} Reds, West Near x * & * - Bills Among 28 ~ Signed Into Law — ~ Reverse Slash . The Weather Wednesday: Fair, Cool Details page two ea 118th YEAR ASSOCIATED ONITED PRESS PHOTOS ®*% & & & PONTIAC, M x &k* & &* A Wait for Marriage License Cut fo ICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1955—28 PAGES _ greeme x & ke *& 3 Days _ nt on Big 4 x * * * + -byGov. Williams Takes Effect Measure Oct. 4; More Insurance} _ for Autos Also OK'd LANSING (#—Gov. WR liams today approved 28 legislative bills, including one shortening the mar- riage license waiting period. The new law, which be- comes effective next Octo- ber 14, requires applicants for marriage licenses to wait three, instead of five, days. Williams also signed a bill increasing the amount of automobile insurance which must be carried under the financial responsibflity act. |. The law boosts requirements from $5,000 to $10,000 for bodily injury or death of one person in any one accident, from $10,000 to $20,000 for death or injury to two or more persons in accident and from $1,000 to $5,000 for collision property damage. * * * Other bills signed: Require appeals to the State Tax Commission on assessments to be filled by July 1, instead ‘of Dec. 1. Give county road commission em- ployes authority to stop and check trucks believed to be violating weight limits, and free truck driv- ers for liability for overweight trucks. “TRACTOR LAW Allow vehicles hauling hay, straw, outboard motor and row boats to be 1314 feet high, now 12%4,- and allow farm tractors to haul wagons or trailers 55 feet long at not more than 15 miles an hour. * * ® : Require all butter with a grad score_under 90 to be labeled ‘“‘un- dergrade.”’ ‘ Raise the salary of the director of the State Waterways Commis- sion from $6,800 to $8,400. Permit securities to be sold be- fore approval by the State Corpor- ations and Securities Commission. REGULATES AUCTIONS Regulate public auctions of new merchandise outside of municipali- ties or inside those without local ordinances, Require pasteurized milk to have (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) in Marine Corps Senate Overrules Ike in Dem Challenge of Requested Cut WASHINGTON (® — Democrats took a step yesterday toward open. attack on President Eisen- hewer with the 40-39 Senate vote aimed: at canceling his cut in Marine Corps strength, | 7} It was the first successful major challenge in Congress of Eisen- hower as a military man and demonstrated to some Democrats that on this score the President ig not invulnerable. It might signal a shift in ri Three officers ficers (unidentified) model the different items which make up the uniform — choice of shorts or long trousers, a sleeveless shirt which can be | Flyboys Will Don Bermuda Shorts AIR FORCE TO SPORT SHORT PANTS — The Air Force: has approved a new silver-tan summer uniform to take place of the khakis worn since 1947, Peace Drive As head of the nation’s armed forces, Lucero spread his control over all activi- ties of the country, which is still under a state of siege. Despite the strict army checks, most—ef—Buenos Aires had the appearance normalcy. Despite Lucero’s protestations of returning normalcy, his communi- \que for the successive day warned the public against rumors of continuing conflict. As he had before, he termed these “completely false” but ad- mitted that they had “increased considerably.” “i The communique reported that 18 planes used by the rebels in bomb- ing government sites had been flown back from Uruguay, where the insurgent pilots fled for refuge. Fourteen junior officers returned with the planes, declaring that they had not taken any voluntary part in the rebellion, ARMY PUBLICIZED Lucero and the military reaped a growing publicity harvest in the nation’s press as Peron’s.long-time if Hf | { if § Lucero Continues fo Lead in Argentina BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (?—With President Juan Peron keeping to the background, Maj. Gen. Franklin Lucero continued today to direct the campaign to restore full peace to this nation left tense by revolt. The balding, square-jawed army minister, holding the top role in the post-revolutionary period, said again in a communique early today that the situation is “steadily normalizing without any inconvenience.” y. Study Alternate Reserve Plan Backers Awaiting Ike’s Views on Bill Designed to Break Deadlock WASHINGTON (®—Backers of a new military reserve bill looked for possible White House reaction today as the House Armed Serv- ices Committee was called to con- sider the compromise plap, shorn of an antisegregation' feature and other controversia] elements. The President, who several times has prodded for action on what he called a “vital” program to strengthen the mili- tar) reserves, has indicated he re- gards the antisegregation amend- ment as out of place in legislation of this sort. However, the new bill, intro- duced yesterday by Chairman Vinson (D-Ga) in an effort te break a month-long House dead- lock, would eliminate some of the things Eisenhower asked for, notably authority to recruit a special corps of teenage trainees, After the ‘compromise bill was introduced House Republican Leader Martin of Massachusetts endorsed its “fundamentals” and predicted House passage. ._ z Under the Vinson measure the reservist ranks would be filled mainly with men who already have finished their active duty hitches, : |2,000 Turkeys Roasted Summer Makes Debut Tonight: at 11:32 P.M. Spring said a rather violent fare- well to Pontiac this morning when an electric storm in the wee hours ushered in the longest day of the year. By 7 a. m., however, all had cleared and old Sol was getting down to the business of warming things up. Summer begins officially at 11:32 tonight when the sun reaches its northernmost point, 321, degrees from the equator and the northern hemisphere is in its or- _ Since we are closer to the sun in the winter than we are in the. sum- mer, it makes our seasons more. mild than those of the southern hemisphere where just the op- posite is true. This mopth will see the famous Northern Cross, one of the most magnificent constellations, rising on its side in the northeastern sky just after dark. The weatherman says we are in for a warm week with the tem- peratures averaging between a high of 82 and a low of 58. Don’t Pin High Hopes on Big 4—Churchill LONDON ® — Sir Winston Churchill said today ‘‘we must not count upon complete and. im- mediate success” in the —forth- coming Big Four conference. at Geneva, “A period of relaxation of ten- sion may well be all that is now within our grasp,” said the retired prime minister. -- “Even so, such a phase would not be sterile. On the contrary, it would give time for science to show the magnitude of her bless- ings rather than all her terrors.” Sir Winston spoke in the ancient Guildhall of the City of London, where a bronze statue of him was unveiled Churchill, who has long plumped for a meeting of the Big Four -| which 30-odd nations will negotiate lke’s Reciprocal | Trade Bill Gets Signature Today Includes Tariff Cuts Asked by President Plus Safeguards WASHINGTON (#}—Pres- ident Eisenhower today ar- ranged to sign into law the bill giving him the new tariff-cutting power he asked—one of the top meas- ures of his 1955 legislative program. The bill extends the 21- year-old reciprocal trade agreements law for three years, to June 30, 1958, and permits the President to cut tariffs up to 5 per cent in each of those years in nego- tiating for similar conces- sions from other countries. It is the first new grant of power to reduce import duties since 1945, and also is the longest extension of the law in a decade. In its basic essentials, the -bill contains the authority which Eisenhower ly asked last year. ee when his pro- posals ran into resistance in the he sent word he would settle then for a simple one-year ¢x- tension without new powers te“ cut tarifts. That is what Con- | gress voted last year. * The State Department is ex- pected to begin at once to plan for an international conference at Power Failures Reported Severe Electrical Storm Hits Pontiac Early Today A severe thunder-and-lightning storm which rocked Oakland County for the second time in three days this' morning left 7,300 Birmingham and Royal Oak families without electricity after lightning knocked out a Detroit Edison Co. substation. Lightning also caused two home fires in Avon Town- ship, sparked numerous small blazes in cellars and attics around the county and split trees. key son substation in Royal Oak could not be put back into service, crews switched lines to the Bloomfield Hills sub- station and restored power to affected homes by 8:15 a.m. Power had been cut off at 6:30. A similar storm hit the area Sunday afternoon. Birmingham police were forced radio after the electricity blackout put theirs out of commission. Traf- fic lights along heavily-traveled extra policemen were called out to unsnari traffic jams at inter- sections. was brought under control by the Rochester Fire Dept, _ enport set ablaze in a LIGHTNING HITS TREE new. agreements involving ‘tariff reductions or other concessions. The United States must use up the first 5 per cent reduction author- ity in the year starting July 1, or it will lapse. The same is true in each of the two succeeding years. In addition, the measure permits the President to reduce to 30 per cent of value all tariffs now above that figure. These were the principal safe- guards written into the extension bill by the Senate over the opposi- tion of some Democratic sup- porters of the reciprocal trade program. 1. New power for the Presi- dent to curb imports by quotas or higher tariffs if he finds an indusfry essential to national defense is being harmed or threatened. 2. Revision of the “escape clause’’ procedure to make it easier for an industry to show it has been damaged by imports. 3. A requirement that the Tariff Commission must recommend that a concession in a trade agreement be withdrawn or modified. In Today's Press In Pontiac, a. lightning bolt struck a large elm tree at 704 Melrose St., tearing up chunks of sod and vibrating the floor of the Willidm A. Dafoe home. Other tree damage reports were received by the Parks and Recreation Dept. The Pontiac Fire Dept. attrib- uted two minor fires to the storm. The forecast for tonight and ° tomorrow ifs fair and cooler, with a low tonight of 60 degrees and a high temorrow of 76-80. Yesterday’s high was 84, low 66. more than one-half inch of rain fell between 8 a.m. Monday and 8 a.m, today. At 8 a.m. today, the mercury in downtown Pontiac stood at 69, Strike in Los Angeles Causes Traffic Jams LOS ANGELES @—A transit strike forced additional thousands of Los Angeles workers into cars today for a hectic trip into the logjam of downtown traffic. Extra police were again as- signed to try to ease the mass of. cars off jammed-up frééways and into city streets, Police estimated 100 000 additional cars surged into the downtown area yesterday, th first day of the strike of 2,600 workers, __ Some motorists began organiz- ing car pools and others hitch- hiked when Los Angeles Transit Line buses and streetcars stopped running yesterday morning. They normally carry 900,060 riders a County News................ 17 Editorials ..............00005 6 Sports ......... wie ale e's'eleis 18, 19 TWOROCES owe ccccccicccsase. 16 TV & Radio Programs...... 27 Wilson, Eart.......... weiss: 16 Women’s Pages......... 12, 13 day, Because the struck Edi-+ to use the Pontiac Police Dept. | Woodward Avenue were out and{o Pontiac Man, 6], Dies of Burns Victim Apparently Fell Asleep While Smoking, Police Say A 67-year-old Pontiac man died of burns early today after he ap- | parently fell asleep while smok- | ing, Pontiac said. victim, Charlies Wilderson, Pontiac Rd., was found by his brother, Lamont, 56, at about 8:30 p.m. yesterday on the kitchen floor of their farm home near the eastern city limits. | Lamont told Sgt. William Nes- bitt and Detective Fred Wirth that he found his brother col- lapsed on the kitchen floor his clothing ablaze. Police said he apparently’ st gered to the kitchen from his m, He said he extinguished the pas, Delegates Laud Ike's Address - Eisenhower Sees Atom Becoming Man’s Most Productive Servant FROM OUR WIRE SERVICES SAN FRANCISCO —~ Russia and the Western Powers were reported to have reached virtual agree- ment early today on ar- rangements for the top- level talks in Geneva next month. Informed quarters said Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov told the West- ern diplomats at the end of a four-hour meeting that at first sight he saw no reason to object to a series. of pro- posals they had agreed on in New York He was understood to have told them he would study the pro- posals more carefully and give his reply in a day or two. The West- ern foreign ministers apparently were, so certain of his acceptance that no further meeting was ar- ranged. . = * 2 ¢& “The United States will leave blazing clothing and smouldering bedclothes. Charles refused medi- “|pending arrangements. = to be put back in bed, At about 1:45 am., Lamont said he got: out of bed to check on Pal victim and saw that he had died. Acting Oakland Coroner Dr. Isaac C. Prevette sald Charies died of second degree burns and suffocation, ° Lamont was scheduled to make a statement at the - prosecutor's office today. ‘ Ro stone unturned to work for peace,” he said, “We shall reject no method, however novel, that holds out any hope however faint.” NO PREDICTIONS Although he promised that the United States would do its best to make the Geneva talks a suc- cess, he declined to make any predictions, He. said: “Whether or net we shall then reach the initial decisions that will start dismantling the terrible ap- paratus of fear. and distrust and The two brothers lived on the small farm with another brother, Grant, 65, who was at work at the time. The victim was taken to Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home Bossy Can’t Even Sweat When Mercury Hits 80 EAST LANSING (®--Hot? Con- sider the cow: She can’t even sweat. Dr, Samuel Brody of the Univer- sity of Missouri told a group of dairymen today that cows release their body heat only through va- porization or through breathing. When the thermometer hits 80 degrees, Dr, Brody said, the rate with which a cow's bedy loses heat does not increase, People on the other hand, start sweating at 80 degrees, and per- spiration makes them cooler. Dr. Brody said Indian cattle have it all over American stock. They can sweat, Fire Head Moran Guilty NEW YORK W—James J. Mo- ran, former first deputy fire com- missioner, has been convicted of evading $131,307 irt federal income taxes. Luxury Cruise Ship Nears Completion weapons erected since the end of World War II, I do aot know.’3 The President declared: « _ “Whe can doubt that in the so beat down the raveges of dis- . ease and the pangs of poverty that human king will experience _@ new expansion of living stand- ards and of cultural and ypiriteal horizons." He added, paraphrasing words used by Abraham Lincoln in the Civil War: “The object of our (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Say Air Funds to Bolster U.S. Aiding in Plane Race With Russians WASHINGTON (—Se nators Byrd (D-Va) and Symington. (D- Mo) said today a $31,882,000,000 de- America ahead of Russia in long- range aerial striking power. The Senate passed the bil 800 yesterday and sent it back to the at UN. Birthday. next 10 years world science can _ peace of such new kind that all fense money bill will help keep cpanel lots in Ferry Farm Addition. REPORT ON BIDS . Finance Director Oscar Eck- man is scheduled to report on bids received for insurance on city-owned vehicles. and compen- - gation insurance for waste collec- tion and disposal employes. A public hearing ts set on in- tention to construct a water main following ln to be from Josiyn to Barkeil street Beverly avenue from Joslyn to A eree' Beer avenue from Josiyn t. avenue from Barkell " Becond avenue from Jos Second wvenve from Bar A assessment 3 Dreyer Sisters Win Baton Contest 3 Teen-Agers Pay Fines for Possessing Liquor Three teen-age youths, charged with iflegal possession of liquor, were fined $15 and $10 costs ves- terday after they pleaded guilty before Springfield Township Jus- tice Emmett J. Leib. The trio, Richard Stiff, 19, of Holly, Donald Stewell, 18, and Harold Chittick, 19, both of Grand - Blanc, was arrested over the week- end by Oakland County Sheriff's deputies, Detroiter Sentenced Chester Zygaj. 