f a ra f a ‘ si) t ys / j ae / { } » j ' ‘ i 7 
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“zz-" THE PONTIAC PRESSii -~ ae day jo er wk eae ‘Phy é Lad ws /f ‘ ae ey ff ES wea Te 2 Neds ie } f a +4 , it. —o Bayes Fel , y r p yf r pe ke eget Soe ell im. Pisme 
    
    
    
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118th YEAR x*xnwekr PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1955 —30 PAGES TN TBRRATIONAL NEWS SERVICE 
Polio Immunization Delayed in Oakland County -   
‘ Whose Afraid of Big Ol’ Champ? Teint Cloud _ See Possibility | Candidate for JA Title southern States. 
         
        Michigan Area pee £4 SA ae sc =a ea of Red Blunder | It ) Pe: tte Need Vaccine 
        radioactive cloud was believed | 
bound toward the Great Lakes re | *° . : "” 
omc y meen, i Austria Pact | The radioactive cloud was creat- a 
ed yesterday in an atomic test me . 
blast in Nevada and stymied) Western Officials Await private aircraft flight in five moun- ° | j 
tain states later in the day. Explanation on Treaty. 
Civil Aeronautics Administration) From Chancellor Pas 
officials ordered a rectangular area > 
creas upon the recommendation | _, WASHINGTON (INS) — | Bi the Atomic Energy Commission. | U.S. officials wondered to-| eS 
Airline cruisers were ordered to| day. whether Russia’s ac-| | — 
ggg Poe er — phon |cord with Austria is a major| | _— 
through at between 100 and 115| Soviet diplomatic coup or a . * et eee 
= Ss +e ss & 
Hope Growing Supply 
Will Permit Use in 
This Area Soon 
First clinics in the two- 
shot series of polio immuni- 
zations for Oakland County 
school children were post- 
poned indefinitely today   | 
| 
  
miles an hour in a jet stream/blunder that can cause| ee ' , ” - [| when it was revealed that 
a 31,000/ trouble in the satellite 2.2% » = 4 |vailable supplies of the vaccine are insufficient. . 
gage States, ~— 
polio danger begins 
schools close early, will be 
supplied first. 
. John D. Monroe, 
county health director, said 
the clinics lanned for 
rural schools raeuien and ati ny there are any hidden) 
British Voting (%.." | fural schools Tuesday, and ._|...The.explanation of the ac-) for cities of south Oakland : ted M 16 cord is expected to come} — . = - |County next Saturday, 
dq ay from Vienna after Chancel-| ACHIEVERS’ QUEEN—Dixie Davis, 16, of 183 Elm St. was selected | Would be put off until the - 
lor Julius Raab briefs the! by members of the eight Pontiac Junior. Achievement firms as their | Vaccine supply is adequate, 
Election to Be Fought British, French and Ameri- candidate for Queen of JA. Dixie will compete with girls from 13 other) “We were all set up,” Dr. Mom 
gh ‘can high commissioners. _| JA centers in southeastern Michigan for the crown. Judging will be at "*, commented ruefully. “The The U.S. Weather Bureau in Den- | States. a 
ver said the cloud should be over! These officials pondered, § the Great Lakes - Minnesota area | 
today ‘provided maintained ita|tre question while they 
speed and was not disintegrated awaited an explanation of | 
by variable winds. the agreement on an Au-| 
strian peace treaty to see if)     
      
    
  IMPROMPTU SNOZZLE CHECK—Alan Peggegri- | AP Wirephete} on Economy, England’s | workers were ready to go, but now 
ni, two and a half years old, appears unafraid as he | Marciano. The Briton arrived in Oakland, Calif, Fri-| pole in Peace Moves _ Publicly, ae ieee Be ae) Oo ee eee ove see tee we Oe 
tweaks the nose of British heavyweight champion Don | day enroute to San Francisco where he will clash — app P= rae at he She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lynn D. Davis. jon and wait.” 
Cockell, who will challenge world champion Rocky | with Marciano, May 16. LONDON @ — Britain's general occupation that 10 | He said, “Most of what we have 
! | election next month may well be .j4 ‘ => ’ 2 |done in the way of preparation 
[fought around two main issues— | °° cause Report Violence in South can be salvaged, but the doctors   
the nation’s economic health and 
7 Moore’s esti | oe ei cme Distros ton Steeng_ Americans wan the ae : sit =f | ical Socinty whe, volunteered thei 
 aaislatore Sia Gaca Suspect = ESE == 25,000 Mill Workers Strike === Legislators Study Plans The battleground has been shap-| Amst Rwsnian sgrecmont (e 
(Assist Peeble-Minded eld inTeras Sees Ses == ip f Sales in New England ceassss= now 
ait the 3 
ule the clinics all over again. I 
comes   
      
    
    
  
  rope Communist govern- . . sachusetts, Rhode Island Saturday. 
teasers | Walk in Capital |sne vermont. me workers (res: nt wot tore tthe te stayed away in support of lh aig ee all—were . 
strangled body was found by a buying. A month later he said his - ; supplies of Lands! ide Traps that such a study and pro-| railroad section worker in a West | emergency aoe eater ne paying | Ct-end-out es. i which S| Cuts Familiar Figure demands for a new contract | the vaccine are shipped here by gram be launched and ‘spe-| to . 
cifically stated the Howell | Bloom“eld garbage dump—lovers off. ‘on Washington Streets |*"4 refused to take a 10) Gea. tece can proceed cn 
° ® Tuberculosis Sanatorium) “the sus On “Tuesday Butie? wilt detail 1955 riots in East Germany, pect, police reported,| Britain's economic outlook when Soviet tanks troops Sixty in Japan might be converted to care) went to Detroit March 2% from} he Seinante his new budget. —~ — By BURDETT C. STODDARD Police Claim Parolee elections May 2. to cautious, t 
Two resolutions have been introduced in the State Sen-| wo. in Detroit on > Leaders of the opposition Labor |Cittnns'tnes sme “wait until they ny THE _ wr ge gull 
ate arid one in the House based on a proposal by Oakland ‘ . Part; quickly declared that |1... more complete explanations. . : In _| of Kidnaping Eden's 10-day-pid government with the idea that) 4noth@r majorstrike darkened the nation’¢Jaborfront| 1» Oskland Count, plans had County Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore aimed at provid Some toyed been made to immunize an esti- 
ing institutional space for feeble-minded persons needing | From AP and UP Dispatches ee ee toe the Runsiane mag have bindered | today a0 some 26,000 textile workers in four Mew ENG \ssamq s.s00 chlldese — first: nd 
— Authorities in EL Paso, Texas,| sheued sighs of worsentag. 4A a © i, | wand states struck in a dispute over wages. second graders, plus mere than care, ad ~ op bene a to an agreement and was in the two big 8,000 who participated in last year's ‘ 
Meanwhile, the judge today repeated his: were holding GW peared man)" And there was renewed Lattite|try to Block West German re- New violence and damage reported field tests but did not receive the j that a program must be set up to provide trea t for | today for questioning in the brutal criticism because the Conservative | armament. continuing strikes in the South. These two costly walk- | vaccine. x 
uvenile offenders past the age of 17 as part of a fect | 2x slaying of T-year-old Barbara | Sovernment has mi see ot ee Their thinking ran like this: / outs, which started March 14, affect thousands of tele-| Rochester pupils were to have 
rin ™ Gaca Jast month. atone = The Hussiins never have with- phone and railroad workers as well as workers in some te" their first shots Tvesday, . to check juvenile crime. 1s ot he on problems. drawn their troops from any | + related industries. most of the other rural county ‘ 
One Senate resoluti Id fi interi mit-| _ He was being he request | Last February the Churchill g0v-| area except Manchuria and North | schools were scheduled for the first e resolution would orm an m com “| of Detroit Police who identified | ernment took action to speed the| The CIO Textile Workers of two clinics on Wednesday. Chil- tee to investigate possibility “that the tuberculosis pro-| him as James J. Dairy, a twice-| flow of exports and to slow down| rumen a eS Union struck in 23 cotton dren in the cities of south Oakland 
ram of the state has been overexpanded and part of the | convicted sex offender. | imports. | The situation in Europe is differ- textile mills in Maine County to have bese e@miais- 
acilities ... should be diverted to... the care and treat-| But Detroit authorities stressed; Among the steps taken by Chan-| ©Mt than that in Asia because Eu- » M&S-/tered the serum in clinics next 
ment of mentally defective children.” | that this is just one of hundreds | cellor of the Exchequer R. A. But- | has no 
    
