———— ee eS OeeeSe_,S,,,—t—“‘_eO NO Ogg 0053 3; 00 UO O”-™™”™—OOM The Weather Sunday — Fair (Details Page 2) THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition 1llth YEAR x * ad PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 —26 PAGES UNITED PRESS ENTERNATIONAL NEWS GERVICE — 7 Yugoslav-ltalian Tempers Flare Over Trieste 2 West Germans Prepare to Cast Ballots Sunday Victory, for Adenauer Means Participation in European Army BONN, Germany (AP)— West) Germany’s national electibn campaign wound up today as 33 million vot- ers prepared to cast ballots in what looked to the out- side world like a contest be- tween Russia and America. To |the everage German, however, there was no clear-tut East-West choice such as recent Moscow and Washington statements would seem to imply. Th¢ United States, through Secretary of State Dulles, gave its blessing Thursday to Chancellor Konrad Adenauer’s pro- Western conservative coali- tion government. Russia, through the official news agency Tass, called last night for the defeat of Adenauer and his program of rearmament in alliance with the West. German voters who will de- cide the issue in tomorrow’s parliamentary voting — perhaps the most significant election in postwar Europe—could point out that both parties with any chance of winning are anti-Com- munist, The opposition Socialists are just a. strongly opposed to Moscow as - Adenauer’s Chris- tian Democrats. But to the outside world the dif- ference was this: The‘ triumph of the 77-year-old Chancelior’s Christian Democrats would commit West Germany to his program of raising German troops for the proposed West Eu- ropean army, a project the United States supports, A Socialist victory, however, | = would bring in a policy of unarmed neutrality in the cold war, which Moscow demands. For most Germans, however, the main question was: Which ' policy offers the most hope of achieving that all-German dream of reuniting both the Soviet- occupied East zone and West Germany in peace and freedom? Tass said last night that the mo- ment Adenauer achieves his goal of a Western military Alliance ‘‘it will become impossible to revive the unity of Germany.” Dulles declared Adenauer’s de- feat would be disastrous for the prospects of German unification. The Socialists jumped on Dulles’ statement with such fury that it became the hottest issue of all in the closing days of the campaign. American Walker Cup Team Leading British MARION, Mass. (#—Six of the American Walker Cup forces had leads ranging from 1 to 7 holes and the other two were all even with British rivals today at the halfway mark of the 36-holes singles golf matches at Kittansett. Winners of all but 1 of the 13 previous international competi- tions, the Americans gained a 3-1 point lead in yesterday’s opening foursome engagements. First Snow halted and the northwest entrance t up to four inches. * s * in Montana AP Wirephote EARLY WINTER—While the East and Midwest was struggling out of a record heat wave, snow and sleet fell in@Montana creating scenes like this on the Cooke City-Red Lodge highway. Traffic was o Yellowstone National Park closed for a time until plows cleared the way for tourists. The snow measured * * * 26 Degree Drop in 4 Hours , into Pontiac and broke up recorded here. rain worth a million dollars, yesterday’s high of 85 degree Cooler Weather With Rain Worth Million to Farmers Temperatures plunged 26 degrees in four hours yester- day afternoon when the long-awaited cold front swept the longest heat wave ever Packing winds up to 45 miles an hour and carrying the cool air reached Pontiac area. shortly after 2 p.m. and dropped the mercury from s to 59 degrees by 6 p.m. Detectives Find | Valuable Furs $40,000 Cache May Be Pieces Stolen Aug. 29 From Drugged Man DETROIT (UP)—Holdup bureau detectives recovered 43 fur pieces valued at $40,000 here early today and said they were believed to ‘be those stolen Aug. 29 from a New York salesman at Grand Rapids. -Det. Sgt. Archie Richardson said 18 fur coats, 25 stoles, a diamond ring and a wristwatch were ‘re- covered at 1 a.m. on the north- west side, but declined to reveal other details. Police said they were still working on the case and would not say whether an arrest had been made. The fur salesman, Daniel Most- man, reported to Grand Rapids police on Aug. 30 that a “well dressed, cultured woman’ had drugged him in his hotel room there and robbed him of 45 fur samples, The description of the furs taken from Mostman tallied with those re- covered in Detroit. He also re- ported his diamond ring, wrist- watch and wallet were taken. A long-range prediction by the U. S. Weather Bureau indicates cool weather will remain at Tuesday. , least through A cool, pi Labur Day week- end, with temperaurres in the 70s, is forecast. Rain is expected Tues- day. Edmond W. Alchin,’ Oakland County agricultural agent, termed yesterday's precipitation ‘‘a mil- lion dollar rain.”’ Earlier, Alchin feared county farmers would lose as much as $1,000,000 in crop damage unless a general rain and cooler weath- er snapped the 10-day seige of hot, dry weather. “The rain and cooler weather will give potatoes and fruits a better chance to develop properly and be marketed as top-grade produce,’”’ he pointed out. ‘‘The change in weather also has im- measurably aided fall seeding and ground condition for planting.” About .40.of an inch of rain ac- companied the cold front. Relief from the record-smashing heat wave came suddenly when the cool air from Canada blew into Pontiac. The mercury dropped ¢ra- matically in the first four hours, then inched down slowly to a low of 55 degrees at 7 a. m. today. But sunny skies sent the mer- cury upward this morning. It stood at 57 degrees-at 8 a. m. and rose to 75 at 2 p.m. in down- town Pontiac. Fair and somewhat cooler weath- er is forecast for tonight, with a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Pontiac Father Gets Birthday Gitt; Son Is Released in Red POW Exchange Jose Ruiz of 443 S. Jessie St. got, brother’s release, Mrs. Harold R.|not wait to join the family over the best birthday present anybody | Fritz of Hazel Park said she could} the joyous event. could ever receive — even though it was two days late. He learned today, only two days after celebrating his 7ist birthday, that his son, Sgt. Alfred E. Ruiz, 28, liberated late yester- day by Reds in one of the last prisoner exchanges. . - “I was to give up hope that my bjy would be freed by the Communists,” sobbed Ruiz. “I have been praying for Alfred ever since we heard he vas captured by the Communists, and now we thank God for his return.’ Others in the Ruiz home were equally thankful today. Alfred’s brother and sister-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Guzman Ruiz, said they have sat before television broadcasts “night after night” waiting for news of Alfred’s liberation. Upon hearing the news of her f) Alfred had been. a_ prisoner since May 18, 1951. He and an entire night scout- ing patrol of the 32nd Red Arrow Division were captured on a mis- sion in enemy territory. Alfred, recalled his brother Guz- man, volunteered for action in Korea in October, 1950, ‘‘becau - he hated communism and he felt he didn't do enough when he was in service during World War II.” Guzman said Alfred “left. the Sacred Heart Seminary in De- troit, where he was studying to be a Catholic priest, during World War I to fight in Europe. Parks, Beaches fo Draw Crowds Over Labor Day Attendance May Be Cut by Weather; Governor Will Speak in City One official picnic and hundreds of informal gath- erings at recreation areas will mark Labor Day in the Pontiac area. Pontiac and Oakland County Democrats will meet at Murphy Park on South East boulevard Mon- day for their annual picnic and an address by Gov. G. Mennen Williams. Although cool weather may reduce the number of persons driving to Oakland County recreation areas, law enforcement agencies throughout the county are prepared for heavy holiday traffic. , Average attendances were fore- cast at Cass-Dodge Park No. 4 and at Pontiac Lake Recreation Area if the cool weather con- tinues. Officials at both parks indicated attendances would go up or down with the thermomenter. On warm holidays;—record crowds jam parks. Cass Dodge Park officials ex- pect a Labor Day attendance of about 10,000 persons, about 3,500 under a capacity crowd. Nearly 2,500 may visit Pontiac Lake recreation area, according to of- ficials there. Average attendances also are ex- pected at Kensington Metropolitan Park, Highland State Recreation, Bald Mountain Recreation, Holly Recreation, Proud Lake, Ortonville, Rochester-Utica and Metamora rec- reation Areas. Michigan State Police of the Pontiac Post will be augmented by officers from Detroit to handle traffic. Every available man, in- cluding detectives, will be on traf- fic patrol in the Pontiac area and patrol cars will be on 24-hour duty. All available men in the Pontiac Police Department and Oakland County Sheriff's Department also will be used to handle the expected heavy traffic flow. Motorists, whether they are plan- ning extensive trips or daily ex- cursions to picnic areas, have been urged to exercise extreme caution in an attempt to hold traffic ac- cidents at a minimum. lran Receives New U. $. Grant President Announces $45. Million Given in Emergency Aid DENVER (®—President Eisen- hower today granted the new government of Iran 45 million dol- lars in emergency economic aid in an obvious move to prevent any Iranian alignment with Russia. The President acted just 10 days after Prime Minister Fazollah Za- hedi appealed to him for swift assistance, saying Iran’s treasury was empty and that money was needed urgently to enable the coun- try “to emerge from a state of economic and financial chaos.’ Last Tuesday Eisenhower made public a reply assuring Zahedi tue United States would give “sympathetic consideration” to his appeal. Today the summer White House issued this statement government of Iran, the President has made available on an emer- gency basis 45 million dollars which will be used for the imme- diate economic assistance of Iran if Press Will Publish at Noon Monday ax! Sz 58 Fe if 4 3 > > le a Wa. i % e ‘ ~, m. “my th. AT 8TH ARMY CEREMONY—Gen. William F. Dean (left) released from a Red prison camp in exchange of war prisoners is shown as he reviewed Gen. Dean Reviews aoe eS *S ite Th <<" Honor Guard an honor guard during a farewell ceremony at the 8th Army Compound in Seoul, Korea, { i ‘ *t AP Wirephoto PWs Made Death Pact to Avoid False Confession FREEDOM VILLAGE, Korea —Two Air Force officers today said they made a pact to die rather than sign false confessions that the United States waged germ war- fare in Korea. The communists tortured the two for months, but neither would ‘“‘confess."’ The pair, freed today by the Reds, were Capt. Byron A. Dobbs, 33, of Clio, Mich, and Ist Lt, James Stafiley, 24, of Decatur, "Ga. Speaking of the death pact, Dobbs said: “Once we were resigned to‘ die it wasn’t too bad. We figured the U.N. would live or die in Korea and we couldn't confess and have our country accused of this thing.” Accidents Kill 3 From State Tot, 2 Detroit Area Men Die, 4 Hurt in Holiday Traffic Crashes (By the Associated Press) Three Michigan persons were |- killed and four others injured in ac- cidents in Indiana and Pennsyl- vania as the Labor Day traffic across the nation moved into high gear. Three Detroit area _ residents were killed in a Michigan City, Ind., two-car collision last night. The victims were Michael J. Ku- piek, 35, of VanDyke, a partner in a machine shop; his 2-year-old son, Dwight; and his father-in-law Toefil Kowalski, 63, of Detroit. Injured were Kowalski’s wife (name and age unavailable), Ku- piek’s wife, Leona and a $-year- oid son Michael. Mrs. Kowalski was described in critical condition with multiple lac- erations. The other two were not in danger. A spectacular crash near Erie, Pa., injured truck driver C. Le Quigley of Grand Rapids. He and a woman were the only two sur- vivors of a three-vehicle crash thai killed five other persons. Across the nation, the toll of violent deaths in the 78-hour Labor Day weekend slowly began climb- a Reds Free 275 Americans: Will Release Another 110 PANMUNJOM (AP) — A whooping 275 Americans streamed back to freedom today and the Communists promised to return another 110 tomorrow, the 33rd and final day of the big Korean war prisoner exchange. The second and last Communist “bonus” delivery will boost the number of Americans repatriated to 3,596—283 more than the Communists first promised to send back. Both sides arinounced téddy they would complete the exchange tomorrow. ¢ The final delivery prob- ably includes a small group of American air force and Marine pilots whom the Communists said “con- fessed” to germ warfare charges. . The Allies said they would turn back on the last day 137 Chinese and 2,255 North Koreans, boosting the total repatriated to 75,797 — many more than the 74,000 the U. N. command first promised to return. a The Communists also promised to release Sunday 1 South Affican, 8 British, 4 Turks and 1 Japanese. This will raise to 12,753 the number of Allied POWs returned, 10 short of the 12,763 the com- munists said they would liberate. But the Reds have since said more than 20 non-Korean and 300 Korean prisoners refused repatria- tion and will be turned over to the neutral nations repatriation com- mission for disposition, Both sides said the final figures would include all prisoners who want to return, including any who had changed their mind at the last minute, While the Reds held back until the very last airmen they charged (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Even Governors Lose Kids at Fairs DETROIT (UP) — It happens even in the best of families—the governor’s children got lost at the Michigan State Fair. From Gery, Nancy and Wendy’ viewpoint perhaps it was the other way around. “Mom” and ‘‘Dad” Williams were the ones who strayed Friday. The governor thought his wife, Nancy, had the 12, 10 and 7-year- olds in tow. Mrs. Williams thought just the reverse as each toured the fairgrounds looking at the ex- hibits, Then came a call over the public address system for the gyvernor to report to the administration building. There he found the three, waiting for someone to claim them. In Today's Press eeteeeeeeeeeeeee eeeeee 2 Building News ........ eevccces 13-18 Chere News ...ccccscecscceces 8-8 OCORMON To ccc ccrcdccssescceaxteens 2 Cumnes WOW8) 35. iscicccccccccccs 21 Dr. Crane Seteeeeeecee 4 ee eee eens eeeee eeereteee 4 MEM, Pet)... c.sccccnccteccacten 6 MOPEONS © cscs cess cvecccce eccccees 19 PMONTUN iciceccsccccsccceccecessse 6 TV & Radic Programs .......... - “DODOLAOIE. evcccccces BO-83 w ¢ eer ere teeeeeeer eeetee 21-25 Women's Pages ......ccsscsesee 6" lke-Dulles Talk Set Tomorrow Believe Denver Meeting Will Review Far East Indochina Policy DENVER (®—President Eisen- hower and Secretary of State Duiles will meet here tomorrow for a foreign policy review with special emphasis on developments in Indo- china and other Far East areas. Arrangements for the conference were announced late yesterday by the summer White House, which declined to say why the session had been called. Washington officials said, how- ever, that it would deal with for- eign policy generally and Far nn developments in particu- ar. The same officials said there was no connection between the Eisenhower - Dulles meeting and the reaction abroad to some of the secretary’s comments on for- eign issues. They said Dulles arranged the conference several days ago to bring the vacationing President up to date on recent developments. They have not met since Aug. 10 when Dulles stopped in Denver on the way back from Korea and Japan to report on his visit to those areas. lito’s Country Troop Actions Threatening to Use Her Own Tough Army if Rome Persists ROME (AP) — Tension mounted on both sides of the Italian-Yugoslav bor- der today as the two na- tions glared at each other across a pile of diplomatic protests involving the bit- ter Trieste dispute. Belgrade threatened yes- terday—in its fourth pro- test in three days—to rush its own tough t-oops to the Italian border unless Italy halted “provocative” ma- neuvers there. Rome replied last night that Italian forces had taken only “precautionary and protective measures.” The Italian note, however, did not: describ these measures. With the final word thus far in the seven-day flareup of the old quarrel, Italy scoffed at Yugoslav- ia’s “pretended frontier incidents.’ Rome said even if the inci- dents were true they seemed “‘of very mocest nature’ for so much hullebaloo, On the other hand, declared the Italian Foreign Ministry, it has heard nothing from Belgrade to dispel Italy's fears that Yugoslavia plans to annex the Yugoslavs’ oc- cupation zone of Trieste by force. The Adriatic frontier region, long disputed between Italy and Yugo- slavia, is now an international free territory divided into two zones pending a settlement of its future. British and U.S. troops occupy one Yugoslavia administers the other. Exchanges between Italy and Yugoslavia over the issue have grown more bitter in the last few days despite expressions of confidence by leaders of both countries that the new flareup would not lead to anything crit- ical. Western diplomats have urged a policy of calm. Yugoslavia ‘charged this week that Italian engineers were digging trenches and building pillboxes along the border and Italian tanks (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Oakland-James K Bus Service Changed Pontiac City Lines buses on the Oakland-James K route will run each half-hour week days starting Tuesday. the company said today. The first Oakland Ayenue bus will leave downtown Pontiac at 5:15 a.m. each day and leave the route’s end at 5:30, running every 30 minutes. The last bus will leave downtown at 11:45 p.m. and the route’s end at 12 midnight. James K buses will follow a similar schedule. E. W. Dreasher, City Lines trans- portation superintendent, said the half-hour arrival and departure times will eliminate layover time from the bus schedule, faster driving operations. Bus company officials said the Saturday and Sunday schedules yall remain the same. 80 New Pontiac Teachers Welcomed by Community . Civic leaders and. school officials laid down the wel- come mat for some 80 new teachers in Pontiac Public Schools yesterday with a day-long program of speeches, tours, a picnic and conferences. Forming a welcoming committee in Washington Junior High School to start the day were Pontiac Mayor Arthur J. Law; School Supt. Griffin, Pontiac Board of Frank J. DuFrain; Glenn H: ucation president; George M. Watson, Chamber of Commerce president; and William L. Treanor, Junior Chamber of Commerce president. Also on hand to greet the*— new teachers were Mrs. Paul Gorman, president of Pontiac Federation of Women’s Clubs; the Rev. Herbert E. Ryan of the Pon- tiac Ministerial Associa- tion; and Theodore Wier- sema, Principals Club president. a tem. The help of the Board of Educa- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) ¥ Angry at Border section, including the port, and - making | ’ - ’ TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 May Set a New Becord Tax Collections Running Ahead of Record Rate Set in Birmingham Last Year (Prom Our Birmingham Bureau) BIRMINGHAM—The percentage of the 1953 city tax assessment collected by next March 1 dead- line may set a 26-year record, City Treasurer Russell Berger said yesterday, “Last year's collection figure of 98.09 per cent was a 25-year high,” he explained, ‘‘and this year we're running slightly ahead of the 1952 pace.” A penalty of three-fourths of one per cent was added ta unpaid assessments on Sept. 1, Burger stated. The fine will be boosted another three-fourths of one per | cent on the first of each month until March 1, 1954, he said. On that date the city marks unpaid accounts delinquent and fordards them to the county treasurer for collection, he ex- plained. . According to Berger the county increases the penalty to four per cent. Any assessments it collects Jury Indicts 5 Union Leaders Embezzlement, Robbery Charged to Orville Ring, AFL Teamsters’ Official KANSAS CITY (#—A Jackson County \Grand Jury yesterday in- dicted five men, including one of the central figures in a recent con- gressional probe of labor difficul- ties in the Kansas City area. Orville L. Ring, president and business agent of AFL Teamsters Local No. 541, was indicted on two charges of embezzlement and two counts of second degree rob- bery. . At a hearing here in July two members of a congressional in- |; _ vestigating subcommittee said Ring and others in his union were ,at fault in a prolonged dispute that tied the building and heavy construction industry during the! spring and early summer. | Ring denied responsibility for the strike and said his union sought only a wage increase and what he termed its rightful juris- diction. Agreements were signed ending the work tieup shortly after the hearings ended and after the AFL put Ring’s union and several others under a trusteeship. The robbery indictments against Ring involve alleged forced con- tributions to a Kansas City Hos- pital. The other indictments in- volve handling of funds in the} local. tet Del Nabors, assistant to Ring and a former boxer, was named | in an indictment charging felon- | ious assault. cal John A. Scheffer, manager of | the Kansas City chapter of the National Electrical Contractors _ Association, was indicted on two counts of second degree robery. Willard Wilkinson, president and | business agent of Local No. 663 of the Heavy Construction Laborers | Union, was named in an indictment charging second degree robbery. Edward Chevlin, former vice- president and business @epresenta- tive of Teamsters Local No. 838 was indicted on a charge of as- sault with intent to kill and two charges of carrying concealed weapons. The indictments allege the incidents ocurred Jan. 9-10, 1952. Chevlin resigned from the local in March, 1953. Postman-Spectator | Rings Winning Bell SHREVEPORT (# — A postman who came as a spectator filled in in an emergency and won indivi- dual honors in the Arkansas-Loui- siana-Texas tri-state bridge tour- nament. J. W. Thomas. was called on when tourney officials ‘were short one player in filling out the final table yesterday. “I didn’t want to play, but I did and I won,” exclaimed Thomas. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Fair and semewhat warmer Sunday. Cool te- might lew 5¢@ te 54. High Sunday 76 te 80. West te Seuthwest 4 te 8 miles tonight and mostly south- west imcreasing te 16 te 15 miles y, Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. At 8 a.m.: Wind velocity 1 mph.; direc- tion west. Sun sets Saturday at 6:59 p.m. Sun rises Sunday at 6:03 a.m. Moon sets Saturday at 6:43 p.m. Moon rises Sunday at 4:21 a.m. ———_ Temperatures 1 Friday tn Pontiac (as recorded downtown) Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean perature cool rain. .40 inch of rain. eee eee eee ey Pree eeeseretesers | are returned to the city each month. Sums collected so far this year amount to 94.64 per cent of the total, Berger said. The 1953 asses- sment figure was $863,622.96, he explained, and $817,314.41 has been turned into the city eoffers. Last year at this time $755,645.88 of the 1952 tax figure of $802,499.- 49 had been returned, said Berger. * * * . \, eres ; A noisy air conditioning unit in. a large store here, once again commission meeting with the com- plaint that it keeps them awake | nights,¢and insistence that it can | be quieted, They also complained /of an untidy alley, and commis- | sioners said the matter would be attended to at, once. * * * Father Thomas Kenny of St. Columba Catholic Parish said today that beginning tomorrow masses which are being heard temporarily at ston School, Royal Oak, will be Sundays at 7, 8:30, 10:30 and 11 a. m. Father Dunstan, O. F. M., will assist him on Sundays, Father Kenny said. * x * A request that the city rezone the block on the northwest corner of East Maple and Coolidge from single family to business A was turned down at this week's City Commission meeting. Following the Plan Board’s rec- ommendation that the request be denied, commissioners asked that the owners be notified of the board’s re¢ommendation, and _ in- form them that they may request a formal hearing on the matter. * * * . “College Student Day’ will be the theme of tomorrow's 8:30 and ll a.m. services at the First Presbyterian Church. The Rev. W. Glen Harris will deliver his ser- |Jand are used under a single oc- 58| North Korean POWs, who turned So2esraszsee SEStlSesszss| = mon on ‘With God in Pursuit of Knowledge.”’ * * * Commissioners approved an amendment to the curb cutting ordinance this week allowing, where two or more parcels of cupancy, the same specifications for driveways and curb cuts for each lot, | The amendment stemmed from the Shell Ott-Gompany’s request to ‘add another driveway on Maple and Hunter. Under the existing ordinance they felt they couldn’t put in a driveway wide enough to accomo- date their. needs. * * * Holy Name School will begin classes ,Wednesday. Buses will pick youngsters up at 8:30 and classes will be dismissed at 11 a. m. that day. Full day classes will start on Sept. 10 and dismissal time will be announced later. * * * At this week’s meeting, City Director Robert Boatman to look into the urgency of rezoning Miss Vida McGriffin’s property at 595 S. Bates, rom single family to in- come bungalow. She had requested the rezoneing because two homes in her immediate vicinity are in- comes, Boatman said the board felt that as an older neighborhood, that area should be protected and rather than be considered piece by piece’ a study should be made of the entire territory, Commis- sioners requested setting a hearing date as quickly as possible. * * * * Bloomfield Hills School Board | this week approved hiring of a new sixth grade teacher, « James L. Wilson of Auburn Heights. Re- cently released from the service, he formerly taught in Lincoln. Superintendent of Schools Eu- gene L. Johnson said one teacher was still needed for the fall term, The need arose when the first grade at Vaughan School was split into two sections to accommodate a large enrollment, he explained. Reds Release 275 American POWs (Continued From Page One) spread bacteria over North Korea, the U, N. command was doing the same with the leaders of the bloody Koje Island POW camp riots. The U.N. command would not confirm it officially, but Sunday’s delivery presumably will include the riot leaders, including North Korean Col. Lee Hak Koo. The contingent of 275 Americans returned Saturday was by far the largest group of U. S, s sent back in one day. All a in good health, The Reds also handed back 24 Britons and 1 Australian, 11 South Korean soldiers and 2 South Ko- rean women Red Cross workers. The Allies delivered about 2,400 up with a neW propaganda trick as they arrived at the exchange point. Instead.of the of the usual shout- ing and flag waving, the Reds were called to attention by the leader each truck, then bowed their heads and wept in unison. Sephardic Rabbi Dies JERUSALEM (®~-Berizion Meir brought neighbors to this week’s/ the Nica where Yugoslav President out with a bovine razzberry at the NOT IN THE M0000-D—Pat Knowles’ prize Holstein calf gives thought of the coming New Jersey State Fair, oldest fair in the country. The calf would rather romp in pasture than be placed on show at Trenton, N. J., as the ancient agricuftural exhibit celebrates its 208th birthday beginning Sept. 27. McCarthy Asks Sleuths Names Army Secretary to Be Called to Committee Session Tuesday WASHINGTON \—Sen. McCar- thy (R-Wis) today asked Secretary of the Army Stevens to tell Senate investigators why the Army won't provide names of military person- nel who cleared civilians suspected ! of Communist activities. Declaring it- was just as impor- tant to find out who gave clear- ance to a Communist as it was to locate a Red, McCarthy had said earlier he would appeal to Secre- tary of Defense Wilson or even to President Eisenhower for the in- formation, if necessary. bd * * But he told a news conference today he hopes ‘‘we don’t have to go any higher than Stevens.” “Stevens had nothing to do with that order,’ McCarthy § added. “But we would like to have him come in Tuesday, if that is con- venient with him, to testify in a closed session of the committee about the situation.” The investigations subcommittee McCarthy heads held four days of hearings in New York this week during which it was disclosed that a woman employe of the Quarter- master Corps, labelled by Mc- Carthy as a ‘'100 per cent Commu- | nist,”” had access to Army data on troop movements, The woman was not named, but McCarthy demand- ed to know what military officials had cleared her for the job. * * * Col. Wendell G. Johnson of the | 1st Army Intelligence staff refused saying such information could not be supplied because of a directive issued by former President Tru-. man on March 13, 1948. McCarthy said today he is satis- | fied that Stevens, now on vacation, did not know in advanee about Col. Johnson's . decision. He added that he is not asking the Army to turn over any FBI or Other investigative reports which would reveal the names of confi- dential informants. Tension Mounting | in Trieste Dispute (Continued From Page One) were massing at Goritza. The town ys not far across the frontier from Yugoslav village of Okrajag- ito will make a major speech Sunday. * * * Italian fears that Tito would use | the occasion to announce annexa- tion of the Yugoslav-controlled zone of ‘Trieste touched off the latest angry controversy. * * . Belgrade's note threatening to move its own troops to the border declared: “If the Yugoslav government establishes that the. Ifalian gov- ernment continued to adhere to an abnormal situation on the border, it will be forced to undertake cor- responding measures on its own territory.’ Rome replied this would place upon Yugoslavia ‘‘full and exclu- sive responsibility in case of adop- tion of any such eventual mea- “* « * “The Italian government reiter- ates there has been no crossing of the frontier whatsoever by any units of thet Italian armed forces,”’ the note declared, adding that Italy counts on the same kind of conduct on Yugoslavia’s part. * * s Fresh fuel was added to the growing blaze by U.S. Secretary-af New Swimsuit Styles Go Back to Roaring 20s BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. w— Cole of California previewed its 1954 line of swimsuits today and it looks like the bloomer girls of the Twenties may make a come- back at the beach. One of the new numbers was called a ‘‘non-blooming bloomer.’’ It’s a pair of bloomers, all right, but it is knit to fit and shaped sto flatter. On the shapely Cole models it looked fine. Several other numbers harked back to the long waisted styles of the Charleston era. An accessory caused much com- ment. It was a bag attached to a cane, made to stick easily in the sand. : One suit, called the ‘‘Kinsey Retort’, was a black satin affair with peek-a-boo blue nylon chiffon. A hit at the showing was a tent coat that draped over the feminine torso like a tent. Cool Weather, Rain Saves Farmers’ Crops (Continued From Page One) low of from 530 to 4 degrees to- night and a high of from 76 to 80 degrees Sunday. Although the East still sweltered in the grip of the heat wave, this morning. the cool air and showers sped toward its rescue. The cool air is expected to cover the entire eastern half of the coun- try by nightfall. Heat deaths continued to climb yesterday, with at least 149 persons dead throughout the East Central and Eastern states. Meanwhile, an Atlantic hurri- cane, called Carol, packing 150- mile-an-hour winds, whirled over | the open sea today, about 250 miles south-southeast of Bermuda. Weather forecasters expect the storm to veer away from the con- tinental coast and blow itself out at sea. Its closest approach to land would be Bermuda, they added. Milford Man Demands Examination on Charge A Milford man, charged by Brighton State Police Post with felonious assault on two juvenile girls in New Hudson Sept. 1, de- manded examination yesterday be- fore Springfield Township Justice Emmett J, Leib. Richard J. Brown, 21, of 422 Steadfield Rd., was returned to Oakland County Jail under $1,500 bond. Examination was set for Sept. 10. Police said he fired a 22 caliber rifle at the feet of two girls. ‘lonian Relief Week’ LANSING (UP) Gov. G. Mennen Williams has’ proclaimed the week of Sept. 6-14 as ‘Ionian Islands Relief Week” in Michigan. He urged all citizens to contribute to a relief fund to help Greece re- build the Islands which were dev- astated by a series of damaging earthquakes last month. | reporter Alla Mistake, Says Cpl. ‘Slick’ Ex-Prisoner Declares He Never ‘Squealed’ on Anybody to Reds HONOLULU (®—Cpl. “‘Slick’’ arrived in Hawaii yesterday home- ward bound from Tokyo and said “It was a’ mistake’’ war prisoners in North Korea were out to get him because he ‘‘ratted’’ on them to the Communists. A boy scarcely out of his teens, Slick looked young and a little scared. His hand shook as he’ held a cup of coffee and talked to a/' at Hickam Air Force! Base. * * * ‘They called me Slick but it was all a mistake,’’ he said. ‘I never squealed on anybody to the Com- munists.”’ Slick admitted there was animos- ity in camp against men who were friendly to their Communist cap- tors but he denied he was one of them. “I was friendly with everybody. Théy had nothing against me,” he said. *_ * «* . Slick confirmed he went AWOL five days from an army hospital in Tokyo. He denied he was trying to run away from other liberated prisoners. “I went out and got drunk and missed my plane and decided to stay drunk,”’ he said. He returned voluntarily to the hospital, Slick said he had been questioned by military intelligence officers after his release but indicated he had been cleared. * ™ * A Hickam intelligence officer who broke up the conversation said Slick was not in any kind of cus- today and would go home just like other returning POWs. Fellow repatriates aboard the plane show no indication they had heard public reports about Slick. One of them said Slick was treat- ed the same as everybody else. The group will leave Hickam today after an overnight rest at Tripler Army’ Hospital. Their plane is scheduled to arrive at Travis Sunday morning. * * * Slick was repatriated Aug. 12 and originally was to have returned home by ship. He was flown to Tokyo for aerial evacuation to the United States after he told a chap- lain of threats against his life. A few hours before his sched- uled departure Aug. 28, Slick dis- appeared from a Tokyo army hos- pital and was AWOL for six days. He returned voluntarily and there ,has been no announcement of charges placed against him. Although hé is not ill, Slick is being flown home with a group of sick and wounded repatriates. Pontiac Welcomes 80 New Teachers (Continued From Page One) tion in getting new teachers sit- uated in their new jobs was offered by Griffin. He said the board would maintain its efforts to pro- vide adequate school facilities and fill them with well-trained, happy teachers. Watson told the teachers of efforts to coordinate business and industry with education in Pontiac. He-also explained the importance of children as future citizens. “The kind of job you do with children leaves its reflection on the community,’”’ he said. Treanor and Ryan also stressed the role of teachers in building civic consciousness and in training youth. Mrs. Gorman and Wiersema briefed the teachers on the var- ious clubs and organizations which they may join. Following the morning session the teachers were transported by buses to Supt. DuFrain’s residence at Cass Lake for a noon picnic luncheon. They were then taken on a tour of the residential and industrial areas of ‘Pontiac, sponsored’ by the Junior Chamber of Commerce. Rounding out the day, the new teachers toured their schools and discussed their. positions with their principals. * Postal Finance Head Here Retires Af ter ee ro) - ‘ | Poe | SLAY », horse-drawn deliveries of 1910 to Forty Years Clifford Moody, who saw postal service here progress from the that fellow e REV. RICHARD DIXON Directors Elect Council Officers Rev. Richard H. Dixon Heads Pontiac Human Relations Group Board of directors of the Pon- tiac Council for Human Rela- tions recently elected new officers. They are the Rev. Richard H. Dixon, minister at Trinity Baptist Church, president; Mrs. John Houston, secretary; Glenn Wilson, treasurer, and Mrs. Morton Har- shaw, corresponding secretary. Other members of the board are Rabbi Sanford E. Saperstein, derry A. Shroder, Theodore Wier; sema, Otis Lawrence, the Rev. John Trese and Miss Marie Hickey. The winter program is in the process of planning and a full membership meeting is in the off- ing. The purpose of the council is to support activity which will pro- mote the principles of equality, justice, freedom and brotherhood in the community. The council seeks the coopera- tion and participation of all per- sons and groups who endorse these principles. New York City Campaign Hot Everything Good |Comes in Pairs in San Gabriel SAN GABIRLE, Calif. — The home town folks are planning a warm welcome home for two local boys who did big things in Korea, and that’s about the only thing about this story that isn’t e coin- cidence. James G. Daniel and Harry Fleming are both from San Ga briel. Both entered the infantry as officers at the beginning o* World War II. Both as lieutenant colonels commanded Republic of Korea troops in 1950. * * © Both were captured in Korea after the Chinese Communists en- tered the fighting. Both were listed as missing in action at the same time and both were identified as prisoners by the Red radio on the same broadcast in December, 1951. Both were decorated for the first time in the Korean War, both were released at the same time and both their wives who are named Gladys heard of their re- lease at the same time. They're expected to leave for home from Freedom Village at the same time. There’s just one thing the folks here are wondering about. Have Daniel and Fleming, by some coin- cidence, met each other yet? Staebler Angers Michigan Clerks Thomas Leadbetter of Detroit Hot at Charges of Dishonest Elections MACKINAC ISLAND ® — Mich- igan’s city clerks are hopping mad about Democratic Chairman Neil Staebler’s charge that ‘‘there hasn’t been an honest election in Michigan in 20 years.’’ Thomas Leadbetter of Detroit told fellow clerks ‘“‘I am sick and tired of such baseless charges’’ at a sectional meeting of the Michi- gan Municipal League here yester- day. ‘“f intend to nail misrepresen- tations at every opportunity,” Leadbetter continued. “I regard Staebler as the biggest political faker in Michigan and I won't sit by idly while he breaks dqwn public confidence in elections.”’ Staebler countered at Ann Arbor: ‘The recounts are the best answer to Mr. Leadbetter. If he would de- vote as much effort to encouraging Primary Vote Sept. 15 for Mayor Will Show Dem Party Control NEW YORK —New York City is in the midst of a sizzling mayor- al campaign, the out come of which may be a factor in the next presi- dential election. The Democratic city primary Sept. 15 will provide a test of strength between the New Deal wing of the party and its so-called conservative branch for control of the party in New York state. * * * The New Dealers currently hold state party control. In their ranks are prominent figures such as Sen. Herbert H. Lehman, Rep. Frank- lin D. Roosevelt Jr., and Averell Harriman, former foreign aid chief. They are backing Manhattan Borough President Robert F. Wag- ner Jr., for the Democratic nomi- nation for mayor. * * * A leading power in the conserva- tive wing is James A. Farley, for- mer Democratic national chair- man who broke with President Franklin D. Roosevelt. This group is backing Mayor Vincent R. Im- pellitteri for renomination. A victory for this group could project Farley back into the na- tional political picture. ~~ * * Whichever group wins out will have a lot to say in the selection of New York delegates to the 1956 Democratic national convention. * * * The election, in which the Re- publicans and Liberal parties will give the eventual Democratic can- didate, his main contention, is scheduled for Nov. 3. The Republican candidate will be Harold Riegelman, who resigned as acting postmaster to make the race. President Eisenhower, here to dedicate a public housing proj- ect, posed for pictures with Riegel- man and wished him well. The Liberal candidate will be City Council President Rudolph Halley, familiar to millions of tele- BIRMINGHAM—Dr. Norman B. Abell, recently appointed medical missionary to Burma, will give the EPigil iy. ig fe his fellow city and township clerks to improve election procedure as he is devoting to encourage them to cover, he'd be doing the citizens of Michigan a great service.” City Clerk R. Stanton Kilpatrick : of Grand Rapids and Robert ™. Montgomery, state director of elec- tion, said that the absence of party registration requirements handi- capped clerks. Staebler has complained that not all clerks comply with the law requiring that election of- ficials be divided equally, Dem- ocratic and Republican. Kilpatrick ‘and Montgomety agreed clerks are without any ade- quate guide, since no one is re- quired to register himself as either a Republican or Democrat. 35-Year-Old Man Sought in Stabbing Oakland County sheriff's deputies are seeking a 35-year-old factory worker for questioning in the stab- bing of a 22-year-old youth during a fist fight between several men early this morning in front of a grill on Auburn avenue in Auburn Heights. The victim was Gerald McHan- ey, of 3082 Midvale, who is re- ported in fair condition in St. Jo seph Mercy Hospital with cuts to his back and head. ; Sought is Curtis Rains, 35, of 2431 Auburn Ave. Sheriff's deputies Robert Kim- mons and Bill Smith said several men had engaged in a brawl in front of Anne’s Grill. McHaney was Stabbed in the back. Witnesses told deputies Curtis fled across the street to his home, changed his clothes and fled on foot. None of the witnesses could explain how the argument started. Pioneer Inventor Dies; Had Many Car Patents SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (UP) — Charles H. Martin, 85, builder of the first automobile with the motor in front under a hood, died at his home here Friday night. Martin, a native of Findlay, Ohio, never became wealthy but kept his family living comfortably on some three dozen patents, in- cluding such devices as a park- ing meter (1937); radio switches and the so-called Martin fifth wheel, a hitch which made possible use of modern tractor -trailers. . Couple Awake to See Thief Trying on Shirt A burglar who was “trying on a T-shirt’ in a bedroom where Mr. TLE ot ur a gee i | 1885, she was 12 More State POWs Freed Michiganders Included in Group of 275 Gls Released Last Night (By the Associated Press) Twelve more Michigan soldiers reached Freedom Village last night as the Communists released 275 Americans, the largest batch of returning POWs since the ex- changes began 32 days ago. The prisoner exchange ends today. The previous high was 150. A total of 110 GIs have been promised thei rfreedom today as the historic exchange of prisoners comes to a close in Korea. With the final exchange. the Reds will have returned 3,596 American cap- tured during the three long years of bitter fighting in the Land of the Morning Calm. °- The state prisoners freed from captivity behind the barbed wire compounds of North Korea last night were: Sgt. 1.C. Alfred E. Ruiz, son of Jose Ruiz, of 443 S. Jessie, Pon- tiac. (See story page 1). Cpl. Gerald W. Hewitt, son of Gerald A. Hewitt of Detroit. 1st. Lt. Michael -Ivanushka, whose wife, Theresa, live in Rose- ville. , Pfc. John G. McCracken, son of John McCracken of Detroit. 1st. Lt. John A. Ori, son of Mrs. Rose Ori of Detroit. Capt, Byron A. Dobbs, whose wife, Kathleen, lives in Clio. 1st. Lt. Leroy Bond, whose wife, Ruth, lives in Bay City. M. Sgt. Larrey Hampton Jr., son of Mrs. Julia Hampton of Detroit. Sgt. 1.C. Lawrence Roy Wilson Jr., whose wife, Bertha Louise, lives in Flint. Sgt. 1.C. Raymond W. Manske, who gives his mother-in-law, Mrs. Fred Cote of Marquette, as his next of kin. Sgt. 1.C. Robert Jackson, whose sister, Mrs. Infred Pipe, lives in Mt. Clemens. Sgt..1:C. Donald C. Edwards, son of Mrs. William R. Stewart of Flint. Pontiac Deaths Helen Cayton Prayer service was held today in the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home for Helen Cayton, infant daughter of Nelson and Edith Lumpkin Cayton of 541 Fildew St. Burial was in Oak Hill Cemetery. The baby was born Friday and died early today in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Besides her parents, she is sur- vived .by a sister, Nelritta at home. Mrs. Olive Quackenbush Funeral for Mrs. Olive M. Quack- enbush, 68, of 804 Stirling Ave. will be Monday at 11 a.m. from the Voorhees-Siple Chapel. The Rev. Wesley R. Wibley, of the First Assembly of God, will offi- ciate and burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Born in Petrolia, Ont. Feb. 23: the daughter of Robert and Martha V. Cable Jack- son and the widow of Edward J. Quackenbush, who died Dec. 20, 1942. They were married in Canada in 1902. Mrs. Quackenbush*came to Pon- tiac 13 years ago from Baltimore, d. daughters, Reginald and Mrs. Paul Saurwald of Pontiac, Mrs. Joseph Clark of Tampa, Fla., Robert of Brighton and Miss _ Geraldine Stearns of Albuquerque, N. M. Also surviving is a brother, Jo- seph Jackson of Sault Ste. Marie. Frank. W. Springstein Word has been received here of the unexpected death of Frank W. Springstein, 84, in Washington, Mich., Thursday evening. Born in Paris, Sept. 20, 1869, he was the son of the Rev. Archibald and Almira L. Springstein. He came to Pontiac as a boy .and lived here about a quarter of a century. Since his retirement from the Detroit Street Railway, where he resided in Romeo and Washington, Besides his widow, he is sur- vived by a daughter, Mrs. Charles Brown of Detroit; a son, Albert of Irish Hills; a sister, Alta B. Springstein of Pontiac. Funeral will be Tuesday at 1 p.m. from the Moran & Duff Fu- neral Home, 8340 Grand River Ave. in Detroit. Burial will be in Grand Lawn Cemetery. Boy Runs Into Car; in ‘Good’ Condition Eight-year-old Charles E. Hood 281 Davisburg Rd., who .an ft Surviving are two sons and three | was an office employe, he has « *. THREE AFL Official Advocates | SPonsibilities” of preparing for ° ° possible H-bomb attack. Fighting Defense Cuts In a pre-Labor Day radio speech WASHINGTON # — William F.| over NBC last night, Schnitzler Schnitzler, secretary-treasurer of | said Congress showed itself ‘‘more ‘the American Federation of Labor, | interested in a balanced budget says community leaders should than in the lives of the people,” “rouse other citizens to their re-' when it cut defense funds. See ean es eee FATHERS OF FLIGHT—The Wright Brothers THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 . By Wade Jones and Ralph Lane Unlike the Wright brothers, who almost literally lifted their plane into the air with their own hands, the mod- ern pilot, with his physical limitations, is the big prob- it’s been a long way from Kitty Hawk to Korea. As the Wright brothers, at the time of the first successful flight, could not even we — | F of a REGISTERED Jeweler firm is passed upon by a Board of outstanding Retail Jewel- > Se Cigar Maker Retires C M : ) Sth Won’t Seek 4th Term as Governor 23 000 Farm arked heh A seapeariariniad se ne ee CALL - After 60 Years on Job 0. In | S | ’ Gemology—the science of all precious stones FE deral MARYSVILLE, Kan. (UP)—One | pecula te If Gov. Warren for November Draft and metals—and in new scientific methods of of Kansas’ last cigar makers has decided to call it quits after al- most 60 years of rolling hand-made stogies. J. H. Wiedemeyer, 75, decided to sell out his business, which his fa- ther started 71 years ago. He has | made few cigars in recent years, | switching to chewing tobacco. 2-9111 Pontiac Piston Service Co. Complete Machine. Shop Service 102 S. Saginaw By J. Lee Voorhees We salute one member of our team—Labor. These men with teammates, capital and management, play a game that has made our wrong Management, sink to serfdom. It is the slave of cruel masters. It has lost its dignity as human beings. These men are obliged t o fight, beg, crawl, be subservient for the meanest ei: sort of existence. What a difference in *. America! Our Laboring team is glorified, shares the honors of a healthy economy. It is a dignified member of a trinity— Labor, Capital and Management. They're unbeatable. Labor, without Capital; is frustrated. Cap- ital, without Labor, is inert, lifeless. Man- agement uses the power of both to produce wealth, strength and glory, for all of us. We sincerely salute all Labor on your .day. . E. SIPLE ATTENTION! « Plant Employees! If you are In need of industrial safety glasses we are on the recommended list to fill your needs. Optical Department Dr. B. R. Berman Optometrist Phone FE 4-7071 17 N. Saginaw St. Picture Tube Too Small? Too Weak? DOES YOUR TV NEED REPAIRS? TRADE IT IM! GET A NEW TV! WE HAVE ALL FAMOUS MAKES No Cash Needed! Terms Available! HAMPTON T-V 286 State St.—Open Every Nite—Phone FE 4-2525 Makes Honors | Recoilless Rifle Platoon Wins Top 95.8 Rating at Camp Grayling The recoiliess rifle -platoon of | Pontiac’s National Guard Co. M, | 125th Infantry Regiment, received top scoring honors at the end of | its two-week training program at Camp Grayling last week during | Army Field Force tests. With a 95.8 rating out of a possibte 100, the platoon topped all others of the 46th Infantry Division. The 17 platoon members were William T. Hollis, regimentg) com- mander, was told that Co. M. had some of the best-trained men in the division. Using live. ammunition, the rifle platoon scored direct hits on three out of four ‘‘enemy tanks’’ to win high scoring honors. Co. M’s machine gun platoon, under the command of Lt. A. Platoon under the command of Lt. hakes Kansas City KANSAS CITY —Another busi- ness building was bombed here |last night—the fifth in the last | week, The big front windows of the Glass Hpuse, a glass and china- | explosion. Operators of the store said they had no idea why the place was | bombed. Previous blasts have occurred at | two clothing stores, an auto agency and a grocery store. A $5,000 re- ward has been posted for informa- |tion leading to conviction of the | bomb throwers. | ae First Navajo Announcer Is Using Native Tongue WINSLOW, W—The first Ariz. \is beaming newscasts, chants 'and commercials in their native | tongue to Indians on the vast and | isolated reservation. | He is Dana Begay, Navy veteran | and business school graduate, His | program, ‘Echoes from Navajo- | land,” is broadcast from KVNC, COMPLETE BANKING BRANCHES YTON PLAINS AC STATE BANK AUBURN HEICHTS Member Of hedersl Deposit Insurance Corp. SNS MQ AQAAQOAAANNAAN WSS ware shop, were blown out by the | | Navajo radio announcer in Arizona | WASHINGTON (# — A wave of speculation that Gov. Earl War- |ren of California is slated for a top administration appointment, possibly to the Supreme Court or |the Cabinet, |from his announcement he will not (seek a fourth term as governor. | But. politicians, professing |have no ingide knowledge, were inclined to doubt anything was in They anticipated that would serve out his present four- year term which extends until Jan. 1, 19553. Warren, three time governor Navy Balloons to Probe Secrets of ‘Stratosphere | WASHINGTON\W—The Navy has Slated tor High U.S. Post churned up today! Plans. friends and associates here by surprise with his announcement. None acknowledged having any information as to his future Vice President Nixon, a fellow | 'Californian, fanned political spec- | to} ulation with a laudatory statement |that Warren's many friends wish | | prospect for the immediate future. | “him well in any field of activity Warren he decides to enter after leaving the governor’s mansion.”’ In the past, there haye been sug: | | gestions that Warren might try to join some 30 other former gover- |nors now serving in the Senate a seaplane tender in the Pacific | ‘| poised to launch high-rising bal- Largent, and the 81 mm Motor loons to probe the secrets of cos- will not be a candidate. launched from a point near the Galapagos Islands, off the South | American coast and near the cen- tral belt of the earth's magnetic field. They carry instruments to record data in the stratosphere. | They are automatically dropp¥yd and can be recovered. president, he resigned from the | Senate and Gov. Warren appointed Thomas H. Kuchel, California state comptroller and a Warren associ- | ate for six years in state govern- ment, to the Senate vacancy. Kuchel is now in California busily campaigning for election to the Senate next year, and apparently confident that Warren | ; | mic rays. There have been recurring ru- * Robert Corland also received high | Dispatch of an expedition aboard | mors that the governor would ac- VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME ratings during the tests. | the USS Currituck was disclosed cept an appointment to the Supreme } as ; yesterday. Court but no vacancy exists there 268 N. PERRY ST. ; PHONE FE 2-8378 || Another Store Bombing The ‘‘Skyhook”’ balloons will be | now. There were reports in Cali- fornia earlier this year that asso- | ciate Justice Felix Frankfurter, now past the retirement age of 70, | might step down and be succeeded by Warren. On July 30, Frankfurter told the | Associated Press: | The Navy said the data would | “You don't suppose I would let be useful in atomic research and California’ know without letting the | weather forecasting. Firemen's Lesson Just Too Realistic close to the real thing. Methods of gas transport fire- fighting were being practiced by the department. A protective screen of fog streams was set up at the practice location to prevent radi- | ated heat from spreading. | Two smoke bombs were set off | for realism. But when the smoke 'came into contact with the fog it | stayed down instead of going up. | Four square blocks were blanketed ' $0 thickly with smoke that motor- NASHVILLE, Tenn, (UP)—John Henry Chatman, 35, was fined $2 and costs here for breach of the peace. However, Chatman told the court: | “It wasn’t exactly trouble. It was i | just that a man got after me with | | world know, too, do you?” that when a Supreme Court jus- ‘tice retires he first lets the Pres- | ident know. The White House has COLUMBUS, Neb. (UP) — Fire-| men outdid themselves when 4) be Practice session unexpectedly came | to be secretary of interior or sec- | ' pever, 5 | Frankfurter also reminded | | | denied knowledge of impending high court resignations. | As a Westerner, Warren could | regarded as specially qualified | retary of agriculture — Cabinet | posts now held by Westerners. | There has been no indication, how- | that Secretary of Interior | McKay or Secretary of Agriculture | Benson wants to quit.’ Sen. Knowland (R-Calif), newly | elected Senate majority leader who | has been a close political associ- | ate of Warren's for many years, | is on an inspection trip to Japan, | Korea and Formosa. His office | | William H. Ramm, of Struther, O., | | Zot proof in Duncan Bay yester- | day. The proof was a 28-inch North- ern Pike which had not only Ramm's lure but those of two other-fishermen in his jaws when | Ramm “reeled him in. Broken | pieces of line trailed from two of rubber tires. 28 Jackson Street San SPREADERS — Make it a breeze to teed, seed or weed the lawn. Save on materials. Sturdy steel with REGAL FEED & SUPPLY CO. —We Deliver— So LAWN SEED — Ideal for fall planting becouse it's all peren- nial, makes the deluxe lawn in sun or shade... sow less becouse of the millions of sure growing seeds in each pound. 1 lb-$1.85 5 Ibs-$8.95° Sat 2“ SPECIAL” SEED — Se- lected blend that makes a service- able lawn in sun or shade with ordinary care, 1 Ib - $1.35 5 ibs - $6.65 Junior - $7.95 No 25 - $12.85 WASHINGTON (#—23,000 men | are ticketed for the draft in No- | vember, the same number as in each of the past few months. All the new draftees will go into the Army. The Navy, Marine Corps | and Air Force have enough volun- | ‘| teers. In announcing the draft call yes- | terday, the Defense Department | also said it is taking no more phy- sicians for the time being—not even volunteers. Since July 1, 1951, 5,754 physici- | ans have been inducted, including | 5A2 last month. Now the Army has so many volunteer doctors, the de- partment said, it is assigning some 500 of them to the Navy and Air Force. | i grading diamonds. at CONNOLLY’S you can be sure to be safe when you select a diamond because you benefit by our scientific study of Gems through the American Gem Society. To maintain the title of REGISTERED Jeweler requires yearly “customer-protection” exami- nations. CONNOLLY'S 16 W. Huron St. — lem in future avidtion prog- envision flying ot night, . sae ress. Many of the mechan- $0 now is it hard to im- eee ye ical marvels in the modern agine flight to the moon A » eA ractraae ~~ plane are intended to make or the stors. But at least “ SPECIAL SERVICE| f.puncimne ce sab RR up for his weaknesses. we grant its possibility. TO GARAGES | Today, 50 years after the aos : the size of man’s to ’ b Motors Rebuilt Wright brothers’ momentous = deeds is limited only by a p racked Blocks act at Kitty Hawk, the magic | se SS th- --nch of his dreams. W } Y A . Crankshaft Grinding ~{ mystery of air flight still un- PS ers tage o . SRN CG Gilndes asker | |_| folds. Jet propuinon shoots ae lin planes through the air at more SS oe EN COR eae “Houea™ thon the speed of sound: The : Ra Your best assurance of true value and beauty Brake Drums Ground new rocket principle promises ee et in diamonds and jewelry comes from a jeweler travel many times faster thon Red i ity. tation that. ; with unquestionable integrity. The reputatio was the fall of dust, or ash, that for two days and three nights the town of Kodiak was in almost | complete darkness, | Am lnternational Profesioral Organiation of Dependable Jewelers Similar to the Guilds United Btates the greatest Country on earth Pais congratulated. by army officers figtee lc uatuaal Gapetean | but that seems unlikely now. During the eruption of Mt. Kat: | - > AMERICAN: GEM SOCIETY S opposed to our team we see r in ‘, 5 A: . 5 : | r es - as j c ; 9 ea, . £3 another Country, without capital and the 7: =: VOORHEES umpiring the contest and Capt. politics, apparently c a us ht | When Nixon was elected vice mai, Alaska, in 1912, so great ge baawehe es And, Now Gee Coal Co. 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Z | y 02:00 teas AAD a He teed 10 RO og t= 97.89; © Metered trucks assures you o full measure ~ © Courteous drivers, cleanly . delivered © Holdens Red Stamps at no Phone FE 2-0491 Se eee ee eee ee eerste —_ é int - —_ FOUR ~ SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 ~ THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiae 12, Michigan { Reg. 0.8. Patent Office Daily Except Sunday Published from Taz Powrisc Press Building Harots A Prrzceratp, Publisher (1 Rosset. Bassem Nat'l Adv. Mgr. Conaas N. Cuurcu Hoaacz P. Brovirs Editor Advertising Manager ‘Entered at Post Office, Por tac, Mich. as second class matter MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS eres The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of al] local news printed tp this news- paper, as well as all AP news dispatches. Tue Powrmc Presa ts delivered by carrier for 40 cents a week; where carrier service ig not available, by mail to Oakland and adjoining counties it is $1200 @ year; else- where in Michigan and all other places in the United States $2000 a vear. All mat] su are payabie tm advance. Phone Rontiac FE 2-8181. MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 Gen. Jonathan Wainwright Death of Gen. JonaTHAN M. WAIN- WRIGHT lends sad’emphasis to the lesson taught by one of the most tragic chap- ters of American military history. It was his destiny to take command over our Philippine forces after Gen. MacARTHUR had been ordered to Aus- - tralia by President RoosEvELT to pre- pare for the counterattack. : * *x* . * What happened thereafter on Bataan and in Corregidor was ~ disastrous. WAINWRIGHT’s piti- : fully small, poorly equipped force ~ - never had a chance against the million strong enemy. There - nition for their obsolete howitz- ers. - WAINWRIGHT’s job was to fight as long ~as he could and he did it well. But ~ Bataan fell April 9, 1942, and Corregidor ~ held out until May 6, three months after ~ MACARTHUR’s departure. x * * Then came months of imprisonment =for WAINWRIGHT and his men who sur- ~vived the death march from Corregidor =to Camp O’Donnell.’ Friends attribute . his ill health and death in San Antonio -at 70 to his 39 months in Japanese prison camps. Probably one of the happiest postwar days for Gen. WAINWRIGHT was Septem- ber 2, 1945. That day he watched his conquerors sign the articles of surren- der. on the deck of the battleship Missouri. ° * * * “Terrible as was the ordeal of captivity,” Wainwright wrote, “I often feel we were spared chiefly to warn against an infinitely more terrible fate. The price of our unpreparedness for World War II was staggering to the’ imagination. The price-of our unpréparedness for a World War III would be death to millions of us and the disappearance from the earth of its greatest nation.” In the words of President E1sen- HOWER, General WAINWRIGHT'S example of courage, fortitude and unshakable patriotism long will be an inspiration to Americans and free men everywhere. Ike Wants Item Veto Representative Keatine is the moving spirit behind a ‘proposed Constitutional __amendment to give the President the long needed item veto. As a result of a call at the White House to discuss the amendment, the New York Republican knows he has strong Presidential support. His visit occurred just after President EIsEN- ’ HowsR had signed one of the large ap- propriation bills. * * * This contained several items Mr. EISENHOWER considered need- less and wasteful. But he cduld not do anything about them without rejecting the entire bill. The result was that the President voiced great enthusiasm for the proposed amendment. | * * * There isn’t any doubt that such an amendment would save millions in operating costs annually. All Presidents have wanted this power. But members of Congress always have opposed it be- cause it would end their habit of using riders to slip pork barrel items into major appropriations. When this matter comes up in Congress taxpayers should urge - their Senators and Representa- - tives to give the amendment their | support. | SSS ‘ Tue U. S. may be a bit premature in beginning to rebuild South Korea, as Synoman Rugs is likely to go berserk later and get it torn up again. wasn't even any reserve ammu- - No Votes in This . - Thoughtful readers of the news must be amazed when some Congressman rushes into print without thinking things through. . A case in point is that of Rep. PHILBIN, Democrat of Massachu- setts. He told newsmen that at the next session of Congress he would take action to halt the Revenye Department’s. door-to- door hunt for Federal income tax delinquents. * * * . The Bay State lawmaker said the de- partment’s field survey smacked too much of “Gestapo and OGPU methods of the police state.” —— He apparently had forgotten that the check in the New England area yielded surprising results. In two days agents collected $80,000 from ‘8,8000 persons who hadn’t filed returns. Another $162,000 came in from those who hadn’t been questioned but had become fright- ened. kt *& «i In Mr. PHILBIN’s opinion it’s alh wrong for the Revenue Department to make everyone pay up. What elearly is an effort at total tax collection is ‘“‘tax gouging” to the, Congressman. We don’t know if any of Rep. ‘Philbin’s constituents were among those who didn’t play fair with Uncle Sam. But we strongly suspect his statement won’t win him any votes from those who paid up without a visit from the revenue men. Le \ “THE jet-propelled automobile is just around the corner,” asserts an automo- tive engineer. Good gosh! — which corner? , The People’s Business Homer's In Again Senator Bocsts His Stock to Get “GOP Nod for 1954 By JACK I. GREEN LANSING (#)—U. S. Sen. Homer Ferguson (R-Mich) seems to have reversed the political thinking of 1953 and cinched the chance to seek another term in 1954. Ferguson has been diligently stumping Michi- gan in the hot late summer, mending his fences and doing his best to quiet the talk that he can't be ré-elected. Politicians, sighting along those fences, seem to be agreed that the, silver-haired senator has done a pretty good job of mending and that he can uave the nomination again next year if he wants it. , What's more, Ferguson and his friends, including party leaders, have pretty’ well smothered the gossi; that he would be kicked upstairs to get him out of-the race next year. Advised by spiteful reporters that Ferguson's _ stock appears to be rising again; a Democratic spokesman cracked, “Well, it couldn't have gotten any lower.”’ That Democrat voiced what a lot of Republicans felt earlier this year. The GOP buzzed with reports that Homer couldn’t be re-elected, that he would be appointed to some cushy and dignified federal post to save his face and leave the way clear for a more vigorous candidate who might have’ to take on Gov. Williams in 1954 for the senaforship. . There was a period of apparent indecision in the ‘Republican councils and then the high command moved to turn the tide. Arnold J. Levin, the press chief for the State Central Committee, was sent to Washington, D. C., to look over Ferguson's publicit” machinery. Whether Levin was responsible, or mot, Ferguson's name began to get better newspaper play. Then Ferguson, probably with a little nudging, came back to his home state in the off-year and stumped like a live candidate. The in info-med circles now is that Ferguson did himself a lot cf good, that there is little talk of dumping him and that his re- election next year will be backed by somewhat the same moneyed, hard-hitting crew which elected, U. S. S€n.r€harles Potter last year. It may be that many organi Republicans privately would prefer another candidate, but they see no way they can dump the chairman of the Senate Republican Policy Committee without awaking a storm of Democratic cat- calls. Of course, for reasons of health or bad political breaks, Ferguson could yet wind up on the sidelines next year. but it looks now like he will have the loyal, if somewhat unenthusiastic, support of Michigan Republicanism. The GOP is not unmindful of what a scrap this may mean if Williams decides to run for the senate. and determined to go through to the end with all it has. Some idea of the task ahead can be had from two- incidents related recently by a Republican observer. ~ This observer said he attended a banquet- rally outstate for Ferguson this summer. A crowd of party loyalists was gathered in the lobby exchanging shop talk until the soup- was on. . He said that Ferguson arrived, walked straight through the crowd without a word of greeting But it seems committed to the scrap _ f, Yer +s , ae ee a oe Stews ’ /; ‘ ra , ¢ f ’ . i uf * ’ , R , 3 3 : The ended Heart THEM THAT ARE OF A BROKEN HEART’ Ax4.34:/8 ¢' EG OT- y “~ Be < it org mere, % Vo ae = SAR aren) = ~ vy Voice of the People Press Reader Says Petty Gambling Is Bad for Young People; Leads to Trouble Later (Letters will be condensed when neces- sary because of lack of space. Ful] name, adaress and telephone number of the writer must accompany letters but these will not be published {f the writer so requests, unless the letter is critical in its nature.) Old Satan is surely working over- time in these later days and is stcmpeding many of our people into breaking both the laws of God and of our country. But the Devil is a liar and the father of lies; and through his cunning is making them believe that ‘‘petty’”” gambling is okay if done for fun or for, “charity.’’ Petty gambling starts many a youth on the downward road to destruction. We Christians should know that such teachings are not evangeli-: eal, in other words, teachings of THOUGHTS FOR TODAY He doth execute the judgment of the fatheriess and widow, and loveth the stranger, in giving him food and raiment.—Deut. 10:18. " & * * * O brother man, fold to thy heart thy brother; Where pity dwells, the love of God is there; To worship rightfully is to love each other, Each smile a psalm, each kindly deed a prayer. —Whittier. th: New Testament. In fact, it is only “robbing Peter to pay Paul,”’ and cannot be Christian. A Christian Reader Says Man Is Naturally Evil Being In reply to Leona Gould about man thinking nothing but good, the Bible says man’s thoughts are continually evil and that his heart is deceitful above all things: and that out of his heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, etc. Scripture calls all unrighteous- ness sin, the penalty for which is death. Since Christ died for our sins, man’s inherent good ‘lies in Christ as Saviour, not man’s thinking. The natural man cannot change his thinking outside of Christ. How then is it possible for him to justify himself before God with his thoughts? Herbert H. Smith 1286 Vinewood St. Ann Francts Skeptical About Curing Diseases Most of these organizations that collect. money from the public to tion. The rest in torture of animals. This is both degrading and de- plorable. There is always that wonderful cure just around the corner, but of course it will take millions of .dollars and many years. . Ann Francis 60 Hillside Drive. Just A Smile For Safety A young couple, on hearing of the arrival of a friend's» fourth child. sent a play-pen as a gift. The ‘‘thank you note” left them somewhat astonished. “Thank you so much for the pen.” it said. “It is a perfect God- send. I sit in it every week end and read, and the children can't get near me.” Forecast Boy friend — I hate to tell you this, Junior, but you're losing your sister. At the party last night she promised to be my wife. Junior — Huh, that’s what. the party was for. . Fifty-fifty Passenger: ‘‘What's thé use of time-tables if your trains are always late?’ Porter: ‘‘What's the use of wait- ing-rooms if they're not?’ Days of All Faiths Labor Day Was Officially Established by Congress as National Holiday in ‘94 BY CANON H. V. HARPER Workingmens’ holidays are by no means a new thing. In ancient Greece artisans had a day on which they paraded through the streets carrying torches. In mediaeval Europe each trade had its guild and each guild had its patron saint, on whose feast day all the guild members laid off work and celebrated. Thus there were as many Labor Days as there were guilds. United States had no Labor Day “Christianity is concerned with a man’s work and how he does it, Aunt Het and tomorrow before the working- man's holiday. many American Churches will observe Labor Sun- day. Preachers will point. out that the first of all labor legisiation is contained in the Fourth Com- mandment, and that man’s high- est destiny is to be a co-laborer with God in the still unfinished ancient belief of Jews. Thurs- day is Rosh Hashanah (New Year’s Day) in the Jewish calen- EF a f : eka gS 4] <8 f | Riek E their duties to the Creator and to each other as fellow-creatures. The other is that Rosh Hashan- ah is the day on which the Creator judges the men whom he has made. According to ancient tradition, the fate of both men and nations for the next year is now written in Heaven. But the book is not yet sealed, and everyone has 10 days in which to repent and ask for mercy. At the end of the 10 day period comes Yom Kippur, the great fast of Atonement, and the book is finally closed. Case Records of a Psychologist . Modern Clergymen Follow Christ’s Positive Gospel Religions differ widely. Some are introvertive and not in- terested in winning new con- verts. But Christianity is noted for its positive outlook and misstonary zeal. That’s why it has zoomed so greatly in building. , schools, YMCA and CYO buildings, etc. By DR. GEORGE W; CRANE ‘ Case H-378: Paul S., aged 60, is the son of a Baptist minister. “Dr. Crane, what would you list as the selling points for Christi- anity?’’ he asked me. “I have listened to preachers and evangelists all my life. About the only selling point they offer is escape from the penalty of sin. “They try to keep their parish- joners out of hell. They seem to' think the Gospel can be sold on its death benefits. “But Christ said that he came r s0 we human beings could enjoy the more abundant life. That seems a positive idea to me, yet So many clergymen are nega- tive.” Most of our modern clergymen don't fall into the category of these old-fashioned orators who tried to sell religion as an escape from hell. ~ Instead, they follow Christ's pos- itive teachings. For Christianity “is Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE It Is My Fault Why do I always think of you... Asleep or wide awake?...It is because I understand... . I made a great mistake . . . We could have stayed together, dear . . . So many years ago . . . When you were in my arms and when... I said I loved you so. . . But now the years have multiplied . . . And age is quite a fact . . . And there is nothing left for us . . . To add or to subtract .. . It might have been a different world . . . If you had given me . . . Your charms, your kisses and your love... . With every memory . . . But in the beauty of your face ... The sweetness of your name... I must confess that after all...I am the one to blame. (Copyright 1953) Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER Have you been following that hassel ben ruckus over in Mar- rakesh? It's a. dilloloo. The French settled it in their quaint diplomatic vive la man- ner. They say the more it changes the more it is the same, and the less you have. The twin Bedouins of upper Sahara got fed up with the beau geste business of always having the Foreign Legion winning in the last reel. So they got up on their high camel and rode off in a cloud of dudgeon. The Haji“Tamoo of Mezzoura-Arkansa had his eye on the Sultanate. He wanted to play piano in the Kasbah. s] But Hollywood was always giv- ing the best roles to featured play- ers. so the Sultan revolted. He took hig dancing girls and soft music over to Petrillo. What happens? Moulay Mo- hammed Ben Afra is the new Pasha. Peace and goodwill is louder than ever. There naturally was a crisis in the French cabinet. The premier couldn't find his high silk hat. Our own state department doesn't like what happened in El Morocco. It likes to be consulted «the inevitable. This is a diplomatic victory for French intrigue and will add a outstanding as an_ extrovertive faith. Most of the other religions of the past have operated as a re- ligious ‘‘closed shop.’’ Only their ae race or fellow members count- . S So they weren’t greatly inter- ested in missionary work, for they didn’t want to include peo- ple of other races or color. They were smug little groups of ego- tists who thought they alone would enter heaven. But Jesus reversed that idea. He opened his positive Gospel to 4 ‘a al i a everybody. He sent out mission- aries ahead and urged his follow- ers te go into all nations. Moreover, he told people to quit thinking of their own selfish goals and to turn their attention out- ward (extroversion). So he gave us the Golden Rule, which is the ovftstanding recipe for extroversion of personality. Christ was unique, therefore, in doing things. He fed the hung- ry and the sick and of- fered a spiritual toaic to the * idealists who were being smoth- ered under pagan materialism. Other religions demanded that babies be thrown to the crocodiles, or into the fiery furnace.of an idol named Baal. Or even into the Ganges River, up till the be- ginning of this cenfury. But not Christianity: And many religions stressed de- tails and ritual far too much. They might try to restrict’ the diet, but no true religion can be developed at the gastric level: Real religion is a product of intelligence, It is based on brain hungers, not on menus or taboo foods. Jesus was thus never guilty of making mountains out of molehills. He was the great exponent of “horse sense’ in human relations. In his day, the religionists in- sisted on, a slavish deference to the Sabbath. They worshipped the letter of the law rather than the spirit of it. To shock them out of this hypo- critical view, Jesus tartly informed them, ‘‘The Sabbath was made for man; not man for the Sabbath.” This obviously means that we could change the Sabbath from Saturday or Sunday to Wednes- day or any other day in the week, and that would not matter, for the purpose of any so-called Sabbath is too offer mankind a day for worship of God, Jesus thought big. And he ad- vocated positive thinking, not neg- ative, critical or myopic attitudes. The “Compliment Club” is a perfect example of Christ's extro- vertive, positive outlook. So if you want to talk about your neighbors, do so via compliments for their virtues. (Copyright, Hopkins Syndicate Inc.) From Our Files 15 Years Ago COUNT COVADONGA of Spain, former heir to the throne, killed in Miami auto crash. REPRESENTATIVE George A. Dondero announces candidacy for fourth term. 1938 IS “Year of Big Rain” for county; precipitation for first eight months is 30.88 inches. 20 Years Ago VIRGINIA VAN WIE wins wom- en’s national golf championship. U.S. WARSHIP sent to Havana to aid Americans as government is seized by rebels. SLEEPING SICKNESS hits Michigan; four in Grand Rapids il Writer Had Relief Taking Daily Ca-D but Sairy Gamp Spoiled Things for Her By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. THE MAIL BOX Sairey Gamp I had started taking Ca and D as it was apperent- knew cases where it resulted in calcium de- posits—and she says this is not an old wife’s tale but the finding of a noted authority ... (M. L.) Answer — Now, shucks, we were going great guns until along came Sairey Gamp. the vitamin B-12 can reach the blood stream is by shots... (E. R.) Answer — B-12 with folic acid is as effective by mouth as it is by injection. Send stamped, self-ad- dressed envelope for pamphlet The Red Blood Vitamin. Mineral Ot) Is it harmful to take two tablespoon- fuls of mineral of] every night reg- ularly? «(G.