ : k, IHOUSE-| TOP §$§ FOR C PE 4-2131. } } j ‘ this od ediate pos. ciuren } 150 | dividing. | | c business. $40,000 3 FT. AMFRIC¢ AN inds. 2 Auburn. $600 DOWN) [2 AE pilenne ca ile fond iles of Pontiac, Imm 3007 W. Eves. ‘tl § | 100 x : present 1950 35 1487, Giddings | “ all-kin D - PO = ape family home 5000 down Open, Ev i ES | \ 10,000 down. t er, ere new. tye WANTE ! th on |: sized ing rm., ssion, $ - 100 ACR | with $ he : CARS, a Neat 3 :room and ba \ kitcnen, full din C LD IN ro- | | §-2967. a 500 & double, lot, a atllity i ing rm.,.1 bedroom beds . Wood O.} OU TBA HOME eae sites with good Near Fenton. Good jo era | ae} yore | GLEY AUTO PARTS with, aunty rage ha Ay bath doves as? room - howe hunting days pre| over wruumage Hasy to drive mainiained Se ces ican oy Annett | nc. i r BA dollar paid for wrecked & ; w ouple oms and a bath EALTOR § Your house attractive |/mod- Ta d Ao ane ; soil 85 acr bath and | ‘ ad Top do ickup. 170: Bag- A idea) for the youn Sine. r Id“ be ysed as ke Rd. ree hen you see this oom, well. a on house, full : : nk cars. Free p 4-3585. that cou ¥ Full 125 ‘Willems Lake whe eted living modern furnace. Barn, 3-7193 a} QY 2-2544 or FE 4-3 \ just starting out nied This the second’ floor. c S n 9 a.m. to Bp ern home. Carp’ with treak- KE "AREA basement with d brooder | eral ty St. FE ‘ARS to save that high ye ee a oa ent and stoker heat, , fice Ope modernistic kitchen s land tull W "ATIK RING LA toolshed, poultry an Call to- | 28 ‘Hur Se FE Sunday 1 } ED! 1949 TO °63 USED C' ig the first time offe ht basem matic hot water. 2 t nook. 2 bedroom a bed: f use. 10 acres timber. od Open Ever F ATION ‘ WE: INE town buyers. Huron be sure. to investigate rig | | te ngaragel (Lot te. DEI Bath “down, ‘ull, dares. Fe with yh al 110 x 150 | bight “at only 613, ug NEW ee ERVICE STATION 2 ‘ "Motor Bales. 952 W. Huron. Phone sway. CU ie ee coed ges furnace ‘This home| dl has $695 ood neigh -RE«ESTATE tion, 2 large service oders living |” ( il Ratha PAYS TOP s eo 4 tT “SPENCE Spe h 2 NEW—NE W—NEW! $7350 ee) he tah price Gul mee 2|. der fn Soreal air ih tn | Close. to ee ceueae te stores. 7 OGR es bedroom home | ences Aut’ s aN, VIRGINA fies 4 to “49 Fords it i — s t suburban lots o nd gprage borhood e woode ea iving room, ei qua od used wrecke ) hevrolets a . ores remy noms y r we are of beet a be nporch. Also hed. breezeway a ront- bus lines | Som ih 30 ft, living with | nt including go Rea- HOM Pontiacs, Che Im. on ‘the Ist floor i furry, hurry, me bedrms. and su | tache 222 {t. of Close to w. ern kitchen 1 me ale inventory. ILE 21 E. Montcalm,- _ and 3on fe ‘and. Located | ee Oy gested near | atk J. Down ‘payment is only | Tare lot with Pod Mandl to ‘f, ACRES WOODED | | reaklast nook, bath apd, } De. |. sonable ‘rent. with @ fease: 1f 704 | Aerie ee ek Motor Sales in the best of districts ance | tha Heights! and contains a ood. Do + Plenty of home a urs. | Just ly wooded with room on first floo m and bath! ogre interested ef 3389 Dixie ears to pay. fl €e€ odel- care. oa feceea back ata ea [eb toons acd baby clue unity 1180. FRIENDLY HOME raise that family of yours. | Just On naved road Beenent ete vin peted master bedroom i | dine business, “inquire ‘ y hthson -re-| fér top dollar on hate | TOR | 3-1603 and fenced back ar active (uil 4 ected tile floors 1 [1 A er lot with 24 ft. living:, 1, block from Baldw nd conven-| large trees. Exce Some clear 2nd fidor, li ated. oil heat, Highw E can buy a Les Hutchinso as) 2627 Dixie Hwy. t many. many other at Hos ine | soe ‘i Includes 11 lots. On) cor bedrooms. kitchen and rice is only $11,500 a Holntment plenty of dy tor gardening Low, o room all oe attract e set- | U PER | SERVIC You ditioned trailer ag low r NT fentires Don't farl throughou nm. o!- room ated and painted Pp s, Call for ap ound me for ¢ colonial home ide 1 for GULF S r-| con V4 : WA = mest delepremney ACoA: | tent sli owg.ta | Rath weet decor essing. | to"ser this new living today. | ground $e 10 ACRES se Sh Bptehch S| No.7 at erinds, when, you oper | guna ler Sales] 3.70,'$2 MODELS BE eURE TO roe di. fere See hey are as ; saddle ‘men : our own We * , iler Sale R_FPRIC - . Mtg. costs wn ts all t E BROS. By appoin ate FE 2-9173. railer $ >| GET OU | VAN $1,000 POM * full oa! You oor ae thn wt eat W] [ jence| Only 1 lott, foee tee ie down. °F F200, terms. | rad Oren opppitunity for you, Give eee rayton Plains oe ae bixig | ! it GHWA ma P : 5 room a 600 do to Conven . $2, . i . I. . = WITH RES T :. Wi : path with’ attached "garage 1 RANCH jHOME Bathroom, and’ utility, aim Open oc a R- e12 or. owes ard vere . . LADD 160 ACRES $ oni Bee FE ¢4129, ThORAMT so Comer it! Mile ie Woodward, OR 93-1385. : U 1 55 (or 1% acres! o the road | _ “RES . YDEN, Realtor pixie Highway, Wate ; 3496 Pontiac Lk. Rd. h the work, 140 acres tache YES ON LQCA- a Roya! Oak UI 5-2810 | For Sale atta ica hit eecne i 4 ACRES J.C. HA : oa | . 8600 BY OWNER, $3,400 Lake Rd FE 2-0207 arm wort very productive] beanur MACHINE income. OR 5 AILER FOR to afford you that pr The || n the outskirts of 3 W. Huron St. M2 | BARGAIN “‘n modern 4 fms. and | Corner ia wows Drayton mnie [Eileble apd ver Winner for} “tion, good part cine |SMALL HOUSETR > thing” called ‘privacy. tiHit Located 3 a beauty of 6 26" FE 852 or EM ~ yr 2 for equity ‘n m ent. 109 8S. Mer- | 4286 Dixie OR R 3-2361 arm and, +; eheat per acre. 3-9209. "_sale. OR 3 3-2504. “9 BUICK ies | : FE 5/5852 or : ER TO; © ’50 Hele jist Neen “ermotctel rooms ‘and bath. Full base. | Eve. pF Pe Pal eee SORNER LOT 100x] years on 1 house, 138 ft. barn, SHELL PRODUCTS .000| MODERN HOUSETRAILER TO Dyna, jet, black, have just | been ie active | bres win (uriaes acd hor YOUR _Timac. ] |BEAUTIFUOL c d Hickory Drive. Masi eariganed ae house, ma- bay station on M-59, 15 MO} t, small children welcome, M Deen ee le mileage. It is indeed en attr | men wid iit in 48". Con- A HOME OF ST SUBURBAN 200. Fieldwar “Estates. bactitice b4 penchions, Mul crib, ’gran- Two ey low rent and good lease, rent, t 2 Gr. fnew ire a x . low erie of $6,950. It Water. Bu ms. 28x42 on N WE ¢onstruct- orrest Lake n, MI 6-0191.| = ¢hine © she Spring in-pas-| gai buys new inventory __2-400 MUST SEE i MIK#H AUTO: joke ( IL’: ghe foanaationt G@uiee peas OW? | droom home, double ¢onstruct: | $2,000. $1,020 dow F bie: paved’ uacnrare: Gee ctl G4 TPE 2.8543. CALIFORNIA BOUND ult, * \ BANK RATES | Y CO ) + ithe foundation) Qu 1 éar~ # be ement, new furnace, Ls EIGHTS. % MILE OF fure, paved barny farms we] open\ call BER SHOP. before Sept. 14, etroen 701 OAKLAND AVE. BANK F aT..." GILES REAT. iL ’ I Includes al ith . . | ed, Lipads of fruit, near stores AUBURN H on 8 Squirrel Rd. the best producing tonight foriguy oR RENT _ BARB 9123. vided rooms: sleep HW: elece | eo ~~ $952, °*4-DR| | SPECIAL. j ‘REALTOR | { Can be handled w ie Side Brick | lot, plenty $4,650 with $3,150, Auburn’ Rd., 1-0342 ave offered. Call 28,000. lenty of busin EM 3-! d living room carpete i BUICK, lean. $1575. \Can) fie. FE 56175 | peting. W est three school. Only 5 __ 100x250 lot. "FE ee 4 details.’ Price $28, FP) y o 2 a ° . on tor: Duo- friday hea’ R & H. | Clean ter 6:30 rh. 82 W, Hu uron $2500 down. rand family home o bal. $35 monthly. living ING LOTS ae . fobil Gas Station tric refrigerator; copk.| stove; nance. FE 2:7726, afte TOP 1 G AL OW » NEEDS FIXING Bedfoams, Won Double Shek toe wen’ bedroom home. pe AU ee iNerora ® Clarke so AcnEa. 8 RM MODERN SOME): ony ae ease oF eine pettee ‘brakes: side SuiGck 5 SUPER A iaut hone BUN | dcntowa or “vestibule, fireplace; sun rm, ent, oll hot water) bee ton areas } RAM near M-15, 40 acre " rm. | home E a neighbor-| lights:’ cedar piyw! yer been out-| dyna. a s, fully equipped. Exc, . | Small home close wn. 4 ieee. breakfast nook, downstairs| jasem bus by door. See this {OLMES-BARTRA) in) Midland, $1,500. Suchy |Real- | rocated on oe iness. Low] side; new! tires: mele y time; E-Z eye glas 194 Linden Rd., Pio. | West Suburban ‘ |: off of N. Rosela ee: room, on to wall carpeting, School buy. Only $9,750 | with } i . aa near Cadillac, $1.800, ie hoot] & transien' us. mediately ‘side on Fe boss: from cond., reps. FE 2-3606. | water- | ms. City water and s lavatory, ke an eppofitment | |fore you buy. nod peated ar Poa ty, 290 South St., Ortonville, inventory Available im at 88 W. Mansfield. ac neer_ Highlands. Ww, Modern 2) bedroom Eliz- ite 30 treet. Needs to gas heat. Make $2,000 down. VENDER 1950; Ev's. O A : Dart, FE 2-0103.. Body. Ait 7 UPER, DYNA , 8s to Eli on the str¢ bees OTH ER LA Or 3 ST HUR : : Phone Mr, Fisher 50. 8 jowner, abeth Sa Crescent Fee! be uaece “Priced at $2200 ane Fre — Beat aera! CORNER | rod =e, fs FILOYD KENT, Realtor BEAUTY mi Pe for Gusk aale ey oe oe Ore at Cos- ae Tipcoln Scziva “25600 °York: etec- standa t. bal: ‘front © 3140 W. 33| near Teleg ie ice St. . FE! business," p See tie Lake Orion. | : $1250. ane . television, refrigerator furni- | witn $450 dowh or discoun White Lake Fro | | 24411 ‘Eves. EM, 3-33 48. 24 W. Lawrence St. | FE 25508 45435, llo’s Trailer Sales, | Eexe | . | Royal Oak. SUB GPE , tric stove and other t | Cash \ t Office FE Ere BLOCK FROM Open Evenings sUSINESS sco FIOR| SALE. | _ “41 SUPER CLUB GPE., Priced a | for. Cas J I me Proper “SIDE 75x292 FT. 1 FE to Consumers __ ~~" HEATING B HOUSETRAILER ica (hess BUICK ‘41 8 Rd. OR ture’ included. i} | lus, nco WEST LOT * g. Blvd. E. _' Next to dows. Very FE 2-712, 0 0 Williams Lk. 000 down. E Tties. Main house Zi full) “GMC plar. VELLY fino Also Aluminum win: Bi ae _F fp $225, 629 j oe;a0e wath BOC QAKL AND LAK Tae fine prope ble rooms odern, ranch type, fu fu oF | 80 ACRE FARM, GRA on j Als will “WE HAVE ADDED TO OUR : : } | : ke front has 4 siza fire- 3 bedroom m - "transportation. _4-5740. “BALE NORTH OF soil. Good fences. Located ent call FE‘ 5-3461. WE HAVE A lpm | 3-6462. AL | DR HEAT. altor |] 341 ree iandsa ‘aped lots go 4a e living room wi basement, near monthly = FOR SALE 5. d. 2 barns, chicken For appointm: TRAV rt BUICK, ‘41, SPECI wail tires, “TUG” BQRST, Re n this, 6 rdom immacu- up, | Larg odern Kitchen. handle, $66 mo} LOTS | Ave, FE 4-131 “paved roa Complete-| _<“° G OPPORTUNITY. | all mod- flow, white , PE 543642 with with full bath place. Nice iatge 3 rch. ALSO| | $3,000 .will taxes and ihsurance. 1600 Stanley ‘aT CASS house, al bedre, get e \worth| STEEL HAULIN uity in 1952 Ford tt Marlette trailer, all m et dynes t, 22,000 ‘miles, very 2644 W. Huron 8t. | date bungalow a large | Bi front screened po oderh Home including t interest. Immefiate T TON VENICE ‘BLVD. iy Hous — today.| Will trade rey tandem semi- | line, bad ch interior finish, priced; $7 o°7 pain OR’ 53-8644. 7 | - and stairway | ae | excellent 3 seeay eats for $60| 414 per cen LO’ ake. MI 6-1318 haan Car about “this he Balance} F7 tractor & stablished busi-| ern, bir “00 | Trailer clean, $1,550" “@00D ‘ - | Hh, attic with space for | in rear presently ren ach and possession. LAVENDER rice $20,000. Terms, t trailer for small e under Telegraph Rd. 35 4DR. SPEC, BUICK, - dz j | att mg, full base-. |, Garage. Good be OTHY SNYDER | Full p t. Robell Realty, FE 32-7020 Balen, 431 8. rT 35 4DR. kes, running “con em reaes yyhed heat, elec- | | montniy. breakwater. Best pORd REA LTOR TIFUL at 5 per cen Maple. MA/ ness “TEASE IN BAR. FE 5-1751 | rubber, good bra 34658. IRWIN | | - ment with steam rage and | good cement Or wil] trade 140 W. Hur ; BEAU Walled Lake, 1102 W aa 8 p.m., Sat./ KITCHEN FOR terford. L lands = very cheap. Hie Oe weet! Oares bland. | ae Bnd. Meret Ce property Sal Been ine 5508 4-1552. Open daily ‘til 8 p.m., _ 5864 Dixie Hwy., Wa “FT SPECIAL PONTIAC CK ROADMASTER RIVIERA, | lake priviledges on Oa By ‘or a 3 bedroo | Office FE 2-44 105x279, CORNER _& Sun. ‘til 6. PRODUCTS 195] 30 torm’ windows. Like new. | BUICK tires. Phone aR? Ortonville, . ane mare? town: VILLAGE [3 Lots, TON AND WOOD st. ~ SHELL Chief Storm for da ror cash. |" new tire RIVIERA, GI: RESALE intment. SYLVAN ~ MARLING' ACRE NS ON M-59. 