The Weather Fair Details page. two THE PONTIAC prestt OVER Pane r 118th YEAR xe * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1955 —30 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS PHOTOS eo INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE 7 9 Americans Hurt in New Korean Riots, * * x * * ~ Annual 4- H Fair Under Way Tomorrow «amv Farm Equipment Slowaway! a a in U.S. Airmen Reveal and Produce to Be Exhibited | Show Scheduled to Run Through Saturday at Perry-Walton Site Oakland County's an- nual “back -to-the- farm” movement gets under way tomorsgow as the 4-H and Agricultural Fair opens for. thousands of visitors. Slated for exhibition are! projects of “the 2,500 4-H) Club members, along with | a variety of farm equipment | and produce. , Indications are that this may be the biggest fair yet. and growing Oakland County is expected to jam the show at Perry and Walton with throngs of spectators through its clos. | ing Saturday evening. Every county road will be in use tomorrow as trucks haul the mem- bers and their displays to the fair grounds. The site was readied Sun- | day by an army of club member | volunteers, under the direction of | fair manager John K. Bray, After a day of setting-np, the fair will really begin to roll along with the evening selection of the Fair Queen, | Entrants from the different clubs will be Judged at 745 se with last year’s winner — Johnson, on hand to Pore new beauty, The girls must be between 15 and 21 years of age, and active in 4H club work. In addition, they also must have at least one sum- mer project. (Continued on page 8) Ford Fund Proposes Atom Studies Prizes DETROIT @#—The Ford Fund propesed to establish awards in Atomic Research similar to Nobel Prizes in Physics, Medicine, Chemistry, Physiology, Literature and Promotica of Penee. A Ford heue ex cheanen dis- closed over the weekend that the Ford Fund had set aside a million dollars to provide the awards, if the plan is approved by the U.S. Government. And if government approval is given, formal announcement of the plan miay come teday at opening of the International Con- ference for the Peaceful Use of Atomie Energy at Geneva, Swit- zerland. Any formal announcement has been left to the government, which would make as many details avail- able as security chiefs think ad- | visable, Scientists of all nations, includ- ing Russia, would be eligible for the annual prize or prizes. ~ * * * * * x * * ¥* x -* ¥* ur ‘Tumult Erupts | Obie; Sgt, Clifford E. Griggs, AP Wirepbote | ing 24% years in China. | Dubois, Pa.; Sgt. Joseph Dub- WHO 68 BILL? — With a smile on her face, 16-year-old Joycelin “They used ‘persuasion’ that | | berty, Bristol, Ga.; Sgt. William Joan Pilapil, of Hilo, Hawaii, refuses to answer the question as she is| civilized people simply do not Kellon, Drene, Miss.; and Pte. Sunday. She | know about,"’ he said. i escorted to shore by an FBI nurse at Long Beach, Calif., was a stowaway aboard the Canadian Destroyer Athabaskan, | woman among 240 men. She has indicated her boy friend, “Bill,” the reason. (Story, page 57) " Sawdust Flies for Annual 4-H Fair P usan Streets | Four Koreans Injured | in Outbreak Against Neutral Nations Team SEOUL \) — Nine Amer- ican soldiers and four Koreans were reported in- jured in renewed Korean riots last night at Pusan against the neutral truce supervisors. The. U.S. 8th Army of- |-fically denied Korean police |reports that U. 8.--guards | bayoneted three Koreans lin an earlier outbreak at | Pusan Saturday. | Police said none of the 13 were reported seriously hurt today in | the stone-throwing clash between |demonstraters and U.S. soldiers | guarding. quarters of the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission inspecting teams. The Sth Army sald six Amert- cans were given dispensary treatment for slight injuries. It sald they are Military Police Capt. Robert Paonessa, Chicago; Sgt. William D. Perry, Sandusky, = Torture Method Commies Used Beatings and ae Diet Are Called Mild, Treatment by Fliers | ' = TOKYO (?}—The Chinese © 2) Reds inflicted months of | i on excruciating physical and mental torture on 11 U.S.) airmen to wring statements | used to convict them as_| spies, Col. John Knox Ar- | nold Jr. told a press confer- |ence here yesterday. | The 11 men, released last | Thursday at the Hong) Kong border, are scheduled | to leave Tokyo Wednesday morning for home in two} *U.S. Air Force transports. Arnold Jed the others yesterday in telling of their treatment dur- | 5 Eugene Dainey, Webster, 8. D. | Korean national police said a | U. 8S, soldier slightly cut a Korean | with a bayonet at Taegu in prod- lone | } He told of being slugged in the | was j | face with his hands fled behind | | him, ef tourniquet-like mana- Cool Weather Is Expected . = {0 May Through Tuesday The long hoped for cool is expected to stay at least through tomorrow. cles, of being “forced to stand | until you started screaming.” Then he broke down briefly. | i ding him to get moving, The 8th | Army said it had no information. } LJ *- o “| Police Arnold, of Silver Spring, Md., estimated ‘some 30,000 Sith, a B29 shot down Jan. Korean laborers milled through 433, while on a Korean War Pusan streets throughout last [oP e Bead mission over | ae Ss, | Other demonstrations were- re- wa ported at the west coast ports of © linchon and Kunsan, | AWAIT ANSWER Ponting Press Phote | South Korea's government awalt- North Korea, Peiping’s Communist propaganda radio announced last | November that Arnold and his 10' = it lerewmen had been convicted of = s wave, which hit Saturday, | intruding over Manchuria on @/ - «oe seewsnens — ‘the most efficient sav ‘ | spvi mission, he id’ he never had confessed dust-spreader on the market is this 13-year-old model | of residents of the Oakland County area attend the ed an answer, meanwhile, to its After seven straight days of 90-plus temperatures, the to intruding over China or to being | from New Hudson. When it comes to spreading it for) five day event, which is held at the 4H fairgrounds | Jemand that_all NNSC teams get mercury dropped to a high of only 86 in downtown, on a'spy mission. Pontiac Saturday and barely made it to the 80 mark | Sunday. The forecast called for fair today and a little warmer had come to the Pacific to aid tomorrow. High roms was expected to be 75 to 80, countries in danger of being over- | igh tomorrow 78 to 84. The cooler breezes ended ¢——— low tonight 58 to 63 a hot spell which saw 22) (days in the 90s since July | 1. The thermometer regis- | tered 60 at 8 p.m. in down- | town Pontiac and had! climbed to 74 by 1 p.m. The torrid weather left Satur- | day amid numerous thunderstorms | and two small tornadoes. Tlie baby twisters hit at Hastings | ¢ in Barry County and the Clark | Lake vicinity southeast of Jackson. | The only injury reported was to) er who was tossed into a con- | cession stand by} = twister as sel mashed ‘prope ties. at ‘the cin County fair | grounds, Sunday night was 42 degrees at | Grand Marais on the Lake Super- | ior Shore of the Upper Peninsula. | The cooling mass, of air over- spread the east and “he north- | ern parts of Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi.. U.S., Red: China: Stymied on Civilian Repatriation GENEVA (#—The United reported bogged dowh today over procedure on the pro- posed repatriation of civilian nationals of two countries. After a meeting of almost 21% | U. Alexis Johnson and Wang Ping-nan called another 48-hour recess without announcing any progress. States and Red China were hours, Ambassadors The discussions up . to+ now. Have been confined to the problem of releasing 40 American civilians held by the Peiping regime and repatriating an indefinite number of Chinese students 1 : i 3 : speetite i iF nl ee a carnival work- | jst | News Agency, which claims under- | _ Ttao also said over thirty thou- | will swing into the northern edge H f John Schoenenbe: : ber at Pe nd Walt The selecting of a Fai n | out of the country by Saturflay. Fy Tete Un Ge eopragnonlge oicansod| a eotpaible owes = . a tomorrow The commission is composed of Se members from Switzerland and | Sweden and pro-Communist Pollnd ‘and Czechoslovakia, The ROK Sister of Pope Ike Restates Peace Stand x" Se in Note to Atom Congress : North Korea. It also wants Dies in Italy | Swedes and Swiss to leave. In a letter to the ROK govern- GENEVA (?) — President Eisenhower said today that | ment, ne ‘on Lagived heer pe. atomic science is the “newest and the most promising | “cooperation to Pontiff Depressed Over tooi” of all to help clean up the “dark breeding places” aaa veleaen ppg too psa: Death of 83-Year-Old of disorders and wars. ernment source sald, Josephine Pacelli | He sent a message of-greeting to the opening session | /of the International Gonference on Peaceful Uses of | Atomic Energy, to be read by Chairman Lewis L. Strauss of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. In it. the President re-e————— The &th Army in a release said (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) , affirmed his pledge of Dec. | are the dark breeding paces of |8, 1953, to the U.N. to find) disorders and wars. $8,500,000 Suit ways to apply this science | Eisenhower said no other scien- a only statement he signed, | of the Nu-Ly-Wix 4-H Club can't be beat, Thousands | will begin-the activities, at he said, was one that his air unit, | a | the 58Ist Aerial Resupply Group, | run by nations opposed to democ- racy. At the trial in Peiping, later, |other statements were added to | this which made it sound as if he | had confessed to a spying mission. | a | repudiated that statement’ at ae trial.” he said. | Maj, William H. Baumer, Lewis- | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) I: | | Reds Threaten — Near Formosa Nationalists Report Will Hurricane Chinese Commies Move Connie Batter in Two Areas ‘Eastern Coast? died of pneumonia at her home | | | here last night, She had been para- ~|Doesn’t Worry TAIPEI, Formosa (® — National; MIAMI, Fla. «®— A weather | lyzed for more than 20 years. sources continue: to report | @rama now shaping up will deter- | >: * Prosecutor Ziem | threatening moves by the Chinese imine in the next 24’ hours whether | The 29. year-old pontiff, now at Reds, REA in southwest China and | the U.S. eastern seaboard will feel his summer home at Castel Gandol | to the wel being of man| tifie gathering of such scope Z| Oaidang County Prosecutor Fred- in the mainland areas opposite | the 135-mile winds of Hurricane | fo, was reported “very depressed”’ | instead of death. s importance has ever taken plate, erick C. Ziem is being sued for | Formosa. | Connie. at his sister’s death. He had been! ‘We appeal not alone to govern- | | with peoples of the world repre- | $8,500,000. ; ; The first big -hurricane of the | very close to her, prayed for hours ‘ments to join us in this coopera-| S¢Dted. and a je yt carla at, But he isn't worried in the least. year plowed steadily along over for her yesterday and kept in con-| tive endeavor,” he said. “We are | — in restore “old — of sack The current rage among Jack- the open sea‘at about 15 miles an} stant telephone communication | hopeful also that business and pro- he ent ie aoauea a so w a son state prison inmates seenis | grourid contacts on the mainland, | hour. It was bypassing the Bahama | with her home during her last ill- | fessional groups throughout the years.” srup lor 80 MANY! 1, be starting large—But ground. said