-M. A.) Answer — Yes. It interferes with Ne Wet Wash After a bath my skin stings, burns and itches unendurably ... (Mrs. D. H. 8.) Answer — Why bathe? Anyway, use no soap, no hot water. No clothing — or the less the better : E BE BE Z e i ig =4 5 ! i a letters, not more than one page words long, pertaining to personal and h , will be answered by . Brady tf a stamped self ts . (Copyright 1953) f a! THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 FIVE OPEN TONIGHT ‘til 9 - SUNDAY ‘til 4 P. M. SALE! Men’s Dept. Store 1 Block North of Wilson Ave. 516 to 520 S. Saginaw St. FE 2-2784 — Chief Pontiac Speedway Stock Car Races Sunday Afternoon --- 2:30 P. M. AND LABOR DAY > 100 LAPS of Racing on Oakland County's Only HALF MILE TRACK A Full Program of Stock Car Racing, Trophy Dash — Heats — Pursuit — Semi-Final and 20 Lap Feature _ SPECIAL EVENT Labor Day Powder Puff Derby 20 LAP FEATURE RACE of. OLD MODEL STOCK CARS Time Trials—1 :30 ‘Races—2:30 PARK CHILDREN GEN. ADMISSION FREE FREE $1.20 incl. tax 386 NORTH LAKE ANGELUS ROAD Between Baldwin Ave. and Joslyn Road CHIEF PONTIAC SPEEDWAY NEW POST AHEAD—Recently sworn in as the new U. S. Ambassador to Switzerland, Miss Frances E. Willis, trims rosebushes at her Redlands, Calif. way up through home. Miss Willis is the first woman to work her Service, to become a full-fledged ambassador. Boys’ Club Members Paintings Sell Well BOSTON @ — Most unusual of this year’s exhibition at the big Boston Museum of Fine Arts was a set of 200 paintings and draw- ings done in the past three years by members of boys’ clubs in different sections of the city. Many of the paintings were sold and the museum, itself, bought several. Fifty of the boys’ works of art were selected for a traveling show to tour the United States. TV REPAIRS Work Guaranteed! HAMPTON TV 286 State St. FE 4-2525 careful... United Press Phote the ranks of the U. S. Foreign Mackinac Shrine Will Honor Doctor MACKINAC ISLAND (UP) — A $40,000 restoration project has been started. here to commemorate a 15l-year-old date in U. S. medical history. . ; State medical leaders and politi- | cal figures joined in ceremonies to lay the cornerstone of a shrine honoring Dr. William Beaumont whose analytical studies on human digestive processes in 1822 marked a medical milestone. The project is expected to be completed next year and turned over to the Mackinac Island State Park Commission. Dr. Beaumont’s studies were made possible when Alexis St. Martin, a young trapper, was wounded accidentally by a shotgun blast. The victim continued to live but the wound left a gaping “win- | dow’ in St. Martin’s stomach through which Dr. Beaumont ob- served digestive processes. His findings provided medical men with concepts of reactions of the human stomach to various| types of food, liquor, and even) emotions. Mop-up Crew Finds Victim ‘Smilin’ Thru’ IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (#—Three cars tangled on a highway and the driver of one of them looked into one of the other cars and called an ambulance. There was blood all around, he thought. It turned out that no one was seriously hurt and Mrs. Darwin Champion was even able to smile through tears as she wiped red paint from a spilled can from her hair. located offices. LOW COST TITLE ONE You are not limited to one transdction through us at a time, we are here to serve all your needs. One of Our Many Services! Property Improvement Loans No Money Down! --- Three Years to Pay! We're here to help you with your home building,. modernization or repair problems, feel free to stop in and discuss them with us in either of our two conveniently sf) wi JER OD ‘ 4 a oF. r # . a 16 E. Lawrence 407 Main Street PONTIAC ROCHESTER +f nn en eS eee Too Stiff a Sentence | HIGH POINT, N. C. (UP) — Marion E, Johnson, 17, and his 14 year-old companion, seized in a charge of stealing two horses in Leesburg, Va., overheard an officer ask whether Virgina still lists horse theft as a ‘hanging offense.” The two youths began to breathe again after another officer said | **no.”* | One of the greatest investments you make in your lifetime is in your home ... That is why it pays to be extremely It is better to be safe than sorry:. .. To make that saying a reality ... follow these simple rules ... Know your real estate dealer or contractor ... Deal only with well established firms ... Read contracts carefully .». Don’t sign a blank contract ... Don’t be high pressured ... Never sign a contract certificate before job is finished. BETTER B of the - Pontiac Chamber of Commerce Phone FE 5-6148 NO... before you buy or build a home ... DIG for tke facts USINESS BOARD Waldron Hotel Bldg. Spending less and less time in your recreation room because it smells musty? Concerned because expensive paneling is warped, aad doors won't close? Win back that valuable living space— dry out the air with an electric dehumidifier! A dehumidifier’s thirst is enormous. Ic removes as much as 3 gallons of water from damp air every 24 hours: Electric dehumidifiers are compact— easily moved from one trouble spot to another: They pleg in, jest like a floor lamp: CEE YOUR DEALER or Detroit Edison ee ee ee ee ; A AN OO Aa at ge ne - = ee THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 Women Must Often Choos e Between Security Now and Future Too Many Girls Waste Their Energy by Daydreaming About Wrong Lads By ELIZABETH WOODWARD It’s normal enough for a girl to want to dream about somebody. It gives her something to do with her spare time. Keeps her from being lonely. Her own private thoughts keep her company, tease her, tantalize her, and on the whole make her quite happy. ‘Cause it’s a real pessimist who can’t make her dreams come true—in her dreams. Funny thing is that some, girls do their dreaming about the wrong guys. Sue dreams about Pete be- cause he’s the only boy she knows. Marge dreams about Bill because, though not exactly her type, he’s become a habit. Fran dreams about that guy she sees every day at the bus stop—she doesn’t know his name or where he goes—but his face haunts her throughts, While Edith spends all her daydreaming mo- ments recalling the one time she met that lad named Mike. It’s easy enough for some girls to tell when a lad’s worth day- dreaming time. It’s pretty hard to convince some others that it’s wasted steam, But here’s another try. We'll begin with Carol who writes like this: ‘“‘Dear Miss Woodward: I’m 15- and I met this boy at a park. He was operating some_ children’s amusements, and while my kid brother wag on them he kept star- ing at me. Soon he began talking with me and we seemed to hit it off just right. To Learn the Merle Norman Way to a Lovely Complexion Call FE 2-4010 for FREE Demonstration and Makeup 405 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. ywvevwvwevwve,. Fall Term Tues., Sept. 8 (Evening School Sept. 10) Day, Half-day’ Evening Gregg Shorthand Speedwriting Stenotype Stenograph Higher Accounting Business Administration Executive Secretarial Bookkeeping Typewriting Dictaphone Comptometer Calculator Call, Phone or Write for Details THE | BUSINESS INSTITUTE 7 West Lawrence St. Pontiac FE 2-3551 Veteran Approved EVERYONE IS TALKING... about the marvelous rug cleaning by this old es- tablished firm. ‘Carpet comes back brighter and better. Try it! DOMESTIC 9x12 RUGS $qs5 € i= New Way RUG and CARPET CLEANERS 42 Wisner Street FE 2-7132 “He gave my brother a lot of tickets for other rides so I wouldn’t go away. I’m sure he lost his job because of that for I haven’t seen him down there lately. “I know that I like him and would like to go out with him, but I don’t know whether to ask about him and try to find him so I can apologize for making him lose his job.” “You see, if he’s still working there and found out I asked about him, he might think I was chasing after him, which I wouldn’t want —because, after all, he might not feel the same way about me. Can you please help me out?” Yours was a one-shot encounter with a strange lad, yet here you are using your daydreaming time feeling sure he’s the love of your life, feeling sure you're guilty of making him lose his job, feeljng sure that if you haunt the amuse- ment park enough you'll see him again, feeling sure if you just had another chance to talk all your dreams would come true. Such daydreaming is sheer tor- ture. It’s fun to give a guy you meet-once an occasional passing thought in retrospect — but it. seems such a waste to keep a stranger the only one on the mind. Then there’s the guy you loved a while and then stopped loving. Stopped with ‘a violent smash. Too many girls keep on dreaming of guys they’ve fought with. Sort of like locking the stable after the horse has been stolen. Here’s one such who writes: ‘“‘Dear Miss Woodward: I broke off with Tom about two weeks. ago and I haven't been speaking to him since. ‘Now, I’m.going to have a party and I want to invite him because I still like him very much, but I don’t know whether he likes me. Do you think I should?” I can’t really imagine why you’d want to, You broke off with Tom for reasons you con- sider perfectly sound. He made you so mad you haven’t spoken to him for two whole weeks. What can he possibly have done to reinstate himself in your good graces? What can have made you change your mind about the horrible crea- ture? Whatever he did two weeks ago made you furious, whatever he said annoyed you—and would rile you just as much today. Why give him a second thought—even in your day dreams? worsted flannel fabric. * The tattersal vest, at one time considered only correct for wear with sports or country clothes, is now an integral part of town and business outfits. The vest worn in this picture carries a red and black overplaid on a white ground Please don’t roast your baby in the sun. Any Mom who uses an oven thermometer in baking should know better than that. But every day one sees little tots broiling in the summer sunshine, with mother sitting under a parasol quite aloof from it all. An agonizing sunburn can scare a little tot into the shade for a lifetime. But if Mom takes time and energy to instruct her child in the proper procedures of sun basking, a good time can be had outdoors. Here are some tips worth ob- serving if baby and Mom plan to enjoy their outdoor sessions this summer: ’ 1. Before your youngster leaves the house have her assemble sun- glasses, suntan lotion, a hat with a brim, long coveralls, long-sleev- ed light-weight blouse, a large Turkish towel. Ss iGuard Kids From Sun When Playing on Beach 2. When she arrives at the beach, show her how to apply the sun- tan lotion. : 3. Children who have been sit- ting in the sun are likely to shiver after a dip in cool water, When she has been blotted dry with a towel, have a warm sweater ready to keep her from chilling until she warms up again. 4. Bring an alarm clock so ex- posures to the sun may be timed. Time consuming relaxers such as reading and . knitting are likely to take your thoughts from your child until she is scorched, Be sure she wears sunglasses or little cotton eye pads when she is, lying down in the sun. , 5. Keep her from munching food and drinking icy drinks while she is in the direct sunshine. When it is time to have lunch, sit in a shady spot or under a parasol. Please Note: We will be closed both Sunday and Labor Day, September 6 and 7, | Hosts Rude Not to Wait: for Guests, Shouldn‘t Eat Until Delayed Company Arrives By EMILY POST _ A wife writes: ‘‘My husband and I were invited to Sunday dinner at my husband's cousin’s house at 2 o'clock. He and his wife live about 40 miles from here. “We left early enough but traffic on the highway was very bad and we were delayed. At five minutes past 2 we were still on the road, and wanting to reassure our hos- tess that we were coming, I called to explain our delay and said that we would be there in about 20 minutes. ~ on our way. ‘‘When we arrived the table was completely cleared. Soon after- wards the hostess brought in two plates with our dinner on them and we sat and ate alone. “I was so upset I could eat nothing, and if it wasn’t for the host, who is a wonderful person, I would have left then and there rather than be subjected to this inexcusable rudeness. I would very much like your opinion of this situation.” Answer: As you had telephoned you were going to be late, they should have delayed the meal until you arrived. It was unthinkably rude to leave you eating alone. Dear Mrs. Post: If I invite some- one to my house for luncheon or dinner and that person cannot come on that day but suggests coming another time, or if that person ac- cepts but then later telephones to say she cannot come, am I still obliged to invite her at her con- venience, or is my obligation ful- filled? Then isn’t it her turn to invite me? Answer: The person you invite has no right to suggest another day and you are not obliged to invite her at her convenience. Strictly speaking, an invitation cancels the obligation whether or not it is accepted. Dear Mrs. Post: One sees so many apparently well-dressed wom- en on the street today wearing gloves and no hats. To me this seems all wrong. I'd like your opinion. Answer: A few years ago you would have been right, but today even well-dressed women are ap- pearing out without hats. Cawre Wher Quick color for your kitchen! These 8-to-the-inch cross - stitch motifs are so simple to do. Put them on your new kitchen towels —delight a bride or hostess! A child could do this easy em- broidery. Pattern 623; transfer 6 motifs each about 444x8 inches. Send 25 cents in coins for this ' | pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- Send tern for first-class mailing. to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly pattern number, your name, address and zone. ENT Lester $10 moneny $20 18 E. Huron St. BRAND NEW Betsy Ross Spinet A Beautiful Piano with a Magnificent Tone GALLAGHER susie co. A Delivers 1| Wash Garbage Cans Garbage cans will become a source of bad odor unless washed with soap frequently. This should include the inside of the lid of the outer can as well as the inner | i} z >isir|>i al ees | Zjmir ial ALS Rimi olz|>F arbi DIARY Aim + al-4jol-1 } O}O} Z| aial> >ji9 plz mjzi- 0 for Avérage, Herbert Sondheim, famous Amer- ican designer noted for his tailor- ing skill, designed this two-piece dress with charming simplicity. He artfully attains crispness with gentle curves, as witnessed in the pockets and jacket front, closed with a row of buttons and a pert bow at the neck. The gusset, so loved by high fashion designers, is uniquely cut as part of the sleeve, eliminating a separate insertion of this feature. Note the reed slim skirt is relieved by a-back pleat for walking ease. Originally made of fine wool, this design lends. itself equally well to faille or bengaline. Avail- able in sizes for the average height woman and diminutive sizes for those 5 feet 5 or under. In selecting your pattern size, please use the guide below which nepresents body measurements used by this designer: No. 1154 (Regular Sizes) : Sizes 10 12 14 16 1 Bust 324g 34 «35%4 37) 38% in. Waist 24% 25144 27 2814 30 in. Hip* 33% 35 36% 38 3944 in. *7 inches below normal waistline. No. 854 (Diminutive Sizes) Sizes 10 12 #14 #16 18 Bust 3214 34 «35% 37%) 384% in. Waist 25% 27 28% 30 31% in. Hip 34% 35% 37% 38% 40% in. Size 12 regular requires 25 yards Being Clean Counts in Impressions To make a good impression, see that everything you wear is in perfect condition. There’s nothing sorrier than stained shoes, cos- metic - rimmed scarves, finger- marked buttons, dirt-edged petti coats, dusty handbags,and sticky compacts. An hour a week spent with soap- suds for these little ‘‘extras’’ will pay off enormously — not only in the way you look, but in the way you feel. Allow for Shrinkage If you have an automatic dryer for clothes, many home economists advise buying cotton knit socks, underwear and shirts a size larg- er than usual to allow for shrink- age. PETUNIA! Whittle THIS way Just a bit And you can make Your candles fit / Right, Petunia! Just wrap. steel wool around candle bottoms and twist, and they’ll soon fit a too-small [candle holder. Dress Patterns Designed Diminutive of 54-inch material; size 12:dimin- utive 2% yards of 54-inch fabric. To order Patterns 1154 and 84, address Spadea Syndicate, Inc., P.O. Box 535, Dept. 149, G.P.O., New York 1, N.Y. State size. Send $1.00 for each. Airmail 25 cents extra. New Pattern Booklet 9, including over 100 designs, available at 15 cents. (Copyright 1953) | THINGS TO COME ROW OFTEN FED TO CATTLE tl CHOPPED HAn// which needs much tending, Benefits Less Remunerative Job May Be Best in Long Run Graduating students are often asked, “Which will you choose? A beautiful fullgrown rose or a scrawny bush but which will one day pro- duce hundreds and hundreds of blooms?” . us face the decision be- tween immediate profit or the long range potential. Facing such a problem is the woman whose children are in school and who wants a part- time job. She usually wants it as prepara- tion on a small scale basis for a full-time job when the children are grown. Too often, however, such & woman selects a job which is temporarily profitable and steady, but which will give her little, if any, preparation for her future goal. Unless she is in great financial need, I feel it is vastly better for such a woman to select the field which will give her the best ex- perience. For example, one woman, whom I shall call Mrs. E. H., selected. a part-time job for experience, and she has never regretted it. “I have always loved real es- tate,” she told me, “or I sup- pose I should say, anything about houses and apartments. “When my youngest child en- tered nlirsery school, I faced what might have been a difficult de- cision. But my decision was made easier since I knew that one day I would want to return to the working world full-time. “I was offered two jobs. One was as a real estate salesman, a rental agent on a part-time com- mission basis. Tht other was a straight part-time receptionist job in a commercial firm for a flat $20 a week. “Fortunately for me, I chose the real estate because I really liked it best. I didn’t make many commissions the first couple of years, but I loved every minute of it and I learned a great deal. “When the time came to go after a full-time job, I found that most employers liked my expe- rience. “I now have an excellent job with a carpet manufacturer. I know he would never have hired me if I hadn’t explained my en- thusiasm for houses and apart- ments, and my experience in meet- ing, face-to-face, hundreds of people: who rent and buy them —and who also buy carpets.” Many times the job that pays more, or offers more security in the beginning, is a dead end whereas the job which offers ex- perience can bé the beginning of a remunerative career. (Copyright 1953) Chemical Potent Mosquito Curb WILMINGTON, Del. (INS)—The DuPont Corp. has announcec a new mosquito killing chemical called EPN, an ounce of which is claim- ed to be enough to kill all mos- quito larvae in an acre of water. The company said EPN is parti- cularly effective against DDT-re- sistant strains of the species of mosquitoes which causé malaria and sleeping sickness. DuPont warns, however, that EPN can be used only in diluted form and by trained technicians. Lamps Now Are Created in Co-ordinated Roomtuls By ELIZABETH HILLYER What's a lamp for? Tre H ay i BRE. Pe r Fi HH f : af , : fl : ~ E § Sooner or later, most of*— For the short, fuller figure — fall’s newest, smartest, most slen- derizing line! Drama on the diag- onal—spiced with color or fabric contrast for an elegant effect No fitting problems—this pattern is proportioned to fit and flatter you! Choose crepe or wool with satin or velvet Or combine two colors —so smart! Pattern 4590: Half sizes 1413, 16%, 1842, 20%, 22%4, 2414. Size 16% takes 3% yards 39-inch; 4 yard contrast fabric. pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th Sti New York, N.Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. IF ultra-elegance— PA HES Sleek, mat, almost dull © finish broadcloth; casual lines is the ulti- mates in yqung and slimming fash- ion for a complete wardrobe. : Miss U. E. — Luxurious fabric, dressmaker rather than sstirctly tailored, is the most ageless ‘for- mula for young and elderly ladies. Narrow boxy line suit, under broad- cloth with broadtail trim coat is an around-the-world ultra elegant wardrobe. Easy to Prevent Dry, Rough Skin While Tanning HOLLYWOOD (INS) — Are you letting the sun, salt air or wind dry out your complexion? It is v easy to restore a smooth complexion finish even if you have been exposed to the sun's parching rays, the wind or an - Send 35 cents in coins for this , tern for first-class mailing. Send - +. i A A oe i. sr inf THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 ° SEVEN Exhibit. W Club Work to Be Shown on Friday To .Include Varied Arrangements by Members’ Flowers arranged in kitchen uten- sils, dried flowers, dahlia arrange- ments, aster arrangements, vege- tables and fruit will all be on dis- play Friday at Roosevelt Temple. The occasion is the Better Home and Garden Club Flower show called ‘Gardening Through the Years,” which will be held from 2 until 9 o'clock. Among some of the table ar- rangements, which are done without the aid of painted, arti- ficial or protected plant material, will be a Thanksgiving arrange- ment by Mrs. Clyde Hadden and a golden anniversary by Mrs. J. M. Beauchamp. To carry out the theme of the ing an afrangement called 100 Years Ago. + * * 6 Preparing for the Better Hame and Gar- den Club flower show, “Gardening Through show, Mrs. Walter Seaks is enter- the Years,” Mrs. Alfred Rothweiler of North A Halloweén table will be pre- sented by Mrs. Guy Tubbs; Mrs. C. A. Beamer will do a buffet table, and Mrs. J.,I. Kendel will enter a terrace table arangement. All of the specimen blooms to be exhibited must be grown by the exhibitor and must be named. Another feature of the show will be a conservation table.’A speak: er will be present, both in the afternoon and evening, to dis- cuss soil testing and other phases of conservation. Other exhibits will {include mis- cellaneous flower arrangements, novelty arrangements, African vio- lets, fruits and vegetables. Let Soft Kerchiet Hide Pin Curls _ at Shopping Time Saturday seems to be national beauty day among housewives, if one can judge by the number of busy young mothers seen wearing pin-curls on the street on a Satur- day morning. Baby doesn’t mind seeing moth- er in pin-curls as ste pushes him in his carriage and goes from one errand to another, hauling gro- ceries, wet wash, shoes for repair, and a morning’s worth of other foot-tiring occupations. . Her husband’s not there. He'll see her later, with hair freshly washed, set and brushed out for their Saturday night date: Then who minds the pin- eurled look? No one minds at all —unless this girl goes around with the pins naked to the eye, or covered with a soiled, rose- . spattered kerchief. If her neighbor, who “also wears pin curls on Saturday morning, can look pretty with the coverup she’s hiding her pin-curls under, can’t she, too? . A kerchief in a solid color looks smartest. A soft fabric, like thin silk or chiffon, fits smoothly and ties softly. Or one can get ready- made curler covers with an elas- tic fit to hold pin-curls in place under the type of hat that hides the hair. The girl whos really up on beauty is as neat and well-groomed on Saturday a.m. as on Saturday p.m., even though in a very dif- ferent way. Sliding Door Ends Stooping Problem A laundry hamper with a slid- ing panel in front is a big help. Just slide the panel up ahd let the laundry tumble out when you're ready: to put it in the washing machine. , That’s a whole lot better than having to stand on your head while you fish out the last garment from the bottom! ; Best Study Aid for Child FORT MADISON, Ia. (INS) — Want your youngster,to study this fall? Get a two-by-four. But don’t apply it where you might think, it does the most good. This two-by-four is the recom~ mended surface size (in feet) of a desk to make. it easy for your child to wield a pen and pencil in doing school lessons. A comfortable desk, equipped with the proper tools, not only helps encourage good grades in lessons but also good handwrit- ing. The desk should be 25 to 30 inches from the floor. Its accom- panying. chair should .be straight backed and high enough so the youngster’s eyes are 14 inches above the desk top. To avoid the danger of eye strain, be sure there is proper lighting. the bottom of the shade is at eye level. A table lamp should be about two- feet high with semi - direct lighting. In either case, provide generous-sized shades and _high- watt bulbs. Also, avoid a shiny surface for the desk, A large pastel blotter is a good idea as it reduces glare, and saves the finish as well, The desk should also have spe- cial compartments or shelyes for storing writing equipment and ref- erence books. Miss Steward Feted on Eve of 7-Month Trip Mrs. Frank Thomas of Florence avenue and her daughter, Mrs. Robert Reynells entertained at a cooperative dinner recently in hon- or of Margaret Steward who, is leaving soon for a trip to the Far East, The Philippines, Australia and New Zealand. The table decorations featured placecards representing airmail letters addressed to Miss Steward at each of the main cities that she will visit on her seven-month trip. Those present at the dinner in- cluded Zella’ Walker, Mrs. Fred Conner, Ora Hallenbeck, Faye Don- elson, Mr. and Mrs: Harold Has- kins, Mr. and Mrs. Eskil Carlson and Mr. and Mrs. John Madole. Proper way to remove a glove: Pull tips of fingers, grasp lower edge and pull glove wrong side out venesee Avenue (center) snips a few -_ Two-by-Fou r Be blos- a $e You er ’ ¢ If a floor lamp is used, place it so | over the hand. Straighten glove into shape immediately. at soms, while Mrs. F, D. Allen of Liberty Street (left) and Mrs. J. L. Slaybaugh of Glenwood Avenue discuss the show which will be held Friday at Roosevelt Temple. * * ¢ a~ | Il Feature "Gardening Through Years’ Roesers Vacationed on Ranch Back From the Wild West Dr, and Mrs, W. O. Roeser of Neome drive, with their three sons, Wally, Fred and Douglas, returned home Wednesday after a three- week trip in the West. They visited Yellowstone Na- tional Park and Glacier National Park, where they spent some time on a ranch, While they were there, the boys had a chance to do some horseback riding through the mountains, where they reported they ran into a snowstorm. * * * Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Ellis of Union Lake road have been hosts | for the past three weeks to their son-in-law, daughter and grand- child, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Eliseo and Leslie Dean, of Miami, Fla. The Eliseos are former residents of Union Lake Village. Wednesday evening they were honored with a dinner at the Hotel Statler in Detroit by Mr. and Mrs. Leo Williamson and other friends. They will leave Sept. 9, and going by way of New York, they will arrive home African violets, which will be displayed |owner, Mrs. W. A. in Miami later im the month, ! Seaks of Cooley street, Roosevelt Temple Friday, are being ad-| president of the Better Home and Garden mired by Mrs. J. R. Armstrong of Cooley | Club, points out a particularly large blos- Street (center) and Mrs. Fred Bohlman of \som. The exhibit will be from 2 until 9 South Anderson Street (right), while the |o'clock, Mary J. Davis to Wed Oct. 17 Mr. and Mrs. Cedric C. Davis of Kemp street are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Mary Jane, to Burton Bond. He is the son of Mrs, Thomas Bond of South Tasmania avenue. An Oct. 17 wedding is being plan- ned by the couple. Alpha Xi Delta to Gather ‘lat Get-Acquainted Dinner | North Woodward area Alpha Xi | Deltas will tonvene for a get-to- | gether dinner Sept. 14 at 7 o’- | clock. Hostess for the evening will lbe Mrs. Alex Clark of Walnut ‘Lake road, and honor guests will | be college members living in the area. - For this first meeting of the new year, the executive committee *has Younger Set Is Boss Beam Movie at Be-boppers By DOROTHY ROE (Associated Press Women’s Editor) Teenagers probably constitute America’s most lucrative market, says Bill Thomas, one-half of the Hollywood producing team of Pine and Thomas. They buy more records, see more movies, write more fan let- ters; influence more opinions, shop for'ymore clothes and ice cream sodas than any other group he can think of. And they are more vociferous than anybody about their likes and dislikes. That’s why the two Bills have beamed their next picture, ‘‘Those Redheads from Seattle,” straight at the bop-conscious younger set, using as bait some of their own At an eleven o'clock ceremony " MRS, HERBERT, E..KENDALL Beverly Kleist Wed in Holy Name Rite Beverly Kleist became the bride of Herbert E. Kendall this morning in Holy Name Church. The Clarence A. Kleists of Birmingham are the bride’s ‘ parents, and Herbert is the son of Edward Kendall of Norwich, Conn., and the late Mrs. Kendall. » favorite recording artists such as Teresa Brewer, the Bell Sisters and Guy Mitchell. Says Thomas, a genial ex-news- paperman: “My -own teenage daughter usually won't come near the set when I’m making a picture — movies are old stuff to her, a Hollywood product. ‘But during the filming of ‘‘Red- heads’’ she_brought her pals around in relays, and all of them squealed and swooned all-over the place at the wonder of seeing those life.”’ . The Bills teamed up a .dozen years ago tq produce the kind of pictures they thought the public wanted. Their success through the years has amazed some older hand at the business, especially so since many of their top successes have been on small budgets. Thomas explains how they do it: “‘We keep close to the boss. The boss, in the final analysis, is the man who walks up to the boxoffice and buys a ticket. No matter how artistic or beautiful a movie may be, it can’t be a success unless people pay to see it. ‘We do a lot of traveling around E doing better than ever, says Thom- ; i F peti wo 5 voices on their records come to} arranged for delegates to the na- tional convention to give their re- port. The delegates, Mrs. Leonard Bender and Mrs. Frank West, both of Royal @ak, will also show colored slides and black and white pictures taken during the trip to Pasadena, Calif., where the convention was held. Other pictures will show spots of interest seen during the side trips to Denver, Salt Lake City, San Francisco and Los Angeles. Elected national president at the convention was Dr. Elizabeth G. Van Buskirk, assistant professor oi classics at Elmira College, El- mira, N. Y. Other features of the stay in California were tours of the Walt Disney studios and the campus of the University of California, where a reception was held for the group by t he local Alpha Xi Delta chap- ter. Mrs. Bender, as official dele- gate from Birmingham Alumnae Chapter, served on the courtesy committee of the convention, Assisting Mrs. Clark as hostess .|for the dinner will be Mrs. Donald McGinnis and Mrs. George Lytle of Royal Oak, Mrs. Robert Harvey of Huntington: Woods and Mrs. J. J. Hogan of- Birmingham. Pink, Blue Shower Held at Evans Home Howard street was honored Thurs- day evening at a pink and blue shower given by Mrs. Kenneth Evans of Preston avenue. . Those attending were the honoree’s mother, Mrs. Albert Gra- ham, Mrs. Henry Green, Mrs. Walter Babb, Jean Lucas, Mrs. Patricia Huffman, End Smoking Mess With Plastic Cases If there’s a smoker in the house, you're probably heir to tobacco shreds all over the bath, and occasional packs of wet, soggy mess up the bath cleans it up. Coming Events Porget-Me-Not Birthday Tuesday at 12:30 for a gart, 16 Jefferson Bt. Group will meet Tuesds a coopersitve iumeb at 12:30 vy home Mrs. Dewey Allen, 8 Liberty Mrs. Frank Lawrence of West { Planning a holiday weekend at their cabin in Grayling are Mr. and Mrs, Royce Lazenby and children Carol, Marlene and Larry of Dover Road, * * » Mr, and Mrs. Maurice Brann and family of Indianapolis are the weekend guests of the C. E. Coonfields of South Avery road. * * * Soon to be leaving for Colum- | bia, Mo. and Stephens College, is Grieta Van Coevering. Grieta, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Van Coevering of Commerce road, will attend the annual Campus Leaders Confer- ence on Sept. 10. She is the chair- man of the mediations and ideals committees of Senior Hall. Another ‘Stephens’ Susie’ who will be returning to school this fall is Sally Jo Barnett, daughter of the Archie Barnetts of Oneida road, * bd * Mrs. Louise Anderson and. Dew- ey Anderson of LaGrange, Ill. are among those in town to attend the wedding of voan Pearl Freder- iksen of Baldwin avenue and Ray- mond E. Bell of Elm street. Others include Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ander- son and family, also of LaGrange, Iil., and Mrs. Alfretta Sinkey of Strathroy, Ont. 5 Shopping Tips Help You Select New Fall Coat Fall coat-hunting time is here. Since you're seen in a coat per- haps half of your waking hours as long as chilly weather lasts, it’s a crucial purchase from a beauty angle. These shopping tips may help you. 1. If you wear a suit under a coat, wear one while trying the coat on. (If the ‘weather’s too warm to wear a suit while shop- ping, have the salesgirl let you borrow a suit for this purpose from the store’s stock.) 2. Do you want the coat for country or city wear? Tweed plaids, checks and stripes are for country, while flannel, broad- cloth, doeskin, cashmere, wool Cheviot, fleece, boucle, and ve- lour are city fabrics. 3. Black, brown, navy, gray. and beige are your basic colors. There are very few women into whose wardrobe red, green or gold coats fit well. Have a list of your wardrobe colors with you and consider them all when choosing a coat color. 4. Fur trim adds to the ex- pense of a coat and limits its usefulness. Such a coat is gen- erally too dressy for all-day wear but not dressy enough for eve- ning. 5. If you're under 35, ask your- self if the coat is sophisticated enough for you. If you're over 35, beware of a matronly coat and be sure it has an air of youth about it. Vacuum Cleaners Good for Kitchen Keeping one’s hard - surface floors dusted is a wise precaution. Dust and dirt are gritty. They in- jure the appearance of a fine floor in almost no time at ail. ‘There is a special vacuum clean- er attachment for bare floors, which also should be used around the edge of any room where the carpet or rug does not extend clear to the walls. . Home economists declare that the use of the vacuum cleaner on the kitchen floor is almost as good as a scrubbing. & Snel JUDY WOLVERTON Mr. and Mrs. Leon V. Wolverton of Ivy street are announcing the engagement and approaching mar- riage of their daughter, Judy, to Robert Gerald Thompson of Mil- ford. Nov. 25 has been set as the wedding date. Exciting Red | Lingerie Is Fall Fashion You will catch a mood of gay excitement when you slip on the eye-stopping red. being shown in a fall lingerie collection. And there is no limit to the varied uses for this color under your fall costumes. These bright and fashionable ad- ditions to your intimate apparel wardrobe are shown in nylon tri- cot in a rosy flame shade called, “Firelight ned.” The color is featured not only in the fabric of the garments themselves, but also in the matching nylon nets, laces and ribbons used to trim them. The red is a startling foil to basic shades, offering a vivacious flash of color uhder navy, grey and black. If you like a bit of color contrast to gusset from a slit skirt, what could be more imagina- tive than red? Whatever your age, you'll enjoy the fun of wearing a matched set of red underthings. Each of the pieces is trimmed with delicate lace and net, all in nylon. Sorority to Send Extra Delegates For Convention More th sent to the Sigma Beta Convention in October; it was decided when Psi Chapter met Thursday evening at the YWCA. The extra delegates, from both Psi Chapter and the newly-formed Beta Alpha Chapter, will enable the girls to entertain at the con- vention with a skit. The gathering will be held in Fort Wayne, Ind. At the Thursday meeting Irs. Eugene Russell reported on future activities to raise funds for the national charity project. The group atso decided to send a nominee for ‘Sigma Beta Girl of the Year,’’ who will be chosen at the convention. Mrs. Keith VanKleek was chosen as the nominee. Beta Alpha Chap- ter members were guests at the meeting. . Hostess to Sorority Mrs. Robert Holloway of Garland avenue, Sylvan Lake, was hostess Thursday evening when members of Beta Theta Chapter of Lambda Chi Omega sorority met for the in- stallation of officers. one delegate will be Detroit Rite Solemnized Friday Night Suzanne Caspar, Lt. Roger R. Vogel Repeat Vows Suzanne Caspar, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jean Caspar Jr. of Venice drive, was married at 8 o'clock Friday evening in the’ May- flower Congregational Church, De- troit, to Lt. Roger R. Vogel. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ray- mond A. Vogel of Detroit. White lace over satin fashioned the wedding gown, with the full A lace cap held a fingertip veil and she carried stephanotis and ivy. Julie Vogel, sister of the bride- groom, was maid of honor and bridesmaids included Mrs. John McConnell, Mrs. Richard Alban, Mrs. David VanderKloot and Barbara Reynolds. They all wore champagne cole ored, antique taffeta with brown net headdresses and they carried bronze chrysanthemums. Joseph T. Morrow of Summit, N. J., was best man and ushers were Robert Johnson, Ear! J. Cline ot Grand Blanc, William McIntosh, John V. White of Bay City and Bruce Wales. A reception followed Lake Country Club. Mrs. Caspar’s gown was of iri- descent green taffeta and she wore a small matching hat. at Pine Mrs. Vogel wore pale mauve taffeta with a matching hat, Both mothers wore orchid cor- sages. For her wedding trip to Florida the bride wore a beige faille suit with a brown hat. Note to Students: ‘Classmates See Hair From Rear Teen-agers, your classmates sit behind you at school desks and perhaps form opinions about you from your hair style and grooming. Here are some hair habits you won't want to fall into, if you'd have your classmates’ admiration: 1. Combing hair with fingers while listening to lectures or twin- ing your fingers around_a favorite curl. , 2. Scratching your scalp thought- fully. This means your hair and scalp’ need oil treatments, unless it’s just a bad habit. $. Poorly conditioned hair that causes dandruff and loose hairs to fall on your shoulders and back. 4. Going without a shampoo for too long so that an everwidening circle of grease spreads from the center of your scalp. People who are taller than you see this. 5. Overtight permanents, especi- ally when the hair is long and in need of thinning, that cause a frizzy halo of fluff to stand out like a bushwoman’s. tends« to stringiness. Set it if only to give it shape and form. You need not aim for curliness. 7. An over sophisticated hairdo that belongs on a woman, not a girl. The latest high-style hair fashions are, in most cases, not suitable for girls of school age. If you must use inflammable cleaning fluids, keep them stored away from the house, and keep con- tainers tightly closed. eae sioo he ste? 5 CRE i 5 ees Be £ Be. x 1S 0 SOR Pree oe POO : ia < Oe eon a eX The navy chambray denim wrap around |navy cuffs, pocket and coat dress (left) banded in white, has a|the one piece wide tuxedo type shawl collar and ties in| worn se back. Red and white striped denim with La . 2 : Ni ee 6 SRE iy ns hie he a ea * button trim forms prevent (right) which can be floor-length skirt falling over hoops. : ,. 6.° Absolutely straight hair that seeneeveeeewrevne eee eeoerweexeene EIGHT 98-year-old Isaac Morris is in| his 61st year as pastor-of a Quaker Church in Paoli, Ind. | THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 Sunday Sermonette THE NURSERY Lutherans Have Surplus of Young Ministers LAFAYETTE, Ind.—Most Protes- Doctor Puts Up Group Attends s . e ST. MATTHEW'S tant denominations have out “help Shrin e on awn Peer through the plate-glass window of a hospital nursery, Riseman Cam LUTHERAN CHURCH wanted ee con errs and look at the newborm babies. They’re all so much alike (Misseari .Synod) WALLED LAKE O. A. Gerken, Pastor MA 4-1575 10:00 A. M. Sunday Scheoi and Adult Bible Study 8:30 and 11:15 A M Worship Service that the attending nurse can tell them apart only by the identification bracelet each wears on his wrist. But before long marked differences will appear; and by the time these children are grown they will be so varied it will be hard to believe they all began life in the same place. One of these babies will have become a noted musician; another will be living out his years in an institution for the feeble-minded. One of these infants will have become a dis- tinguished professor of chemistry in a large university; another will be working as a night-watchman in a small knitting-mill. One will have become a respected businessman and public-spirited citizens; another will be serving time in prison as a criminal. Church, with four times as many . seminary graduates as before the Fashions Statue From | war, has more young ministers! Mqine Granite to Our| than churches for them to serve. This was revealed by Dr. Marcus} Lady of Lourdes | pane a Se even” ne (By Religious News Servt-e) i r, i tervi . . ; an | opening of the 11th convention of SULLIVAN, Me. — hi well-known | Boston physician has erected a | the International Luther League. shrine to Our Lady of Lourdes on| Pastors’ Association | si von eee cr pecenes to Meet in Pontiac . ter, an active Bay State Roman Catholic layman, fashioned . the First meeting of the year for the Pontiac Pastors Associaition, will shrine of black and white granite be Friday at 10:45 a.m. in First native to this area. The doctor's strong Presbyterian Church. feeling is evidenced in his credo for | This organization meets each | ee | month and pastors ,from’ Pontiac young’ physicians. | and vicinity are invited to attend. | The Rev. Carl W. Nelson, secre- tary, reports that all new pastors are especially invited to this first meeting of the year. Rabbi Saperstein Was Dean at Jewish Youth Farm Project Pontiac youths attending Rise- man Farm Camp near Drydén over last week end, included Ju- dith and Sidney Dickstein, Marilyn Goode, Richard Hartman, Edward Kantzer, Gordon Lapides and Mi- chael Rosenberg. : Rabbi Sanford E. Saperstein of Temple Beth Jacob was dean of the camp attended by Michigan State Temple Youth, of which the rabbi is religious adviser, Representative Jewish youth from all over the state took part UNITED LUTHERAN CHURCH OF THE ASCENSION Williams and Lorraine The Commen Service....11:00 A. M. Sunday Scheol .......... 