15,000 Eta ele hhh | 1951 BUICK SUPER Very - PPO j te d : rick 4 §-2490 111.10 AN 2 BAY BSTATIO lease.| FE 5-998. | - adio, heater, etc, alow with tile bath N, Oaklan ly landscaped FE PRIV- A. w rent and good - Dynaflow, r |.* Sha euvomaue heat Pee neall| Edi. M. Stout, Resi A Narth Off eee felines | belroon tous, seta aye | LOTS or bee karen” Middle ait dah Aiea Vl E500 buys new inventory to open. 23 «FT. AL 1: mA PRAIRIE clean, FE 44627 i entrance with sae screens. This ginaw ‘St. Ph. FE 5-816 13x18 living room, 12x14 & -| |wa}..2 car garage, & screen win-| tlegés d Union Lake. EAS miles from Pon 22 stanc 2-83 DOING SOO Et ye ‘49 ne ir. |sig., -elec- . | EF storm windows oral large rooms.) 77 N.|Sa en eve. til 8:30 a cedrcoms and bath. Qui¢ pits combination an S recreation | Straits a pchmelder. 924 Pontiac room farm home, work land, | PEsTAOR..N” FOR SALE. bed gas stove. ei Bikes N ( ; a Rome io beeciy, A ates poms pO gessibn. Full price =” ee en Celia et er pe re pares me al dairy barn, 150 acres house. ellent business. brakes, Of 71 ate ; —-- | , ilo & milk ho x “ P Trader m+ Sete: ane appron ie devo. Lod | 700. DOWN _ $1,500 down. eertian utinds. Tits tone ee Ants. hone MA bigs 20 acres woods. 8 At only $20,- ce Pontiac’s TO i wide and’ approx. | $ lights venetian blinds. nly 2 years| DAYS LOTS NEAR! gchool bus at door. 8, you PARE rou Pitan ve th “ig extra pro- on thing of value as should see this. ‘S.grm| new nome electric elar : built for the ety pesainle incaeta MACE ony meee Ostel ana aor Om very sake Sere, TON ee Bs reductions on all} win accept any Tilees of of what . -GEORGE R. IRWIN, BROKER |) 54 an eea wail ‘ianeete at sheet. ne Hohe, re convenience.” ‘Can’ be purchased $25 flown also some in North end it today. “POF ne, FINE, GAS | [ectae., rest “Keon, Fdgoa, Aico | GoWR paym on a foaa ae ee, me 269 Baldwin Avenue 4 |} tank an 2 large lots Full With One Ac % $5000 down $25 no Blvd. i ‘ > G uarters good year i Arrow; Richardson. eg aise. rel! Tock, meiuded. d fill bath, ex-| with only MPSON | off Waltoa ‘BREWER : Ej ui MA 6.2686, wan d trailers. Par We SALES _Phone FE §-0101 or price $5 7£0 ‘Two bedrooms an will, really FRED THO! FE 22944 WILLIS M. PE 4-518) D E PARTRIDG , ness take lease. some sea ale 1540 ‘La- MIKE’S AU TO MODERN HOME, eee” Sta loion chk’ oon, 9 Spokane Villa velt Hotel WAR ; 16 ; Bart Wourt end | 1a se North Oakland jAve. ‘ 6 ROOMS, ALL oil heat, hardwo.. Rea y. Golden i ot . Roose} ua EM 9 -4008 : R FE 2-83 per Rd. MY 2-4611,, 701 FE 2-9408 full basement, 2 eames Mp ams alti Pemaerdal ul soil for anv kind ou. Eves | : nzan| REALTO Lake Orion. ate Pontiac | floors, 2 car serage, 2 ye Oost | coaen: Vecant snd coacy tie y h Hom © ituvelm tm COUNTRY NEAR 43 W Huron 8t = ts land on 7 ‘heavens! isc or edealt cd as, 3) Saree Rane ie city on a large DAIRY F. A Lope : 3 BEDROOMS. the | city ore == =. 246 ACRES. e Bis Gif coat Beal | OREN came a vines | | LAND CONTRACTS. cet epee eel | aloe eee Ses pee 6. Milford 4-6571. No c rch. sled _—— ‘ BOUGHT AND Pole Loceted in Drayton (ans | Ss jaad For tnfermetion ae oie hse., gs Lyne a SES eas street, this yr, E 1614. i 18 miles N. -o ie ( H. Basie “rE Onoe || 28 YA, &8 ROOMS | otter: Reasonable discounts, | a paved sud living tm! to | rpabtali a OsMUN. wwe | ase: SP days feat esTaTEe| R CHESTER, MI \ N. Br m from) ; eed rm. @ si i ; a - bac 6 $1,590 cfm comprised of = Ce it Fiery iand scontracts Nh haa “dining bedimis., bath and’ ined ner, | Seis. iam, Paces, new- few. hee -_ FE _ 43505 oe AUTOS sig f farm hom We to be with snack bar. led | 40x120, rsity 1-3284. ee ee ( ’ LIVESTOCK - A | ACRE modern 8 rm. old ther’ ou $2,000 full basement, aded. UNive : 90 ACRES bare, Goops i chicken house, o iis a age , bath, large HOUSEHOLD roma len Gc scae | Fi Ted | OUITE) tee’ sole Dede |e tale Ss id Ow | seer eee peme| BOE “TiS MORTGAGES on Oat handle. le er. j other mod to Cass Lake, . | School bus‘ at door. th of MO son, Only, $1,000 to T| I many 900, $3,900 down. ] waterway 40° for $595, : $15,50. 1 mile north 44% lots | wide, : then 3 miles UL 8. a 2 ACRES Some in 2223/8. AY FE 5.0083 ~ #&AND HARGER CO. Giroux & Hic S suDgON 2 BRADWAY prem Sl W., corner of Groveland and Thay rE ida tabaning te er coor: Total TT ACRE < ROO ie) =| agents ops ayy pa Drayton Plains | WO Orchard Lake Rd. FE2-0600.! er: ‘ | ‘echoo ; | 4300 Dixie ar. price only abso. ip 2 = si "on time. {hom BW an a — OF 3470 | / of L. Templeton Réaltod Befory = p.m. Wesh "Open 8:30 "til 8:30 7 ° | K. L. e€ pa s FE 2-6223 | OR 36449, ; . | LY) 4 | . Fs eee | | | | bat ! : & a | . . 4 t } , [ } j | i 4 | | i | . _ , / | ~ | , | i < f it | r ’ ; - a" Sy Se ee et ee 7 Oe en ee a, . . 3 | See _ SIXTY-TWO 3 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 + | | | | | For Sale Used Cars 55 Sale Used Cars wcencalrel | FINEST _ | BAGAINE | ’49 PACKARD 2.DR, CLIPPER’ Heater, nice clean car, two-tone.| PONTIAC RETAIL | || STORE | “GOODWILL | USED CARS Not a Name but a Policy!’ $200 oo oe easy monthly pay: | ur’ CLEMENS 8ST. hy YOUR USED CAR 'EROM A DEALER | You KNOW. || . '53 PACKARD ~4-DR. CLIPPER miles, currey.t model car as d ayment. If this is the.car you ve been waiting for, don’t hesi-+ ’ tate, come out and drive 52 FORD CUST. 4 DR. With Fordomatic drive radio a heater, low mileage. Your current car down. This car is beautif and priced right. Low monthly payments at bank Fated. ( 1946 AND 1947 _CHEVROLETS ‘SPECIAL! ’51 BEL-AIR CHEV. ‘ Radto-and heater, very low. mi Your..current car down. Piiced | ta sell.-24 easy monthly paymerits at bank rates. i 51 HENRY I : Two-tone paint, heater, seat cav- +, A-l condition. Your 1946 c down. balance at easy bank ratés. - 1948 AND.1949 i CHEVROLETS. 51 CHEV. 2 DR. J “sy Two-tone paint, this is a one- owner car. Priced at only— _ PLYMOUTHS ae : , With % down ‘and balance in 24) | monthly payments at bank rate. ade | '51 DESOTO CL. CPE, intention TIRED OF “LOOKING AT, OLD, WORN-OUT CARS? _ Then Come to the POINTE. 7You'll find good, clean |; cars at low prices and E- Z terms. 50 Ford 8 Cust. 2 Dr. . Radio and heater, spotlite, white- oe tires and overdrive. — ’50 Chev. Bel-Air : Radio and heater, 2 tone beauty. 51 Chev. Cl. Cpe. (Radio and heater, 2 tone green land whitewall tires. | | le 51 Merc. 6 Pass. Cpe.. Radio and heater, overdrive, a black beauty. "46 Mercurv 4 Dr. Has radio and heater and is only $295. POINTE ! MOTOR.SALES 171-8, Saginaw St. Radio and heater, poviabied anit, "48 car down and.balance is eai with 24 monthly payments.. 51 NASH RAMBLER Like new, radio and heater, overdrive If you have a nice old '46 tar to trade—bring it in, we will deal on this car ahd give 24 long months to pay.|. aa * FEW sf | CHEVROLETS PLY MOUTHS 50 STUDE. 4 Radio, heater and ove economical to operate, inside -and out. Only HARD TOPS _ MERCURYS B = Ue parmests CONVERTIBLE: SUBURBANS TION “WAGONS SPECIAL ’48 CADILLAC "48 FORD STAI Radio and heater, g upholstery, good. run les down and ‘easy p CLUB. ‘COUP | Radio and heater, ovbrarive: Me- chanic’s special at only— PONTIA RETAIL | with $100 down and } "46 NASH 4 $100 sows 12 easy payments on mens at Mil Bank Rates! ENE 19 Allowance 150 New Car : | sharp, low. mileage, owner oe The best deal Bargains to , ~ Choose From | 2020 Dixie Hwy. 4-649 FE 2-9878 or FE GET OFF. THE ~ HOOK _jiine. 123 Norton Ave. HEV: Iblack paint job, NO DOW N PA ‘On BA LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES i DODGE—PLYMO M-24 at Buckhorn Lk. $lov. OR 3-153 CHEVIE CPE, “4942; —“eXTRA clean new tires. 875 Scott Lake Road after 5 p. m. er Excellent condition. Mansfield. DAN. PRIVATELY OWNED, EXC. COND PH, FE 5- ANTED OLDER CAR son MY Ai equity or $150 ae or | in os Fleet.ine, take over yme 97 N, Roslyn, off Elizabeth Te, Rd 4 Finance Plan 53 Mercury 53 Willys | "52, 750, 49, 46 Ford 51 Kaiser, hydra, Olds V-8 engine. 51, °48, ’47 Kaiser 51, °49, °48, °47 Chevie 51, 49, ’42 Mercury 750, 49, 748, ’47 Pontiac 51, 49, 48 Studebaker 50, '46 Dodge FCONOMY USED CARS 2B Ane | FE 4-2131 CHEVE., GOOD CONDITION, "best offer. 6201 [Walson Rd, after Pp.m_Clarksto) CHEV. eno SED.,’ CLEAN, ale equipped; also 35 Dodge, | good trans. FE 4-5781 after 5 p.m. CHRYSLER Demonstrator a i} We have sev al low. mileage dem- onstrators“on hand at all times. ate cars carry new car guaran- and can be pong with tremendous saving. | KELLER- KOCH, IXC. . Pea create wits ” DEALER . Woodward, Birmingham MI 6-1200 1953 DESOTO eae hanes ae With your ' present ‘| Let us worry abou savings. Cail Mr. McNellis, MI 47811. W A, Galtrider,, Inc., 912 S Woodward Rirm any younger. Trade i “SAFE BUY” USED \ 52 MiERCURY ish, dio ater, Merco-Matic qi ive, a0 wl '51 FORD CONN. | | Radio, heater, overdrive, ai sidewalls. She's @ beauty. ’50 STUDEBAKE me one you aye been 49 LINCOLN Maroon finish, radio, heater, overdrive. A swell car for th __ 1949 SUPER Radio and heater. A one om Balck finish, Rite and hes '47 HUDSON | Radio and heater with, black new paint and tires. actine “49 TDR a LE EXE. cond, Extra’ clean «$7 . .| We are open from § a. to 9 pom les yea CENTR | LINCOLN- MERCUI MAIN LOT [° 4. | Pike at Cass Soeciall 190 CHEVIE. D one Ph. OR 3-8240, ‘FINANCIAL EMERG! my' beautifyl 1953 my jet black iy _p. m. 144 Summit. ; 1 owner, 2400 mae | 49, MERCURY blue,” oe Cie | aa bank Fates. | ‘MIKE ‘AUTO SALES, - . \ LINCOLN-ME Down Paym 1948 FRAZER 1946 STUDE. FULL PRICE CHEVROLET, 's2, 4 rai wt. and miles, $1,500 -Your Studebaker De 1953 DESOTO DEMONSTRATORS, wer steering, torque converter, &H.. and other extras. Call MI 4- 7811 for particulars. 46. DODGE COUPE | R&H, | 63 8. _Perry. ~, 1950 PLYMOUTH _ SUBURBAN - “$295 The popular all metal ve wagon. One owner Tony 34 actual miles, Has radio and heater Try it out on the road. Brand new DeSoto bie Coupe, four- doer perccce an special pric | DOWN 1951 DODGE FORDOR Coronet, one owner |...... pre 1951 LINCOLN CLUB Coupe. nydrematte, R & x . $460 “11981 PLYMOUTH CLUB Coupe, one owner .......4.. $365 1952 STUDEBAKER é % ton pickup, 6,000 miles .. $345 1952 CHEVROLET 2 DR i. Powerglide, 28,000 miles ..... $395 1951 DESOTO 4 DR. ; ‘ Loaded with extras ...,..... $445 .1982 PLYMOUTH : Club coupe. overdrive .,..... $395 we zUrMouT™ CLUB Hee weewe «4 vail Wee ene $265 1949 PLYMOUTH DELUXE _ 2 door one owner .....,.... $245 1950 DESOTO FO! eens heater ......41.. Verein $325 1948 CHRYSLER +-DF, Many extras ...4,.. A’ Habel OK Used Car. ‘49 Ford. | “My card—you've gpt a tooth that needs filling!” | whee Fale Deed Sere SS 66 S. Perry 1950 DODGE SEDAN» Fully equipped. Brewster green finish and not a mark op it. This car is cne of the nicest/cars in town. See it today. 665. PERRY ‘CENTRAL LINCOLN MERCURY FE 518447 © || DODGE "52 4 DR. SEDAN, R. yo. tinted glass. Like ne ORION MOTOR SALES | M-24 at Buckhorn_Lk. wre DODGE ‘47.2 DR., 2., CLEAN ood nie Heater, spotlight. $395. E 3-754 { i é FORD STATION WAGON . '63' COUNTRY SQUIRE New with full equipment. Includes Fordomatic power steering. R&H, clock, turn signals, Windshield washers Less then’ 1,000 miles. Owner must sell for business rea- sons. Call FE 2-8371. Ext. 24. 