32, of 18427 Ryan, Detroit, yesterday was placed on one-year probation by Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland. Zygaj_ pleaded guilty June 8 to non-support of his family living. in Oakland County. | Bulganin to Visit India MOSCOW & — Prime minister Nehru announced today he has in- vited Soviet Premier Nikolai Bul- ganin to visit India and Bulganin has accepted. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Fair and @eoler tonight and tomerrenw. L night mear 60. high tomerrew ‘74- #0. Seatgh” fete nes: oS a air & * = low 56-48, Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding & a.m At 8 am: Wind velocity 12-15 m_.p.h. ‘Directioin: Southwest. Sun sets Tuesday at 6:12 p.m. Bon rises Wednesday at 4: x4 a= Moon sets bse at om. » Moon rises Wednesday : ‘8 suecgeule *eeeeeee eeoeeare Ss tseeceeeseeenene | Ce ee & DR. JOHN M. STEVENS State Hospital Ofticial Ends Duties August | Pontiac State Hospital today an- nounced the resignation of Dr. John M. Stevens, assistant medical su- perintendent of the hospital. The resignation becomes effec- tive Aug. | when Dr. Stevens be- gins duties as director of the mental hygiene clinic at Univer- sity of Pennsylvaia, Dr. Stevens joined the staff at Pontiac State Hospital in June, 1950 as a psychiatrist and was appointed to the position of assistant medi- cal superintendent of the 3,000 pa- tient institution in Oct., 1953: The appointment was made by Dr. Ivan A, LaCore, medical superintendent. Prior to this appointment Dr. Ste- rvetis had been assistant clinical director for a year. In the new position Dr. Stevens {will be in the department of psy- chiatry at the university medical school. His first duties will be in the organization of the clinic. Dr. and Mrs. Stevens will make their horne near Media, Pa., with their four children, Suzanne 8, John Alan 5, Sally Jean 3 and Constance Ruth seven months. Search in 13th Day “tata |f0F Orion Auto Dealer | ices The search for a former Lake Orion auto dealer, charged with embezzlement, entered its 13th day today. A nationwide teletype has been sent out by the Oakland County Sheriff's Department with the de- scription of David P. Dawson, 31, who operated Dave Dawson Inc., a Ford sales agency at 51 N. Broad- way, Lake Orion. Dawson is charged with embez- gliing $28,862 from the Universal CIT Credit Corp. The company daims Dawson failed to return to them the wholesale price of cars «|which the firm bought from the plant for sale by the dealer. Big 4 Plans Look -|All Right to Molotov (Continued From Page One) the world will think anew and act anew, ATOMIC SERVANT “It cannot be a mere stilling of the guns—it must be a glorious way of life. In that life, the atom, dedicated once as man's slayer, will become his most productive. servant." British Foreign Secretary Har- old Macmillan said the President's speech ‘‘gave a very fine start to the conference."’ Belgian Foreign Minister Paul-Henri Spaak called the speech inspirational. There was no comment from Molotov, who later met the Pres- ident at a reception and ex- changed pleasantries, Eisenhower left for Washington in his private plane last night, ap- proximately 24 hours after his ar- rival. -— Wait Cut 2 Days | and Coach Division who died May p | THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, J UNE 21, 1955 _ # > \ : rriage License (Continued From Page One) 3.5 per cent butterfat, instead of 3 per cent. Remove old and unused author- ity of the State Welfare Depart- ment over soldiers’ relief com- missions. . Require written examinations for those seeking licenses to sell life and accident and health insurance. Reduce the price of the | com- piled laws. Remove the sales tax from water sold in bulk tanks of 500 or more gallons. INHERITANCE TAX Cause the six-year statute of lim- itations in inheritance tax matters to run from the date of final de- termination of the tax and not from the date of death. * * s Free from the use tax cars bought outside of Michigan by Michigan residents in military service if a sales tax was paid in | the state of purchase . | Allow two or moré municipalities to operate sewage disposal and wa- ter supply systems. Require motorists to report to the secretary of state if they have an accident in which more than $100 worth of property dam- age results. Authorize a home to be built near Traverse City for neglected or dependent children committed to care by the probate courts. FIRE PROTECTION _ Allow townships to sell special assessment bonds-in of | special assessments for fire protec- * * * Allow the Conservation Commis- sion discretion to change com- mercial fishing regulations to elim- inate conflicts with . adjoining states. Require cosmetologists to. have 1,200 hours of training over a nine-month period to obtain a lt- conse, Require a candidate who has changed his name to put his for- mer and his new name on the ballot for 12 years after changing his name by court action or 10 years by naturalization proceed- Pay the 10-cents-an-acre grant direct to local units for lands ab- sorbed in the State Military Res- ervation, M. D. Douglas Estate Is Left to Widow Morgan D. Douglas, 63, a former general manager of GMC Truck 3, left his entire estate to his widow, Marda G., according to a will filed in Oakland County Pro- bate Court, Mrs. Douglas of Bloomfield Hills, receives half of the estate outright and the other half ts to be set aside in a trust fund for her. . She will receive compensation from the fund during her lifetime, after which Douglas’ sons Morgan Jr., and, William E., will benefit from it. The estate is estimated to total more more tee $100,000. Pontiac Gir Struck by Car, Hospitalized Seven-year-old Gwendolyn Thompson, of 20 Beaudette St., was admitted at Pontiac General Hospital yesterday afternoon after she ran into the path of a car on Bagley Street near Jackson street, Pontiac Police said. The girl, reported in good condi- tion with a broken right leg and head cuts, was struck by a car driven by Sylvester Kyles, 46, of 830 Orton St. Kyles, headed south on Bagley. said the girl ran from behind a northbound auto. as follows: Axle Plant 3955. 5 for work at 6:00 A.M .Wednesdey, June Afternoon shift - 1955, NOTICE All Pontiac Motor employes laid off until further notice on Friday, June 17, 1955, because of parts shortage, report to work Employes report on regular shifts Tuesday, June 21, Assembly Plant Day shift employes Mn identi tn 328 ~ id nesday, June 5. Department 328 “rpey tment ao" starting time Pry y* , Sheet Metal Plant Department: No. 780 for work at 5:00 A.M., | Mowe va omg gy ng i utr Pa Wea De 4 report at 7:00 ‘A.M., report et regular shift ner. June 22, ot regulor shift WILLIAM AHO City Parks Official Leaves Staff July 15 Resignation of Raymond C. Kel- ler, 31, as city parks supervisor was announced today by David R. Ewalt, Parks and Recreation Dept. director. - Keller will leave the system officially July 15 to assume the post of assistant parks superin- tana, ry at M AA u Wis, The Day in Birmingham City Calls for Plan to Cut) Proposed Ice BIRMINGHAM — With prelim- inary architectural studies show- ing that Birmingham's artificial ice-skating rink will cost approxi- mately $25,000 im excess of the $125,000 bond issue passed for that purpose, the city commission took steps to remedy the situation last night. Rather than pare from incom- plete plans, lawmakers authorized the firm of O'Dell, Hewlett and Luckenbach to prepare complete plans before changes are made to bring costs into line. An increase in the size of a pro- posed shelter at the rink would necessitate the additional cost, officials said. In studying the matter last night, commissioners saw an $3,000 shortcut in relocatien of a pipe-trench, and other altera- tions. , Between the bond issue and oth- er monies from the park improve- ment fund, approximately $129,000 is available for construction of the rink, plans for which were spear- headed by the Recreation board. Car Hits Four Boats plate glass window at Van's Ma. HOLLYWOOD, Fla. u» — John ‘rine Service and bowled over four yesterday. It crashed through a ieee Rink Costs parking in the northeast busi Rees quadrant. The board also’ will discuss the steps needed to add a professional zoning category to the city's present residential, commercial and industrial restrictions. * s * Assistant city manager Jack Walker, a city employe since 1950, will work his last day in that | capacity on Friday. Walker, who came here as assistant building inspector, moved up to head that department in 1952. Since 1953 has been assistant to City Manager Donald C, Egbert. He will join a Southfield Township construction firm. s * * Brown-haired and brown-eyed eyed Patricia Talbot was chosen te reign as Miss Birmingham in finals held here Saturday, and il go to the Miss Michigan being held at Detroit's asonic Temple on Saturday. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester W. Talbot of 1364 Holland en Due in the Death _ of Mrs. Charles Jacobsen Our Store Will Be Closed Wednesday, June 22 * Jacobsen’s Flowers William Aho, city forester, will discussion letter replace Keller as parks supervisor, ae park Teen N O ; [ ( E Ewalt said. . Keller joined the Pontiac depert.| Cort be meved oe as not to be ment as forester in Sept., ‘ tertere with the first golf tee. was promoted to his present post in Dec., 1952. Aho, 33, was hired as; City Manager Donald C. Egbert ‘Fisher Body Employes forester in June, 1953. He was| pointed out that long range plans ‘formerly with the Detroit Parks| call for erection of a — All employes of the Fisher Body and Recreation Dept. house, thus allowing for a reloca- tea 62 the Wasaber ene ton. Plant:in Pontiac are to report for Michigan Driver Killed a. - ‘ “ a work at thei | ee ce rti c , h N Toledo oe Board ool will . ° Wednesder : J ooE + in Crash Near ing re- times on Wednesday, June 22n ’ TOLEDO um — John C. Sunder- volve around a problem which has 19 62, of Plymouth, Mich. was| "2e® Pushed by the city since 35 kijled nd his gee ‘setiously | 1947: that of extending 14 Mile road injured today when their car ror Southfield to Cranbrook Signed: collided with another at the inter- . Property owners have fought any : section of U.S. 6 and US. 23, which is 18 miles south of Toledo. = = eee FISHER BODY DIVISION Mrs. Sunderman was taken to a/ | - PONTIAC PLANT Bowling Green hospital, suffering | ° “est arterial a trom head injuries. | “reer 900 BALDWIN AVE. The driver of the other car, “A report on current parking in Blaine M. Wengard, 23, of New| the business district is included PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Lawrence, Ohio, suffered only| im the agenda and will be tied minor injuries. inte discussions on the need for o NORTH DAKOTA MINNESOTA SOUTH DAKOTA } ae ) NEBRASKA i Today The Prudential opens its new North Central Home Office to do an even better job of serving your insurance and investment needs. Located in Minneapolis near the geographical x center of this thriving region, our new head- quarters is dedicated to serve the people of Michigan and six other great Midwestern states. Suite 4 _Coftner A _ From our new: home we're better equipped to help your local Prudential representative assist Nona nd June 22, ey you in building your future security ... better equipped to help our local investment personnel supply needed capital for "business me ene home building and farm improvement. 02, Pontiac State Bank Building Saginaw and Lawrence Streets Pontiac 14, Michigan rthur L. Norris, Manager Suite 207, Kay Building 3Y, South Saginaw St. Pontiac, Michigan David H. Lewis, Division Manager The Prudential ee ena OF cuecer eae North Central Home Office» Minneapolis Mina od, 8® A Hoaace PF, Corns NW. Cuwaces . Baoore Rusexts, Bassrrs Editor Advertising Manager Nat'l Adv. Mer. The Associated Press tm entitled coctestvely te for repubdlicstion of ali local news printed this news- paper ag well as all AP news dispatches. reer are payable in @dvance. one Pontiac FE 2-818! MEMBER OF AUDIT SUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1955 Ike’s Revised Atom Plan As he outlined it at Pennsylvania State University, President Erssnnow- ER’s revised “atoms for peace” plan ap- pears most likely to benefit nations now short of fuel and power. - Afer inspecting the atomic reactor built at PSU, the Presi- dent said he soon would send his new program to Congress. Briefly, he proposes that the U. 8. offer friendly free nations re- search atomic reactors at half their cost and provide the neces- sary nuclear fuels. * * * For nations able to invest their own funds, the President wants to supply them with needed construction and operational know-how “within prudent security considerations.” ~ It is estimated that atomic reactors ean be built for $1,500,000 to $2,000,000 each, As for nuclear fuel, our Govern- ment already has pledged 220 pounds of nonmilitary grade material for in- ternational use. ~ * * * More than the underdeveloped countries would benefit from this program. It should be a boon to those highly industrialized na- tions whose progress is ham- pered by shortages of fuel and - power. Among these are France, Switzerland, Italy, the Scandi- navian countries and Japan. * * * Our abundant supplies of coal and oil and hydroelectric power are a strong argument for the President’s program. As Joun Jay Hopxrins of General Dy- namics Corp. builders of the atomic submarine Nautijus, has pointed out, this abundance means that atomic electrictty won’t be competitive here for a long time. He therefore has suggested a lend-lease program to supply friendly ‘ nations with reactors. Certainly, the President’s proposals eould do much to put the peaceful bene- fits of atomic energy within the reach of our power short allies. Trade Act Sent to Ike With acceptance by the House and Senate of the conferees’ report, legisla- tion extending the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act was assured of becom- ing law. : That the President would sign the bill which started out as H.R. 1 there never hag been any doubt. It sailed through the House in virtually the In the Senate, however, it ran into considerably stronger protectionist sen- timent. The result was that the Ad- ministration had to accept certain modifications of the escape clause which would tend to make it easier. for in- dustries seeking tariff relief to make out a case for themselves. * *~x* -* Nonetheless, as it reached the White House the bill extends for ‘three years the President’s au- thority to negotiate Reciprocal Trade agreements. It also empow- ers him to lower tariffs up to - five per cent in each of three years. Final enactment of this key instru- ment of the President’s foreign eco- nomic policy was a major victory not — only for him and the Nation but for _the whole free world. : - Ericson’s Statue At the risk of antagonizing all those firmly convinced that Co.umsus dis- In fact the Wash Demo- anne ‘nl | hie hae y 00 YW “ oe , 4 a ; a ‘ imi Se | _THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1955, oe i _ Loe: Bs mand pedestal: for ] Voice of the People j«§ «| Statue of the Norse discoverer, - , (eae tr oi shit aos Wie eet Reader Says All Human Beings Need Help ~ Back of this request is the irritation felt by Macnuso#® and his Scandinavian constituents over the absence of an Ericson statue in the national capital. As the Senator explained, his supporters are disturbed when they reach Washing- ton to find a huge statue of CoLuMsus in Union Station Plaza, but none of ERICSON. *x* * The Senator appears to be on both sound political and histori- eal ground in claiming that Ericson discovered the North American Continent in 1002 A. D. It long has been accepted as his- torical fact that this son of Eric the Red, Norse colonizer of Green- land, reached our New England coast around 1000 A. D. or about 490 years ahead of Columbus. _ Because of the grapes he fourid there, he is reputed to have named the area Vinland, or Wineland. The settlement is believed to have existed for 10 years. * * * There also are records indicating that BJarni Hersuurson visited America in 986 A. D. from Iceland and that Henry Sinciarr, first Prince or Orkney reached Nova Scotia in 1398. In view of these facts it seems to us that Congress is morally obligated to give the Norsemen due recognition by providing a place for the Ericson statue. = Tue report by a Gallup, N. M., man that during a recent dust storm the dust was so thick that prairie dogs were dig- ging burrows 100 feet above the normal surface of the earth has not yet been confirmed by the weather bureau. The Man About Town Praises Work Here A National First-Aid Man Commends Pontiac Chapter How to keep young: Associate with young people. How to get old: Try to keep up with them. Eighteen certificates in first-aid instruc- tor training have been issued by the local Red Cross Chapter. The classes were taught " Evan