10:00 A. M. Geo. L. Garver, Pastor FE 2-7513 | St. Trinity | || Lutheran Church | i Missour) Synod | Rev Ralph C. Claus H | | Auburn Avenue at Jessie Ist SERVICE 8:15 & M. 2nd SERVICE 11:00 A. M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45AM, religious | How to explain these differences in people? They are due REV. H. F. MacALLISTER Minister to Give a . a : 7 . REV. EDWARD D. AUCHARD |. Sage ; ; . to variations in heredity, in environment and training, and in jm activities which included dis- cussions on current social prob- s t New Minister |lems, appreciation courses in the Bible, the Talmud and Jewish Prayer book. Worship- fellowship and recreation also were on the agenda. . Rev. Edward Auchard Will Be New Associate Also serving on the staff were Mrs. Herman Dickstein, youth ac- at First Presbyterian New associate pastor at First tivities chairman of the Michigan State Temple Sisterhoods, which Presbyterian Church, the Rev. Edward D. Auchard, will be ‘wel- sponsors the camp. and other youth projects and Mrs. Rudolph Hartm comed Sunday at the morning ser- vice an. The Rev. Mr. Auchard comes Plan World Air Tour of Church Missions to Pontiae from Grace Presbyteri- an Church, St, Louis, Mo., where (By Religious News Service) he has served for four years. A world tour which will. give Educated at York College in American church members an opportunity to follow their dollars Nebraska and Bonebrake Semin- ary at Dayton, Ohio, he received into the mission fields has been an- his theological degree from nounced by John Rosengrant, of the Board of Foreign Missions of Louisville Presbyterian Seminary at Louisville, Ky. the Presbyterian Church. The new associate will share personal dedication. Little can be done “about heredity; but for the rest, home, school and church all have an important part to play. Though their functions overlap, the chief task of the home is to provide a suitable environment for the growing child, of the school to supply him with adequate training, and of the church to moti- vate him with a high moral purpose. Confident Living Prayer Will Make Work Successful The other men looked at him in surprise. The room became as quiet as a church. For five minutes or so each man sat occupied with his own thoughts. The man who had spoken prayed in silence—perhaps some of the others prayed also. At any rate, an hour later the concilia- tor came out of the room to an- nounce to the reporters waiting outside that a settiment had been ‘'‘The main factors in the mak- ing of a physician,” he says, “are a good background, a deter- mination to work hard, to sacri- fice yourself for the good of the patient, to carry hope and help- fulness to those under your care; “To respect all faiths, to carry in mind that the curing of the . patient comes before any material Bloomington, Ind. gain on your part, and above all, ; to remember that God Almighty,| The Rey. H. F. MacAlister, the Great Physician, is above us| Pastor of eee aa United all and, in the form of prayer, a| Presbyterian Church, will preac E ° M petition to Him is more potent than | a farewell sermon Saris | asl er ’ Or e i i | astor at the local church since | any Gras ce SONEICR Reete}sIKe By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE that may be given.”’ | January 1942, the Rev. Mr. Mac- y aie Allister will become pastor of the} I always try, just before Labor | newly-built United _ Presbyterian Day, to write on the application |Church_ at Bloomington, Ind.. | of prayer and faith in the daily | Sept. 13. work of all of us. Not so long During his pastorate here, a new : 7 : , I told over radio a sto church was built and the mortgage ral ‘ ey ine . lll S burned on June 21 this year. The | #00Ut- prayer in business an Final Sermon Joslyn Avenue Church Pastor Moving On to ll | “A Changeless Christ for a Changing World” : ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH The Church o/ the Lutheran Hour JOSLYN AT FOURTH STREET 4 9:30 A. Sunday School — 10:45 A. M. Morning Service ' George Mahder, Pastor Phone FE 5-0404 © fa Watch “This ls the Life’—Sunday, 1:30 P. M.—WJBK-TV ‘ LEI ERO AE LLL LE LO ELE ENE BIR GAEL LEED EES, ST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN CHURCH American Lutheran Conference (National Lutheran Council) HILL STREET AT CHERRY STREET » Sunday School pang ae “9:45 A.M. Bethany Baptists ‘Plan Retreat Day 4 a REV CARL W. Parsonage: 145 Owege Drive | Ah all-day retreat has been congregation increased by 25 per) asked my listeners to send me GRACE LI | HERAN CHURCH planned for Saturday, Sept. 12, at! gent and missionary giving 70 per | others. Letters came in by the Glendale and S. Genesee Service for Aug. 23, 30, and Sept. 6, The tour, using Pan American World Airway's first-class serv- ices, will leave from San Fran- cisco on March 1, 1954, for Hawaii Teeple Lodge, off M-59, by officers | cent, | hundreds, and I want to tell you | and lay members of Bethany Bap- | . .-/ today about one of them. tist Church. | The Rev. Mr. MacAllister was a A ernun ot Temporary Changed to: SUNDAY SCHOOL, 10 A.M. WORSHP, 10 A.M. Regular Services Will Be Resumed Sept. 13! SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 A. M. WORSHIP 9:30 - 11 A. M. | The company will gather at the church and be led by Wilbury Craw- ford and Andrew Pepper, confer- | educated at Muskingum College, New Concord, Ohio, and received men, so the let- reached and a strike had been avoided. Never before in history have peo- with the pastor, the Rev. Dr. Wil- liam H. Marbach, the various pas- toral interests and activities of the { ence directors, to the cenference grounds. | Forrest Brown, moderator of the First Assembly of God church, will preside during the ses- . Group Plans Christmas sions. He will be assisted by the chairman of each major board. of| , 1, anticipation of Christmas time in Africa, the First’ Assembly of the church. God will have a Christmas serv- First Southern Missionary BAPTIST CHURCH ‘4 365 East Wilson Ave. Sunday School . .:.:.11.:.-. 9:45 A Worship ole © 0; ee feF Ho WECM « 1 1 :00 A B. Lic U. © 0 fore Te YQlo- 07 oo HEB ome 6:30 P. M, Weel 6. vice cw 5 o0% -seres 7350 P Wed. Prayer Meeting ... 7:30 P Pastor H. T. Starkey Phone FE 4-9633 HUBBS QUARTETTE “Member ot Southern Baptist Convention” South Saginaw at Judson First Methodist Organized on the Donelson Farm in 1828 Rev. Paul K. Havens Mrs. Jean Putnam Minister Choir Director 10:00 A.M. “ANCHORS of the SOUL” Rev. Haven, Preaching 11:15 A.M. Church School—Classes for allages. _ Wednesday—7:30 P. M.— Prayer Meet- ing and Bible Study. Why Not [nvite Your Summer Guests to Church? | The SALVATION ARMY | CHRISTIAN SCIENCE | | Sunday School ........ 11 o'Clees |! Sunday Service ...... 1) @'Ch SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY: . “MAN” ! Wednesday Evening Testimonial Meeting at 8:00 o'Clack ice Sunday morning. Gifts will be presented by mem- bers of the church for missionary boxes to be used in mission fields on Christmas. Miss Martha Under- wood, a returned missionary from Africa, will be present. The Rev. Wesley R. Wibley is pastor. FREE READING ROOM 3 EAST LAWRENCE 5ST. { Open Weekdays: 11 to & Fridays Until 9 P. M. First Church of Christ Scientist Lawrence and William Sts. 1 te a ee a eet Collier Road Church Collier Road at Collier Court $.$. 10 a.m. Y.P. Sun. 6:30 p.m. Sun. Services 11 a.m., 7:45 p.m. Prayer Meeting Wed. 7:30 p.m. B. PAWLEY Pastor Lapeer Broadcast Thur. 3:30 p.m. Community United Presbyterian Church Drayton Plains, Michigan W. J. Teeuwissen, Jr., Pastor i a ae 9:45 A. M. Bible School if 11 A. M. Worship Service Sermon Topic ‘CHRISTIAN VIEW OF LABOR” 6:00 P. M. Youth Fellowship 7:30 P. M. Evening Worship» Wednesday: The Study Hour at 7:30 P. M. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 347 N. Saginaw St. Charles D. Race, Minister Ph. FE 4-0239 10:00 A. M.—Bible School 11:00 A. M. Morning Worship 6:30 P. M. Jr. and Sr. Young People 7:30 p. m. Evening Service 7:30 P. M., Wed., Prayer and Bible Study Tuesday, Sept. 15—Congrgeational Meeting, 7:30 P. M. CHURCH OF CHRIST _ East Pike at Tasmania—Phone FE 2- “THE GERALD OF fRUTH’ 9:50 A.M Sunday WXYZ—Each San. 1:00 to 1:30 P.M. 1.30 P.M. Wednesda 7:30 PM. Sunday Evening Service 10:50 A.M. Suntes Yeung peg ty Meeting Friday, 7:00 P. WALTER & RANKES Minister Bible Scheo! Eve. Service ership SUNDAY SCHOOL ....................9:45 A. M. HOLINESS MEETING ................11:00 A. M. . No Y. P. Meeting Until Further Notice EVANGELISTIC MEETING ee ee 7:30 P. M. Officer in Charge ee Captain Vernon Vie 7:30 P. M. 7 29 W, Lawrence Street . Ie gg Oe ampeeanuads " aeaaguecmennenand 7 ies i. . ae : , 4 2 manreweny 3 ORs OF, ORE 8G PR Evening Evangelistic Service 7:30 P. M. Speaker REV. PAUL VANAMAN of South Carolina “The Temptation of Jesus’ FIRST CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN Sunday School at 10:00 A. M. Morning Worship 11:00 A. M. by the Pastor Special Music by Joyce Miller Evening Service by Rev. DeVault 7:00 P. M. Prayer and Bible Study Wed. 7:30 P. M. Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church DR. ANDREW S. CRESWELL., the minister, returns to the pulpit and will preach at 10:00 A. M. on “STRENGTH MADE PERFECT IN WEAK- AT THE EVENING SERVICE AT 7:3 P. M. “THE POWER OF PERSONAL WITNESSING” will be presented by a group of Personal Workers telling of instances of Personal approach shown by slides and film. . This group will consist of Mr. and Mrs, Andrew Garner, Mr. and Mrs. Harry White and Dr. and Mrs. C. L. Baker. A mesgage by the late Dr. Harry Ironside will be given by tran- scription. Starting Wed., Sept. 9th Mr. & Mrs. J. R. MacMurray : America’s Finest Musical Leaders! s i ' Hear Them Every Night — 7:45 P. M. . R. MacMurray Playing Over 20 Instruments CHRISTIAN TEMPLE 505 Auburn Avenue SUNDAY SERVICES 10 A. M—Communion and Sermon Rev. Lola P. Marion, Speaker 7:45 P. M.—A Great Evangelistic Service A Great Bible Sermon You Should Hear! “The Anti-Christ Now at Work” Dr. Leland L. Marion. Speaker A Friendly Place. or Worship his bahcelor of theology degree at ter said, were Pittsburgh-Xenia Theological Semi- ; seated in‘ a smo- nary. ky hotel suite. | The men_ had their coats off and their sleeves rolled up. The ashtrays were lit- tered with cigar- tte - butts and DR, PEALE chewed cigar ends. It looked as though the oc- cupants had been in that suite for a long time and expected to | stay. ; There whs a round table about which they were seated. It too was littered—with paper, thick law books, all the appurtenances of a business meeting. But there was a tension in the air that is not us- ually present at most busines meet- ings. The tension was there because this was an important conference between the representatives of two giants bitterly espousing opposing viewpoits. . . the officers of the | major companies in a great basic industry and the officers of the powerful union representing their employes. A strike was threatened if cer- tain conditions were not met and that strike would set back the nation’s defense production. The negotiations had reached an im- passe and even the federal con- ciliator from Washington was un- able to bring about a meeting of minds. The talk had been bitter and nasty. Tempers were at a break- ing point. Men sucked at their cigars angrily or loosened their collars and ties in irritation. A hostile silence fell over the room. ‘ Then, quietly, with an _ Irish brogue, one of the labor leaders spoke up: ‘‘You know, there’s one thing we haven't tried and maybe it can bring us together—help us find an acceptable formula, some- how. I'm going to sit here and pray. If any of you want to do the same, it may help a lot, but if you don’t want to pray, you can at least think.’’ CHURCH OF CHRIST 1196 Jeslyen Avenue Matt. 16-18—] Cor, 3:11 I Cor. 11:25—One Cup 26:27 ; Matt. 1 Cor. 10:17—One Loai— I Cor. 11:23 1 Cor. 14:31—Non-Sunday Worship Every Lord's Day Heb. 10:25—Acts 20:7 Morning 1100 A.M. ple realized how the subtle power church. With his wife and daugh- of prayer can give clarity to the ter, Joanne, he will live at 285 S. mind, insight to the thoughts, and, Tilden Ave. power to the pérsonality. Prayer | fuses people together, making real | covert gaat Psychologist Claims Need for Faith Basic of personal relationships. (By Religious News Service) Take-your work, whatever it is, and dedicate it to God. Fill your- self and your job ful of ode| NEW YORK—A basic need of the human personality is “spiritual belief involving some form of re- spirit, pray to Him and ask His guidance when you need help—and ligious faith,’ Chief Psychologist John A. Blake of Central State you will find that your work is easier and that you do your job Hospital at Petersburg, Va., says in the current issue of Mental more efficiently. Hygiene, publication of the Na- St. Benedict, who founded the Benedictine order of monks, took tional Association for Mental Health. as his mtte, ‘To labor is to Clinical psychology has come to pray.” And, indeed, they are in- extriciably joined together. recognize that man’s character is in large part built on a relation- When you pray about your work ship with ‘‘some exalted power it also goes better. Relations with your associates are improved. lying outside himself,’’ according to Mr. Blake. Your mind delivers fresh and crea- tive ideas, and you get more pleas- ure out of your job. So take a prayer to work with you. (Copyright 1953) tionship, early acquired and strongly rooted in the depths of man’s personality in infancy and ously disturbed in later life a con- flict results, manifesting itself in some form and degree of person- ality disorder. “Such conflicts may be just as profound as, or even more than, those due to pufely secular frus- tration. In such cases, one might rightly say that man became lit- xo. erally ‘sick in the spirit’. childhood, is either lost or seri-, and visit 14 countries in 59 days. The travel, the visits, the pro- grdm and the on-the-spot - con- ferences will be planned to give churchmen a vivid and realistte picture of their church at work across the world.”’ The group will meet government and church officials on the highest level (last year the President of the Philippines, the U. S. Am- bassador to India, and the Presi- dent of the International Christian _University in Tokyo were inter- viewed) and also talk to mis- sionaries and members of the | humblest missions in out-of-the- way places. Navy Praises Chaplains Who Served in Korea WASHINGTON, D. C.—The Navy has issued a statement praising the heroism of its 316 chaplains in Korea and reporting they have re- ceived 158 medals and decorations | extlusive of campaign bars and | unit awards from the Korean gove | ernment. Since the Marines landed in ‘Psychologists have observed,’’| South Korea in August 1950, some he added, ‘that when such a rela-| 166 Navy chaplains have served _ with leatherneck units and about 150 others on ships in Korean wa- ters. Along with their regular duties chaplains have led Marines in Ko- rea to construct or support six orphanages and to assist in the | support of many others. One Marine battalion supported an entire Korean village of 1,500 people. In addition, Navy chaplains led in the construction of one Ro- man Catholic school, and two Cath- | olic and five Protestant churches, at Sundown The Jewish New Year, which begins at sundown Wednesday, will usher in the year 5714, according 10 days are known as High Holy Days, and‘are dedicated to repent- ance and spiritual regeneration. Prayers and music of the synagogue on these days stress the theme of God's universal rule of the world and the brotherhood of man, At Temple Beth Jacob, a .ser- vice will be held Wednesday at GEORGE B. DWEEY Newsman Speaks at Baptist Church. George B. Dewey, world trav- eler and newspaper correspondent, will speak at First Baptist Church at 10:45 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday. His subjects will be ‘‘La- dies and Gentlemen, Meet the King,” and ‘‘Why Russia Behaves Sunday School Morning Service—11:00 A. M. Evening Service—7:30 P. M. N. Y. P. S. 6:30 P. M. K. A. Hutchinson, Pastor Evening Service, 7:30 P.M. I) That Way.” —_ han for juniors will be Beother Peal Doone gee oe returned tO/ held at 2 p.m, Thursday. The 7175 Elizabeth Lake Rd. erica after touring Egypt, Iran, | tirst session of the new school year Pakistan and Indo-China. will take place Sunday, Sept. 13 —————— 9: 7 To ——— At CHURCH. NAZARENE ||) -: TRE 60 State Ave. 9:45 A. M. FIRST GENERAL BAPTIST CHURGH 249 Baldwin Avenue Sunday School ..... 10:00 A. Morning Service .... 11:00 A. ML Sunday Eve Service .. Christian Endeavor ... 6:00 P. M. Wed. Evening Prayer .. 7:30 P. M. Sev. & Garuse Sev. & Garner, Paster &. Gampten, Chote Directo: School ...9:45 a. m. to Jewish tradition. The subsequent ' Jews Usher In New Year Wednesday Similar services will be held on Friday with the rabbi . preaching from the subject ‘‘Who is Wise? He who Forsees the Future.” Mincha and Maariv will be held at 6415 p.m, on Friday. PONTIAC UNITY CENTER 714 N. Saginaw St. Midweek Service Thursday, 8 P. M. Sunday 11 A. M. Affiliated With Untty Center Schoo 4 4 4 f 4 4 4 + Apostolic Church of Christ } 458 Central The New Birth, as the Bible Teaches, Believe on the Lerd Jesus Christ, and Repent and be Baptised in the Name ef Jesus Christ for Remission and Get it Services Sunday 10:00 A. M., | Tuesday 8:0.0 P. M., Thursday, Saturday 7:30 P. M. ” Rev. L. A. Parent, Pastor Ph. FE 5-8361 or OL 2-4751 7:30 P. M. 11:00 Wership 61 NORTH LYNN STREET 10:00 Sun. Scheot Rev. C. D. Fries Pastor 4 4 4 Ww. Y. P. S$. 645 Evangelistic 7:30 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 NINE The Gutenberg Bible, produced at Mainz, Germany, in 1452, was the world’s first printed volume. Morning Service 9:00 A M on ee — Young pA Service 630 P M Charlies PD Race. a. 2 Calvary ' Assembly Church ® 1517 Joslyn (Full Gospel) eeeee y i a We Young People : Thursday .- 7:45 p. ma i F. Fred Peter. Pasto: by acted ed FIVE POINTS COMMUNITY CHUBCH [sa Sunday Schoo! 10 -=/il Morn. Wor. 11:15 a. m. #,| Eve. Service..7:30 p.m. 98 Rev. Gordon C. Lindsay? | Pastor - J FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH W. Huron at Wayne St. Church School: 9:45 P. M. Morning Worship: 11 A.M. . Sermon Topic , “What Is Life Teaching?” Wiliam H. Marbach, Pas Edward D. Auchard, Associate Paster ‘\ CHURCH OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN Town Hall, E. Pike St. No Service Sunday Silver Tea Tues., Sept. 8th Rev. Juanita Partis, Paster Statistics Show Church Growth 1952 Membership Hits Record of 92,277,129 in U. S. Church membership in the VU. S. réached a new all-time high last year, setting a record figure of 92,277,129. The new figures for 1952, re- vealed today by the National Coun- cil of Churches, indicate that 59 per cent of the American popula- . | tion belong to religious bodies. In 1940, only one out.of two Amer:- cars had religious affiliation. The statistics for 1952 repre- sent a gain of 3,604,124 church members over the previous year, and fn unprecedented growth rate of 4.1 per cent — outstrip- ping the population increase by two and a half times. In 1952 the number of local U. S. churches also reached a new peak of 285,277 as compared to 284,592, and the number of clergymen hav- ing charges rose from 181,123 to 183,899. “Statistically there is one church for about every 325 members,” | stated Dr. Benson Y. Landis, as- sociate director of the Council’s department of research and sur- vey. land a lag in efforts to fill thou- | sachs of vacant pulpits.”’ Dr. Landis, editor of the Na- tional Council’s Yearbook of American Churches — which is the only source of statistical data on all the nation’s reli- gious bodies — noted that the figures are based on informa- tion from 251 religious bodies. The over-all 1952 gain in church membegship twice that previous year, is partly attribut- able to greatly increased birth rates of: the 1940's, Dr. Landis pointed out. ‘Other factors have been the widespread systematic evangelistic programs carried out by the churches and the zenerally felt need for guidance in times of international tension and up- heaval.”’ (Free Bus Ride) EVANGELISTIC | TABERNACLE 60 Tilden at W. Huron Preaching 11 A.M. & 7:30 P.M. Youth Groups 6:30 P.M. ~ Radio CKLW. 7:30 — wear? 8 a. m. A. }. Baughey, Pastor ee - FIRST ASSEMBI-Y ‘ of GOD 210 N. Perry Street Rev, Wesley _— Minister | 9:45 a. m. Sunday School ll: 00 a.m. Weaken | Sermon: “The Abodes of | God” 7:45 p.m. Message by the Pastor—“The Science of Revival” 7:45 Tuesday Worship ‘7:45 p.m. Thursday, C. A. Service “Visit the “Church of the ' Old Fashioned Gospel” CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC - SCIENCE CHURCH * 30 St. Suen, 7:28 P.M. Dr. ee oe Bearers: Rev. mi 7 wea Bar }of microfilming 10, million manu- the voluntary company of workers. | Ladies of the Mexican congrega- Pastor's Son to Be ‘Vatican Library Microfilm Work ‘One-Sixth Done “But the ratio between! r}clergymen and members is only | lone to every 500. This points up| la continuing shortage of pastors | of the} CORNERSTONE IS LAID—Cornerstone was laid | built by members of the church. In the picture (left Thursday for the new Church of Christ which was/| to right) are Virgil McGlotlin, member of building started about Aug. 1. Located at 1180 N. Perry St., the building will face Scottwood avenue. It is rane — deacon; and E. C. —— — foreman. ey 3 ay ashes hie BE Te Pa» ‘ Oe Qt xe Q > cy » bes ; a 5, ; ‘ a en, eos 4 é: Pontiac Press Phete committee; Walter E. Bankes, minister; Richard A. REV. Special Meetings Planned by Church For two weekends starting next Friday, special meetings will be held at Parkdale Church of the Nazarene. Services will be held for three days, through Sunday at 7:30 p. m. and at 10:45 on Sunday morning. . (By Religious News Service) ST. PAUL, Minn. — The project scripts in the Vatican Library to/| make them) available for American | scholars is about one-sixth com- | pleted, it was reported here at the | national convention of the Knights of Columbus, sponsors of the, project. s250 0 ol mis will cost about 000 arid i is expected to be_com- face in “several years,’’ accord- ing to the Rev. Joseph P. Donnel- ly, S. J., St. Louis, Mo., directory of libraries at St. Louis Univer- sity, where the microfilms are be- t (Donnelly, secretary of of Columbus Founda- project, ‘showed color slides of some of the Vatican’s illuminated manuscripts to the convention here. Volunteers Building Church at Imlay City The Golden Rule is being put in practice today in Imlay City.| where Mexican Baptists are build- | ing a new church. Ministers and laymen from Wayne Association are giving the day to assist in the building of this storié church. The committee in charge is headed by the Rev. Fred R. Tiffany of Pontiac, the Rev. Wendell Maloch of Walled Lake and the Rev. William Shaw of Ypsilanti. The Rev. Charles Morse, pastor of the Novi church, is directing tion will serve a Mexican dinner at noon. Speaker on Sunday: Guést speaker oratorical contest in Ilinois in 1953 and was a member of the champion debating team at Augus- tana ay: at Rock Island Il. “You Know You Are Welcome” eo G CLASSES FOR EVERYBODY 11 signee x I “ey. Evangelistic Hour “THE SURE-CURE FOR BACKSLIDING” ‘ATION VICTORIOUSLY” The pastor, the Rev. Wayne E. | Welton, will preach. Special music for the first weekend will be by Ray Dafoe, minister of music at ithe South Flint Church of the Naz- arene and Frank Fitzgerald of Olivet Nazarene College, Kanka- |kee, Ill. Plan Sunrise Service at State Fair Sunday A sunrise service expected to draw more than 5,000 worshippers will be held at the Michigan State Fair this Sunday under the joint sponsorship of the Detroit Council of Churches ‘and the State Fair Association. Federal Judge Luther W. Young- dahl of Washington, D.C. will be the main speaker. Dr, Kenneth G. Neigh, executive secretary of the Presbyterian Synod of ——— will preside. Dr. Robert M. Frehse, executive director of the Detroit Round Table of Catholics, Jews and Protestants, will lead prayers, and Dr. Frank P. Madsen, president’ of the Michi- gan Synod of the United Lutheran | Church in America, will read the Scripture lesson. The invocation will be given by Dr—Samuel C. Weir, Moderator of the United Presbyterian Church of North America. : | Church was started to take care iCity Congregation Lays New Church Cornerstone The architect, Viner A, Ranta- | nen of Detroit, designed the | building for the greatest service | at a cost of approximately $125,- 000. According to the Rev, Mr. | Bankes, the public will not be | asked to contribute. | ine Church of rye in| The building committee includes | Keego Harbor was formed from 4 | 1 .wis Hatcher, I. J. Wilkins, Tom- nucleus. of overflow membership, | a f * car and a year ago the Rochestér | Me Jones, Virgil McGlotlin, W. W. | Largent, Richard Smith, George | King and Charles Harrington. On the finance committee are Argyll Allen, treasurer; the Rev. Walter E. Bankes, minister; I. J. Wilkins, elder; Gene Hatcher and W. J. Clark. The building foreman is E. C. Maynard. One of the fastest growing con- gregations among the churches of Pontiac is the Pontiac Church of Christ, now located at E. Pike St. and Tasmania Ave. Three times in the past five years it has over- flowed the capacity of the church. of the same situation. Three years ago, Walter E. Bankes, local minister, expressed the need for a new and large church building. Final plans were approved and work was started about Aug. 1. The new church will seat ap- proximately 630, with parking space for 160 automobiles, The church owns seven lots between Robinwood and Scottwood with three additional lots in the rear. An organization known as Rail- road Evangelistic Association, Inc., provides spiritual activities | for railroaders when they are away from home. fo Local Pulpit Pastor Returns Dr. Andrew Creswell to Preach at Oakland United Presbyterian For the first time since return- ing from a year’s leave of ab- sence, Dr. Andrew S. Creswell will be in his pulpit Sunday at Oakland Avenue United Presby- terian Church. His subject will be “Strength Made Perfect Through Weakness.”’ On Oct. 1, Dr. Creswell will have completed 33 years as min- | ister of the church. | At 7:30 p. m, Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Garner, Mr. and and Mrs. Harry White and Dr. and Mrs. C. L. Baker will have charge of the service. They will show slides and moving pictures of actual experi- ences which they will relate. A recorded message by the late Dr Harry Ironside, “Charge That to My Account,’ will be heard. A collection of stamps illustrat- ing Bible stories has been present- ed to the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. pared by. an insurance executive who spent 11 years on the project. | It was pre-| An Indian mission, still standing| could run out quickly to repel |was built in 1816 at Upper San-| attacks by pagan Indians. dusky, Ohio, with the doors on About 95 per cent ‘of the worid’s either side of the altar so WOr| uation lives north of the equa- shippers faced the entrances and | tor. aa P All Saints Episcopal Church Williams Street at West Pike The Rev. C George Widdifiela, Rector Res. Waldo R Hunt Rev. Williem C. Hamm Rev. Ware Clabduesch SUNDAY SERVICES 8:00 A. M.—Holy Communion 9:30 A. M.—Holy Communion 11:00 A. M.—Holy Communion and Sermon by the Rev. Geo. Hann St. Andrew's Chapel 4386 Dixie Highway Building ats Conditioned 8:00 4.M%.—Holy Communion 10:30 A M.—Worship end Germon by the Rev. Waldo R. Hunt, Vicar Nursery for 2 to 1-year-old Children St. Mary’s-in-the-Hills of Lake Ortop and Oxford Joslyn Ra. ano Greenshieic RG ‘(Nina Scripps Sc 6:00 A M—Holy Communion 11:00 A. M.—Worship and Cc. Sermon by Rev. Wm. Hamm, Vicar _f The Church of Christ 210 Hughes Street 11 A.M. Sunday Wership R. L. WIGGINS. Minister 10 A.M. Bible School 6 P.M. Evening Service Pilgrim Holiness Church Baldwin and Fairmount First Social Brethren Church of Pontiac 316 Baldwin Ave. Rev. Joe Rose, Pastor. Asst. Rev. James Johnson FE 4-1656 SERVICES: Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Preaching Service 11:00 a.m. Special Singing Evening Service Saturday : and Sunday Night 7:30 p.m. Midweek Prayer Thur. 7:30 p.m. First Progressive Spiritualist Church 16 Chase Street SUNDAY SERVICE: 7:20 P/M. Evening Service Mid-Week Meeting, Wed., 7:30 P. M. The building will be of block and brick construction throughout, with modern design and an artistic front which will face on Scottwood axe nue, : ' Twelve classrooms will be pro- | vided in the full basement of the 64x96-foot structure. The basement (Oppesite P FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Cor. E. Huron and Mt. Clemens at Mill St., Pontiac “THE NEW CRAFTSMANSHIP” Harold J. Le Vesconte, Rev. Malcolm K..Burton, Minister ost Office) preaching also houses a kitchen and utility | ———--___ room. Officers’ room and preacher’s study will be on the first floor, where a nursery room, supplied with a loudspeaker, also is planned. A hot water sytem and an air conditioning unit are included in the plans. CHURCH — 87 Lafayette The Whole Bible for the Whole World SBOWARD C. ARTZ, Paster FREE METHODIST Saturday, 7:30 p. m. — Sunday 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday School 10 a. m. St., 2 Blocks West of Sears Classes for Every Age. BURTELLA GREEN, &. 8. Supt. BRETHREN THE EVANGELICAL UNITED CHURCHES CALVARY Paddock at Prospect Rev. Bingaman. Minister Guest Speaker 178 Green Street (Near Orchard Lake Ave.) Rev G / Bersche Pastor Sunday School 9:45 A. M. BALDWIN AVE. Baldwin at Homes Rev. H. E. Ryan, Minister A. M.: “The Helmet Merning Worship 11 A. M. Mr. Jack E. ad of Salvation’ CHRISTIAN ALTAR” P A. L. Bingaman, P. M.: “The Shield Alliance Youth Fellowship : sense 6:15 P.M. Minister of Faith E . . . . Evangelistic Serv ice. Sunday School ..... 9:45 a.m. Youth Fellowship ....6:30 9. m. 7:30 P.M. Morning Worship ...11:00 a.m. Evening Worship .. .7:30 p. m. Howard Odgen. Music Director ZION CHURCH... NAZARENE 239 East Pike Street ae Small enough te appreciate you ? ° . large enough te serve you. 6:30 P. M—N.Y.P.S. 7:30 P. M.—Evangelistic Serv. 10:00 A. M.—Sunday School PARKDALE Parkdale and Hollywood, One Block West of Baldwin SUNDAY SCHOOL 9;45 A. M. N.Y.P.C. 6:45 P. M. PREACHING SERVICES 10:45 A. M. axa 7:30 P. M. ‘ BIBLE STUDY, WEDNESDAY, 7:30 P. M. SPECIAL WEEK-END SERVICES — Sept. 11, 12, 13 7:30 Eoch Evening 9:45 and 10:45 Sunday A. M. Featuring Guest .Soloists Mr. Ray Dafee, Flint, Michigan Mr. Frank Fitzgerrel, Kankakee, I1l. ' Rev. Welton, Preaching Rev. Wayne E. Welion, Minister SERVICES THAT INSPIRE es n sestiat 7 Sunday Schoo] 11:00 A. M—Worship in Michigan Rev. W. E. Vérian. Pastor 1837—1953 Attendance NAZARENE aa Mr. Howerd H. Barnett 815 a teacher 10:45 A, M. 10rd a “LADIES AND GENTLEMEN MEET THE KING” George Blongren Dewey, Speaking This Service Will Be Broadcast et 1}:00 A.M. Over CKLW 7:30 0M. “WHY aussi BEHAVES Evening George Blongren oe ae jgtie FE 2-6328 \S FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH &. 8. Sevege. Paster || Sale Beeause Revival Services Thru Sept. 13 Hear Rev. Jason Felter Interesting— Dynamic Bible Preaching Special Singing Each Evening __ Come — Bring Your Friends ~ E. C. Swanson, Minister — — Roy Overbaugh. §. S. Supt. FIRST CHURCH OF GOD 25 East Blvd., South of Lookout Drive General Offices—Anderson, Ind. “Running to Win” Sunday 10:45 A. M. 7:30 P. M.—Evening Service. ‘’Where Labor and Capital Meet” Sunday School 9:45 A. M. Rev. Grover C. Johnson | | | BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH W Huren «et Mark Freé Rebert Tiffany. Pastor SUNDAY SERVICES 19:00 a. m. Worship 11:00 a. m. Church School Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. BIBLE WORKSHOP FOR ALL AGES 9:30 a.m. Prayer $$ === EAST HUKON AT PERRYS Central Methodist} Sev. Milten B. Bank, D. D., Minister Rev. John W. Mulder, Asso. Minister 9:45 a.m.—Sunday School -— - 10:45 a. m.—Morning Worship “THE MASTER WORKMAN” Dr. Bank, Preaching A Whale of a ———— We are offering outstanding reductions in many items, some up to 50% off START- |; ING TUESDAY, SEPT. 8 thru SATUR- DAY, SEPT. 12. Reduction on BOOKS, BI- BLES, PLAQUES, STA- TIONERY, FLANNEL- GRAPH MATERMLS and COLOR BOOKS. 20% 5% aa 90% EEE Christian Literature Sales : 67 Oakland Ave. FE 2-1721 * Reduction on FRAMED PICTURES. >. a ee ae 4 b ae A ee i ee ee ere me Me eee MM ete OR SRD ore! TEN ) THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 Only 25,000 - Conneetientis 3.202. Ic Mi hap | Ki T Sj ' - ot ars | al W man Wins ee Rbisolenieh one yan. a2 awarde yt) scholarships in phy- 000 acres of land is ised for grow- | or va Ne OEE Community Theaters oc 0 sical thereapy since 1942, using ing vegetables. Opé-third of the} MENOMINEE (® > Mrs. Mar- some $2,600,00% in March of Dimes 25,000 acres is pots’ >producing | garet Brandenburg, 72, of-Menom- Birmingham land. Sat., Tues.: “Sangaree,” Arlene Dahl, Polio Scholarship | funds, to combat the shortage of inee, was killed Friday when~an Fernando Lamas; “Ma and Pa Kettle on Miss Phoebe A. Wolfe, 2824 | | therapists. Vacation,” Marjorie Main, Percy Kil- Otsego Rd, has won a scolarship | in physical therapy under the Na- GAUKI ER tional Foundation for Infantile Par- | automobile in which she was riding | ) Aut skidded and overturned near Ran-/* Weds Tues: “Scared Stiff.” | Dean Sun., Tues.: “Powder River,” color, | Rory Calhoun, Corrine Calvet Y a Y | Pri.; Sat.: “Roar of the Crowd.” color, Howard Duff, Helene Stanley: ‘The ‘ : h Homesteaders,”’ Bill Elliott, Barbara | Allen. Milford Sat.: ‘‘Beast from 20.000 Fathoms,’ | Paul Christian, Paula Raymond. Sun., Tues. ‘The Desert Song.’ Tech- | micolor, Kathryn Grayson, Gordon Mac- | Rae Thurs., Sat.: “Pony Express,” Tech- | nicolor, Chariton Heston, Rhonda Fiem- ; ing. an Martin, Jerry Lewis; “Scandal at SHOP | toul, lll. H@r brother, Thomas F. | scourie,” Greer Garson, Walter Pid- |Lomieux, 69, of Milwaukee, was | 5° Bloamfield alysis’ nationwide profes sional TORAGE CG driving. He ’suffered only minor nati, a Bess,” atewart poranset, aint HORTAR., * S : GE Cl : injuries. The two were en route tO} june Allyson, Van Johnson. wn Pierre Delmontier, chairman of Orch r) - Texas. eieeee Williams, ernando Le me: the roo i wl no. specialists Ila \ ? A “Col u ° stor til 9 P. ¢ || Optometrist Dies rae mot —_— . | Cae Uaiensly: age, packing, local Park Free Hubb : Gat, ‘The Bandwagon,” Pred Astaire and long- distanes macwig — ee eee BATTLE CREEK = Dr.|cyd Cherise 0 me,” S AM B ENSON |Adrian B. Hudler, 63, a Battle|charies Boyer, Louite Jourdan: | “A USED- TV _ \Creek optometrist for more than | Queen Is Crowned.” Queen Birsabeth | _ io 6 . [30 years, died Friday. He had been Sarin, Set neste an Get c a ALLIED 20 S. Perry St. |i for two years. Funeral service} %4,. «tiawatha.” color, Vincent Ed- ot aaeeens ty 14 — |will be held Tuesday. ENON, Sisiitg O'BNicn, Prone Loves 286 State (RLS este Seve Ts neg - - Le $10-$15 Down — $52 Wk. || "9 Orchard Lake (oy STOP in) -... ake Your Entertainment pak ad DONATI ANY AMOUNT , With You! YOU WISH —¥ Install a Car Radio Today! eee eee , 1952-1953 Fords [Seats pena Sw | AS YOU LEAVE: All New Sun., Tues.: ‘By the. Light of the | Silvery Moon,” Technicolor, Doris Day, $ 5 | Gordon MacRae; “Siren of Bagdad.” | Technicolor, Paul Henreid, Patricia Medina. } | Lake — Walled Lake | Sat.: “Parmer Takes‘a Wife,” Techni- color, Betty Grable; ‘Siren’ of Bagdad,” Technicolor, Paul Henried, Patricia Medina. ; Sun., Tués.: ‘“Prancis -Covers Big Town, ** Donald O'Connor, Nancy Guild; | “By the Light of the Silvery Moon,’ Technicolor, Doris Day, Gordon Mac- Rae Wed., Thurs.: “Angel Face."’ Robert Mitchum, Jean Simmons; “One Girl's Dies at Cheboygan LITTLE THEATER DESIGNS — Florine Antes, i Miatied Freee ene i AUTO |. CHEBOYGAN W — Bert J.| Cashier for ‘Little Theater’ in Columbus, Ohio, dis-|to avoid paying the federal amusement tax on ad- | | Nickels, 78, former chairman of| Plays one of many placards which show hous: | missicn tickets. Similar signs adorn lobby fishbow]— | ~ STORES \the Monroe County Welfare Com- | °Wners posted at boxoffice and lobby in an attempt | where patrons may place donations. 103 N. Saginaw St. ~ FE 5-2267 ye TEcHNicouor | mission died here Thursday. | ay ‘ | Nickels, who had retired, came| During the recent eruptions of|cano, all air travel was halted be-| Dean Greeted by Clark es J 7 “here for a vacation and hay fever|Mt. Torbert, Mt. Spurr, and a cause of the heavy pall of ashes in| 4 at Freedom Village | relief. | third, _unidentified Alaskan’ vol-/ the air. FREEDOM VILLAGE, Korea Di eK HK HK HK KKKKKKKK KKK 1 ere * * * ADDED WESTERN * x x | WANTED | AAAAAAAGGR AOA O OO OM lA i returning from North xB: > FreOl $ PS iccaan peta carne thy Two Men With Good Job : Magnificently filmed | $ Z > " , wo men Wi 00 ops Ll cs é do pleat ee 3 $ Boats $ jg) Clark few to Korea yesterday Tl Who Want Better Jobs Selling Chevrolets = » 2 4 'from his Tokyo headquarters to OUTLAW EMPIRE .* TS}. j 2 3 and $ |meet Gen. William Dean, highest ; ; ‘ THAT RULED oe SSS: | 2 3 Pony > | ranking Red captive. See John Libertine, Sales Manager ————— — 4 4 2 | THE ROCKIES! ——_ SN UUUE | $ $ Rides! > 4 | The new cap ital city of Indi WE Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Block N. of Telegraph FE 5-4500—Open 6:30 P. M. Lele Chandi, the goddess of } adbvtbtidbtdddddbddbdbdbdbdbb PEC EE PPPEPPCEPPPPPPPE PEEP ERPAEP AAAS PPP APA EA A PS Salli Sg aftr aia z me Hane Ef TO-NIGHT—3 GREAT HITS} TST ] > FOC CC CC SCC CCC CCC CCC CCC CTC T TTT V CVU VCC UVC CVU C CCU UCU YT i | Oe re eee ee HITNO.1 e @ @e @ HIT NO.2 @ @ @ @ HIT NO.3 @ @ RFA ‘ | First Run --- 2 in Color! --- Owl Show ! | jan.” Coane Me i — = A JUNGLE FULL OF | Pram Pirate ‘Sa COTTEN - CALVET | SWORD y cunt BARBARA HALE |. SE Gas BAL CAFESS BA HMR ous marwaro- partic meoin «PEKING EXPRESS gm OF VENUS 94 ee BY TWO ALEX NICOL -: vy CHARLES DRAKE: JIMMY HUNT iy We “Sew ie HM ARNESS ee “Sane LAST TIME TONIGHT THE 3-/ BEAUTIES! TOPPER OF THEM ALL! ASK ANYONE WHO HAS SEEN IT! SUNDAY PT DRIVE-IN THEATER MONDAY THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN Cor. Williams Lake-Airport Rds. Box Office Opens 6:45 JACK BRODER presents MACDONALD CAREY DANGEROUS DRU WHEN JOHN HURT... Weltten for the Serenn ty WINSTOS MILLER, FRANK L MOSS ond LEWIS BR. FOSTER - Gased ot 2 moval by Kart Grows . Produced ty Wien 1 Fine ond Wihem C Thomes- A Paramount Picture OWL SHOW An Extra Feature After Our Regular Show! PLUS Color Cartoon _IRELAND of the Noe KIRK DOUGLAS gives one of the great performances of our times as A Thrilling YUKON” = : Story of Action! PLUS THIS SECOND FEATURE! GARY COOPER in COLOR by Pathecolor were or S SUNDAY - MONDAY PTT OER, Or ee FIRST {2 “RUN in EXCITING FOREST. GIRL LEADS | | ‘gi . _ ee ¢ - a a : 8 baie i, Spoas ae , ~~ a ' eas! “A LO NG ea arcie re wo (P y Sees e . a———e——eee— starring yey came) a | * ee THE GREATEST OF ALL JUNGLE ADVENTURES! TRADER:® HORN 1000 WILD ANIMAL THRILLS! SEE! © The hair-breadth escape from an island of crocodiles! © The weird death-dance of the savage isorgi tribe! ¢ © The-dloodthirsty battle of the tions! °, @ The deadly charge of a ferocious rhinoceros! CAME JONES” The West needed tough men on the side of right. Jones wes the man! MIDNIGHT OWL show | Waleed fe Al [THE NAME OF zs) MAN... WITH THE eee oF FA TIGER! ] 2 at? oe wee 2 kf eee ee Oe oe “ee “Ms! ——aee eee eo ee a as ° THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 eS Oe eS) OU vl? Sit.) } Say-Die Marines! | y, hoa y | m\ @ “is mee (OV RUS of P ea PLEASURE ISLAIND coun Techn color LEO GENN-DON TAILOR, si (ENE, Raker ELSA LANCHESTER DOROTHY BROMILEY = AUDREY DALTON - JOAN ELAN DOORS OPEN 1:45 P. M. AIR-CONDITIONED “SIRE OF BAGDAD” With Paul Henried ' LAST TIMES TONIGHT “ALONG THE ALAMO” And “THE 49th MAN” first outdoor film, ‘‘River of No Return.” Terry buttonholed me this week and her first words were: ‘‘What did I tell you? They get Marilyn outdoors and the first thing she does is fall in a river, tear a couple ligaments and hold up production for 10 days. And comes home on crutches yet. Zanuck wpn’t let her off the lot after this. I’ve fallen off horses, crawled through snake-infested jungles, doused myself in the ocean and never even lost a fingernail.” Terry is working outdoors again with Tyrone Power in ‘‘King of the Khyber Rifles.’’ After a ca- reer of wild. adolescents, she is playing a bona fide lady for the first time. “T'm so prim and proper and slay everybody with my veddy British accent. Of course, I have one scene where I go in Ty’s bedroom wearing a nightgown but I knock first.” One of the more fascinating pastimes in Hollywood is watch- ing the plight of the gossip columnists trying to keep up with Terry’s romances, Her recent boy friends have ranged from Howard Hughes and Nicky Hilton to pro golfer Al Besselink and Navy Lt. Ray Nielsen, a young medico. Her first husband was Glenn Davis, the pro football player. What does she want in a man? Money? Looks? *‘Money is unimportant. What | does money do but give you in- dependence? The next time I marry it will be in the temple the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints) where it is ‘until death do us part.’ “Looks mean nothing. My next husband will be good and wholesome, I know that type usually is pretty dull but some- day Tli find someone who is 00d and sophisticated, too.” Terry, the granddaughter of a ) a ee Mormon-bishop, avers she takes her religion seriously. Then, she adds: . “You know my navy lieutenant is a Mormon, too.” Pontiac Theaters } OAKLAND Sat.: “Ambush at Tomahawk Gap,’ John Hodiak; “That Man from Tangier,’’ Nils Asther. Starts Sun.: ‘‘Gentlemen Prefer Blondes,’’ Marilyn Monroe, Jane Russell. STRAND Sat.; Tues.: ‘‘Vice Squad,” Ed- ward G, Robinson, Paulette God- dard; “Rebel City,’ Elliott. Wed., Fri.: ‘‘All 1 Desire,’ Rich- ard Carlson, Barbara Stanwyck; “A Queen Is Crowned,” Queen Elizabeth It, - ON THE REGULAR SCREEN! NAKED DRAMA! as fierce and WiateRdaleliil-te Mes the crime that gave it birth! ROBERT MITCHUM JEAN SIMMONS. ry oe AMES - BARBARA OHEIL and Directed by OTTO PREMINGEER Serecapiag by FRANK NUGENT ond OSCAR MILLARD “i rpipege 4 HURRAY! It’s Cool Again Drive Out for a-Delicious Meal! T Se ee SUNDAY MENU Reast Tom Turkey with Dressing and Cranberry Sauce Chicken a la ig on lta sacar tik wih BY seers OOF .. 10° LES HUTCHINSON’ CAFETERIA 4541 Dixie Hwy. ‘ Gene Shas, Mor. Wild Bill Union Leader Gold Pleads ‘Not Guilty’ WASHINGTON ® — Ben Gold, president of the Independent Fur Workers union, pleaded innocent yesterday to an indictment charg- ing he falsely swore he was not a; Communist in an August, 1950 atti. | davit. Federal District Court Judge Bo- litha J. Laws set Nov. 16 for trial. Gold was allowed to remain free under the $10,000 bond he posted after surrendering here last Mon.- | day. The charges grew out of a state-| ment Gold filed in 1950 with the| 10 Sabre Jets in Bendix Race Pilots Trying to Break Cross Country Record, California to Dayton EDWARDS, Calif. @—Ten sleek Sabre jets were poised today to flash 1,900 miles through the skies to Dayton, Ohio, in the annual Ben- dix Trophy race. The fleet F86 North American fighters were to whisk away at five-minute intervals from Ed- wards Air Force Base, starting about 6:15 a. m., Pacific Daylight Time. * * * Piloted by Air Force officers, all the jets are expected to reach the finish pylon at Dayton in slightly more than three hours. They will be striving to break the 1951 Ben- dix cross-country speed record set by Col. Keith K. Compton, who flew from Edwards to Detroit at an average speed of 552.86 miles an hour. Some pilots will make one refuel- ing stop, some two. Ground crews are prepared to refuel the ships and make minor repairs in three minutes. The Sabre jet is powered by the! General Electric J47-27 jet en- gine. The Bendix race is a feature of Dayton’s national aircraft show, commemorating the 50th anniver- sary of, power flight and Ohio's statehood sesquicentennial. The pilots: * * * Capt. James S. Carson, 28, El Centro; Capt. John M. Fitzpatrick, 29, New York City and Dayton; | Maj. James P. Hagerstrom, 32, Waterloo, Iowa; Maj. William J. Evans, 29, Norwich, Conn.; Lt. Col. Wintin M. Marshall, 34, Detroit; Maj. Stevens H. Turner, 36, Clin- ton, Mass. Lt. Col. Michael C. Horgan, 34, Fairmont, Minn.; Maj. Edward Johnston, 30, Reynolds, Ill.; Maj. William T. Whisner, 29, Shreve- port, La.; Col. Clay Tice Jr., 34, Phoenix, Ariz. pleased, especially since permis- sion for the party had been denied by Director of Nursing Mabel Hausknect. Yesterday, Executive Director Morris George announced that 29 | student nurses were suspended. Later, executive members of the nursing committee held a>session, dismissed charges against seven of the girls, but decided to hold up diplomas for the rest indefinitely. Graduating Nurses Party No Success PHILADELPHIA (—It was the end of the training grind for 40 graduating student nurses at sub- urban Abington Memorial Hospital. Some of them decided to blow off steam. They gathered in the interns’ quarters for a beer party. Hospital officials weren't too The first census in the United States was taken in 1790. (EAGLE Starts Sunday THE RIP-ROARIN’ HIP-SWINGIN’ LAST TIMES TODAY! “Jungle Jim In the Forbidden Land’ —ALso— “My Six Convicts” ) | | | | | starring fm SHERIDAN Steling H AY DEN with PHILIP REED LEE PATRICK: LEE AAKER | | ‘BEVERY BREATHTAKING SECOND A LIFETIME OF [== i — THRILLS! ZA | | | | } | a mOnOGE rictues National Labor Relations Board | that he was not then a member of | the Communist party, had no affil- | iation with the party, and did not | support its policies. Gold, 54, used | to be an avowed Communist, but | said he severed his party ties be-| fore signing the non-Communist | affidavit. Gold’s unién, which claims 100,- | 000 members, was expelled from | the CIO in 1949 on charges of being ' Communist dominated. | Grader Kills Driver, 28 | McGUIRE AIR FORCE BASE, | N.J. —The operator of a motor! scraper was killed yesterday as it, struck a rut, pitched him over the} hood and ran over him. He was! Leon Arnold, 28, a construction worker of nearby Lakewood. | « —_—_—— -—— Tere | BOX OFFICE OPENS 10:45 A.M. || STRATID THEATRE - PHONE FE. 5 6211 —STARTS TODAY— HE DROVE A WEDGE OF GUN -LEAD BETWEEN THE LAW AND THE LAWLESS! pan ieee 3 pane pt “i 4 ie PHONE FEDERAL c Oo Le] L OAKLAND: MODERNLY AIR-CONDITIONED JOHN HODIAK in ~: sat “AMBUSH AT TOMAHAWK GAP” ALSO: “THAT MAN from TANGIER” 2-485! Either one would make it terrific! To- gether they're tremendous as the Broadway ‘i hit of hits becomes the screen's musical : a gem of ‘em all! me * ee ee a “NOSTRADAMUS SAYS NO” CARTOON © NEWS. ee ee oe ee ee ee a ee > - and Charlie Coe of Oklahoma City _ TWELVE By BEN PHLEGAR AP Sports Writer For the experts one of the big- gest disappointments of the 1953 baseball season has been the sad showing of the New York Giants. The Giants, who won a host of new friends with their triumphant drive to the pennant in 1951, were picked as a solid third place entry with a good chance of nudging Philadelphia out ‘of second. These |judgments were given by men | closely connected with the sport who watched the clubs during spring training. ‘ At their present rate the Giants are going to be lucky to finish as Double Reverse Surprises Browns, Gives Lions Tie By JOE FALLS DETROIT (2P)—Sometimes it’s good to do things in reverse. The Detroit Lions tried it Friday night and wound up with a 2424 tie against the Cleveland Browns in their exhibition game in Briggs Stadium. Here’s the picture? With three minutes to go, Browns held a 2417 lead. Detroit was on Cleveland’s 16-yard line and needed to pick up yardage— fast! A field goal wouldn’t do, of course. The key play came on second down. Quarterback Bobby Layne of the Lions handed off to Doak Walker on a reverse play. Walker then handed the ball to Gene Gedman, and the rookie halfback caught Cleveland with its defenses down and skirted left end to the three-yard line. The 13-yard double reverse put -Jones Watches U.S. Cup Players Trounce British Grand-Slammer Winces at Lop-Sided Wins in International Test - By BILL KING MARION, Mass. —Under the exacting eyes of America’s greatest amateur golfer , the immortal Bobby Jones—his Walker Cup team successors seemed assured of wrapping up another victory over British golfers in their lop-sided series of international conquests to- day on Kittansett’s narrow course. Although he, too, twisted the British Lion’s golfing tall, the Atlanta all-time sports hero ac- tually winced yesterday as he viewed the opening day’s slaugh- ter. American tandems, in 36-hole al- ternate-shot foursomes, piled up a 3-1 lead. Homebreds need only an even break in today’s eight singles matches—also at 36 holes—to gain their 13th triumph in the 14 team competitions played since 1922. Jones was enthusiastic about the golfers who chalked up the losers’ lone victory. ey were John Morgan and Ger- ald Micklem, who prevented an American clean sweep by defeating Bill Campbell of Huntington W. Va. 4 and 3. Harvie Ward of Atlanta, and, national amateur champion Jack | Westland, turned in an easy 9 and 8 victory over John Langley and Arthur Perowne. ‘again had a lead, 17-14. the Lions in scoring position and, with exactly 1:51 left, Gedman squeezed over left end for the tying touchdown. Lions were satisfied with the tie but they had a chance to win it in the last few seconds. Pat Harder aimed ~ field goal from the 29-yard line but it was partially blocked and fell far short of the crossbars. In the first 16 minutes, Lions built a 140 lead and looked as though they would breeze to their fifth victory without a loss over the Brownies. Detroit had scored in five plays, at 3:15, with Layne passing to end Leor Hart for five yards and a touchdown. Then, at 1:05 of the second period, Yale Lary picked off a blocked field goal attempt and raced 92 spectacular yards to score. \ It was then quarterback Otto Graham got the Cleveland attack moving. Browns‘ scored at 13:40 of the second period when Harry Jagade slipped off tackle for five yards. The half ended 14-7. engaged in a punting duel before Browns started another sustained march, fehturing aball control. This one went 80 yards in nine plays and was cepped by Graham's 10-yard pass to Dante Lavelli. That tied it. Just 34 seconds before period ended, Pat Harder tried a field goal for the Lions from the 44-yard and the ball flew squarely between the posts and Detroit And, again, Browns _ bounced In the third quarter, both teams, the high as fifth. They are 28 games behind league - leading Brooklyn, only 4% in front of sixth place Cincinnati, and deteriorating rap- idly. . * * * Right from the-start they have not looked good. Their supporters brushed aside the weak beginning with the excuse that teams man- aged by Leo Durocher are slow starters more often’ than not. Echoes of the Giants’ victory song, which blared from every corner ‘two years ago, were being heard again in July when the club finally edged into the first division. But with August came the real breakdown. They have.won only 13 games since Aug. 1 and they’ve lost 27. Sal Maglie lost his touch, Monte Irvin was hurt, Hank Thompson was hurt, the pitching staff gener- ally went to pieces. Al Worthington a pitcher the Giants had been warned wasn't ready for the ma- jors, was brought up from Minne- apolis in July. He broke in sensa- tionally with two shutouts. Now he’s lost six straight. * * * * Worthington started last night against the Dodgers. He wasn’t charged with the 86 loss but only because the Giants managed to tie ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 Giants Collapse Biggest Disappointment the contest twice and then kick it away after he had departed. The New Yorkers committed four glaring errors which gave Brooklyn five unearned runs. * - + The victory moved Brooklyn 10 games in front of the second place Milwaukee Braves, who bowed 41 to the St. Louis Cardinals. The Cleveland Indians and Chicago White Sox played a 66 tie in ll innings with rain halting play and the St. Louis Browns clubbed the Detroit Tigers 14-6. Chicago's twi- light-night twin bill at Cincinnati was washed out and the rest of the clubs weren't scheduled. BALL GETS AWAY—Harry Jagade, Cleveland | Browns’ back, circles his left end and fumbles as he is hit by Detroit Lions’ Bob Smith in 1st period of Friday night’s exhibition game in Detroit. Charles | advance. Game ended in a 2424 tie. Ane (50), Lion AP Wirephoto center, caught the ball before it touched the ground, but was tackled before he could = Munn Advances Training Slate Cool Weather Gives Spartans Opportunity to Scrimmage Friday EAST LANSING u—Encouraged by cooling weather, coach Biggie ‘Munn managed to move his Michi- gan State football practice sched- | ule ahead a day. Munn had said he wouldn't . stage his first scrimmage until this afternoon. But yesterday, aft- er most of the afternoon was | back. In the final period, Lou Groza tied it up with a 42-yard field goal and then, with six minutes to go, Graham again found Lavelli for another touch-, down pass, this one for 28 yards. Detroit took the kickoff and, Youngsters Sam Urzetta of Roch- ester N. Y., and Ken Venturi of San Francisco, bested Joe Carr of Dublin, British amateur champion | and Ronald White 6 and 4. State Committee to Study MHSAA Rules LANSING (UP) — Rep. Harry Phillips (R-Port Huron) today called a meeting of the adminis- trative rules committee for Sept. 16 to study a ‘“‘harsh” rule that made nine high school athletes ineligible because they~accepted merchandise awards. Se Michigan’s High School Athletic Association ruled the nine prep athletes ineligible for one year Aug. 20 after it was shown they accepted the awards. Tigers Get Pitcher LACKAWANNA, N, Y. ® — Signimg of Nick Koleff, 19-year- old right handed pitcher, to a Detroit Tiger farm contact was announced here yesterday by scout Cy Williams, He said Koleff marched 80 yards in 14 plays to tie the score. Pontiac Horse in Rich Event — A Pontiac-owned racer was in the field at Chicago’s rich Wash- ington Park Futurity, today. In the entry list was Mark Leach’s Greenacres Farm Mr. Prosecutor. The horse is a bay son of ~Occupation-Unmash, who finished second to Hasty House’s Hasty Road in the recent Arlington Fu- turity. Hasty Road and Sea 0O’- Erin, Hasty House entries are favorites for today’s race of 2- year olds. It will not be telecast or broadcast. Eddie Arcaro was expected to spent indoors, he allowed @ briet 15 minutes of contact work. By HERB ALTSHULL WASHINGTON w— If Lew Wor- sham can keep going the way he has of late, they'll have to carve a njche for him in golf’s hall of fame right alongside the Joneses, Hagens and Hogans. His round of 69 yesterday gave him a two-stroke lead in the Na- tional Celebrities Open. Playing in his first tourna- ment since his spectacular vic- tory in the Tam _ O’Shanter championship event last month, Worsham had the big gallery applauding his textbook golf from start to finish. Yesterday's round gave him a Coaches blew a fast whistle and no man worked for more than five minutes. Two backs from the so-called Planutis and halfback Bert Zagers —made the best showing. There were no injuries. This afternoon, scrimmage time was to be extended to about half an hour. Featherweights Clash WASHINGTON \ — Gene Smith and Bill Bossio, a pair of hungry nationally televised bout in which both: men hope to emerge as a ranking challenger in the muddled 135-pound division. Smith is rated the favorite. TV time for the 10-round bout is 8 p.m. (EST). Washington area will be blacked out. Baseball Results (By the Associated Press) AMERICAN a be up on Hasty Road. The rich race ($156,083) attracted an overnight field of 15. If all ‘share will be $99,645, and second Ce .' place $30,000. Likes New Code thinks he will enjoy the college football season this year for the in about a decade ‘‘now BRS os EE ial lyse a j i HH ~ Red Grange Welcomes Football Rules Change ; Some 30 years ago. “I loved it,’’ he added. ‘I tried to figure out what | the opposing quarterback would do start the 6-furlong sprint winner’s ' net w Pct, GB New York ...ccceeeess ge 43 674 .... Chieage ...:ccccsscese 4 504 1044 Chewaland ..cociieceess 1) 504 1045 Besten ...ccccccccdese 23 O SAI 17g Washington .....00000+ 67 @& 496 2% Philadeiphia ......5.-- 5 82 .388 38 PON 2... cc cccceees 5e 85 .370 4046 BO. Lowls .....vccccecee 47 88) «(348 43% Ferd (16-5) vs. Mastersen cage at Cleveland, bo 5:15 ae 5 a (7-3) and ornieles Wyk and Feller (7-6); Detroit Se teneee Chicago at 1 p.m.; Philadelphia, J p.m.; Detroit at st. ingten 8 featherweights, clash tonight in a| halfway’ mark of 137 — 7 under par. » Worsham. wasn't the only eye- ‘catcher. Bill Nary of Kansas City, broke the competitive course rec- showing why they’te champions, “second team’ — fullback Jerry ord at Woodmont by three strokes Four Different Squads Answer, to New Ruling By GEORGE BOWEN COLLEGE PARK, Md. \#—Coach Jim Tatum’s answer to the return to limited substitution is to make up what amounts to four different teams which should give you an idea of the amount of raw football material at Maryland. “We have a pretty young ball club," says forthright Coach Ta- tum, ‘‘but we don’t have the crying towel out.”’ Most of the youth is in the line. Development there probably will tell if Maryland can start another long winning streak which reached 19 last year before the ’ final two games. All-America Jack Scarbath, Tatum doesn’t seem to have a worry in the world for his ‘seventh season at Maryland. Bernie Faloney, proven veteran of two seasons, is ready to step in as a signal caller, passer, run- p oes. ner, punter and defensive half- back. Perez Gains Victory In the backfield, despite loss of | Worsham Takes 2-Stroke Lead in Celebrities Test with a brilliant 64. He got home | with one putt 10 times. He wound up in a three-way | tle for second at 139 with ve.erans Cary Middlecoff and ‘ed Kroll. | Main gallery attraction today |is the foursome of vice president Nixon, comedian Bob Hope, Gen. Omar Bradley, former «hairman |of the joint chiefs of staff ‘and John McClure, Washingt >n attor- ney, a frequent golfing companion of President Eisenhower. Indians Making Move by GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK (®—The worst thing that possibly could happen to the Cleveland Indians is happening— again. Manager Al Lopez’ doughty warriors are making their move, just as they did about-this time a year ago. . Studentg of the game will recall Davis Cup Test Preview Is Seen inU.S. Nationals Trabert and Rosewall, Seixas, Hoad Figure to Reach Semifinals By WILL GRIMSLEY FOREST HILLS, N. Y, ®—Un- less a big, mustachioed Dane and a 39-year-old pappy from Florida gum up the works, the Labor Day weekend in the National tennis championships should produce an interesting preview of the Davis Cup challenge round. * * * The Dane is Kurt Nielsen, who opposes top-seeded Vic Seixas of Philadelphia in one of the two re- maini er-final. matches to- day at the West Side Tennis Club. They last met in the Wimbledon final: this summer and Seixas won in stratght sets. * * The Floridian is vitamin-gulping | Gardnar Mulloy of Coral Gables, ' who matches his tennis wizardry against one of Australia’s 18-year- | old whiz kids, Lewis Hoad. : Seixas and Hoad are favored. If! they come through as anticipated, this is the intriguing lineup we'll have for Sunday's semi-finals: ‘Seixas vs. Hoad. Tony Trabert, Cincinnati, Ken Rosewall, Australia. Rosewall and Hoad are the two teen-age youngsters on whom Aus- tralia is counting to keep the Davis Cup which was won and defended vs. Ken McGregor, now pros, Seixas and Trabert are Uncle Sam's picks to bring the big inter- national trophy back when the United States and Australia clash | next December in Melbourne. The United States must stil] take Can- /ada in the American zone {finals next week, but it’s regarded as routine, * * * Rosewall, the 138-pound all-court tactician who tops the foreign seed- ed list, and the crew-cut Trabert, No. 2 in domestic seeding, ad- vanced to the semi-finals yesterday | by devious routes, Wolverine I] ANN ARBOR W — Professor | Bennie Oosterbaan gave the first of three big exams to his Uni- versity of Michigan Football squad here today. With a week's practice work on their belts, the Wolverines staged a scrimmage on the practice field that was designed to start the ‘jelling’’ process that will lead to the opener here Sept. 26 against University of Washington. On the results, the Michigan coach will begin to formulate the squad that will carry the load this falls. Boys who impress the staff today will probably see action in the fall campaign. First and foremost, it will serve ‘as a big test of Louis Baldacci, the Akron, O., sophomore who stands as the leading candidate to succeed quarterback Ted Topor, who graduated. Offensively, Baldacci has demon- strated the finesse and leadership necessary to the job. Now the coaches want to see what he can do defensively, as a line-backer. Also uppermost in Oosterbaan’s Pontiac Entries Idle in State Tourneys No Pontiac entries saw action Friday as state baseball and soft- ball tournaments got under way at three sites. Ortonville’s 6pening game with Big Rapids in the American Base- ball Congress’ test at Battle Creek was rained out and will be played today. Shaw’s Jewelry, in the Michigan Softball Association Class A Men’s meet at Escanaba, and General Motors’ girls, in the MSA Class A Women’s tourney at Coldwater, had Iist-round byes. Jewlers meet Grand Rapids, 7-4 winner over Escanaba Friday, to- Scrimmages; Coaches Watch Baldacci mind is determination of Capt. Dick OShaughnessy’s role in the coming campaign. Regular center last season, he may be shifted to guard on both defense and of- fense. Dean Ludwig, of Marion, O., and Jim Bates, of . Farmington, loom as good center prospects and appear superior to O'Shaughnessy as line-backers, thus suggesting the switch. Dalrymple Wins PGA Assistant Pro Test Orchard Lake Country Club aide John Dalrymple fired two sub-par rounds at Glen Oaks Friday to win the 1953 Michigan PGA assis- tant pros tournament. Dalrymple collected eigh birdies in posting 67-69—136 on the par 71 course. Ben Lula, of Tam O’Shan- ter, was runnerup with 79-69—140. Mac McElmurry, of Western,’ won the caddie-masters division with 73- 74—147. Roy Beattie, Plum Hollow, was tops among the shot assistants with 75-81—156. Reconsideration of Prep Ruling Sought HASTINGS — Citizens here by the Michigan High School Ath- letic Association. Petitions were delivered to Lt. Gov. Clarence A. Reid in Lansing yesterday for presentation at a of the MHSAA. Four Feature Races DETROIT ® — Four feature he'll soniomber tor "long, time. night at 9 a.m. GMC girls play|Day Handicap, will highlight Mon- Milwaukee A . , ime. | their 1st game at 3 o'clock this|day’s nine race program at Hazel St. Louis hs eels meine said | stternoon. Park. Eleven horses have been ~ merchant. “Gallardo had me in| ,,. norminated for the handicap Cotenge plenty of trouble.” Miss Swaney 10th ae That was putting it mildly. Gal- re To Victori : on tube bed 4. efter ae = a ae a o ictories nat! at Chicago, 1:38 in Madison Square Garden last| Ont “Friday, Miss Sanda: Swaney, DETROIT #—The Sander Hills (16-7) vs, Spahn (19-5) or Liddle (6-5); | out of the fire with rousing rallies. | te field of stars. The Oakland winning ways at Wolverine Harness _ But after the bell sounded to end| County girl is the current world "*ceway Friday night. Skael. to vg = a the elghth round. Dr. Vincent Nar-| women’s wateraki jumping tile| {0° wo grat dash of the feature eas, f Conimansl Os ony "| stein to stop the fight ate: trot, posted two more wins for the Broskiyn ot New York, 1:05 pm; st./two deep and long cuts on Gat-)y), Ww. ‘s Titlist stable. Losls at Miweukee (2). 2 pmi rete’ |lardo’s left eyelid and brow. iw omen $ St Chicage (3), 1:20 pm. Women’s club‘ at} Duke University quarterbacks : Phaede td fee enn, 180 Michigan. State’s all-time ‘career | Bloomfield Hills was won by Mrs. | Worth Lutz and Jerry Barger, bat- pai Milwaukee at Chicage (2), 1:30| Scoring record is ‘held by Lynn|L. J. Columbo Jr. Friday. She de-|tling for the first string job in Bat Cuastnnstl of 9 Lents iS) 1% —— mel 3 ee ag las Hanley Dawson Jr.,|the Blue Devil backfield, are "+ (downs seasons . an 1$hole finals match. | cousins. have signed formal petitions ask- | Chica ing reconsideration of the sus-| p, pension of ‘six high school athletes | Cleveland Sept. 16 meeting of the joint com- | F mittee on administration of rules | » that during last September, after it had installed George Strickland at shortstop, the Tribe was. the hottest thing in seven states. The Injuns closed with a. terrific swoosh, and’ were breathing right down the Yankees’ necks when they finally ran out of games. * * * They returned to their winter homes convinced that if they only had fired up a little earlier, or had been given the advantage of a slightly extended schedule they would have made heroes of them- selves in the World Series. Last spring, when the thought was expressed that the Indians might need a little chinking up here and there, the natural-re- sponse was that they would be the same puttit which nearly ran down and trampled the Bombers, only Tribe Repeating Strong Finish of 1952; Late Drive Complicates Winter Trades perhaps a bit stronger. For instance, they would have big Luke Easter and his powerful bat all the way, whereas the lus- cious one had been available only part time in ’52. Also, the chances were good that Ray Boonewould would make a fine comeback at shortstop and jive up the batting attack. So what happened? Well, the brittle and aging Luke had injury trouble almost from the start, and first thing you knew rookie named Bill Glynn was playing first .regu- larly. Next came a_ wholesale swapping of lesser talent with Detroit. and Boohe was gone. The Indians had dropped back well behind the fleet Chicago White Sex, a situation they appear now to be.on the point of correcting, Iceberg Seeks to Repeat ‘52 Publinx Honors Defending champion Roy Ice- berg faces stiff challenges from a field of 125 golfers today as he seeks to repeat as Michigan Pub- linx champion. State tourney got underway early this morning at the Highland Country and Golf Club. An 18- hole qualifying round is scheduled today, with the low players and ties moving into Sunday’s 36-hole windup. Only golfer ever to win the Pub- linx title two years in a row was Ziggy Zawadski, who turried the trick in 1939 and 1940. World's Fastest in Detroit Race Slo-Mo Among Craft in Labor Day Event; ‘Canada Has Entry DETROIT — Six of the world’s so well by Frank Sedgman and fastest hydroplanes were an- | nounced today as virtually certain starters in Detroit's Labor Day Silver Cup speedboat regatta. Favored as a likely winner — barring mishap — is Stan Sayres Slo Mo Shun V, of Seattle, which reportedly ‘‘cruises’”’ at around 150 miles an hour. The craft will be driven by Lou Fageol, Kent, O., motor manufacturer, who was driving it at Seattle last A t when it cracked up and sank on Lake Washington. Ina preliminary test run here Fageol said he had the boat doing Brownies Slice Detroit's Edge Hosts Clobber Tigers for 14-6 Win; Wertz Hits Grand-Slammer ST, LOUIS W— St. Louis Browns belting in 10 runs in the fifth inning, whipped Detroit, 14-6, here last night and trimmed the sev- enth-place advantage of the Tigers to a slim three games. Vic Wertz clouted a grand-slam homer for the Browns in their big inning. It was Wertz’ 18th round-tripper of the season and the 100th for the Browns. When ‘Browns broke loose against Al Aber, Detroit ‘vas leading 3-2. Tigers picked up two in the third, one on Don Lund’s ninth homer of the year and the other on Harvey Kuenn’s single and Ray Boone’s looping Single to left. Kueénn's walk, Fred Hatfield’s double and Boone's grounder brought another marker in the top. of the fifth. : Then the Browns. clobbered Aber, handing him his fourth loss against as many wins. They got 10 runs, nine hits and had three men aboard when reliefer Rae Scarborough finally got them out. Detroit got one back sixth. St. Louis whacked Bill Weik, who followed Scarborough for two more in the bottom of the sixth. Tigers managed to get home two more runners in the ninth, in the 150 miles with still something left. Four Detroit boats and one Ca- | nadian craft make up the remaind- er of the Silver Cup contenders. | Detroit has Jack Schafer’s Such Crust III and Such Crust V, the Gale II and Miss Great Lakes. Canadian entry is Miss Super- | test, of London, Ont., owned by James G. Thompson and to be ton, Ont. (EST). Final is at 5:05 p.m. Burkemo Down List lin Hills (Pontiac, Mich.) among the 60 golfers who qualified for the final rounds of the Na- ment. But Burkemo,. with 149 for the first two rounds, was far off the pace. piloted by Bill Braden, of Hamil- Silver Cup Monday is a 60-mile affair. First heat is at 1:05 p.m. WASHINGTON wW—Walter Burk- emo, PGA champion from Frank- was tional Celebrities Open Golf tourna- | 5, Tailenders drew only 1,74 to the night game. In tonight’s second game of the series here, Detroit will pitch Ralph Branca (3-5). DETROIT AB RH ST. LOUIS ABR Kuenn, ss 4 3 2 Hunter, ss 5 3 Hatf'ld, 2b 4 1 2 Stevers, 1b 4 1 Boone, 3b 4 © 1 Lenh'dt, If 3 1 Delsing, cf 4 © 1 Wertz, rf 4 1 Nieman, If 4 6 2 Steph'ns, 3b5 1 Drope, 1b 4 1 @ Moss, e 4 1 Batts, ¢ 4 © © Groth, ef 4 2 Lund, rf 4 1 2 Young, 2b 5 2 Aber, p 2 © 1 Larsen, p 3 2 Searbor., p @ @ 6 Pesky 10606 Welk, p ) Mullin 160 366 11 8714 17 DETROIT 3.2.4... 002 O11 oo2 — 6 8t. LOUIS . 002 0(10)2 OOx — 14 Pesky greunded out for Scarborough in 6th Mullin flied out for Weik in 9th. E—None, RBI—Lund, Boone 2, Larsen, Sievers’ 4, Werts 4, Moss, Hunter 4, Pesky, Nieman 2. 2B—Hunter 3, Hatfield, Young, Stephens, Sievers, Lund, Mos Nieman 2. HR—Lund, Larsen, Wertz. D —Kauenn, Hatfield and Drepe 2; Hunter and Sievers; Beene, Drepe and Weik. Left—Detreit 9, St. Louis 6. BB—Larsen Aber 3%, Scarborough 1, Weik 2. S50— Larsen 8, Aber 1, Weik 1. HO—Aber ® in 4 (faced 6 men in Sth), Scarberough 5 in 1, Welk 3 in 3. R-ER—Aber 8-8, Scarborough 4-4, Wetk 2-2, Larsen 6-6, HPB—By Searborou (Lenhardt), Lar- Burkemo had a 74 on his first re —s , _. rsen (4-11), L— round and a 75 on his second. | Passarella. Tota aca. Oette Major League A American League ‘Includes games of Thursday Sept. 3) INDIVIDUAL BATTING TEAM ee - w Pet Pet, Pct. et. = New York .......... 4555 724 1900 976.) Wenner Chey son Srewa, Bes = pee Cleveland .......... 4506 654.1212 969 |chvger, Wash 340 Menthe, NY = Detroit 4848 605 1287 265 Vernen, Wash 330 Bauer, N¥ 302 Becton siisscces 13-4617 674 1210 262 | Roce Cley 827 Enter, Clev 301 Wochington oreeees 4529 Gos 11st 3) |Lenbardt, Stl 318 MeDougald, NY 300 Cuteage eves eesnes = 1 Minose, Chi 817 Seene, Clev-Det 294 phia ........ 4768 He 254 | Bollweg, NY 314 Nieman, Det 291 Passes pee es 456K 496 «(11 256 jemen, Phil 31% . Pesky, Det 229 TEAM FIELDING Carey, NY rod Batts, Det RS PO A_ €£ Pet. | Philley, Phil 7 Delsing, Det 222 acoooeconoac 3G0R 1536 106 980 | Busby, Wash 307 Mullin, Det 271 NOW SOUR ccssccciis 3569 1523 168 9879 |Geedman Bes %¢7 . Det 258 fiadelphia ....... 3689 1480 118 978 | Mitchell, Cley 204 Hatfield, Det 256 Saese ...+-854@ 1583 112 978] Kell, Bos 904 reve, Det 243 Washington ........ 3540 1408 111 978 | Woodling, NY 305 Recha, Det 228 Detroit ............ 8497 15283 121 977 | Seucheck, Det 805 Priddy, Det 227 Bosten ....... cesens S618 1521 129 976 | Kuenn, Det 204 Hite 211 St. Louls ....,...... 3590 1468 140 973 ' Beyd. Chi 304 Det 167 ; LEADING PITCHERS WoL .ERA w ERA Cu Saceeeneres? 17 ® 2.16 DEN Te verccecccetres: 12 ‘, 3.58 Bapet,: WE sccccccesccccces 146-8 £808 Wynn, Chev .....-cccccccce 36 30 8.08 ord, NY o.oo... ceeees cece 16) & 2.67 . Wash ..... peoed7 10 3.68 Truoks, GtL-Chl ..cccccccee: 8 68 RUF Weller, Clee oi ckcccctesccce’s 7 6 «848 gbermnett, U0 5 .ccccesssce 18 8 2.98 Shea, Wash .............0.. 11. 6 3.78 COMES EE. len ececscececsces 12 6 3.05 Hudson, Bos .......cccceeee _s & 2 Garele, Cle i ciiccvessvesces 16 8 3.0R Kellner, Phil .............. 1] 12 B92 Parnell, Bes 18 8 817 Fricane, Phil .............. 7 9 4.10 Masterson. Wash ...... cco U0 BEV Growh, Bee sitsciaccseccsca 3) 686 64.30 SOM .cuiascccceecens 4 64 RRP Varsen, SL .........scccece 311 19 6& 2.17 Raffensberger, Clim .......... 7 12 Sat ebtete. UE ic cciscdee cess ctl. WE OO Bees WE oo sencdnceeecove ® 8 Burdette, MU ......cee.s-0018 3: 2.82 Ls eye ay 8 9 rey Go 208, ME nnocccccccccenss 13 j 291 Serkent, Mil .......-seecees-1) 5 te Witholem, WE ..cascegecccccss ¥ t.91 > GRE a nccccccvece eodese_8 . 13 Simmens, Ess woes eee s 12 ‘11. 3.25 RES seve pee soeenge 34 & 437 Antonelli, Mil ..........000+% a 0 SS Minwet, CM =...-..-cenccnes 9 14- 4.99 Haddix, StL ...... eeeceeeees 96 7 3.68 Jangen. NY .......ccccccees te 18 4.298 ME, OU sadecteccece vans 12 8 3.47 eS eee ee 1 62 448 peor. Oot pasasaneececceees 16 7 $68 Konstanty, Phil ............ 4 1@ 447 Ba cc cveccccccccs ee ee Se: | GRE wcccvcccccdesaise © 18 458 & } « ? to Three Games mrwSuweneopea ll e wee ee es Es as ll Tt—S THE PONTIAC PRESS ie I of PONTIAC, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 54, 1953 4 * * . or +, ” hy Po , eg abe tee Pennsylvania Dutch needletuft spreads with egg- shell backgrouna provide conversation pieces for the white French Provincial furnishings of the C. List Six Rules for Brush Care Good Painting Depends Upon Equipment Used for Job . If you want to get best results from your home painting — take good care of your paint brush, or brushes. That. is the advice of paint brush manufacturers who say there are six elementary rules all paint brush. users should remem- ber. The first three are ‘‘Don’ts’’: 1. Don’t ever leave the brush in water. - 2. Don’t ever stand the brush on the bristle end. 3. Don’t ever allow any paint product to harden in the brush. And next are three ‘‘Do’s”’: 1. Do clean your brush prompt- ly after use — with the proper thinner for the paint product used. 2. Do follow with a gentle wash in mild soap suds and water, and a rinse in clear water. 