more than 50,000 Communist | island chain, its center about 200 | ness. | world will become interested and | less damage suits against the © ‘troops recently had massed in Miles from the nearest land. | Funeral services willbe held on will provide incentives: in finding A Iter Poli Shot southwest Yunnan. A trough in front of a high pres- Wednesday at the Church of St. | mai ways that this science can be Assauiter Folice ono During the’ recent prosecutors troops wi sure system moved eastward, and Theresa. etreame picts fe act | | evanhauaiy will rue Cenk’ The | oa * wos |“ ‘Dies From Gun Wounds ;convention at Mackinac Island a ) | drama shapes up like this, as de-| Josephine Pacelli was the widow| Saying the atom Itself is “nom. |) eric un_one 6f three men | Contest was held to see which man Also, the agency asserted, | s-ribed by storm forecasters in the | of the late Count Mengarini, In ad- |! Political” and only man’s choice | currently has the biggest damage large quantities of war material | viami Weather Bureau: | dition to the Pope, she is survived; C8 make It good or evil, the | Wounded by a Lansing policeman | /action filed against him. were pouring into Paoshan, an But if its movement is slow and|by a younger sister, Elizabetta | . Said: | early Saturday died Sunday at a) Seven prosecutors reported suits a daughter; “All of the enlightened nations of | local hospital. | against them in excess of one mil- | the world are spending large sums | Morris C. Melton, 21, died from lion: dollars, but Ziem won hands ROME W — Josephine Pacelli, | | 83-year-old sister of Pope Pits XII, | * * s The Interior Ministry's Tatao law officers who put them there. important point on the Yunnan | Connie gains another three degrees | Countess Rossiniani, section of the Old Burma Road. (180 miles) of latitude, it possibly | |and three grandchildren. Another brother, Prince Frances-' every year on programs of health, | wounds inflicted by Patrolman | down. sand workers were being employed | of the low pressure trough. The | co Pacelli, died 20 years ago after | education and economic develop- | | John Lynch, 23. Lynch, shot Mel-! “If the prisoner gets a judg- re build about 270 miles of né@w | 4ir flow on that side is from the playing an important role in the ment. They do so because they | ‘ton and two companions after the | ment for that amount it would al- highways in Fukien Province, op- | east. This would push Connie to- | reconciliation between the church | know that disease, ignorance and trio assaulted him in an alley fol-| most break me," the prosecutor posite Formosa, “in preparation al ward land, and Mussolini, ' observed, “Th Khrushchev, Zhukov Pick Raspberries » i : the lack of economic opportunity lowing a drinking bout. The official Nationalist Central | News Agency said the Chinese | Communists had activated three | chemical warfare divisions and had | =a" Viglotov Dunks Envoy’s Wife at Zany Party , The report, datelined Hong Kong mee No source, - 7: MOSCOW (®—Foreign Minister three divisions, it said. had) \golotoy took the Indonesian am- been specially trained by Soviet | i ssadce’s wile rowing bet flooded the boat and soaked. the lady. Russians -in North and Central China. U.S, Ambassador Charles E. Bohlen bested Deputy Premier A. I. Mikoyan in a boat race. diplomats and newsmen and their families and many Russians. The Soviet capital had never He added that he hoped it would | the Russian hospitality with an/| prompting one newsman to be only the first of many such | — dinner for the Soviet Jead. | Bulganin, “Doesn't this - look “ festivities: jee paging: Po of ner rae sgh seen anything like it, as the Pre-|. “pyt this should not siete” plan to © reconnaissance 0 mier himself admitted. with our work, ” Khrushchev inter: | | “Molotov came a cropper as he | the Soviet Union?” The program included a two- | jected. | wound up a boat ride with Mrs.| “Yes, 1 suppose this is the start hour luncheon, community singing |" Responding to the Premier, the | | Subandrio and Argentine Ambas-/of it,” the Premier replied, roar- led by stars of the Bolshoi Theater, | dene of the diplomatic corps, Bur- | Sador —— Bravo, In beaching | ing with laughter. More Light in World GENEVA ®—A United. Nations deer " park. foes of the group gathered under a fir tree for the port energy by the end of the telecast of the Moscow Spartak Z Pe Bs Oe in_ his present century as it did in 1952,|len’s l-year-old daughter—Avis eebter’biunfe' 50 vietacy Guar tee In Today's Press| Molotov blushed as Defense Min-| “Yes, he has got me growing catch three fish land's Wolverhampton Wanderers. * Bub County News.......,...,-11, 17 | ister Zhukov called him “a terrible | corn, Editorials Seeegeeeeooneres «€. f I Bulganin . a ‘on speech al Sports ..:... 2, the end of lunch said the party PCP oe eee eee ee ee. coe ewes Despite temperatures over much of the state, swimming and boating accidents led to 11 drown- ings. Eleven were killed in traffic ee man died in a fall. ; Rapids, killed north of Grand Rapids, . Wesley. Neal, 43, a Bay City father of six, in Merritt Township outside Bay -City. Valentine G. Ramirez, 271, Muske- gon, east of Muskegon on M-46. ~ James Edward, 48, Albion. west | | of Albion. Harold Sidebottom, 60, Detroit, struck crossing Detroit intersec- tion, deseph Soltys, 51, Plymouth, in Nankin Township outside De- troit, Joseph Haydu, 2%, Detroit in it. , William Anderson, 13. Wells, in Escanaba suburb. ! Will Baker, 49, Flint, struck by automobile on Flint street. Mrs. Anna B. Gunder, 55, Riga, Mich., in collision near Blissfield. Joseph Michiek, 57, Detroit, who fell 15 feet while repairing siding on his home. * ; Claude J. Wardlaw, 87, Ypsilan- | ti, kifled near Ann Arbor, _ DOWNED WERE: | David Elson, 23, Charlotte, in| Soubee Lake near Sunfield. Nancy Ann. Whiting, 16 months, nr¢ ‘ie ® MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1955 4 THiwvwet | GOLD CUP RACE WINNERS — Hand of Lee Schoenith, right, is shaken by Walt Kade, driver of | unlimited hydroplanes, in Seattle. Schoenith is talk- Such Crust IIL, after Schoenith, in Gale V of Detroit | ing with Bill Myncey, left, driver of Miss Thirfyway, AP Wirephote Baoan Oe Gaspe --- Nea Is Canada’s STA—PG II By JOE HAAS Pontiac Press Feature Writer | GASPE, Quebec — This.ig the, jumping-off place to Ireland from | that part of the North American, continent that is south of the | mighty St. Lawrence River, which | Vandercook Lake, drowned Sunday | in Stony Lake, 10 miles east of | Jackson. | Harvey Wagner, 17, Berrien Springs, drowned Sunday in Lake Chapin, near his home. Theodore Thrana, 20, Rose, N. Y., drowned Sunday, in Lake Cadillac, John Bernard Hoolihan, 15, Stanweed, drowned In Muskegon River, Andrew Clark, Belleville, drowned Sunday in Lake Erie off Sterling State Park, near Mon- roe, Albert Benz, 43, Flint, drowned Saturday in Long Lake in Iosco County. Thomas Roddy, 35, Detroit, drowned Saturday in Detroit River. Donovan Kott, 23, Muskegon, drowned in Canfield Lake, near Manistee, Friday night. Chester Crab, 32, Frenchtown Township, drowned Saturday in Lake Erie, four miles north of Monroe. Pontiac CAP Members Plan Training Trip Leaving Wednesday morning by t transport from Selfridge Field for Sampson_Air Force Base, N. Y¥., will be 11 members of the Civil Air Patrol, Pontiac Squad- Fon’ 6318-2. . The local group will join 600 Michigan CAP cadets who will un- dergo an intensive 10-day period | of study and flight instruction there, according to Sgt. Dee Rob- inson, public information officer. Accompanying th e céadets will be Company Commander Lt. Rob- ert Turner, and the sqaudren’s chaplain, the Rev, Wesley Wib- ley, pastor of the First Assembly of God Church. . During~ their encampment at the base, CAP personne! will at- tend courses in aircraft mainten- ance, meteorology, and navigation, along with physical education and precision marching drills instruc- tion. . Lt.. Erma Haynes, Corp. Randy Strickland, and Sgt. Robinson will serve as cadet leaders for the group during their stay in New York, Other CAP members making the trip are Lt. Col. Robert W. Car. rick, Pvt. Fran Affolder, Pvt. Wes- ley Jennings, Pvt. Richard Rice, Pvt. Mike Pearson and Pvt. Archie Haynes. The Weather PAGE TWO—.. ... ..- ... ..... PONTIAC AND VICINIY—Fair today, tonight and Tuesday. A little warmer ‘Tuesday. Light variable winds. High today to 8, low tonight 58 te 43, Tuesday 18 to 84. high ~ Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 s.m. At 8 a.m,.: Wind Velocity 15 mph Direction: East. Sun sets Monday at 7:43 pm Sun rises Tuesday at $:32 a.m Moon rises Monday at 9:47 p.m Moon sets Tuesday at 11:56 a.m. poten ea | Adantic Ocean in its upper reaches. Bell | here is wider than the southern: peninsula of Michigan. Tonight we are nearer Dublin | than Pontiac. Few people realize | how our continent spreads into the | Ot course Labrador and New- foundiang are further east, but they are so far to the north that the Gaspe Peninsula is the all embracer in any connection between our states and European countries, Gaspe marks; the start of the) Appalachi- an Mountain range which ex- tends to the southwest through the maritime) provinces and | several] of oar | States. i The start is a HAAS very ambitious jone. The mountains rise directly from the St, Lawrence River to a | height of several hundred feet, | which gives them the impression | ‘of being higher than some of our | | western mountains. | SIZE OF MASSACHUSETTS | The peninsulais only about the | ;Size of Masachusetts, but in’ | the 550-mile drive around its shores | it offers some of the most out-, | standing scenic effects on our con- | |tinent. Surely there is nothing in| | the east that surpasses it for pure | | natural grandeur. Over nine-tenths of this highway | | is paved, and the remainder has a| |good hard surface or is ‘under | | construction, It is one of the most | | difficult road construction projects | } in the world.and over $25 millions | | | | already have been spent on it, | j largely coming from gas and weight taxes.” For hundreds of miles a stone wall ranging up to 50 feet high has been laid toe support the sea side of the road, and give it protection from the high tides of the Atlantic, which back up | in the St. Lawrence for a long distance. Thousands of homes dot the high- way along the shores of the river, every state in our own nation is | |represented among the auto. li-' /eense plates on cars parked at. these homes. \GASPE STELLAR ATTRACTION | In the concentrated effort now | | under way throughout Canada to! make it a yacation land, special emphasis is placed on the Gaspe Peninsula, They hope to make it their stellar attraction in the east. But it is not alone as a vacation spot that the Gaspe has a big value, Its mountains, hills, valleys and level sections were covered with forests largely of the kind that make good paper pulp. These now are being cleared off and the logs hauled to the mills, and the land converte’, as far as possible, into fertile farm- ing fields. This great highway In the wood pulp business, the Gaspe is the eastern start of Can- ada’s biggest industry, the manu- facture of print paper, which stretches from here 4,000 miles to the Pacific Ocean, HJ I esti ? cgi TUE i ri a | GASPE NEAREST 17 | | Korea where the demonstrations was announced winner of Sunday's Gold Cup race for | Seattle boat, which’ placed_second. rest Ireland, Vacationland | occupation in the dominion, except | farming. | Besides having an almost unlim- ited supply of the forest products that go into its manufacture, Can- ada also has thousands of lakes and streams to supply the fresh water that is such a vital com- | ponent of paper making. It is said that into the making of every : of print paper has gone, over a ton of water, first in float- ‘ing it to the mills and then in its manufacture, Nine Gls Injured in Korean Rioting (Continued From Page One) reports that American military guards had bayoneted three Ko- reans in the Saturday Pusan riot- ing were tales. * * The Army statement quoted an unnamed U.S. Army officer as say- ing a “uniformed Korean agitator on a truck shouted at military police ‘Go ahead and stick me.’ “When the MPs refused to use bayonets, he (the Korean) pulled out a knife and slashed his own arms and face.” TRY TO CUT WATER LINE Police said last night’s Pusan rioting broke out wher Korean | demonstrators tried to cut the water supply line into the Hialeah compound housing truce inspec- tion teams. There were no reports that the | line had been cut. * o LJ | Korean police also said 22 other | Koreans were injuréd when U.S. soldier guards used tear gas to break up the mob. Riots flared yesterday at Taegu, midway between Seoul and Pusan; at Kunsan on the west coast; and at Kangnung on the east coast. Steel-helmeted American soldiers with armored cars were called out in all five ports of entry in South broke out. The; most violent was at Pusan, | where 4,000 people swelled the | wi}! meet with Governor Williams crowd that milled and shouted. | Both an ROK government source | and the Korean War Veterans, Assn, said the five men alleged to have been bayonetted will need at least three weeks hospital treat- | . ment. | 6,000; DEMONSTRATE Another crowd of 6,000 demon- strators gathered before the harbor island where the truce team is quartered, Some circled the island in boats as U.S. troops guarded the narrow causeway to the island. The U.N. Command has respon- sibility for guarding the truce | teams. In Washington, officials dis- played little sympathy for strong- arm methods which have marked the demonstrations against the truce teams. While it agrees that the Czech and Polish team members have observation rights in South Korea which the Reds do not accord the Swiss and Swedes in the North, the U.S. government nevertheless is determined that if the truce teams are to be “abolished it. must be done in an orderly and proper way — not by violence or threats. President Syngman Rhee told The Associated Press that a year ago Secretary of State John Fost Dulles promised that Korea's ob- jections to the Communist truce inspectors could be settled without violence. _ “That was a year ago,” said the | aed President, “and the Commu- nist members of the NNSC are still in Korea spying.” , VFW Delegates to Confer j training at Ft. Knox, Ky., or at ton; Thomas G. Powers, 314 Nel- ? Area Inductees. Leave for Army Nineteen - Man Group | Headed for Ft. Wayne, to Start Processing Leaving this morning tor Army processing at Ft. Wayne, Detroit, were 19 Pontiac and Oakland County draftees. Local draft board officials said the men probably will take basic Camp Chaffee, Ark. dames D. Oates, 30 N. Lynn St. was named leader of the 6-mag contingent from Pontiac Board 65 while Raymond C, Najor, of 31170 Lahser Rd., Birmingham, will head the 13-member group from County Board 67. . Besides Oates, inductees from the local board were: Bob G, Houston, 36 Franklin Blvd.,-Will- jam A. Landry, 305 N. Paddock; William C. Kreiner, 8882 Arling- son, and Arthur E, Odden, 876 Stanley St. : Other men from Board 67 were: | Richard C. Najor, of Birmingham} Lawrence D. Peck. (Ann Arbor), Earl L. Garner, Holly; Glen F. Thomson, - Rochester; Allen D. Folsom, Birmingham; Ernest M. | Salter, Ortonville; Charles R. Doyle, 64 Pine St; Richard E. Kidd, 60 Lyford St., Ervin W. McPhee, Royal Oak; Grant R. Campbell, Drayton Plains; Engel Groenberg, 1710 Ward St. and Billy T. Wiseheart, Rochester. Plan to Discuss Defectives Aid THE PONTIAC PRESS. | ‘Pontiac Deaths - George Ebert —- George Evert, 80, of 28:Stephens Ct., died in Herman Kiefer Hos- pital yesterday after a 2 month illness. He was born in Chilton, Wiscon- sin, on November 5, 1874, and was married to Abigail Johnson in Chi- cago, Il., in 1905. He has been a resident of Pontiac for 4 years. Paul E officiating. Burial will be’ in Perry Mt. Park Mrs. Gladys Williams Mrs. Gladys Williams, 39, of 334 South Boulevard West, was dead on arrival to Pontiac General Hos- pital after an illness of 2 weeks. She was born on February 14, 1916 in New Orleans, La, and mar- ried Arthur Williams in Port Ar- thur, Texas in 1943. | Mrs. Williams has been a resi- dent of the city for 10 years. Besides her husband she is sur- He had been previously employed with the Detroit Trust Co. Pontiac, two sisters, Mrs. Ida Mor- gan, and Josephine Ebert, both of Omaha, Ne . He is also sur- vived_by 2 efanichildres and + great grandchild. Funeral will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday from the Brace-Smith Funeral Home with the Rev. John W. Mulder officiating, Burial will | be in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. |Mrs. Hattie C. Lippert Hattie C. Lippert, 75, of 174! J Draper St., died Saturday in the Avon Center Hospital after an ill- ness of four months. Born in Germany March 23, 1880, she was the daughter of Frederick and Clare Malone Pitz- wahl, She has lived in Pontiac with her husband Otto for many years. Besides her husband, Hattie is dred Snover of Rochester; two sons, Martin. of Romulus, and Harold of Clarkston. She is also survived by a sister Mrs. Annie Ebert of Cheboygan, Wisc.; 11 grandchildren and 3 great grand- | children, The funeral service will be Tuesday at 2 p.m. from the Bethel Evangelical and Reformed Church | with the Rev. Maynard Oe6esterle officiating. The body may be viewed at the William Potere Funeral Home in_ Rochester. Burial will be in the Mt. Avon | Cemetery. Mrs. Orpha E. Reed Mrs. Orpha E. Reed, 538, of 349} Seward St., died Saturday in the Bloomfield Hospital after a long illness. , She was born in Kentucky, tober 29, 1897 and married Ray- mond Reed November 19, 1912. Mrs. Reed is survived by her husband, three daughters, Mrs. Opal Cox, Mrs. Mabel Epley and Mrs. Irene Auten and five sons, Orie, Joseph, Raymond, Samuel ' and Donald all of Pontiac, Also_ surviving are two sisters, Mrs. | Lezzie Bell Blythe and Mrs. Pear! Anderson, both of Russellville, Kentucky; 18 grandchildren and 1 great grandchild. The funeral service will be held Tuesday at.2 p. m. from the Sher- man Funeral Home in Ortonville with the Rev. Bishop Parrent of Pontiac officiating. The burial will be in the Ortonville Cemetery. | —— George Stimage George Stimage, 67, of 619 Dit- mar St,. died Friday. in the Oak- land County Infirmary after an | illness of 2 months. He was born in Utica, Missis- sippi on August 12, 1897 and mar- ried Altha Dains in Clarksdale. Miss., in 1917. George has been a resident of the county for 11 years and has farmer. Judge Moore, Senator Broomfield to Confer With Governor Two Oakland County officials within the next two weeks to dis- cuss possible bent of providing immediate institutional space for county children ruled mentally de- fective. State Sen, William 8S. Broom- field (R-Royal Oak) and Probate dudge Arthur FE, Moore will meet with the governor after the state's top executive returns Aug. 16 from Chicago. The two revealed Saturday that 93 county children have been com- mitted to the Lapeer State Home and Training School but cannot gain admittance for lack of space. They remain an almost itmpos- sible burden on their families, “We hope to work out a proposal to put before the Legislature when it convenes in’ January,” said Broomfield, ‘either for a new in- stitution in Oakland or for expan- sion of existing facilities.”* by Freed Airmen Hg «. :; BEER Ht ak i it a if Bésides his widow, he is sur- vived by'2 daughters and 2 sons, Mrs. Leola Johnson of Clarksdale, Miss.. Menion Stimage. of Pontiac and Charlie Stimage of Chicago, IHinois. The funeral service will be at 2 p. m. Wednesday from the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home with the Rev. F. B. Reed of the New Hone Baptist church officiating. The burial will be in the Oak Hill Cemetery. Barbara M. Wethy Barbara M. Wethy, 74, of 1028 Boston Ave., died Sunday in her home after an illness of 12 years. Born in DeFord, Michigan on February 26, 1881, she was the daughter of William and Many Walker Retherford. She came to the city from Kings- ton, Michigan, and has been a resident for 46 years. She is survived by 5 daughters of Miami, Florida, and Laurence and Basil Wethy of Pontiac. Mrs. Red Torture Told: aoe and a brother. Mrs. Wesley Mc- Cain of Pontiac, Mrs, Virginia Michigan, grandchildren. Funeral will be at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday from the Farmer-Sno- ver Funeral Home with the Rev. — FOR SERVICE * 807 z z Surviving are.a son George of | Leonard Arthur Jr., Gladys Marie, survived by a daughter, Mrs. Mil- | Oc- | been employed as a Mrs. Ozella Jackson, of Pontiae:— INSURANCE . - Maynard Johnson. vived by 4 daughters and a son. Mrs. Alex Davenport of Pontiac, Cherry Ann and Eloise Williams, all at home. Funeral will be at 8 p. m. Thurs- day from the New Bethel Baptist Church with the Rev. Wm. H. Bell officiating. The burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. The body may be viewed at the Frank Carruthers | Funeral Home, Wednesday night. Missing Scout Sought in Area Birmingham Residents | ~Report Boy Matching Description Michigan State Police are today investigating a report from Bir- mingham Police that a boy fitting the description of the 12-year-old Boy Scout missing since July 5 from a Whitehall scout camp was seen in the Birmingham area. Birmingham Police received a report from Mrs. John J. Zim- merman of 2275 Fairway Dr., that a boy resembling young Peter Al- | len Gorham of Evanston, II., called at her home recently to ask for donations to the American Cancer Society. Mrs, Zimmerman told police when she went for the money, the boy was gone. Mrs. Zimmer- man sald the boy produced Boy Scout identification and that he asked for a-cash donation. Mrs, Zimmerman described the | boy as blond with a brush-cut that | was growing out and wearing a. white t-shirt and kahki trousers. | Birmingham Police also received | a report from Mrs. Zimmerman's next door nieghbor that a boy fit- | ting the same description called at | her door asking for cancer dona- | tions also. She said she could not | positively identify the boy but he did resemble a picture the -police | showed her of the Gorhan youth. | Another Birmingham resident, T. E. Hendrickson of 1170 Arden Lane, told police he had given a boy fitting the description. some money and had noticed another youth waiting for the boy standing by the road. HMéndrickson described this | and about 14 or 15 years old. | Mrs. Zimmerman also told police | she had called the American Can- | cer Society and was told no solici- | tation of this kind was being con- | ducted? The Boy Scouts of America also | told Mrs. Zimmerman their organ- ization was not sponsoring any | such door-to-door campaign. _ County Deaths Charles and Christine Hatley WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Service was held today for Chris- | tme Elizabeth and Charles Eugene Hatley, infant twins