    
  
  
            
    
  
  
  
  
    
              for mental defectives in this! Traverse City and left March 25,| Eden's decision to make an early{""" “'*4 8 a” example. WASHINGTON @®—Folks in the’ meeherg {follow the recommendations of Dr. . | area. | tee day net (batters, Sas ro Rey depend vendo Once the Soviet army with- | capital saw again today what once ‘© renew contracts. Leap liemrppig Fm E. Salk, ice an the 
Three Dug Out Alive Twin Senate and House resolu-| lieved kidnaped. | ernment was widely endorsed by| 47*w® from Austria the Russians jwas a familiar sight—Harry Slicer, The minima wage is | ; 
After Rain  Loosens tions would make the Howell trans-| Daity was arrested as he was the British provincial press today.| Ay Pave te face demands that | Truman out for a brisk morning |.) (4). | In Ann Arbor Tuesday, the day 
—Te ns of Earth err tree meaeures are | ing—for-Juarez,Mexico,-where | —————————————______—_— their _treepe _pull_out of such prance, —___—__|}ay-mew-vislence-was-reported: at suctens lo the acting. a8 sq— 
: on | study by committees. | he said he plans to marry, a TP . | satellite countr tes ag Hungary, | The former President, here the strike by about 25,000 non- | Vetled a waiting world, Dr, 
TOKYO uR—A landslide loosened The judge said he feels the legis-+ woman he met through a lonely Snead Writes SS a so Democratic strates) hoperating employes of the Louie | SAME said higher levels of immunity 1 raing 20S Should hold an immediate | hearts club. Currently hé is on | Some U.S. officials also point meeting, left the Mayfower | ville & Nashville Railroad. Mean- | shot by giving the second 
by three days of torrential rains | pubtic hearing with state officials| parole from the Ionia Hospital| Pontiac Press out that the continued presence of | around 7 a.m. for a walk of about! 14.5. National Mediation Board | in, pe ype areenbh age ty and 
tonight thundered down on Sasebo, | present who could supply figures on | for the Criminal Insane and is in z | Soviet troops abroad cannot help 1% miles. . | members in Washington continued | oven nt amio Fares some 
Japan, burying perhaps as many vacancies in TB sanatoriums, custody of a sister in Traverse| Golf Column bringing on some anti-Russian| “After you're 50, np just | efforts to end the walkout, But Dr. Monroe ‘said ogres - 
as 60 persons, police reported. I In —— to Gov. Williams, | a ‘as » | Secunia’ Sheng Sed, che feeling a the peoples of the =. the rig amount _ about 4,000 additional LAN workers | the State Health Sevaetiteen et 
een to 25 houses >| ckson, 22, , ~ i janned : revised ne Witiasn to 3% were report. | Stee ee Oe ens | Bet tiees was cleared of im-| o America’s outstanding player- Against that general background went along with him, as they did| ™! oS pom Rae oth Gis ow 
ed cought in the slide, ‘in the TB system to allow trans. plication in the slaying. He was| teachers will start his golf col- | of thinking, the officials believe | when he lived in the White House. The derailment of « passenger | Estion, and that the first two 
‘ Some 200 police and firemen, | ters emptying at least the Howell | questioned by Detroit detectives umn Monday, April 18, im the | there is a chance the Russians Tramen walked along Csmnectl train near Nashville, Tenn., last an ot Se vnaine wal Bo Sites 
digging into the debris, reported! puilding for use by the State Men-| after his arrest on a morals| Pontiac Press sports section. | may have started something in| .4) Sveame tor twe blocks, turned | MEM, in which 30 passengers | <0 Ot Clnes. The third shot, pre- recovery of three persons still tal Health Commission, which og bowl One of golf's all time greats. | Austria that will have a chain re- for a block, and headed to- | Were shaken up, was called (oi \> oe — pe |pervises feeble minded care. | Sannin’ Sammy wit ow yeu action among their European satel | THM! Ir © lock, SM ‘Me turned | Sabotage by a rail official jand expense ot parents PEM 
. 2 to get more : By Sasebo, 50 miles north of Nga-| “I eo be ‘Truck Load Limits shots and better scores from your sar phoney ty emehe Sal ne wt ae ae | firm which my 
saki in southwestern oe is the | ee vemaneathe,” he. tad tedey, |Changing on Sunday et eat Gemmees So Help Me, Officer . . «| 2 couple of newspapers in the | Nashville, Chattanooga and St brag cunty of vatdua rack ; 
eT panes | “But vacancies might be utilized | LANSING @®—The State High-| including the Masters’ trophy, | ST, LOUIS (INS)—A St. Louis) bby before going up to Bis | Louis railroad were derailed. The Rochester unit, is continuing to —. | for the next year or two while | way Department said it will mod-| P.G.A," championship, Western | motorist lias added a whopper to) "°°" atanlans af Aleka nwa“£ - Metropolitan police in Tokyo said} more facilitiesWor mental defec- ify truck weight restrictions at| Open and the Vardon trophy the long list of excuses for speed-| There weren't many people on) <a oe In line with instructions from 
thay Ras pepeete sateb SDiee weve tives are built. noon Sunday to allow normal loads| — All golfers, this is your chance | ing. Patrolman Robert Beck the streets, in the pleasant early | 4nd West Point Railroads. ate 80h, | the National Foundation for In- expect the game area, “The state should be {ficient |on all blacktop and gravel roads; to get in on this informative golf | stopped a speeding driver who told | morning weather. | Sidiaries | fantile Paralysis, first supplies 
Reet et, fe: Sete an’: uxtvaie' tenes to eens south of but not including M-20| school and improve your game. | him: “This highway is so darned| Truman was dressed in a gray roa ig ES eae are going te southern states. 
farm fields were inundated and |" Pines age 2, Col 3) * dd¢imnebic” §6Awinten@tminten lake Sie "°F" | South De, Det |B. Von Rive - the railway beds damaged. ( e » Oe 2 : the foundation's medical director, 
iyete lives Anions SS 10 per- + rey boar a me le ee had drowned, 1 was missing . 
‘od 13 injured in the heavy rain-| Four Premiers Hold Pre-Conference Parleys | begin earlier in the south, and 
storm which has flooded much of * | “ ay dg» ee sual 
western Japan. — 
sed pases a et S s Sow Seeds of Doubt at Bandung 222-25 wut cs Secret Sessions Jow Seeds of Voubt at DaNnaung = ir or wrecked | 
Se iat wan ouiar above tear] BANDUNG, Indonesia ®—Some| from Peiping; and Nehru, Nasser | who took the initiative im arranging |The plane had been under con-; Chou and his party of 22 took by Nebre ced his traveling com- 
level. delegates to the Adtan-Alricen com-| Gad U Wu in snother Ale Satie te tim Egyptian leadit's stop in New) stant guard Guring its 30 hours, 10 | off for Jakarta after lunch. Betore Weekend Weather 
‘ ference—a mammoth diplomatic | ternational plane. latter three | r.ini and the preconference meet- | ®42go0n airport they left the British commissioner; Four other delegations already 
Tax Collector Gets — |stusuawbxncr sn nar srrtn itr Chow sone i Ci arma. "PU ® Te hacen wh | "ae = Smee ans fo Be Cloudy, Mild Monday—wonder 2 x colm MacDonald, chatted with the loudy Sepa, are writing the script to plense| party desided te remain evernight | ud SS" us jammy Ban On iin agents wasp wees Oe atpeenee, 8 » 
themselves. n the Indonesian capi aircraft Chou’s Singapore stopover . put | Minister of State Tatsunosulu Weekend weather will be partly 
7 Million Check They are openly questioning the| “What did they have to talk| ung. He slipped out of Rangoon| Burma Ol Co. His had asaki; the Libyan, headed by for- are A ’ » | on his chartered Indian Skymaster| carried its own fuel all the way Nehru, Nasser and U Nu into Ja- Shdanter cloudy and mild, turning a little 
demanded an Arab delegate among | *head of Nehru, Nasser and U Nu. on Be mee hag are Rrra although they had taken off from the Thai, with Prince Wan as chief; | Following temperatures from 4S 
the. carky.orrivals, tay Baim iiss atontnasmtontn a bia vd him and eng HE TET ome e yee sseven.-hours -after Chou's. — 5 anaes ex waa. 
" His question was echoed repeat! Ty Tocicy r= Prose |_M tem precions dociion |e Kite Revs Shape iy oe aueny wee te a edly in hotel lobbies here while the yY were the consequence of the crash | *: y| Prime Minister Sir John Kote-!s pm ot by 2 The three leaders stayed only p.m, today, hitting 57 by 1 p.m, ee ST tte sie aE of another chartered Indian plane| Wieny at the heavily guarded| W%e heads the delegation from | Tonight will bring a low of @ te in all—were getting ac = bectvece’ ore carrying eight Red Chinese to Indo- | 5.) / Ceylon and Prime Minister Crown 47 degrees and the expected high quainted. nesia last Monday, Peiping radio| Jaarts, alspost before comtiware |Prince Faisal that from Saudi |iomorrow will be 64 to 68 No one seemed to know the sub- 32..." | said it had been sabotaged. fully shielded and| Arabia, which were expected to! ‘The U.S. Weather Bureau says George - wedeees . from reporters } . 
jects under at Rangoon! Betterials ......... 7otees vegllin en « Chou had to cancel a scheduled | 9) ioeraphers night, it will cool off to a low of 4046 and most were concerned’ Jenter Bétter ........45 sre 3 | stop at Malaya, and put For three days all planes into’ sunday wight, Monday promises te 
what appeared to some 1 be ass sesversrsrcosreaeess< Fi | dame at because of bad| It was learned, however, that | Indonesia have been packed with | be fair to partly cloudy with little 
by what appeared to some to be a mobiemtaddiceees eR Singapore’s| the dozens of Indonesian soldiers | delegates, They, their aides -_ change in temperature. 
delegates who arrived| - ah {tice guards. Chou| port on the request of the Chi- eed Seccmnate gin. seen) ABC Cartage for Efficient Moving en@ 
4 H Pages See ee went nese not town, { J 
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i 
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Hs 
Htae aA ey 
» y 
       