3. Do comb or brush the bristle straight, wrap carefully and per mit it to dry without disturbing or bending the bristle. Even the best painter cannot do high quality work if his brushes have deteriorated for lack of proper care. at New Ceiling Equipped to Control Heat, Sound Ceilings that heat, cool, and con- tro) sound have been introduced to héme builders recently. The material ised is aluminum coils through whick flows hot or cold water to orovide either raciaht or cooling; and also clinging to the ceiling is an acousti ‘herma! blan- ket made of giass fibre for ab ‘eae Beat (Fea ; FRENCH PROVINCIAL — A pair of twin’ 8B. Hampshire master bedroom. T in beds have a matching twin chest, anu : deep purple velvet chair adds another intere:ting color note to this room. Eggshell cotton carpeting covers the floor. Ee = = ro re — — Se . —— hx ( 0 ie i Me awe os ’ ane. My eit 2 ei + ae Pie. eel Te ronment yen peer & wee + Re, * gre - a caees may me meen ? » —_ te ¥ 0 i, :+. WHITE MARBLE — Italian marble in white was used for the front is piece of the t:aditionally styled white fireplace in the Hampshire living room. A Swedish sunburst mirror and several Swedish brass accessories complement this plain white facility. Wood Paneled Room Proves Sales Aid Wood fanciers maintain that wood ha @ sale: psychology all its own. They cite the case of two almost identical homes sold by their owners at the same time on Chicago’s North Shore. The only difference between the two houses was that one had hardwood plywood paneling in the living room and the >ther didn’t. The house witb the paneling brought $2,500 more. The panel- Ceiling Beams Popular Plank and beam construction is gaining popularity in both resi- dential and apartment construction. The exposed planking and neams form an attractive ceiling and, at the same time, serve as sub- flooring for rooms above, or as roof decking. Sweep Varnished Floor Varnished floors should not be washed with water. Sweep with a hair brush and every two to- four weeks use a lightly oiled mop. Scratches can be obliterated by dropping turpentine into them and ~# r % EX) Tee wh 4p weir Be a ~ bot Trundle Beds Adapted to Fit Modern Home A new version of an old idea makes interesting news in the home furnishing field. The trundle bed of colonial days has been adapted into a modern version bunk-bed set by a furniture company, The unit includes two twin size beds, a three-drawer chest, a ladder and guard rail. These may be arranged in a vertical manner for the trundle or bunk-bed effect, or he pieces may be re-arranged to make two complete separate twin beds and chest, a ladder and guard rail. The wood is hard rock northern maple stock in two finishes, and the price ig under two hundred Architects Plan Detroit Meeting Regional Conference on Sept. 18-19 Will Include Four States William C. Zimmerman, Pon- tiac architect, today announced that architects from Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky will hold their American Institute of Architects’ Great Lakes Regional Conference in Detroit Sept. 18 and 19. Raymond S. Kastendieck of Gary, Ind., newly-elected region- al director, will preside, said Mr. Zimmerman. ~~ Guest speaker will be Harvey Campbell, executive vice presi- dent of the Detroit Board of Commerce. Clair W. Ditchy of Detroit, newly-elected national president of the institute, will speak at the dinner meeting on the eve- Sateen init hada P ; te Ce Shee wt . mh, é oe Ps Reb ge pee 4 ound for LIVI! RATE TET IPE ORR Se RT mens ere ~ > » A F . a ‘e 2 “ “sgh os ; wiry of at 7 thal doe x COUNTRY HOME OF CRETE — The C. B. Hampshires of 6323 Middle Lake Rd., Clarkston, chose modern crete for the exterior finish of their new home. Placed side by side in vertical position, crete is.a concrete product with a smooth-as-glass finish. It invites paint and keeps its paint jobs longer than ordinary concrete building materials. Your Neighbor’s House The Hampshires selected ledgerock for a center panel and this, built horizontally, breaks the vertical lines of the crete. Soft salmon color is used on garage door trim and relieves the white of the rest of the one-story contemporary home. American, Foreign Flavors Pervade Clarkston Home By HAZEL A. TRUMBLE Although international flavor has been added to the interior decor of the new Clyde B. Hamp- shire home in Clarkston, the exterior design and construction materials boast exclusively of this nation. From Florida came the idea for the life-time white tile roof. Exterior is built of modern crete, a rather recent innova- tion in the building material field. Borrowing its name from the island of Crete, famous for generations of skilled stone- masons, tt is a house-height section of concrete block with ‘ @ very smooth surface. Crete has an affinity for paint and paint fobs are renorted to tast longer than on other types, of concrete matertals. To break the all-vertical lines of the crete. the Hampshires chose a mid-section panel of Tennessee ledgerock The hori zontal position of this rock com- plements the crete lines. Pale salmon picked up from the rock is used for trim and overhangs. Floor plan drawn by the Hampshires has a 27x17-foot liv- ing room, a dining room. com- bination kitchen and dinette area, two bedrooms and ‘ath, plus a utility room and garage with workshop area. Now in the finishing stages is the activity room with three giass walis overlooking Deer Lake and a deep ravine back of the Hampshires’ home. Artisans from Sweden, Italy, France, Spain and China have contributed to Mrs. Hampshire’s interior furnishings decor. White Italian marble faces the fireplace, with accessory pieces in Swedish brass. Inlaid woods from Spafn form the dining room suite which, according to Mrs. Hampshire, never. gets anything but a soap and water bath and plenty of soft-cloth rubbing to _ restore nat finish. “1 don’t believe in furniture polishes. They check good wood finishes and eventually ruin them," she said. French prints are used on the living room walls which are painted cafe au lait. Give House New Saate All birch woodwork is used throughout the house, with every- thing from the kitchen cup boards to the spacious closets finished in this natural grained wood given five-time finishing treatments by Mr. Hampshire. Interesting window treatment in the living room has one win- dow group covered in pale tur- quoise silk filament draperies. In place of the usual pinch-pleat tops, a three-way shirring tops the entire set of windows. These are shot with metallic threads. cameo and have Chinese flower and tree motifs in brown and deep turquoise. Beige embossed carpeting cove by Resurfacing Exterior Gable ends, soffits, breezeway ceilings and eaves are the accent spots in your home. They lend sparkle and freshness to the exter- ior of the hceuse. By resurfacing these sections you can do a remarkable facelifting job on the house at very little cost. There area variety of materials to choose from including many composition panels but of them all, fir plywood is one of the most adaptable. economica! quality sid- ing materials open to you. With it, boxing an eave is a simple matter, A flush plywood surface on the gable-end lends variety to the siding style. And you can nail a smooth ply- wood breezeway ceiling into place in nothing flat. In jobs like this, be sure to get only exterior fir ply- wood with waterproof glue. If your house is looking old or somewhat ramshackle, don’t o--er look the possibility of a re-siding job outside. Plywood is one of the few siding materials that you can nai’ on right over your old wall surfaces. There are a number of effects you can achieve with this panel material. One is a board and batten style with flat battens nailed over panel joints and in the centers 2 feet apart. Half.round moldings can also be attractive. But one of the .nost striking treatments open to you is wide-lapped plywood siding. * ers the floor of dining room and living room. A Katherine Henrich Chinese bachelor’s chest and circular coffee table are used in this room. Finished in ebony, they are grouped with velveteen arm- chairs in a soft brown. Master bedroom is furnished in white French provincial. The twin beds are covered in Penn- sylvania Dutch needletuft spreads with an eggshell background. This same color is used in the cotton carpeting, and the dra- peries are in celedon with gold. Striking color note of this room ts a purple velvet uphol- stered boudoir chair. All rounding corners are used, eliminating necessity for window sills. Bathroom has ceramic tile on floor and walls, with pink, oat- meal and black ferming the color scheme. Kitchen of the Hampshire home ts in sandalwood with a new type vinyl floor which re- quires no mastic on top of the concrete floor. m Resilient, the flooring is non- porous and stain-proof and re- quires no waxing. One-quarter inch thick, it can be taken up for changing of floor design. HAND-RUSBED BIRCH KITCHEN — Five seperate and successive OO ES, eee FOURTEEN ——— ee Ce ee Get Our Price! Let us show you how much more we build into your garage tor a completed’ CALL TODAY! Car-’n’-Halt low price! > Single Double 6 PAL te © 207 W. Montealm St. WEWING. Phone FE 4-9544 For «a against causes—all in one Fe & & “% ae Ralph J. Austin Extended Insurance agg and explosion as by e. surprisingly low edditional premium you can have your fire insur- ance extended to cover loss from several other Ask this agency about it. Austin-Norvell Insurance Agency, Inc. 70 W. Lawrence *St. Corner Cass FE 2-9221 Nearing Completion 3 Bedroom Home Large living room—natural fireplace—completely modern Located in Beautiful HURON WOODS A Controlled Residential Subdivision area. Good schools, taxes. An your future heme! Lots Available Adjeining 800 acre Pontiac’s Oldest Insurance Agenryy Ess 000 Community National Bank Bldg. «FE 2 Next te Branch Pest Office | « { a : THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5. 1953 FIFTEEN _ Average Wife Washes average Someta each, may q H , Acre of Dishes Yearly =| yn Seco cercare alien an ore an ome The importance of aot water in| floors and floor coverings, and an the home is pointed up by the | acre of dishes. | = fact that cold water is rated from | | erm § ssue two to 20 times less efficient for| About one-half the families in | cleaning purposes. \the U. S. own their homes. ° : ‘| James H. Hampton Will LAU GH atthe Pere ysneatorean tm A permit for construction of a| " | $12,500 home, to be built at 558| 2 | Pearsall St., was issued this week | wherever your home is— whatever it’s made of— whether it’s new or old— YOU CAN HAVE THE FINEST WARM AIR HEATING! | by the city’s building department | to Della L. Adams. Another permit among the 13 issued this week was obtained by | | James H. Hampton for construc- | tion of a $10,000 store at 825 W.| | Huron St. Other permits include: | Re-side dwelling. 46 Sanderson, Mid- west Supply Co., $815. . “ror 25 Bagley, Midwest Supply | O., 7 | — home, 563 Alton, Louis Breaux, COLEMAN BLEND-AIR FUR- Easily | $5 = NACE forces freshly heated -side, > ff \ | 1050" ee 1 filtered air through 312" heat Installed } Build garage, 337 Iroquois, Robert D. ® tubes ; | Heitsch, $500 ’ . in any R A Th 7 build ' eles 25 N. Sanford, Marion Ham- x ' h ld is modern building mate- won te 3 ome, 0 ec reation rial is as rugged and durable as | a mre a a Peay), erent | 3 The MAGIC 6! . : 1 ‘ R ’ the rock from which it is made Build addition, 120 Osceola, Donald } ‘1 BLENDER blends PRE-ENGINEERED 3'2-INCH or new: oom. —yet it's light in weight, easy Prericks. $3.500 . - . HEAT TUBES carry freshly to handle, simple to use. Just ana Bidiie Co. are” AER: Wine furnace air with g heated air from furnace to Move the energetic youngsters nail the bi panels directly to Build addition, 250 Edison, Ambassador room air and 4 Blenders. No 4 i ‘3 ' f studs or right over the old walls Insulation Co., $675. » | € 3g . an the fun- Oving adults out o and the job is done! Finish with | Build garage, 250 Edison, Ambassador et ak. Sedlies we circuletes it from Expensive your living room tato a8 ety a ainr wallpeper of texture if | Taaulation Co. $828 mae. - ~ | ili Remodel pada ss i se an RSs you wish. tee eee ‘ CHINA FLOWERS — Stylized flowers on contemporary designed floor to ceiling. : N° BLEND-AIR FUR . emodel- tion ta your home easily, For ideas on remodeling Heat Varies Little china are in tune with the softer, prettier type of table settings now COLEMA aii “ta eith . ing or Al- quickly, and at surprisingly low attics, cellars, living rooms, Pests conducted in rooms heated| in demand. Now on the market, this Gayety pattern is at home with NACES are available“in either Sevailenst cost with Gold Bond fireproof kitchens, etc., ask for your free Co nee basehonrd Gectne Units either strictly contemporary or traditional surroundings. B- gas or oil models. ° Gypsum Wallboard! copy of “Modernizing Magic.” y ; show only 2 to 5 degrees tempera- ture difference between floor and | N Al Ab| matter too much that laboratory Fireproof GYPSUM @ UNAFFECTED BY CEUAR DéK.eN" I ceiling. This contrasts to a differ- | ature one e attempts to duplicate its many a @ WON'T WARP OR BUCKLE ence of ry ut 20 degrees Sacral qualities have not succeeded/ 4 ‘ ; . Lod WALLBOAR DJ «tees anr xm or secorsisa J 0°e and ceiling in rooms heated) fy Produce Wood Tis caveolin Gu wood, cf _ | course. And the fact that it has : Most A live in ho ALBERT RB | Biggest dollar volume of home | oat ee uve : uses | been a product of such long and } e made of a material that has accepted use means that many improvement loans insured by ; LOWRI & LUMBER CoO FHA last year was for additions| never been invented. homeowners and home planners * and alterations. But the greatest | Fortunately nature, aided by | may have actually lost familiar- || e FE 2-9104 Baldwin Ave. at Walton Blvd. number of loans were for insula-| man, provides it in abundance in | ity with its propert ies and | | tion work. | this country and so it does not | merits. | JOHNS - MANVILLE PRODUCTS SUPPLIED Sensational In troductory Offer Asbe sto S siding or NEW ALUMINUM SIDING shake-type aa Famous “REYNOLDS”: and “ALCOA” dv Offer Ends Sept. 11th; Place Your Order Now 800 Sq. Ft. LABOR and MATERIAL APPLIED GOODWILL Automatic Heating Company ‘The “Hot” Name In Home Heating 38 S. Telegraph Rd. , FE 2-7849 a, ¢ Lifetime Guarantee 800 Sq. Ft. LABOR 7 Installation by Trained Mechanics and MATERIAL d 100% Perfection Assured $ FHA TERMS Up To ; 3 Yrs. , To Pay d Fire Resistant @ FRIENDLY FREE ESTIMATES OPEN Sun.-Mon. v¥ Won’t—Peel or Blister d Won’t—Fade or Loosen OFFER ENDS SEPT. 11th PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW! @ FRIENDLY FREE ESTIMATES CONSTRUCTION & BUILDING COMPANY | 499 South Saginaw GENERAL CONTRACTORS 7 PHONE FE 3-7181 AW ¢GENERAL @ ELecraie Tere E ATION PAVING . ) ) | .. Terma Available Citiphote Line’ of - laevis o 0’BRI EN Hi EATING SUPPLY HEATING wine ser | FE 2-1211 Se oe i ie i>). ie. ee, Ji il _ SIXTEEN PROTECT YOUR HOME INVESTMENT From Fire — Storms — Tornadoes Call Today—We’'ll Be Glad to Help You On Any Insurance Problems LAZELLE AGENCY, INC. Dan Lazelle Hardwood Flooring Exterior Birch Doors me Always Service — All Ways DIXIE LUMBER CO., Inc. 831 Oakland Avenue FE 2-0224 $33.00 building cost: Interior sketch shows the living-dining room from its garden side looking toward the corner firéplace and _ front architect.) ne F4 . OTT et coanaciys i Nd MBE EA RRELILOPIGIO DEES >in ie. ie ie ie ee ioe ae ee: De ae ee. a ae. ie. aa i! 1% THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1953 3 ] ] 00 door. This is Plan H-208-P by the PLAY *4-208-P nan Payer “a older Utility Grade ........... Homegraf Company, 11711 East | ; Eight Mile road, East Detroit. 7 Five years ago, nearly one- : Per M (Further information and blue- la quarter of the younger married The first factory in the United | States devoted exclusively to the manufacture of machinists’ tools was established in Nashua, N, H., in 1838. John H, Gage set ‘it up at the Nashua Manctactirmg Co. THE TIME TO PLAN YOUR DRIVEWAY s NOW! CLARKSTON Save Future Expense and Trouble by Building NOW! 5-4601 for Free Estimate! ANN ARBOR CONSTRUCTION C0. hil HH Hil 1}! i} Hi} TT ttt cia 25 BOILERS | Pontiac Store 371 Voorheis Rd. FE 2-2919 L DISCOUNT lip to All G.M. Employees “4 | on General Motors Delco Heat Products—For a Limited Time onty at Cate Heoting © an¢ Aida BUY NOW AND whch WATER HEATERS. a FURNACES ii Hu i} HH th WH WHI US Hii ti WH} WMA HHT et FF HEA : ' ' Se ee Oe anes, > VP ee MA ! TMH ST SEES s a Authorized Oakland County Distributor Drayton Plains Store 4696 ° Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9501 Successful Home Decor Depends on Color Choice One out of every two people says that color is the biggest problem in decoration. It may be that a homemaker likes a certain color but lacks the knowledge of how to use it or what colors to put with it. Or it may be impossible to find fabrics or carpets in the right color. But once the problem is solved, color can be the key to successful de- coration. It can be used to play up the good points of a room, or dis- guise its poor features. A family of colors actually can create unity in a room. The use of garden colors in a house can make the boundary be- tween indoors and outdoors almost imperceptible. The 1954 palette is composed of 29 different colors 14 are called current colors because they are the colors in current demand; 15 are decorator colors, indicative of emerging trends in colors. The pa- lette is no arbitrary set of colors which most people want. Chairs ranging from Hitchcocks to new plastic shells; are taking to these colors, in bold and soft- spoken hues. Color is applied to the chairs by brush, spray, or electronically molded in. Manufacturers of furnishings for the bedroom and bathroom are making it easy for the home- maker to coordinate the colors in the two rooms. For the bath, there are now bathtubs, bowls, basins, towels, plastic shower cur- tains, and sponges in colors that blend with bedroom sheets and blankets. Bedroom furniture (chests, beds, tables, chairs) comes painted or lacquered making it possible to maintain the sense of color har- mony down to the last detail. Even leather is changing color and becoming a more versatile de- corating material than ever before FUEL SAVINGS UP TO 50% OWNERS REPORT OIL HEAT - FURNACES 6 BOILERS Because of new dyeing methods, practical top leather can be had in any color. Today’s decorators use leather as a whole background for a room, “papering’’ @ wall; or as a rug, serving as a foil for a marbelized floor. When leather is used for accents, it may be mixed with nubby fab- rics and set off by gleaming brass legs of contemporary furniture for an interesting counterplay of tex- tures. Like the superb marquetry of 18th-Century furniture, it is in- laid into table tops or on the drawers of chests. Modern Dratt Stops Smoking From Fireplace Pleasant news for homebuilders is a modern draft built into the fireplace and designed to elimi- nate smoke, to start the fire quick- ly, and to supply 80 per cent of the necessary draft that is normal- ly pulled into a room as cold air from the outside. The concealed draft slot is lo- cated at the front of the fireplace and keeps a clean line between the hearth and the fireplace proper. The draft can be adjusted, the producing company states, so that any desired. amount of heat may be obtained; while a fixed ‘‘cur- tain of air’ is directed-up the chimney, keeping the smoke to the back. It is engineered so that heat may be held in the room even with the damper open. New Unit Ventilates Wall of Glass Block A unit to give controlled, all- weather ventilation ina solid glass block wall is now available. struction. The outside face consists of thick glass light diffusers, set at an angle to allow the passage of air, without causing drafts. Inside the unit is a fine mesh wire screen to retard dirt and insects, while on the inside face are two heavy glass louvers which may .be ad- justed to any angle, up. or down, easily. ERE QO WN . Electrical Contractor ® WIRING @ FIXTURES © POWER FE 2-3924 or FE 4-6405 BLOCK BUILDINGS Complete Basement Waterproofing RELIABLE WATERPROOFING CO. chal aes All Work Cusranteed—Free Estistes WEATHERPROOFED Phone FE 4-0777 5 es we wa un in 2 were ee x Older Group Buying Homes Survey Says Demand Great Despite Some Who Are Pessimistic WASHINGTON (INS)—A survey taken just after President Eisen- hower’s inauguration shows the de- mand for homes is greater than it has been in the past two years— a sharp contrast with the pessim- ism expressed by some industry men. Sponsored by the Federal Re- serve Board and conducted by the 1953. The survey also showed that newlyweds under 25 years of age are buying fewer houses while couples owned their homes while in early 1953 the figure had dropped to 14 per cent. Mortgage money shortages, cou- pled with the declining number of veterans under 25 and using the GI bill may be responsible for the alls a READY Ff MIXED CONCRETE driveways, walks, curbs rwwevwvvvuvuvuvuvevveivevveveveivvveivevovuevuvevevevwevwver University of Michigan, the survey 4 $ to buy 2.8 million homes, including and gutters will last indefinitely! - 4 4 {> 1.8 million new houses, in 1953. : » ——— PHOON 4> This is slightly higher than Whether you oes C) oy home or remodeling your pres i the 2.7 million estimated for the ent one give o thought to the convenience os well as the in- p : When You Need Steel—New or Used $ p é record year of 1950, but three crease in volue your property will have with these low-cost, 4> @ Angles—Channels—Beams 4> years ago families bought a ever-lasting CONCRETE improvements. ? * Reinforcing Bars > 7 greater number: of rind houses ‘ @ Basement Posts > than they did older dwellings. > é @ Plates > J Whether industry plans have -ROCK @ SAND @ GRAVEL @ Pi a ' changed in recent months is not : > 4> 3 s jee known, but home building is still ANY AMOUNT, LARGE or SMALL: : > We Cut to Size—— > : ‘SMARTNESS ‘AND ECONOMY— | | we Livine DinweG running ahead of 1952 with pro- » Envisioned in this modern design | 12°-S°x WO W944 7-848 9 spects good for construction of > ‘ FE 4-9582 > 4 of a house that needs no basement more than a million homes. MEETS A.S.T.M._ SPECIFICATIONS 135 Branch St. Across from American Forging and Socket is smartness and economy. . Most prospective buyers, accord- i q> es Fe Although there are three bed- oron | 9) | ing to the survey, expected to pay BOICE BUILDERS SU PPLI ES lh i Li li Li Li Ll Me Li i hl i i i hn i Ml Mi i i ln Me nl rooms, a large living-dining room : =A ' S| | 1952 prices for their homes this Member of Detroit and Michigan Concrete Block Assn. re and combination kitchen-laundry, [-] mwrey | xicu-tamo grees! | [year but, for various reasons, the © BRICK © BLOCKS © CONCRETE the house covers only 1,059 square ! “4 10-6 17-2" . median planned expenditure rose Cenidiste tis of Sada © ’ bar | a 7S ple a feet contains only 10,618 cubic 4 « Feven PET? from $9,500 last year to $9,900 in 545 South Telegraph Road one FE 5-8186 BEECH and PECAN feet-figures that largely determine drop. of every 10 married persons over 65 owned their homes in early 1953. This was five per cent more than the number reported in 1948. The_Reserve Board comments that 6 out of every 10 home buyers this year will be married couples under 45 with veterans showing “mote interest in the housing market than non-vet- erans.”’ Rents and the number of families living in apartments are also ris- ing. The Board says 17 million American families were >aying an average rent of $33 a month in 1948 but early this year 19 million families were spending an average $47 a month. Further increases are likely. Regarding maintenace ex- penses, the board says 12 million home owners spent at least $50 on their houses last year and about one-third of these spent $500 or more. This market is expected to continue strong this year. Casement Windows Now Come in Wood The conventional double-hung window is still the most widely used, but there is increasing use of casement wood windows and those of the horizontally sliding type.r Many other types are available, too, for the home planner’s indi- vidual requirements. A great var- iety of choice in wood windows is now possible in every locality of the country through local lum- ber dealers. On the other hand, almost 7 out | Saturday and: Sunday 12 to 7 p. m. Deluxe Two and Three Bedroom Brick Homes in Beautiful... "WESTRIDGE Pontiac’s Newest Fine Suburban Area DIRECTIONS: Turn off Dixie Highway on Cambrook Lane at Our Lady of the Lakes Church. Watch for “open” sign. HELTMAN & TRIPP cenerat conrs Exclusive Builders and Developers of Westridge at Waterford 22 W. Lawrence — FE 5-8161 Nothing Finer Built! JANITROL HEATING EQUIPMENT Call for FREE Heating Survey and Estimate Today OTTO A. TRZOS CO. 3103 Orchard Lake Rood Keego Harbor FE 2-0278 oa Before You Order Your <> GARAGE : Since. the unit is made in the fe three standard sizes of glass block Be Sure to Get 2 and is simple to install, the pro- . ducer points out that it may be Our Price cand used either in old or new con-|. Specifications “ASPHALT ~ FREE ESTIMATES .. . Our sy aloenion. will call ct your convenience — no obligation. G&W Construction Co. 2010 Dixie Hwy. at Kennett Rd. 12 en tls, Pontiac, Mich. ” ten et ee 4 2 ‘ ial Naess ta ee | $ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 ee a a a a ee ee ee TY, os ee s _ SEVENTEEN and 10 miles) Mgqkes Tarnish Go ; ; ; ; lines. This cuts installation units isl Line With Oilcloth Check Protection , —y Modern Utili otis and save steps. ra Stier! ‘has won om akcadbac: Shelves and drawers can be - 4. Provide the room with stain-| ural award for its attractive and| Copper and brass tarnish can be lined with oilcloth more smooth- proot and durable counters of | *urdy design. removed with salt and lemon ap- It ig mainly of wood frame con- ly than by using thumb -tacks if you coat the wood with shellac and lay the oilcloth while the shellac is still tacky. RAY O‘NEIL Realtor Complete Real NEW Seal Ritz - One Coat FLAT PAINT for Water Vapor BEAT Damp basements, porous foun- dation walls and floors — as well as crawl spaces — all may be sources of water vapor which even- tually finds its way into exterior walls or into living quarters where it increases the indoor relative -humidity in winter. sistance. Sometimes this may lead into the | stud spaces of exposed walls and may even pass through wooden | sill construction and fire stops. Since the vapor enters from the bottom of the stud space, it is ex- tremely important to make sure that your home has adequate vapor barrier protection to safeguard it against the destructive force of in- hath MBER} INSULATION CO. } | dows have affinity for each other.| the wondow walls by means of celling tracks and _ traverse Women love to peer out of them, rigging. Tailored sheer draped Room Popular All-Purpose Plan Could Make Work in Evening Almost Attractive One of the prettiest rooms in especially in the case of basement- less, all-on-one-floor homes, has grown to a new high of both use- fulness and attractiveness. What once was just the site of the heating plant, or a place merely for laundery tubs and trash-collection, now ranks with other rooms as a family living area. colorful tile that may serve many purposes, including laundry sort- ing, hobby crafts, and children’s play activities. 5. Be sure the utility room has two entrances, one from the inter- ior of the house, preferably the kitchen, and the other from out- doors. 6. Make the room cheerful and You know what? This utility room could easily become the most popular place in the house! 3-Sided Cabanas Gain in Popularity Cabanas, usually three-sided shelters facing the beach and the AT LAST! A JvffercaT TYPE OF OIL BURNER! plied with a soft cloth, then quick- ly washed with warm water and soap flakes, rinsed and dried. ROCK LATH—Plain and Foil PLASTER—Cement--Sanded--Structolite LIME—Ivory--Grand Prize Estate Service | In finding its way to the outside, an oaks ae the homemaker’s realm can be the | easy to be in by supplying plenty GAUGING—Quick--Slow 75 W. Hurow FE 3-7103 §| the moisture-laden air of the base- Wee fi! “utility” room. of windows and fluorescent light- =. ment takes the path of least re- five This practical part of the house, | ing for evening work. AGGREGATE 4 reggco--Zono ‘ MORTAR BOXES—PLASTER TOOLS—HODS MORTAR BOARD STAND ADJUSTABLE STEEL TRESTLES * Order Your Coal Now x KAISER COAL & SUPPLY CO. 702 S. Paddock Street Phone FE 4-3555 oil smell. NR RS Ly pletely. Result! Fuel sav- ings and a cleaner home. vading moisture. Here's a utility room design re-| water, are getting more ANd MOTE | weg sees seo sccm caesar a a ems Ge cently suggested by one of the| architectural attention. # If Y . | ' ‘connect: | § our Furnace is 11 Years Old — Or More... It is estimated there will be | WINDOW DRESSING—Bedroom drama (top left) is achieved by leading housing experts: A cabana colony of 53 t 30 multion it teaeri SS ee combining plain curtains in ripple fashion with contrasting draped} 1+ ee a ere M4 G F Oil bé ATOMIZATION” CAN . S. 53. ; . a: ; pose one, inc ins an in the _ by the end o dotted emer Soe ice lace style curtains in tailored style rodipact heating content aeeae DOORS ‘ e > j}are trimmed with eyelet er; (bottom le picure window is/ facilities for garden tools and out- . bd WHO’S YOUR |cyrtain arrangement of two-tiered short curtains, sides having full|of-season clothes; laundry; and Flush—All Sizes % SAVE YOU FUEL DOLLARS! ROOFER? length curtain of same or contrasting material; (bottom right) French | f4mily hobby and play space. “SPECIAL BUY 4 s @ |! doors get a new outlook by combiaing dotted curtains straight over 2, The room may be made at- 2-6 & Under $9775 : i | sashes with a single-width plain marquisette curtain at the outward cective iy ote ae Mehogeny a We Do All Kinds of | Sas es 1 sing Pp. rq waterproof and easily cleaned if ry @ ROOFING | opening of the door. it is surfaced with material like Have Wide Selection. of : @ ROOF REPAIRS , * * « +e « tile, especially on the walls and 4 @ ROOF COATING iS . Ab © se floor. MERCER FLUSH j;| > Oe cocks We | tumped OUL CUTtAINS? | | + recate tne room stratesica’ | DOOR SALES ||. Get An Estimate Without Obligation S ] . B 4 aay be “necked ue” al 256 Wellsboro, Walled Lake hy Briinary wethed | —leaving unburned “core” into millions of particles. ROOFING & Ah. windows! Women and win-{ get privacy and light control at 4 ily gab facly sont, ocd Each particle burns com- ns | dress them @p.and even be peeked rtaip ; filmy. ligh . For Nearest Dealer's To Buy or Sell Neal Estate, See: §) at from the outside looking in. vearamee - y» light ap fluid heat ROTARY BURNERS Name, Call BATEMAN and KAMPSEN Modern windows, however, pre- * ‘Where there’ are odd size | | s f blems — how to| ~: ; a j F West Detroit Glass REALTY COMPANY =f Sc" 4 few, roblems icture, | Windows in a ‘bedroom, a pair of] © GETS ALL THE HEAT FROM EVERY DROP For warm air heating systems of Pontiac 329. East Pike Street bay or terrace-type outlooks. Or anne curtains aly Pit pove | OF OlL FE deral 2-8397 FE—4-0528 in the = CF a iar | give the illusion ‘of castes window. | @ ONLY ONE MOVING PART @ GENTLY circulates worm air on ae | ee bit of. ingenuity to fit them 47.eXtra pair of curtains — wide ne @ SO QUIET YOU HARDLY KNOW IT’S THERE @ FULTERS and humidifies eir | \ od cre." ; and short — may be used as a prevent heoting yew breathe in a m m pi : | dressing table petticoat. plow Heat your home the new, modern way, with a Fluid @ QUICK, quiet heat *Whatever- the curtain prob- | ; a Heat Rotary Burner! No burner costs less to operate! @ SUMMERTIME COMFORT — lem -— there is a solution. You | 4. A large picture window may | There's a model for every home — come in or call for | 3 blewer fon can be operated SUPPLY can camouflage windows to look | be draped in two tiers of curtains | @ free estimate today. | § ph bot ot dainty or give the illusion of |— 4 number of short lengths, and | * Convenient terms arranged / 9 North Telegraph | massiveness — all with curtains. | one pair of curtains at the outer onne i L —_ Call FE 5-6973 for FREE Near Huron These suggestions offered by cur- | Section from top to bottom of the | William Lechner 5 a Home Heating Survey FE 4-2575 Ext. 6 lotion area. The shorter window Eves, Sun.: FE 5-7433 tain experts should help you in} ..4; F osed your quest for sunshine or shade | eae mnene ee TC) ‘0| youl . | Suit the mood, or just plain beauty at your win- dows: | 3. Very large windows in a | | bedroom may be curtained in a | 1. Combine plain and dotted | combination of plain and dotted | marquisette curtains at a French} eurteln materials door with fixed sash at either} 27 N. Cass Ave... FE 2-1821 E al TH ony PRgH1 — \ | _ LAUGH AT THE-HEAT! INSULATE YOUR HOME with ba ad Na a —_ REREAD SLRS, oF On NEN |side. Two pairs of dotted curtains! Drape the plain materials flush | gerren HOME scaahaiaesiea dation ve house! Le . eating and Sheet Metal Contractor hang straight on the outside sash. | With the window in smooth ripples | 2. GARDES, oe ay gt i 351 N. Paddock Street FE 5-6973 | A single width pair of plain mar-,in a tailored style. Then drape | . quisette is tied back at the ns| aang curtains over them} ae ae seca _ | ward opening French door. | from center to side. LOB ARLELRBEARBELENGE SSE th SN Alon ae cotton | 2 Large window areas, par- If you do not have curtains with | | ticularly corner windows may | built-in tiebacks, pull the fullness | of the curtain back in a sweeping | curve and anchor it at a point just above or just below the cen- ter of the curtains for the most pleasing effect. Dotted marquisette, organdy and rayon curtain materials will shrink some when washed. Your curtain length should allow for this. GTN (~) Infra. Aluminum Shield, Wards off Summer Heat 4 ‘ Wood Preparation Pays Dividends | areftil preparatien of new wood rfor painting pays dividends in ob- | taining good results. It also makes If you want a home that’s cool in summer, warm in winter, choose INFRA, the insulation that has proved itself in the labo tory and in the home; - |it easier to repaint later on. Be sure of the curtain width the Zsulation favored by ' First, remove any hardware, you require. On a criss-cross style, architects, engineers. ond |then sandpaper the wood or rub it| one 40-inch width window will need : , , | with steel wool, carefully rounding | two 80-inch width panels, often builders. any sharp edges and corners to expressed as ‘160 inches wide to Of all heat transfer through wall spaces 65% to 80° is pes apenas ae rai| ja AL These give the desired RADIANT. Infra Insulation REJECTS 97% of Radiant shea 4 icdentations All with aan! ! filler, level them and sand off any a Heat . roughness when the filler has dried. Ar chi tect Sees That spells summer coolness. And winter comfort and #3! 1 you are planning to use a pig-| P : economy. Come in and ask us about Infra. | mented coating, apply a priming | actor y-Builts | coat next. If you plan a ‘“‘natural’’ finish and are dealing with an open |, in Greater Use | grain wood, such as mahogany or) GircaGo (INS) — An internat-| |oak, apply a paste wood filler be-| ionally-known architect believes |fore you varnish, stain or shellac’ that the house of the future will the surface. be built chiefly of factory-built | parts, steel and glass. ‘ ; 5 | Walter Gropius, former head of |Harvard University’s department & |Of architecture, made that predic- | tion in Chicago recently and added that the trend ‘‘away from the brick pile’’ has been under way | for 20 years. The architect said factory- | In consideration of all the people that will be off and i me eels ‘ able to work on their homes over the holiday | “It is not machine-made parts \ or the machine that makes for Bage hocaing @arsiopreents “with - . WE WILL BE OPEN cm, ihe er SUNDAY and LABOR DAY 10 A. M., to 2 P. M., Tru-Bilt Block -Co. 922 Pontiac Drive FE 4-9531 BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS RANCH HOME This new ranch home offers so much for you to enjoy in gracious, peaceful, suburban living; close to town. Styled of tan brick it fits into lovely surroundings..Rambling yet planned to give utmost in living area. Has three large bedrooms, mahogany paneled sun room, large dining room, relaxing den, two natural fireplaces, one in the big recreation area of the full basement. The modernly Crosley equipped kitchen has ample space for breakfast and laundry room. Automatic gas fired hot-water American-Standard radiant baseboard panels provide heat. Two tile baths, one with stall shower. A big two-car tects achieve greater individual- made windows, factory-cut steel | and factory-assembled kitchen which were built not by machine but by hand.” | and bath units will help archi- The architect also foresees fur- or leroy, giving litde or lots of . garage is attached. School buses serve the area for the children. (Our Usual Sunday Hours) | unsrslay Wonderful big windows on all sides give picture-like views of the , smaller Conditioners spacious 200x300 foot lot, which has majestic shade trees scattered ~ . | er for Humidity t | We Wish You All a Safe and Full . oe about. Price $36,000, on terms sizing air equipment ‘ ‘ Labor Day Week-End -_ Open oe Shaw! , pen for Showin Saturday, Sunday and Labor Day 10 to 7 DIRECTIONS: -Approxjmately one-half mile south of St. Joseph Hospital, turn right, off Woodward to 170 North: BURMEISTER’S ORTHER LUMBER COMPANY r : Wholesale or Retail Berkshire. Watch for ‘‘Open”’ sign. A fence should be selected to , | _emarwiicnamens (tees! = ROY ANNETT, Inc, Realtors - a , ry 3 e Roa 3-4650 and EM 3-3996 . etme 1 advantage. 28 E. Huron St., Pontiac Phone FE 3.7193 \ / : __EIGHTEEN a EE Ee RIES ot Beautiful Ranch ing by roughing the surface with Homes in fine sandpaper or powdered pum- Bloomfield Hills ice, brushing clean and then coat- 1090 Lone Pina Road ing with thin shellac, BLACK TOP © DRIVEWAYS © PARKING AREAS FREE ESTIMATES—EASY TERMS Ga ASPHALT PAVING CO. 2010 Dixie Hwy. FE 2-2227 -* *¢ & " AX AXX 8,4 AY wee, * ri } } } ft ff wyY\ } \ i rv) } \ hl ABBA ve 4 eeeeeeesseses yr ak, er s* ” Dh < J *@aePeeoeagioonsease A Aj 140 N. Cass Ave. +s a Ay YOUR HOME IN THE SMART, MODERN MANNER SIBLEY COAL & SUPPLY CO. . FE 5-8163 Bulging Plaster Can Be Fixed Repair Job Consists of Flattening Surface, Securing With Screws By HUBBARD COBB An awful lot of nails go into the average house and they are all pretty important little items. Just think,- for example, what happens when one of the nails holding the lath to which the plaster is ap- plied pulls out or rusts away. What happens in a good many cases is that a section of the plas- tered wall or ceiling bulges out and this makes a home owner most unhappy. In some cases the only thing to do about this situation is to remove the plaster from the bulge and renail the wood lath into place using non-corrosive lath nails. In many instances, however, it’s pos- sible to repair the damage without having to make too much of a mess out of things. What you do is first locate the position of the wall studding by gently pounding on the wail. When you've located a_ stud, gently push against the bulge to force the lath and the plaster back into place. tened out, keep it that way by running’ wood screws through the plaster and the lath into the wall studding. You may need several screws to do the job and they should be about 1% inch long and they should have flat heads. Once this has been done you can touch up any cracks in the plaster with patching plaster. - BURMEISTER‘S ORTHER LUMBER COMPANY 7 Wholesale or -Retail Cooley Lake Road Open Sundays 10 ‘til 2—Weekdays 8 to 8 10 Carloads of ~ sd ; be] bay! ” ¥ é a e fe é; the quality items any or CARLOAD ONE CARLOAD ONE 2x6's CARLOAD ‘ ONE 2x8's , CARLOAD ONE Genuine UP *5 CARLOAD ¥ *500 ildi riv ONE UF YOu oe ules and = CARLOAD save up to. $500 on all . materials. Two 1x8’s - 10's - 12's. CARLOADS For LOW, LOW CAR UNLOADING ONE | for PRICES Come Out CARIL.OAD 7 and See Clarence : Burmeister ONE It Will SAVE You CARLOAD © MONEY! EM 3-4650 / for the Biggest NO’ We've Ever Offered ‘PONTIAC! When you want quality—think of Burmeister’s Northern Lumber Co.! lading on this terrific LUMBER BUY! These are you get a volume purchase LOW PRICE NOW on all items. Clarence Burmeister for° TREMENDOUS CAR-UN- LOADING SAVINGS! , NO, 2 & Bétter YELLOW PINE 1x6’s. A quality value! DOUGLAS FIR 2x4’s No. 1 with 15% No. 2. Clear, full milled timber. Mill dressed, quality grade. NO. 2 WHITE PINE Weyerhaeuser stock. KNOTTY PINE PANELING . and 106 GARAGE SIDING WHITE PINE BOARDS 3-in-1 ASPHALT SHINGLES colors including pastels. FIR FLOORING 1x4 ond 2x6, 2x8, 2x10 , CEDAR SIDING Just Arriving ale And bere is the bill of we are now unloading . . . and Come out to the yard, see Idaho, waxed end A-1 quality, all and EM 3-3996 Once the bulge has been flat- ee | >t = * | el ea y mS ‘a , | wall SSS Apt bd H ie | - — ) a “SA as Dee VAR : a _—— % — ms Be oan ee fT PATIO FURNITURE ee OUTDOOR STORAGE—For more gracious, more convenient and more comfortable outdoor living, you can construct your own patio furniture. Home Craftsmen Okay Outdoor Storage Cabinets Most homes have far too few outdoor storage facilities. Outside of the garage — which soon be- comes three-deep in garden and lawn tools, bicycles and wagons Decorate Room in Picture Hues Choose Color Scheme With Fine Art Work:as Your -Guide Looking for ideas before start- ing to redecorate your home this fall? Your favorite picture, or a new picture, can be the inspira- tion for a sparkling new color scheme, Whether you are doing over the living room, the dining room, or other rooms in your home, you | can pick your colors from a fine picture. For the artist has keyed all of his colors. to the dominating color, to create a harmonious composition. The picture you select for a | color scheme may be one of the many fine reproductions that | are available in your stores, or it may be an original oil or a watercolor. Study the picture, noting the proportion of the var- fous colors used by the artist. Select the dominant color in the picture as the color for your walls. | This color may be grayed, or |may be lightened according to ' the outlook of your room. If the 'room receives a great deal of | sunshine, you will want a cool, grayed tone. Warm colors are more suitable for rooms with little sunlight. Choose the second most im- | portant color in the picture for In general, if the house is fortable and colorful, it stylish. Brush Care Helps Proper preparation of the brush before painting makes cleaning easier later, says the National Bu- reau of Standards. Recommended procedure is to suspend the paint brush in linseed oil overnight be- fore using for the first time. REFRIGERATION SERVICE — DAY OR NIGHT | SERVICE Authorized Kelvinator Dealer MASON REFRIGERATION ‘FE 2-6400 461 Blizabeth Lake Rosd Broker Willis M. BREWER ® Listings wanted ®Buy and Sell | paint. f— there is practically no room for storage. Some home craftsmen have ap- preciated the inconvenience in the situation to the extent they have designed and built their own out- door storage units. — For those who don’t feel up to designing their own one ply- wood association has come along with four new plans to help them out. For want of better identifica- tion, the -association calls the units an outdoor storage wall, a carport storage unit, a garden cabinet and a set of demount- able furniture that includes an- other cabinet. But these units are readily adaptable to other uses besides those named. The outdoor storage wall is par- ticularly intresting, for it doubles as a summer dining center and an out-of-season storage unit. It can be built free-standing attached to house or garage. Designed in three connected sec- tions, each with a full-front door opening, it is carefully planned for storing tools (it’s big enough to contain a lawn mower), toys, barbecue equipment, flower pots and other odds and ends. For either summer dining or a garden work center, a large table folds down from the cen- ter section. The carport storage unit is de- signed to keep out of sight the items normally stored in garages, but it is also applicable as a garage installation. The unit can be built into an existing carport, but for good measure the plans also show de- tails of how to build a carport especially designed to contain the unit. This storage wall has space enough for bulky gear, like win- dow screens and bicycles, and smaller cabinets for tools and cleaning equipment. There is a “garden” closet for storage of a wheelbarrow, fertilizer and such as that. The third unit in the set of plans is more than just a garden cabinet. It is built near the chil- dren’s play area for storage of games and toys, next to the out- door fireplace for barbecue equipment or at a shore-side cabin for boating and fishing gear. The patio furniture is a