1947 FORD TUDOR, 1 oe NER, best offer. 1490 Williams Lk, Rd. EM 3-5121. 5 19§3 FORD, 4-DR., CUSTOMLINE, 8, R&H, overdrive, turn indicators. back-up lights, etc. Changing jobs must sell, 7,500 miles, ell =u handle. MI 4-3747. FORD ‘52 RANCH ~ WAGON, | Tvs overdrive, radio, heater, private owner. Call OA 8- -3113. FORD, 47, CONV., , GOOD COND. OR 3-8608 after 4. FORD °37 85 GOOD D COND. | $100 $100 . or best offer. FE 5-3020. | Rochester Ford Dealer 52 FORD CUSTOMLINE FORDOR $1395 Larry Jerome AIN STREET AT THE BRIDGE Ph. OLive 1-9711 { “FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS A Goon PLACE TO BUY” , OPEN EVENINGS } > e } FORD, 1951 CUSTOM 2-DR. R&H, Fordomatic, leather trim. Fr «- 341 Oo. | FORD | ‘51 | COUNTRY SQUIRE Stat. |Wagon. 12,000 miles. Just like new. R H verdrive. Wohifeil Dee, Engineering, 2274 _ 8. Telegraph. 34 : 53 Ford Convertible Radio and heater, overdrive, white biaghdehed walls, A big savings, don't miss it! Huron Motor Sales 4 “40 FORD 2 DR. SEDAN, CLEAN, good cond. ‘47 Pontiac 2 4 3 Streamliner, good cond, FE 4- esis. FORDOMATIC, 1951, 2 DR. CUB- all extras, low mileage, FE . 9370. ates a FORD, _ 0. COND. ~ CALL als. Baldwin Rd., FORD Mor MODEL A_ Ney ‘GOOD COND || 66 >: Petry |1950 FORD SEDAN Has radio, heatet, and dark green Exceptionally nice and at a new low price. céllent tires. $295 DOWN, Pajance 24 months. 66 S. PERRY CENTRAL ey ae, MERCURY FORD, 1947 2 DR CLEAN, VERY ood cond,, $426. C all after 4, E 50225. { ‘40 FORD, ONE OWNER, LOW mileage. “PE 5-8129 after 4:30. 1951 FORD | |CLEAN & reas. 2-2658. 731 PORD, R. & ‘ii, DIREC. 6 810. Sordemetic, leather trim. 2-3410. | ‘40 HUDSON SUPER 6 FOUR DOOR FULLY EQUIPPED, VERY CLEAN |, SALE PRICED JACOBSON MOTOR SALES Your Hudson Dealer SAW. Pike at Cass FE 2.8350 Peterson. -1952 Henry J 2 Dr. | 1954 Henry J 2 Dr.: 1981 Kaiser 2.Dr. |, 4 Dr. | 1947 ‘e "49 :Praser. | 946, | 1949 Chovesins 1, 3776 AUBURN ve | FE 4-4003 KAISER me 2 PR. , & #H. rE tse OR Fea 3 MEF Peerage yell ite FE ane 66 S. Perry eg Rega ences * 66'S, PERRY CENTRAL. LINCOLN MERCURY : FE 65-8447 NASH '60, 1 Ln BY oRidmN : _ ket top condition, FE -4429. oly Tg ie OO pa *b1 NASH 4 DR. O.D. For Sale Used Cars 55 Holden's Red|'5] Henry | , 2-door, blue., ‘50 Chev. black, Fleetling. Bargain at— ° NOW GIVEN WITH EVERY USED CAR | PURCHASED “COMMUNITY Costd Are Forgotten You Save! ’46 Hudson 4 dr. ; 46 Buick .......0. 7 d4 5 | 48 Chev, Cl. Cpe..... "47 Ford ...,...0008 os |’48 Dodge Cl. Cpe.... ’46 Pontiac , "AT Waiser sbpdeeees in 24 en $29 Larry ‘rome | | 47) FORD , ‘51 NASH , super Sate . 34 Years of Customer Confiderice WORKINGMAN’S | MABEL CHEVROLET S. Saginaw at Cottage PHONE FE 4-4546 50. PRAZER 50. FORD 8 | dr. vevlebolecs ‘46 PACKARD, Clipper, r&h, od.. ™ This 2-door is black antl 52 ao | coupes, all colors. $1245 to $1545] |) Peau cay aces “49 Ply. 449 R & Ho. 50 Gitn GnOotUTUTotT Be PLYNOUTE DEMOS. (2) VE w mileage. New car guarante : Wood ward, Bhan. _ [MI 4-781). W. A. Caltrider. 4 PLYMOUTH aC PANBR GOK, dr. 000, $1295. foul CHEVE. We prey pede ‘ol CH VE. &h, power- 952 W. Huron + FE 2-2641 |, Wess ORION MOTOR SALES DODGE—PLYMOUTH 34 at Buckhorn Lk, MY 2-26 PI yaaa ‘51 STATION WAGOVW. piety. it sharp! Heater & tur glide, 2- Ao paint $1, 2° ‘02 PO! NTIAC *42 Chevie . Will trade. 12 Mariva after 6 p.m. = | ene auieet Clearance SALE Compare and Save 48 BUICK Super, 4 dr., r&h. $795 finish. This car will surprise you. |; | No. 191 50 PLYMOUTH 4 DR Good Selactibn of | SOC Used Trucks GM AG Terms \ All Cars Gu: aranteed COMMUNITY nnn No. ‘195 i 7 FORD SUPER DEL. ny No. 192 ’48 BUICK TUDOR be No.201 46 OLDS CL. CPE. Open. mary bight | ‘ Mai | O12: "wo, 23 a 47. BUICK 4 DR. '47_NASH mappesipon FE 5-0079. | No. 190 ''49 FORD 8 CUSTOM 152 CHEV. DEL, 2.DR. $1345. = 48 BUICK CONV. N ASH Custom Ambassador onditioned air ‘heater seat cIBALL| YOUR R NASH DEA * OPEN ee Y3 DOWN—WE TRADE | No Payments Until October 27th \ 210 Orchard Lake Ave. | ; PLYMOUTH “4 DR. Pr i-soor > AL, OWNER. R, & H. PROV- || “1’50 Mercury 2 dr. JE] 6-37 . Used oe ——_ | Sale Used Cars 85 RIEMENSCHNEIDER’S ; QUALITY USED CARS 47 Ford 2 dr. New motor, new 48 Dorige 4 dr. ‘47 Pontiac coupe SE? 6 ollcoonocdtnonnontian 395 22: -DEPEN DABLE USED TRUCKS ‘47 Ronee 1 ton pickup dev cei §398 ‘Dod ge; D4 ton CBC beeen, 95 $1) Ford 2| wa ve Ain 6 aie 1145 "49 Dodge 172” WB. ......... 895 2 '50 Dodge. 4 ten pickups .... 675 ‘60 Dodge 1 ton “Stake with qual, Wheels — boeR ben ane nod ve 745 AIEMENSCHNEIDER | | - BROS, _| Dodge 4 Plymouth: Dealer | 232) 8. Saginaw St. __ FE 2-9131 PONTIAC,’ '53, 4 DR., HYDRA- Matic Chieftain dix., ‘low miles, r cessories. Gd co WARNING Itis going to be a long cold winter. Don’t get. caught with a cold natured au- apmobile. See these hot specials now, | 1952 MERCURY mai with extras | 1951 MERCURY Radio, heater; directional signals. Aj real sharp car, 1951 BUICK SPECIAL. Redio and. Remier. Clean inside and out. 1951 FORD V-8 Hydramatic dtive, radio, and heater. 1950 PLYMOU TH Radio, heater, A real ‘clean car with plenty of miles, left. 1048 Ol. DS, “66” Radjo heater, white sidewalls. This | cay is Immaculate. SEE ~PHIL C ENTRAL | LINCOLN-MERCURY BALDWIN AVE. LOT ' FE 4-7816 South of Fisher, Body _ ' ’49 PONTIAC atid ooh 8B sedan ~dlx. ~Radio. eB SELL, OR TRADE West. Side, ide Used Cars easonable discount. MY 2-3551.5 ; PONTIAC ST) 4° 1 peOME, AC- n |) sb" 50) Pont. Cpe. -V ery Nice - | 4 + $82 a a Radio. heater, white sidewalls, back- |. up.lights, and directional signals. | 50 NASH ST ATESMAN = 749 [Baldwin Ave.~- | One Block ater, Aydramatic Bargain fe ced. Severa) others to choose 923 W. Hurof __FE 42185 | TRADE - FOR LESS. ) 153 Buick Riv, pe. , 4 dr. ~ *$0 Olds 2 ‘dr. , 60 Buick spe 2 dr, '90 Ford conv, ¢pe. "49 Forl 2 dr. } | "48 Cheve, 4 dr. ’A7 Cheve. 4 dr _ Anderson Pontiac-Buick — h, Collect, Uti¢a 3001 41 PONTIAC 8, “GOOD COND. RONT IAS 49,2 DR.; DELUXE, R&H, $750 ‘FE 56505. “1950 CATALINA . HY DRAMATIC, | new rubber, .ow mi, one owner. 57) Florence. St. PONTIAC, 1952,|4-DR. CHIEFTAIN | Hydr., R&H & other acces- sou Low mileage. FE 4-8647. 17551 Auburn, Utig¢a, Mich.) | P | eae R&H., MI 4-5013 after ’ Bright: Spot | ‘Orchard Lake at Cass 52 Pontiac Catalina 52 Olds super 88 2 dr. 51 Buick super 4/dr. 51 Olds jsuper 88/2 dr. 51 Olds 88 4 dr.’ }. 51 Ford 6 custom 2 dr, ’51 Pontiac Chief, 2 Ar. \ 51 Buick Kos 4dr.” 51 Ford Victoria ’50 Ford custom § 2 dr. ° 50 Chevrole 4 dr. sed. 50, Olds fdr.) 4 dr. 50 Olds: ’50 Olds 88 2 dr. ’49 Nash 600 4 dr. "49 Mercury 2 dr., ’50 Olds | ' dr): 1’49 Plymouth 4 dr, |°49-Ford 8 sedan | '49 Kaiser 4 dr, - | ’48 Buick super 4 dr.- “48 Buick sedanette ’47 Plymouth 4 dr, sedan ’47 Pontiac 8 4 dr| ’4Z Olds club sedan’ | 47 Mercury 4 dr, ’47 Chevrolet club: coupe ’46 Olds 4 dr. sedan: 41Ford 2dr | 1 40 Ford 8 c upe Buy Now at Oe New| Low Prices ME ate can . Saginaw FE CING New Cars— Phone —— ; PONTIAC ‘49, 6, 2 DR. cond,’ 413) Bros 17 52 Ford 8 Customline 4 ar} ’52 Pontiac Chief./4 dr. sed. 51 Dodge Meadaw. 4 dr.}’ ’51 Buick Roadmaster 4 dr, | #9 | Sale Used Core 58 EARL R, » MILLIMAN | A FORD DEALER OVER 31. YEARS REMEMBER W arranty | & | Prices | ‘Slashed! Out They - Gol | Dealery | Welcome ‘51 Ford 8 Cyl. 2 Dr. $870 | 51 Ford 6 Cy | 2 Door Ci ston 8775 49 Plym. Door 4 i -*50-Ford Door $750 32 Ford 8 Cyl, 12 Dr, ' $1295 “150 Ford “6!” Deluxe 148 DeSoto ust.[4 r ’ —_tA____— tA! OD ) Open From 8 a. m. -9 p.m. HON; FE 5-4101—After| 6 FE_ 5-3488 "52 PONTIAC, 4 DOOR, x DRA., _2 tone “blue, ; ephone — Rom rTiAG 3 LL | two tone blue. _FE 4- 3193 after 4. | 41 PONTIAC” —.| EXC.” COND., good ires, he Adams Rd. _ $175. F eee || 49 PONTIAC. 8. 4 DR. CHIE AIN, a & H, nydramatie, turn ignals, . $845. MI 4-5309. an “PONTIAC 2 2 DOOR, gee: heater, FE 2-1398, after 4. | $1 PONTIAC. peer 2 DOOR, are, many extras. Ph. FE 2- 7124," after ’ pom. one owner, - __ FE 2-1645. I{ 1 Ford Cpe. Ourcgsive RAS, 48 PONTIAC, 4 & H, __Wil trade, 180° rutten. st -CLEAN One’ cae PON’ TA FOUR DOOR SE C HYDRAMATIC ANSMISSION Radi -heater White wall ties chrome discs Two-tone | paint | Low mileage | W € Trade KIMBA LL YOUR. N "ASH. DEALER 8. Saginaw PE 4-1545 4 OPEN N IGHTS PONTIAC 1952, '39 PONTIAC, 7 ‘MOTOR, GAL between | &T7 _T p.m PONTIAC _-753 P neeekte Dl “DE luxe 4 dr: Hydro.,| power steering, ete. 3800 riles. Sharp. Will trade. OR 3-2940, 51 PONTIAC, DLX) i 18,000 “MILES, ' excellent ee FE 2. standard shift, most acces ait 2-7458 Beverly. “TONE ¢ GREEN. Hydramatic. re extras, | an E, | 1948 Nash, 4 dr. CLEAN. Mway, FE|C ~ GOOD USED CARS REDUCED IN PRICE FOR FALL & WEIN tee DRIVING - overdrive. Good tires & mechani- ca'l” sound. Selling for $ 1950 Chrysit. Winosor dr. Black | finish, R&H & auto transm sion. . Clean & runs; like a new) car. See & dri thin i | Selling for $1195, | 1952 Piy mouth Cranbrook é-dr. |-° Light’ green finish, Has R&H, also. seat covers This car is clean & ready to drive Sell for $1295. 1947 Dodge cib. cpe. biack has R&.{ v'us a potlight. This | car had a new Demian ee installed | ct year for $305, | fer, Barat Baratoga clb. cpe. as nex lett sone ior 78 Clean ia & out, Salk "RAK & ayer én Aten agg oo Ce MOTOR SALES ‘CHRYSLER — PLYM UTH Mich. REPOSSESSIONS Sold for Balance Due For Sale Used Cars 55 PONTIAC |'48 2 DR. 6, R & H, $475. FE} 4-2882. All Our Used Cars Carry | STSDEBARER (61 CONVER?., % © a L6- Month or 6,000- Mile|. ck rl od ‘white wall tires. "Going cheap LARB ORION MOTOR SAI SALES DODGE— ae M-24 at Buckhorn MY 2-2611 Sree 1949), WuLLYS 1 SATION "WAGON 4560 Elizabeth Lake Road, |For! Sale Trucks 56 ont. | DELIVERY Very Clean & Neat ' ag ‘46 Int'l Newly painted, many miles left in this one, 279 | Take cut choice of Amer- ica’s Choice. Our selec- tion is, big, but money Alifference is small. THE THRIFTY | TRUCKERS ~ LOT | Ss. Sagin; w at Cottage BHONE FE 4- Aaa 1951 ‘CHEVROLET TR ACTOR "$638: hash K-7 international $155; ‘air on both; model 13, Cleroc doser $125; ti 1-7115. : | STUDE. ‘46 STAKE CHEAP! OR “11956 CHEVROLET % TON PICKUP. ‘A-1 /40 FORD DUMP Fh RE 2-5033 Larry Jerome - Rocheste r Ford Deale PICKUPS. fl \ i 1947 FORD, 1 ‘TON, 8 CYL., 4 SPD | TRANS, ......... $545 *|194i GMC FLAT RACK i TON good - BONTIACS '81 AND ba! FE 4-2070. 2 F 6 FORD DUME, 36 YD, ExG. € | $378, oe a is] bal S32 °o 3 Be 5. new brakes, aan 3-4348. A-l Truck Buys | Ford Panel , $195 48 Ford Ly -toh Pickup — Full Price $595 2 | *50 Chevrolet | 7 ¥4-ton Panel @ $275 Dn, BARLR: / s,.,|MILLIMAN Dix. cad, LI’ 1-1500 Eves. FE | j | : ' Poe th BE: | af = | ie ' peak i L \ | i ‘ 1 | i f a om 1 4 ' 1 |i | | } | |* For Sale T cks 80 MODI THE PONTI i | || | | | \ 5 i / y i EST MAIDENS NTIAC PRESS TH | | | oid | | / By f 5 B J ’ URSDAY, | ie ae bs | y Jay Alan | Sale H SEPTEMB | Sacra a {ICHIG AN'S : ousehold | Goods 66 i ER 1h 1953 | iit. | 1: | | »D : sy Sale Miscell | care | : FINES “Sale Miscellaneous 68 Sale Miscellaneous 48 | _ Sale Mscetlan tN ~ 7 A ' na saaaaaaanagaannnaaa ~ - HST USED TRADE-IN | “son naniert - | 4s 'Miscellasicous: 68 _ SIXTY-THREE &B R A INS ce sprin DEPT. Steel” ‘new ine o Crercars! i MYERS PU CYCLON Far m Pr uCe | 7A | For $ ; | A G L Coe oat “Beater ES eeebees tee sene e698 Steel Co. 138 vapiaes Wh (ceroes Deep and shallow ee || | Materials noe FENCE | BARTLETT 6 1A} For Sale Livestock 73 | bHer ti .. 