Thompson, National Safety Service Representative. He congratulated the chapter and Ralph Forman, First Aid Chairman here, on the excellent facilities of the chapter house and the pre- vious training given the enrollees. MN _ Scion of a former prominent Pontiac family, Howard G. Pound, died last week at his home in Flint, aged 73. He was scoutmaster of the first Boy Scout troop organized in that city. ; While summer does not officially arrive until just before midnight tonight, Jake Vanderlind, my Pontiac Trail weather watcher, says we've already had the worst of the summer heat. A couple of days before summer ar- rived in 1944, his thermometer climbed away above 100, and: his strawberries cooked on the vine. But the heated spell was followed by an unusually cool July and August. Now living in Detroit, Garfield Drayton writes that it was the boast of his father, the late Max Drayton, that he was in the local talent cast that staged ° “The Adventures of Davy Crockett” at the old Pontiac opera house in the winter “of 1884. A cadet from the Pontiac area is among the few to be named to the coveted dean’s “list at the U. 8. Military Academy at West Point. He is Josef Conrad Krankel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Krankel of Almont. ‘ : A pear tree in the yard of Paul Herbst of Williams Lake is very prolific. While most - of its branches are loaded with fruit, others -are in- blossom. . ~ Scandal in the animal world: The father of a brood of young squirrels near the home of ' Andrew Arvidson of Waterford was killed by ah automobile, and the mother has deserted their family and ran off with another squirrel. Th Arvidsons ‘are feeding the brood. —_—_———_—X—X—X—a—a—“a—a=— Verbal Orchids to— Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Newton of 124 State Ave.; sixtieth wedding anni- , versar 7 . "Mr, ana Mrs. Frederick D. Carr_ of 88 Thorpe 8t.; golden wedding. ' Mit. amd Mrs, John L. Gibson > of 670 W. Walton Bivd.; golden wedding. _ Mr, and Mrs. Lewis N. Brayton ‘ | & e i. “4 2 i’ j j a ; ~The Hat and the Rin ‘David Lawrence Says: — eee President Tells Russians What U. N. Means to West SAN FRANCISCO — There is here an atmosphere of hope for the peace of the world. An op- portunity to express that hope is the main reason why they are celebrating the tenth anniversary of the founding of the United Na- tions To say over and over again that the world wants peace is not a futile gesture, because moral force — which is the sum total of the currents of public opinion everywhere — does manage to penetrate the most difficult bar- riers. When, therefore, the President of the United States stands be- fore the representatives of 60 nations and articulates the mor- al code which the American peo- ple stand for, it is a distinct gain. Bearing in mind that Foreign Minister Molotov of the Soviet Upion and the other envoys from the ‘satellite states are here, it is thrilling to hear the President say- ing to them face to face the truths that the Western world @>r- siders paramount as a basis for peace. CHARTER PRAISED “Justice, decency and liberty,” says Eisenhower, are imbedded in the United Nations charter — if all nations would only observe them. * * ° “The right to select in full free- dom” the individuals who conduct government, no matter what its form, is the President’s second concept. “Free access to historial and tenance and operation of ‘a system of self-government” is the third point emphasized. “No nation has a right to em- ploy force aggressively against any other,” proclaims the Presi- dent as he carries further the theme that it is “the first respon- sibility of every nation to provide for its own defense’’ and that it has “the clear right to assoc.ate itself with other like-minded peo- ples for the. promotion of their common security.” NO PUNCHES PULLED The President was naturally compelled to express his thoughts in implicit phrases. For at this gathering it would have been in bad taste to have done otherwise But, reading the speech carefuily, it will be observed that Eisenhower didn’t really pull any punches. He reiterated the fundamentals of in- ternational morality for which the Western nations fought in the last war and which-they still hold to be prerequisite to a firmly estab- lished ——- * Eisenhower has left it to See- retary of State John Foster Duilcs to make an explicit pronouncemeut on American foreign policy later in the week. But already those who may have doubts as to the w- dom of this celebration can be as- sured that the reaffirmation of basic ideals has in itself given a tone to the United Nations co1- ference which must inevitably overflow into the other conference being held here concurrently at which arrangements are to be ‘| af #187 i z F ve EE H t “We and a majority of all na- tions, I believe, are united in another hope: That every govern- ment will abstain from itself at- tempting, or aiding others to attempt, the subversion, coercion, infiltration or destruction of other governments in order to gain po- litical or material advantage or because of differences in philoso- phies. religions or ‘ideologies.’* . Ld * . ~ Undoubtedly, in the drafting of the President’s address, there were many minds in our govern— ment which worked long and care- fully oyer those phrases. For they say, in effect, that there van be no peace in the world till all gcvernments are free and only when Soviet Russia gives up her strategy of international commu- nism, with its objective of world conquest. : Back in 1933 the Soviet Union pledged itself in writing to aban- don those objectives, and diplo matic recognition was granted by the United States on that specific condition. Is the Soviet Union ready to make another: pledge; and will it keep that pledge this time? (Copyright 1935, New York Her- _ ald Tribune Inc.) THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Whe knoweth if he will re- turn and repent, and leave a blessing behind him; even a meat offering and a drink offering unto the Lerd your =—— 2:14, . w Every one goes astray, but the least imprudent are they who re- pent the soonest.—Voltaire. but Sympathy Must Precede Actions Ee od carer, Beets Sigua tae eke Deke All of us basically want to help “others because we feel a deep need for other pi ’s help as well. Sympathy ‘must precede helpful- ness, for there we find understand- ing. Are we truly helping those about us when we take over their per-: the way from our own experience. The one needing help can there- fore draw his own conclusion. Andy States ‘Prodigal’ Is an Excellent Film The motion picture “The Prod- igal” is an excellent portrayal of an individual, far different from the bigoted article by Dr. D. A. Portraits ~° By JAMES J. METCALFE ‘Time Off” is relaxation that... So many of us take . . .. If just to have the comfort of . . . Another “coffee-break’"’ .. . We take time off from daily cares . . . As often as we may... And that is always good for us... working day ... But there is one exception as .. . We go along in life . . . We cannot have vacations from . . . Our moral stress and strife . . . We cannot take time off from God . . . From decency and good . . . Or from the obligations that. . . We owe our veighborhood >, « « Our struggle for salvation is ..» An everlasting fight ... And there can be no compromise .. . Between the wrong and right. (Copyright 1955) Looking Back 18 Years Ago CITY VALUATION increased to $73 million. FRENCH RECEIVE lIiitler’s peace terms. 20 Years Ago SENATE GROUP ignores FDR's tax plan. : U, S. TO PROBE governinent bureaus for graft and laxity. Poling in the “Christian Herald” which was quoted in the Press. 7 Willlam Reid 141 S. Parke League Investigates _ Reports of Cruelty We rely appreciate the ef- forts of Pontiac Press in for- warding our appeal to “One who: cares” concerning a dog cruelty a aw Anyone with a cruelty complaint may contact us at FE 5-9290. we will be glad to work with them. dean M. Davis Corresponding Secretary Michigan Animal Rescue League Hal Boyle Says: Now It’s Man-Watching © That’s Delaying Stenos NEW YORK @— What really does the most to lower efficiency in the average business office—girl watching or man watching? Would you get more work done _ if every white collar man were forced to wear overalls and a hal- TY loween mask on the-job? I raise these questions only be- cause my earlier campaign to put the American working girl in bloomers has fallen fiat. Why the campaign? Well, a survey showed that on an average day American men were wasting 20 million hours of company time doing nothing but daydreaming over the charms of their pretty girl coworkers. - L * . My theory was that if all work- ing girls were compelled to wear the same drab uniform they would become so repulsive nobody would waste time looking at ‘em. The suggested uniform: Black cotton stockings, old-fashioned black bloomers, and a blue middy or high-necked blouse. But it looks as if I got off on the wrong blooming foot. You'd think it would be the of- fice girls who'd raise a howl against being compelled to wear bloomers. Not at all. Many of them were quite attracted to the thought. It was the men who yelped. Typical complaint from a boss: “Why .don't you shut your big mouth. Boyle? It has taken me 20 years to work up to a place where I can have an office of my own and a good-looking secretary. Quit talk- ing like a wife, will you? Let well enough alone.” oe * * An office supervisor remarked: “You're putting the cart before the horse, son. There are more women than men in the average office today, and believe me most of them are man-crazy. . “If men are wasting 20 million hours a day girl watching, then the girls themselves must be wasting 30 million working hours staring at the men in their offices. Case Records of a Psychologist Jilted Woman Is Told to Grit Her Teeth and Go Out and Find Another Boyfriend God will help Mildred change “1” into “2,” but God does not try to aid you when you simply ask him to make a little “o” into a bigger “O.” So use the two rules below for rebuilding happiness and success. They produce results if you will force yourself to follow that recipe. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case 0-362: Mildred Q., aged 21, is the jilted girl who tried to commit suicide because of Her humiliation and wounded pride. - “Dr. Crane. I cry myself to sleep every night thinking about Jack,” she said and the tears started afresh. 7 “Then I re-read his love letters to me. Oh, I feel so miserable that I simply cannot ‘go on living any longer.” REGAIN PERSPECTIVE Everybody feels dejected and drained of. emotions at the bottom . of a serious loss, like death of a loved one or a business crash, But whenever we are overcome with grief, we are thinking about self. We are indulging in a form of self-pity. Our ego is the center of our thinking. To regain rormal perspective, we must resolutely make our brain emotions to mutiny against your brain. red shoes for our senior prom.” said one high school girl, “when I saw a veteran returning home without any feet.” - . You can also observe many smiling, jolly people walking along the streets with white canes and seeing-eye dogs. it would likewise be helpful in widening your perspective if, you could visit our Veteraris’ Hospitals and see the boys therein who have lost hahds‘ or feet, or ail four extremities, atid who must try to ‘write letters home by holding a pencil in their teeth! ‘HAPPINESS RECIPE The recipe for happiness there- fore has two parts. First, look around yourself at people who have far fewer advantages than your own. Then you will not over- ly magnify — peaey grief. Second, look ahead to a new goal and resolutely keep driving tion from your dead romance of yesterday. os M@anwhile, by going through the motions of gay conversation. and dancing. attending parties, art . museums and church together, you will soon begin to feel the cor- responding émotions. ; “If you. go through the proper motions you will soon begin to experience the corresponding emo- tions,”” runs an axiom of pyschol- | * Always write to Dr. George W_ Crane fm care of The Pontiac Press. Pontiac, chigan, enclosing @ dreesed envelope and cover oes and grinting costs when you send for one ef his psychological Mi self- long 3c stamped, a dime to’ said a baby with a new rattle. Every time I pass his desk it’s all I can do to keep from reaching over and pinching his little fat merry cheeks.” . for men office workers then—over- _alls or Bermuda shorts, plus blind- ers or Halloween masks? — “In _ my opinion it wouldn't work,” said a middle-aged secre- tary acidly. ‘“To me most men look like they are wearing Halloween masks anyway, but in this civiliza- tion there is nothing you can do desk : “Is anybody against this whole idea?”’ Smiles — In * Australia kangaroos | are hunted in autos. Being good jump- .,ers, they make fine substitutes for pedestrians, : Fish enjoy being tickled, accord-. — ing ‘to an ichthyologist, We'll bet _ they'd ‘be more tickled to’ get away. have pearls in them, -° Children are always q great han- dicap to anybody who- wants to - lead a dull life. ie meme > ae the angles, fewer people would be running- around in circles. = - - What good does it ‘do to pinch a >. speeder when it doesn't make him wake up? ~ : , charts (Copyright 1955) Reader Finds Calcium re Relieves Sinus Trouble °- - By DR. WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. It is absurd to label ache, pain. or other sensation ‘‘neuritis’’ if it is here today and gone tomorrow, * . t i i a Hi if FA A 5 ‘if i “helt treatments” (whatever they - may be) or high calcium diet and«. calcium i fF hi iF i ii Z i F I Considering the price, we can't understand why all oysters don’$ If more people would study all, “THE PONLLAG PDS, & AUBSDA), JONE 31, 1955 ot. THE BERRYS Sun Shines YOU NEED Kindy | ~ Sun Glasses RN IE C8 AR Ma Mt a SABRE A: iain + By Carl Grubert JOIN THE FUN hai lage yy Le Mailman, 42 Dies jas a second child treated with the 9:30-5:30 daily 9:30-12:30 Wed. 9:30-8:00 Fri. | Salk polio vaccine was stricken. : George Harold Lemmons, a post- 13 NO. SAGINAW ST. after hospitalization with the di-) gan, er laying brick for a patio at his! the home | able Physicians said the child, a girl was in good condition| The with “only a light case” of the disease. The first “Salk case’ Was an 8-year-old boy. Doctors at Park- Boy, 12, Inherits i “17° . - Blamed for 5 Deaths 98 Million After (| Tsccet Ss teat tee mater. right out dancing on their very : oi ro io.in a as F ‘ly T d eis @ ta gan aaath = easy _ NEW DELHI, India Police i agar _ : } a e Se e whole secret is Arthur . : 7p A @-yearcld aml of rage Y | brewer Max E. Bernheimer, who| neny blamed an astrologer's pre- a eae i DALLAS, Tex, W—A 42-year-o NEW YORK u—Young William) died in 1913 and whose widow died| diction for the death of a family Magic Step To Popularity. This 3 man became Dallas’ first ariel Anthony Burton's fortune, which) last year. of five. rie speed eave re the key to all : deat! t { the year yesterda - : - t+ 40-#2sy you can mas- © eath victim of the y y ¥\he inherits through a family} An accounting of the estate filed They said a ‘soothag yer told | - Pas in joat $ crn he Yaa + tragedy, has been figured at near- | ly eight million dollars. William, ” lal clerk, died about four hours! known as Wayne William Loner-| are approved. He has already re-; ‘ie by. his own hand before dune ‘| sease. He became ill yeste day aft. | | his father Wayne Longergan killed | record showed. T-year-old jn 1943, second AT ARTHUR MURRAY'S Becinneas who come to us are always cag) eles that they start estranged wife Patricia He is! 1 ose serving SB yeare sa. ile. Astrologer’s Prediction yesterday in Surrogate’s Court. 1 showed the boy will inherit ST} | be | 809,918 as soon as the accounts| if you've never danced before! So don’t be an unhappy side- line sitter, Come to A Mur- ray's now and be @ star on the — floor. Studios open 10: AM Maden Mohan Lat, 4-year - old/ government cashier, that he would now 12, used to the | 30, after bringing ent saree 'to his family. His name was changed after | ceived $8,059,198 of this sum,. 