com- bination of demountable units, in- cluding table, benches and storage cabinet. The furniture comes apart easily for winter storage. The cabinet may hold cooking and barbecue equipment. Plywood for making the units should be the exterior variety, which has plies sealed together with waterproof glue. / In finishing the units, prime them first and then apply two coats of high-quality exterior house Electric Clock Has 2 Outlets . and Night Light A new clock that is installed right into the wall and which not only tells time but has a T7-watt night light and two electrical out- lets that will supply two electri- cal appliances simultaneously is} now on the market. gat se link vE iy r% ir ilps Ff stiles FF ei Outside Paint Job | Needs Dry Fire place Back on Stage Center Architects Giving It Contemporary Styling by Use of Tile The fireplace is coming back to the ~‘‘center of the stage” in modern homes. Big fireplaces that dominate an entire wall were commonplace in the houses of 100 years ago, for they were needed both for cooking and for heating the house. With the advent of central heat- ing, however, families began in- stalling smaller and smaller fire- places, which were often little more than fussy extras in rooms. Today’s architects are revers- ing that trend, They keep the fireplace opening small, it is true, but they give the fireplace importance, They make it the outstanding feature of the room and plan the furniture and other decorations around it.. Two of the most suecessful ways Secure Perfect Closet by Boards on Plaster Any closet can be transformed into a cedar chest by nailing three- quarter-inch thick cedar lining boards directly over the plaster. For perfect dust control and add- ed insulation apply metal foil over the old wall and lap and seal all joint$. Use tongue and groove cedar boards for a tight fit. Weatherstrip all door joints. ; Serve in Flames If you want to get fancy and serve a flaming dish at your next dinner party, the technique is sim- ple. Heat a ladle of cognac until it’s warm, put a match to it and then pour the flaming brandy over the food. ommercial and Industrial Wiring Specialists Electrical Contracting » Fluorescent Lighting BALLARD ELECTRIC Floor Laying, Sanding, Finishing MILLER BROS. 16 Years Service in Pontiac Call FE 5-3162 of giving a fireplace this impor- tance are to face it with a fire- proof material such as tile and extend that material either frem floor to ceiling or from the fire- place opening along an entire wall. In one Western home, the archi- tect raised the fireplace hearth to knee height, so that the fire woulld be almost at eye level for seated guests, and then faced the entire wall with tile in a fairly deep buff shade. No mantel was, used, with the result that the eye) centers immediately on the fire- place itself. In another home a black tile 543 S. Paddock St. FEderal 4-4201 Pontiac, Mich. Lumber SASH & DOORS BLDRS’ SUPPLIES BUILDERS’ HDWE. PAINTS DICKIE Lumber Co. 2495 Orchard Leke Rd. Phone FE 4-3538 was selected for the fireplace facing and the tile run in a wain- | scot about 30 inches high along | the entire wall. A large wood box was built into the wainscot near the fire- place and the wainscot itself was topped with a wide wooden man- tel, which also ran the length of the room. Other architects prefer to run) the tile facing from the floor to ceiling. The texture of the tile itself and the. amount of it used then make the fireplace a dom- inant room element. FIRST For Best Price and Quick Service Dawson & Watson Rebt J. Dawsen. Hugh A. Wateon 11% N. Saginaw St. Ph. FE 2-5420, Pontiac OUN & KEAUTIFOL i= aHOME We have many now/avail- able in every pricé range. Call ROY ANNETT, Inc. REALTOR 8 EK. Geren St Phene FE 83-7193 Open Eves. and Sun. 1-6 P.M. 14x20 Garage All materials furnished includ- ing 8 x 7 steel door No Money Down Up to 3 Years to Pay ORTONVILLE LUMBER CO. Ortonville, Mich. OPEN SUNDAYS 10-2. Phone Ortonville 59 . “e Gelp Finance Dewn Payments & A SUN PORCH? ‘ee A GARAGE? LUMBER 3360 W. Huron FE 5-6910 =e eu t por ; z Fete Ps <€ : SR ane 4 i ete Sh “3 las ) | 3) 4. |» 3 eS Ses ss ee ie as SS a eS Be ‘ \ eee . Our low-cost home improvement loans help you modernize now . . . make your dream kitchen come true. Enjoy your dream kitchen NOW! Low rates for home improvement loans Low down payment + 3 years to pay “Enjoy all the timesaving, work-saving conveniences of a beautiful, modern kitchen. Our low-cost home improvement loans make it easy for you toe modernize now, The kitchen is the room where a woman spends most of her time, does most of her work. And a new kitchen adds to the value of your home .., is built to last a housetime. Find out how easily you can modernize your home . . . on our home. improvement plan and take 3 years to pay. Come in today BURKE LUMBER CO. Where the Hame Begins Drayton Plains on the Dixie OR 3-1211 / mst eagcenans THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 Potter Urges Loyalty Oaths. Would Withhold U. S. Aid to Schools Whose Teachers Won't Sign WASHINGTON (# — Sen. Potter (R-Mich) says Congress should ‘ take up the question whether to deny federal funds to schools whose : teachers refuse to take loyalty or non-Communist oaths. Potter called for such considera- tion yesterday, declaring that “If ‘there is any one place the Commu- nists can do a lot of harm, it is in our educational institutions.” “Such oaths are required for a lot of other people,’ Potter added in an interview. ‘I certainly think the teachers shouldn’t be put in any aterent category.” ‘ Denial of federal aid to any edu- cational institution whose teachers refuse to take the oaths was recom- mended in an Americanism Com- mittee report approved this week by the American Legion national convention in St. Louis. Both the House Un-American Activities Committee and the Senate Internal security subcommittee have exten- sive testimony from former Com- munists that Reds infiltrated the school system. Some educators, on the other hand. foresaw difficulties for legis- lators in trying to set up specific standards for a federal aid ban if it were to be applied. 29-Year-Old Mother of 9 Beauty Contest Finalist CLIFFSIDE PARK, N.J, (P—-A 29-year-old mother of nine children was among seven wedded lovelies who made the finals for the title ot Mrs. New Jersey of 1953 last night. Mrs, Anne Spada, a 5 foot 3 brown-eyed blonde from Whippany, _and the others were chosen to compete for state honors Sept. 10. The winner then will go on to the Mrs. America contest in Asbury Park, Sept. 13. STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- bate Court for the County of Oakland, Juvenile Division. In the matter of the petition con- . on John Schram, minor. Cause No. 2637. To John Schram and Alma Schram Hills, rents of said child. Petition having been filed in this Court alleging that the present where- abouts of the parents of the said minor child is unknown and the said child has violated a law of the State, and that said child should be placed under the jurisdiction of this Court. In the name of the people of the State of Michigan, you are. hereby notified that the hearing on said peti- tion will be held at the Court House in the City of Pontiac in said County, on the 15th day of September A. D., 1953, at nine o'clock in the forenoon, and vou are hereby commanded to appear personally at said hearing. It being impractical to make personal service hereof, this summons and notice shall be served by publication of a copy one week previous to said hearing in the Pontiac Daily Press, a news- paper printed and circulated in said County. Witness, the Honorable Arthur £. Moore, Judge of said Court, in the City of Pontiac in said County, this 4th day of September A. D., 1953. Seal ARTHUR E. MOORE, A true copy Judge of Probate GEORGIENA R. MURTHA, Probate Register, Juvenile Division Sept. 5, 1953 STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- bate Court for thé County of Oakland, Juvenile Division. ' the matter of the petition con- cerning Albert G. Lewis, minor. Cause To . and Doris Lewis, parents of said child. Petition having been filed in this fourt alleging that the present where- abouts of the parents of said minor child is .unkmown and the said: child is dependent upon the public ‘for sup- port, and that said child should placed under the jurisdiction of this Court. In the name of the people of the State of Michigan, you are hereby notified that the hearing on said pe- tition will be held at the Court House in the Citv of Pontiac in said Countv, on the 15th day of September A. D.. 1953, at nine o'clock in the forenoon. and you are hereby commanded to ap- pear personally at said hearing. It being impractical to make personal ice hereof, this summons and notice shall be served by publication of a copy one week previous to said hearing Moore. Judge of said Court, in the City of Pontiac tn said County, this 3rd day of September A. D., .1953. Seal ARTHUR FE. MOORE, A true copy Judge of Probate GEORGIENA R. MURTHA, Probate Register, Juvenile Division Sept. 5. 1953 STATE OF MICHIGAN: In the Pro- bate Court. for the County of Oakland Juvenile Division. P In the matter of the petition concern- ing Clarence W. and Richard C. Erickson, minors, Cause No. 13131. To Evald and Marjorie Erickson, )}ar- ents of said children. Pet having been filed in this Court all that the present whereabouts of parents of the said minor chil- dren ‘are unknown and the children are of this Court. le of the State of Michigan, you are reby notified that the hearing on said petition will he held at the Court House in the City of Pontiec in said County, on the 15th day of; September A. D. 1953, at nine o’clock im the forenoon, and you are hereby commanded to appear personally at said hearing. It being impractical to r.ake personal service hereof. this summons and notice shall be served by publication of a copy one week previous to said hearing in the Pontiac Da ceosanend Sie Probate Register,-Juyentle Division Bept._§, 1953 ' To yton Dulmage and Irene Sossi. Petition havin: ee ee eee ee that t wi ts parents of ere Hi g 3 a8 F E fe Ghee | : i | : | i Eggs, dozen ... “} Peppers. bushel OP MICHIGAN: Ta the Pro- | said minor child - has violated Local Markets Produce ; ‘Farmer to Consumer Beets, buned ....ccccccccce be e 3 for ereete eeeeeeseee 26 ae BIE ccccce rs Treen peppe LOR ceoses : Cucumbers. 6 for ....cceses 28 Corn, dosen ...... eccceces 40 Tomatoes, quart ..cccccess 25 per peck seeeeeeceseeeeee 1.50 per bushe! ..... eccceeccce 2.00 o. beans. quart erecee 20 Radishes, bunch .....ceess -10 D TOP xiswece eeeeececcee 25 Carrots, bunch ....cccccess -10 3 or, ereeeeve seeeeeeeeeeee 45 Onions, bunch ...cescoccee * -10 3 for Potatoes, bushel s..e.scse.s Cabbage. nead i. pples, bushel ...,.aesseee - 1.73 to =) e Celery BUNCH ceccccccccee ercccccccces 65, .70 an — wm os Carnations, dozen Gerantu GOZED cocceese 5 Gladiolis. cb PrYTTTTT i. and Wholesale DETROIT PRODUCE DETROIT (UP) — Wholesale prices on public farmers’ markets: Pruits: Apples, crab, No. 1, 2.50-3 bu; McIntosh, fancy, 4.00 bu; No. 1, 3-3.50 bu; Wealthy, No. 1, 3-3.50 bu; Wolf River No. 1, 2.25-2.75 bu. Cantaloupe, fancy, 3.50 bu; No. 1, 1.50-3 bu, Blueberries, No. 1, 3.25-3.75 12-pt case. Grapes, No. 1, 1-1.25 pk bskt, Peaches, Hale Haven, No. 1, 3.25-3 bu. Pears, Bartlett, No. 1, 2.50-3 bu; Pears, Clapp’s Favorite, No. 1, 2.50-3 bu. Plums, Burbapk, No. 1, 3.50-4 bu; plums, Damson, No. 1, 2.50-3 bu. Watermelons, No. 1, 2-2.50 bu. Vegetables: Beets, No. 1, .80-1.00 doz behs; beets, topped, No. 1, 1-1.50 bu. Bregcoli, fancy, 2.50 4a-bu; No. 1, 1.50-2 %-Bu. Beans, green, flat, No. 1, 1.50-2 bu; beans, green, Roman, No. 1, 3.7§-3.50 bu; beans, green, round, No. 1, 2-2 bu; beans, wax, No. 1, -2.50-3 bu; beans, Ken- tucky Wonder, No. 1, 2-2.50 bu; beans, Lima, fancy, 4.00 bu; No. 1, 3-3.50 bu. Cabbage, standard variety, No. 1, .75- 1.00 bu; cabbage, curly, No. 1, 1-1.50 bu; cabbage, red, No. 1, 1-1.50 bu; cabbage, sprouts, No. 1, .90-1.25 bu. Carrots, No. 1, .55-.75 dos bchs; carrots, topped, No. 1, 1.80-2 bu. Cauliflower, No. 1, 2.25-2.75 doz. Celery, No. 1, 2.50-3 crate; celery, No. No. 1, 1.00 doz behs. Corn, sweet, No. 1, 1, 1.00 doz behs. Corn, sweet, No. 1, 1-1.35 2.25 bu: cucumbers, dill size, No. 1, 3- 3.50 bu: cucumbers. pickle size, No. 1, 4.25-4.75 bu. Dill, .75-.95 doz behs. Egs- plant, No. 1, 1-150 bu; eggplant, long type, No. 1, 1-1.50 bu. Kohlrabi, No. 1, 1-1.50 dog behs. Leeks, No. 1, 1.25-1.75 doz behs. Okra, No. 1, 2.25-2.50 pk bskt. Onions, dry, No, 1, 1-1.35 50-lb bag: onions, green, fancy, 1.00 doz bchs; No. , -73-.90 doz bchs: onions, ,pickling, No. . .12 per lb, Parsley, tly, No. 1, .50-.75 dos bchs;. parsley root, No. 1, .15-.85 doz bchs. Peas, black eye, No. 1, 3.50-4 bu. Peppers, cayenne. No. 1. .75- 1.25 pk bskt: peppers, hot, No. 1, 1-1.50 bu: peppers, pimento, No. 1, 2-2.50 42-bu; peppers, sweet, No. 1, 1.50-2 bu. Pota- toes, new, No. 1, .75-1.00 50-Ib bag: potatoes, No. 1, ; Radishes, white, No. 1, .80- radishes, fancy, 1.00 doz bchs; .10-.90 doz behs. Squash, Acorn, No, 1, 1-1.75 %-bu; squash, Butternut, No. 1, 1.50-2 bu: squash, Delicious, No. 1, 1.50-2 bu; squash, Italian, fancy, 2.00 %a-bu; No. 1, 1-1.50 bu; squash,, Summer, No. 1, .75-1.25 %-bu. Tomatoes, No. 1, .40- .50 pk bskt; tomatoes, outdoor, fancy, 2.00 %-bu: No. 1, .90-1.25 4e-bu. Turnip, fancy, 1.50 doz bchs; No..1, .90-1.25 doz behs; turnip, topped, No. 1, 1.50-1.75 bu. Greens: Cabbage, No. 1, 1.25-1.75 bu. Collard, No. 1, 1-125 bu. Kale, No. 1, 1-1.80 bu. Mustard, No. 1, 1.25-1.75 bu. Spinach, No. 1, 1.50-2 bu. Sorrel, No. 35 1-1.25 bu. Swiss Chard, No. 1, 1-1.50 bu. Turnip, No. 1, 1.25-1.75 bu. Lettuce and salad greens: agg cab- bage. No. 1, 2-32.50 bu. Endive, No. 1, 1.25-1.75 bu; endive, bleached, No. a 2.50-2.75 bu. Escarole, No. 1, 1.25-1.50 bu; escarole, bleached, Mo. 1. 2.59-2.75 bu Lettuce, head, No. 1, 2.25-3.25 3-doz; lettuce, head, No. 1, 1.25-1.75 bu; let- tuce, leaf. No. 1, 2.25-2.75 bu. Romaine, No. 1, 1.25-1.50 bu. ’33 gs ~~ CHICAGO POTATOES ‘ CHICAGO (AP)—Potatoes: Potatoes: Arrivals 151. on track 295; total U.S. shipments 337; supplies moderate; de- mand fafr: market firm to slightly stronger: Idaho-Oregon long whites 3.35, Russets 3.40-55: Nebraska Pontiacs 1.75: Washington long whites 3.20-40, Russets 3.25-50; Wisconsin Chippewas 1.40, Pontiacs 1.30-2.00. ‘Livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—Salable hogs 300, total 2,000; compared week ago: Barrows and gilts strong to 25 higher; sows .75-1.50 higher. At week’s close the top stood at 25.50, paid by local independent packer for the small number choice 230- 260 Ib wetghts available. Such weights established the market top all week. Closing bulk choice 190-220 Ib butchers brought 24.75-25.25 with most choice 170- 190 It lightweights at 23 50-25.00 accord- ing to weight. Small lots scaling down, to 180 Ibs ranged as low as 21.00. Most sows scaling 400 Ibs and lighter sold on the week's close at 22.50-24.00 with bulk 400-550 Ib weights at 21.50-2300. a few head heavier weights as low as 20.00. Salable cattle 200, total not given: compared week ago: High utility and commercial cows weak to .50 lower, can- ner to average utility grades .25-.75 bulls .50-1.00 off; and ‘ higher; vealers slaughter calves 1.00 lower; stockers and. feeders fully .50 lower, instances 1.00 off; heat the principal bearish factor, ad- versely affecting the market for slaugh- ter as well as feeder cattle, forward buying for next week again curtall by the Monday holiday and approaching non-slaughtering Jewish holidays; liberal holdovers from day to day also featured the. market although choice and prime . | steers and. heifers well cleared late and . | carryover of kinds grading good and below redueed but the clearance still far from complete; modest supply orime sche Liquor Ruling ls Condemned Selling of Hard Drinks on Military Posts Called All Wrong and non-commissioned officers on military posts. There were expressions of con- cern from members of Congress too, along with one of approval. But other lawmakers, asking not to be quoted by name, expressed the hope that the furore would die down before Congress reconvenes, in January. Said one: * s s “Anything you say publicly on this is wrong.”’ The Army and Air Force an- nounced yes sales of liquor by the drink or bottle will be per- mitted to persons over 21 at bars and lounges operated by officers’ and non-commissioned — officers clubs at posts in the United States and its possessions. Such clubs, while on government property, are not government enterprises. They are run by their members under service regulations. , Hammers Schumberg, Washing- ton representative of the National Retail Liquor Package Stores As- sociation, said the néw policy was ‘legally, morally and ethically wrong.’’ Schumberg went on to say in a statement: “This is completely contrary to the announced intention of the Ei- senhower administration to dis- courage government competition with private business, If the policy is allowed to stand, there will be a mass uprising against the Re- publican party and the mothers of boys going into the service will lead it.” Sen. Hill (D-Ala) said in an inter- -| view: “I will certainly ask a full and complete report from the secre- tary of the Army on the new regu- lations and their effect when Con- gress convenes.” One lawmaker with military ex- perience said the situation was ticklish because: “The veterans who have been in the services and have hair on their chests, think the men can handle their liquor. And the church women and similar groups are fighting any sales of liquor, or even beer.”’ Unofficially, high military offi- cials summed up the philosophy of the new system this way: “Some of the men are going to drink anyway so we might as well make it possible—and attractive— for them to do it where we can keep on eye on them and make them behave themselves.”’ GM Sends Out Call for Repair Experts DETROIT W — General Motors and government employment agencies today launched an in- tense, nationwide campaign to re- cruit 350 key skilled tool and machine repair men. Unless they get them soon, the present total of 33,500 idled by the Aug. 12 fire at the General Motors Livonia transmission plant may be nearly doubled, GM said 25,000 additignal em- ployes are threatened with layoffs. The skilled men are needed at the one-time Willow Run bomber plant, where GM has leased space ed) from Kaiser Motors Corp. to maké automatic transmissions while the Livonia plant is being rebuit. The company said the, needed tool and machine repair men could work up to 70 hours a week if they 1025-1275 Ib fed steers 900 Ibs and heav- | wich ler bulked early at 24.00,27.50 but from Tuesday on at 23.00-27. when the ex treme ton was 27.75, hieh choice and prime 1500-1600 Ib beeves 24.50-25.50 loed high prime 1575 Ib weight: ~ 26.75, high choice 750 Ib yearlings late 23.00, week's bulk good to low choice steers 17.50-23.00. commercial to low good Tades 13.00-16.50, two loads utility 1025 tfp-horned grassers 12.00 but light low utility grass steers down to 10.00; choice anh prime fed heifers 21.00-26.00, good to low choice 16.00-20.50, ;commer- cial grassers down to 11.50 and light canner grass heifers down to 7.00; late bulk utility and commercial cows 9.25- 11.00, few on heifers order to 12.00. late bulk canners and cutters 7.57-9.00; utility and commercial bulls closed at 10.00- 13.50, canners and cutters 7.00-9.50, few good heavy and medium-weight fat bulls 10.50-11.50; few choice and prime vealers late 21.00, most commercial to cholee 14.00; load choice heavy stock steer calves 20.00, most good and choice feeding steers and yearlings 16.00-19.00, medium to low gond 12.50-15.50. , Salable sh 100, Compared week ago: spring slaughter lambs total not given. Good to prime and yearlings out prices during which time sp grading good and better declined 5.00 to mostly 6.00 . Woman Hurt in 2-Car Crash on M-59-at Tilden on M-59 at Tilden, Rd. Driver of the other car, Thomas inted |. Kinser. 26, of 7256 Ida Terrace. Bartender Dozes While Patron Helps Self to $125 A lone patron of a bar was be- lieved to have helped himself to $125 from a cash box while a believes he knows the customer’s name. Man Hurt in Accident Veachel F. Shelton, 46, of 2845 a circus lioness, to announce the birth of quadruplets to her and her mate “Tarzan.” One of the cubs in the litter is an albino. EXPERIMENTAL—Packard's NINETEEN new experimental sedan, the “Balboa,” features new design aimed at passenger comfort with sharply different styling of the roof and rear window.’ The roof forms a canopy over the rear window, which is out of the reach of the sun. The window, flat and distortion-free has a reverse slope and is not exposed to rain or snow. The car is one in a series on which Packard is experimenting with new styling concepts. Above, William H. Graves, left, engineering vice president, and Edward Macauley, chief styling engineer, inspect the new car. Gen. Dean Eats Tremendously Enters Tokyo Hospital for Examination Before Heading Home TOKYO (—Maj. Gen. William F. Dean, liberated yesterday after more than three years in Commu- nist prisons, checked in at Tokyo Army Hospital today for rest and a physical examination before heading home. Doctors described Dean’s appe- tite as “amazing.” He has scheduled his second news conference for Sunday in the hospital auditorium. The thin but apparently healthy former commander of the U. S. 24th Division flew here this morn- ing from Korea after inspecting an honor guard at 8th Army head- quarters in Seoul. * * : Before boarding a B17 for the five-hour flight to Japan’ Dean drove through the streets of South Korea's capital smiling and waving to thousands of Koreans who turned out to cheer him. » * * At the airbase near Seoul, Dean wept as he said farewell to Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, 8th Army com- mander, and other officers and representatives of the Republic of Korea where he was military gov- ernor during the occupation. As he started to board the plane, Dean looked at a group of small Korean girls who had’ presented him with bouquets of flowers and said, ‘‘taitanhi komapsupmida,”’ Korean for ‘thank you’ very much.” With Dean on the flight to Japan were two other repatriated veter- ans of the 24th Division, M.Sgt. Joseph Tupa of Honolulu, and Sgt. Alden Cook of Bluefield, W. Va. At the airport to see him off was Col. Charles R. Rain, of Salem, N. J., the former executive officer of one regiment in the 24th Divi- sion when Dean was commander. Dean joked with Rain and nudged him in the ribs several and Dean remarked: ‘I’m enjoying it a hell of a lot more than you are.” ° The 54-year-old soldier, who won the Medal of Honor for heroism while personally leading the last defense of Taejon, was wearing green fatigues and his two-star in- signia when he landed in Tokyo. He was driven in an army sedan from Haneda Airport to Tokyo Army Hospital, where he put on hospital-issue pajamas. Although Dean appears healthy, army physicians will give him a thorough check before he can leave for the United States. They may complete their exami- nation Sunday: * * * ‘ A hospital dietician said Dean was in excellent spirits with ‘‘an amazing appetite.” The general’s pretty wife told newsmen at Monterey, Calif., that news of her husband’s release left her numb but, “It’s wonderful— just wonderful.” Mrs. Dean said she didn’t know when her husband would come home. ‘ Bakery Strike Averted DETROIT (UP) — A threatened strike by 1,500 AFL Bakery Work- o* ae Hal Boyle Says: Death Takes No Holiday as Labor Day Approaches NEW YORK (®#—Death got up early this morning. Most of Amer- ica slept late at the start of this long Labor Day weekend rest from its usual work, but death promptly went on overtime. If an ox, a cow, a horse could declare itself a holiday to show that life holds a dignity and re- ward beyond the sweat of toil, it would browse and dream in pure animal wonder, and rise re- freshed on the morrow. And even death might take most of the day off, too. But when mankind has a holi- day for any reason, Death can knew no idleness. He must tabu- late a great human self-slaugh- ter. And so it was Death rose early today ... he had a lot to do in the three busy days ahead... . he had many a mortal rendezvous to keep on highway and byway, in homes and saloons, on pond and pavement, on mountain cliff and summer playground .. . For Death had a double duty . . » He had not only his usual job to do, the escorting of the sick and old and life-worr across his pale frontier . . . He had his extra holiday clients to attend to . . » The lost battalion of the need- less dead... On such days Death, the fair weather friend of the foolish, Business Briefs Buick Motor Division will build more than twice as many hard- top convertibles in 1953 as in any previous year, Ivan L. Wiles, general manager of Buick and vice president of General Motors, reported today. Wiles estimated Buick’s production of the two- door Riviera” models would amount to 175,000 units this year, compared to the previous record of nearly 85,000 built in 1951. Chain drugstores showed a nationwide sales gain of 1.6 per cent in July of this year as com- pared with July 1952, according to a regional survey by Chain Store Age magazine. The survey, which covered 64 chains operat- ing a total of 1,833 stores, said the Pacific Coast area topped all regions with a 3.1 per cent in- crease. Robert L, Shueller, employe in the mortgage department of Community- National Bank, has completed a two-week residence session at the School of Bank- ing at the University of Wiscon- sin. The session includes lectures on banking and related fields. _ 2nd Group of B47s Flies Atlantic Today TAMPA, Fla. w—Another group of B47 Stratojet bombers was to fly nonstop from England to Mac- Dill Air Force Base here today, aiming at the record of 9 hours 13 minutes set Friday by Col. Michael McCoy. McCoy, commander of the 306th Bomb Wing, piloted the lead plane in the 4,49%-mile hop from Fair- ford AFB, With him were Maj. James Gallagher, co-pilot, and Capt. Clarence H. Leffingwell, nav- igator-observer. initiates new members into the D. O. A. club... This club has no dues and no life memberships - « » Ht is made up of unseeing people who are brought to hos- pitals and tagged with a card bearing three initials that stand for ‘dead on arrival.’ Yes, Death got up early this morning ... For in the next three days there are hundreds of Amer- icans he must meet and wave to their doom, a D. O. A. tag.... The potential new membership crop was large and the land was wide . .. And Death is conscien- tous . . . He didn’t want anyone who earned that tag to miss it... Wherever Americans set otu to celebrate the holiday, this skeletal comrade of the stupid and care- less went right along for the fun. And here is what he will say, or perhaps is saying even now In ten thousand cars round- ing ten thousand curves he whis- pers to the driver, ““Go on and pass that car ahead of you... How do you know there is an- other car coming around the bend? . . . Never mind what your wife is saying .. .” And on some of the curves an- other car does come around the bend . . . There is a scream and a crash of metal . . . Death says to the silent husband, ‘‘So long, sucker’ . . . And says to the silent wife, get to marry another fool”... Then he walks over to the sil- ent, huddled driver of the second car and says, ‘“‘Pal, I knew you didn’t want to join our organiza- tion . . . But I am ‘only taking memberships, and this other guy . . And now you belong .. .” Or Death puts his arm around a teen-age high school driver and says, ‘‘Faster, kid, faster... Boy, you’re a real hot rod. . Sure you can see clear in the moonlight . . . See how close you can come to that bridge’”’*...A moment later the boy’s ribs are in his lungs, blood drowns his whimpers, and Death tags him and says, ‘“‘You know, I almost thought you’d make it . . . Well, even counting the funeral costs, I saved your folks most of the college education . . .” And somewhere a mother at a picnic, busy fixing the dinner, is sure someone else in the fam- ily is keeping an eye on the child who toddies toward the lakefront . . . And sure enough, someone is .. . “Come in, little girl,” says Death from the water. “I will catch you, and your mother will never, never forget you again. See the pretty tag I have for you...” An overweight man of 45 with a fading heart calls across the tennis court and says to his boy, “Son, I'll beat you this fifth set And as he ESEe: aE : 4 E75F ¥ Ee E ¥ Fy i n e pauses an ambulance will halt, pick up a still burden and race with it to a hospital where it will “Dear, you'll never, f *| feet to the ground, killing him, TOILETS Close coupled. $19.95. Also large selection of lav- atories, bathtubs and shower stalls. MICHIGAN FLUORESCENT 393 Orchard Lake Ave. MIMEOGRAPHING PHOTO OFFSET PRINTING — LETTERS—BULLETINS—RULED FORMS — POSTAL CARDS — LEGAL FORMS — PRICE LISTS PONTIAC LETTER SHOP News in Brief ~ A break-in at Martie’s garage at M-59 and Airport Rd. was re- ported to the Oakland county sher- iff's department today. A cigarette machine and soft-drink were broken and $10 to $12 in silver taken. Fred R. Lunsten, 43, of 626 Hen- drickson, Clawson, was fined $100 ani $15 costs and sentenced to five days in Oakland County Jail Fri- day when he pleaded guilty to drunk driving before Clawson Mu- nicipal Judge Kurt Babo. Jack Loren Otto, 26, of 652 Okla- homa St., furnished $100 bond yes- terday after pleading innocent to a drunk driving charge -before Municipal Judge Charles P. Web- ster. Trial is set for Sept. 17. A plea.of guilty to a reckless driving charge yesterday before Municipal Judge Charles P. Web- ster, cost Gerald E. Jackson, 22, of 36 Pine St., a $50 fine. Charles W. Avery, 63, of Carrier Mills, Il., pleaded guilty to a reck- less driving charge before Munici- pal Judge Charles P. Webster yesterday and was sentenced to 30 days in Oakland County Jail when unable to pay a $50 fine. if your friend’s tn jail and needs bail, Ph OR 3-7110 C A Mitchell How Do You Plead? ‘Much Better, Judge’ GREAT FALLS, Mont. W—A woman appearing before Magi« strate George Millions on a drunk charge apparently didn’t under- stand court proceedings. When asked how she pleaded to the charge, she replied, ‘‘Why, I feel much better today, judge.” The case was reset. Saws Way to Death BROCKVILLE, Ont. @—Thomas Edward Kirby, 76, a gardener, went out on a tree limb yester- day and began sawing it off. The limb split and plunged Kirby 60 Hold Thurston Rites Monday U. S. Education Head's Funeral to Be Held in Lansing WASHINGTON (UP) —Funeral arrangements were complete today for Dr. Lee: M. Thurston, VU. S. commissioner of education and former Michigan superintendent of public instruction who died Fri- day, The Health, Education and Wel- fare Department said Friday night that funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. Monday at the Estes- Leadley Funeral Home in Lan- sing. Burial will be at 1 p.m, Tuesday at Central Lake, Thurs-- ton's birthplace. Thurston, who died of a heart attack, was appointed to the fed- eral post by President Eisenhower and assumed his duties July 2. He was 58. Acting Secretary Russell R. Lar- mon will represent the Health, Education and Welfare Department at the funeral. Thurston is survived by ms wid- ow, Mrs. Jessie Gothro Thurston, a son and a daughter. Automotive Production Drops Off Past Week DETROIT (®—Motor vehicle pro- duction in the United States this week will total 130,660 units, Ward’s Automotive Reports said today. Consisting of 108,358 car and 22,. 302 trucks this compares with 121,- 227 cars and 23,624 trucks built last week. The decline was attrib- uted to a shortage of automatic transmissions, new model change- over work and inventory readjust- ments. Last year at this time United States factories built 84,865 car and 18,500 trucks. - About one-fifth of New Hamp- shire’s total area is under culti- vation. Montcalm Bowling Centre OPEN Wtd —Merning. Afterncen CLearee: FREE INSTRUCTION 2M te 8 Pm 30 E. Montcalm. FE 5-2221 —_— ed HAVE YOU ENOUGH INSURANCE? James A. TAYLOR Agency 1210 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. FE 4-2544 $59.00 value... 710-712 West Huron Street Phone FE 2-9921 WANTED. Two Men With Good Jobs Who Want Better Jobs Selling Chevrolets See John Libertine, Sales Manager JACK HABEL CHEVROLET COMPANY meta OPEN SUNDAY and MONDAY ‘til 4 P. M. . Sale! Sizes 3 to 14 Girls’ Regular 1.95 | DRESSES Sale! $1 49 Td Sh eek rytcas sh, i ——— 1 Block North of Wilson. Ave. 516 to 520 S. Saginaw GOODMAN'S Dept. Store St: FE 2-2784 __TWENTY 3 Major Issues Dominate |stnareon Be German Election Sunday THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 By LEON DENNEN BERLIN (NEA) — West Ger- mans will vote Sunday, free — for the first time since Hitler seized power in 1933 — from pressure of dictatorship or foreign occupation rules. The Bundestag elections will thus mark an historic date in the life of the Bonn republic. Russia has’ recognized the im- portance of the occasion by pro- posing a German peace conference be held within six months, and polishing yp last year’s suggestions that Germany be united under a provisional coalition government formed by Bonn and the East German Soviet puppet state. The move is widely judged by Western diplomats and West German lead- ers as a calculated effort to influ- ence the Sept. 6 balloting. Eight years after the Nazi de- feat in 1945, West Germany is rapidly emerging from the abyss of war destruction to assume a dominant place in non-Commu- nist Europe. There if a striking difference between the despairing nation I saw in 1945 and the busy, bustling and even prosperous Germans who will go to the polls Sunday. While Soviet-occupied Germany is in a state of disintegration and seething with revolt, the Bonn re- public is forging ahead towards full economic recovery. But even a prosperous Bonn republic is only part of Germany — an artificial creation hastily patched up by post-war political expediency. Germany divided, East or West, is a power vacuum in Europe — ‘the dominant un- solved question left by the last war. i Germ remains the breeding ground of national dissatisfaction, political extremism, intrigue and racialism. Three major issues dominate the West German political campaign: 1. The unification of West and East Germany. 2._ Bonn’s participation in the European Defense Community. 3. The alarming revival - of Nazism in West Germany. The rapid recuperation of the Bonn republic together with the growing difficulties in the Soviet zone have greatly § increased agitation for the unification of Germany. This is point No. 1 in the Kremlin’s “‘peace”’ offensive. Moscow is of course aware that the rising in East Berlin and Germany last June open Communist influence in Bonn reached a vanishing point. But the Kremlin obviously hopes to weaken the Adenauer coalition by courting West Germany’s pro-Nazis, ex- treme nationalists, neutralists and . The heroic rising oF East Ger- mans last June convinced many Germans that now is the time for a deal with Russia to unite the country. Chief exponents of this view are the Social Democrats, Chancellor Konrad Adenauer’s strongest po- litical rivals. : Said Erich Ollenhauer, 52-year- old leader of West German Social- ists: ‘‘The lesson of the East Ger- man revolt is that national unity must have priority over the Euro- pean Defense Community.” Ollenhauer added: ‘Present plans for bringing divided Ger- ‘many into a close military alli- ance with the West is a serious obstacle to unity.” Dr. Adenauer, in tia, regards the East German uprising as ‘‘the first fruit of the West’s policy of strength.”’ He believes that a free and united Germany can be as- sured only by Bonn’s close mili- have illusions that the Russians may soon agree to a united Ger- many. ‘ Russia at the same time seeks to revive in the NATO countries the threat of a “militarized Ger- many.” Premier Georgi Malenkov played both tunes in his recent speech to the Supreme Soviet. He went out of his way to court France. He of- fered Fragce a strengthening of the France-Soviet pact if she draws even some Social Democrats who’ back — as many Frenchmen are tempted to do anyway — from bringing Germany into the Euro- pean Defense Community. Malenkov even hinted that — should France comply — he might call off the war in Indochina which has been bleeding the French na- tion white. Even .many pro-Western Ger- mans believe that Russia’s “‘offer’’ has made an impression in France — especially in quarters. whéfe the rearmament of Germany is thought intolerable. They are convinced that in his continued championship of the E. D. C., Chancellor Ade- nauer is beating a dead dog. 13-Year-Old Becomes Mother of 8-Pound Boy MORRIS, ILL. w& — Mrs. Diane Barr has become a mother at the age of 13. She and her eight pound four ounce son born in the Morris Hospital Tuesday are doing fine, the hospital reported today. Mrs. Barr will be 14 Monday. Her husband, Donald, 25, works in a Joliet factory. tary” alliance with the NATO na- tions. SIDE GLANCES by Galbraith The energetic and able 77-year- old chancellor is perhaps the out- standing: leader,.of pro-American sentiment in Europe. With France and Italy suffering from a chronic economic and political crisis, West Germany under Adenauer’s leader- ship is one of the few remaining bulwarks’ of the European Defense Community. More than the political future of the aged chancellor is thus at stake in the forthcoming West German elections. Adenauer’s defeat on Sunday probably -would kill President Eisenhower’s European Army scheme. It would undermine U. S. foreign policy in the global East- West struggle. U. S. interest in the re-election of Dr. Adenauer and his coalition of Christian Democrats, Free Dem- ocrats and the rightist German Party, is therefore direct and criti- cal. . But Washington’s ardent} wish to see the chancellor re-elected is matched by Moscow’s equally ardent desire to see him defeated. American officials in Bonn, I am reliably informed, have in- structions from Washington not to even discuss an alternative 1, oa 1. M. Reg, U. & Pat. OFF. | Seb 1953 bs NEA Servite, ine. policy to the European Defense Commiunity. . The Russians, in turn, are cur- rently employing in West Germany “‘Administration: economists are optimistic about investment oppor- | - tunities—so if you could spare a dime—?”’ THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert BESS CURE RSTYRRSULLESDUIMDIE88) By Edgar Martin q QUST BECAUSE THE SOM. ER VACATION 1S OVER 15 NO gq REASON WAN WE POG S THANK GOODNESS NOURE SAFE! le yi ‘ a se *? os } ' ‘ r ye hee ere \ GUESS TH' OL” FRE GOOD BOY gs We WE FIXED } A \ ad. ~ 7-S * Sere . [aS 9-5 | ate HE S ARE GENUINE ALLIGATOR, PLEASE! NOW JUST ONE] PLEASE MAKE SURE A MORE OETAIL, MADAM! THE GOWN '6 PARIS MODEL AND NOW, FRIENDS, I PRESENT THE WINNER OF THE SNOOKER TOURNA= MENT, THE FEARLESS BIG HUNTER MAJOR, , WITH THE PRIZES TROPHY, AN ENLARGED ¢& PICT DRE TITLED (= IN/* Mk YON AuL{/x MY HAT {SMOKED _Y: mat/ INFERNAL \\ GLASSES ) SAME 2 )3\ Time! -| AUNT FRITZI FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS aes . Sgt Great Scotr! my WA HEATER Zz B CS we A GOOD DESCRIPTION CoRRRAEY ca, MASTER FRECKLES , N “6 ie d, & S & : € Cont 1963 by NEA Gorvice, tee. T. M. Reg. U.S. Pat. 4-5 By McEvew and Striebe! ALLUN- >> MIGHTY GENEROUS OF YOU BUT I’M AFRAID YOU'RE TOO LATE —THAT'S RIGHT — I'M TAKING OVER % THIS pagers f WAS DUE A WEEK AGO # | GET ME A MRS. e = Sb ¢ By Ernie Rushmiller OH, SLUGGO --- MY WON THE BIG ARCHERY CONTEST SHE HIT THE BULL'S-EYE EVERY TIME ---HER AIM WAS PERFECT ~--AND MISSED Finis THE GARAGE BY SEVEN DO YUH THINK THE BOSS REALLY GOT — ‘ ae ~ SURE, OXO'S A WHIZ AT PUTTIN’ON A LOOSE ~ S . “3° D soe | re SPACE CADET GuP/ RELAX, QUEENIE! 4 AN- READY ... SORRY, SPACE-BOy, I GOT WHILE..