4. across complete ot ‘2 < an | Rocker clo ledicrscen “$895 | et? wie ee & ere Younguown bi $0 fp. | terme Free entimatel. Fit 434. ‘Boua 24éo #80 you Ee FOR SALE 3 P| 50 Chev. S d ‘ ROGESE so onetncepipejiececes gate eat ery Aa |" | pixecuer -enpata GO Ob “i youpens m, Carl | mede gratie for any om RIDING © . | Mew Gee e ' Delivery Derenpors & a 50 CLOTHES POSTS KELLYS # HA ARD | __cond., $30. FE 6002: GooD, Pans, a 2 _FE 2 : or any one to ride. L4 | Fr raat ve good thre piece dining room suite’... $39.50 R WAR’ FLOOR 8A | oe ou pik 6 BU | REG. O% , \, Onl 3 8 pe! difing rm. suith ....... $49.50) C 3904 “Auburn el FUR Lone Pine F RAM, SALE | a dow nly S745 suite ...... $49.50 OMBINATION .’DOO | Auburn “Geighte, reel rent. Os! willpaper”bteamers for ROUGH pie ea [ot Miaaievets | xoreta i peyments. La imei at) Od cota N ten BER STEMS PICKETS RS| CEMENT BLOCKS] |* Pies dana Fuel ahd Paint, 496| tame Lake 5, Soe PER BU. | dredhen. 4 EIFER, READY TO | | | | | , THOMAS fant OMY PLY emediately deliv KS 3 PICNIC rien 9 a jams Lake Rds. OR 3-8211. Wie | ole. 1¢"Mile Rd. MA 7 | - | Be ECONOMY 'WOOD Ph aiglivered 94. she She: : sheen: FE 45085. Fo R SALE agen ORCHARD — BART: Want , | : a; Chevifolet | URNITURE co, | M. A. Benso aE ses ham ieee trage door, PE OVERHEAD Oa: | Pract ; sprayed 6230 Orchard [PT Livestock | 74. g-ton Pi ——+__1_8._BAGINAW | LS) DO YOUR FOLDING KC E 3-531 |after 4 p.m. rms 3 ARE ROCK signin lin ipa ks preety amend ty ie a ubrOhaee Tv —| Bantu saa con | Gaetee scene | Sate SED, cE | Seca RE weet ete rot ar | eee A if led! | * iter beers ae ae cay and in nce CH OME cabs c | Ore ETS IN BEAUTIFUL ec ve Montcaim Cutide 7 = i ee eX STRAW 30 eee ‘ POE Jar ; z $22.50: HAIRS, | | “blue and je several Montea STOKER * : me ge bony BIN FIELD. rses Ph. VES, LIVE 2 aia Full | Brice diging set, 8 $01 & chair, $22.50:| lavatory wht el A Bathtubs, ice | athe ity 2-620 crime | trols, Axl SCHW ABS ALL con. liT Ha Ge ane _MApie &-6731, $1 env Sie" er” tae, | Seen Soe tts | bee naarare eter rae | aa eS aes | nom | eee ‘ A hg 10.50; | alue, ’ 3 ea : .m. : <1 . 51 Kor iu | ; BRE hiriare 3 Auburn, eed ert rel Blightly ledowy | eal ofl RIG. | Srov es, alesse OIL DRUMS. 31 8S i save 2209 Indian- | WTD. CPpSTOM CORN ~ ord Y-tor Picku ANTI Orchard Lk. 4 “i Tinpesscent. Sat ae oe Heating & A were, 2 adway, Lake Orign UTH A. oo MA 5-3502 _ PICKING | _ New paint. © real good ext pricea. ay Le REASONABLY | —°'*** eat eee ing’ Co. 460 West Hu een es oe a ey ace NEW BAY, C pam - ey ry { Py) i? % J 5 Full Price NEW BEIGE TWEED ALL SIZE Gis @ ELEGTRIC ~ Ere ie nase PARTI. rue awale level, bushel basket. | OATS, Gb yg Algal 1% down o 2 plec D, , RA heat and 8 & ELEGTRIC ons ‘tile availab ATi:| eRe owe oonthinars adults et. | OATS, _MA 5-3502 | | months at bank 7 cig uae 28 H4bss after 44 suite. | peta ules fence ol fore || S08 focker room’ partt uns enai ce Giddings Ra’) ele. Binds Td crea Cal Maple bass HEA | | CA8H FOR Raced sod for Farabons care M. ft w6's & axe, | PT partitions. |e aromn bine HO Ter 5} see, _ 1. Clark- aw u 8, 5 a, | Price, picku Reas. TOES, peat 7 ie 1 " tools. Phone aon | aie | baretere Bad: parts for of] Gorn. En Krotty pine paneling rer Gonstruetion | dejiver. ea pil also pep’ mor) TO 62.00 BU.; | 1-900 ‘BALES 1 a ae 51 Chevrolet MAPLE FINISHED BED, SPRINGS| ee fittings tralia not plates || tnt ete “in Sic tena n 0.) Pontise Rd.) Gigs fieiod bbe anh oe awit deliver. nats ae s : mattress, INGS| ers and cab- | three wit ecr : BENDIX de rar U FOR. } ae aL - y ie ee a Rogine. ORERAL, REECE coud, FETT: | qggocinted, With rater . * STACKETTS ° | laure WASHER, Wt 5,,00UF | edith olts's Orch NING “EAT: | COR “CLEAN WHEAT STRAW 40 i ane a | ge ator, ex EFRIGER-| With’, ie BURR WIT -9957 __ South of Auburn. 1, 2-3 td. €| al ,, © | Fife sliver io 4 ai TABLETOP OAS MI 48849, | Open ven: 8. ee Building: Supplies | ‘ft tel eve. “antnua’ eubiy bos on | HOME aes Come For) ar oniere Feet aie he Ready terete ros, tanks. AS STOVE, enings (& Sundays P.M. | 7 Oa Clarksten | _esies. cubter, #35. MI! OT ge Masset. 2 or Ta nares WHEAT] GROWN | a 3895 Fi | |2 DR. BLOND a sat d LES, BARTL 1) Phen peas. "Oe eau | i ABI LOCHINV Prune ETT P vor 688 | Your old truck rice | } | _OR & “BIOND CABINET MAGNO: Anch : Water TAR OF BURNER & | STOP LOOK? f Paras plums. xi LETT PEARS. Sal Far : : 03 months on ane Usedoy te a4 fe os | WEw FUR ve E on ence | FE i rope ‘ pr. of ioral af ! For sale: Pile of bal NG APPLES — peclins sy an . Equipment 76 . ; rected by f 5-8333. or: dral 3 || sisting of umber, con bush POTATOES, eee — ay aA | | W FURNIT Erected by factory trained men.| | / sisting of 2x4. 2x8, & 1b 1 | Beene eee tes ce 4 = ; MIC nine ‘ = | LAA |=| N | BARGA URE _ : PE 5-496: tre meney down. Cali | -‘TRENCHING a we H. P. Sutton, Ph re Reese — Baldwin north of Glare Finigehey . USED HIGAN’S * Via TatT i ‘a | | Hol AINS” bi estimates. Footings & ° p RM. OIL HEATER. [EXC BARTLETT” P - M ACHINERY ' PINEST : T ch fib ‘ [8 eat Neches eye fraines. $8.95; STEAM Bi , field tile FE $-8921. || eas. FE 2-6075. » SORE) arte ee hel \ THE a | di my folks] weren't so ee | Sere ali et Sic ee a ie VERE CoRR — | Wea type. burt COMPLETE Wit H MAHOGANY DINING ROOW iS.” Bereshi MC.CORMICK, DEERIN bob Oe ree CONVER OF vorced like hers sq I could travel ail hioned and were | ished mactceapad, 910.06; Yat | 300) 8, Paddock PE | an" piphne. Mae edit anion tae | folls: combination ch player with ake city ‘of St. Joseph Hosp.) TRIBUTOR & CUTTER. Ise WOODWARD AND 1 oF visiting, th — ve over the bed ed drop-leaf | table + Unfin- SF 2-784 |. ©2.,10497 H quipment | 22" furt nation cAbinet io: TT PEARS, GRE INCL BLOWER PIPE wi ‘MILE then.” I | . er the country] $395: ‘m ables, $i0.95;| New 7 | 3-48 iehignd Ra, Cal | urnace grate radio: | gage plums, . GREEN UDED. PR PPR i FORD 52 F re 8 pote i = : a untry . $895 reid Aerie chests, Lage ap unit . b 7 32 from 8 to 4:30. 1) EM a an St. FE ati. . Seems at: 4. yuk. oice’s Orenare gg ap hie MC CORMICK : wie 9 N. Pa ock ; oa | f springs, arte 95: nrYaple b co , vathra | teereees $22.95 +. {EAT YOUR HOME ~ ae FE 2-1898 er- exe Rd. 2 “left off ooley BINDER DEERING CORN Motor Scodters | 88) For Sale Clothir {| 64 - : ie ‘san beds, one, pede, yt cn sets, coer: w- Economically with H 4 roa oT AIR FURNACE. 852 MEL- c ake Ra, FE 54092, Eliz, VATO! : WITH WAGON ELE- - AAA 58 | os eindindicasons LI NPet Sale Househol alte a vie. Rank waruesre. for, the auto. h ¥ guatanteed 30 ital | fully auto. furn. & heate Liftle | RECON: Leh CIDER ~~ | BOT fi NEW -& naw | MOU, Sale Household Good ne rniture. 13 ot wate gal. one that li ters. ‘The NVERSION H_ MACHIN i hl PR, CUSHMAN SCOOT ee Nar, LDTONE | 13. CU. joods 66] srecrnic HA rE «isa, ue New interior | ter heaters. $65! fire” Foo ighte iteelf & burns he | “in good cond... OAs BORNE ple lt call, will deliver. 104 yeu ON AND BOTH GUA new | \ addock| FE 4- -| wd spring coaf, 2! FT. 1952 ie ALON |) ggg FESO e. Floor rid bebe Biot ‘CIRCULA rshail. FE 41071, M ANTEED, GUAR- | 43° CUSHM _FE 4-4246. ress: All ‘Size 1 . 2! skirts vinator { MODEL KEL- piece Ratta DRYER, | 3 Wl Une $7 to 3g}, Dem furnaces & 5 TOR . all r, Green. | f ; —~aodp | __ VE 3-7842. 8 exc. ‘cond ood ane FE tab] n_ set,, wrought | 8 plumbing & onstratiors. dail ctajty. |) cond. 9446 . GOOD APPLES: Mel { : \ f a. uerrimaeeer. COND., 90. $295. 4-6042. @ fect chairs, bt: eon Were ney builders |, Sllowance f y. $20-to p40 | 34837. ey Hake Ra Ww NTOBH, | WEAL BI ° _ S. Merrimatset. FI 5-4667, | STARK jig saw, home fF sell fo ‘ey and used N e for your old | i“ - eM olf River. Pe one -ACKETT, | 62. CUSHMAN 08), FALL GOAT, | ; “sectional 1 raft r less. led We|| “Suchen doe heafer.| PA SY | 2773 ches potatoe INC. ( MO’ |. |, coat, $10: $10; BERCK E : —+-{ pom & im eather daven- | HOLL i PETR edna eat Poem 6 STEM, ‘ ts , s.| YOUR| i just, overhauled )R SCOOTER, | 5 $10; new fall codt, Mayt » | ae aho any bedro INGSHEAD V, A O HEAT SERVI . IKE NEW, RE Auburn Hgts. sachet | DEALE i excel , yarmatiag tran, pring coats, $10 $50; 2. ytag “Dute Ser”? in beds). MI 4 om] set| = miles « ARIETY STO. ssociated With CE CO. . REAS. 5 R i lent cond. $490, OA a | cape, $50, FE falta Seam ink ran h Oven” gas GOOD’ RUNNING sate | :floor yee ald win. rx STORE || 60 8 we raller Exchapge coat SPOR NACE, : al For al 2. Dixi Higivay rw ' : i :| GENUINE CAME ge with deep. well>2|. tor, Coldspot, $60. REFRIGERA- | Paints. We ing and Mac-O-Lac Open Evenings aba Paes _Reas. FE 71-0786 COMPLETE. e Pets FIC | sexe sicdoaaie aterford = For Sale Moto (Hickey-Freer L's HatrR coat! years old; , $20, 2866 Oran 2 whee! trailer | REV-MAE self’ tor less. MEDICINE : poner PM. | 1026 McCORMICK Literal at RAR lotorcycles 59| Jacket, tuxedo, all ae e dinner | ee ; excellent cane! Lake. ge Grove, Willlams|| with ASONRY ICOATING MADE gee with nen Are |} Sand ; ; BIRD DOG ‘PUP rubber, godd con Rt CTOR ON es HALEY Us Er essonabl Priced” nrolled Field e. Litter ulated. Bot! e, 10x24. Brida RNS] i oy bee! | POE TE a ab bee LINOLEUM, 9312, ($395| am ae ge ‘es tar, 805 | tar rat, rapa] oe Satack. pimr.| Bact Sci Wt tay, eas | Le kes tas el ; it gel for L. INA | ., 84:95 3 Y very || reverse — with| — ~~. lirt. Chap. FE 2- . A tiful Evening: ence, new! $20 = Fa INDIAN WARRIOR 5 MDTOR:| Gicce ‘size 'i4 100, FE spate “JACK's COT gt roe mote - 60 SQ J” ¥Ds. ROSE GAR- | iy eer Swe caren = tee Shredded Peat Hur 2-2650,| DUPE, PEP eh oe ‘ney be 01 iri ei — cohd. 240 Going. ‘s/| WINT BURNER LA wide. $50. used, rotari a= yew umu Now bite years old.) U§ TT For Sal CE oe: | skirt ER CLOTHE Dav GAS RANGE! rigugis. FE 5-6047, 143 ES i | Millers G es and reel dtpe.| ere 8 Fe § Haw We. Bre. oF Sok eet USED oa Petes Bic) ycles BETis| [eoeta, ete! Bike {2 a, | Davenport chair bl $30. |'s prede | 1593 8. arden &?Lawn Equi °: | BEST s,, $12), PE 7-045| all evenings or Sa irday, them |., BARGAI soa Re cles S9A size JK. Alsg portable iB. oat |. Dresser. $5., Blue Sr oe wate ee “BUITE, | 14 Mile Ran eicrhingh (north of | | gravel path till TOP sor. ‘BAND, day. Mi. 8, Chariton. 254 » Sune CASE CORN, BIN NS > | el ENGUI E18 BICYCLE. 3 | Musi i fon 50 Northview LoL 4-8543. e new, $50.|| Rock ae $1 pilbunay: | wyatavle 4-6009. Tine gle el __2-0557 Ww. Kelty. FE refed fe mile north of | CASE BILO Erro Pa ce | j : : 41173, . usical . | | else les REF rock,: $1. 307 + 4x8 sheet {| _fivailable. We take t oa TOP SOIL, Sane eee re -C REG, BEA EHL SILO F! i i | 36" BAAR ARR ‘ 2 | BOY'S, 46" BIKE, GOOD COND. Kc pstractign, 3) SHOP SUBURBAN |_ S00." ihe ae hundred Nook cep SiMeae groan trade-ins | | Fats-oszt 1 BOR rare | y sremele. Richa, MAUE S| Pore si) FILER . a | -4443. 2 ) { = . n- |! n a _S* b, : . el- 4 H | GIRL’S 26 IN. bcelw oo SCORDION LESSONB, YouR| Wb , & SAVED | % SIZE MATTR || 4 BURNER 5 Bj Saree FE 4-2623,| =< 0°™: $100 ee Mt, tank. Brpbd | ‘ake REGIST am ERS | WAGON ESTERS, BLOW- soe cond. FE 44 EN "BIKE. | sale and ee Accor our here 3 yous 20) dollars have tore sens Herel full ‘size RESS & SPRINGS, orent. deuniete ashes. DOUBLE |, CHROME , DINETTE penne | TOP SOIL goons boxer, GISTERED | FAWN MALE CASE.’ COMBINES. IDEAL FO "3 26 IN. B 3-8266) , Red B SALES CO. The £ mattress, FE 5-158 springs| Clock, $295. y rs, tinfer, light, || semble these y s, ‘As.|° Load. or delive MIX DIRT.|..0!4. FE 4-8790. i months |2 R¢ CLOVER SEED _ R | bier. $13. FE vse RAM- anole Musica) Oy Mus ; arn, yas Auburn Rd Big Mansfield, 2. 639 East $165. Als lue, terrific “wall ; 4 chairs’ & ourself, and. s@vé 4:30 dail red. HE 23-0412, 8 to GR : fend ° 2 OLIVE ! ‘ | Pah h ted ts -9055 ial odds ¢ 65 east of Auburn Hei 1 mile | g. Tek ain Oo several excepti ue, $39.95. table, $69.95 ve. 130 daily. FE 40959. EAT DANE |P NEW EA ROW et PICKE {| “hs 2 La +, free parki n Heights. 