5 Nee eee eee a ant boy's mother in her fashion-| Willam- new lives with his! Lal worried about the nesdiction Beekman Place apartment: maternal grandmother Mrs. / so much that he stabbed his wife ARTHUR MURRAY Schon of Dancing | Lucille " Wolfe ‘Qurton, who has/and three children to death, then/ p FE 2-0244 father was convicted of been his guardiay since shortly | threw himself under a speeding 25: €. Lewrence St. hone - degree his after. his father’ was imprisoned. | train. murder of land Hospital agreed neither case could be attributed to the vaccine shots. The end eben of the | United States was inaugurated. at | | Philadelphia, Pa. THIS SUMMER, SERVE MILK! “spéciat Gas ak 2 WATER HEATER SALE - a ENDS JUNE 25 || ee ONLY Gas \ ~ | HEATS PLENTY OF WATER — | 3 "TIMES FASTER. @ National sales records show on overwhelming preference for automatic gas water-heaters over ony other type run by on all-automatic fuel. Gas does a better job . .. actually replaces hot water 3 times faster. @ An automatic clothes washer (and what modern home doesn't have one, or plon to have one?), Sonne needs the speedy recovery of the gos heater. ‘ @ More than 75 manufacturers make gas heater. You can find every type of construction, every sort of tank lining, every A product advantage you can think of . . . in gos. © Yet automatic gas water: heaters cost less to buy, vie and insterll y 4 Gee Water Heater NOW.... SAVE $$$! MONEY DOWN ON THIS MOHAWK covenTey OP wall-to-wall nothing down 516° @ month! Here's the modern—easy way to enjoy the beauty of Mohawk’s Textured Coventry wall-to-wall, in your living room, dining room, bedroom, and foyer. No Down Payment. As little as $16.30 monthly on our easy payment plan. Your room sizes may vary from the dimensions illustrated, but your monthly cost will still be proportionately low. Drop in today or let us call at your home with samples of the many new weaves and’ patterns, and the dazzling array of colors in our wide selection of Mohawk Carpets. Low monthly price includes carpet, carpet cush- ion, installation, and all laber and materials. * This is the Carpet... Notice it’s deep texture. PECIAL PURCHASE Deep Pile Solid Color — ; COTTON CARP A special purchase enables us to bring you a No Down Payment! ‘ luxurious carpet at a truly low price. Choose from Gold, Green or Cinnamon : Specially Priced at $Q. YD. Wie Cane 4 “Pontiac’s Oldest Exclusboe Floor Covering Firm! ee , "(FE 4-253 _ Open ‘til 9 P.M. Mondays. and Fridays CTL. Perry St. Les med ie. Sg / TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1955 ST. JOSEPH ASPIRIN FOR CHILDREN Albania Appeals to U.S. LONDON iA. broddcast by Tirana radio heard here reported that Albania had again requested admission to the United Nations. Previous requests have been voted down. ’ ¥ EE ee ee | REPEATING A SELL-OUT! | At MITCHELL'S WE AGAIN HAVE A LIMITED Se onertllincemmnetiilersaeatinemeancetieemesed THE PONTIAC PRESS. 5 Youths Killed in Jersey Crash Car Smashes Pipe Truck Headon, Somersaults Both Down Embankment SOMERVILLE, N.J. (#--Four youths and a girl were killed last night in @ head-on truck-car col- lision, A sixth youth was critical- ly injured. The victims, returning from a church league softball game, crossed the center line wf Route 206 | to pass another car and smashed { SUPPLY OF THE NEW into the trailer truck loaded with t ; 10-inch coment —— pipe ' The truck jechitied. Both car } ‘ and truck rolled into an embank- a ment, .the pipes‘ spilling on the Ae ale emer 6-21 | road. 1 = : ~ | State police identified the dead, ' ee ee ee all of Bradley Gardens, as Ralph Horton, 19, driver of the car; Francis Trout, 26;, Stephen Chon- ! Milli Coll illionaire’s Collection |\tor'tt rose ‘sever 15; ane Lawanda Serofino, 17. : of Trash to Be Auctioned | 222° 233) Stet ‘Somerset — Hospital was James Cordick, 17.. i WEST POINT, Miss (» — The} The decision to sell Rose's ac-| The driver of a truck, Her- , accumulation of personal effects| cumulation was made by the five man Walsh, 3, of Rosendale, N.Y y y ; and household goods left by an| heirs, the youngest 65. was baponenp ruc knee injury and fir e@ Such excitement at our pen counter! eccentric millionaire come up for! “We're heartbroken that Clifton| 4) eyewitness, William Daugha- i And no wonder . . . when you look public auction July 5-7 | could have enjoyed all these things day, Martinsville man, i , It was gathered by wealthy re-| and didn't, sighed Mrs. Roseytold police.the youths passed him over the features below, you'll see t a y uiny te & } hy ot had AS d cluse Clifton Rose, who died four Woodward of Pulaski, Tenn , a and several other cars minutes j =Sy weve to re-orces and re- months .ago. He couldn’t bear to} ¢.4 cous . before. smashing into the truck. i order again! throw anything away. Th ne ‘ jj |He gaid he saw the lights of the s: The collection ranges trom a Mrs. Elisabeth Owings of Pulaski. ipo per, San ‘ant pibee ‘ying ¢ F 1928 -Cadillac to silver hip flasks, Sms s 5 hrs ac pipes flying ' : POINT CAN NEVER mea tos old ergo play of aks a . Ay hee . peg rears. le : @ } NEVER NEEDS SHARPENING oks, crystal, linen and old lace, ees : Glass ~ os 5 ‘Ttone, Ala., and Stacy’ Rose of : i fe a new. town .and : © CLEAN ERASABLE Liner ie furkitore CIOS 88 OP" | Hetrokt. : ‘Liberated’ Temple Bell | oe manera i " eee ° f crea: - , © WRITING CAN'T SMUOGE) net . * ‘a belt: — : Going Back to Tokyo ‘country tweed so ot strik- - MADE, Y- ore an evaluation cou Ms ; ing colorings creation, y * ae am been made, dump trucks and wasors| LIE Insurance Hits . | Pasapena. cali wa sepa on meena: | hauled away tons of yellowing pa- ete . 2 | Pann dene Ct coe a or a tiie pers, letters and photographs. $15 B || . 5 _ asadena y Hall after “T : = Rose,’ while struggling with an | lon-1n fate sailors “‘liberated'’ it in Mei going baek to its homeland. ; . DETROIT WP — The Institute of The 700-pound bell was taken , — Life Insurance reported, today that | from the 1.120-year-old Gochizan | 9,623,000 Michigan families owned | Soji temple in Tokyo by Buddhist | irritating: plumbing job, was felled by a stroke at the age of 62. He died a week later, Feb. 21. He left no will and about $1,500,000. pe late, The lonely millionaire suddenly | $15,451,000,000 worth of life insur- | priests, who donated it to their na-} NS , - elagia i EQUIPMENT CO. withdrew from his normal social/| ance at the heginning of 1955. | tion’s ad an pale hg) the Park OPEN § STATIONERS © BUSINESS OUTFITTERS circles in the 1$40s—no one seems| This compared with $14,419,000,. ;CTWSer_ Fasadena foun na Right : MONDAY ‘ 123 Nerth S$} to know why. He conducted his/ 000 in protection owned in Mich- || Japanese ehipyard after vj oye at the . Abate ‘ fobs FE2 483) extensive investment business with | igan 1954 and $6,599,000,000 at the) _\°sterday the Board of City Di- Door NIGHTS ' postcards ° start of 1946. Peay announced that the bell is a the total. Michi tif being shipped back to the temple { ~Ot Pra Pegs e insur. ‘in the interests of international | r ance in ce a ginning o od will.” | . : ° . ; AUTOM ATIC the @ear, the institute reported j 6 Fine Draperies and Floor Coverings Since 194] i $5,571,000,000 was in group policies | Tobaeco accounts for more than : covering 2,318,000 individuals. |50 per cent of North Carolifia’s 1666. S . Telegraph . : FE 4-0516 Another $8,409,000.000 - was farm income, yet occupies only, 3,296,000 ordinary life policies. =p per cent of its cropland. . . . 2 7 | . : ; S * © : , * ets . ; : + GAS or ELECT RIC | See th e extra savin iS ou etl in 1 ; ( | WARRANTY! a . J = cia irtl day aea s! ‘ : i C [oe t ne a i ( COMPLETELY INSTALLED and operating in ‘ : your home. Nermail installation on Detroit ‘ Edison electric lines and Consumer Power gas a 1 lines. 7 , Gal. GAS t S 34.4 Gal. Per Hr. Recovery. ae Automatic Fully-Insulated. ; ' _—or— | . : i | o. < : . L . : Life-time, Life-Bele Element. ‘ Automatic Fully-insulated: 1 1 | i . ' Your Choice \, ED SULLIVAN sare: We’ re Visiting a classmate near Buf- falo, N. Y. is Peter* Kamer Jr., | son oft Mr. and Mrs. Peter Karner | husbands gathered Saturday eve-f. 3 At a public ceremony Saturday Pontiac Bethel Five of the In- ternational Order of Job's Daugh- ters. * * * Elizabeth : Rockefeller was in- stalled as horiored queen. Patricia Zielke’ is. the new senior princess and Marjorie* Seelye is — princess. Dan Hickman. . | Wilson, | Personal News of Interest in Pontiac the typing course. All of us can} June New combe and Ann Tierney o Menominee road. Pete has just \LaSalle street and Shirlee Fisher completed his sophomore year at Assumption High School ‘in Wind- sor. ss * Georgia Hoyt has returned to. her ‘West Lawrence street home from a month's trip along the. west coast, where she made stops and visited friends in Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, San Francisco. and other places of interest. * * s The. family: of William Goodwin twas able to witness his gradua- tion, from the Capitol Page School in Washington, D. C. on June 13. Mrs. Commodore Goodwin of Lake- ‘view avenue and her daughter, Ruth, and son, Wayne, flew there for the occasion. Cara Fortin of Paul E. Rockefeller of East Iroquois| lation as honored queen of Job's‘ Daughters road presented his daughter, Elizabeth, with| Bethel Five. The ceremony was held at the a gavel Saturday evening during her instal- Job's ‘Daughters Install New Officers Driscoll, second messenger; Janet third messenger; Wheafly, fourth messenger; Judy Smith, fifth messenger, and Karen Bowman, senior custodian. OTHERS INSTALLED Sharon Clark was installed as ‘junior custodian; Marjorie Moran as inner, guard and Wynette -El- well as outer guard, * - * The Book of Gold. Was read by Caral Sapp. paling 16 Mary Moore, installing Barbara Kline, . guide; da: Tontokcine, mar- shal; Louise Eliott, chaplain,- and Gwen Vernon, recorder. Masonic Temple on East Lawrence street. Mary |. cian; Joanne Whisnant, 4 with a guardian pin by Mrs. Refiishments were “seryed to “* A : ie ee M 5 - j Z a VN 4 his 3 We { ;of Waterly street accompanied them. They also attended ceremonies ” on dune 15 when Vice President Richard Nixon presented a class of 14 with presidential diplomas. William's appointment came through the recommendation of U. 8. Rep. George A. Dondero (R-Reyal Oak.) . * * * Shirley Clancy was recently ini- tiated into Eta Chapter of Delta | Sigma. Epsilon sorority al Michigan State Normal College in Ypsilanti. The daughter of Mr. and Mes. James Clancy of Ruth avenue, she is also a member of the. Newm.in | Club, Catholic organization on cam- pus. a Pontiae Press Phete custodian, and Mary Lou- Morris- on, junior custodian. Karen Yakey was soloist and Mary Jane Nichols was the angel. The Flag was escorted into the befhel.by Robert Joiner, Rayniond Yokey and Arthur.Thomas, mem- bers of DeMolay. GIVEN WHITE GAVEL = —__ |. The queen was presented with oe ot Oe ee Paul Gardening Show Slated Aug. 27-28 Four Area Clubs to Sponsor Event in ‘CAI Building Four area garden clubs detailed plans yesterday for a late-summer flower and garden show to be held in the Waterford Township Community Activities Building on Williams Lake road. Under the generat chairman- ship of Mrs. Vivian Tubbs, repre- sentatives of Better Home and Garden Club, Dirt Gardeners Club, Sylvan Lake Garden Club and the Waterford Branch of the Women's National Farm and Garden Asso- ciation met in committees to discuss the Aug. 27-28 event. The show will be divided into four parts and those submitting entries may have only one to a division. — The Sylvan. Garden Club is in charge of artistic arrangements; the Waterford group, horticulture exhibits, and Dirt Gardeners, con- servation and education. Better Home and Garden Club is handling the jurfior gardeners’ exhibit which is open to al) school- age greenthumbers whe would like to display the results of their efforts. They may submit flow- ers, vegetables, bird houses or bird feeders. THOSE ASSISTING Refreshments will be served in the afternoon and evening of both days. Heading this committee are Mrs. J. A. Rammes and Mrs. Albert Flowers. Their assistants are Mrs. Albert Kohn, Mrs. Ju- lius Halda and Mrs. Donald Hoyt. Mrs. Shirley Stamp is chair- man of the budget and finance « | gommittee and with her are Mrs. Fred Collins, Mrs. J. L. Slay- baugh and Mrs. John Greenlee. Mrs. Fred Bohlman is handling publicity and on her committee are Mrs. Leon Schelly, Mrs. Glen Arthur and Mrs. E. L. Windeler. Family Marks Three Weddings at Open House Gold, silver and white decora- tions were used in the Dexter road lhome of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hampshire Sunday. afternoon wh-n they were hosts ai an open house eclebrating thcir silver wedding anniversary. They were married June 14, 1930. * * °¢ Mrs. Hampshire's parents: Mr. and Mrs. Herman Bahling cf Brown City, were also on hand to celebrate their golden wedding anniversary. The Bahlings were also married on June NM. Te make the pattern complete the Hampshires’ son, \ Dale, claimed Sylvia J. Rouse as his bride ou Jume 14. The bride is the daughter of James Rouse of Draper ayenue and Mrs, LeRey Garner of Lincoln Park. The cou- ple is residing on Sanford street. Among the 200 guests at the triple celebration were the minis- ters who performed the wedding ceremonies. The Rev. and Mrs. Murray Willard and daughter, Shirley Ann, attended frum Livo- nia. ; The Rey. and Mrs. Arthur Binga- man of Calvary Evangélical United Brethren Church and the Rev. and 'Mrs. Eugene Ramsey vo! Pontiac were also present. . ® * * The tiered w-ding cake which centered the refreshment table was decorated in honor of the three couples. Sylvan Garden Club Has Dinner Meeting The annual cooperative dinner of the Sylvan Lake Garden Club was held récently at the home of Mrs. Raymond Dombrowski of Fisher road. ® Members submitted flowér ar- rangements to be judged by Mrs. Frank D. Webb of Birmingham. Mrs. Webb is first vice president of the Women's National Farm and Gagden Association, chairman of the Detroit Garden Center and a judge of the National Flower Show. Mrs, Vivian Tubbs, general chair- man of the Inter-Garden Club flow- er show, explained committee work in preparation for the annual show, which will be held Aug, 27-28 in the Waterford CAI Building on Williams Lake road. es - i » ' ~» Granger was flower girl. ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1955 Petition to Band Program Set for Summer Walled Lake Classes Scheduled for Beginning During Next Week WALLED LAKE~Helmuth Hol- _land-Moritz and Frank Balaam, _ Walled Lake schoo] instrumental teachers, have set up a summer band program for elementary pu- pils, to begin the week of June 27. Students will have two half fiour lessons weekly at the elementary school closest to their homes. The cost of the six week course will be horne by the Board of Educa- tion, but each student must fur- nish his own instrument. \ The directors expect 180 stu- dents to participate, about half of the number being beginners. According to them the summer program is a vital part of the in- strumental music program as it insures beginners an adequate start when they do not have the ‘pressures of school work and it keeps advanced students progres- sing normally. Students will be notified by post card of the time and place of | their lessons providing they have | left the correct address. The di- | rectors ask that any student who has not received his notification by June 25, call one of the direc- tors for further information. , ; Marriage Vows Spoken Saturday in Church Rites AVON TOWNSHIP—Shirley Ann | _ Blomberg and Ronald Dean Clark spoke their marriage vows Satur day at a seven p.m. double ring ceremony in Elmwood Methodist Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sven Olof. Blomberg of 2767 Grant St. Ronald’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Gale Clark -of Rochester.. The bride wore a waltz length gown of white lace over satin and nylon tulle. A headpiece of seed pearts heid « fingertip veil of ifu- sion. She carrieg a heart shaped arrangement of carnations and lily ef the valley. . Signe Blomberg was maid of hon- or for her sister. Bridesmaid was Lois Jaycox and the bride's sister Sandra was junior bridesmaid. Kay Robert Clark served his brother as best man, Walter Goedecke of Rochester and Sidney Blomberg were the bridegroom's attendants. . Seating the guests were Leroy Goedecke and Warren Moshier. Following the ceremony, a recep- tion for two hundred guests was held in the church parlors. On their return from a trip into . northern Michigan the newlyweds will reside in Rochester. Church Delegates to Meet at Milford MILFORD—For the first time in 20 years delegates from 83 Detroit area churches will mieet today at the Milford Presbyterian church.. Host pastor Rev. Charles Richy wil] lead the devotional services which will begin at 4 p.m., followed by transaction of yearly business. The main order of this meeting is the examination of candidates for the ministry, some to be: li- censed, some ordained, and some to be taken under the care of the Presbytery. Robert Ward is the elder delegate representing the Mil- ford Group. Dinner will be served by the men of the church at 6 p.m. with 200 guest reservations. The meet-. ing will be resumed at 7:30 and jfarniliar figure at auction sales will conclude at 9:00 p.m. : bal MR, AND MRS, R. oy HOTTMAN Shirley Snover Married| ‘in Afternoon LAKE ORION — Shirley Jean Snover became the bride of Rich ard L. Hottman recently in after- noon rites at the First Baptist Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Snover, of 117 E. Church St. Mr. and Mrs. | Lloyd Hottman of Judah Lake | Road. Gingellville, of the bridegroom, A white pucker nylon gown wih lace yoke and fihgertip Frank J. Nique, 72, Dies at Thomas . THOMAS—Frank J. Nique. 