of Mr. and Mrs, William J. Hatley of 933 Lake- view St. Christine was dead at, birth at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital , |Wednesday and Charlies died Thursday. Burial was in Ottawa Park Cemetery, by. Pursley Fu- neral Home. Surviving are the parents, two | brothers, William and Jerry, and a | sister, Linda June, all at home. Robert F. Roberts KEEGO HARBOR-—Service for Pvt. Robert F. Roberts, 24, of 3034 Norcott St., will be held at-2 p.m. Wednesday from the Pursley Fu- neral Home, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. He died Friday in the Naval Hospita] at Great Lakes, 1), 7 He is survived by his mother, Phoebe, sjx brothers, Jack, of Port Huron; and Garnett, Wesley, William, Eugene, Kyle, and one sister, Mrs. Goldie Penoyer, all of Arthur E. Withers OXBOW LAKE — Service for Arthur E. Withers, 57, of 15 Dan- forth Dr., will be held Wednesday at the Sparks - Griffin Faneral Home, with burial in Oakland Hills cemetery. He died Sunday. He ig survived by his widow, June, a daughter, Mrs. Gilbert Richmond of Oxbow Lake, and a sister, Mrs. Hazel Stone, of Phoe- nix, Ariz, : About two million volunteer workers are enrolled in Red Cross activities. The Day in Birmingham Commission to Consider Objections to Parking Lot ‘BIRMINGHAM—A major share of tonight's City Commission meet- | ing is expected to revolve around’ a hearing which will consider ob- , ‘jections to the city's proposal to_ ‘eonstruct a second. municipal parking tot. The newest parking lot would be ed in the north half of the block bounded by Merrill, Bates, Townsend and Henrietta. Along the same lines, a report | will be submitted by the plan- ning department on the north- east portion of the city’s central business disftict. A third park- ing area in that location has re- ceived an approving but informal nod from lawmakers. Reports submitted by City Man- jager Donald C. Egbert will bring | discussion on the paving of Quar- | ton (16 Mile) road and surrounding streets. Improved maintenance of | park properties will also be taken up. i | Approval -of a city charter amendment would raise both the salaries and working hours of the justice and associate justice of | peace. Passage of another resolution would place before voters at the April, 1956 election, the question of whether the city be allowed to sell lots 56-583 in Adams Park Subdivision. | Other hearings will consider ob- | jections to vacating an alley ad-| jacent to property owned by Wil- | liam Dove, 640 Wallace St. and ex- | tension of the sewer on East Maple between Woodward and Brownell. * * * The Birmingham Community | Bioodmobile of the Oakland County Chapter of the American Ked Cross will be stationed at the First Methodist Charch until 8 tonight. Area residents between night from the home of Mr. and Mrs. ‘Robert L. Martin, 960 Har- mon Ave The Martins told police they questioned their 15-year-old baby sitter when they returned home ‘and. found evidence of a party. The -sitter told them three boys jand another girl, all 15 years old, | had been there i The teenagers have so far de- nied any knowledge of the theft, police said. < , Police also are checking the theft |of a $590 outboard motor which was reported missing Saturday | from a building at 1256 S. Wood- ward Ave. Bruce Mellendorf of Lake Orion told police the motor | was in the building when he left Friday night. but missing when he returned Saturday morning. * Ld Me George L. Greenup, 351, of De- {roit, was admitted to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital yesterday for in- juries suffered in a two-car colli- sion at the East Maple-Eton in- | lersection, Greenup was released after | treatment for a deep lip laceration. | He was ticketed for failure to stop | in an assured distance ahead, after police said his auto struck, the |rear of a car driven by Joseph W. | Riley, 50, of 803 Ruffner St. At the time stopped for a tralf Riley was le signal Charles E. Webb Service for Charles E. Webb, 40, of 1979 Sheffield, will be held Wednesday afternoon, with time of service.to be announced later, He | died suddenly Sunday. Mr. Webb had been an electrical engineer with Continental Electrie Co. in Detroit since March, and prior to that had been with West- _inghouse. : Survivors include his wife, rea a gorge Ages eligible | Genevieve, one daughter, Christine aoe poral eee Elizabeth, and one son, Charles smect » written "all at home; his mother, Mrs. * * * Daily fishing expeditions for the past week by Mrs. Matthew Cle- vers wil] constitute the main at- traction when Zonta Club mem- bers gather at her Pine Lake Home for a fish fry at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow Swimming and_ boat- ing are includetl on the list of activities. a * Boys and girls attending to- morrow's 10 a.m, story hour at Baldwin Library will hear Kath- leen Piket, children’s librarian, read “The Talking Pot" and “East of the Sun and West of the Moon.” Kindergartners through sixth graders are invited. * * ae Police plan further ~questjoning of five Birmingham juveniles in connection with the theft of a | John Dallenbach: ers, Jack J Los Angeles Rader Stands Mute During Arraignment Hugh H. Rader. prominent High- land Park lumber dealer charged with manslaughter, stood mute this morning when he was arraigned in Oakland County Circuit Court. Judge George G. Hartrick et- , tered a plea of innocent for the 60-year-old West Bloomfield Town- ship resident and directed that a trial date be set. : | Rader, free on $2,000 bond, was charged after his car collided head- on with another June 27 on Middle Beit Road, resulting in the death and two broth- and Robert C., all of youth as blond, wearing a T- | $150 diamond and peer! ring. and of an 18-year-old Walled Lake boy shirt and blue or gray dungarees = @t antiue _ pistol taken Saturday and injuring three others. t YOU CAN’T BEAT for Automatic Heat! | esas ] IT’S CLEAN—ECONOMICAL— Best Buy in Oil Heat! Now, Mobilheat gives more heat than ever. ..has more heat units to keep your fuel bills low. It’s pre-fested for your furnace to give efficient, clean-burning com- bustion. And it’s dependable, so you're always sure of steady, comfortable heat regardless of just can’t beat Mobilheat! weather. You You can rely on Mobilheat Supply FRIENDLY “MOBIL” SERVICE! | When you sign a Mobilheat contract with us, you can forget your winter heating worries. Mobilheat service is automatic—yol’re always sure of adequate fuel oil supply. Our metered trucks assure you of full measure. Our courteous drivers protect your lawn, shrubbery See or Call Community National Bonk Phone FE 4.4523 and driveway. Call us today! ee ht tt me ’ teldmindecbohntetebtrlchebededetirdedrietetrltechelat igs Ke lea Bice = ‘ , pees reseneeneue ‘ ® “Sener ee i A f € 0 AGES No. 23 “‘Bonanzagra Have Fun! Win $100! “Bonanzagram” is an exciting new puzzle in which the Pontiac Press offers both fun and a $100 cash prize. BUT before you try your hand at “Bonanzagram” be sure and read the rules at the bottom of this page. Solution will appear in the Press Aug. 19. CLAIM CHECK Below is a duplicate of the “Bonanza- gram” entry you send in to contest headquarters. It is ESSENTIAL that you fill it in and save it until the correct solution to “Bonanzagram” No. 23 is published Friday, Aug. 19. Unless you do so, you will be unable to collect the prize if you should send in a winning solution. Check the rules below for turther details. asa i rie Rae ee p OF MAIL __ADOENED YOU AM ON THE w=eFAM AND ENJOY __IVING VERY MUCH AM BUM__ING ALONG AT A FAST T_OT PLAY HO__KEY OFTEN AND AM HER ON ALL COU__TS DONT __IND REA__ING THE HAR__EST OF MY LABORS HAVE SOME NEW __ ASSES WORKING HARD IN TRL__ FOR SPRING TERM HOPE YOU DIDNT CA__y AWAY MY OLD TO__S OR THE __jXED UP TR__CKS OR MY 800__5 | OR THE CHES SE-_ IF THEY'RE STILL AROUND PLEASE SEND __IGHT NO WANT TO __AVE THEM ALL AND U__E TOO KIDS KEEP BU__TING IN MY ALIBI FOR THIS _ ANGLED LETTER __ATE TOO CHEERIO IMPORTANT : Save This Claim Check Until Solution Is Published! Toear _gves PARENTS SORRY IF "ue Bonanzagram No. 23 Story Clues Mr. and Mrs, Mallard had been doing some traveling in the west, and also been much occupied in furnishing a new home They suddenly realized that they had not heard trom their young son, attending a large boarding school in the East, for al- most a month, so they sent off a chiding telegram, asking that he. write them air mail immediately. The youth, who had been busy with his own concerns, athletic and otherwise, noted it was April First and de- cided it was time for'a spoof. He wrote them in cryptic terms, leaving many of the words incomplete He knew it would amuse them to figuré out what news he had for them. The parents were able to {ill in and under- stand the letter. Can you, t decipher what the young jokester wrote? 00, OF MAIL __ADDENED YOU AM ON THE FAM AND ENJOY __IVING VERY MUCH | AM BUM__ING ALONG AT A FAST TOT PLAY HO__KEY OFTEN AND AM HER ON ALL COU__JS DONT __IND REA__ING THE HAR__EST OF MY LABORS HAVE SOME NEW __JASSES WORKING HARD IN TRI__ FOR SPRING TERM HOPE YoU DIDNT CA__y AWAY MY OLD TOS OR THE _JXED UP TR__CKS OR MY B00__5 OR THE CHES SE___ IF THEY'RE STILL AROUND PLEASE SEND __JGHT NO WANT TO __AVE THEM ALL AND U__F TOO KIDS KEEP BU_TING IN MY ALIBI FOR THIS. | ANGLED | LETTER ATE TOO CHEERIO Address cece ueeeees Name Bretiii are intense: wievereve City. . Phone......: (0 Check here if you would like the Press delivered to your home! ‘How to Play ‘Bonanzagram’ Solve the “Bonanzagram” by filling in all the missing letters, as indicated by the underscores, in the message. Insert only one letter above each underscore. Many — clues to the missing letters are hidden in the story. or an ying the peat lb gel reer oon Sd geet OO 1 knewledge should provide the correct letter. bore contestant will mote that the message is unpunctu- eted. Punctuation will help Arsh the mes- sage but is not necessary to win. 1. After solution is ompleted, “Bonansa- oram” should be clipped and pasted to @ two-cent postcard-with your name and address. 