    
100 men will attend the 
events. 
The retreat movement is spread- | 
ing rapidly throughout the country, 
according to Dr. Don. Fraser, 
ning division in the Chamber of Commerce's annual | Looking on (at 
bined with an interesting appraisal   \ ATURDAY. APRIL 16, 1955 
Grateful Nation 
Paying. Homage 
to Jonas Salk 
  CLEAN-SWEEP — Curtis Patton, head of the win-| yesterday's wind-up luncheon at Hotel Waldron. 
left) is Max Kerns, membership 
membership drive this week, (right) congratulates | chairman, who said the drive was the most success- 
Robert C. Tricker, who took home top honors from | ful in Chamber history. 
  
of spiritual values as applied to 
their daily lives.   Feeble-Minded Aid 
Studied by State City C. of C. 
‘Campaign Nets 
| 161 Members 
al     
it 
iF Michael | members. Tricker 
Vincent; | individual high-marr 
: Henry | ewands as captain iif: 
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| young delinquents could be kept 
    
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
      Little Godfreys 
[Hit Pay Dirt Marion Marlowe Gets 
Mariners Booked Solid 
NEW YORK (INS) Offers 
poured in today to the “Little God- 
freys” orphaned in the latest 
The red-haired entertainer yes- 
terday fired nine members of his 
troupe in a two-minute reading of 
a@ press release immediately after 
ard, Nat Dickerson, Martin Kari 
_er, Preston H, Miles and—Charies- 
The Mariners went to Boston 
for a benefit at a Medford church 
  Raise From Sullivan, |: His idea was picked up by the 
New York Daily Mirror. The news- 
Paper proposed editorially a three- 
month campaign asking its readers 
doliar contributions to a 
rk iy ifs | t | tion SPAG-TV has started a 
| Salk a Dime”’ drive. Almost imme- 
diatley, responses started to 
storm on the Arthur Godfrey show. | sceintist. 
  
Van Wagoner Back _ 
fo Bridge Authority 
a tour to the Near East, the execu- 
nouncement that Van wagoner was 
being put back on the authority 
to fill out 
  the- 
| The term e 
| Van Wagoner 
ticism 
  
AT 
nee 
Lin,   
the term from whith 
E 
  The Day in Birmingham   
pele: f aAL g 
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4 | ; § 
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phot u fF x" } i : 53 & E 
  | Cometary, - ——   
Very Rev. Ted Scala 
  
   
    
  
    
  ,Will Conduct Service [gi 
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Ul i bg i . i <q 
| i l if | : mite : 
: 1! 
; \Start Elm Spraying 
|City Forester Advises tiers of lots    
   
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Recently appointed as chaplain 
of the Michigan Wing, Civil Air 
gional Chaplains 
20-71 at Selfridge Field.      
      
   
      
    
     
       
      
  
Tan INSURANCE 
  
  
  
  
  