72, 3 the area, died Monday. He was well known throughout the region as the operator of the lunch wagon at auctions, and lived here 50 years, currently at 440| First St. _ Service will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Mabley Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in Mt. Pleasant Cemefery, Oakwood, with graveside rites by the Oak- wood Masonic Ledge 100. Surviving are his widow, Jennie; a daughter, Mrs. Verna Miller of Oxford; six brothers, Otto of Cass City; Harvey of Oxford, Arnold of Goodrich, Clarence of Lake Orion, Ralph of Livonia, and Parke of Pontiac. LORRAINE ROSSMAN Lorraine Rossman is a recent graduate of Mt. Carmel Nurses School in Detroit. She is the daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewie Ross- man, of 544 Atwater St., Lake Orion, and a graduate of Lake Orion High School. are the parents | re in | Church Rites sleeves was the choice bride for the ceremony, Nancy Casey of Lake Orion was Goller of Lake Orion and Phyllis Snover, cousin of the bride, as bridesmaids. Arnold Bliss of Lake Orion was | the best man, and Theodore Hott- man and Douglas. Snover seated the guests. After the rites the couple left to' make their home in Belton, Tex., near Ft. Hood, where the bridgroom Army. County Deaths David KR. Gidley MILFORD TOWNSHIP — Service \for David R. Gidley, 8, of 3485 Peoria Lake Road, will be held at 1°p.m. Thursday from Richardson- Bird Chapel, Milford, with burial in Wixom Cemetery. The boy died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are the parents, M and Geraldine; four roars. Merle, Stanford, Kenneth, Thomas ) all at home; the grandparents, Mr. land Mrs. Bennie Ax of Detroit, and Mrs, Bertha Gidley of Milford. Urban Shoti MILFORD — Service for Urban Shoti, 89, of 4004 Laphan St., Dear- born, will be held at 10 a.m. Thurs- |day from Richardson-Bird Chap- el, with burial in St. Mary Ceme- tery. Mr. Shoti, a former Milford resident, died Monday. Surviving are three sons, Wil- liam of Dearborn, O. V. Shoti of Milford, Mike of Hungary; eight grandchildren and two great- grandchildren. Richard 8. Diewald ROCHESTER—Funeral arrange- ments for Richard S. Diewald, 23, of:Bloomer State Park No, 2, aré pending at William R. Potere Fu- neral Home, awaiting the ship- ment of ‘his: body frgm the U.S. Naval Base at Norfolk, Va. Sea- man Diewald was killed in a car accident in Virginia. Saturday morning. : Hugh Thompson to Head Legion Post at Marlette MARLETTE — Hugh F. Thomp- son is the newly-elected command- er of the American Legion eat 162. Other officers are William Steil- er, Grant Osburn, Orville Zorn, Donald Rogers, Robert James, Den Lambert, Thomas Elliott, Russell Baldwin and Clarence Zimmer. . Thé small Balkan kingdom’ of Montenegro was absorbed by Yugoslavia after World War I. Dairy Cattle Complete Long Term Tests Dairy cattle in the Oakland County area have completed long period tests recently, and received praise for outstanding production records. . Lakefield Dunloggin Lass, a Hol- stein of the W. C. Ireland estate, Metamora, has been cited for 533 pounds of butterfat and 15,218 pounds of milk, for twice-a-day . She aver- given the high rating of approved, according to Ayrshire Breeders’ wip four quarters of milk per day for 36 years. Wolverine Lilas, a Ayshire. cow owned by Adolph. Brocker's Bett- A-Pall-Ayr farm, Metamora, has accumulated a record of 105,214 pounds of milk over a 10 year period. Premier Louise’s Rose, a reg- istered Guernsey cow owned by dack D. McCullough, of Reches- ter, gave 10,562 pounds of milk and 622 pounds of fat during a eenes milking test of 305 days. Assn. executive secretary Chester Cc. Putney. The rating has been given to This record was made in nine The record equals approximately 5,117 quarts of milk. Another Guernsey owned by Mc- Cullough, Ilustrator’s Fable, pro- duced 10,848 pounds of ‘milk and 505 pounds of fat, . Frank Specia, of Rochester, has just purchased the young Guernsey sire, Rochester Duke, from E, T. Phillips of Rochester, ~ of the | | two years, the area reverts back is stationed with the | the maid of honor, with Adele}. years, and would supply a family | Citizen League Seeking Election | Ask New Commission for Creating Bylaws of Township Area MADISON HEIGHTS — Petitions have been filed asking for election of a new charter commission in Royal Oak Township's Madison Heights. After two unsuccessful attempts to file the petition with acting may- or Mrs. Virginia M. Solberg, John Archambault, president of the Madison Citizens League;-filed the petition’ with Oakland County | Clerk Lynn D. Allen. Under state law, the petition should be filed with the acting mayor. Allen said the petitions were photostated, with the orig- inals kept by him and the photo- stats to be served on Mrs. Sol- berg. . Voters in the area turned down /a city charter at the polls June | 7, by the narrow margin of 1,758 to | "|Get Miniature Car. 1,676. . In. January, residents had ap- proved incorporation of the area, and elected a charter .commission to prepare Jaws for the new city. If a charter is not approved in to township status. A petition also has been filed for a recount of the charter elec- tion. Thig recount will begin at 9 a.m. Saturday. : The photostats of the petition were & soggy mass in the front | yard of the Solberg residence this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Solbert and Ar- chambault differ on--versions of how they got there, but apparently Archambault gave them to Sol- berg, who refused them. ame Charter Group Filed at + adison. MRS. F. H. GRAUNSTADT & IF rederick H. Graunstadt, Elinor Allison Are Wed WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Eli- nor Allison and Frederick Hiram -Graunstadt spoke their wedding vows in an afternoon ceremony Saturday at First Presbyterian Church, Pontiac. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Allison, 2211 - Kingston Rd. -The bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred- erick O. Graunstadt of 2639 Wil- liams Lake Rd. The bride wore a gown of white embroidered nylon, - with a bouffant skirt of tulle over silk taffeta. A. coronet secured her fingertip veil, and she carried a colonial beuquet of roses and stephanotis. ~ Maid of honor was atichastinn | Demnipster. Mrs. James Phelan of Davisburg was the bridesmaid, and the bride's sister, Andrewina Allison, served as junior rides- maid. Earl Graunstadt was best man Crippled Children LAPEER — A T-year-old Lapeer girl and her 3-year‘old brother 4 have switched from a wheelchair to a miniature automobile: They are Kay and Jim Brown and they suffer from Oppenheim's disease, a muscular ailment that prevents them from walking or standing. Béauford Miller, 39, a worker in a Flint auto factory, heard how they always had to sit on the side- _lines when other Lapeer children paraded to opening of the town’s | ' playground for the summer. Miller enlisted the aid of several | fellow workers and built Kay and_ ——— for his brother. Another brother, Leonard Graunstadt, served as usher, along with Kenneth Winkel of Detroit and David and Richard Selby of Hartland. Among the 250 guests was the bride’s. grandmother, Mrs. Mary Dempster, whe came from Scet- land to attend the ceremony. A reception was ‘held in Yhe White Lake Township Hall. On their return from a- honey- moon in northern Michigan, the couple will live at 3136 Whitfield St., Pontiac. 4 Parents Reveal 2 Engagements, Wedding Plans NORTH BRANCH—Mr. and Mrs. | ‘John Repic engagenient have announced the of their daughters, If no petition for a new charter | Jim a car. They made most of the | JoAnn and Rose Marie. commission is filed by the dead- | Parts for the one-horsepower en- | JoAnn will marry Richard La- line Saturday, the present charter | | giné by hand. The car has forward | Valley of North Branch July 23. commission would begin again on | 4nd reverse gears and a complete | He is the son of Mr. and Mrs a new charter. Theodore Roosevelt at 42 was 3 m. p. h. Two thousand spare | | Jocham, the son of Mr. and Mrs. | the youngest ever inaugurated as time hours went into its construc- !John Jocham of Clifford. They President. lighting system that works. A gov- ernor keeps the speed down to | ‘ tion. | Rose LaValley. Rose Marie's fiance is Frank ‘plan a fall wedding. Figure-Slimming Group fo Meet Waterford Club to Hold | Summer Sessions at Home of Member WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The Fashion Your Figure Club of Wa- terford Township will continue its _| Wednesday night meetings through- out the summer, but at a new lo- Meetings will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. at the home of Mrs. James Dinkel,- 5485 Elizabeth Lake Rd. All women in the community in- terested-in losing weight have been invited to attend the weekly ses- sions, two groups—the Buxom Beauties and the Robust Rascals. The two teams compete against each other in weight-shedding. Winners of the match will be the losers, weight-wise.-They will be treated to a picnic at Crescent Lake by the opposing team. Trophy for lésing the most weight last week was taken by Rita Thompson. Two Area Ministers Will Exchange Pulpits Rev. Ralph Davidson of Anderson- ville Community Church will ex- change pulpits Sunday with the Rev. Henry Wrobbel of Calvary Baptist Church, for the 11 am. service. Both pastors will leave Monday ; to attend a Pastor's Bible Confer- | ence at Camp Maranatha, near | Muskegon j | ‘ Almost one-half of the U.S. supply of electricity is generated from coal. 0. L. SMITH Do. Vv. M. Reopening His Veterinery Practice at His Same Location 794 N. Perry Ph. FE 2-6113 cation, Gladys Say president of the club, a meed today. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The | Area’ Park Commission Considered at Holly HOLLY—The village council has under consideration a proposition to approve a township park com- mission. The principal area to come under jits jurisdiction would be the new ‘Bush Lake bathing beach, now owned jointly by the village and township, under the control of the latter. request comes from the Holly planning commission. ve in 1 ip youl onove AN ORANGE G you can ORANGEADE Currently the club is divided into |' your dairy te your home or store. A family On Sale at Grocer's or delivered to your door by Our Routemen 0 585 Ocklend Ave REAL ORANGEADE As k your Milkman or G GIVES OLDER CARS NEW CAR MILEAGE! 1952 and ’53 cars with conventional and overdrive transmissions compete in 1 ,323-mile special run. Each car got Over 20-Miles Per Gallon with New Mobilgas Resuits of the Run certitea by AAA Contest Board: in this recent cross-country 3-year-old cors—with an average of 42,000 miles on their speedometers— each got over 20 miles per gallon. Each performance was certified by the AAA run, 2- and gives more miles New Mobilgas has ignition, misfiring, carburetor icing . It your car_isn’t brand new, this special run should convince, you to try New Mobilgas. It offers dramatic proof that this great new gasoline what it takes to deliver long, smooth mileage economy: Higher than ever oc- tane plus three new gas-saving additives called Mobil Power Compound. Mobil Power Compound protects against pre- —systems clean. That all means real savings on gas as you drive, better power and mileage per- formance from your car! Don’t miss it. New Mobilgas with Mobil Power Compound. per gallon at regular price! formation of. engine gum, +. and also helps keep fuel = a s me Oe ee eet pone Sib: SI re ee NEW Mobi igas _ with Mobil Power Compound -- TT “ita ee | Y&e OFFICE FURNITURE THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1955 Grains Recover | Night's Losses CHICAGO w — Losses of major fractions on overnight sales orders were quickly. recovered on the | sweet. Board of Trade today. A variety of minor news items considered to be slightly on the bearish side caused cae opening easiness. Near the end of the first hour ’ wheat was unchanged to 5s.higher, July $1.97; corn was une to % higher, July $1.47%; oats were % to ¥% lower, July 655s, and rye was unchanged to 4% lower, July 1.024%. ‘So were % lower to’ % higher, July $2.43%, and lard was 2,.to 8 cents a hundred pounds lower, July $12.32. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, June 20 (AP) — Opening os 5 R i ~~ tes tege 197% July .......-. 10 aveipes 199% Beep ..ce--00 etd coccccee 201% Des ........ 100% MAP) =: 56.-0s 1.99% Mar {...:-.. £33% May. eo 1.93% Bo Corn Old Contracts July oo..cee. 149M July. 24 Sep cccess SCM BOP. ....-+0- 333 Bee ..ccccee 1.33 = NOV 2... oe 2.30% Mar ecvee 236% Jan voc SOK Oa : ew Contracts Puly!.cc-ces 40% Wet ..-.2--- 2.33% Bep neice. GB% Mar ...seeee 2.37% Dec oe 6T% 1 Mar : 60% July .......13.00 “Sentenced to. Jail . Warner Bell, 20, of 20834 Colwell, Farmington, was. sentenced to 60 days in in Oakland County Jail by Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland. Bell had appealed a drunk and disorderly conviction from Farm- ington Justice Court. ; 20. (UP) . of M = ae a treason fie ofr Markets: bu; bat Btogigie Red, 330-400 North a 25-3.75 ry SPY. : 75-85 behs. oor, 15-80 doz bens. ‘Tomatoes, -h ib "bekt. Turnips, 90-135 dot eens: SS 1.00-1.50 a Collard, 00 bu. Kale, 100-150 bu. Sorrell, .00-1.25 bu. coach oh bu. Mustard, "8 1.26 bi ae i bu Bocarele, isis bu. Lettuce,. ibd, => pe bani lettuce, head, 3.25- ere: 1% 1.50-2.00 bu; let- tuce, leat, 1.00-1. ay Romaine, 15- 1.38 bu. ; CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO, June 20 (AP)—Potatoes: rivals old stock 6, new stock 398; on old stock, and no carlot track sa! stock supplies tnaveostiio: erate — market bombs 7 4.00, there 120-435 round reds 4.26-4.35; Arizona round reds 4.10-4.20. DETROIT EGGS June 30 (AP) —Eges. f.o.b t, eases included. ‘STATE FARM 8020 AUTO INSURANCE PAYS FOR “SMALL” ACCIDENTS TOO! HOWARD C. BRATT Harvey Perry, FE 2-0201 James Schell, FE 4-9546 Frank Aherns, FE 4-9546 Earl Davis, FE 4-9546 Howard C. Bratt, FE 4-6921 Robert Gaff Jr., OR 3-2778 Vern Hartman, FE 4-9546 Leo G. Huffman, FE 2-0201 » Lester Oles, FE 2-0396 YAWMAN & ERBE » MANUFACTURING CO. Announces The Appointment of , TISDALE As dealer of and OFFICE EQUIPMENT vealers steady; stockers and feeders 07 ing slow, weak: a. few loads prime 180 1,300 Ib —, 24,25-25.50; a load 1,192 eights 25.50: high choice and mixed tnd» few erading . f pens 16.88- one deck mostly low, goed 90, 1b with et 1 pelts at 18.00 = — 4.50- Judge Passes Sentence County Jail by, Circuit Judge, H. Holland yesterday. Mc- | cons pained (unai8 1peccmang wher arrest- 460 W..Huron. = FE 55-1111 marihuana cigarettes ed. May 22 in Royal Oak Township. A tederal-state | “TStock a _ ‘Inches Upward, cratt, Distillers Corp., American Telephone, Air Reduction, General Electric, New York Central, South- ern Pacific and United Airlines. Lower were U. S. Steel, General Motors, Goodrich, Philco, Phelps Dodge, Allied Chemical, Westing- house and Public Service Electric. Associated — 15 nats == ott stocks Screw *No sale; bia and asked, Noon, -today.. 4 1 choice and ime steers 22.75-24.00; most 1713 good and i steers 18.00-22.50; cattle Previous” 4ay..:3364 136.5 ey Ma at ieee ysuslly cal 9 commer = Month _s0¢ veaee 219-7 ins 724 1629 . eces ITLL 6398 : yi Gaiters ‘te 24.25; most goed and choice hetf- 1988 Righ...0.+.334.1 138.4 $35 ims ers 19.00-22.50: a few choice to low prime WW cic. 1°1149 #672 148.8 tonas 92.78.23 .00; utility and commereta! lose high.......211.8 123.0 68.3 158.3 Sena. welts oo nes pa ence © 178 55.4 108.0 - a ime v¥ ers ; ETRO! TOC — good and ce 11.00-23 00; pond - pedestal = eas wn : a few loads venting shes cesar, 30-05-4100; 0 wae | oT after"decimal Dointa 5 Pelle, -red gt 776 Wb yearling f Baldwin Rubber* .... 178 .715.. ¥-Michigan ASA 3 3. Salable 1,900; moderate’ Products® ,, 33 ie — end lambs | to 2 Screw........ e828 30° 2 0 ipand dyn 30 Bs es Midwest Abrasive* .,.. a4 A aoe ‘hans 3 alle gt) poe ei Rudy Mfg.........cc06 2 33 33 ing as 85 Wa’ nyne oe ener 120013 Clawson Man Sentenced A Clawson mari, who pleaded guilty to taking indecent liberties to three to DAVID L. PEPPLE Youth Is Appointed ° ‘|to Service Academy Recently granted an appointment Academy was David L. Pepple, son of Mr. and Mrs, Lamar Pepple,- 224 Cherokee Rd. David, a graduate of Pontiac High nahn ‘ aciites—Orade A jumbo 41-80 weighted School, will report June 28 to the ver 5 ov 2% “tedium 28-00 wd avg 20s 3s. New York Stocks Academy, in New London, Conn. ‘ r Tt ~ A jumbo “0 aly 's (Late Morning Quotations) The academy offers a four-year 4, large 40-43 wtd avg 40% medium, of, coursé leading to a bachelor of the Leeda | Ad tee. 24.3 Int Tel & Tel 284 SS eee: Air Reduce :.. 