2. Entries will be received at the Pontiac Press office, ° W. Huron’St., until § om. The entrant must work out ond keep duplicate }solution as a@ claim check. those i # H F "uu : q a ae gram” All missing letters must be correctly -sedioe ied to win a Bonsagram will net be considered in judging @ correct answer. When filled in, the “Bonanza- will | out @ clear message that will conform in every way with the clues. In many cases it will seem that more than one word would be the correct one. That's part of the fun! You should weigh the- clues and select the BEST possible in each case. How to Submit 4. Entries may be mailed in envelope but mber one to a. . Mimeograph. duplicator or other un mechanical reproduc- 's forbidden. ot 0 | Bonansa- 6. fudges’ decision will be final and con- submission of entries indicates a oj THE, ‘PONTL AC PRESS, MONDAY, AU GUS frigeration. j burger and other | “Atomburger” by enterprising. rés- {taurateurs. but an honest-to-good: | ness, nuclear - treated hamburger given reporters sandwiches plus two important ad- tional Laboratory—- | ditional] features: | | rolling hills and odd shaped’ build- ings devoted exclusively to nuclear | i—it is sterile; ont can be preserved raw and without re- A preview of the atomic | lin the uses of atomic energy in food | preparation and sterilization was | | that has all the quality of present | Pnergy Commission's Argonne Na- ST &. |The Lowly Hamburger Gets, Eiocitted by Irradiation From Atomic Reactor LEMONT, Ill, (INS)—The atomic hamburger is just around the cor- ner, Not the giant sandwich dubbed | joss rgse arch. ‘The laboratory put into operation | irradiation facility | Aoday a large built specifically to things. to com | of Gamma radiation at the Atomic | | facitity—$100.000 ~34,000 acyes of| The ‘ INSTRUCTIONS: Each word is related to my 1 | appears under arrow, reading downward. | | tAMAN we eee eee WHAT'S MY LINE? scramble as few as possible to guess my line, Answer | big customer. work, Un- some food Experts believe food is to reduce and spoilage during | sterage. ibe done ing recontaminated Under these condit ANIRT HCMAR and when opened w fresh, nutritious and CPMA TYDUS when it was packed EFFECTIVE SAPS RAPDEA KIEH 1 VOCUABI bas SUTEAL Ww WN GAFUTIE SEMS © 1958 What's My Line Ine. Seturdey’s enswer: benD, shut, music, for, Merch, bAton, Jump, bOvees, paRede. * [= “\\ one tub washes while the other Clee rinses clothes are spun damp dry the aonm ee reas aluminum agitator is extra efficient call FE 4-2511 NIGHTS Til 9:00 TOR SHOPPIng radibartivity, etre, save > FREE other materials, The cost of this | BIG SWIMMING POOL ‘food atomizer. tually is just a carefully-construct ed exaggerated swimming pool, already is in full use with the U.S | Army ‘Quartermaster Corps as a The Army is interested in provid- |f ing fighting men with an ample supply and variety of tresh whole. | may be the answer. The idea behind irradiation of Researchers believe this best car | by purifving food sealing it in airtight containers | !which will prevent it from becom: | might keep indefinitely—or the effect of radiation wears off— | Tests thus far show clearly that | such foods as ground beef, waffles, | cooked ham and potatoes can be | preserved effectively inthis way. In every case researchers have to find out by trial and error how | large a dose of radiation will best | | do the job. Potatoes, keep well with 20,000 roentgens of | but given too much ‘52.18! Regularly ‘179.95 Absolutely Free! American Woolen Company's. famous Nylon Rayon gene Washable Blanket. Warm as toast with, rich, rayon satin 7-inch bindings. with your purchase rh # Waite's: ‘Washers—Air Conditioned Downsteirs Store \, cost of such treatment. Estimates , | range from & fraction of a cent to’ (7 cents a pound, but, as ai army | spokesman pointed out: Considering the added advan- |tages it is within the competttive range of conventional methods of food _Dreservation “T's THE Citizens an FOR INSURANCE Hard to Pronounce— Easy to Settle Withi FE 4-0588 ‘ BRUMMETT-LINCICOME, Inc. 367 East Pike Street line gn grow sprouts. oe te prevent the radiated heat from N In other ‘cases the taste and | cooking the feed. = . appearance of food is altered. The big question miark is the ; \ | The new atomizing tank at Ar-- | gonne, by speeding up tesearch, | wil) ald greatly in learning about | and solving ‘these problems, The | pool itself is 20 feet deep and study effects! holds 565,000 gallons of water, on foods and | which acts as a shield to pro- henadl bandiors and as _coelant a cn nm i La " which ac irradiation deterioration a and then | ‘a= ions, the food | until | i} be just as | appetizing as | wr Lae wegen 4 year? pen ne hates - a i ree « There ee ended of Braids to Choose from at McCandless. 1! North Perry Street | for instance Model 532 {1 and | your old washer Full or Twin Size. any Easy Merchandise! * K fy i) DAPEC Ba at ae : ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1955_ al judges will select the queen, who will wear a cotton dress. Judging will get under way in earnest at 9:30 a. m. Wednesday, and the home economics exhibits are studied. Judging of dairy. classes and general exhibits will also begin then, so that the winning Projects | and animals will have their tiles throughout the remainder of the fair. | After a 1 p. m. archery contest, the dairy showmanship will be | Pontiac Press Photo | } tiveness, FOR THE BIRDS — Assembling poultry cages for one of the exhi- bitions are Donna Terry, 13, and Jackie Terry, 15, of 2615 Featherstone Rd. They are both members of the Galloway Lake 4-H Ci participsting Gronghowt this week o sd H fair activities. ub, and will be Ne ; y Ee | : neta ELA HOLD HER, LARRY — Marvin Scramiin (rig tells his brother Larry to hold up the top of the table, | moble while ht) } across the county, yesterday to complete preparations for the annual as he steadies the supporting saw horse into position. | fair which opens Tuesday. A variety of homem Members of the Oakhill@f-H Club of Holly, the boys,| and farm displays will be exhibited on benches in along with numerous other 4-H club memabers from | tents on the grounds. held af 2:30 p. m. This popular event is usually one that draws wed Char of am ak ae Oe 5 Following a 3 p. m. baseball game between the Lucky Leaf and the Think and Do clubs, at 7:30 p. m. the clubs will parade, , Floats of the clubs will come in for judging then, by a panel of three judges. First prize is $20, with $15 for second, and $10 for third. Tke winner will be determined on the basis of originality, attrac- and thought pertaining to 4-H, agriculture, citizenship or patriotism. Another highlight ef the Wednesday evening activities is the rollicking pig scramble. Club members 14 years old vie to capture young sows. Winners agreed to return one young sow from the future litter for the pig scram- ble next year. The following judges have been announced: Beef, John Kendall; general exhibits, Glenn Summerfelt; dairy cattle, Albert Kessler; hogs, Kendall; sheep, Frank Williamson; dairy showmanship, Kessler; beef showmanship, Kendall; flowers, and gar- dening, Mrs. Russell Thompson; poultry, Victory Clayton. had ase im the hogs and sheep classification will . Thursday, with beef judging scheduled for 2:40 p. mi. | Selecting t take place at Ip. m. Beet ce will be at The dress review, always well received by both 4-H members and | | area residents attending the show, will take place at 8 p. m. Wednesday. Last year 97 4-H girls participated in the event, modeling their own designs. Pat Render of the Bloomfield Club took top honors. | Gov. G. Mennen Williams has praised the county fair project, | as very worthwhile. “In a highly technical and industrial ccalety. many people tend to lose sight of the indispensible contributions of the farmer,” Wil- 1een Contest to Open sail 4.H Fair Tomorrow “Tt is more. ‘Yhan fitting that your county has decided to hold an| | annual county fair to insure that our. Michigan citizens are made aware | of the vital role of the farmer, “The county fairs have made great strides in improving the stand- ards of our Michigan agriculfure production. Excellence has always been the by-word of this great event and this excellence has had its | impact throughout the state. “It is my hope that all of you who visit the fair to see our products will also enjoy the great recreational facilities offered there. “Best wishes for a successful and satisfying fair,” the governor concluded. “Although primarily designed for the boys and. girls in war club work, a well-balanced fair has been possible through the cooperation of merchants and dealers,” fair manager John Bray stated. “Our 4-H fair has grown into an all-community fair,"" he added. On the mechanical side of farming, the annual tractor field day is | scheduled for 1 p, m. Friday. A trophy will be awarded in two classes, tor plowing and tractor operating contest. Included in the operating contest is driving, back- ing, and spotting. Also counted are backing a four-wheel trailer, and belting up. . Second prizes in both sections will be $8, and $5 will go to the third place winner, A machinery parade will be held at 7:30 Friday, showing the latest | ‘in mechanical farm equipment. This will precede the 8 p. m. amateur | program, and the riding demonstration which is planned for 9 p. m. An all-day horse show is slated for Saturday, with judging estab: | lished for 9 a. m. All exhibits. will be dismissed at 4 p. m. G. 8. McIntyre, director of the stafé Department of Agriculture also has offered best wishes for the 1955 fair. “Gince the earliest beginnings of agriculture in Michigan, fairs | liams stated in a letter. Woman, 87, Injured LOS ANGELES, -®—Mrs Madsen suffered only minor and bruises when hit by an auto- running to catch a streetcar, Mrs. Madsen is 87, Essie | cuts STEADY, THERE — Building one of the pens for | the animal exhibits at the fair are Ken Smith and| work. Annual projects come in for study by the Jim Waid, of South Lyon. They. are members of the | thousands of Oakland County residents who attend Nu-Ly-Wix 4-H club. Most of the 2,200 club members | | the five day outing annually, John K. Bray, assistant have something to show at = fair for oer year’s, | Soman agne nari agent, is fair ee Pontiac Preis Phete have been.an important factor in the development of better farm’ met h- ods and the ——— of better ways of life. for everyone,” MeIntyre has written. . “In 1955 the quality and aumber of exhibits. of cminttan prod- ucts, handicraft, household arts and others would defy the imagination | of the earliest sponsors of our fairs. And the types of machines designed | to do the job of farming quicker+and cheaper point to the inventive genius that through the decades has made American agriculture the envy of the world. “Your fair is for your enjoyment and enlightenment, It offers much for young and old, and reflects great eredif¥jo the civic-minded people who gave unselfishly of tine and effort to make it what it is,” he concluded, Last year’s fair drew some 50,000 people, | attendance on the last day. This record stands to be broken if the mounting interest in the 4H fair continues. COwae EP Cw ® UP IN THE AIR — John Lesster of Lake Orion is really up in the air over the fair, but only because he's working an one of the many booths that will be used. Richatd Foster of Clarkston, a member of the East Orton 4-H Club, steadies the ladder. Besides the numerous judgings of animal entries, there is also a pig scramble, and a 4H beauty queen contest. The beauty contest is scheduled for Tuesday night. jlonia Free Fair Opens IONIA W — Michigan's second largest exhibit, the 39th annual Ionia Free Fair, opened Monday | with officials predicting the fair | will draw more than the estimated 200,000 persons it has averaged in recent years. A crowd estimated at 10,000 attended a preview Sun- | day at the fairgrounds. ‘Red Flannel’ Sets Day CEDAR SPRINGS W — Michi- gan's “red flannel” town - has |scheduled next Thursday for its annual Farmers Day celebration with a day-long program of events including a horse pulling contest, hot rod races, stock judging, ball games, a rodeo and a parade, Pontiac Press Photo fame out at the 4-H fairgrounds aking helping to () f : Pontiac ‘Press Photo and pail, dcals Vatek teks chines eehen. while Barbara Wimmer and Donna d Janet Sharpe many, Ie RRA Sole So enue quieter saoeei ss vine, ‘Keeps the Flab Away -| District for the purpose of viuaneretes Frisbie- make the floor shine. Highpoint of 4-H activities of the year for |"™!” Center of gravity in the human 10 seaee Fach Day body is slightly to the right. Here’s the Broadest American Automobile No C aeieacill Gregory Oil Co. Necessary FUEL OIL Call Today 94 East Walton Bivd. Phone FE 5-614! LOS ANGELES (INS)—A UCLA professor specializing in physical ; education thinks ‘‘city dweller’s | flab’’ can be easily controlled. Dr. Laurence E. Morehouse, who at one time directed the physical fitness program at West Point, .maintains that two 10-| minute exercise sessions a day pve keep the average adult in good trim. Protection We've Ever Offered! INCLUDES. Free Personal Effects .coverage. Free Drive Other Car. © Damage to tires by vandals, and meny, many more. Check with us. - H.R. Nicholie He says toe-touching, deep knee bends and other conven- tional calisthenics actually do more harm than good, especially early in. the morning when muscles are at their flabbiest. ‘Dr. Morehouse says these four exercises will turn any short- | winded communter into a_ well- conditioned athlete in short order, | 1—Vigorougs warmup exercises | for several minutes such as run- | ning in place, 2—Stretching exercise for neck | and lower back. 3—Arm and shoulder exercise | such as pushups from floor, wall | or table: 4—Abdominal toning . exercise BUY With CO WASHER SALE Call “BUD” AGENCY { 8. R. Nicholie—H. Delos “Bad” Nicholie 49 Mt. Clemens Se. Opposite Post Office Ph. FE 5-120) NFIDENCE at WAYNE GABERT’S such as slow leg raising from a prone position. NOTICE. OF SPECIAL ELECTION ‘0 the Electors Pn Cherryland Sub- division, Lots 26 Pontiac Township, , Michigan, given that a Specia) id tn Precinet No. 2) jonday, 12th day of pe fame $058. to schabiich & Special Agsesamen « erryland Street at an cotimeated cost of $5,738.15. and the property within the District be yr nee & Special Assessment to pay ther sn ype = lor “a aection shall be closed on b day of August ae to vote. Precinct No. 2 V im the new fire hall om Model 50 as. iMustrated No MONEY WA the Towestp as EES Your Electrical Appliance Specialist | Phone FE 5-6189 - Regular Price $12995 OUR LOW PRICE } | ss > 20 Gallon Capacity Double Walled, Bow!l-Shaped Tub : i | Year Service and Guarantee ( Immediate Delivery DOWN 24 Months to Pay! EGABERT Ne i= 121 N. Saginaw St. with rain cutting the { AY, AUGU ST 8, 19: Only about 20 of Bermuda's 300 islands are inhabited. ers in the U. S, There are about 5,000 mink farm- Get a Vacation Loan from HFC Now—today—you can get extra cash from HFC for all your vacation ple Train or plane fare Car repeirs New clothing luggage Bus fare Any good reason $20 to *500 without endorsers Vacation Loans are made extra fast. One-day serv- ice. It’s easy to meet he oe ymients for 30 wp vi 2. Bord don’t you miss out! Let yourself from f endl. de cor rie e able HFC! Phone or come in today! MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS 2 18 fa 6 pavewts | Pevents | Paymds |: paymts oatesenaned 3% South Saginaw St., The Kay Bidg., 2nd Floor PHONE: FEderal 4-0535 Loans made to residents of nearby lowns jm YOU'D NEVER KNOW I HAD (5.D.)* “7 suffered mental — psoriasis crusts # bathing suit peel s Theaks from the 4 grateful beart for what Sirol bas done for me" ~h writer of this letter (in our files) has arned what h ds of ds of psoriasis sufferers pan now know. Siroil tendsto remove psoriasis lesions on outer skin. If lesions recur, light applications of Siroil will help control them. Siroil will not stain clothing or bed linen and is offered on a two-weeks-satisfaction-or-money-refunded basis. 22 years of successful results. *$.D. Meons Skin Disorder WRITE TODAY FOR FREE BOOKLET VAT ALL DRUG STORE SIROIL Pre g cong rel Pg 124 A MONICA, CA THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOND 7 BERRYS - By Carl Grubert | ¢ THEN WHEN YOU wer HING BURNING, THROW. State Chooses Legion Head Name Donald J. Smith Unanimously; Auxiliary Elects President DETROIT w — A farmer, also is an Air Force veteran of World War. Il, is the new com- mander of the Michigan Depart- ment of the American Legion. He is Donald J. Smith, of St. Johns. Smith won unanimous election as two other commander candi- dates withdrew in the closing ses- sion of the 1955 state Legion con- venton yesterday. . Withdrawing were Charles W. Synder, of De- troit, and Harold L. Willard, of Edwardsburg. * * * The Legionnaires went on record against federal aid for education adopted a resolution favoring the so-called Bricker Amendment to limit the U.S. President's wrenty | making powers, will be the Legion's first conven- tion in the capitol since 1935. The Legion Auxiliary chose Mrs. | John E. Starkey, of Detroit, as its | 1955-56 president, The number of marriages in the United States is likely to remain at a low level in the next few years eligible for marriage were married in the years immediately after World War [I and because de- number of babies who are now) coming to marriageable age. a 45 Thomas Economy F “ts BUY ie YEAR!" COME IN TODAY! Only $3 Down AMPLE FREE PARKING Open Tonight and Friday Until 9! TODAY! who and admission of Communist China | to the United Nations, And they | Lansing was chosen for the 1908 | convention, to be held Aug. 2-5. It. because a large number of those > pression years produced smaller | Find Ancient Ruins ROME, i®—Ruins of a temple to | unknown gods have been found by | workers digging a passage under | a street near Argentine Square. No one knows yet whether to ex. | cavate the temple as a tourist at- | traction or let it rest. Rome is al- ready well supplied with ancient | monuments. Russians Oren Border HELSINKI, Finland w— Ex- changes of tourists between Fin. | land and the Soviet Union are expected to begin shortly. Negp- tiators-in Moscow report Finns first will be allowed to go to | Leningrad and Moscow and later to places as far away as the | Caucasus, | TERRI EFFICIENT! DEPENDABLE! ECONOMICAL! LOW PRICED! TAKES ALL OF THE WORK OUT OF WASHDAY! COMPLETE WITH FULL WRITTEN GUARANTEE! * QUEEN, now ofS i ae fet Fal ep w YEARS OF SERVICE Big family size Aare Large 9-1b. ade per 7 full lo 8-pos Lar fetime | ashday- Wke 108 NORTH SAGINAW SMELL P It's what's BUY WHAT YOU NEED PAY WHAT » Now yew can | arty up to $500 the sensible” Bengficial way . with | VOU OWE! all the details of your lean custom-fitted to your individual ‘? @ much you can afford w= repay conveniently. Employed men and women married or single—en joy a prompt “Why Certainly!” weeds, We wake into consideration to their request. Phone first for how much vou how one-trip loan. Write or come tewimge hevunty of Dera 2nd Floor ¢ Lawrence Bidg., 7 WEST LAWRENCE ST. Gerald Harvey, Manager « PONTIAC © FEderal 2-9249 Loens mode to residents of all » 9 towns behind our name that makes the difference e Biparks-Qriffin Funeral Home “Thoughtful Service® 46 WILLIAMS STREET DIAL fe 24 HOUR AMBULANCE SERVICE F / “H EY? DUTY. WAS nee - Was 269:95 rie hing! ‘Double ars fire Washing! fam soon ‘adjustable e balloon wring: Abricated motor. Spanking clean Phone FEderal 7114 , washes you have even seen! NOC MONEY DOWN! Washday isn't workday anymore when you own this sensational brand- new AUTOMATIC Speed Queen. What's more, you'll have the cleanest AUTO- MATICALLY controls water temper- ature, water fill, washing cycle, jywarm, cold and deep rinsing, damp- drying and shut off. Powerful motor is mounted on rubber for vibration- less operation; lifetime oiled. —— “FREE £ DELIVERY AND 1-YEAR SERVICE ~ ARE INCLUDED! vee THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1954 ’ me ” By ELIZABETH WOODWARD “Dear Miss Woodward: I liked him. long before he ever liked me, and I'm afraid I'm going to wind up still liking him after he has aint sonnatiy be tne been oval ing me whenever his older crowd comes around. You see, though he’s my age, he is a year ahead of me in school. When his class- Answer: Funny how a girl can feel that she’s being left out when has the slightest intention i ‘of leaving her out. She gets Be Smart, Look (omy rm bigrtons grey egal = Sharp! Call Fox Fax not worth talking to, less than “TX , dust. And she curis all in on her- for fresher, self in misery. It makes her clam up and hang back in shy, hurt silence, | And all the time the people who ' make her feel this way aren't even | ceaacions that she's hurt. They don't think she’s much fun but setae cance INTRODUCES THE 3 MOST MAGNIFICENT PERMANENTS *75° . $10 - $12 Complete with Cutting and Styling Short ... sweet ... adaptable... giamorous or casual! styling as you Choose. For casual comfort or |} vacation fun it makes hair care a breeze... “Where Service and Quality Are Supreme” A Staff of Expert Stylists Await to Serve You! Haircuts $1.50 and $2.00 Open Wednesday All Day— Friday ‘til 9 P. M. No Appointment Needed! Immediate Service! Andre Beauty - Salon PHONE 2nd Floor Pontiac State ty Bidg. FE 5-9257 cleaner, newer looking cleaning. = . ng & 719 W. Huron FE 4-1536 Andre GG §.....nome of finer cleaning ..... PUT YOURSELF IN HER PLACE Refreshingly cool, comfortably poised And she will stay looking this way because she is cool, and comfortable in Ogg cleaned clothes. Summer clothes need special attention during cleaning to keep colors bright and airy, to get all soil and dirt out of fabric ‘pores’ for cool air cir- culation,. to remove spots and stains that warm weather ‘just seems to produce.’ At Ogg's we take special core with every garment you send to see that spots and stains are removed . . . that the fabric is cleaned prop- erly for its texture, dye, and composition. That is why your garments look so much better when you have us do your cleaning. FOUR CASH and CARRY STORES TO SERVE YOU: 379 E. Pike St. 430 Orchard Lake Ave. 4481 Highland Road Ogg s/! ~_SUEINERS | _Ottice and Plot, © BOR lapperes 376 Auburn Ave. * . they’re leaving her alone that she’s acting peculiar. EDon’t Feel Left Out Amidst ‘Older Crowd’ Se, when they're around you act as though you weren't. You don’t make your presence felt, Four boy friend's anaes are special friends of they’re around he can't ignore them to pay strict attention to you. And he prabably wonders Kind Reh fe Will Seldom Hurt Person Tactful Handling of Situation Is Necessary By EMILY POST A mother asks: “Will you please tell me how to tactfully handle the following situation: My n-xt- door neighbor has a daughter who is a year older than my daughter. They have been friends for a long time. Both our families are in about the same income bra.