2 acres of Bale H_H Goods ti) Saree ia aps) ite ptional bar. || These are b vajue,| TOP SOIL, PR reg., ¢h UPPIES, AKC |? ROW 1 ROW tot to ne Lan ng. 9 of Fr WA | slightly er ages Where Gre ee ice tand hew 4953 IL, PROMPT DELIVERY. Champion |sired. M W) POTATO D | Boats & A | TREMENDO DOUS SAVINIGB | ON NEW AND | SHING MACHINE) °°] luo eat podrred. Mich reT\ular col ous make All __ PE 17-7271 after 4” ¥. | WTD. BR 14-1560. | 9,7 SRAUONG. Ee ee Beatie eioe’ cathe 6 | Spinet|plano's ret eNDOUS SAVING | ON Beds of cil cite antl cere) FE 2.5832 | Ave Seen’ Veranaca’ vane lt oe ors. Come in, iook, epm- any i) 7 | old. FE rANY SPANIEL, 1 YR. | OG ASE, | tgsories 60) Gate i ate F Pe urned ffom)|Mich- Lamps, tab} and sizes WARD'S SUPRE | te. Open ta | "gam. rd Lage || Eeaarai be convinced of bead TO SOIL REG. BR i R. PLOWS) {ELD. TILLER EVINRUDE 7}; aii Gains her's, PE | Shins Deh yucael ed | ._ stove, RF ME 407 raaall C & Closed Sat. inary bargains, M se]. ‘Sand | MES. BRL TINE Gs "ARROWS. DI 9 H.P\.| USED , PE| ty osets 3 years old. FE 2 H LI M | Fiucreseatt, 393 gains. Michigan , gravel, fill dirt : E 4-9262. PANIEL PUP Ho} h SCS& sons, #425 cash. MAyf 2 SEA- epee vOE - z Bets and’ tadios W s 4 I! Ope BER CO. |! Open to & Orchard Lk. @ve,| ROAD GR . FE 42980. 8. ug ten & Son, I jo PT~ METAL_R yiair 4.2939. =AuTI oh pen a iehe eine nlite a AYNE GABER is from 8 fil 7 Mon, .m.'Closed sat, |] |] gravel, AVEL, DRIVEWAY Srp TAN_HUSKIES, YOUR AUTHOR ne. } OWBOAT; M. cas Louis XVf" m: Ranges, ca my 4 “Bat. open thru. Fri. (OPEN 8 + cement, gravel. ¥| femple. 3 MALE AND SAL IZED J. 1c good duck boat; $40 | MAKE) <3. ad exc. care‘in mahog. Heatin s and electric FLOOR SAMPLE | | Sun : One from 8 til § A.M. TO 8 p Ml: FE 4-3263. Tann el, fill sand.| old yrs. old also 10 at Cc ES| AND SERVI ASE ié FT. 7 Ait . OR 3-7292. ome. Space re musician's g stoves and oil LE SALE Af: holds from 10 ‘til 3 | eT ~ A 2 yps ' er Sand Gravel. uskiespup. All r Swks, |2t Costs Less to Fa CE 3,- organ, quired | for ers space beat. Duotherm of) ays. open f JNDAY 1 BLACK DIRT. __ Lake. MA 4- eas. Walled h. .OLiv tm with C: . "$238, FE 2-0028 OOD COND iene Marenea [oe Chrome ,4 Heater New f Except Faste rom 10 ‘til O~LO 3 _ Peat T TOP 80 1487 e 19761 Ph ane : : +» | GOOD inette penple, Reg « loor r | Thank 3}| . {_or manure. IL, | PARAKEETS, - 12H. P, . Romeo 25: é F D LATE: "| Chest gets g °$13995, Heats 5 and sgiving, Xmas FE 17-7224. j ETS, $4 mele GARI Sean 22 _ ORD, ROS PPO gene, roy ame propo a | Et any ee nie Wee ake IS jg UME PamAREETR tbe DEE | Tate cle : =k ro | 10+ r a= ap = = : sonable, 1 so | Storkli s, wate Ee Pee Cu eae Fe. 1 mparp: | Dining room sultes, ete, #290:95 cena of selourplus L | . STATE TESTED MY 266 ne eee Wwagoe cer a MOCENOINE REPAIRS SNARE ROM AE pip: | ON bow Got AND enor, | Ni, Se taal ey ea ScD 4x8 SHEET ROCK [aitsencs, ererar biter TP MAR Og COR) MAE |” ae Ma scale | RINE SALES | OR 3-1494 STAND. | ALES CO. } 95 ‘Toastmaster $249 & M ais - @7 38 a “sands, le Se (26765. SEARS ROEBU 422° 8. TELE SERVICE) UPRIG , |COMPLETE BE \ with” E 17-0783 |. 3 way 50-60-80 ‘water jheater, | ‘ aterial Sales C ! S135 PER SHEE gravel, block dirt, HOUNDS FOR SALE: 2 RABBIT & acai for} sale CK _HAM- Li? MAKINE SALE GRAPH GHT CONCERT in th D WITH pRaws . °68 95 0 al. cap 41 NEW & oO | mh ‘Litleym AEN 1 coon. 2 9 RabBIT & | —*:?6 - A-l ghape. MA ) S| & SERVICE, piano action r RT| GRAND 1 @ end. yea matt Weg ew Crosley'elec ran #146, 2x4 USED LUMBER 1x6, 1 , 2 au pe Ie 4-7 + #00, W, | Wilson : E | TELEGRAPH | suitable ecently~rebhilt, M Clement. OR 8382. ress. 7260 ully auto. dix ge. 4 x8 studs. 58c each. Seer | x10, 1x12 — G : : | A RMALE TR. x Ler nec fara ost Sentine. ' 1 1x4 m & iw. P RAVEL, , & ACTOR. F-20, PLOW [SAR my icil that f | iE | 2 Seeaper Pos a pester clear re Vslinahiye | we Gan en ee ipicture| lee sheathing, pring. good quailty 2x6 “NO. PER i a aack ope SE aI fr P) Se village). ‘a _ Dre Of Airport afi cigs Hackett ‘ at tf « —yo a 89 e. 8 t 5 | R TLL = Z afte : Sramees I Terie planning abricat. be | baer Sa berg. 52 Williams. FE Bb oess mal Up to others ta choose thom* | aués. WHITE, cee Uy used ansho ll’ ona oe thes 4 ‘| soil, sand cad DIRT, TOP eel BOLENS GARDEN a a . FE 2.2625. erms very reasonable. 5 FE: e metal. $15 Pare tee BOTTLED” are . am 121 N ® cdawier us pay mao. 8 to 533 Pidieoe. ann, A PT. an ner thousand cal al 18° ot FE 3-9575) ree Carel Goy- | -—-- cc R PUPPIES | hon ban 5 ood Seger tracto MERCURY MOTORS,| ELMER BUNDY THUMI size ony Pure g 8 HOT | LARGE SIZE NESCO Hi t-4ise)| 5240 Bighiand (i 5h) OR Bon oulsite' Boy dell doors $9.95 Tompt, delivery, on | sand. GPEEIAL | IP 6507 Dixie fiwy. Mapien cacot els now available Most ; Pe asen case, mutes tielaged lors w ale. ital Co. yout oie 978 dishes & a || ‘hart vi ON EEE | y ell Paints, $3.95 2 pe ‘Black| and ‘ee ta Baby parakeet ae AL WHEAT PL ieniNG Tite elivery. Terms) _ immediate a ! 1) 4-3933. ~~ cham Naa old. $75. FE 2-49 | rages. $15 Det A RBOYDELL PAIN ING RI zl {| & food _ cage, book, recora| Bragae® TIME WILL : J Ad nt Ey [. SPINET PIA Mu : 1. $75. FE 2-4053 after 4. 1-5915 roit TRin |IF_YOU A PAINTS — CH TOP SOIL . $1350. | MY 2-676 ar PL SOON. GENESEE SALES option to neha RENTALS’ WITH MAYTAG WASHER. REBUIL’ Store Equipmen | DRIVE Re BUILEING & HOUSE Cy een ‘GRAVEL | TOY, MANCHESTE T a an Pena cae an acea “Son 2161 Dixte, Hwy. i FE = lagher's. FE he mon | Gal. oan WARE FE “45169 * | Store Equipment 668 AND SAVE Upon eaee ISTERS| “AMERIC “AN Ti — 3 AKC, some) ch; pica nitea ano , Call LIZER NOW. FOR ! 1 | 4 MERCURY, OUTH 2-8786 | ACCORDION | 566. | ED WASHERS, $15 UP, TYLER DOUBLE DUTY _ MATERIALS $500 ON ALL! Pit FE oAaai: Onke propucts|| Cet colt Bu lan ere | G Res oR ae +1112 , || ‘Sales & Servic jOARD MOTORS. lent. eda ON 120 BASS | EXCEL- ela ne rt 98 up. Used _ > Case, meat ander ana MEAT Make cure its | SAND, GRAVEL oseeedy FE 2-9453 Mt. Mor 6268 W. Bar acne Ce ys KING B you, Shorty Hook's Place” $130 fessional _ use. Bacrife for pro-| -$4¥.00 "up. iid Up. Used retrig-+ \and meat block. 254 8. ‘Se we, Res | _Soil._Kenneth TeIyL DIRT, TOP | RAB orris, Midh.. Ph. 7-9500,. | | Your) LE Sithardole Raat Pin ee Se aa oe Se etal eh rela iton pre Be W.. | Residential and | Lom mareial er tea urmeisters BAND. ” GRAVEL: | ue 46108. oe Mt. HOUNDS & ‘BIRD boas. (Pons ine i -5 268. | e. : i ae ec 80 FIL ene > DOE. | 18 FT. OLDTO ke. | Sale Hous fh jit Ss, 50 up. Pesoneteaiee ¢ Tadios.| serve PORCELINIZED SELF a Sion Ons men, F. H. " North 11, rock. FE | 2-2817. FE Ty. TOP | pR-TO" aol eed Rd. at Opd rk | ‘ OL! WN ul es: e€ old- G nk and dish Hotpoint grocery stor 3-14 rthern Lumb _|| BLACK D 2452, Y FOX TE ED yee ing cance. Andel Sonic aarags et io} ds 66| Used oil naearty ¢omb., $320. thes “matching Peneationce and / GRAHAM .POST YARD 18197 Cooley Dave aa er 4 Ds flowers. . Bi 3908) LAWNS “AND __OR 3-7703. RRIERS, ADULTS. row her a TRACTOR, 10° ¢2 ey Sacrifice | val pOseRn TY cab Sa 2! st “ we B MUNRO ELEC SS | or s eat otter Cea ba ee Head SAND 5445 Dixie Hwy. - WE DEL. 1 e Rd the AKC BOSTON ~ abet Craftsman 8 ene 875; ls paOCED lee full size. FE 4 GAB | Bou. Lawrence Oe FE 54031 | phone we Pe a Rochester or| Ht) elas OWN' FLOORS, FLOOR a0 Mil V ER’ State tested: aati per _ weeks old, FE 17-0243. ER "PUPS. “3 $75. 1042 "Doris Ra. saw, like new, ! J | hort: BOAT CU ahoeite tie BED $30. C ——_ SLDS POT REFRIGERATOR. 1] BAR-B-QUE MA rent. ig machines and waxers for With De Ns eee gravel) FE4:0172, — sand ana| REG. BEAGLE |PUP SikGTRIC: BROODES a | cra g goods of all Ana i blond $20. Larke T OF _ Joh pring mattress, | $15. R, oes. cond, Also N CHINE, GOooD Barnes H ose Wed. afternoon EM, -4 8 bade . TOP QUAL | trade OR 3190358. S, SALE OR ventilator $40 R $750.22" a0 Donne ‘tor ithel b aul exes Very dod woud. "Used FE A-<190| | Peoes ster ri cash tegister.| ee ee 142 'W. Huron, 53-4650 fe 29 _ dirt & gravel. TOR, ae FILL | BRITTANY Sear - down i bab eet tonog, CBP e : _ e Mh 4 | _lé ‘9057. " moe ee Davenmont a ewan | 8 Jsed Trade-In/ Dept. “Sale Miscellaneous 68) Sus"! 2th rarmion (are |g Sh Give Dade | sna eae BE en, mac PRET Wie a eA *| Sie PR TiACTOn Wit Trans ortati COAL 8T FL Bes see lecific stove. s39.05| .- ahi tang oe | rl a skied Roy's replace- oF mite Gem n door with} Girt & manure: PE’ 4.6640 viack} TROPI R WITH 5 lear | Pp ga tees 95 = Wort sid o more D ae i in portation oe 3-248 OVE, USED 5 MOS. NEW. | B punt cata $050 , LOOK es JAGEsOW | RENAE sac che operate, fully Figur, pereny r scece | ‘State ae ICAL FISH. ; NTRADE-LS AL ) | eCAN. UG SAE | || China cabinet) 2.2... A ee $9.95 ; ‘4 ers, chain saw Built last the manur favel, fil dirt. chi ese ee FE «+ . ! -INS. STOP “Toad YAN coma J erat x16, GRAY. ALL WOOL. 2 pe.'i aah conn adsl ts sits : ody ‘Shop : [Pipe dien, rar pee ciay breaker availa artee AU leek Install GRAVEL. BAND. FUL Fi bir ma GUINEA FBtOR. BIRD 6 Uae FE 4-0734 of FE 4-111 WANTED RIDER 1} L cash Cost $450, gel $250, ° Dg FOOM «0... (..... $29. | 4-524 and remodeling heavy top T AND | _ +8433. Astor. FE NG Bi S. |. (oe , $250, & Pc. dinin teedeeee: $29.95 ‘ 4 Call f service avail Sand | soll, C. E. Hi F oO. to Detroit, Mo FROM. PONTIAC FE 4-7241, FE 5-6456 | Woodb @ room. «fable. $4 E a or free estimates 1 and Gravel. OR 3- owe, | FOR SALE 2-6663. np. t Friday, FE PAPE sah UTO ~ Taen (oe aowe parmeni, Fass sats x00 quipment : |AIR COMPRESSORS fe 4 fee oo, more 6 RAVER. | Sera ae “Lot Ore ak Mer me Saha ! Ra Dealer | ers. A Bani mi nay , ot om iac | Sese . ie ; es FURNITURE, | INCLUD- es ve MAN'S i ; SACKS. GRINDERS: ER STANDS | “apeden or breakers and> Se eae FE om ATCH. 2 wWaawas re cen . _ Bensost Fea! Baucom aoe Lt 2) CHAIN 8A 8. = at Opdy ‘ke / —RARnAAL x, electric gh | Pike onl =? YGEN CART: SAI ; es for rent; ~elay: a 54. BAND AND _ 1, Lap $239.50. "20" & I "ghs range, | IN'OUR USED y ! BODY : SAND PAPER; ‘CO other equip. COLEMAN GR. i fill dirt. ND GRAVEL, one 737W2 Lap peer, Mich. “5808. oa’ damonet 26" i 7 FT. She y APPLIAN LEAD: ETC. COME AND | 12 NE’S. ~ ace AVITY OIL FURN]| cement road gravel. truckin BABY Peet: o | ee ration, MY |. ro Ge R ADE ator, KELVINATOR, rRIGER- een been. tradin bate DEPT Ti mad 7 AT 69 LINCOLN APTER | 1351_ Baldwin > PE en sa oeoe floor Philco radio, MA ee tani on Jaen Lake Bilelrose PARAKEETS FE 2- 4 § * windel ¥ N McCORMICK © | : tia room house dn extra/1 | DINING RM. 8 R 3-0¢11. ers, ironers & pelea raeers. wash- FRIGIDAIR : 2.0071 |) GAS CLOTHES DRYE! a. 2} ‘ : ria a tbl conveyor b CK CORN well outside. Wil arge | FE. 47500 UITE LIKE NEW to sell them f In order EREFRIG marred R; SLIGHPLY) Ss r.. Tractor drawn, je car- } equity for home 1 trade i$2) 3 me .| them right; § ast, we try & pric tor. Montgomery W E R A- pe tumbin iS M in transit. Terrific porting Good PARAKEET “E | —quindre n. 61171 De- tee, 8, TAGE bo ia tol’ Bon. ertie re STOVE ado GOND Washers a aes I ¢| 270 Harrison. ard oil furnace.|| 3 BATA) Bt pecials Mee meee 393 ° Peat Sporting. Geode Or 591 Fourth, Closed TS $4.50. eye RESTONE . , feb s is ° i . . cee des lea lene | i tS mol Lie 2 ‘den CONSOLE MODEL Du id : Refrigerator at $49.9 TOKEN, ore Bie “200 gyri, RM ELE mee eae 50 OtUrOAy: pen to 6p. m. Closeq| Art Lawson Gun Shop| HUNTING DOG, eye ha 402s ie weaésie lmelecient a beet, no of ‘Rochester 7; miles space heater, h O| THERM Television at 5 Gl 2-7445 I EATE.:S I WATER EXPERT G 309 ts & birds.°2 Beagl ubes, 2— 16 and 4 ‘| Blower & ssneats 8 0] FFHERM| Motors Ma & $39.96 _ GE EL ECTRIC, 3 SE -dO0D OM EDISON NSTALLED FREE “LUMBEF Ribice ete ee wena | we 1 Rockhaved: 1 mie ‘puppies.| _ tubes’ and ‘wheel implement tires Ed ', @ «| _ cond.