371 Isl Cre Coal 38 | science degree in engineering and ‘37.1 Jacobs . 2. j Chocks 38. ended: Ihed “Ch 2, 81.8 Johne Man’. 84 ir st Guard in the Uaiee States Whites—O A extra large 40-41, | Allied Strs 114 fo pmdodr “184 oast Guard large 384-40, medium 35-36. Allis Chal ... O23 tind clk’... 625 Browns—Grade A extra large 40, large | Alum Ltd... 741 foes Cae °° 993 ‘ ‘ 38'y-39, medium Alum Am 1044 'Reaeer "424 j Market steady to firm. Top quality | Am Airlin . 614 Boh SO Ty ews in rie large in ample supply to a fair demand. |4m Can ..... 38.1 LOP Gisss |. 82 Mediums, standards, large B's and mod-|Am Cyan . . 44 OF Cosi: 3G erate- lige short offerings moving [ans boar peed pe) me & My ... 684| Robert Dennison, of 21 Lois St., nase ono a slower to aaa at thee high price level. = Laas : ae pe aee: : Hh told Pontiac Police yesterday that rsa — Am Rad... 3217 ne 8 Com we - someone smashed the windshield CHICA ITTER & s Am Geating .. osee i CHICAGO, June 21 (AP) — Butter |Am Smelt’... 31.3 Mosk Tre... 74 of his car with a rock. Damage steady: receipts 1.478.014; wholesale byy- fo mph : #3 | to the auto wag placed at $25. ed re peineerern a * res Crue tei‘ s333 May D str... 366 ; cars “ve -.. 44) After pleading guilty to reckless ee inte, eatte jane; wacteaste |i ame... % Wensen gag | driving yesterday, Daves Suther- uring prices 1 to 2 bgher U6 large | Armes Bt .. 426 Motor Pd... 334/land, 28, of Detroit was fined $10 whites 60-69.9 per cent A's 39; mixed 39; | Armeo Stl .. 436 Ueoe oe ie sig as Spey 8 dedp 305, dirtion rosy oe Co 83 ieetercis . ... 383 and assessed $10 costs by Sylvan 7 € current rece Murra . ot Atl Cat Line 424 NTR, ce. - i} | Lake Justice Joseph J. Leavy. Atias Pdr .. 3 Nat Cash RB .. 404 ; Poultry Aveo Mfg cc. 18@ Nat Dairy 0 8] Freddie Williams, of 250 Harrt- ce POULTRY Beit & on. ape Net Lead :.. 633/80n St., was arrested yesterday by (AP)—Prices paid | Beech” Nut ... 296 Net Steel ... 082) Pontiac Police on four per qeoey *Detrot for No 1 quaiity Benin AY: Std Ny air Bre ’.. 288 | traffic warrants. The warrants e up a= —ti(i‘i‘CS Cdr; CS oeeee noteery, Bens 2128. ight pene 19-20: | Boon Steet ot? 28 Stee, “ ,|list the following violations: Ex- Ts or - bg . A Whites 31-32. Barred ke 32-33: capon. Bohn sum a =. Roam Ay i cessive noise, no driver's rns ettes aver) - f aver) . Ron . or sae speeding and run red igh . Market steady. Receipts light but ade- | Bordeen —.... 44 Nor sta Pw .. 166 ing & . | quate as overall is slow. Offe e Warn .. 453 Nwst Airiin .. 25.2 over the weekend were well Briggs Mf ... 211 Ohio O11 ..... 383] Driving under the influence of Brie My .... 327 Oliver Cp ..-- 63/ tiquor cost William Earle, 52, of CHICAGO POULTRY Derreugns "21. 33.1 Qteas ts Gi 1881 W tertord Townshi 100: fine CHICAGO. June 20 (AP)—Live pourtry Calum && W134 Pena Ww Aw.. 197| "2 pas about steady: rece coops 998 (Pri sogep lana ++ 4 Pond EPL... 134 and $25 costs yesterday after he coops, $6,567 Ib); f.0.d bi bese Param 7 prices react oysrodleh lee ea [ES -- 384 Param Pict. 3|Pleaded guilty before Sylvan Lake 24-28; sieht ben hens ote! 18: broilers | Capital Airl 35.2 Penney JC.....986| Justice Joseph J. Leavy. or fryers -32; 13-125; ‘arrier . 41 Pea RR..... 25 eapencttes 36-78: Cater ‘Trae ’.. is” Proips > s a If your friend's in jail and needs Celanese 123.8 Phiico ...... 425 Ph -9424 or MA 5-403 Livestock Cent PO. 318 Pad Mer... | OO. FE 5 Sa 5-4031 a 298 Phil Pe... a —Adv s & Oh .. 53 i. DETROIT LIVESTOCK Chi & NW ... 203 Pitt Plate G...816/ FW. buy or sell In Waterf DETROIT, June 20 (AP)—Hoge—sala- | Chile Cop eye S 2 S| Drayton Pains or Clarkston sree ble 1,000, Unevenly higher asking prices |COrysier ..... Bey Senger 33 retarding trade: no early sales. p Steers Sve .., $44 Ad on $23) See White Bros. Real Estate. OR - Cattle — Galable 2,860. Receipts m-| Clark Bauip 707 Rand |. 8 | 3-7118 —Adv about se par cont peters coro teers | ore "cola. ..1130.4 Holding .. 15.4 cent cows; slau steers eee aad yeas igs sregamina (uneven catty Gol Gas... 16.6 Repisb uit! 4384) Rummage sale, South Center, sales good and choice under 1100 Ib.| Gonsum Pw 478 Tob B .. 442; Lake Orion. Fri. and Sat. 9 to 5 steady : heavier w ts slow. | Con pf 45 1086 Piet & weak: cows unevenly strong to S0c paee pf 45 110 Rock § 2 higher; bulls about steady; stockers and Cont Can ... 84.3 Safeway _ 41 feeders less. active, steady: earty sales | Cont Mot .... 10 . St Jos 528 and choice fed gteers and year-|Cont Ot! ’ 984 Hos bas po lings 20.00-24.00; only few lots high | Copper Rng . 42.2 Scoyill ME. Me a rop 0 e chotee yearling ‘-steers 24.00; mostly | Corn Pd ..... 29 Sears Roed ... 92.4 choice steers 22.50-23.50: early sales |Cruc St! ..... 436 gion o1 ||. 626/ 8 good and choice fed heifers 19.00-22.00; | Curtiss Wr .. 204 gimmons ... 44.4 few cutter to commercial mostly utility | Det. Edis ..... 37.4 Sinclair O ... 50.4 in al e ever heifers 13.00-14.00: most sales utility | Dis C -. 396 Pi 1. 60.4 sot ee crore oe RICH [Erviiee 2 Bt Bw eannes &: ost 5 . r . Sone Tightweight acacey Tne Oouk Du Pont “9089 vd ‘4 eae] Sharp drops in reported cases of te 8.00: cariy sales wttity = ane, = ne ou re On cel 3 scarlet fever in Pontiac last week uw om ™ y . - ; $90 Ib. yearling stockers 30.30: small Poet as ot tng - $5 | appeared today in the communi- ts good and choice around 475-525 Ib. & Mus In’ 43 td Ott On... 406 | Cable disease reports, released by stoekers parted er Red ... 15 Stevens JP... 22|Dr. John D. Monroe, health di whats Pocono pao oy epee oad she 2 oe oa mh wy : enne : = 3 come interests asking higher: | titel) “77° 332 oBck 2 199) Pector for Pontiac and Oakland {s0d-28 00: few high pi ebeice individuals Patrb Mor“... 287 Switon & Co. Op ete h up to 28.00: some held higher: few util- |Preept gul’ ,:. 7) Sviv, Ei Pd ... 424) Breakdown of both reports for ity end commercial erade “14.00-18.00 Prueh Tra :. 443 tex G gu). 4446|the week ending June 17, along . &m Gen flee ... , oesd. 6 (BL native spring lambs ‘about | Gen Fas. oe if Thome Pa |. 44) with compersiive figures for tt s y Lo is... 76 Transamer .. 44.5 - ead herwise cad Motors 198 Feent€ Pox 3 ae us week and a year ago fo Gen . f ie’ a ‘ CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Gen Fei note sat Un Carbide .. 99.6 CHICAGO, June 20 (AP)—Salable hogs | Gen Tire ,,. 64 Un Pac 167.2 PONTIAC ~~ . , 500; tainty ective: very wrote pho | oars ~ . 726 stewed faa be 83 mostly er on ers @ Goe' rt ee ss a none as mtich os to a are Goodrich . ,,. cin Datted Lo «63 et itd ‘ ve classes: most choice No. to |sGoodyear -. 634 Lar i : ee Chicken 2 3 2 . oe 190-230 To butchers 21.00-22.25. -1Orah Paige. 31 a Gel ™ -- 33 l sess 4 r| i dy 21.75 and above on chotee No. 1 an Gt No Ry ... 42.1 Rub. * $0 meen) OCORC eeeetnnee ; . : grades —— podiet® * _— tained y hatoodl] nee m4 US Steel : 407 gear — ne pb : choice No. an ’s 4 e 1 Te Steel of __ a etek coe * 32.58: a deck choice he. 1s 31 neal Ve . a4 vg = vt cane ooping cough ...... ® 3 .) 63; m choice No. is a . : BR Pic Ib 26.00-21.25; a few 240 Ib to 21. eee 5:18 wins pun. ak OAKLAND COUNTY most 280-310 Tb 18.75-19.78; @ few lots s+. 401 West Un Tel 25:7 320-360 Ib 17.00-18.75; a few up 380 Ib| Hooker Ei... 393 woestg A Bk 28 Last Prev Year down to 16.80; sows 400 Ib and lighter | Houd Her 13.1 Westg EI . 70.6 Week Week Ago -15.80-18.00: a few choice around Tl Cent ..... 645 white Mot 40 | Chicken pox .......... 50 57 2 Ib and lighter as much as 18.50 and | Indust Rav 4 Wilson & Co 12.6|Diphtheria§ ...........- 3 0 18.75; bulk 400- Ib sows 14.00-15.75 Cereee A aad 94 Wise El 3V6| Measles ......,.00e000 65 a weights up to 606 Ib-down to 13. — Interiak 40 Woolworth 49.2) Pneumonia ......00--0+ 2 i ao Logged salable calves 400, chot Inspt e ir 73.5 Yale os - Poliomyelitis 9 2 d prime steers 1,150 Ib Late and al mt I t 54.7 Yngst Sh&T 3.4 | Scarlet fever 12 2 weights steers grading good and below | 10) ck wee, Tl Zenith Red us Tuberculesis Sana00 3 11 steady to strong; choice and B ered steers per ... 1124 Int Bus Mach 430 | Whooping cough .... 1 8 2 over mostly avcety: 1,150 Ib steady to Mumpe 2.00.55 -c.065.0- "109 109 45 weak; heifers steady to 25 higher. cows | wow elTQee AVERAGES steady to 25 coeur: bulls steady to strong; K, June 21—Compiled Gd Caro Phone Magnate Will Be Buried Today CARO # — Funeral service was held today-for colorful Wil- liam J. Moore, retired founder of the Moore Telephone Co., who died Sunday. He was 8&4. At one time Moore’s home in Caro had 20 telephones-in it. He kept a 1914 Cadillac in good run- Results of Bar Exam Include Atéa Men to the United States Coast Guard]. Detroiter Killed in Argentina Graham Tune, Engineer for Kaiser, Identified After Revolt can personnel had been living in the City Hotel, near the central Plaza de Mayo on which Thurs- day's aerial attack centered. When the bombing began. they were | moved to the American embassy. The company said it had re- ceived a report that Tune, like the others, had gone to a private home after the bombings ended. The Kaiser men had no idea last night exactly how Tune died or where his body was picked up. However, they said what appeared to be flash burns indicated a bomb had dropped near him. The company planned a funeral service in Buenos Aires before sending “his body to Detreit for burial. . @he company sent word of Tune’s death to his family by an old friend of Tune, Howard Stutzke, who had worked with him in the former Continental Motors Corp. Stutzke found Mrs. Tune and her json all packed to fly to Buenos Aires to join Tune. James said he had received word Friday that his father was safe. He said the State Department assured his mother that Tyne had left his quarters at the hotel and together with other Americans _| taken shelter at the embassy. ° Tune was a native of Brantford, “| Ont., and a resident of the Detroit area for 30 years. He was a grad- uate of the Brantford College In- stitute. He was with General Mo- “| tors Corp. and Continental Motors before joining Kaiser in 1947. The + Woods. LAS, tamily lived in Harper Oak Park Builder Gets Prison Term Ben Bayer, 43, of 6815 Linwood, Oak Park, received from 1% to 5 years in Jackson state prison when he appeared before visiting Cir- cuit Judge Michael Carland, of Owosso, in Oakland County Cir- cuit Court yesterday. Bayer is free on $2,000 bond peal attempt. He was found guilty of larceny by conversion June 2 by_a jury. Bayer, a builder, was . charged with failure to produée clear title to a home he sold and not return- ing the down; payment. Traffic Engineers Meeting at Rotunda Monthly meeting of the Michigan Chapter of the Institute of Traffic Engineers was set for today and tonight at Rotunda Inn, Pine Lake, according to T. A. Vanderstempel, Pontiac traffic engineer. Howard Gandelot, vehicle safety director for General Motors’ Re- search Laboratories, will speak on “Horsepower and Motor Vehicle Safety." Vandérstempel said 60 to 80 traf- fic,.engineers from all over the state are expected to attend. Pon- tiac merchants have donated door prizes for the affair, he added. Three-Year Probation Given County Pair Two South Oakland County: men were placed on three-year proba- tion and assessed $100 court costs by Circuit Judge Frank L, Doty yesterday. John R. Barr, 17, of 34433 Pal- mer, Royal Oak Township, and Charles McArthur, 18, of 936 Grant, Clawson, admitted June 13 break- ing into a shed May 11 at Marias and W. Fourteen Mile in Clawson. Gets 3-Year Probation | anger’ Enos Jr., 27, of 416 y, Ferndale, was placed on $200 court: costs by Oakland Coun- ty Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland yesterday. - Enos pleaded guilty June 6 to totaling passing two checks $245 in Royal Oak last Jan. 22, Driver Given'2 Days Pontiac Deaths — Mrs. Roy C. Gerard today pending outcome of an ap- Funeral for Mrs. Roy C. Gerard, 63, of 167 S. P, St. will be Thursday at 9 a. m. from St. Vincent de Paul Catholie Church. Burial will follow in Mt. Hope Cemetery. . The body is at the Kirkby Fu- neral Home where the saying of the rosary will take place Wednes- day at 8 p. m. . Born in Plymouth, Wis. June 6, 1892,, she was the daughter of Edward. and Margaret Gaynor O'Connell. She married Mr. Gerard there Oct. 16, 1926 and came to Pontiac 24 years ago from Milwaukee, Wis. A member of St. Vincent's, she also was a member of the’ Altar Society and the League of Cath- olic Women. Besides her husband, she is survived by a brother George O'Connell of Munich, Germany. Gregory Alan Juckno Funeral for Gregory Alan Juck- no, 9, of 790 Hillcliff, who died yesterday after being struck by a car, will be Thursday at 1 p.m. from Grace Lutheran Church. The Rev, Otto G. Schultz, his pastor, will officiate and burial will be in Glen Eden Cemetery in Livonia Township. The body will be at the Farmer-Snover Funeral Home un- til noon Thursday when it will be taken to the church, Born in Denver, Colo., Aug. 30, 1945, he was the son of Chester J. and Gertrude L. Cremer Juckno. He came to Pontiac from Dear- born four years ago and attended Hudson Covert School. Gregory, who was a member of | Grace Lutheran Church also was a Besides his parents, he is sur- vived by his grandparents, Joseph Juckno of Detroit, Sam Cremer in | Wyoming and Mrs. Edna Cremer | who lives in Michigan. Mrs. Francis C. McMath Word has, been received here of | the death of. Mrs. Francis. C. (Madeline King) McMath, mother | of Robert R. and Neil GC McMath of Bloomfield Hills. Mrs. McMath, who lived at 114 Merriweather Rd., Grosse Pointe, died Sunday. Also surviving are a daughter, | Mrs. Harold Edwards of Syracuse, N.Y., a sister, Mrs. Thomas P. Howell of Cleveland and a brother | Charles Brady King of Larchmont, N. Y. Funeral was held today from the | Grosse Pointe Memorial Church. Pontiac Station Wagon Production Shows Leap “Pontiac produced 4,668 station wagons during May, three and a half times more than its station wagon production in May, 194, and almost equal to Pontiac sta- tion wagon production during the entire 1949 model year,” R. M. Critchfield, General Manager, said today. Pointing out the steady rise in| popularity of station wagons since | field said total production of 1949 model station wagons amounted to 4,729 or about 1°, of all 1949 Pontiacs built. May of 1955 saw about 8°, of total production at | Pontiac devoted to station wagons. Further evidence of increased demand for station wagons can be seen in the wide range of station wagon styles, Critchfield noted. Two City Men Sentenced for Downtown Breakin Two Pontiac men were sentenced yesterday by Circuit Judge Frank L.~ Doty after they pleaded guilty ing at 53 N. Perry St. June 5, Placed on two-year probation and assessed $150 court costs were last 81 Blaine St. the first 60 days in Oakland Sry Jail. = eee a nre To > RUNK BELT LINE Lor 49 aA.P 104 mesg ume 8 | SRAND T — _1392 60 eee FEATHERSTONE, * S.UNE SEC. 22 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held by the Pontiac Seomicion tn Commission on Monday, the lith day of July, 1966 at 8 o'clock p.m. Eastern Standard Time for the purpose of r to R tis] No. 2 the following described prop- erty fed the proposed piat of “Herring- ton Part the BSE. % Section 23, T3, N.R.10E, esl of Pontiac, Oakland déscribed as com- ache ond line of Lot @ alto | 104, the gp peice 4 corner. 0 No, to Lot 49 as @ point of continuing West al pout rly line of the Bection 1180 the easterly .. thence N. the R.O.W. aoe 1352.60 ft, thence 00°42°53” E 1174.70 ft. to the West line of: Lot 40 Assessor's Plat No. 104, thence grog} dl along said West line of Lot At obilonrd ~~ oan ot 4® being t lace 0! — By order A, yo Commission, Butea dune ADA R. EVANS, member of the Children's Choir.- | the end of World War II, Critch- | | | | | | { | | | June 13 to breaking into a build- | | William Waddle, 27, of 3906 Bald- | win Rd., and Levi Scribner, 25, of | Scribner will spend | fetks whe make loons te YOUR best inter= ests. You may choose your own lean plea end repayment schedules te fit your bud- a te cod tape. We’ can aise CUT high insteliment peyments threugh evr CONSOLIDATION PLAN. @ One menthly payment-ene piece te poy @ leaves more money out of pay checks @ Gives you edditionel cash if necessery Just Phone FE 4-1574 STATE FINANCE COMPANY Room 702 Pontiec | State Bonk Building fh, Complete Investment Facilities . . 