  4 4 h PI ; fi under juvenile jurisdiction “until - | Legislature as a lobbyist for the! Graham. Planning to Tour ser sreste’sristctin’-wti| ch ettatr, Tey were over Legidature as a lobbyt tr thine Old Calendar tomorrow at & « . “ before an audience that included | the Strai : Sunrise Service at 5 a.m. S E C t Thus care and treatment could | COU" ot tian et Soon ts bridge bond issue. Van | 
1x uropean oun ries be kept up past the age of £1] Soi iittame the setting of | nee, was lobbying on another The Very Rev. Ted Ccala of 
PARIS —Evangelist Billy Gra- | for a few details, Bevan is leaving | eeateiy tttutanden about 2 | public demonstration. ete Poor eRe ein it | Femdale formerly of the Holy “tor to society Church- ham will tour six European coun- |for Germany today vo complete If &t 25 a person still had not| The public enthusiasm was ap- Cress » OCpehe, Nob wil tries following his mass meeting in | cities ehare Graham will appear. responded to treatment he could| parently enough to impress a i conduct the service assisted by the 
Glasgow and London, 8 press ad- | eee be transferred to the state prison; ®umber of booking agents pres- Williams Elected choir under the direction of Mrs. 
viser said last night. | Beavan said Graham will hold — , a ae a caine aan WASHINGTON &—Gov. G. Men-| Ted Scala, John Buliga. of 3670 American evangeli 4 | Meetings at Stuttgart and Nuern- adequate space to care engagements nerr Williams of Michigan was| Sashaba president 
= eon oe and in three other | feebleminded persons is provided,| €%t ten weeks, including one 8l- | ciected a vice chairman of the| —s of the start in Paris June 5-11 and con- | berg perhaps - tinue through Switzerland, Ger- | German cities which have not yet | then mentally defective juvenile =o for Providence, | Democratic National Committee |“? én will many the Netherlands, Merway | @stinlt decided on. offenders could be committed im- : yesterday. He succeeds Sen. Green| Hymns of the Resurrection and Sweden. al | Graham’s revival meeting in mediately for treatment Miss Marlowe, who was assured | (R-RI). | be sung accompanied by the Bells. 
His press adviser, Jerry Bevan, | Paris will be his first full scale; An example is the case of Floyd! a berth on Ed Sullivan's “Toast : 
said the tour is arranged except |C@™paign in a Continental city | Diamond, 16, who police say con-|of the Town” almost before the . . a 
where he will have to use inter-| fessed killing 9year-old Kathleen | news was out, disclosed early to- Native Galilean Gives 
lk Ad ’ 1 St ——. In last year's tour, the| McLaughlin neer her Farmington| day thet an original efler of six evangelist con imself to short | Township Feb. 17. appearances on t show B ib] d T ] 
©, AGMIFA! SUMP  sese"in various citien) ier ticton ner [2a been upped to “twelve or as| DJ DJe Lan ravelogue . . | pe 5 Sieneh & unk tn many as I can make. ae 
Meeting in Augusta His five-day campaign in Paris | “m youth What was more important was ; x CM, mee te . P A Galilean shepherd St " A 
will include the full organization | awaiting trial for first degree | tn5: each of them was to be at ae - 5 Haboush will speak on the 23rd = AUGUSTA. Ga. —President | that Graham has used in his Brit- | murder under adult laws. $3,000 a look. That’s twice what : ane Sunday morning at 9 o'clock 
. ish and American | The judge previously had com-| she was from : race Lutheran Church and at Eisenhower meets here today with | Grult%s tuectings in ener Eure-| mitied  Diemond te the Lapeer| Gun te nena tee Central Methodist Church at 10:45 Adm, Felix B. Stymp, Pacific pean cities will be shorter one-or- | State Home and Training School! Godfrey's Hawaiian singer and a.m. 
Fleet commander, to receive two-night appearances similar to | for the feeble-minded, but said he| hula expert, hadn't been ‘heard | On. Monday night, he and his 
report on the situation in the For- | last year's Continenta} tour. | was forced to waive jurisdiction | from. But she was reported in a party will present their Bible Land 
mosa Straight and the Far East; His schedule i two+ state-of shock. OStCal velogue, “A Trip to 
Fen y. j June 5-9; Zurich June 18; Geneva} years to Diamond into the the Holy Land,” at Grace Luther- 
After the conference with Stump June 19; West Germany June 21-| home and = youth needed imme- siding bad hy oe an Church, Tuesday at St, Trinity 
the chief executive planned to play 28; Rotterdam June 30; Oslo July | diate institutional care. last pag yo ttictal Lutheran and Wednesday at the 
golf with Cary Middlecoff and 3 and Goteborg July 5. | Officials agree there is little like- ¥ « Central Methodist, each night at lly Joe P f | h blamed the forthcoming storm . Billy Joe Patton. After that Graham will take & | jinood the youth's frame of mind “clash rom 7:30. 
Stump, as Navy cémmander in brief vacation before attending the can be changed if he is found nahi cae ie Mr. Haboush is a native Gall- 
chief in the Pacific area, had over- | Baptist World Alliance meeting in| Fuity and sent to Jackson State| eco pice Ln ame ttmesy meter. Medan allen all supervision of the February | London July 22. | Priesn a piss Game ‘mater. — tote aamenuae 
sencennien ot Oot Citnens Netivart- If a person could not be adjusted . his youth tended his father’s flock ist Tachen islands under protec: Unemployment Claims | he could be kept in a mental insti-| ,; Marion's insistence on giving, ot sheep, He came to the United = " | Conti Decline H | tution for life, the judge pointed | i)" 6, hing 1 States before: World War I and ontinue ciine Mere out the executive said, ‘“‘was driving , he way 
Take 1,092 Whales Unemployment compensa-| “I repeat that public sup pa A ror sing. dusts with universities here and abroad, ma- KOBE. Japan ®—One of Japan's | tion claims continued their down-| and participation is required if a Frank Parker—a survivor of yes-|" Jering in the science of Archaecol- 
three whaling fleets returned from | ward turn this week, the Pontiac tober program is jo be! terday’s “‘suffle”’—also irked God- ony. He also specialized in the the = today claiming a otfce of the Michigan Employment unched,” he concluded. trey. ate historicity of Biblical Literature. 
postwar Japanese record ; . Godfrey Virginny Mr, Haboush said he hoped to 
whales. The mothership Tonan | Sectrity Commission reported Ye | Kansas Going Dry plantation by his private plane bring to the western scientific 
ey Te OnO a cons, f whale | A total of 1.122 jobless pey| LAWRENCE, Kan. (UP) — Kan- | 59m igang, + oe: mind, the knowledge os to the . Before | newsmen: | . workings of the eastern mind in ee ree ee ee ee a oe “I hope you'll all have a pleasant | its relation of religion as under- ° Dudley, branch manager. ms | twice the water it utilizes now, &| weekend.” § 
The Weather - | Should be below the 1,000 mark by |'state research committee pre} As the gang split up to go its pe Danes Wot bn efoto 
Prowrsec AND wcemty — Partly next week, he said. dicted. several ways, Janette Davis an- while the Western World is a world } 
Seat’ Magn temenvow 01-08 Pestty other survivor, prepared to leave M of science, . setat” ot contr tomerros stent. Wes | saya ce lehay ollsemgalials . The natural color scenes in his 
— -wee Europe. velogue appeared 
— Bevatews Temeneaterce wa | She was reported “stunned” by Maree tenia de unasiae. im 
12. m * wm” 88h the news of the firings of which ; story presents the life in Galilee 1. = . Ip m... " she too had heard nothing before and Palestine as it was and as it 
0 a.m $1 -}| the ax fell. ‘ is today. 
Seles ta Domai . a 8 Beginning his lecture career in 
ew temperature preceding som Victim of Nail Beating 1920, he ae Copan oo De ee 
pitection” Bon rey 1S mph. Still in | Condition a gh encanta med ede g Bs 
am sets Saturday at 7 pm. : y : oe: ~ ; 
Sun fises Sunday st 9:49 a.m Cindy Lynne Montgomery, who ‘MADAME HABOUSH notables, His wife, Madame, as 
ay ee to celebrate ber fourth birt-| ats in al an Seema. ——— today, i 
(ha Recorded Downtown) critical condition at Pontiac Gen- | Tighest temperature ss eral Hospital, ronye Sap ge HINCKLEY LY: to 3] 00 
Lowes temperature nail punctures, head and a 
es . "The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ay Be aaa eee ee  Penthee & | Charles E. Montgomery of 515 E. 908 W. HURON ST. 
a Mean temperature e oo, BAY m7 3 , 
gE soto thee Wilt Be Closed .* we 4; kee 12, of Fairmount St. A T 11& 5 im leee 17 im 1876 party had been planned . 
- Vestags Tepteatare Chert a! by Cindy’s parents. ; = : A pate ; 
ee Pencil Kill Schoolboy | DON’T MISS OUR FULL PAGE Me Situ os  ADVER IN THIS _ 43 30 Onane ™s TOKYO —Schoolboy Toshihiko TISEMENT erik 00 @8 Pees > headquarters returns the weapon he had = ; 
est ESE sims Pomu Ter oTarany4 nara mpetan Pentcs | ova Sapt ees | PAPER, TUESDAY, APRIL! 19th a3 8. Francisco 6241 ns Guard infantry unit, A‘heavy : ; Ma svallowed the celled cap, chobed| Ea a 2k eS ’ pe wk 
” #i 61 | the 125th Regiment was reviewed at the Water street armory. to'death. . = 
    >       
>: . There's nothing like t nation proceedings for acquisition + jt for beautiful, smooth 
esley R. Wibley colors that dry in hour, Rev. W. ne . P make painting easy —even i 
Appointed Area Ghaplain| you've never painted Sbeet 
Oakland ot the Pint Assembly of cod FUEL & PAINT CO, 
436 Orcherd Lake Ave. 
FES-6159_   { 
‘PONTIAC 
a FOUNDATION.   
  