| 656 Wi included, | Good | THE GOOD 1-6 HP. at $4.00 cond, OL E. GOOD) 4° >OIL LINES $85 Mecpen ana: none stocks, si hts, uburn Heights. le .east of | LITTLE s. OL 62601. | " dw. Mt Stout, Realtor |S7UPI2 £0 nding Dr. FE 47060. HOUSEKEEPING SHOP Sarre FORCE ‘Open Sun. 10 ~~ 43:98] BUILDE |] Sinmenition. New ane us sights. | BLOND COCKER Tee a Wee ad PLOW 7_N. Saginaw St, py’ tor fram UCH. SOLID] M F 41555 ‘ontiac comb AIN 4 BURNER Fri | a.m. to 2 , RS SUPPLI sale or trad and used guns,| Dies. registe SPANIEL PUP- pe, $85, EM 3-382 TRADE YOUR O , "H 5-8165 ty ae years old. Also iia! % B CSW. Huron. as mew be blower Piel § good ARN day might till 6 om Plaster board 4x8: | 6455 Dixte ‘Rignway supplies. 10 and z- neren, best of breed. JD “B''| TRACTOR 6395 a ator. of cae dae REFHIGER- type |washer. Utility trailer. at BBD & SPRINGS. de" ROUND ELECTRIC we chbien See Ph Bes PLUMBING feoeatgrpe belch ea. WANTED FHOT ois AND ube 10 and 4-10 miles) west of Tele- JD 101 Corn Picker $465.00 ne uel : COOB s fo : ' BEAUTIFUL (r _terms, ah oor, weak ivedor See ARTIFICIAL FIREPL oo Fix: _ Mise. 36 tye of Fees Star earpeting. ee oe 0. PE 2- ate CON- satmoow ewes Deliver _ roe | fer yout pont Belge Py et etc TouN 10 Dry vies 71 ‘REG. COLES, 4 MO. ee leet I, ate nek. 11, n cupbgan fy FIX: ee BED | 18.__|| | pipes SOIL|” —— | r Bab - CRIBS, CRIBB | KCHANGE YOUR [ CAND | TN Pc a ae is) FE2:| FINAL CL ABANCE | O48 oi, lllinotd ang, RING $5 |) O04 sar water qgutomatie Ti| “ aotty pine ana, cedar panabne) sereereecsel| NST Sere Lakes FEE 3460, Trail \ri-| new snd, oped oe erty) fot late m ve sold pr excell BUFFET, IN Our entire. FE ATER urnaces, ste oi] and| Windo ord Weldtex. ester and Steve ca, Win-| PRICED > , VIS MACHINER H. ri car ient condition, N stock of ne 4-6679. $7.50. water boil 2 rel _b ws and Wind Used shot ns ' FOR @U , 45 Ortonvill Y, Ph. a J. VanWelt OR 3- crs Fuge Abd Ded, Utell led Ab penn craares: Sine eens 5,000 GAL, GAS f HEIGHT 20) Bree, *| Site "renweod: v) pine Guns traded aud peg isvered mal bong! BALE. WARE ~ aLaBEN seed TRADE EQUITY as | i a nbs if rug, $10.) per res and counters) & etc. ere, | ot tank, 841 Ronen” ase. GAL. ae SUPPLY ¥. 5 , Tedwood. red cedar,} fir oe boo nd sold, eas layaway., ees 39 Ivy. ele pups. . . oo eee . e with ac : l RADIO. $5. 10 Nor WOR ye | 5, Perry Lu : tgun shell 126, UD: OXER FOR | 8A ba tary Mowers 6 Treage ge 4 LD = | : hy St. umb: 5, ay < 4 — Service: ‘ i Pongse. Press ee 7 nilac.’ Write error. let 12 fe TUBE “Kelvinator 8 cubic tt. ‘Sibiined “te |[ENCYCLOREDIAS. 1 ee E 4-5431 right wy tor Bl) your gaeds. Flee KEI tye easant contes rs pune on phone FE FOR IN TN | pat 1eE's SALES a : ; | ‘LEATHER _ SEW : | $5 ATTRESS & $PI ate niversal 7 cubic ft. ixie Hwy., Drayto: lor $55, | | wlaY DS HARDW AR STANDING WELL i Sai Mt. Clemens ct. FE leat ING MA C@ FE INGS, |4 Z.ectric ran OIL TA yton| Plains. | | PL 3004 E yr. old TRAINED 5 ONE MAN CHAIN BAW 3-9830 | S| Hei eee Itt ‘onay woolljrarze tuaanep | Easy gener LEAKS BON THRE Ot WOOD | ™ [Sealy auld Materials | 35 Ti apary at, daams, | Gatien meen Sane | Boe ea ae (| eather Will: acces. for ‘ very} ood cond 100 ' ap tro : SKILL SAW At cut ra 0-06 RIFLE, I ae ever, also 24> yr. uck oF a demons: i : cash ‘OR pants or sei tor ae | | $1900. FE | Our }oss — your gain $49.50 sped saw, 8° PORTER CABLE! | doars ate prices Kitchen cabinet LU CYR. | _St FE 21628 C-59 N. PARKE on ses bunting.” thes Peceee , ee ee ction. + Is GAUGE Tf R | C reconditioned. model 88C. Newl PONTIAC: ] MBER CO, SHOTGU, ee ‘ j ce. Wood wn Equipment $. Gar- | shot gu 0 g ae BAfnay | pLasti AR MSTRON in AYTON' S PARLOR BET wo, yee Wiser ht pes sie Boe lake Rd. 43 Co | ga. ION eee gence th | pincer "ICAL Fis & SUPPLIES __Bi odward| (north of 16 es Pi ate deer rifle, pump gun| (J FLOR ~— » PRICE 3065 0 | vacuum sw 9x12, $10; | ‘ 3-2543 ED BEEF. C1 bitin gol reas. 559 E. €, éxc. cond., | OA s. 49 Park 8t., NEW CASE TRAC MI 4-6000. * S.and 7 p.m. a-7631 Retapen Nall Tile, rn. ft rehard Lake Rd. Kee $20, roundel k $6; electric oven, GAR: AGES quarters for frees CHUNKS |OR| 20 G Tennyson; FE 3-7139. a bes Oxford.| oN E |TRACTOR, $500 OFF. see ; = 3. AUGE ADO: ees Sess Ey Massey-H OFF OIL AUTO. HOT BONNY. MAI ...19¢ | FE 5-981 Harbor 2 Haale Lurter camp sisal (cork cen oo i Orne alse pote vial. tuthecd’ a _sh 3 SHOT STE RASLE BABY PARA Eyes.| with 3 arris Colt | A WATE: D INLAID T . table, 60x ze. | work an mplete with etc. & . veal, turk otgun, trade VENS| and O PAR. t int. hook-u $1298 | fins ater “4 p.m! er aR ATER, Tart Reenay el ee ee ge rx S-0074)) Ee C:ssie bet bees 48 and in| Lime “OR 3 gh, Sane Fa FE san shore xt] | 8 2O7 Se ee RIPEE Clem Opalines. FE 426960. i308 Mt, Chop hie 1990 Ford 5 ree, Ufa 2O0m LA 1 $7.9 WASHE Seered GIL TANK: 7 R 8 5 EM_ 3-5624. | 58 FULL BIZE } ost caliber GukMAN WIC.AC. loader =$88: small YOUR LAND CONTRACT. Ee 141 Ww. ‘HURON SS ELECTRIC 1 Aer Lies FEW. | Pang isk oer: * Standard be ratte tne ae gts. < Contact Mre aMertin’ al jLench. 10 Bap ATi trade, Manley | ee pono goad PUPS,;AKC| °°) Great American. case $95" urni —— Tigage, ey. plivery— J ator am . at : M - nel” le k= _ well ee eo ed Dew or weed WHIRLPOOL aUTO! a; aad Fis vise © para INGE, “$405 fou ra down “go a ovED fe 76 “churp. Oped 60 deluxe | @ IN. _ CABINET SINK, ry 3 16 gauge. gels _ BARREL a ap ee Pino. Ch SHEPHERD. aglaciegs ew lat $b Gants AILER setrailers. still jn crate, bi R., 5 es lots evelopment -8286. ondition.| tures, $35 WITH } (30.30 64 M FE 5-6452 ampion bred. we qur bid an: in 60 Ex - fin discdunt. & BEDDING of lumb ¢ontains | i _ PIX ODEL ee §-6452. week, Mich y day of Site ‘Teatereph | Oven. fre Soupel ¢. OR $88. | t. Witt ings. F ee ee len came BT turon SALE LON USED: FURNACES — 'ALL STEEL 2 ety i. | ee oe aL WINCHESTER, akG REG BEAGLES ALSO RE Sse ne enna meer he CK 81 are p pen Eves. SPOT Ran, $607 MLNCTRIG 5-0043. -| FE 4-8284 “ havé a jcom CES — | _ $65. 83 Huds anEL TR. _very_ good. _ caliber, | — Enelish _o b-1 wood Rd. Lak for 2 HP air co EAM CLEANER _Stove. 9. } 1c NS ying, 8 = Ev:. OL 2-131 hew furnaces plete line | REIN on. WTD DEER SPRINGER &PA a 468, ies sens 1631. s SF a Ungromae SCO | "EM, FORMTTERE, OO COND. ee even com | RETMESAGI REME, "Bh ee Pas aroma cova wens AR Sy (AS feta a ees Sales 77 Sy wih hee” tee ASSEM- 268 Third” moving due COND. ~ SPECI — cond. 3-2080. 7 STORM DO 37668 tele aril: exstelod wiactios. od GAd clrao chem Meanting ee eau fora t w motor guara to fil health, 8 ALS PROMPT | ———— M DOORS WITH _oF_trade. FE = machine, sel}} —? 0019. | : . FE| 40CTIO : . ing ft aeuge tavage or jictinshl 6 “Pr, REFRI 2 be frees dining-rm, suite dirt, si arcs ERY ON ‘BiAcK| | ne and oy ot IL HOT (WATER HEAT: ia storm ‘ windows and NS, BINOCULARS, “er mint PARAKEETS._ ony |type RW E BILL NAGY— Britany! Field pimp fora ae domain | opie Alctorwas, om, ceou Studio vouch rae Sap ‘manure. ietitioa ct dirt, an eal storage tank, FE) p,m” “a PE 22002 aftr g| have 7 guaranteed = ee aie food. Since wear are CAGES, | gar phone 96 Lape” = rittany, trained. or a Reg. | SEMI- Table : : at i L : ve 7x 3 — 8 : 95, Also. land A SAT,, BEPT 1 FE: 4-6082 ie MODERN MAH gas stove $29, C ; = ‘ LAWNMOWER 50 — 8 x 30 — 10) 1 ve. | villi | 19 AT . 21 FT, SCHULT HOUSET | eee: Cove MAHOGANY END | Oat 'Briscens dresser $2) COMBINATION DOORS olen FR tery 31" cut ER, | WHIRLWIND He Pelesccees <- Wee Wollenske | L ROP. pipes 1b AT 12°30, IN THE =. |, wees catosten: ek pe aie ae eon ewe | oak, Princes dresser | $e! Basement Com Wood || Beek Roast ESH MEATS Pogestion dig WHIRLWIND QC) Scopes, orticiat gents ‘Rifle | 3848 TROPICAL FISH hernitnre & cate! modern, ‘elean innerspring - mat poe Sleeps | coodt 18 Po pa RETRIOERATOR, | Oakland Fiinite te $12 Spe yellow Maged No. 103, 130, | Pork ‘Steak 200. freveveecees 39¢ LECTRIC STOVE $48; ~30-30° WIN: GAGE a ‘SPORTING HILIPS LUG. ~AQU ATIC G RIE 2-1860| Mayta Prigidaire’ electric: regis g water ss, 4 | closets, | ELECTR we + e phone 194) fee gee stope power Weaver No. Sagin: G GOODS, E washer. Floo e Sees were, meres tut Du, IC RANGE, GOO e ‘uy sell and a | leak nose 69¢ $100. FE 5-2007 eqver aw Bt 19| TROPICAL | NS Rugs. r coverings, ~ Oeniee IN lene | ee. Te os . bconp, | 1 8. Sagin || quchange 166 N co. | '| Pork A seodeacebecess Dm. aftey 7 | HUNT 5 AL FISH & SUP Ma ge assortment of chairs, ane siors. Tadic, Vieuie’ gute | fH | anaes a CONVERTS _ PE 2-5523 ed Fel BS 2Pe FE 4.259 | Bork Sausage. ee STERLING SIL s1s95., No Bows. na | See: ae 2 Se. pare gay eave ee [+ teen tates” Bell a See tres, | pnaipeas new pod WOOL | $n"3-100 hl ‘fio Peed a Radio. radi ee beet ore st Beer 4g¢ | a oe Gadroon ae ge MB geckes G i205,” ail ‘ee Aubara RD NEAR CANARIES, 240 Dini suites. Liv Lpagioot gent re . > £9 sickness b e due | - : ’ cond. FE oe Ib. ¢ eposit! fr : & Stew ceed pcdio.QG6 0 a6 35¢ 00. ern chest 333 og &. + Grimes — ghts. hg rodm su room huite. Ww. efore Sept. | I line ye jer. Co: ecorder. FE wire)’ Ho fpe rede ctesceees | _ $100. Term agiuded. Stream-eze American — FE. din, m suite. ig 1 ee eeperiele, 50 ytime | Twin) BED INNERSPRING gas Co. fo, Shae Dine igh Kenyon ‘Puel- KENMORE cl ra he ) Ha DORs Loi peel tor ise ‘oc st SrLINE oa, Me Mays) She phate“ wiceer, Reo. LIVER & W Prop Metacnor sale.) Fay Davis, For Sa (oa resses and éprin | MAT-| > ton way. Dra __blower, BURNER WITH) quarters of beef for lock 4 NE BABY B eather Bu ts, Fletcher ps. To; HITE’ POINTER rite etamora. Bank vis, - 1) eee le Clothing 64 MI 48899. gs, gdod cond. | kE 1. y-| 59 _S rm. Heater. 96 Flore a | PDYKE MARK ers| _inette. Reas. 200 8 UBGY. BATH. | :GAGE & ea PHILIP'S LUG. Rrotua rae = stock. Milford, | A | h,_Au¢tioneer. One Clerk. | \baptes | homo ed oe a | EXTRA NIC comet ENMORE me oe ae ANGE, 7 GAL. CRANE LINE ELEC nee.) walton at Opdyke | ET | USED & & 10 IN Marshell] | | <.No. Saginaw: RTING GOODS, 79 | WEIMAR ANTIQUE OAL aa tORE: _ ia | ROTHMOOR C ~~ | ™ NICE PART PE mee $75, 4133 A YRS. water heater, lik ECTRIC| ™. ire { FE 5-794 and elbo CH HEAT Pi Ty pyre t | ANER PUP, EX pt. 19, 1 _ SATURDAY | black | with black eects ATS [ess FE 3-7257. PERSIAN erfoed., OR 3- -8011, Gail steer Wa. | —OF_3-1337. e new. $75, a Open Sunday 1) after 3 Dw. bree new, 1 DUCK STAMPS {| buy toe aioe a registered.: raaterna [oes hob nail a A pea milk 4 or : sian trim, LGAS R - ; ' er, 7 F } | : am berlain FR: __buy, $100 and $125 iy dishes glass, Cran- c mMuskrat > |eray | with : ANGES I F rid : i | agNTI r EE ARCHR \ a 125. EM 3-520, % & vases ee vil) Marca [id als FE Poeunree, das trial] Phillips rani ONAL HARY =e coh ate Saturday es TH, BO WLING BALL LIONEL & AMERICAN Hunting Licenses MUNPE ai FREE.” | gr i leaps, Gone With The ‘ORESN || WINTER COAT | Ave PE 20195. Orchingd ‘Lake | coe. rE a ae Berfect., 2x4 fir oly and Carr, y 2 De ber Mesa es eee et 4 AUTHORIZED FACTO Y Pl archery poppies . | oe hg ft "clock. marble top Lee ¢ At with| -- . | " : 6 . r | er wi pay sTO- BERVICE es | ; , |Cherry, a pertect steerer oe ta black coat WALTON TV s I 4% (ELECTR BREE tires i tke 800 Enon, aeress oF ll Carland’s Guo _For Sale Livestock 73 Greehshie! Ra. Lake Orion to asys ALL i nae 2-30: Eras a> ‘. Hedleum rem: & ay soc storm windows ectric saw padi torny eg in| $12) 1 otaceas SHOTGUNS, Re, RIFLES & RE WTD. HORSES wo EoaRD. | Bl head of 4 then west J mi. __ hunting. outfit > WHITE STAG Sate pet.) off; ARDWAI ! d s. Gas} s400. ae trailer ers, $12.50 w revoty-| jaho% Experie D. REAS. . | - POLICE EE fin 10. PE 37-0580 \¢ { . ecco 52.25 ae & a large a: ARE! rel bar stock, Oi) ry 2 ton cold] § tur 2 “aid coo! a Shell Gun Will trade. Bur- __ Stalls. Fi PE 5-0831. need care. Box Size EISEN Hi R JACKET. re | Ic. Hae | para assortment of gara, 4 containers. Bho Tums. § gal.