2 ot Your Finger Tips Just pick up your phone and call us for experienced service on your investments. Your inquiries ore welcome —by phone. by letter or in person. WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. Member New York Stock Exchange and other leading exchanges PONTIAC OFFICES 716 ‘Pontiac State Bank Building FE 4-2895 | 511 Community Nat'l Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & HANSEN Donald E. Hanson Res. FE 2-5513 Richard H. DeWitt Res. FE 5-3793 Fire Insurance Liability Insurance Life Insurance Plate Glass Insurance Accident Insurance Automobile Insurance Burglary Insurance Bonds—All Types “ALL THE HISTORICAL BOOKS WHICH CONTAIN NO LIES ARE EXTREMELY TEDIOUS.” —Anatele France Financing plans | [NY that make sense r and save dollars! The soundest way to home ownership is with one of our low-cost mortgage loans, tailored to fit your special needs! All-inclusive monthly payments often amount to less than rent! .Come in today, and talk it over with us! Capitol nen & Loan Co. 75 West Huron Se. — FE 4-0561 Household Furniture Have you ever to take inventory of your. furniture and contents’ values? We think you No Obligation! S HW. HUTTENLOCHER Agency H. W. Hattenlocher Max E. Kems 318 Riker Bidg. FE 4-1551 2 en = . i STOCKS— “BONDS - Consult Us for First Hand Information in Stocks and Bonds | Le * én ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1955 ~ - = r _ Ato Service - etoveseenqecs Ml "Sale Motor Scooters ae ‘Por Sale Motoreycles .,.... ’ Sale Bicycles = =: its ‘s send cleaning FE 23-4166 7 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING Fe 3-023 rE PRACTICAL NURSE AVAILABLE. Live in. ! Ep an A ae FE ee oh PL ING & AIR Den Mevers 1603 WALL W. w : SAWS MACHINE FILED Neat. PE §-698 after 6. MANLEY LEACH, 10 BAGLEY ST TREE TRIMMING AND REMOV. Building Service 12 _Pyagrte emete Pr Deo) PE A-1 CEMENT WORK UP MONEY! /Sell_ unneeded} “DON'T PASS belongings for cash) at , i a Classified Adal Dictation and general of- fice work, ced, Help Wanted Mal | | CARNIVAL by Dick Turner| Help Wanted Female 7 sa . "ACCOUNT ADJUSTER | =~ Saleswomen ncctions advance. for So finance ‘company’ Must bes bist MON. NITE naar, wal saisry fe Pt 4 — WORK pished company 2 a.m, trom ar ‘ae? Paul | : Loan Housewives or business women Br § ‘ eK v4 . aie cm mf Qeainew Pontiac, TO SURGERY we ee Ba we Mon. nites from ereevecceses Weanasds: The Rowary = canatleneeaiod RR eaem ait: — smployee's “ape: = buying Sextet: ee, : = ts the} er 4 Please apply at our Tel-Huron _ Flowers steevessesererrneee F ata Barber, most modernistic pe a oges lepent — oe r - Funeral Directors ....+.... 4 8. Se, Broadway, Lake shop in Oakland County. P) \ Wi kl Moquments ...sc-cveesneee 4A | mother of Maroit's. ana Burvert|. Heads Barber Shop, OR r lan — = Nin. eman S “Cemetery Lots sesescereoes 5 MS og ~J wits 3-9041. | R i STORM Pato bOoR IN- ; held June 22 st 2 ~- Ge Y : Pad pester Bins ge aan’ | REP eT "Har es at ioe EMPLOYMENT odist Church with Rev. Mont C./| fast of Poo Airport. oj = Wanted Male te Se my BH BY GiRPENTERS WUsT BE UNION. { Help eeeeerese Park i te in| _FE +5560 . (a (ae ay Help Wanted Female ..... 7) state Rone rotten, Gonere! COUPON a Help Wanted eeeseccesovese 8) da: mag = AG ee Men wanted Kendale Studiga. 14 ~$c ; ae Instructions | aeeeeeseooerese 9 Me tn state un ot service. —5._Saginaw. 2 Nee le NEEDS Work Wanted Male .......10 “ory ) pina. Yeo iientt nee 8. oes Ceady of part time. FE mi 1 apore AN BRON Work Wanted Female .....11| sod wie Gerwruae ‘Suckne, Fu-| Comb. Bumper & Painter ¢ 4% 9 AM. to 3 P.M. day, - , at ma. weiter Souk onves ian ? se Sereg nn enat| Bindi cee. goons lone i a TED'S Building Service ..,.++2.-. intermen nO ae pele’ i Grape said taser WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK RD. Ballding Supplies ...,00..012h | TYP. Greg yt be ot the Fer, toe ine gry see! WANTED. OfRL OVER 18 IN Rusinens Services .....00.-13 bel aes io thes chures diag eB in. Phone 0 nome ae Bookkeeping & Taxes .....14 ee | Foot mel $500 pt ADT Saal pan Chiropodists .secesseoseso.25| MQENRY, TORE We 1000, NHE-| "BOND EMPLOYMENT , EF eereee, Morgciee home beloved mother of J. Howard Me- B-1 RIKER BLDG al eee ee re ew . WE, ee Sees . of Mrs. James Kailty. — ORAPTEMAN. FOR AL - children Also cleaning lady 3 Furniture Refinishing ....16A pega! 73 Pat 9 ra fe p PRE wal of 3 years ove me 6 Lace days week. MI 44034. 6B agenee's —— * Funeral service wil be Sp ag vend ce TOOL ton between iO wm cat Pom |WAITRESS FOR DAY. EXPERI- . — 3pm from, the Pursiey Funeral | Studebaker, 046 §. Woodward, Bir Bloomfield Hose, Woodward, ai | enced. Pour Corner iuneh, cor Photos & Accessories a | Home with Rev. Otte G. Schults mi OUSE _ Square Lk. 5 ner of Walton and Perry. officiating. Interment at White OUSE OF GOOD R M EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. DAY WAITRESS Physio-Therapy eccscceselA ors ee cae es USED CARS and night. please genet phone. =n ; . at oan sons Television Service ........22| _ Home CARKNER Foods,” 2831 Opdyte. coreer of | Dine. way) Drayton Typewriter Service 2A | MACE. JUNE 20, 1988. a STUDEBAKER HELP Walton Rd. Closed Wed weeee Mw a, LS , . ZB beloved husband of ‘hrs. “Seamie | ser ¢s430 Birmingham epee UTE 8 WAITRESS Upholstering ........ss00+ Mique: deer father of Mrs. Verna foe een FOR surance. apply im person, BRAID Severe oly "ad co to * BS. .. I. ‘Clarence, Ralpi steady ae SCESTIONAL ; ry | 2380 Ur oot Cos a sad" Pirte mek, era ey ca Tagety "Fos Dry lets ih earateas , crreacent| Sear ee at oF 6 Lost-& Found .............24] June _ et 2 pm. from the z AFTERNOON service — Fanibic boars, | WANTED. WOMAN Hobbies & Supplies .......24A | Mich with Rev. Alfred wady of: | geseott Dress ew. te oe Reesckspieg (47a davon: ene Notices & Personals 25| Preesant oe Sduwood, os a _ SHIFT EXPERIENCED WAITRESS Ware fee PULL OR as Mich. Gra will be SEE 44 in person. Gave's Grill, 878 part time. house wives-mothers can Lodge aldwin. : WANTED Sinteieondge ite tee amreness| Experienced Butcher BILL Gin, POR GENERAL opvice | Scrat Sst, gh, ond, phone oe ments by Mabiey Funeral Prieadiy ne WEIGHTMAN with some knowledge of boot-| 9 am. and 12 noon Children to Board ...26| Nome, Oxford. _ Michigan. _ Sw edly et, 2iG ALAS keeping Prefer one with car | — WOMEN oS A a ig ee li Walled Lene "Write Pontise Press| ExDerienced tei solicitors, Wtd. Household Goods a see ~ dear, father of Sire Ut ect 7s ie on Frank in ae -_ teoee deal tm the — Sale Musical Goods .......62] ace "Ocking Stet” = Pensasse| Set, Stzellent opvortdnity for ed- [CAB DRI SY paY| GLENWOOD AVE, 1" Gijs.\Buring vocation Ve ean T on, Market Tire Co. ‘Apeir WH Srchard Lake. 3 408 PONTIAC, MICH. “EMENT WORK Sale Office Equipment ...63 BOX REPLIES r CEMENT WORK 7 ‘oundations, basement floors, Sale Store Equipment eeu At 10 «am. today ome SRB ARE OR GRILL Wm, aed) MIDOLEAGES — WHIT WOME fivewars, Sore aint — Sale Sporting Goods .......65| | there were replies at Rave en fer, alert "ries CARFER GIRLS Sight hogeckeoopine and” 'ircoina. | “pain Ghee, 10, UPERVIE ‘ Hunting Accommodations, 65A the Press office in ive lstings and contects. wD t. 2 Washi .gton, OA *-3377 Sand, Gravel & Dirt ......66| | the following boxes: eee ; “ £3 | ipo RAGED Uap rai as og EK 3 _ 7° ® motheriess home. 3. OR : . Wood, Coal & Fuel escocccvet 22, mM, ss, 28, $2, 36, BU tT-WE' INSURE IT | | 3-0539. “COMP SHINGLING— Plants, Trees, Shrubs ....68 87, #0, 61, 70, 105, 108, Midwest Employment an, White, cae to 88. phd nope New or old work. Call OR $2008 For Sale Pets esecovccess Om 118, B f 40@ PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. nae TIME Prev Bot orl ee in enginee: end Dogs Trained, Boarded ...70 oan LF Feevist, | desires ful time summer work, c= ? 20. "venir aviy | PURCHASING CLERK | papaxpadi COLORED Wak FARM MERCHANDISE __ Help Wanted Male 6 ater, 38 pir Pontiac ** privecin Prefer experienced person for wante construction. tectory, fam : phases of purchasing. typing Te-| itor, or work. PE ee. Hay, Grain & Feed .........71 | A SYoUNG MANO 1870] Open Bre Cleaner and Spotter | fuired. “appir persomet oines. | SLEGTRICA- WIRING AND’ PAG For Sale Livestock i..:...22| 28° Orchard ue ae |. _NExT mningham Gieaners, 1288 8. Wood: ECEPTIONIST DOCTORS ee woe | > D: T P. ; ce Dist essenti ND : Wanted Livestock seneeeee ed _imotic Perr nab wae with t ESPO! - Clerk Stenographer ment write box es 4 ‘Fortes ine. Cut large erass iat For Sale Poultry cueeecsetl ASSISTANT MAN = position, and age, exberience and and Sale Farm Produce .....;7 30. Excellent ‘Caportinity for 7 Sale Farm Equipment ....76 and fmpiovment references nee ( oe j Startins salary $7 Auction Sales ...........,.77) gtk wit rood ‘opportunities or : ' y S88 Wayne AUTOMOTIVE =«-__—|_oniy “it vou are seeking ‘perme: -For Sale Housétrailers - as 2B: leaner and 4 tter Rent Trailer Space’ ...,...79| Xrv sir Socal ir. | 8 Wood- Auto Aécessories .....,...80 a 1m caws. PRECISION MACH Big h 3 W Fitzwater 1212 _DeSiaz easy BRICK. BLOCK STONEWORK maintenance end tree work OR Highest quality work at reasom- | 33148 of OR 3-233 peep ie elas mg eS | eee CUSTOM TREE SERVICE. CUT- a ace -_ runing ed service. chain eee 32468. LANDSCAPING SULLDOZING BASEMENTS DUO. Top sol) and _ FE §-<4372. filing. fine grading. EM | San 3 LANDSCAPING yoase. Call after 4 p.m. Comp} lawn int ané CHIMNEY WORK cleanup. _ FW 2-8112._ Expert chimney specialists, clean- RADING AND YARD . r te an 5-3583. built new. Also other brick, re ROTO TILLING neys, FE TOL, ‘ CALL EARL KLINE LICENSED SPRA —— sap a OR Mosquito centrol, shade trees, re , : shrubs O W_ Scott, OL 23-4021. eu 5 PRES | REE TRIMM. ING AND REMOV- a. ‘ees our el mem —e ae be selecting ber American Forestry Viscocia MEIro rose le ARPENTER REPAIRS AND AL- Hons. Quick eather. ~ Moving é & Trucking 19 ETs DRA & @&1 MOVING AND TR D. E. Cook. FE ¢4156, Some discarded articles haul CEMENT wW PLOO Pree FE 46-0786. Meas Free estimates. | 44-1 MOVING (RUCKING PICK- . @p end delivery Good service at CONC BROKEN BY rE sort reasonable rates FE ¢1803 any- or job. Free estimates FE 2-00T'. Ume. CEMENT OUR SPECIALTY . CARTAGE CO _¥ 0 rs, _Dasements_ EM 34879. | _M: pickup _FE_2-4750. ese «: 0 } rm Free _ 21616. FE . OR 3-227 FLOOR LAYING, SANDING AND " a experience cotimates “Stn Pant Taylor. OR ensed 3 q iyoes of correc’ alterations, ~ Building Supplies MODERNIZE icensed butider he pgm June rit July aa tvees 5 other . Insured workmen D & M BUILDING SERVICE 12A Recreational centers. All t¢ —_ and doors to ro FLORIDA ROOMS pes of "ose CEE WEEDON 16618. Telegraph Rd. FE ¢-2508 __ Business Services — 13 A& El youn PROBLEM: Want. fe ee hire, a ts RENCHING Saws, Lawnmowers TET, Work Wanted Female 11| Busiriess Services - 13 Lest & Found 24 PPD PLLA LAA ARAL AL es = Paz Sea BE" eRGO™ | Electrio_Sewers Cleaned | “2k, OFM SREEEARAT LOR HOUSEWORK . service. Lake Angelus. June i3, reward. “er canny ook weekiy or y a treated rE tu ‘ Roto-Re Sewer Cleaners “viet BED Thiel aEt sg 6-137 € H 2 at Sere ESI cere mea |Cage I e dav service PE S147! re ee rete ei, “Game | man, Woward, PE 66300 or OL our | RONINGS WANTED PICK UP Glices“heceits rvarenterd Free | Steet imoaiees = BUSHEL FE | _C*!! OLive 1-6645 after § p.m. License 1328. Reward 23-3313. = _T* | eiecrnic WOTOR SERVICE BE | Sack scorre Doo LosT at TRONINGS "OOD WORK POY Pee is TNS | Blue sky Driven. Reward. ere! not RS DESIR Fe bee WORK. 1D. POWER OWERS | Si ack SCOTTIE DOO LOST AT ye P es a AR ee ee _FE ¢$816. | ““Biue Sky Drive-In. Reward. FE CADY WANTs DAY WORK OR AWN ee 5 eed | oe. 4. a Ww dish FE &-31%8. pak service all work rear | LOST |W Th pepers tween Waite's ward offered. M LOST: MAN'S BULOVA WRIST watch LOYD MONROE WOOD PARTS MACHINED TO with gray strep. Gradue- L FE 4-6866 your specifications Quota’ on tion present this year. EM }3-8008. _request, M_ A. Elliotte FE $3, | LOST: ——.. = or al TYPES | MARDNARY WORK Furnitur- Refinishing 1 16A 30 Ave.. al) green. FE 2-803 Sle Sy Appelsity. Free estimates | paminG ANT'QUES A 6PB nals “Binck, Win tet Re a. i ction, | Eatab: a eae den Pk win T miatie BLACK, MIXED D satisfaction. : lished crew, FE 5-906. ee g 168 spaniel Injured in abdominal re A ALL POWER LIFT EQUIPMENT Ger YOUR Petr : — : plowing. (s) id WANT TO TO Masonry Crew Available | Biases: Pectog, leveling and ame) Oo axe for basement and cement work. GARDEN FLOWING AND BORER Stichigen Animal ‘Reseus League. [icensed costrerter FE seen | tng On _Hobbics & Supplies 24A (1 CARPENTER REPAIRS AND annex “PLOWING pa oF pons Quick service OR Pe rent wEW SCRABBLE SETS, 2 fet “Rough and finish, EM 3-900! \iow aor o pEsiae _— be . = wrenc ALTERATIONS MY rey BUY Modernizing of all types Com-| LAWN GRADING AND ORNA | eat’ Wholesale and retall deat mer uality wo: satel PE 6-6396. ers for Kodak and Ansco. Whoie- . — e cial, Q y rk. La i « mE acres undry Service 18) fii teReldit' ica Ron CONSTRUCTION rE 7200 Cooley Lake Rd. 3-485 uss quasars cLAIN OF RUPF- bg ; __Notices & Personals 25 ¥ ; tee. Ph Pon taanery . vs I bave the records of EAs Co! home. I ost Lavenaced a sice clean 1963 Plymouth club coupe 912 8. Wood- Now you cas drive your own car. All my love, Jimm A NTY A Burnes . 03 Mark KNAPP SHOES so 8. Santora PE +4670 LIGHT TRUCKING AND CLEAN- 37200. O’DELL CARTAG REDUCED RATES bores vag te wre e vou Smith SUDDEN SER R bish and | trucking FE 46079 AND HAULING RUB- after 2 p.m. and 30206. Trucks to Rent TROCKS TRACTORS % Ton Te oe Bey Stake Pontiac "Parana: and J/ Industrial Tractor Co, ARD Open_Daily Including Sundays —_VE 6144 cidmi «aa oDD FE VOLLMAR MOVING A ees ace Unites States Quick service. PE — 50562, 41M. Perry Painting & Decorating 20 4-1 DECORATING — PAINTING papertne and w Call for est) wanen TE case a) PAINTING. INTERIOR 1 & Ex terier 10 per cent Guaranteed. Free est. FE com &j PAINTING PAPERHANG! 40018. Hall’s Wall Washing Painting PE 22708 a AL = PE vie 1 dav cervice Ress. OUTSIDE PAINTING, PAPER cr poiaster and repairing. Painting & Wall Washing] atte _Pree estimates. PE $-2211_ 4 gee ey ei PLL LOL LLL Ll Ce comment: hee etane| BEDFORD MOVING |cmpren LOVED AND ~ARED _Ravmong Commens PE ¢4966,_ | Loca: & tong distance FE 2978) fet rv. rete CUSTOM BUILDER CAN Work DUMP SERVICE. BLACK CRESCENT LAKE one house now 1. dirt « tft Sand rni grav- TARE aS Ma's Pepi J8 B Ino ¥ A. FT -_F Heer. + Day ensdd Dome nancing Modernising FE ¢8470.| HAULING OF ANY @IND REA- bome, FE 22098 or 203 LECTRICAL NG. LE | _somable FE 26857. Raebu censed. Eq Murray. FE 2-8687. LIGHT HAULING iicenseD HOME, TAKE ORION EXCAVATING VATIN Gani FE #0187 area, by week. MY 2-6553. ‘ AULING FE ©0947 AFT- Basem end = trench . rz messs mown | RINERA TORS —CtEawED—agn | Wd. Household Goods 27 R SAN AYING, FIN. | or rubbish navied Clean up. FE | ~~~ Fa Gardner. «i FE! 461%. ; LET Us BUY AUCTION IT for you O88 2 FURNITURE sel) *t for vou. B. le Pnone WANTED TO BUY ALL WANTED FU @ rE WILL B AND odds & ends FE 40786, WTD: ‘s IN. BIKE, BAL- loon tires. OR WTD TO BUY: G00D GARDEN with cultivator. H. P: Sutton MY Wanted to Rent _ ‘AUTOMOBILE child: round Preferably accessable - — Day phone WA COUPLE WITH 2 Ht 2 CHILDREN N DE- sire large trailer 2 bedroom apt. Furnished. Waterford or Pon- tiae viein! te monthly basis or Box No " DESPERATELY NEEDED 3 on 3 room . 2 small children. EMPLOVED BY NATIONAL CON: cern, has coped with 3 dren. Desire 4 three or four bed Can furnish references, kon an : 2-0285 penwve 5 2-6568 for woman rene F RADIO ® Tv tome. Fon don’s TV & A pp a | | THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1935 , 6 _ Kinescope_ Coca Show During Redes Seed tionalist plane dropped 100,000' ported on progress in free China, s-, = : - . s day's Radi Both Mother | | = == Today's Radio Programs - - Mother, omaade Fo op Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject te change without notice. . Wan, (ee) CELW, (see) WWJ, se «=; WUAR, 130) «WXYZ, (1270) «9 WJBK, (it90 )=—WPON, (1468) us an Ca Cafeteria and Lunch Counter TONIGHT WXYZ, Ed. Morgan WPON, Goes Calling WFON, “News, Wiatter * CELW, J. Van Korea 1:15—wgR, Ma Perkins wi ueeeo 10:15—WWJ, Qlldersieeve ‘cuLW Geel unaaes WXYZ, Paul Winter - Plan Emergency Films CALL HOMADE FE 22-6242 WXYZ, Wattrick, McKensie one Top of Town : CKLW, Tex Beneke . | i _ CKLW. News KLw. Lotoy 10:060—WJR, A. Godfrey WEOR 7 Gur, Nuss Used in Star's Absence : . WJBK, Don McLeod 16:30 W JR, Your Gov. e] WWJ, McBride, Peale 1:30—WJR, Dr. Malone . For complete catering service WPON, News Was. New = = a wee. CKLW, Eddie Cantor Due to Family Loss : i #15—WIR, Clark Quartet | CKLW. Citisens Wort Ciara) Lepcaind bappeta nyt pepe for banquets and wedding wwi, Bud Lynch 11:00—WJR, News WCAR. News, Temple WPON. Platter d Weddin cakes , News y L ; , oy ; lotplak | coady Chase WXYZ, Top of Town WrOn. Mews 2:00—WJR. Mrs. Burton: By JACK 0 BRIAN INNES 8 : CKLW. News, M . CKLW, Davies ‘ = NEW Y q S)—N a F ~ WPON, Idletime Serenade ewe Musie WPON. Pontise Barty WJBK, Don McLeod ™ NEW YORK (INS)—Now It Can party cakes and special oc 0:30—WIR, Sports “He be mart Final > WPON, News, Eddy Be Told, Dept. . . . When Imogene ion cakes are ours cialty WWJ. Russ Mulholland WXYZ, Top of Town WKYR Whtspatue. Bren) ts Ut Ba Coca’s mother died suddenly a few Casio pe C WXYZ, Bill Stern CKLW, ®portsmortem CKLW. Mary Morgan 2:15—WJR, Perry Mason weeks ago, a kinescope was right WCAR, Henry J. Taylor WCAR. Musie WWJ, Plain Bill , WJBK, Dinner Music 11:30-—WJR, Midnight Music CKLW. 5 Star | at hand because it had been made W 5 Als H it rge CKLW, Jim Dunbar ~__ 10:45—WWJ, Break the Bank . € Atso ave @ Larg 6:15—WJR, Lowell Thomas WXYZ. News, Top of Town| WXYZ, Girl Marries 2:30—WJR, Nora Drake | ready in anticipation of the death D & . . is) bohahesthed Speed WPON, Music ip Air WCAR, Music wwe Pais cracked 'of Imogene’s ailing husband Bob V ariety of Pastries : NESDAY MORNING 11:00—WWJ, Strike It Rich CKLW, Clubtime | Burton . . . Burton died Friday. 