  
  
  Saves You Many Dollars on 
of Recognized Quality! 
Lasting Satisfaction! 
CONVENIENT TERMS All New Furniture 
— Latest Styles — rontea "caer, Puget ert 
“Meet Y . | 
Wm. W. Donaldson 
114 Cemmanity Bonk Bidg. 
} MILLER’S - 144 Oakland Ave. 
| Miller’ eel @r S== Overhead 
  ASK ANY OF OUR MANY CUSTOMERS : 
Open Monday —Friday Evenings 
  
      
;     
        144 Oakland Ave. Where-You Honestly Save!   
    
~ 
      { 
  
  | 
} } 
| 
  
BS Dom relia | 
Play “Bonankagram” Weekly 
Win Large ‘Cash Awdrds THE PONTIAC     “t+. 
  
    
   
‘ 
| es ‘ Misiied nai ape eb Ea .   
    
  Rt Rea: i. gt epee id gies 
#* Get a = as a a * oe age 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
IROQUOIS COLONIAL — A gracious colonial 
lined gray brick with front of white frame and 
Briarcliff stone has been built at 301 W. Iroquois 
Open for public inspection Sunday, it has seven 
rooms._including a living room, dining room, 
kitchen, three bedrooms and two bathrooms. There 
is a full basement. Ceramic tile has been used for   by Eddie ‘Vanderwerp 
the bathrooms and the kitchen features a counter- 
top stove with built-in oven. There is a fireplace 
and large picture windows in the living reom. 
Placed on a large city-sized lot; the home was built 
by Ward Cumazaings and the sale is being handled 
by Bud Nicholie Real Estate Agency Pontiac Press Phy 
  
  wi La 
> 
. 
r 
— a : ps Me 
ia 
     
STAGES OF BUILDING — An over-all picture showing the development of the 
housing on the south side of East Boulevard reveals the different stages of building 
process. At the base of ‘the hill, several houses are nearing completion. Also visible are the 
, \      —— HOUSES -FOR- GRANADA 
have been completed on Granada Drive. Built of mission brick ranging from reds to 
grays, thé houses have thrée bedrooms and aré both GI and FHA financed. Measuring 
24 by 35 feet, they are placed on 50 by 150 lots. Located between Mt. Clemens and Perry 
    oe 
  ses —-Streets,_ off East Boutevard; the homes etige a ravine and have winding streets with 
kewer and water and gas fired furnaces are included. Handled by Rose-Hill Realty Co., 
another 120 houses of this same design are being constructed along “the edge of East 
Boulevard by this company. 
    } : 
  +> 
/ ee. ae PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 
a ese ais edie a   
PRESS   
   
      
th 
Te RY ES, A ey a aa a dad on. 
round for 
Your Neighbor’s House   
Pontiac City Builds Toward 
100,000 Population Count By HAZEL A. TRUMBLE 
Men and machines are moving 
Mother Earth within the 
limits of Pontiac to level more city 
lots, dig more basements, pour 
more walls, lay more brick and 
mortar and to roof more houses 
for the growing population of 
this city. 
The growth picture indicates 
that within a few years when all 
of the available lots are devel- 
oped, Pontiac may hit the 100.- 
000 mark. It is now in excess of 
75,000 
Residential growth, unprece- 
dented in previous year's build 
ing records, is giving Pontiac 
every type of home from the 
single-family five-room GI to the 
large, colonial styled home. 
Multiple housing is being con- 
structed, too, in spacious brick 
duplexes and in two-family ter- 
races. 
City living—with its close 
proximity te work, te scheols, 
te churches, business and shop- 
ping areas, parks and recrea- 
tional activities—is still the 
choice of thotsands of peaple 
whe want te puj down their 
reets in an established com- 
munity. 
The conveniences of water and 
sewer facilities, paved streets 
and public transportation out- 
weigh the cal] to the country for 
many people when they are de- 
ciding upon a homesite 
In- 194, city records showed 
  the long line of basements, with cement forms already 
construction. Still, More basements are being dug at the top of the’hill, In the distance 
new brick duplex development is seen where 300 units are nearing completion. 
' that there were 10,055 lots avail- 
able for building. During that 
year 6,000 houses were built. The 
balance of 4,055 lots together 
with the recently developed 2.900 
in new subdivisions give the city 
a 6,000-pius figure for 1955 
Vacant acreage (that which 
has not been plotted), accord- 
ing to William Ransom, city 
assessor, runs approximately 
between 306 and 400 acres. The 
balance of the vacant land 
within the city limits is owned 
by General Motors Corpora- 
tien, Oakland County and the 
City of Pontiac. 
Southern Michigan, of which 
Pontiac is a vital part of the pic- 
ture, had the highest first three 
months figures in history in con- 
tracts awarded for future con- 
struction. March figures alone 
were 19 per cent over the sare 
month for 194. This is accord- 
ing to Dodge Reports. an organi- 
zation making a business of 
tabulating and reporting con- 
struction news 
The increased valuation last 
year raised the assessed valua- 
tion of the City of Pontiac by 2° 
million dollars. This was both 
personal and real property as- 
sessment 
Local real estate dealers and 
construction companies report 
that Pontiac is reflecting the cur- 
rent national rate of home pro- 
duction Which in turn is a reflec- 
tion of a healthy expansion of the 
national economy 
  
       
        
in place for the nett stage of 
}           
  LIVIN 
  
   
  TWO NEW TYPES OF PONTIAC HOUSES — 
The photo at the top shows the new contemporary 
house of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Erickson. Located at 49 
Camley St., the house was built by Ward .Cum- 
mings. Pink cedar shakes and white frame are 
used for this most unusual design with the sloped 
ceilings inside following the exterior lines. Clere- 
story type windows highlight the living room 
facing the south. The same pink used on the éx- 
terior of the house has. been selected for interior 
Rite Meee. me 
WEST FAIRMONT — The above photo shows 
only a few of the dozens of new homes in this area 
which is close to Kennett Rd. and the General 
Motors Fisher Body Plant. A GI type home, the 
CRANES SWING INTO ACTION — of the 
Carth preparing scene going on today out at the new 
Fast PRoulevard development include large cranes 
at work placing sewer lines and basement forms ‘ dl $ colors by the EricRsons with gray and white used 
for contrast notes. A compact home, there are five 
rooms. The lower photo shows the new brick built 
by Elmer J. Dunlap for his family at 248 Voorheis 
Rd. There are five rooms with two bedrooms and 
two fireplaces in tis house and it has a full base- 
ment. A red cedar gable highlights the front en- 
trance and ledgerock is used for the planter along 
the front. Mr. Dunlap is a builder of medium-priced 
custom homes 
  
exteriors are shingled and they have five and some- 
times six rooms and bath. Full basements are in- 
cluded in these houses. 
thn 
of 
Machinery is playing an importalif role in Pontiac's 
development with bulldozers and other mechanized 
units shaping the land for 133 new homes in that 
area.   
  att eel é 
  
   
EE 
Panes ners 
a ‘ 
Mer daw 
Free Estimates   
    
  
     
     comtort records! 
BHHo William Lechner 
FE 2-1821 
27 WN. Cass Ave.         
  
THREE-D KITCHEN—Just a whisper apart, but you get depth, dimension and decor hanging cabinet buitl of westcoast hemlock separates the areas but ties them together. 
in this modern kitchen-dining area. An amazingly compact multi-use peninsula and | Cabinet top becomes work surface, buffet, snack bar and holds fat range unit. THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, APREL, 16, 1955 
34 Sik i: SF % it oe Nae 
od   
+P, 2 
Cee ees 
iol OR ten 4% — ¢ 
> cl ih AEN lil: RMR 5 A NI AS Hm mote 
” b. r be y nia, Kad 
nis | on ahi " 
ie 
with ARMSTRONG’S TEMLOK 
Don't let unsightly walls remain an eyesore. Refinish 
them—quickly and economically—with Armstrong's 
Temlok. This smooth-textured fiberboard dresses up 
rooms beautifully—and provides a full half-inch of in- 
sulating thickness that keeps winter cold and summer 
heat outside where they belong. 
Temlok is easy and practical to install. There's no 
painting, plastering, or papering. It comes in conwen-, 
lent sizes. Stop in and see it yourseli—today. «lS ib taps “a gu ee 
es. 
Se 
Door 
    
   
    
       
      Building Permits 
‘Exceed $81,000 Here Permits for projects worth a 
total of $81,310 were issued by the 
City Building Dept. this week 
Highest-priced single project for 
| one-story brick-veneer structure at 
$4 Wenonah Dr., valued at $15,000 
A tabulation of other tags issued 
for jobs valued at more. than $500 
follows: 
House, 607 Colorado, $6.000 
House, 62 E. Cornejl, $10 000. 
     