| - y trained i ane : , 375 8. Telegra i¢é Mos. ¢ al bet _ Cheap. :"E ae ool pants, | Bonny: a a wal a Harold's, 140° S. ‘Saginaw Jrocen lots & 4 raglan ven hr sitet Dis Ray. abla te Tsing pris motor ti fli che Coan Wood: ca “ae Pp. Well bred. HOLSTEIN Seia 800 WOOL | slimes inlaid tle ” ve the dollar. less nat AL FURNAC seep at | eb O00 Teo ue at it es -AKB pany s Hip b PUTING COAT & F OR SHO "x9 Open Ft RED STAMPS “TODAY . ' PAI NT > | ae blower. ey ee, AU- _ 5) 5 p.m ‘315 Giddings a. qe 4 fter Goo gal, Fuel 69A * AND | Sonne aLatose Wad ait ~/ 99 8. Sagin a ines 6 Gar to tel Cement ABN LS gor nike ¥t | FE|A SMALL BLDG. 8 x 10 D SLAB WOOD. 36 | Lk Rd | WOMEN'S ALMOST NEW SILV1 : | shed PREB HOME _9_ PM.) kx all [paints, OT AIR FURNACE 1 construc 8x 10 DOUBLE. 2 for $11. Del. FE CORD OR iL Z +f |). gine tar Mteoemed ekus SILVER-| OIL HEA’ Th | DEMONSTRATION 4000 $2.75 ro aa & | -e7._ PE 2-2558. ACE & OIL BURN- Soaanle tor tsol sti. | LE }GOOD DRY tes oe 52006 after |4. | Condition, cost $900 Last ose, | eae weter SATO SE. pe GAL. | 3 ; ‘Bales | 900 W. ron OUTDOOR FIREPLACE GRILLS” 2/8035. shed, ¢tc. |FE| ~¢°ss¢e- for $11.00 88.00 brown Cae ten = Alsa Paeed 1. FE 2-7033 vacuum pes a ater a re o.708 t All steel, removable aaa ae PHIL GAS 4 BURNE a ie “4-568. . delivered, FE | suit and ie = 83. [G ERATOR AND GAS sitio Windsor NER STOVE. en | . | ie Wad ad 12. “Ali $30. 5 Me Naa noon ‘suite, stove, re See. R AND GAS Reaty Mt et ae mk _ EM ee Ressonat Plants; apie | Di ic 7 . asional c' 2 NEW mrs raters i Gal. can r -. 3 — Se | ae ~ ree: + tie |. THe) Pontine "Press, Boe women pies Park | ae rill Koki BLOND TV, | ‘Wall capping for #" ot coat an LOOKING OIL BURNER Ss, Shrubs 70! | Manes NEW si |STORMLINE CRIB & MATTRESS. Other household mattress. 1gcicewalk expansion eee | Seed seme ee area oe _ PLAN | ' “2 ROWN: SIZE | HOO : dings Ra. FE - 48 Gi Soe ee t Go ft. | STOKER. LIKE NEW | T NOW - , cas SE 4 wool, ‘tase MR |emad "11" Pa! RU i DROP LEAP 7 YLOCK rs PE ong wives ee Fall sae of ev DATS Mi, ITS, a s~thees "reer WING BI age eae Il grag CHEN TABLE 8) Orchard Lake yaad e ba bree ovr BEG Lakeside Nursery ie: ho | cond BACK CHATR| _sulomal 30 4 | > LAVATORIES, : lal 30 GAL. HOT W ia de A: Bimapote_tak | | = \ Febarts ition, 00. ic attach. ” 9.3593. renaeee, .. COMPLETE WITH rater ATER TA & - i || Call! BENDIX AUTO. w = $24.50 value, $14.95. Also i pennr, Ales is Eauge Dogs T St ‘ | | | Vil new S15. FE, fer ae CRE |W pon gay Peter ose Ago Us STOKE © atone io net tose _ . | | i | | , crate m : oy | | 5 ar pct eta le edeiduer Por taal ek | "ots Ia-n fury. Pe Sih if | | | fs ‘ d ‘p.m. Closed Sat, are | away 40d rel your sb Be gee Boers Fe ded, | |: ' ' . : ‘ee tel, dogs AND CAT || ; or | }) r | L | —_ 7s | g poe =e \ a ‘oe ae } | { i | | } | é i bd ™ f ‘ { Maat I ./ at = | } i = ‘ } et | iH jh i “Uke | | ‘ Sag | \ : | Too ; eal » 4 | + , «4 | J ey ae | i | } \} | 4 | 5 | al a 4 \¢ 4 ’ | hoe | > > el * ; | ih | 2 ees | ; ri A ; Le tl | _ SIXTY-FOUR - , io | - THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 | aN , Set ls : Saat - a a nina aS Vane) wn La rl iG eG cau eee ; Tare ae ane (Crattir | ‘The scinetists said the Arctic ice | . : ‘ Now, he said, family relation-| p | i A few days later the man, who | ‘Idi _; || will differ slightly, The throne for , ‘Gettir | yew) Beene ular D M | Australia Buildin | Seasons Getting Warmer cap is receding, the ithibiness of Family Relationships ships are cemented) by the closer oP eputy akes had slain another in a juke joint h f f us : the duke will be on the same level, ie Believe Qcean Experts the Arctic ice diminishing and|°M Better Plane Today | | ties of warm companionship. Arrest the Easy Way | brawi, $howed up at Jones’ office. 7 rones for Reyalty but will be placed a little behind |NEW HAVEN, Conn, (UP) —| warm saltier currents ate sweep-| CARBONDALE, Il, (UP) — The| ,, deh ae tase ai clannin tha CARY, N. C. w+ Wake County.}"'I trust Mr. Wiley,” he told offi-) AUCKLAND, New Zealand \#— | that of Queen Elizabeth. According’ to a group of ‘oceanog- | ing through ithe North | Sea and| American family isn’t what it used blenty nf in ekevice Pa ning a hee Deputy Sheriff Wiley Jones’ popu-/} cers. i Two thrones are being built for M i wed b, Ames raphic experts from 10 countries! Danish waters into the Baltic Sea. |, to be, and we should be glad of it, r ions”’ were necess to | larity was put to the test recently. a) a Queen Elizabeth and the Duke of ost 1 nc s found ca p P uf ; man relations’ were sary dg , : Line | Searching for aman wanted for Although El Salvador is the) Edinburgh for the day the Queen lay eggs in a leathery capsule ; who met at Yale University, the}, — | aner| | according to an Illinois sociologist.| combat the current high divorce LY ee hich breaks lat hatching ti winters, springs and falls are get-| Mount Vernon, home of George| Dr. Herman Lantz of Southern | rate, | murder, Jones went to the sec- smallest | country: in ‘the Western opens a special session of the New w reaks ja ching time. ting warmer. | Washington, narrowly escaped the/| Illinois University said that in tion of the county where the killer Hemisphere it is the world's third/ Zealand Parliament in Wellington || ; ’ | Pooledi evidence ihdicated that | auctioneer’s hammer in, 1856. a many cases the American family| Kansas is usually the nation’s| lived, He let it be Known he want-/| largest producer of coffee — Brazil! Jan, 12. El Salvador] is the most densely the Atlantic Ocean jis in the midst was secured by patroitic women | used to stay together ‘just to kee: leading wheat producing state,|ed to see the fugitive as soon as and Colombia being first and se-| The thrones will) be about the populated nation on the American of its warmest period since 1600. | and made a national shrine. | the old farm going.” me followed by North Dakota: possible. cond. || ; f same size, although the designs | mainland. | aie ts T ss okbmepmemnarel a | | | 5 [ aa PRICED...FOR SALE ONLY! aI | <4 bo ull Size : ee | mony House Ful W pRICE “ai | e | SPECIAL LOW ERIS™ a ch e | ; b : : ' : | | | 4 ‘ c - HARMONY HOUSE | 5 r, i, | po | | 4 1 | un . e | . | =e ° at 6.98 | 5 , , Regularly Priced Regularly | askets ‘te packground _ graceful scalloped 7.95 5x5 4:15, ‘Lightweight feported Willow * 4, . Plain velvar jed corners. Harmony House oe a | For Only | «= DAD borer’. ific Blue! and others. Come | Imagine, an all-steel ironing table at — =" | Rose, ray At low cost! ‘ - $1 savings! Has ventilated steel top ine Belgian] willow, consi: ) - J (ee ] & ‘ 1 | : e | 4 ion Wil Teiniorce rim in- | | yourp Housewares Dept.— and a sturdy non-tip base: Itis your saree long wear. |Easy-to-carry | ; : Sears Basement best buy , . . save now! | round style. |22!/2-in. diameter. | ead Dept.— ote! series Ge casein oe : scnason le ureeora ale nt Main Floor 7 Tee at | a VE NOW! 4 | | Nimes aw SA ; _ . Ss " 8 4 ; ck | _ " 0 : iF | VER 10% tailored. | ea) 0 0 | ) BA. SAVE oe rayon panels od , se i Ped Bie = A 3 | : : S Household Brooms 11-qt. Step-On Can Oval Wastebaskets | WENE C Lightweight, Kitchenette Type Chip-Resisting Enameled Steel Strong All Meta Construction ~~ “Heavy Galvanized Steel - roy Reg. 1.29 99¢. Rey. 4.89 3.99 Reg. 79e = MA Rey.1.69) ]|,44 ae | . \ - | | 1. | | : ; N i, Firmly sewn good quality corn Seamless white porcelain A real bargain! All/metal oval Seamless bottom.) Heavy duty : Regular y- 1 64-in. EACH will take long, hard wear. enameled inset has rubber shaped wastebaskets: Beautiful handles. Strong corrugated - od at 3.29 2\x Woed handle feels comfortable bumpers, flanged rim. White; natural colors |lithographed on _gides, bottorn. Ideal for gar- Price ' ‘ mape . Fine huatity in hand. Light, easy to lift. Sunghine Yellow. At Sears! metal! Sale Priced. u- dens, leaves] ashes. h C 1c ij ’ Bea i | “ pe 2) of Easy to ee elusive Fluted = mopauizetts, Sete «DISTINCTIVE HARMONY HOUSE i Cm e, wile bs 3 | of Distincttv @ Searset finish re- i US i | Desig® pust-Tight duces shrinkage, | ee orem Se | | gTully Enclosed repels insects. ; | ; | | R we ? . : | |" = | : ° Headbox Hoicture ‘a 7 e Deep 3-in. bot- | | | | indows ’ it Vv a tom ; hems ce wie i | | Give your his low Pree: chanis™ 1Y%-in. side § , | | beauty at t Kh perating service Reis ee 3 action, SMOP” “catisfactOry , amel 2 = | . “1 give long ba d ‘ Sheer and lovely, meti- NE (a ay n * | will 9 +. base, a 7 f arable pl LAC 1 . 7 culousl | tailored. In ; a: Dura \ priced! 3.95 Ivory White. Sale ends _ r i | finish. ‘Sa . $ eg. 4.29 oe : SD eee . “ ao soon j.|.- don't miss ‘ Bedroom Fixtures ® : i" 9 ‘to 35-in. Sizes, is ~N Sor these budget pleasing d i 1 rc ine a ; . ————— - . ‘ savings, Look—Look at the Price! | ~ *Other Sizes Proportionately Low Priced Reg. 1.79 1.37 ‘Anstart stor “i oe . Buy one for poo becioge. it FIXTU RES y , pin ee : 7 7 A this sensational price! in | c | 7 ( > As - “ “ ° OP Gre - ye " crystal or Tuscan rose. 101/2- | | , | : in. shade. UL-listed. — Play | _———— = ee - Ty, | SE 5 ee Ws ee : es See be A Peis y : ¢ i . oe | . = ? iS ay a : 7 bare ey 2 el i e | HSS Sti x 2 | iD SS Se Jae S e =) - é Bk cs : é 3 , 33) | Alle z | .. : Beautiful, brilliant, eco- : Clas nomical. Gleaming, chrome- fe | plated holder. 13-in. width. \" } P 4 ae | Rooms sparkle with Circline eS. ‘ | Fluorescents! oo es { | \%. c av * : + ae Piet Opaa | Rees. ~ acl 7 — - BN Sod Sioa casene ef ee Eee ee es cape ie ge SSS t | . re i} — ‘ "|| ° ege ' e e? “ | e | |e ' e | Pa Cotton Dishcloths Ceiling Fixtures Low-priced | Reg. 12.95 Colonial Dinette Fixture Reduced To A_New Low Price Combination Circlines Reflector Has Chrome Trim } Cc Ploted With 3 | 5 t h : | | | ! opper-Plate i -Way Swite | Rees 6 ai 88¢ en 9.87 Bien 6.87 bw priced modern charm-for your dinette or breakfast nook | | : = ’ ; r q. Stock up; now and save: on Beautiful center incandescent Install fluorescents yourself. 141 ir idth. Get your ode at Sears! ‘ f |e } quality cloths. Long wearing beamlight with 32-W fluoresent “White enameled steel body, | 27. , Y | Me a | watfle weave, overlocked circline. Chrome-plated. 3 way is |, | i | ; edges. Bright washfast plaids. lighting. 15-watt, Reg. 8.95......5.87 - cca Bases 9 pau De ee 3 poor i " ‘ : bb | al \ % cAI | i : ra Imported From Poland! Extra Strong Absorbent (2. Li Ti : lir NN Linen Toweling \ i re e Regularly 49c yd. re ae oe | | | Dag | : se Yes > @ Smooth, almost lintless : ee ata, VO, tt Set et EB Ep, NN es Ne se oe 3. > f } | | | , | Fh ‘ ' | ~ ] ° a ~ wee iene ra i @ Washfast cotton borders d. ; ) | Beas e, ° ° € ~ me ol i an | ft Setter pores yy | eee Dayle x one ristures) Sale-Priced! Your Choice'19.97 Sale-Priced! Your Choice i et ; a Lat . ¥ i ee ite = mn bei f ator | 1 ale © ) i * | j 04 , 7 It’s all linen crash . . . thirsty tnd strong. Fine for dishes | Reg 29¢ 4 hos $1 | Reg. 16.95 13 87 25.95 Washers 23.95 Mixers 14.95 T isters 14.95. Wafflers . and | lassware because it’s practically lint! \| Th I- i | “| Small, lightweight and port-. Makes! you a better cook — lou Py eee Ger ype . gi ee er i . g' [| $ prd ¢ si ly ce 1 | ..e The perfect towel to keep Chrome-plated, 5-light type, able} ioe €oal. capacity, saves Fes time and energy. nt : high pop “MP actos Toasts sand chon, nies fopd! ‘ stitched selvages won't ravel or tear. Handsome border glassware sparkling because | with frosted hand-cut glass 3-blade agitator action. For . plete with bowl, gbeaters noes Hl OG toast small Automatically makes light, me- Fbiue. 