‘:et. Every now and then the mother brings over several dresses that my daughter. “Not wanting to hurt her feel- ings I have always accepted them but my husband is furious with me for doing this and says that no daughter of his is going to wear someone else's castoffs. “He has forbidden me to ac- kind and I certainly pony te ¢€o anything to offend her. Your hely in this matter will certainiy be appreciated.” Answer: T think the only thing you can do is to thank her for her very kind intention and say ‘that fortunately Jan has plenty of clothes this year and that the neighboring orphanage, or what- ever charity is nearby is really in need of them and could put them to far better use. “Dear Mrs. Post: I have been told that ‘according to Emily Post’ engraved engagement an- nouncements are in bad taste. If this is true, I would like to know your reason for objecting to them. |Why is an engagement announce- ment in bad taste and a wedding announcement not., I personally cannot see any difference. “A notice in the newspaper is all right for those tiving in town but what about those relatives and friends living in other cities who will not see this notice. Héw are they notified. My fiance and I have many friends and rela- tives living in distant places and to: have to sit down and write notes to all of them would be quite a task.” 4 _—_—— Answer: Order a number of papers in which your announce- ment will be in and send them to your friends and relatives. To have engraved engagement an- nouncements has always been considered in really badd taste. Coming Events The Reliable 12 Club has postponed the regular meeting until further notice: Pontiac Shrine Past High Priestess Club plenic, scheduled for Aug. 10, has been canceled. Rosetta Birthday Club will meet with Mra. Ralph Gould. Whitfield drive, Mace- day Lake,.for noon luncheon, Wednes- Individualized . PERMANENTS ‘6° Ne Appointment Necessary Individual Cutting and Styling by Oscar PARISIAN Beauty Shop 7 West Lawrence Over Old Prof’s Geok Store FE 2-4959 her daughter had outgrown for |” scent ea Hime kml RUTH HEDEMAN ~ Flying from Washington, D. C., to Cambridge, Eng- land, today is Ruth Hedeman of Sunhill drive, Silver Lake. She will work for several weeks on a government-sponsored solar research project at the Cavendish Laboratory. Local Solar Researcher Flies to England Project Leaving today for England, | Hedeman is a graduate of Gouch- Ruth Hedeman of the McMath-|er College. Before her service in Hulbert Observatory at Lake An-| the Navy, she was a teacher of if E tH H F B< aa® si aebek (Copyright, 1965, By United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) gelus, is heading for Cambridge | mathematics in the Baltimore and the Cavendish Laboratory. school system. She is being flown to Cambridge Service, where she will meet Dr. PERMANENTS Helen W. Dodson, who sailed for England Wednesday. T: co-work- ers from the local observatory will spend several weeks at the lab- oratory working on a U.S. govern- The basis for every hair style ... hold it in shape, easier, longer. ment - sponsored solar research Short Curl project. Permanents They are studying the relation trom ' between solar features observed photograhpically and the solar ra- dio emission detected by the Cam- frequency of 70 megacycles. - Miss Hedeman has been a solar research assistant at the McMath- $6°° No Appointment Necessars Hulbert Observatory since .1949. IMPERI AL Prior to coming here, she was a ; . graduate student in Astronomy at Beauty Salon the University of Michigan, where she received her master of science |] %@ ©. Pthe St. FE 4-2878 Color Is Difference Store-Wide CLEARANCE Girls’ Hats 33.49 Value $1.00 Boys’ Caps $1.98 Velue 7% Summer Coat Sets... 14 Off Limited Sizes 2-Pc. Suits $13.98 Value $5.98 Boys’ B 2 Eton Suits $3.98 Boys’ & Girls’ Sailor Suits $2.98 35.95 Value SichicsBabyland WILLIAM K. COWIE Custom Upholstering 21 Years of Practical Experience} 378 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 4-2857 oo “I'm the envy of all my friends it done!” for this ing Setving Pontiac Homemakers Over 23 Years! degree, since having my living room furniture beautifully restyled and reuphoistered by William Wright. And my husband calls me ‘smart girl’ because it cost him so much less than new furniture. My only regret is that | waited so long to have Call FEderal 4-0558 FREE decorating advice and esti- mate. Learn how you, too, can add new charm and grace to your home easy way. Our representative will show swatch after swatch of excit- mew fabrics . . . right in your own home! ® All Work Guaranteed for § Years * Wiuam Waicut Furnitere Makers & Upholsters 270 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. During World War Ti, Miss Hedeman was a Lieutenant (senior grade) as a WAVE. Trained in meteorology at the University of California at Los Angeles, she served as aero- logical officer at Naval Air Sta- tion, Klamath Falls, Ore. and at Navy Weather Centra in Washington, D. C. A native of Baltimore, Md., Ruth Keep White Bright, Use Easy-lron Aid White collars and cuffs on little Bra every Cro treat when temperatures climb...a fresh dark dresses are a sign of fall. | : How charming they are, if they're ife y ; kept a bright white! Wash them : often with hot water to which you|} { Sultry weather needn't faze your charm! Stait every day with a freshly laundered Life Confidential Bra +.-and go through summer—poised, *pretty and flower-fresh. These are the bras that insure you today’s higher bust- line. Foam-rubber-padded cups put all the emphasis upward... 80 you're lifted and firmly held to higher, lovelier contours. There ate Life Confidential Bras styled to meet all your summer needs—so don't be caught short! Be fitted in a complete bra wardrobe today! day * system at Eight Mile road, Cost of THE PONTIAC. PRESS. MONDAY, | 4 Townships, 2 Cities Push Drain Plan\ | Barbara Keck Well Today Quick Action Saves Lite of Cass Lake.Woods Child To Meet Aug. 25. on Financing $2,500,000 Interceptor Would End Pollution of Lakes, Streams Preliminary plans for a $2,500,- 000 interceptor sewer to service four townships and two muynicipali ties moved a step forward with the setting of an Aug. 25 meeting to discuss financing and possible apportionment of costs. Officials of the areas involved— Waterford, West Bloomfield, South- field and Farmington Townships and the cities of Keego Harbor and Farmington—will meet with engi- neers, finance experts and Oakand County Drain Commissioner Ralph — at the Waterford Township Waterford Township Supervisor Lloyd L. Anderson said they would seek to reach Some agree: ment as te each community's proper share of costs, The proposed interceptor would connect with Waterford Township sanitary sewage system at the southern end of the township and run south into the Detroit sewer a preliminary engineering survey already has been underwritten by Farmington City and Waterford, West Bloomfield and Farmington Townships. At a meeting Thursday in Farm- | ington, officials of all the commu- | nities to be serviced heard an out- | line of necessary steps to take in| order to get the interceptor built. | | Detroit bending attorney | Claude Stevens, acting in the ing bedies of the commanities: 1, Come to an agreement on each community's share of cost. 2. Ask the Oakland County Board of Supervisors to appoint the drain commissioner as an agent with authority to build the main. 3. Arrange for financing possibly through sale of revenye bonds, If built, the proposed interceptor . is expected to end pollution of | lakes and streams in the tast-grow- | ing areas and reduce the need for | septic — Hybridhen ridhen Yield Amazes Owner Howard City Mutations Give Three Eggs Daily to Woman Breeder GRAND RAPIDS ®—A hybrid- hen, one of about 100 in Beverly Johansen'’s Howard City flock, has baffled poultrymen since Septem- ber 1953 with a remarkable egg production. Even Miss Johansen finds it “hard to believe” that she has collected from one to three eggs daily from the hen's wire cage nest. : | George Scoft, field supervisor for the Michigan State Poultry eee may have to opera’ ‘nels instead of the ts oad Johansen reports flock sometimes Within. 30 minutes AUGUST 8, 1955 Little, blonde Barbara, two-year- old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray- mond Keck of 5171 Westcomb, Cass twin sister today. Had it not been for quick action by a neighbor, Maurice Naert, and the West Bloc id Fire Depart- ment, and Ba ‘s cousin, Sat- urday night, the Kecks this morn- ing might be attending a burial service. Gwen went into the living room where the twins were playing and found Barbara lying on the couch, her face blue, apparently not breathing. Alarmed, she picked up up the child and rushed across the street to the Naert home. fire departmem, and gave the baby artificial respiration, Fire- men reached the home within minutes and revived the child with a resuscitator. Barbara was then taken to the Pontiac General Hospital for treatment, where doctors said the child had been a victim of “24 heur virus.” Lake Woods, is playing with her Naert immediately notified the | Doctors told her parents a sud- den rise in the child's tempera- ture had caused a convulsion and breathing difficulty. “We just can't say how grateful |. we are to the firemen and Mr. Naert and to Gwen,” Mrs. Keck said. “Had it not been for them, our baby might not have lived,” Gregory Raps Hare on License Issue LAPEER—Lapeer County Sheriff Clark Gregory has taken issue with- Secretary of State James Hare on who should issue drivers’ licenses in Michigan. Gregory today charged that Hare “wants to be czar of all licensing work,” and assailed the “blanket suspicion” which he claims Hare has cast upon the state's Sheiff's Departments. Hare previously had stated that some sheriff's departments and small police forces are issuing li- censes to mentally and physically unfit persons. Gregory labeled this as a “echeme to get control of drivers’ I and said Chad it ig “pure politics." * - EYE-CATCHER—S mall but noticeable is this cutout cap of rhinestones and bugle beads shown | in New York. Satin cape with matching embroidery is worn with it. One-half of the schools in the | | U. S. in 1950 had only one room, and they educated only about five per cent of the total school popu- lation of the nation, recent surveys indicate. Almont Gets Set for Centennial Three -Day Festivities to Be Held Friday Through Sunday Marlette FFA Plans for Sandusky Fair MARLETTE — The Marlette Chapter of the Future Farmers of America, will meet at 8:30 p.m, Wednesday in the Agriculture | | Resse to further plans for the 4H pat weir ' Shop TONITE ’til 9) ‘at the LION STORE’ f Sister Dresses for School | i 4 ? g | air, to be held next week “i silts 6 y J x | Sandusky. * ALMONT — Flags, banners and! au exhibits of tivestock and! I a Sailor with a streamers are appearing along Main | crops for the fair must be ell = street here as merchants and civ: 4 by Wednesda os fe groups join in preparations for; ine la sp f the FFA, | 2 t meet the “4 the three-day Almont Centennial | . ae ' celebration. A parade, homecoming and a | ‘| list of ‘special events will spark the 100th anniversary of the com- munity, to be held Friday through | Friday's events wil] feature a children’s program in = mern- A children’s parade and picnic Saturday, and an evening talent | 'P# show and Old Time Dance are events. Church services, ball games and family picnics will close the fes- tivities on Sunday, | MSU, Aug. 15. | ————= - {A@vertisement) a motion was made that a school | / ‘bus be chartered to go to the | Farm Mechanization Centennial at | | new silhouette Newest edition of a great classic now takes on the fetching long-torse shape. But everything else has the | traditional charm: the Sailor's | Knot Tie, the deep collar, 7 the white broid trim = Full knife pleated shirt spreads wide below the cuffed — hipline, conceals her indispensable | Disciplined cotton Poplin that resists creases ond soil, stays crisp after washing, » ag Load Capacity . EASY WRINGER , ooe. ‘amily Wesher SAVE PLENTY! with trade FREE DELIVERY! Shop by Phone DON’T MISS THESE VALUES! AVINGS ON FAMOU round-tub washer with -new safety wringer. SAVE $20.00! Regular #12995 109:. NOTHING DOWN! Trade-in Your Old Washer on a New One during these great August Value Days at The Good Housekeeping Shop! LOW COST TERMS! SERVICE AFTER THE SALE! 30 Day Exchange Privilege — 90 Days Same As Cash FREE SERVICE by our Own Service Department These are EXTRAS you get when you buy from an oppliance nem specializing in appliances. Deluxe agitator action —, WASHERS -— ALL TYPES clothes quickly with detergents. Your old washer makes the down payment on this Brand New 1955- Automatic EASY .. . have it tomorrow for - Priced with the SAVE $90.00 MAYTAG SPEED QUEEN _EASY Automatic Washer with large, soft rubber rol- ler wringer. SAVE $30.00! Regular $13995 109: with the famous Spiralator action for cleanify savings in both water and Regular $289.95 199°: FRIGIDAIRE Automatic . lowest, yet giving you fea- tures found in the highest-priced automatic washers on the market. SAVE ‘40.00 Regular *22995. 