1:00—WJR, Guest House WED wxyYz. C } : j > : ' wwi arene econ Wak. AerronlWeles WXYZ, Companion WPRON Club 1460 _. . Another kinnie will be used _to Choose From! WXYZ, Stars at Seven WWJ, Bob Maxwell WJBK, News, George 2:45—WJR, oo Day tonight He was “e fi ee Ladiood Lewis Jr. WXYZ, Fred Wolfe WCAR. News, Music ww, TB SHES 0 x ~ : h all nice gen ports CKLW,. Nuno WPON, News, Party - who went through all the toughest . WPON, N Klin 3:00—WJR, News, Hymns . Lage ed WCAR, News, Musis pale Meer a (1:18—WXYZ. Curtain Cdlis hal SIE ras se eeeae days with Imogehe. who never Fruit Punch Prepared 7:13-WWJ, R. Mulholland WCAR. Cofies ite win aon ee ina WCAQ, News, Music failed him to Order j ; l (JR, Make U ‘ : . . : age leads \SELW. Bewte” — WWJ. Phrase Pays” 3:18—WJR, Rosemary Top TV writers now are up to Punch Bowls and Cups wwa" Moreen Beatty WJBK. News WPON, Pontiae Party MRS A Le! $5,000 per script. CBS signed sev- WXYZ, Med. Faith 7:18—WJR, Masic Hall 11:45—WJR, Second Husband | 3:36—WJR, Helen Trent eral tc annual retainers at $25,000 for Rental CKLW, Gabriel Heatter WJBK, Gentile, Binge WWJ, Second Chance wwJ, P Young f : : WJBK, Larry Gentile . CKLW. Queen for Day $:15—WIR Our Oal or Yive |. . when we talked to 7:45—WJR, Ed Murrow eoak Ode age Wek Fens. Ceeres WWJ. Rt. to Happiness Reginald Rose ‘author of last Mon- a WWJ. One Man's Pamil 12:00_WJR. Jack White , Stuc > fantasy CuLw. oe Ph y CKLW, Terrence O'Dell wWs, mews ¢:00— WIR. House Party day's puzzling Studio One easy, pmele)e) ps CO) WCAR, Sign Oft 1:45—WWJ, News~ CKLW, News. 3 Suns A ae eer esege wite and the exceptionally fine ‘12 $:00_ WIR, Suspense CEL Wa yoey) Darta toe pees Georse CKLW. Eddie Chase, Angry Men" a bediam in his WWJ, People Are F 8:00—WJR, Jack White > P WJBK, Don McLeod ack Z . ~ oe i 5 WXYZ, Show Stoppers WWJ, Bob Maxwell WAS LI WCAR. News, Music bie ao was grag eae 144-146 NORTH SAGINAW STREET - Cc y WJBK, News, Gentile 12:15—WJR, Farm Round ; - surroundes y a tribe -o avy : - ~ me - ~ ‘ KLW, Sgt. Preston wean eos WWJ. Faye Elisabeth | 4:85—WWJ. Stelle Dalles Grocketts.= | Meaning fis (wo (ing SOUPY’S ON — “Soupy Sales” will replace Kukla, Fran and Ollie 8:15—WXYZ, Bhow World WPON, News WCAR, Music 20—WJR, Muste Ha! exes Canng nis) tworun | Sean tele ! me WPON. Luncheon Muste me wisser aeoea heirs. “Now 1 know how the | on WXYZ and the ABC network for the summer, Monday through Prt %6—WJIR, ‘once 8:15—WR, Bud Ouest . a ; : i . wee Lone Ranger WJBK, Gentile, Binge 12:30—WJR, Time Out, Music| WBK. McLeod * Alamo felt," he said in amused | 44y. beginning July 4. Here, Soupy is shown wih ° Rlack Tooth,’ CKLW, John Bteele WPON, Rise "a’ Bhine CKLW, Your Boy Bud (sew mj) Wemes Se Best! resignation. He beats that rap) cousimol White Fang. onelol the svupy Sales bells | 8:45—WXYZ, Music 8.30—WJR, Music Hall palrbpaet peas George _ WPON, Mountain Red by writing his scripts—in longhand | ——— = | 9:06-—WJR, Clooney 6:45—_WWJ. News : 5:00—WJR, News —mornings when his kids are at | Wil Oil | wil be uséf buy drilling and | Ww. Treebled Years WCAR, Radio Rev. FON vite cn OA? | Wws, Keen Deland school. ‘And pay my wife a buck | 1 dcat liman WXYZ, Bammy Kaye : : : N, Farm M&ts. CKLW, Eddie Chase 2 a production equipfnent, | if you are unable te pay your payments, debts er bills when: due, CKLW, Treasury Agent Case un Lida ae — WJBK. News, McLeod a page for typing them,”’ said Reg. | i _ S| see MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS and arrange for payments 9:18—WJR, Bing Crosby WXYZ, Breakfast. Club WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON ee eee | pace Meaning about $65 pin money per Has 3rd Fortune { | you can afford. regardiess of how much or hew many you owe. e:a0—WIR, Amos: Andy WJBK. News T Qeorge | 1:00—WJR, Road of Lite | 51. sn mores Musto | Manuscript. : ae | 4 Fesloce Mate | NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED E ) : —— } ALE jJR, Scores, us | WXYZ, United Nations WEON, News. Musi WWJ, Ross Mulholland =| | *Orwa. sie Deland aint. ; Now nm Boli v1a USED TV SETS |. ONE PLACE TO PAY — BONDED AND INSURED CREW: (Bade Caeter + 9:18-WIR, Kitchen Clud | CKLW. Susie™ WCAR. Musie Sid Caesar’s summer-sub show | | j 10:00_WJR, Tenn. Ernie. : . WJBK, Tom George 5:30—CKLW, Bill Hickock about a swing band on tour with . | HOUSTON uw — Oidman Glenn Only $5 Per Week! “Let 9 years of credit counseling experience assist you.” WWJ, Fibber McGee - oiso_wJR, Mrs. Page WCAR, Tiger Game WXYZ, News, McKenzie Phil Foster as comic, Bobby | McCarthy. still trying after losing HAMPTON | Hours: Daily 9 to $: Wed. & Sat. 9 to 1; Evenings by Appt. Sherwood as bandleader, pur- {most of two fortunes, believes the ; . | j ' ‘ - portedly needs a girl singer. We | third is just about in. the bag. | eS we MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS . ' i - -- Llodays lelevision Programs - = | wry srrestsit corer 8 | sjesking of his toivian at ex 415 South Saginaw St FEB-O456 Above Oakland Theatr - Max Liebman sailed yesterday plorations yesterday, he said, “In| - ~- =a SS for Eurepe andtalent-scouting for | [two years we will have enough Channel 2—WJBE-TV Channel +—WW4-TV Channel 1—WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW-TV next fall's rita spectaculars: | Production to make up (or any- TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS and a misleading travel folder| Delivery.’ (2) Miss Fair Weath- | Please cone back qnother Jes tame jt rn _ a me " ‘ i - cke . c . F A Ye . Carson, or better Yet, just bring! is S. production, he 3ard, at = 6:00—(7) Kukla. Fran and Ollie. upset vacation plans for Milly er. Pat Rousseau. back Jes S Gare J ain tr me aimounted (> 13000 bar ore un a , ~ i and her mother. Elena Verdugo, . ack veane Carson. ' es © : Puppet show. (4) Sonny Eliot. Florence Halop star. 11:20—(2) Nightwatch Theater Gleason's “Away We Go" gal, |rels daily but at present ne owns Variety. ; tichard Dix, Jane Wyatt in| Betty Ellen, will be saying it to “only several Oklahoma wells." 6:15—(7) Dinner Theater. Little |8:30—(7) Steel Hour. Bret Hart’s| ‘The Kansan.” Stanislavsky next fall. She's The old wildcatter made his op Rascals in ‘Framing Youth” “Red Gulch,” story of how East- litse(@) “Toniohe steve Allen learning better acting in summer UMistic predictions yesterday (9) Austin Grant. News. (4) ern schoolmarm tries to civilize - St a xe - stock, opening June 27 in ‘‘Tentler | @PNouncing that a New York and s News. Paul Williams” (2) News western mining town. Teresa] W!th Elaine one Rick Wayne, Trap" at Somerset, Mass. . Denver syndicate had invested Bob White. Wright, Franchot Tone, Jayne ne a Reese. dancer, Loretta Young is down to 84 | 5 160,000 in el ae ” ve ay ; Meadows. (9) Dial 9. Donald} ‘© sited SSUES REG 5 an’ re) Fal te money, for which the syndi- 6:25—(4) Sports. Bill Felmming. = : “ . pounds) and can't start her Fall | { s a 3) per cent operati Cook, Judith Allen in ‘Beware cale gets a per »pe ng ; ae A : 'Clac TV films on time so Roz Russell (2) TV Weatherman. Dr. Everett as 13:00—Twelve O'Clock Theater. | of the Ladies” (4) Circle The-| prances Rafferty, Robert Rock-| an Johnson, Groucho, Barbara h : < ~ . Phelps. ater. John C assavetes, Gena! ell in “The Little Pig Who | Stanwyck, Lucille & Desi are | 6:30—(7) Cavalcade of America. Rowlands, Joseph Sweeny in Cried.” warming up to make films for | More Power... Smoother Hearing | inte! re tt in the Bolivian concession, Baltimore attorney Francis Scott}; ‘‘Time for Love,”’ story of farm their friend until she beats the ane on a Key attempts rescue mission be-| girl who finds her life compl | 12:30—(4) News. anemia rap hind British lines in War of 1812] cated by handsome stranger she ; 4-TRANSISTOR and is taken prisoner. While be- meets at the County Fair. (2) 12:45—(2) Weathervane and Medi- Anyone wondering why Sir A. Hearing Aid ing held he watches the bom-| Spotlight Playhouse. Michael| ‘tions. Korda sold his upcoming Rex by bardment of Ft. McHenry in] O'Shea as gold prospector who . - Harrison film ‘‘Constant Hus- “The Rescue of Dr. Beanes."’ (9)| is refused by a pretty girl. WEDNESDAY MORNING aa aC ne ta funny by itself) S 0 N rf) T 0 N E Abbott and Costello. ‘Efficiency fleeced by a card and gets into|7:99-(4) Tod ay. (2) Morning nd a for a fall spectacular , ‘ “4 5 the reasen is simple enough: 3 bstantial sav- i Expert.” (4) Dinah Shore Show.| a brawl in “Four Things He’ d| Show. I 5 Greater power at substantial sav Welcome to summer. (2) News.| Do.’ ow Korda got more than $200,000 ings. Scientific fitting — personal ore a $ aia rou un a i — une Doug Edwards. 9:00—(7) Todd Purse Show. (4)/| for the one can of film, which service. Don't bargain with your aie) News (cannvan Dam Oe ne wah oaeo ey ie Room. (2) Garry pu ae ee cond hearing. See Sonorone FIRST! New Franklin Street Carnival Groun ds — South Saginaw at Franklin: : . rn . y. (2 } . is e p Bh eatrical | Cameron Swayze from Sqan| The $64,000 Question. Super quiz | 4 9:30—(2) Arthur-Gedtrey. run turned out to be bigger than Alec Guiness. . , Ocean liner is setting for songs 10:00—(7) Wixie’s Wonderland. (4) |] .., , ; _ | State Bank Bidg. FE 2-1225 (7) Jambo: Theater. Corcine 9:30—(7) Story Studio. John Ho-| yyome, a Poe Robt. CC. Denis | 7 00— m : ic : in * : orve’’ ¢¢ owle H'wood that TV pfo- | : : | diak in “They Also Serve (9) 10wled in } | Calvert in ‘Indirect Approach. Guy Lombardo. Music with Lom- 10:30—(2) Strike It Rich. ducers there “butcher” teledramas | your HEARING lati isimi lg 304 (9) The Visitor. ‘The Research- bardo band and soloists. (4) Stu- | 11:90@—(7) Stary Stuciio. (4) Car- and Says that’s why N.Y.-based ——-— > er,” drama. (4) Roy Rogers} 4, 57. John Howard, Ellen| toons. (2) Valiant Lady. “live” dramas are better than | }AWWWwnAnnnwrn nnn, Championship Rodeo. Roy and} noavig in “Ring Once for Death,” - : LA“ : . The Dale Evans stars in rodeo at} iow tolling of ancient bell af- 11:15—(2) Love of Life. eaturing ese | San Antonio Coliseum featuring} fects two families. (2) See It} 11:30—(4) Feather Your Nest. (2) eee Coe Famous Make TV: : ; Francisco. (2) Jo Stafford Show.| with Hal March as host. | S11 Pontiac re THRILLS! CHILLS! FREAKS! ae tie Gia eather: Now. News documentary with} Search for Tomorrow. = = [= = A mcs s ae : ach WiCTCA onic THE UNUSUAL! Father Day decides to get his lanl AS SSL 11:45—(2) Guiding Light. ATRIFLICIAIRIG Hie TT Loe ae All in one big picture taken as a surprise for |10:00—(7) Waterfront. Circus seal |12:90—(7) 12 O'Clock Comics. (4) | EIS 5 * * ial © a CENERAL ELECTRIC ; ; Happylan do Mother at the same time she| takes over storm-buffeted tug-| Nancy Dixon. (2) Inner Flame. RIATMIPE TS ICIATT = STOTRI LVANIA — DUMONT ~ Carnival. ‘decides to arrange a “home| boat and confounds Capt. John. ATPL [ei clel Imei et INI} SYLVANIA — DUMON sitting’ for him. Leon Ames,| Preston Foster stars. (9) Na- WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON eins g #4 y 20 ¥ e EMERSON — CBS Lurene Tuttle play the Days. tional News. (4) Motor City - . x = ATIC 5:30—-(1) Who Said That. Jockey| Fights. Welterweight Bout: Pat | 12: 15—(4) Way of World. (2) Road — os < E + = e *. — HAMPTON.-TV con McCreary, critic John| Lowery vs. Bob Rossi. (2) Tales| of Life. Gd VIEINTTIEIRT Tato} 825 West Huron St. =, | f Mason Brown guests of quote} of Tomorrow. “Sleep No More,” |12:30—(7) Beulah. (4) Hour of * x = = a = “ '] IN on FE 4-2525 : Fs quiz. (9) Play of the Week. Don}. Science fiction drama. Shows. (2) Ladies Day. (9) SJ isis DeFore, Rita Moreno in ‘‘Mar-j49:15-(9) Yesterday's Newsrect. Prayer Sign. a || riage of Lit Lit.” (2) The Halls} Films. :00—(7) Charm Kitchen. (9) ‘ Groun s Open Every Evening at 6:30 P. M. sinew professor as a fraud wih |10:39— (1) Interationa!_Psice|, Somme" Nak) Bascal Gregg Shorthand FR ANKLIN RO A T. od ming he irmae ot] Ae io Bae etnies Hera ACCOUNTING. D at SOUTH SAGINAW § De ta nt Ol. Oe Bathe.” @) Conrad Nagel| Mack's Matince. (2) Big Payott TYPEWRITING Comptometer and Calculator $:00—(7) Make Room for Daddy.| Theater. “The Storm,” drama. |». 56 (9) Toby David Show. (4) Danny Thomas loses his big/31:99—(7) Soupy’s On. Variety| Greatest Gift. @) Bob Crosby oa MI ’ a Aral ~ | : ' j 0 mas sre | tei ae, New ste classes 11 | LADIES ADMITTED Pick the Stars. Variety with new] Date. William Gargan, June | 9: 45—(4) Concerning Miss Mar- - THIS WEEK- = Et y ' Canadian entertainers. (4) Fire- Lang in “Isle of Destiny.” (4)| lowe Dav ; ves Pas 5 : y a ay, Half-Day, and. Eveni side Theater. ‘‘A Ring for Nell.”| News. Paul Williams. (2) News. . \ y, and Evening nostalgic story of © old-time] jac LeCoff. - . 00—(7) Heartthrob Theater. (9) Morning )¢:00 sin 600 to 9-00" His00 to 1:30 , Thursday Evening repertory theater trying to keep Wednesday Matinee. (4) Haw- i * ee —~. going against competition of | 11:15 — (7). Armchair Theater. kins Falls. (2) Brighter day. | ables : . Yes! Come on tadies! We will admit \/“new’ movies. Alan Hale Jr.,| Dana Andrews, Jon Hall in “Kit |3:35—(4) First Love. (2) Secret | CH you free to the grounds of this. ke) Dorothy Green, Chris Dark fea-}| Carson.” (4) Little Show. Jo-} storm. 7 W. Lawrence Street. * easiaa aoe Happyland Catinyal! tured. (2) Meet Milly. Fight" seph Sallin in “Airmail Special Veet the Scheel or Return this Ad i Detale ~ os we - 3:30—(4) World of Mr. Sweeney. das soca voce cee cecn de canes twee. - - ACROSS : a ro (2) On Your Account. NAME> ‘ADDRESS ae " y i 1p 5 Andree “ON fi 7 3 G 5 lb i? 6 9 10 Til 3:45—(4) Modern Romance. VETERAN APPROVED | en es -—<-<--- See played ‘many 3 1H 4:00—(7) Captain Flint. (9) Folk | owen ana =:FREE CHILDREN’S COUP aaa See a ; roles eo 7 " 7 Songs. (4) Pinky Lee. (2) Robert i - | ! er work is. . Lewis. : ! ; “ in the ——s to Q Ss tf 1 ewes UT ae ae thy 4:30—-(9) Howdy Doody. (4) uy GOOD FOR ] RIDE a ‘1 i Operatic solo i a Howdy Doody. (2) Welcome it - — ee ye 4 $ Born 2 Travelers. i . mi HA 2 ea 44:45—(7) Ricky the Clown. it Saturdgy, ores Matinee, June 25th. 12 noon to 6 P.M. Coupon 4a | ‘ - aanes terns : les any school-aged child to one free ride on the BIG DOUBLE i . bY, Uy WRAL. 5:00—(7) Auntie Dee. (9) Justice it oat ' ae Kietter | 4, Yy LA 4) Colt. (4) Bitf faker. (2) Sage- i ‘GIANT FERRIS WHEEL. Lo. at 7) Sompannen ab 3 . % Uy . &:30—(7) Superinen. (4) Tennessee WSS T SISSIES IIIS 32 Snooze a : one Ernie. f 33 Craft Soe oe y ‘Saturda —June 25th — Kiddies’ D t 36 Seesaws YI i ? rid 2 ocr fl || FREE Chemical || | Té ee Sis Tolp John. y- atikworm 7 = = : 42 Golfer's term . ; . eee S@iD drive eee te Fi a 4 eee FLT ELLY ETT T | hRoor pestaover aera tewtt | Al] Rides and Shows 50 Greedy Put in sewers af aes are , @ 3 Beottiet enamamamimiamanal : ri 2 cleaned by elect erty or Dn “4 fyaceen, RS 6g ier, | ~il No aesuurs—w0 CHARGE Bring he kiddi és! Saturda 12-noon to 6 Sie anm fea, Boon aterp |e Menthe Onoentn ; All rides, al fuced a 8 Celebrated 31 Distinct part | | bacehanals ' ‘the place és yours. L rides, a 1. shows reduced 8 7 46 Carnivorous Bb Bots pootry ME Mont | : to. 10e admission for you: Bring Mom and Dad) : DOWN. iy oonaiat a a igen «o Beentia (i |p ia Bho [ “Contributed os @ public rervice by. td ere | a enjoy: this 21st Arinyal. Elks, Sagnixal, tool F fula” :] os ee - FE 4-2012 ans ke ott we ; / ees Sante bens * 2 Es," or *° jpoustata & ie Yale ik Le, ere fa NH Doo Gn vue gayeriac PRESS Ride Wye i verano Penne pat iiyeges Tae Glas Bi, at os AWWELAUAT fo ey vy : : ret ei : 7 GS a Gu ea 2 ae 3 Lie 5 \ SS / tS e oe ‘ aa ‘ ) i 4 , a . * \, oe wy ; ; 3 b x bee E \ s ‘ . “> ; . ay 3 ¥ s" } % any. s De ‘ aS ots \ : : 5 { I . t Xo 40 ‘ oO i . hy \ \ é t ra as | ‘ a a a“ \ ae : ‘ ae\ =X : ay : ee 4 = | ' : \ eT a Nees F are =