       
       
            
   
     
     Clara, $2.000 
Addition, 38 Oriole. $1,000 
Erect cooling tower 
$2 000   i ' 
I 
! 
!   
Good to the Last Drop 
| ‘To insure better coffee, clean 
the pot once a week. Let the solu- 
tion of baking soda and boiling 
water stand in it for a few min- 
utes, then rinse thoroughly.   
  
; May is the peak month for hail 
| storms in the U. S., while July is 
=i the month for thunderstorms. June 
  
  
    MH TA es, ogee ee] 
: 4 Pe eine sc 
MAKES YOUR HOME 
COOLER INSIDE 
MAKES YOUR HOME 
SMARTER OUTSIDE 
CIRCULATES THE AIR H Htjers 
  
  We Carry « Complete Line of 
Builders Supplies 
  
  which a permit was issued was a! 
see - | kitchen with covered rear terrace 
; and built-in oven and range. It | 
as | also includes a built-in refrigerator 
isa WN. Saginaw, | 
pletely full oi] tank leaves no room 
for condensation during humid 
son. Of course, electric heat calls : 
for none of this, and’ if you're burn- | 1955 
5) > |ing gas you have no fuel storage | 
[= | problem. ' 
=: | But rare is the man who is satis- 
— | fied with a past winter's heating 
      
     Christian Hills to Open 
  —_ } 
360 brick homes when it is com-| Ranch Homes, Inc., in the pre- 
pleted. Fred Blackwood Realty sentation of these models to the 
Company is collaborating with! public. i FE 5-6910 3360 W. Heron 
        ne 
  
  
  
‘Near-Rochester Project | | Christian Hills, the new country-| with the family room included. 
| estate home development located} Built of brick, there are wide | 
on Crooks Rd., just off Adams| overhangs fer sun control. 
Rd., will be! Offering four bedrooms, the 
open for public inspection this Capri is the second model with 
Sunday showing the four models the Executive featuring three bed- which will range from $17,990 to 
29 950 | rooms, a dresing room. one‘ and 
Placed on half-acre lots, the four  a-half baths} the country kitchen } 
co art the Suburban, Capri, | with barbeque fireplace and built- 
} (near Rochester) 
Executive and the President. | in oven and range. 
The Suburban has three bed- | The deluxe model is the Presi- 
rooms with a bath and a-haif | dent that has four bedrooms, two 
ae | and a-half bathrooms, two dress-   
fing rooms, a 33-foot country 
  
Simple Matter | =="* “= =" Builders and developers of | 
Christian Hillis is Ranch Homes, | 
Inc. } 
They are known for their, plan- 
ning of Charnwood Hills on Adams , 
Rd., and for Alta Loma in Farm- 
ington. Christian Hills will have | Spring. Time to Clean 
| Furnace, Smoke Pipe, 
Put in Fuel Supply 
By DAVID G. BAREUTHER 
AP Real Estate Editor 
“Only the rich can afford an in- 
efficient heating plant.” A _ fuel 
dealer made, this observation the 
other day when we were arrang- 
ing for a spring overhauling of 
| the little volcano our house sits 
n. ; 
‘Paper Stuck to Furniture 
Paper stuck to furniture usually 
can be rubbed off with a soft cloth 
saturated in oil. ‘Use furniture 
polish on the spot after the paper 
is removed.       It's a job we like te have done | 
as soon as weather permits the 
heating plant te be shut down’ for 
the season. In fact, there are 
  All true lilies are natives of the 
  
two important late spring chores Bedroom 
| for most of us householders: 3 treom Model Home 
1) to give the furnace and smoke 2 Bedroom Model Home 
= peer pled sey 400 Columbia - vent summer rust \ . . . 
and (2) to lay in a supply of tuet. || bender of birmingham 
| The reason laty spring is a good FE 2-9981 or MI 4-4941 
time to order fuel is that a com- | — ' —   
  
  JUST ARRIVED ON TRACK! 
CARLOAD SALE   
        - 
OF I you burn coal you | Introducing usually get a better price off-sea- |) 
  National 
Homes 
2 and 3 Bedroom 
Styles 
Grand 
Opening 
APRIL 22 
For Full Details cost. Fuel bfils are so hard to pay 
that many dealers have started 
year-round budgeting plans. You | 
pay them $15 or so per month the 
year-round. If there is anything 
left, you get it back; if you owe 
fore, you make up the difference. 
One way te reduce operating 
in heating a house is to 
    . getting the most com- 
fort out of the fuel is the main 
| trick. Proper insulation, weather- | 
| stripping, storm sash and efficient 
| furnace operation seem to be the | Call 
|principal factors, Colwell Homes 
MI 6-2022 
      are believed to be the only people | in the world who have no dogs. 
Only 2 More Days to See 
This Furnished Model Home! 
4011 LEDGESTONE DRIVE Saturday and Sunday 1 to 6 P. M., or by Appointment 
te Ledgestene Drive—right te model. ‘ 
Westridge -of - Waterford     = 
      | FHA Aprroved 
neds neo FE 5-2102 * Blocks * Transit-Mix Concrete 
PHONE FE 5-8186 L & ] AWNING 
545%. Telegraph Rd. 
es 163 W. Montcalm =| 
e ’ 
Sais * ° F 4 Northern Pontise’s Finest Sebdivisten Area 
Featering Custem Sallt Homes, $19,900 te $40,000 
Heltman & Tripp Builders arid Developers of Westridge-of- Waterford 
; 22 W. Lawrence. FE 5-8161     
Visit Our Display 
at the 
IN THE ARMORY 
April 21, 22, 23, 24 
  
FREE 
CUSTOMER PARKING = LUMBER CO. HARDWARE © COAL © BUILDING SUPPLIES. 
COA KLA   
  
      
  TUNE IN MICHIGAN NEWS, MON., WED., FRI. 7:30 - 7:35 WPON 
iat, fs } Bs pes : 4 
        
    
        
       
    
  
  « ns a ay 
GOING TO. BUILD? Build for Permanence 
~ 
  
    | Cinder Blocks 
| Call FE 4-4570-FE 8-0332 
; F. G. Van Horn & Sons | 
199 Mechanic Street | 
        
  
  OAK FLOORING by BRADLEY 
DIXIE LUMBER CO., I Always Service—All Ways 
831 Oakland Avs. 
    