17.ir. wide! | Sears! "BP dy nl it's almost lintless. 100% cot- shades. A beauty for your AC-DC. Listed by UL Only anf cord! 110-120 volts. Priced Pieces! Regulates from “light’ dium or dark waffles. Alumi- | of blue. +in, wide: Sears: | 5 i; | ton, 16 in, wide. ‘ home's dining room. { || ; 10.97} | jlo at 19.97.. to “dark.” Now only 12:97., | num grill, gtid plates. Just 12,97. mi 3S Au FAK 154 North Saginaw St. |. Phone FE5-4171. ne | , Pou a cilia — ~ | | | | Ne é | | rir | | ss | | | | J | j gh 4 ‘ | . ; | Po} | | ee | | oe | ‘ | He eee | | eee En | ? | be Pa ORS, «= OPEN FRIDAY strongly woven _ ; bamboo clothes NIGHT ‘til 9- * Me } Se +? e-: : | t s 7 miu rcnne gf FAMOUS NAME “Qi NOT AN OBSOLETE =a MODEL, BUT A NEW 1954 MA TELEVISION SET ‘ ‘WE MUST WITHHOLD NAME BECAUSE OF NATIONAL ADVERTISING Choose from: RCA, Mercury, Capital, Colam- bia, Coral, MGM and many other _fameus brands. Cash and Carry gf FEderal 3-7114 CUPS and SAUCERS ', . Bowling Bags $2. WE? Large 21x27" x . * - % 99 % ele ee ee ee ee ee ee iy ree datm 4. ipo Per pio in hae. . ~ det “TWO. | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1968 —_——_——— new. -gasinator \ Reg. Price $119.9 } | ar 3 eg. Price $ 5 x _[' | , _ Now 599” | = 7 t Dot? © DISPOSES OF - | = , , : t Brn «= CARBAGE | a BO © DISPOSES OF ; . | RUBBISH : : . 2 _ Electric Portable — | RECORD} WEW! 133 ih Modo/ ol oh - size records: We * and 12” at 38 en, with clear, a * a: 7 a an FE: a beautiful tone. . ri = yo: & 4 7 | SINGER fteck@\ Monts | > Po q : co. = _ A aa: on this , i : , | i Wew Round Bobbin {| Electric Sewing _ __ Machine 30 DAY HOME TRIAL @ Variable Speed Feet Controi oe @ Winds | Rated While Sewing HOOVER VACUUM | | CLEANERS a | ro FE 3-714 For ‘Personal — Shopper we Phone FEderal 3-7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW id po _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953. THREE é - ———-- - : ; = i : | , : : ' : : : ; : : x 2 , ; 4 } J — tices Q : : bd | q ; 3 ; : 4 : 4s Madol—__@ Teh ranbre_1woder— er?_yy 4 . Ce * ‘ 4 age % ’ ‘ i ® Be L j = - a * ... ] : * « — : é siete z F : ‘ / ” om ‘ oy, ' a 4 $3.3 ott = ; : ‘ * — . * i * 4 ‘ ad Ee: f eee am Super K” Chassis | | FM and AM wee tf = Zenith’s ' ‘Challenger’ : ~ Clear, static - free FM —— and powerful standard broadcast reception of long distance AM. ' . The Sensational Saratoga Model L2260R tenth ‘Pacemaker’ No. Money Down —2 Years to Pay / (bd FEderal 3-7114 Night Till 9 108 NORTH SAGINAW (im eee YOUR CREDIT epee oY THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 SEASON’S q ' oy as 4 : 5 « . : — — _ @ at <2 ‘ : - NEW 1954 egownatijewne x} ‘B a 1 7 a Drbetter thon a ae ‘| ce - 20 yd. Line Ticket For the whole season Prices $ Start at » SKIING & AAA i Aa WA AAA ed ECR AN WYK KO Ke! WAN PHILCO Table Model No. 3000 179” -PHILCO 3-SPEED RADIO-PHONOGRAPH 3105” Ph Record With none “| LITTLE AS | Ul reece ey A DAY Hae —— On Our = | a? 6=60CSf ss PHKELCO CLOCK RADIO - Meter Plan | MCS CLC Ry Ca Lae “Pay As Latte As a Pay As Little As $ 95 « 50¢c a Week - ' | /~* salah tii tied Sates, ‘shiaiibaa bs Libel cae | i MP Sal rN : oe nap, ay SAAS besaa THE-PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953“? FIVE” | that Sunbeam gives a > YEAR FREE SERVICE GUARANTEE [MASTER *500 ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD ELECTRIC SHAVER, REGARDLESS OF MAKE OR SHAPE Never before so fine a precision writ- Bigger Single Head Shaves , | : | Closer, Cleaner in Less Time $* ee ' Than Any Other Method | ae . Wet or Dry! = Beautiful New Parker “21"—by ing instrument at such a low price! -NO-MONEY DOWN siertie oa wanted pen —is a perfect Samsonite —_ hy” Luggage “" ——s ye wre recon imparted ne __ threads to wear out. _— Prices & at bub eels CHOICE OF a $ 7° ' COLORS NO MONEY DOWN — . EASY TERMS PM AIL THIS COUPON TODAYS aa Se aa | WEC, 108 N. Saginaw - a a Phone cxsnoesumael “ Tf ease cand ok _ Parker *21° Pens—1 om enclosing $____. fer each pen. few ey Ph , 7 al ac plone d pretreat "21", I will return the pen within” an a — FEdoral = ff se , dices! a ory “_Z0NE__STATE_ 108 NORTH SAGINAW Coffe Ddleck, CiRed, tive CIGreee. Point: ClFine; C)Med., C)Ex-fine OChorge Oreck or MO. , feta’ tf 10 Diamond ‘S a Ve Duet Set NPs aa) Uji» ROMANTIC NEW TWIN-HEART See | MUSICAL os : 5 RING BOX ~ of Antique Silver Plated Meta a FOR BOTH RINGS AND MUSICAL RING BOX __NO MONEY DOWN ‘-Men’s and Ladies’ BIRTHSTONE — RINGS Solid Gold a (i. [cnoice “8 As ks 3 a > be 49 Bros Tt og BR Wyma Now, NO EXTRA __~__ CHARGE. FOR CREDIT NOTARY BONDED DIAMONDS: Trade In Your Diamond Anytime for Full Purchase _ Price Toward a Larger Gem \~ MASONIC A CAPEL BUTTON = —/—2a No tx — SS a The finest quality Diamond Masonic Ring we've ever offered at this sensational iow Price. Massively designed in yellow gold | handsome raised emblem The diamond, brilliantly distine authentic in every detail radiant, odds magnificence -to this ti j ; uve ring Buy now at very special savings ee ee ee nen ee, ate wel A tp th, ~ 230, beset . HE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 Phone FEderal 108 NORTH SAGINAW THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1959’ / / ) SHEETS « PILLOW CASES | priced ATLESS THAN WHITE | MADE BY ONE OF THE WORLD'S LARGEST “Reg. $109.95 Value NOW ONLY DOUBLE-DOOR, ALL STEEL UTILITY. CABINET Tv lout ya tex aes Ons Gk elie colachd. 3 iar Wece/qie? SiMe two “flexolite” lamps at @ money saving ‘sole price on pin-money = The table is upholstered all over in BOLTAFLEX in a choice of 4 colorful hues to grace any room, BOLTAFLEX looks and wears like leather. It i¢ chip and peel proof, resistant: to_alcohol, or stains. Washes easily with soap and woter. Fyll nail head trim. = The two “flexolite” lamps can be turned in any direction for direct or indirect, pe reading light. The graceful shades are in the new scientific MARI fibre glass—a modern fexture that is washable, flame, heat and light resistant. Comes in Chartreuse, red, pearl, and Hunter green to match the 4 BOLTAFLEX table colors. Underwriters’ faboratory Approved Cord. ee * 3 Tier Table eet een * 2214 Inches High * 1% inch Fiyted Tubing. % 20 x 12 thet — _ WB ind Pestle ames w 7% 1 12 Shelf - % © x 5th In. MARPLEX Shades” t & helena Seis a We bought when the market broke and we pass gyor TREMENDOUS our savings on to you! em Fs wt Luxury linens in bright paste! re GOODS. , ot SN os colors...stay bright and fresh after = ees =" countless washings. Full size 81 x 99 sheets and big 42’'x 36” pillow cases, Order now while limited quantity lass. DOWN COMPLETE 12 pc. SET If perfect kis 50° soles MARKET BROKE COMMITMENTS sir ow THe Price oF WM PW 13% $22.95 <2" CHOICE OF: PINK, BLUE, MAIZE Copyright, ‘Robbin Products THE PRACTICAL WAY TO SAY= }CHESTS| AS LOW AS 4a” agrée to pay balonce-50c_ weekly. ee a MAIL THIS. COUPON NOW! WKC, 108 N. Saginaw Enclosed find $ down poyment. Pleose 8 _ vend me the tuxury sef'of colored Sheets and Pillow Cases at the special price of only oy i s onorts '§ Ist Color 2nd Color ~ F Chica... cose cece tec. Choice. .. | Sep a2 ngs | FREE OF CHARGE NOW 269 ‘ ON EDISON LINES KOT Aa RL FY ace I AREER cl a a dk ck peed ELEVEN WASHER 1s a brand ne@, 1953 ‘model ~ Speed Queen with full capacity porce- lain tub, adjustable pressure wringer with instant safety release, alumingm tangleproof agitator. NO : MONEY — ‘DOWN! @ New for ‘54 | | YOU CAN'T AFFORD NOT] - TOBUY NEW 1954 BIG SCREEN ADMIRAL TV admicvad } Pay as little as gee 404 Me 2S. «day | - On Our Meter Plan ae / ® WASHER and IRONER | | MONEY ‘i We Pw DOWN 3.7114 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT ’TIL 9 108 NORTH SAGINAW q . 2 . . Stas OF ie TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER U7, 1953 Value! rr — NTIRE LIVING ROOM ENSEMBLE 1s5/Paeet aft WEEKS T0 ra LIVING ROOM SET INCLUDES Open Friday Night Until 9 P.M. rn Another ® Matching Lounge Chair a Phone Lower Floor . °® Modern Chat Chair »-——_ FEderal 2 Earniture e Genuine Deena Table Lamp with Silk Shade . 3-714 . Department _ © Matching Glass Top Cocktail Table | dapepeierae © 2 Glass Top End Tables, Blond or r Mahogony 108 NORTH SAGINAW Special! =e Chair Side Smoker. e Beautiful 9x12 Rug ® 2-Cushion Sofa with 4” Base Fringe (Not Illustrated) . APIECE CNET. 2°. Ny per: * | E " S E | v iB L E | WATERFALL - .. ~ Each Room May Be Purchased Separately _ Sab ee a CREDIT TERMS ~ ae 30-Pc. Silver Set, ory oe © Covered Butter Dish —— —— Phone ore ; servi | © 5-Pc. Sugar and Creamer __ Open Every FEderal ~ © 12-Pe. Beverage Set, | oF nays me covers ‘Friday 3-7114 , THE PON TIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953- _SULIRTERN gl WHAT. You GET. _ @ 9-PC. LIVING ROOM ENSEMBLE @7-PC.BEDROOMOUTFIT = 5 © 98-PC. KITCHEN ENSEMBLE a a ot i BEDROOM ENSEMBLE evan “ ’ ‘Voie wnt eed Bedroom Set Included e Dresser or Vanity , Complete with Mirror | F ' @ Full Sized Panel Bed cl @ Chest of Drawers —_ : @ Comfortable Mattress . ~@ High Tempered Coil Springs — ~ @ Pair of Fine Pillows © ST . 2 YEARS TO PAY! _ EASY ody CONVENIENT — Complete Ensemble a Included! — © 5-Pc. Dinette Set, Duncan ™ Phyfe design, with double ring in base, Choice of — colors, in spring filled seats | Dinner Set © 11-Pc. Salad Set © Colorful Bread Basket multi-colored "til 9 P.M. SCGINAW __FOURTEEN -aat* ~~ eer, THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 ou ‘mee (ie =6=—Sti<“ Posturepedic Now! Matching Posturepedic Box Spring Also Available, $79.50! LOWER FLOOR FURNITURE . y" -DEPT. SPECIAL! NO MONEY DOWN As Advertised by Bert: Parks. on Sealy’s “Balance Your Budget” Program ) ; d & (fog Saturday Night WJBK-TV, Channel 2. 5-Pc. MAHOGANY [|| DROP LEAF | fg — TABLE > l3 @ — With 4 Chairs — Complete... 6 9” Reg. $89.95 ie. - : - Ee - : : | | ig | FEderal Set Includes: ~—_. whe —e | — . | 3-7114 4 Chairs and Table «© MrT ci. ea Fon iPr Sp $44 | ie rs 108 NORTH SAGINAW | Extra Chairs, Sale Price, $11.95 — FC fy “ ~ Consumes Everything = Even Wet Garbage - * FIFTEEN. THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPPEMBER 17,1953 ‘—_——3 athe = pale ALLL LZ Je CL * a. day is all you pay : Expansion — Sale Price. ee New 4 1953 Hotpotn REFRIGERATOR © Fully Automatic — e No Frost to Defrost @ No rou Shelves @ 14 Sq. Ft. of Shelf Area "2 e 5-Year. Warranty a Soe NO MONEY DOWN :. 199” DEFROST Asthoint It Reg. $319.95, Now Only = HORSES Reset ero eee eel eed Ee ELECTRIC RANGE | “With Automatic Oven Heat Control Phone FEderal 3-7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW am THE PONTIAC PRESS, TITURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1953 UL: B neval Electric Kitchen Clock sl : *ustomers. : First 100 Custom® Our Gift to , ) a. Www.» ‘pete ~ CoA B “@) See ESS ALL THESE BEAUTIFUL . \ CA 34, - PIECES INCLUDED . 4 WA \\ i VER oN i vw SS 7 ai 2 ie . y } i, ‘i Wi ee Is eM | ni | | 1 Tort’ Hee NOR ad Cy ‘ wd, Biren so «MAIL THIS COUPON [| pHoNE J WKC, Inc. 108 N. Saginaw, Pontiac, Michigan ae FE 3 7 1 4 — 7 : e Please ,send me this 77-Pe. Dinnerware Ensemble for only $29.95. - a ——-}-New Account. ae [-Charge to _my_account a : "(Full amount enclosed | tic... D. KITTY KELLY erg SEND NO MONEY for Personal. ROAME cnn scvcs-pescenscvesson sizes te ee Shopper 3 7114 MDD RESS cos eyes ee ee oe pee ee seer nee en eoee eae eeee re 5 } : s 3 : CUEY oc ccccescncocteeeses STATE)... 00005.-- 22: PHONE. 0. 2sccseucdscecesse : : a A a ™ 108 NORTH SAGINAW EMPLOYER'S ADDRESS ........ Jscveseeperes Deere seceessueiscceseasaesercs a. 7 : } 7 z