189: HAMILTON AUTOMATIC WASHERS and DRYERS A combination you want because they make freedom > f ve ive new cleaner on. give you My er NEW wash-day an automatic washings. AND LOW AUGUST PRICES! Hamiton A Autonet Washer priced at only . HAMILTON DRYERS _ ee ee SAVE! 7 5 5° needs little pressing. Deep | Sizes 1 to 3 3 to 6x and 7 to 14 REG Sizes 14, 16 $3. ' : Sizes 4 to 12 $2, f Sizes 14,16 $3.50 Woman’; Home Companion, August a SS Admiral ...... bd Reduction Int Tel & Tel 26.8 Aled Chem 100.4 => 8, are 85.6 Allis Chaim § Johns Man .. she 144 .. $4 ann aa ‘08 py eee Kresge - Am Can ...... @7 ane P * ies Am Cyan ort Ole at oe en OS Lie ch & Lb . 18t “fu . Am M Gee. 903 TkEn aire |. O64 Am News .... 313 oes ‘4 oS ales 3 Lone 8 Chem oH Am Smelt aus pores me Am Tel & Tel.1843 Mack Trk . mae + 26 Martin, Gl .. 264 Am Viscose .. 6 wy p str .. 43 Anac Co . 2 McOraw ‘ee Anse W&C.. 604 Le * e232 Armeo : e} Mere’ 3.2 Armour & Co 148 siorcen Lino . id soe 36° waa at 403 Atchison 136 Mpls Hon... 582 Atl Refin 30.4 saonsan 433 Aveo Mig. 7. Mant Ward .. 20 Belt & Ohfo,. $1.2 Motorola a? | Bendix Ave _- Murray Cp 03 Beth Steel 147 St Gash R..) 384 wong ; SF Nat Dairy Ss a Bohm VPS... 06 Bond BStrs 18 os . 19. Borden 62. Nat sees 103 Borg Warner 45.2 wy Central.... 46 Briggs * Nie 7 “17 Bris Mv 313 Nort & West.. 574 Budd Co ... 16 No Am Av... 622 Bur: he 29.3 Nor Pac....... 17 Cal @ H. 13.1) Nwst Alrline... 222 Camp Goup .. % 10 ceases 323 Can Dry ....; 16.3 ene Ti Ol, 121 Sapte) “Atri. Bt pen A war. ies cal . e.: , $39.4 Panh Epi... 716 . 2 Param Pict... 41.4 . $1.9 Parke Da.... 402 +. 67.7 Pa RR........ 212 . ot Cola.... 23.5 - 2 ~ eea 46 .. 61 «Phelps D..... 88.5 :. 42)«Phileo ...... 284 oS Philip Mor... 405 266 Phill Pet..... 72 -; 163 Pililsby Mills.. 50.4 . 45 Pit Plate G.... 06 62.3 Proct & G.....101 —; Pullman . 4 .. 4 Pure Qi aT 764 RCA . as vieee 96 Reo Hold.... 142 veges S16 Repub 6tl..,, 48.1 Stine'wi: BS Ry, Ss ay Oeere .... 3 Rock Spe...., 206 pe Bee 2 Batfeway St.... 433 Doug Aire .... ovile oe - Dow Chem,... 51.6 Geab Al RR... 80.2 ae ss ene Shel Ons: got oe e . East Kod ..,.. Hy Sinclair ©... 4.6 El Auto Lite . 467 Gocony Mob... 60.6 Rl &@ Mus... 3.7 Sou Pac...:. en 8 Emer Red .. 14.5 “Std Bi . 4 Erie RR .,.. 22.6 Std Oi] Calif.. 906 Ex-Ceill-O ,,. 47 ~ Std Oil Ind... 80.3 irh Mor ,,, 26.2 Std O11 MJ. .136 eons 04) Bt 4a? Pood Mach ,, Stevens JP... 27.7 Gen Bak .,,, 101 | oad Pack... 87 _ am ., S74 nm OS. aos bof Den Fis oo.0y 08 Sylv El Pd.... 44.4 Jen Mills ... 75.4 Yt Se 103.1 en Motors ..133 Tex G 8) . a) yen Tel ..... 42.6 Thom -» 03 Te oo M = Timk R Bear. 61 ~Tire ... 60.2 Tren W Air ms Mllette ....,. ~. 20.9 «Trensamer , a6 i Cen . » ere se 678 On Carbide... 948 Joodrich =... 67.4 tm aa poodyear -°.. 684 Der ie im” eed jrah Paige 5. 24 t Aire _) a Mo Ry... 44 Dale proit oe ernest ++ 187 Oe aes Cp... 321 on ou... 8.2 0S Lines ma Hayes Mig .. 7 08 Rubber... 481 wersh +» 46.5 UB Bteer 52.5 Sotlend F ,.. 141 Van Raf ..... x Homstk sone 387 W, "on Houd Her ... 145 warn 8 Pic 30 TH Comt ..ivce Wert Un T . 3 _ Indust Ray .. 55 gone A Bk a4 Rand. enee ee ~ a, Stl .. 7% White Mot 409 Insptr ++ 61.1 Wilson 12 Interiak Woolworth 50 Int Bus Mach 411 Yale & Tow. 68. me pod eyes : oo w = “* oung Sh & T Paper ... 108. m3: 117 DETROIT *S (Hernbiewer & W. » Pigures after decimal points te hths iw. Noon a a OM Kingston Proiiucts® 3.0.0... 3 3 Masco Gcrew* ....., rst osce 48 § Midwest Abrasives 17) )'' "! 0 ga) 3 Rudy ae 32 (3. wagee eee eas 131 “6 ; bid and asked, TOOK AVER, NEW YORK, Aug. Associated Press. . 160 Week a90.......201.5 132.6" Month ago..,...2448 135.6 Year Beoesneee 1188 91. Bt Recccety h 1OW. 1.251488 TT. Reynolds Aluminum U Prices After Wage Hike. 4 “THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1955 2 of. Trade today, * *° « weather, tried to get out. The rest of the market turned lower in sympathy with corn and soybeans, Wheat particular. ly was subjected to heavy li- quidation, readily giving up ground, ber $2.28 and lard 7 to 13 cents a $10.70, AFL to Propose Senate Profe of Plant ‘Pirating’ CHICAGO, ® ~ =A _ report pro- a ing" of industrial plants was high on the order of business as the |American Federation of Labor Executive Council opened its three- day meeting today. * * * the union's National Legislative Committee said “pirating” of in- dustrial plants from established locations to other areas of the nation results in blight and unem- ployment in abandoned areas. “The ruthless manner in which industrial firms have abandoned merger. Auto Overturns, Area Youth Injured eeenue 446 AGES &-Compiled by The 30 15 15 ‘Indust, Ratis UU). siocks 4-0 ‘ : +, hurled 15 feet through the car's rear window. He is reported in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital with a brain concussion, ificers stated, Also treated for minor cuts and bruises were Robert Devary, 16, | .W®! of 2142 Pontiae Rd., Robert Gar- rett, 15, of 2080 Galloway Rd., and Jack Hendrickson, of 2131 Gallo- way Rd. Oxford Man Injured in Motorcycle Mishap Injured when he apparently lost control of his motorcycle Saturday on Glaspie Road, Oxford Town- ship, Charlies R. Cash, 21, was re- ported in poor condition today by Pontiac General Hospital authori- ties, who said Cash, of Oxford, was unable to make a statement,|~ Moving & Trucking 19 Help Wanted Male 6| MODEST MAIDENS Puneral Home. Oe Gill st.. Oxford, * : x _thort_order_work. PE wea | Trucks to Rent 2 | io Trucks Ponting farm and Industrial Tractor Co. . WOODWARD. Open ‘tr . Including Sundeya | £046) FE 4442 REDUCED RATES — ifn. Bra s.|Painting & Decorating 20 Fs Comb. Bumper & Painter penefits A py Doors. | ae coat dis re eat in Cool Weather CHICAGO..u»—-A break in the hot, dry weather in the mid-west over the weekend also broke prices of the midwest'’s two big crops, corn and soybeans, on the Board DRIVER SALESM EN Bak Candies, Smal! tnvest- wired. LIGA000 afier Ty Mi rt will lie in st vace-Gmith Punerel i Losses ran to more than two cents at one time in both these cereals as recent buyers, who had gone into the market on reports of crop: damage from the dry brother and sister of aay aL ANA “T'll have my shirt medium rare, not well done!" rs ‘RIEN , famous mall order com ) oe Manufacturing Co., focal . No alles: iw * tier #305 m, 311 Pontiac State WANTED. EXPERI- ENCED COMPTOME- TER OPERATOR. FE _2-8111 EXT. 622. sere. ex ~ em work. Ai after 6 p.m. at ny Willard, = . Help Wanted Male _6 MAN POR ORY CLUANING route, Main Cleaners. 4480 Help Wanted Female 7 RIE! . Binglé preferred, To Wheat near the end of the first hour was % to 14% lower, Septem- ber $1.93%; corn 1% to 2% lower, September $1.35; oats % to lower, September 59%; rye 1% to 2% lower, September 98; soy- beans 1% to 3% lower, Septem- I1CIAW LICENSED. MUST tave experience in new howe ry never ® problem. bio 4 Good opportunity. RN UP TO $10,000 | — REAL Oskiand County Dept, of i te in state at the Pursley ee STIMAGE, AUG. 5. 1968 cook, EXPERIE NCED COOK W. EXP. COOK. DINNER AND SHORT a OR 3-0357 RNIZE, | Tveewrer Sevie_2h trues of carpen-| Shine fring. BW} tons. — corrected FE BED- con earCOrens. & eods. Your material vi. tanks installed. OnaPal ie co’ , MATE- hundred pounds lower, September EXPERIENCED .| Stenographers Frank Carruthers Funeral _Home after 7 p.m. Tuesday, posing Congress investigate “pirat- o NG + PAINTING. 4-1 DECORATING cdl tor ont ‘ KG. at nn removed Estimates, FE ~Hall’s Wall Washin & . Reasoneble, PE Tame A. - Evert Ace ‘oan ison. vb sot . | Al PA my EXTER. & PA ing. Grew of ° men, EM 3-3435, \INTING, INTERIOR AND EX- ae tel wall washing Free estimates. SOR aime I PAINTING PA HA | PAINTALLS CLEA TUPPER, OR 4-061 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING. OR S330. 0r Of 3-064. | Pac Wat Wasting Physiotherapy 21A a Fl. Television Service 22 ac| Reply Pontiac Pr ae be SERVICE MANAGER eS Patty oe ly - make 40 » | me ter, Sat. am. Pind- Braet Mone ComPant “% 1 TRENCHING x, a int” Cur. |_er please call PE 2-716). Reward. t in _ 40213 bet a.m. HARDINGE LATHE HAND. DO TTY tet wp TAY & Co BTS 8 HEALTH CLUB = Personnel Department In the report, a subcommittee of YOUR OWN BUSINESS! YOUR 13/Lapy’s BULOVA WATCH. LOST Tel-Huron Cen’ Lost. BIO BLACK, AND TAN OR S318 or OR Rewend) PE . ae —— Lost YOUR PET A & B TRENCHING | gve,se t,name? VE, $0me PART TIME FROM 12 NOON TO 4, PE 4-066) $30 day comm, un- Wind Hic Beta Mast HOUSEHOLD FINANCE, CORP. © help. Orchard Lake home. FE Be eee thei employes in a particular lo- KOREAN VETS AND wa employ «ceverai men The AFL will hold a special one- day convention tomorrow for the purpose of moving the annual AFL, be convention, now scheduled at Chi-| woter cle Pieit tile. | onan Oe nOmEn Baus: ge : LOST: WATCH. BROKEN BAND. Vie of Kroger store. call 56082 ‘we omnee ax Sepia Cost MAN'S BIFOCALS. BLUE “y notlances Lost. BUFF COCKER. REWARD. vy case _Reward. 514 5. Jessie PE) PE 22771. i LO8sT: WHITE AND TAN PEKIN- Monte Avewers to name of Penny. FE 12, ees LOsT: BRINDLE BOXER, LI- cense number 12114. Answers to . MY 3-1603. ‘bbe . | LOST: 2 5 & TAN Vieinity of Elizabeth estimate No lob too bie e- small,| Lake Estates. C 50008 aft tn ik Carruthers Funeral after 7 p.m. Wednesday cago in October, to New York in Work Wanted Male 10 December, when the CIO also will |W meet to ratify the AFL-CIO HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CORP. "% SOUTH SAGINAW Presidents of AFL unions will confer Wednesday on merger plans. inter. Ss — KOREAN VETS mire ¢ . El Roto-Re Sewer Cleaners | ~~~ FE #131) BEAUTY OPERATORS ie yo yo Paes SERVICE RE 4 ete ck $68. ye a me ; _See_ad under Instructions—e. MECHANIC ELECT RIC. . SEWER CLEANING Answers to name of Lucky. Vi- — Sunday Service. FE 42012 ectric—Sewers hour cinity of West Acres. EM i Reward ned (a, RT Rare results, n0 : rE ere. : treated at no| Estates. UNSTAN'S FLOWERS Huron St ae FE 2-830) Funeral Directors 4 POPPE OO . Sixteen-year-old Leroy Fielding, of Pontiac Township, narrowly missed death Sunday night when the car in‘ which he was riding flipped end-for-end and smashed into a telephone pole on Pontiac! |Poad, injuring four other youths, — County Sheriff's deputies sa CE INSTALLATION Comnlets tacitities OR 37757 ton Pla.is~ Waterford Tw: DIGNIPFIED SERVICES Donelson-Johns Fielding, deputies said, was mg bare PR SS. N, EXPERIENCED IN HE at. TO LEARN TAVERN FUNERAL HOME s Sa Ambulance Ser ice- Plane or Motor PE deste . Fxperience not necessary. Driver Cleon Miracle, 20, of 1579 celery ie ernie unt Giddings Rd., who was treated for Oe eee cesbaveerenseses $600 WE LAND t.Wholerale "rh Fetail des!- e Kodak uD. sale , PADDOCK 7 wort ark 1066 W. Huron. =Pain wonx'| Notices & Personals 25 AAA ere DETECTIVES. REPAIR WORK. . COMM'L. rs, Bonded q 6201 ; an EATING. 8. Aerotred Knapp Shoes 7 sant ERE SEER on, Keave epee ee Be A Ladies want di fry- er or $19.50 miner’ take orders for 2% doz. 16 o#. national advertisea liquid cream shampoo. SSPIVOx HEARING Alp RM 10. iG AND N, Saginaw. PE 40539, > a to Pine ian S.reebe pis Work Wanted Female 2 WOMEN WANT WALL WASH- and cleaaine WE 10223 or erences, - CLUB 99 86 8, Telegraph Rq. Help Wanted Female 7 APPLICATIONS