ROY ANNETT, Ine. 
Realtors 
28 E. Huron St. 
  Ph. FE 3-7193 
        
+    
            
    
    
    
   
  
  
    1 , 
A radio controlled garage door opener thot. 
Operotes from the dash of your cor, from a 
button in your home. Operates your door— 
. Operates your lights—works on any style door. 
TEMCO MACHINE 
TIAC DRIVE FEDERAL 5-6644 PONTIAC MICHIGAN 
ail 
: 
| AS FEATURED IN.. | ALSY NITE, translucent Ae ky wo 0 
....... that-givesthe.““Home for. all... fe = 
: America” a distinctively mod- 
trn design feature. You can 
work- wonders in your own 
home with this amazing do- lamer 
it-yourself materials, indoors 
or out, Alsynite can be sawed 
| and nailed just like wood. 
| 9 Gerais ATP. 2 thee | ma 
: dns ‘on Gemiitne -Alysnite |. *) 
/         —in a .closet off 
|reau states, to make changes in 
  | hot water heating system. 
Polish Is Identification 
, one closes. ‘ 
   
      
     
          
          rade Outsized Heoting | | 
System “for Tiny Boiler 
and Récreation Area 
One of ae est reasons for get- 
aa ty heating 
‘iin icho Kober and 
  
    
DINING   
    
  
     
      —————— 
     
    
  Gadaet ot Wall 
- 'Is Space Saver _ Separators and Shelves | 
’ Designed Cleverly Find 
Rightful Place in Home| 
Gadget walls—more than mere 
& architectural baubles—are finding 
| their rightful niche in today's com- 
pact home interiors. 
In many of the modern smallér 
| homes, storage space is at a pre- 
|mium. It is difficult to break up’ 
| different areas of work and play 
| without reducing each room area 
to the dimensions of a _ closet. 
Some of the rooms are box-like 
without any finishing touches to 
} give them a look of individuality 
oon where the gadget walls 
tai separate dining from living 
|}areas, home owners have found     
This was quite apparent from | ff = $f LIVING ROOM Batw that bs ~ — such as 
display af house heating . st pa — ia] simple, wide-spa ouvres of 
Sepeoe shew in connection with TWO CAR GARAGE 202" # 1S" west coast fhhemlock give a spa- 
the recently-held eleventh annual cious airy look while marking the 
exposition of the National Asso- P areas of use, To separate dining 
clation of Home Buliders in Chi- BEOR 00M from kitchen, the peninsula with 
cago. 5 rryrtt} in| rite Bre 2-8 built-in storage for dishes and lin- itt 
en, will double as a snack bar   
| PLAN 2155? Ko 
Furthermore, what little piping is 
a@ modern 
heating systein | of the goals of smart architects. 
from sight. 
ing plant, it is a good idea, the bu- 
;.| Square feet, without garage, and has WELE PLANNED—Periect circulation in a house—passage from 
forced cir- | ome room to anotber without passing through another room—is one 
Here it is achieved to a high degree, 
| including convenient passage to and from a two-car garage wader | 
When changing the home heat-| porch roof. Two baths and space for expansion in the attic are among | 
other features of this plan B-2155AP by Alwin Cassens Jr., 
145 S. Franklin Ave., Valley Stream, N. Y.   These storage peninsulas can be 
put to use in almost any part of 
the house. They are easily adapt- 
able to any size area if constructed 
of versatile Douglas fir. western 
red cedar or west coast hemlock. 
Cleverly designed sheiving 
around the fireplace, finished in 
a natural woed or painted, will 
dress up'a stark wall, and fur- 
nish a display rack for cherished | ys: 
architect, 
The house covers 1,633 | 
38,542 cubic feet. The geographic center -of 
North American continent is a 
      
~~ ly 
  safety. 
Compare the Quality! 
Buy the Best—Buy Tru-Bilt Blocks! 
TRU-BILT BLOCK CO. HOME OF BETTER BLOCKS 
1992 Pontiac Drive Build Your Home 
with Quality-Tested 
TRU-BILT BLOCKS When you build a home of enduring Tru-Bilt Blocks, you 
have a home worthy to shelter your loved ones safely ... 
whether it’s a cottage or mansion .. 
Tru-Bilt Blocks have been tested to meet the rigid quality 
requirements of all standard specifications—your assur- 
ance of strength, durability, weather-resistance and fire    
    
        
           
       
      
           
    
       
     
  
    . in any price range! 
FE 4-9531     
art objects, plants or books.   ing radiators with baseboards, con- 
Nature, like a twentieth-century | 
gypsy. is on the move. And, her | 
, ultimate destination is your living 
Convectors and slim-tube radia-| Troon and your home itself. 
tors recessed beneath windows| Moving nature into the home, 
accomplish similar results from a says Mrs. Elsie Doty Sopp, A.LD.. 
comfort standpoint. Panels—con- | | home decorating authority, is just cealed piping in the floor, a wail, | | another o - xpression of man's attrac- 
or the ceiling—are still another | | tion for the outdoors and his affin- means of distributing boiler-gen- | ity with nature. 
erated heat—hot water circulated; 
under thermostatic control. | “The large glass windows in to- 
Autematically-controlied heat de-| day's hemes,” Mrs. — .ab- 
liverey and uniformity of tempera- | **TVe* “bring ¢ the living. 
ture maintained throughout the | " 
home are outstanding comfort),   
  
  
Paint a ring of nail polish on 
the pull of one cord of your vene- ” 
tian blinds. The ring will tell | 
which cord opens the blinds; which |        
        
      
    
         
        
        as 
  
  
To Buy or Sell Real Estate See 
Bateman & Kampsen }. 
Realty Company 
377 South Telegraph 
FE 3-0528 
        
  
      Nature Moves Into Living 
From Without and Within 
| teresting surfaces of nature? 
are 
| an occasional dusting with a soft     
The family room is a veritable 
paradise for these handy installa- 
tiens. Locked gun cabinet, audio 
wall for television and hi-fidelity 
|equipment, and one wall can be- 
come a neat sewing cabinet for 
natural outdoors right Into your | other with place for patterns. 
home. What then is easter te liye (dress form, sewing machine and 
with than the lush colors and in- pull down ‘cutting table. When not 
in use, the entire unit can be 
Weod walls, floors and furniture folded away. 
mate instinctively with the zarden 
separated only by a glass parti- 
tien, and stone and brick give 
sthiking dimensional effecis as nat- 
ural’as any native scene. All this 
makes decorating schemes easy 
and practically limitless for any 
| room in the home."’ 
| To create this needed ag srl 
between outdoors and home inter 
lfor, Mrs. Sopp recommends care- 
selection .o{_basic Rust-Inhibiting Paste 
for Paint Manufacturers 
Reynolds’ Metals Co 
ville is marketing a new alumi- 
num pigment containing a rust in- 
paint manufacturers. 
It comes in the form of a paste 
made of strontium chromate and 
the large color areas—walls and droces a rust-inhibiting primer with 
| floors — with heavy emphasis on an aluminum top finish 
; wood, 
Wall space, she says, on the av- 
herage, occupies two-thirds of a 
| room's surface area. Natural wood 
| walls, like the striking Douglas 
\ fir with its golden colorings or 
west coast hemlock with its sun 
shine tones, are a designer's dream 
| because of the ease of selecting 
other materials to contrast and 
blend with these walls of neutral 
shades. 
Wood is easy to live with, Mrs. 
Sopp remarks, for it never be- 
comes monotonous and best of | 
all, it mellows with age. In te- 
day’s era of casual living, ease 
of maintenance is also a factor. 
After an initial treatment of clear 
wax, rez, shellac or varnish, only   
Specialists in 
Re-Modeling! 
ELLIS CONST. CO. 
2690 S$. Woodward 
FE 2-267) 
Keasey Electric Electric Contractor 
Appliance—Fixtures 
Phone OR 3-2601 -. OR 3-1483 
4494 Dixie Highway Drayten Plains, Mich.     
    
        
    
a 
  
  LET US PUT A 
BETTER ROOF OVER YOUR HEAD cloth is needed to keep these walls 
in perfect condition. + ' 
This Revolving Door | 
Adjusts for Speed If you like to go through re-; 
or-show;—+ 
  commmechriatae BUILTUP ROOFING Phene FE %-s0T! 353 N. Case 
Estadlished 1918 
Get An Estimate Withest Obdligaticn ot Louis-' 
_hibitor, It is designed for use by _ 
materials for powdered aluminum and it pro |§ _ 
          Finish your floors with FABULON, 
the fabulous floor finish . . . End 
waxing ond scrubbing forever! 
FABULON .. . a full-bodied, clear 
protective coating .. . is so tough, 
so hard that dirt and grime just 
won't grind in, Cleans easily with 
a dust mop or domp cloth. Resists 
staining, chipping, cracking and 
skidding. Easy to apply — brush 
or roller—needs no filler—dries 
in half-an-hour. Remove the old 
Sy re finish—apply two 
Z _ coats of FABULON 
eS - —all in one day. 
“Teint a famous booting allay faith 
PONTIAC MANUFACTURING CO.   
here is the door { n oll e stele or you. It is | ROOFING & INSULATION CO made by the International Steel :               
  
4 yeur floors - 
can’! be stonded, ar 
ese PRONTO, : 
eff the old 
finish. Works 
fast . . . needs ne ofter- 
rinse. Mode by the moters 
of FABULON, the Fobviews 
Fleer Finish. 
Dy eee 
    ame   
PAINT   TT-T9 S. Perry St. FE S6184 5 
    
Coe. of Evansville, Inc. a 
  Average Home Uses 
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For example, fir is the nation’s 
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Lumber must add stiffness, insula- 
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‘Scales 50 Fish a Minute 
Working by hand, you can scale 
15 fish a minute, if you are fast. 
Even faster is a machine made 
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scales 530 fish a minute,   } 
  
  
  
  The door revolves constantly at 
three revolutions a minute. When 
{you touch the crossbar on the | 
| door, it speeds up to nine rpm.__| 
It can be adjusted to a top speed | 
‘of 12 rpm. 
    
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2260 Dixie Hwy.'— > North of Telegraph Rd., Pontioc \«:. 
    
E> TH PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1955   
     vey. Ai grdt’ Ch 
  anges Hands Again Mrs. Lewis to Head NINETEEN   
rmeister's - - - 
      
                
    
    
  scene of sev- ‘ os pa me oe ee pay ee rata 
et See Oe he wetsorteg of, | ee Ps eS ee os z 
iEeanged band sguia. 
_ Lapeer attorney Mrs. Grace 
‘Wtiite has sold the 20-acre farm * ge acquired for $13,500 at a court 
‘pale in 1948 for the reported sum 
    
“ai 
    
8 
    i 
IN HAPPIER DAYS — Chris Ziegenhardt nails up | ruckus. The farm was sold to Lapeer Attorney Mrs. 
    
  
    to the state Supreme Court, the| 9 loose board on an outbuilding at his “Fort Ziegen-| Grace White to satisfy the judgment. The brothers 
peir lost. their farm when they | nardt” home before one of several evictions. The re-| and friends resisted several evictions, but finally failed assessmen as ther share of the lnbiites of Ut of Chie and his brother Paul to pay an $280 were removed, and now Mrs. White has sold the 240- the defunct insurance association. after the failure of a mutual fire insur-| acre farm for $45,000. 
n _—_———o 
3280 in court and attorney fees | 
i the legal shenanigans over Board Approves Will Feature Albion Band 
When Mrs, White finally took . 
pesmi anne he farm ‘Milford Concert Sunday to tenants, PEK * fl t . : ; 
a €ZONING OF LO ‘to Offer P inest in M usic White granted $3, ps . MILFORD — nnual spring! cert Sunday afternoon at the . 
ve juapeer Cots Gireuit Court e eae a Plans | waved of the ‘Aibion College ‘Band | or High School auditorium. | 
po tined oe pty to elay tation #4 © = “~~ | The Band-Boosters of the Huron the brothers continued to remain — = there Recently established tenants | Jalley School sponsoring thi: 
have remained on the scene for on West Maple ‘Chapel Plans ‘ovat in Neeping’ with the policy 
about a year, and rebuilt portions WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- | { providing programs of the best 
of the barn-like house. | SHIP — The township board has} Youth Program jim music literature by recognized   performers in this area. approved rezoning a residential lot 
on West Maple road near Orchard | Ct Sunnyvale ~ | The conductor, Conway Peters, 
tie Weed. /\ WATERFORD TOWNSHIP —A/ *8* deen directly ee It was reclassified to business | ‘ ;' ned | many years for keeping 
usage. The Detroit Edison Co. plans | "P°ci#! youth service is plan College prominent on the musical 
10 build relay_station-there ‘ | for Sunnyvale Chapel at 7:30 map. 
The township's participation in| p. m. Saturday. = | His programs are consistently 
chioriding roads also was discussed| A film entitled “The Great Dis- | built around the proven works of 
at this week's meeting, but action | covery” will be shown, and special | music literature. For pleasing vari- 
Pastor Rev. James Parker will | teresting insertion here and there 
| deliver a message entitled, “Give of spicy pop type music, often with 
| the Young People What They an element of surprise. 
| Want.” | The Band-Boosters will be host 
|to the Albion group, for a 1 p.m. 
|dinner at the Milford Methodist 
| Church   
  
  In other action, the board bonded OES Initiation Slated 
State Police | and the clerk for $1,000. The Com-; CLARKSTON — Joseph C. Bird, The concert is scheduled for 2:30 
has been promoted to cor-| munity National Bank and. the | Chapter No, 24, OES, will hold | p.m. Tickets may be purchased at 
and assigned to the Center- initiation at 8 p.m. Monday at the‘ the door and there is a special 
° Clarkston Masonic Temple. | bargain rate for family groups.     
  
  LEARNING 
YOUNG... 
TO PLAY A 
  INSURED SAM-8PM 
OPEN EVERY DAY SUNDAYS 10-3 P. M. TWO YARDS-TO SERVE YOU! 
Gu a J 
td ¥- ee Special Program, 
Slated Monday 
All-League Chorus to 
Include County Singers   
will giv 
TIME TO HAVE YOUR...     
     
  County All-League Chorus will present a 
program at 8 p.m. Monday in the 
West ‘ Bloomfield Township High 
School gymnasium. 
we 
Participating schools are Clark- 
ston, Clarenceville, Milford, Bright- | 
on, Northville, Holly and West 
Bloomfield. 
The program will include solos, 
barbershop harmony, and a flute 
solo. 
Detroiter Helps 
    
  
  
  
  
      Y h G gee We use the latest methods 
Processing. . and glaz- 
out roup . ing furs... so don't put it off, call 
With Church Gitt | D & D Cleaners today! . . . Protect 
WALLED LAKE—The new car-| your furs. 
peting on the floor of hee ged mags 
Methodist Church is the gi 
the Youth Fellowship and Bernard | FULL INSURANCE 
tonmwed ot the Feats; corvien | COVERAGE Lasky, a member of the Detroit | Board pon and ‘poslpene | 
sev su 
SSeee SS § DRY STORACE p10 rie onmoen We also offer modern Dry Storage friends he made in his youth. | facilities for your valuable Cloth of tea church wos camapiee to Garments. FE 5.8116 purchase ¢arpeting, Lasky vol-| 
unteered to supply half of what) 
was needed in appreciation of the’ . 
= summer months of “| 35 YEARS 
Idhood. ; - 
Speaker Named , SERVICE CLE, RS 
CLARENCEVI - uy in 143 W. HURON ST. 
Bac mtn, ay Pood, al bel PONTIAC FREE PARKING the guest speaker- at the 8- p.m. “ in the big lor at the sides of our Tuesday meeting of the Clarence- building       } 
ville PTA. Election of officers is| 
slated for the evening. — } 
  
  
  
scouring 
honest!... 
         
            
    a’ 
To $10,000 by 
Federal Savings 
and Loan ~ 
Insurance Corp. ‘WINNING | GAME! 
  It’s the all important start he gets that 
re teaches him how to play a winning game... that 
teaches him the values of life. The practice that 
makes perfect for him is the continual practice of aioe yee A Convenient | saving his pennies ‘til they pecans dollars, “4 ‘Service te Shun tie 
depositing his dollars at a profit. or in Bod Waether 
Start a Savings Account with Any Amount 
PONTIAC FEDERAL 
| 16 E. Lawrence Street 
ae rowrixe’ FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION 
  
3 > 
        
    Pots.and pans stay j~/ 
= SPARKLING CLEAN = when you cook electrically 
Just think... no rubbing, scrubbing to shine: 
pots and pans. And that isn’t all. Kitchen 
walls and curtains stay cleaner and brighter, | 
\   
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