}] TO.ERASE YOu AN “YER PALS /! WE GOT A FORTUNE IN OXY6EN TO GO OUT TONIGHT 7 —AIN’ YOU SPACE-DRIPS . oe Pe ARE. IN TH! ... NEARBY, TOM, COMING OUT OF THE TEMP- ORARY DAZE CREATED By ELECTRO-RAY SHOTS, IS FULLY AWAKENED By RO6ER'S AGONIZED SHOUTS /, ~_~ GRAND 5 RECKON |] BECAUSE ' WZERT J} HE OD /HE'S ANGRY THAT? AT DOCTOR on?! CAPTAIN EASY . ee SPN AZ . e ) Be FEN . ( ” or. 1953 & TRUMPING YOUR PARTNER'S ACE _ Webster- WHAT RE WE GONNA PLAY- CANASTA ? \\ WHEN YA SAY + THAT-sMmILE ! 5 iv aX i ny aN Gs 1 < By teslie lurner ead Aha GRANDMA THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 TWENTY-ONE Sets Schedules West Bloomfield Plans Faculty Meetings, Tells Enrollment Dates WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- SHIP—A general faculty meeting at 9:30 a. m. Tuesday in Roosevelt School,,.Keego Harbor, will inaugu- rate thé fall term for West Bloom- field School District. In the afternoon all elementary teachers will meet with Mrs. Gertrude Ealy, instructional. con- | sultant, and high school faculty with Principal Donald Weeds Pre - enrollment planning and conferences in the three school’ buildings will be held Wednesday, according to Dr. Leif A, Hougen, superintendent. Roosevelt High School students will enroll Thursday at 8:45 a.m in the gymnasium and textbooks will be assigned ‘in the respective classrooms, Enrolling at 9 a.m, Thursday in their respective schools will be Roosevelt grades one through six; Scotch School grades one through six; and children of Green School. Roosevelt kindergarten pupils will report at 1 p.m, Thursday. Scotch School kindergartners will report Friday morning. Thursday school busses will fol- low the same schedule at last term. All schools in the district will be in regular session Friday. Champ Steer Brings Owner | $888 in Auction EAST LANSING (UP) — The State 4H grand champion steer brought its owner, Charles Wetzel of Ithaca, $888.25 at a livestock auction of top animals entered in the show. , The 1,045-pound Shorthorn steer was sold to an East Lansing meat market for 85 cents a pound late Thursday. Show officials said the same steer, if it had been sold on the open market at Detroit, would have brought 28 cents a pound. The reserve champion steer, a 1,065-pound Shorthorn owned by Ronald Haymaker of Marshall, was auctioned for 45 cents a pound and brought its owner $579.20. The Kroger Co. of Grand Rapids was buyer. , Sixty four steers were auctioned and they brought average of $20.28 ' per 100 pounds. The grand champion lamb, an 80-pound Southdown owned by Phyllis Skelley, Litchfield, sold for $84 ($1.05 a pound) while the re- serve champion, also an 80 pound Southdown owned by Joe Elser of Litchfield, went for $32.80. The grand champion market hog, a 200- Yorkshire owned by Dale Fox of St. Johns, was auctioned for $115.14 while the reserve champion, a 190- pound Chester White owned by Roger Sanford, Coldwater, went for $66.50. Twenty eight lambs were auc- tioned for an average of $28.38 per School District | _ “SEE” BOAT—Jacques Jahan, of Paris, paddles -his homemade plastic canoe on Lake du Bourget, for use with an claims is the only one of its kind in the world, is 13 feet long, weighs 390 pounds, and is sturdy enough outboard motor. ~ WASHINGTON (#—Sen. Dirksen (R-Ill) predicted today Republi- of Fair Employment Practices Commission legislation in the next session of Congress. the next sessionof congress. Dirken’s prediction came after the agriculture department an: nounced it has abandoned a con- troversial requirement that banks which make farm price support loans must promise not to prac- tice racial discrimination in em- ployment. . The Senate in the past has bottled up civil rights bills ap- proved by the House, largely be- cause of southern Democratic filibusters against such measures. Sen. Hill (D-Ala) said in a sep- arate interview he sees no lessen- ing of Southern opposition to measures of this character. Dirksen said he realizes the Southerners may talk at length against an FEPC bill, but that he believes Republicans should try to pass such a measure to carry out campaign pledges made last year. A variety eof FEPC proposals have been made, most of which call for establishment of a federal commission to prevent racial, re- Visiting Teachers From 50 Nations. Here for Study WASHINGTON (#—Four hundred visiting educators from 50 free na- tions are assembling here and soon will spread across the United States to study and observe Amer- ican education and life. The Office of Education, co-spon- sor with the State Department of today the visitors will spend three months in colleges and universities for study in their specialized fields, * *. Then they will scatter into al- most all the states, they wil live in private homes, visit public and private schools, cHurches, factor- ies, businesses and social institu- tions. They will observe teaching in more than 8,000 schools and will make an estimated 12,000 talks. 100 pounds while 79 hogs auctioned “~3 ‘ brought average of $25.48 per 100 pounds. Armada School Set fo Open on Tuesday ARMADA—Armada Rural Agri- cultural School will open its doors for all pupils except rural kinder- gartners Tuesday at 1:30 p.m., Superintendent H. A. Kitson an- nounced today. Rural kindergartners are to re- port the following day at 9 a.m., he said. Bus routes and time schedules will be nearly the same as for last year with buses due at the school before 9 a.m. and leaving at 3:45 p.m. Sehool lunches will be served starting Wednesday. Nedra Shoultz, Robert Lassen Exchange Vows METAMORA—Miss Nedra Louise Shoultz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guelph Shoultz of Thomas, and Robert James Lassen, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Lassen of Meta- mora, spoke wedding vows Aug. 30 at Thomas Methodist Church. Miss Sharron Shoultz was her sister’s attendant and Robert Hat- field of Metamora was best man. Cooperating institutions to which the teachers will go first are: Uni- versity of Cincinnati, University of Florida, University of Illinois, Iowa State Teachers College, University of Kentucky, University of Michi- gan, University of Minnesota, Uni- versity of North Carolina, Ohio State University, Oregon State Col- lege, Syracuse University, South- west Texas State Teachers College, University of Utah, State College of Washington, Wayne University, Detroit; and the University of Wis- consin. e Since the visiting teacher pro- gram was established in 1942, 1,400 educators have been brought to this country. Drunk Driver Hits Police Car, 3 Hurt DETROIT (UP) — Three patrol- men were injured, two seriously, early today when a car crashed head-on into their police cruiser. Taken to Receiving Hospital were Patrolmen Melvin Louria, 36, and John Perkins, 34. Both were in serious condition. Patrolman Ed- ward Kumm, 49, was given first aid and released. The driver of the car, Patrick Devine, 47, Detroit, was held for investigation of felonious driving A reception was held for guests; Devine, as a checker at the home of the bride’s par-/ for the Red Star Transit Co., was ents. ‘ ° Clarkston OES Lists Agenda for September Night will be Sept. 20 at 2 p.m. Sews Cancer Pads by the patrolmen to avoid a colli- sion. Kindergarten Parents Contacted by Avondale AVON TOWNSHIP—R. N. Baker, superintendent of Avondale Schools, All children, he said, are to be } Aix-les-Bains, France. The craft, which Janen cans will attempt to-force passage’ the visiting teaching program, said |. ligious and other discrimination in hiring. Assistant Secretary of Agriculture John H. Davis, who is president of the Commodity Credit Corpora- tion, said last night the non- crimination clause began only would be required. He said the de- cision was made on ‘‘a question of fact’—that employment was not involved, since lending agencies Praise Priest s Work as POW 2 Army Doctors Tell of Heroit Father Kapaun Who Died a Prisoner INCHON, Korea (#—Two army doctors praised by liberated Amer- ican prisoners for their work in Red prison camps joined today in heaping further praise on a Cath- olic. priest who died a prisoner. “I am a Jew, but I felt deeply the greatness of the man regard- less of religion,’ said Capt. Sid- ney Essensten of Minneapolis. And Capt. Clarence L. Ander- son of Long Beach, Calif., said “everyone wanted to see him and everyone asked for him.” The heroic priest was Father Enil Kapaun of Pilsen, Kan. Anderson said the chaplain never was mistreated by the Commu- nists but suffered because he could not visit prisoners freely. The chaplain insisted on going on work details so he could visit men in other camps up to the day he suffered his final illness, Father Kapaun first suffered a blood clot, then was stricken with dysentery. The Reds finally took him away to a camp hos- pital after he became ill with pneumonia. Anderson said that as his captors carried, him away, the chaplain asked them to forgive him ‘‘un- doubtedly because of harsh thoughts he had toward them Father Kapaun never returned from the hospital, When he died he was buried on a hill near the camp. “He sleeps among the men he so loved and so helped while he was alive,’’ Anderson said. High Dairy Prices Help Slipping Index LANSING — Due to higher prices for milk and eggs, the index of prices received by Michigan farmers in the past month did not slip as badly as it otherwise would have. : ‘The Federal-State Crop Report- ing Service said the index dropped in the preceding month from 267 to 265 on Aug. 15. The cash crop index dropped from 259 to 243 points, feed crops fell from 155 points to 149 and meat animals from 331 to 320, Poultry products, however, climbed from. 242 to 259 points and dairy products from 252 to 262. The Aug. 15 index of 265 com- pares with 308 a year ago. Pullet Disease Shows Increase in Michigan EAST LANSING (UP)—A Michi- gan State College agricultural of- ficial said today that blue comb disease of chickens is increasing in the state. - Dr, Ralph C. Belding, a poultry Dressmaking Project if iit tr ul said the disease is. Racial Discrimination Clause Dropped in Contracts With Farm Loan Banks generally handled the loans without increasing their staffs. , * * * The acrimony over the non-dis- crimination clause began only re- recently when Southerners discov- ered it has been contained in all lending agency agreements since May. Secretary Benson said in South Carolina earlier this week that he regarded the clause as ‘‘unneces- sary.”’ * * * But Walter White, executive sec- retary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Péople,’said that if the President allowed the non-discrimination clause to be dropped ‘‘he . might as well disband immediately the government Contract Compliance Committee.” This group was set up recently to check on observ- ance of non-discrimination by gov- ernment contractors. Davis called in reporters late yesterday and gave them a state- ment announcing it will be entirely optional with banks whether they sign the anti-discrimination pledge. * * * “They can scratch it out and we'll accept the contract,”’ he said. Davis said he presumed some Southern banks already have signed the pledge—perhaps with- out reading the fine print. He was asked whether they could exchange their contracts for another without the .clause. “We'll have to study that out when it comes up,’’ he commented. * * * Gov. James F. Byrnes of South Carolina, who backed Gen. Eisen- hower in the last-presidential elec- tion, wrote the President Aug. 27 saying many banks would refuse to sign agreements containing the non-discrimination clause. White called reversal of the order a ‘‘humiliating capitulation”’ to Byrnes. “Full responsibility’ éor inclu- sion of the controversial clause in the contracts is being assumed by Karl D, Loos, the department's solicitor and one of Benson's first appointees. Youth's Condition Reported ‘Critical’ ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP Charles Barbin, 18, of 21078 Beth- lawn, was in ‘‘critical’’ condition in Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital to- day after he was struck by a car at 2 a.m. today at West Eight Mile and Glenlodge. Driver of the car Arthur Williams of 940 E. Warren, Detroit, was being held by Royal Oak Town- ship police for investigation of leaving the scene of an accident. Police said witnesses reported Wil- speed 56-Year Marriage Ends as Divorce Is Granted MIDDLEBURY, Vt. ® — A 5 year marraige ended here yester- day in Addison County Court. Judge Percy L. Shangraw granted Philemon J. Bristol, 81, a divorce from Laura Prescott Bristol, 79. They were married March 11, 1897. Bristol told the court he hadn't seen his wife in three years. He said he believed she is now living in California. liams qas driving at a high rate of Counties in State in Red $4 Million Report High Revenue in 1952 but Road Costs, Health, Welfare Up LANSING (#—Michigan county government ran $4,049,846 in the red in 1952, Aud. Gen. John B. Martin reported today. This, despite $13,115,000 worth of additional revenue over the pre- ceding year. Summarizing the audits of coun- ty government made by his de- partment, Martin said county gov- ernments took in $155,029,768 last year, more than $13,000,000 above the preceding year. But expenditures, exclusive of debt retirement, rose to $158,- 079,615, or about $19,182,000 more than in 1951. Martin said 31 of the state’s 83 counties had net operating deficits for the past year. Wayne County, biggest in the state, took in $56,500,000, while little Oscoda County had the smallest revenue, $205,147, and more than 75 per cent of its in- come was from state funds, most- ly for highway use. Wayne County spent $62,000,000 while Crawford County had the smallest outgo, $201,229. Martin said that the counties got almost $76,000,000 from the property tax, their largest source of revenue. They re- ceived $44,750,000 from the state for county roads and $10,250,000 for health, welfare and medical programs. The counties’ biggest expense was roads, costing them $53,458,- 000, exclusive of investments in land, equipment and buildings. Of this total, almost 84 per cent came from state funds, Martin re- ported. He said the counties spent $51,- 729,263 for health, welfare and medical aid programs, of which 19.75 per cent was state money. The cost of operating the usual county administrative and judicial offices totaled $381,102,- 650, Martin said. He reported also the counties spent $4,748,476 on drains, $13,- 440,294 on land, buildings and equipment, $234,466 on bonded debts and $5,366,561 on such items as parks, airports, libraries and Ocean Vessel to Enter Lakes 520 - Foot Ship to Become Waterways Carrier DETROIT (UP)—A large ocean- going ship purchased from the federal government for conversion to a Great Lakes passenger and freight carrier will enter Lake Michigan at Chicago next week on its way to Muskegon. Max B. McKee, president of the Sand Products Corp, of Detroit, which owns the 520-foot ship, said today the conversion is ‘‘about 50 per cent completed.” The ship, formerly the S. S. Marine Star, will make its river passage through Chicago next Tuesday, Tugs will tow the ves- sel to a temporary mooring site at Muskegon. A pontoon hull was fitted 6n the ship at New Orleans, for its voy- age up the Mississippi River. The ship left Brooklyn, N. Y., July 29. The first stage of its conversion was completed in a Brooklyn shipyard. McKee said work on the ship has been retarded by a steel short- age and it may not be ready until the 1955 Great Lakes season. The ship’s trade route on the Lakes won't be selected until plans are further along, McKee said. De- tailed plans for its further con- version are being made by George G. Sharp, Inc., naval architects in New York. County Births Imlay Se! Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wilcox announce the birth of a son August 30. a? Making their home in Pontiac ‘ are Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Windingland ~ who were married | Aug. 26. Mrs. — Windingland is the former Jane Ganzel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ganzel of Milford. MR. AND sy. MRS. LYLE WINDINGLAND Body in River Identified as Former Pontiac Worker Gone Since Aug. 9 LAPEER — The badly decom- posed body of a former Pontiac Motor employe, missing since Aug. 9, was found yesterday by fisher- men in the Flint River near Co- lumbiaville. Positive identification of Frank Palka Jr. 27, of Fourth St., Colum- biaville, was obtained from his factory badge and an Army ring. A World War II veteran, Palta had been hired as a punch press operator in April and had been discharged for frequent absentee- ism Aug. 7. His wife, Helen, told Lapeer Schools Open Thursday for Holly Area Students HOLLY — Another school year begins Thursday for the students in the Holly area schools. Charles G. Coggins, superintend- ent of Holly schools, said today that elementary students in the Holly area will occupy all the church basement rooms in town plus the Masonic :Temple, Field House, American Legion Hall and the VFW Hall. Completion of the new Holly County Deaths Harry E. Douglas FERNDALE—Service for Harry E. Douglas, 91, of 308 E. Mar- shall Ave., was to be at 2 p.m. today from Spaulding and Son Funeral Home with burial in Woodlawn cemetery. He died Thursday at a Detroit hospital. Surviving are his widow, Emma; two stepsons, one: step- daughter and three grandchildren. _ Mrs. America Dunavan “HAZEL PARK — Arrangements are pending at the Ashley and Sons Funeral Home for Mrs. Fred (America) Dunavan formerly of 308 Harry St. She died Wednesday of injuries sustained in an auto- mobile accident Monday at Homer- ville, Ga. Mr. and Mrs. Dunavan were en route to Florida when the accident occurred. Mr. Dunavan also was injured and is in Huey Hospital, Homerville. Surviving are her husband and a daughter, Mrs. Paul L. Parks of Hazel Park. ; ‘Christopher Nusbaum IMLAY CITY — Service for Christopher Nusbaum, 75, a resi- dent here for the past 13 years, will be at'1 p.m. Tuesday from Muir Brothers Funeral Home, with burial in Forest Lawn Cemetery. Surviving besides hig, widow, Mary Ann, is a stepson, Homer Chrisman of Detroit. Mrs. Daisy F. Silliman LAPEER—Service for Mrs. Ed- ward (Daisy F.) Silliman, 61, of 2645 Imlay City Rd., will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Baird Funeral Home with burial at Lum. Ehe died yesterday in Lapeer County Con- valescent Home. Born at Williston, Ohio, she lived in Detroit until coming here six years ago. She was a member of Lum WSCS. Surviving besides her husband are two sisterss and a brother, Mrs. Mathew James, Pearl Martin and William Martin, all of Detroit. Mrs. Harriet L. Reifer ROCHESTER—Service for Mrs. George (Harriet L.) Reifer, 68, of 71 E. Hamlin Rd., will be-Monday at 10:30 a.m. from Pixley Funeral Home with burial in Mt. Avon Cemetery. She died yesterday. Mrs. Laella Wilcox IMLAY CITY—Service for Mrs. Luella Wilcox, 82, lifelong resident of this community, will be at 2 p.m. Sunday from Lester and Son Funeral Home with in Goodland Cemetery. She died Thursday at the home of her daugh- ter, Mrs. Nina Lutz of Washington. Surviving besides the one daugh- ter are three other daughters, Mrs. Carol Brown of New York, Mrs. Cedar Creek Rd., will be Tuesday Elementary School sometime early this fall will do.much to- ward relieving this overcrowded condition, said Mr. Coggins. The Davisburg School addition ready for next week's opening, will’ house all the school children in that area. Pre-opening conferences Thursday morning. Kindergartners are ed to reg- ister Thursday and ay, with school to begin for them on Sept. 14. First grade students will as- semble at the Washington Street School on Thursday morning. Second graders will meet at the Field House and third graders in the Masonic Temple. The Catholic Church will be the meeting place for the fourth graders and the fifth graders will assemble at the American Legion Hall. Sixth graders are asked to meet at the band house on Center Street. Buses will travel approximately the same routes as last year, said Mr. Coggins. Economists See Quotas on Corn Predict Vote of Wheat Farmers Will Change Entire Grain Picture EAST LANSING (UP) — Two Michigan State College agricul- tural economists said today they government soon will establish acreage allow- ments and quotas on corn market- believe the federal ings for next year. ‘ John Doneth and Arthur Mauch said they formerly believed farm- ers in Michigan and the entire corn belt region probably would vote against corn quotas. “Because of the overwhelming vote in favor of wheat quotas, however, we feel that a corn quota, if it came to a vote, would have a good chance of passing —but by a narrower margin than wheat quotas.”’ ” ‘They said they believe Secretary of Agriculture Benson will be “forced by law’’ tu impose corn acr@ge allowments next year in order to make producers eligible for price supports of 90 per cent of parity because of this year’s large corn crop. Patrolman Foils Escape Through Hole in Bus RALEIGH, N.C, w—A highway patrolman saw a pair of legs dangling through the side of a prison bus as it passed through Pittsboro, N.C., yesterday. The legs belonged to Henry J. Glover, a former. Ft. Bragg sol- dier from Los Angeles, Cailif., serving 22 years on various counts. Just outside Pittsboro he finished wriggling through the hole he had cut in the bus. But the patrolman, following losely, put him back on the “bus escorted it to Central Prison el and here, Janet Lee Grant to Wed George W. Jarvis LAPEER — Mrs. Reata Clark George W. Jarvis Janet’s father is Wilton C. Grant of Flint. George is the son of Mrs. Velma Jarvis of Lapeer and Harry Jarvis of Metamora. An early fall wedding is planned. for! teachers will be Tuesday and Wednesday, and junior and senior high school students will report to the high school’gymnasium at 8:45 County Sheriff Clark Gregory that her husband had been missing from home since Aug. 9. He was accustomed to wandering, she said, so she wasn’t concerned by his absence. Mrs. Palka said her husband may have fallen accidentally into the river. Palka’s body was discovered by ,| Clifford Harvey, 12, and Ben Sado, 26, both of Otisville, when they saw a pair of overalls caught in a tree wedged against the bank. Dr. Henry G. Merz, coroner, said he could not determine the exact time of death. Funeral .arrangement for Palka fre pending at Baird Funeral Home in Lapeer. LT. WILBURN LEGREE Lt. Wilburn Legree, Filint’s “‘singing cop,”’ will present a con- cert of sacred music Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at Sacred Heart Church, Romeo, according to the Rev. Earl F. Buffum, pastor. The program is open to the public. Pilgrim Club to Greet Metamora Teachers METAMORA — A welcome for area teachers will be the main item on the agenda when the Pil- grim Club holds its initial fall meet- ing here Tuesday. Refreshments will be served by Mrs. Roy Best in whose home the affair will be held. Mrs. Lloyd Andison, president of the group, will be program leader. Killed in Car Crash HOUGHTON (UP) Emil Siljan- der, 43, of Chassel, was killed Friday night when his car went out of control and rolled over five times in Portage Township. ' QUACKENBUSH, Death Notices _ Lo wR were CAYTON, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953, IN- fant Helen, 541 Fildew Street; beloved infant daughter of Mr. and Mfrs. Nelson Cayton; dear sister of Nelritta Cayton. Prayer service was held from the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Inter- ment in Oak Hill Cemetery. BER 3, 1953, Olive M.,. 804 Sterling, age 68: dearly beloved -mother of Reginald and Robert a? bush, Mrs. Joseph Clar Mrs. Pau) Sauerwald, and Miss Geral- dine Stearns; sister of Joseph Jackson. will be held Monday, Sept. 7 at 11 a. m. at the Voorhees-Biple Chapel with the Rev. Wibley of- . Mrs, Quackenbush will . in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery _ in Memoriam 1 IN LOVING MEMORY OF ALTON. d. who passed away Sept. Sth, 5 Deep im our lives is @ lonely spot oor weaee face used to fill, But t can take your memo That shines there and always 7 away 2 years ago Se 5, 1 We do not forget her. we love her too dearly For her memory to fede from our lives like a dream; Our lips need not speak when our hearts po sincerely For grief often dwells where it sel- dom ts seen. by her sisters and iN LOVING MEMORY OF ALTON J. McDonough who passed away Sept. 5, 1948: What would I give to clasp his Anc see his ling face. To hear hix voice speak once more Would mean so much to me. Donough. Otis Crosby, public relations direc~ W Warren, who passed away tor of Detroit schools, will speak Wot dead o us who loved him, at an all-faculty assembly meeting Fe en ee ee neaaey Tuesday at the high school. Fol- And shall forever more. son lowing luncheon in the school cafe- 2 oon tase — attend sessions in their schools a ieee —“' —— with principals. Uties ; oe Sree wee ae Tunch im the home ef hire. Oeorge 45420 Grant Park. Mrs. L. Edmonds will be in charge of the 1 p.m = Rochester Former North Dakota residents tm Sy SE pt 4 Fishermen Find _ TWENTY-TWO . THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 ¢ A Florists-Flowers 3 Wanted Male Help 5 Wanted Male Help 5 SCHAFER'S FLORISTS—FLOWERS ‘TREE TRIMMER, 123 AUBURN ° FB 42-3173 Mulberry 9-2700 Ambulance Service. 3-A ME CH ANI C Wanted Female Help 6 RELIABLE MIDDLEAGED WOM- HUNTOON WANTED an to assist in home for RE- TARDED children. Light house- Ambulance Service a tates, ao laneiee, Mast Live FEZOUS —_|Préfer one who has had] Sally eal Pt Se re) sler 0! ac. res’ mus Funeral Directors 4 experience 7a ry See gcie cuets.. wonasntal ‘oe Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service. Plane or Motor PE 2-8378 products. Steady work and good wages. Paid vacation, Blue Cross in- surance, group life insur- ance, Christmas bonus and excellent working} BA conditions. Brace Funeral Home Estab 1886 Distinguished Service Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME “DESIGNED FOR FUNERALS” BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at the Press office in the following boxes: 4, 6, 14, 15, 18, 27, 34, 35, 39, 41, 52, 52, 56, 57,- 58, 65, 82, 84, 88, 89, 94, 95, 109, 110. ee * The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. All errors should be rted _ ammediately rT be po fr bility for errors other es rger than re type is 12 o’clock noon the .day crevious to publi tion er Want _. od may day “of we nantientog”” CASH WANT AD RATES Lines 1 Day 3 Days 6 Days 32 $1.25 $1.68 $2.52 3 1.25 2.43 3.60 4 1.60 3.12 4.56 6 2.00 3.60 5.40 i] 2.40 4.32 6.48 1 2.80 5.04 1.56 s - 20 6.75 8.64 ® 3.60 6.48 9.72 Birmingham Office Ph. Midwest 4-0844 379 Hamilton Wanted Male Help 5 GAS STATION and lubrication man. Experience necessary, wages and com- missions, “teady employment _ BRAID MOTOR SALES DeSoto-Plymouth Dealer 30 Years Fair Dealing Cass at West Pike 8t. Phone FE 186 WANTED ATELY 2 EX- perienced service station attend- ants, must be capable of working abift alone. Apply Gulf sation. North Telegraph at D’ Dixie STORE MANAGER, MUST BE high school graduate. Good op- —,, for i man, Salary and cummission plus — ag lop Tire and Ru Telegraph Rd. _Her. EXPERIENCED SHOE | SALES PERSON Pull time ition 25 and yrs. of a experience and shoes. for man between e with —_ wiedge INNEL OFFICE APPLY PERSO’ Sears, Roebuck & Co. 1s N. Saginaw Add It Up Good hard work plus a good product and organi- zation equals good pay for you. wild promises but we do say that if you will put forth some real effort your weekly pay will be If you very satisfying. are an experienced auto- mobile salesman, come in and see us and learn about the many. benefits and fine future we offer. Earl R, Milliman Co. CABINET MAKERS, EXPERI- ae ~ preferred. John P. Bexell & Sons, 2470 Dixie Hway. WOOL PRESSER Top wages, full or part time. Rex eaners, Drayton OR Plains, Die Makers and Electricians Journeymen Only aPPLY FISHER BODY DIVISION | We make no of fair dealing in Pontiac | ®© is your assurance of a good proposition with us. BRAID MOTOR SALES Corner Cass & W. Pike St. rs . BOYS WANTED AUBURN Lanes, under oew mansgement, Apply 5-7 p.m. Wed. or Thurs. at alieys ta Aururn Heights. AUTO SALESMAN WANTED. AQ- gressive & ambitious salesman to sel] the fast-moving Lincoln and Mercury line of cars. See Fred Poster at 40 W Pike 8t. EXPERIENCED MARRIED MAN to take complete charge of dairy * barn 3320 N Rochester Rd., Lake Orion NIGHT Gasoline station — man. Hours — 4:30 BRAID MOTOR SAL ES DeSoto-Plymouth Dealer 30 years Fair Dealing Cass at West Pike St. Phone FE 2-0186 Nd a CAB. DRIVERS ON RENTAL BAS- is, steady for night shift, also between 4 and 6 p.m. WHITE FAMILY MAN — 25, WISH- Bor 1123 city. other than factory. City - CLASS L& ODIE- makers, Oak! Tool ® Manu- facturing Co., 525 Commerce __Rd., rear. EM 3-2401. EXP SPOTTER FOR DRY CLEAN- _ing plant. FE 2-0304. “ARE YOU A SELF-STARTER? | Desirous of security and oppor- tunity in healthy outdoor sales- work? We need a young man for the Pouwiiac area represent a national food manufacturer. Tran- sporation furnished. — ex- penss and bonus. For per sonal inerview, write PONTIAC PRESS BOX 36 BOY FOR FULL TIME WORK IN sorting ve Apply to i. Stecker. oa aundry. Tele- graph BUILDER 2 WANTS MIDDLEAGED man for clean up around housing project. Style-Rite Homes, MI 4- 0023. 1090 Lone Pine Rd. near _ Telegraph. EXPERIENCED OIL AND GAS burner service and installation man, J. Fawcett & Co MI EXPERIENCED CARPENTE ER for eae * work, owner build- er, Call M 2. MEN oat APPLY IN. PER- som, Auburn Fruit Market, 2175 _ Auburn J Rd. YOUNG AMBITIOUS MAN TO learn plastic molding business, must be mechanically inclined and speedy, opportunity for advance- ment. Apply MI 4-1330. PRESSER lst class, good pay, exc. work- conds., ste 4 job. Ph. Mr. r Pp. m =z Nichols, 5-720. Clerk-Stenographer Between 18 and 25, stenographic duties light, proficiency in figures important. Good pay, excellent » working conditions. Call Mr. Orr MI 4-5700. TEMPRITE Products Corp. 2345 E. Maple Rd., Birmingham WANTED Foe ROOM AND rd, wages. See Mr. Parks. 398 8. Saginaw. STOCK MAN FULL TIME, YOUNG man interested tn photography. __ Apply in person, 83 N. _ Saginaw. ~ BELLBOY © 18 years or older. Evening hours. Apply in person. WALDRON HOTEL NATIONAL FINANCE CO, HAS psogage 2 for single man, 22 to 26 yrs d. High school or college graduate, free insurance & paid vacation. in available at __once, Ph, + . Mr, Winters. Wanted! ee ean Appear in Moncalm Calm St, Contér. 0. "East Mont- Wore FULL AND PART TIME —" boy at Peabody’s Birming- am Attention High School Boys We have 3 openings for boys 16 to 18 years of age to work in our ailing Room, during the new schoot term. You must be to school, and be ablé to work from 1:00 p. m. to 4:30 p. m. each afternoon. I rested BERT apply in person to FALENER Circulation Department PONTIAC PRESS: RELIABLE SINGLE MAN FOR dairy and general farming, 355 Letts 6% miles north of _ Roches AN 35 TO 40. MUST HAVE previous sales experience. —— Permanent A ny Housekeepin: Shi 51 W. Huron. = — NATIONAL FOOD MANUFACTUR- fon plan; other 8 your per- salary expected “phone Bistory. e number. Write Pontiac Press Box 6. MARRIED MAN TO ‘wone "ON farm = — MY 2-5700 after 4:30 p. BRANCH M TRAIN sonst. back a ge NAGER ES and selling, wonderful est company in field. future, phone or Household Finence 22750 Woodward, Ferndale, daily between 9 and 5. Ph. Lincoln 23-6600 Our 30 years} part time. Apply 438 Orchard Lake |, iter Rd. —_—_ w top wages, vacation pay. Must ref Call 5-8413 for appointment. portunity for person who wee Either white or colored. Peet ont 34 Predmore Orion, Mich. Romeo TYPIST. T. EXPERIENCED. 3 DAYS week. Pleasant working condi- _ tions. Call Miss ' Welsh, MI 4-5210. oe “OPERATOR FULL , OR part time. call MI +5988. SALESWOMEN fr sei ‘adies ready to wear, saiary plue commission, vacations with pay °* day wk. Apply ip ~wreon Oamun's _ RELIABLE ‘WHITE E WOMAN | FOR light housework & care of chil- dren, must like children, pleasant __ surroundings. MA 6-6131. SALESLADY | NO NIGHTS OR OL a Apply MACHUS BAKERY 169 W MAPLE, BIRMINGHAM GIRL FOR LIGHT HOUSEWORK and care of 5 year old boy. More for home than wages. Call after _ 56 30. FE 5-0688. a WTD. 2 FILL TIME WAITRESSES, 18 or over. Some experience nec- essary EM 3-4012 Union Lake Road MIDDLEAGED WOMAN WANTED to take care of sick woman. More for poard than wages. MA 5-6251, __ after 4.30. WOMAN TO CARE FOR 3 CHIL- dren during day. Vicinity of Ox- bow Lk. EM 3-8668. FULL: TIME MAID, WHITE, LIVE in, MI 62032. WCE TCs LIQUOR ~ EX- perience. No food. Nights. Close in transportation; references nceces- sary. Part or full time. FE 5-3672 _1 p.ot. to 3 pm. WOMAN WANTED 95. TO 50. NO VENTIONAL DAYS OFF. $30. _FE 44251. ee EXPERIENCED WAITRESS - 3 Pp. m. to 1l p. m. Sundays off. eed in person, 531 EB. Walton 3ALESLADY WANTED TO SELL| LADIES’ SPORTSWEAR AND AC- | CESSORIES—PERMANENT POSI- | TION. -ONLY EXPERIENCED NEED APPLY IN Lea BUR-| TON’S, 75 N. SAGIN DEPENDABLE ryouNe LADY FOR cashier work at Eagle Theater. Also wanted girl for candy stand. | WAITRESS NO_ si aiaaealaly | se SUNDAYS | | | MACHUS __160 W. MAPLE, BIRMINGHAM _ | WOMAN TO STAY WITH SCHOOL- age girl while mother works eve- nings. May work elsewhere dav« Own room and small salary, FE _ #0775 days. WTD RELIABLE ~ WOMAN OR girl for care of 12 year old child from 8 to 5. 5 days week. Good | — companion important, Write Daily Press Box 66. GIRL FOR LIGHT HOUSEWORK Bellevue. Orion after 6. FE We 8744 days. Ask for Burley. GIRL OR WOMAN TO W school age child and __3-2380 — OFFICE FOR PHYSICIAN. cae San a? etc. Hours 9:45 P. _ experience. Write tate age and WOMAN OR GIRL OVER 18—FOR _after Press Box 48. houséwork and care of baby daughter. White only. More for home than high wages. in. Live _ OA 82197 after 4 Pp. m. __ CREDIT MANAGER for |!arge Pontiac furniture store. An exc opportunity for right per- son Write, giving experience ref- erence and salary desired. Write Box 108 Pontiac Press. R. N. UNDER 35 FOR DOCTOR'S office. No night hours. No book. keepink. Box 20, Pontiac Press. WAITRESSES FULL TIME AND rt time at ee Drive In. pply in perso: BABY SITTER. | ey NIGHTS. Call after 4:00 p. m. OR 3-0650. GENERAL HOUSEWORK. 5 DAYS, 2 nights or stay. 10 Mile Wood- __ward section, $30. LI 6-2234. WOMAN TO STAY WITH ELDER- ly woman from 6 a. m. to 4 p. m. weekdays. Fe 3-7408. EXPERIENCED MARKER AND counter girl, full time. Apply Star Cleaners, 294 E, Pike. WAITRESSES EXPERIENCED, Martha's Drive-In. Apply in per- son after 6 p. m. WHITE WOMAN TO CARE FOR small child in my home, 5 days a week «FE 5-0276. SILK and wool presser for quality plant. Good wages, moi working Ess, steady job. Ph. Mr. Nich- | after 5 p.m. FE 5-7720. WTD. CURB GIRLS. GEORGIA’S Drive In, 2960 Orchard Lk, Ave. Keego Harbor. WTD. BABY SITTER, 4 DAYS WK. See Mrs. Bell, 201 “Ww. New York GIRL OR WOMAN FOR LIGHT housework care of 3 yr. old a Mar parents work ~ Keego. WHITE DISHWASHER, W aights, . MI 49090. MONTGOMERY WARD We have an interesting full time ition for a mature woman who as gene merchandise knowl- | edge. Expérience in catalog shop- | > ping preferred. Duties are to con- tect our regular customers by | phone .o inform them of special | sale items and to place catalogs, with new customers. All contacts made by phone in our office. Good starting salary. Apply in person. 19 E. Lawrence. BABY SITTER. 5 DAYS 14 AND 25 mo. old children. Apply after 4 p. m. Headquarters Dodge No. 4 __ State Park, Mrs. Tom Kern. WAITRESS WANTED HONEY Bee Diner. 19 W. Pike. See man- __ ager in person. 2 ROOMS EVERYTHING FURN. and small wages for woman's services. References reuired. 65-3911 eves. CURB GIRLS Wight shift. Must be 18. Apply ip person. FED'S Woodward at Square Late Ra. WATTRESS —- DAY AND NIGH? r Or usd ana” and M-15, Mia. Clark, wear erent gat beoewore ce _ five in Mad _ ligh use work, EXPERIENCED ~ LEA — for dry cleaning. FE WOMAN -and > lain HOUSE- king. Live in. Fcasst, soo EXPERIENCED HELP FOR pesoowers. Apel. 111 Oneida Rd. Boys, 16 or older, not go- ing back to, school, wish- ing day work as parking attendants. Apply Riker aa 9:30 to 10:30 & 4, 59 Wayne. GOOD PAY. PAID VACATIONS, PLENTY DAVE DAWSON ord Sales MY 1 SLICE OF HAM Wanted Female Help 6 SALES Openings in our Birmingham Shon for applicants who appreciate bet- ter merchandise and pleasant sur- roundings. store dis- count, paid insurance and many Generous employe benefits. Full time appli- cants given preference. D. J. Healy Shop Birmingham WORK NEAR HOME Balesladies 25 ‘o 38° FOR OUR mew nome decorative ig - perienced preferred. ge ad working conditions. Call Mrs. Fee- han at MI 46900. Or apply Jaco fy Maple at Bates, ir - WANTED DISHWASH MUST be neat and cle sats © week, No t. or 8 7 Auburn. _Call OR: ee ee INING ROOM WAITRESSES Experienced necessary. Must be over 18. Night shift. Apply in person. No phone calls, ‘please. TED'S Woodward at Square Lk. Rd. WANTED MIDDLEAGED WOMAN, care of children, hry & board, Wages. Call FE 48440. WTD. RELIABLE WHITE WOMAN. Light housework & is", boy 7 hag | for school. Live ays. OR 3-6300 after 4 p. _ LADY IN VICINITY OF WIL- liams Lake to care for 2 yr old child. 5. days a week in my home. May live in or by day. OR 3-0775 after 5 CLEAN AND NEAT BUS . GIRL, apply Elk Temple 114 Orchard Lake Ave. MARRIED WOMEN | with children who cannot accept ordinary 8 to 5 job. Age . Telephone and some yse of car for local driving. No collecting or delivering. High earnings. For interview phone M. Green, 2-4331 Tuesday & Thursday be- ann noon. ITRESSES, DAY & ’ & NIGHT, JET Whiner, 714 Woodward Ave. - WAITRESS WTD. APPLY IN PER- _ son. Park inn. 975 Orchard Lake. SHORT Eg ell & WAIT- ress. WTD. - PROTESTANT T WOMAN TO serve as companion of widow. PE sen. amount of housework. desired. EXP, CLERK. TYPIST For steady employment. FE 5-6125 Ext. 28. ‘Help Wanted 7 MAN. OR WOMAN WTD. uo SELL real estate full time, of floor time, good prospects, ge 100 listin . Car absolutely nec- Stone Real <4 rE 0253 and a for Bud Miller. LIGHT SHOPWORK. APPLY 4114 Crooks Rd., Birmingham, between 8, and 11:30 a. _m. WTD. — PIANO OR t ACCORDION player. Modern and old time. FE 3-5112 after 4:30 Work Wanted Female 9A WASHINGS, IRONINGS CUR- Sarre Pick up delivery. OR- PRACTICAL NURSE, LOCAL BIR- _mingham references. FE 5-4340. WASHING, IRONINGS. CURTAINS Pickup and deliver. FE 5-6869. WOMAN WITH 2 SMALL CHIL- dren as housekeeper in mother- less home, OR 3-9106 after 3. WASHINGS, IRONINGS, & CUR- tains. Pick up & deliver. FE __ 5-6869 “~~ SEWING pAnd MENDING _ CWE: 55-6278 WASHINGS & IRONINGS TE 4-9431 ~~ Laundry “Service It WASHINGS & IRONINGS, WORK guaranteed. Pick up & delivery. __OR 3-6115. _ — WAMILy LAUNDRY “ SERV- Pontiac 1! JOHN’S TRENCHING Pootings, gin lines, and __8nd drain tile lines. PET ~ STEAM CLEANING ~ Al types of steam ci done. Puntiac Farm and [ndust Trec- tor Co PE 4-046): PE 4-1442 APPLIANCE SERVICES We service al) makes o% cefriger- ators, washers. radios.” cleaners and all fy ot small appliances, PE 59-0626, 5-0925 Leo Lusg PLASTERING _ ROY’S. 96 Oakland Ave FE 23-4021 SAWS, LAWNMOWERS MACHINES SHARPENED _MANLEY LEACH — 10 BAGLEY_ A&B TRENCHING water lines, field tile. "ye Lisi iL TREF [RIMMING & REMOVAL. Pree estimate 84-8805 FE __1-8628. . a EXPERT TREE TRIMMING & RE- _ moval. Ph. FE 5-6593 or OR 3-2000, FREE ATES -ON_ EAVES- troughing, repairing, cleaning. _ OR 3-9593. BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls and Windows Cleaned. Ph. FE 2-163}. “Landscaping 13A|~— BEAUTIFUL BLUE GRASS SOD, cut extra thick 35¢ yard deliv- __ered. White's. FF 5-3140 CUSTOM MOWING: LIGHT, MED- fum, heavy power equipment, quality work. General barr gall ing. Ask for Ted at FE 4-@461. ~ ROTO TILLING ~ Garden and lawn work. FE 2-5631 CRANE’S LANDSCAPE SERVICE. Complete lawn building and main- tenance. PE 17-8333 FE 5-5386 13C Upholstering CORNICES. DRAPERIES, SLIP- covers, matertals Besdlie FE _8-1937 —— CUSTOM PURNITURE UPHOLSTERING WAHL UPHOLSTERING SERVICE ? EST. PHONE FE 4-1950 SLIP COVERS. URAPES & BED- spreats. Your material, FE 5-5797. CUSTOM FURNITURE OUPHO stering. Est. tree. Don Eakle.. 3-4639. FURN. REFINISHING, | _ Antiques @ specialty |MAKERS OF C furnigure; = 34 Gouta Telegraph. Thomas “Upholstering _ Photo-Accessories 20A LIKE NEW, 8 MM KEYSTONE, R-8 as with case, Cost $100. And mm Revere ‘azine aie. Cost $108. No. 288 «4enlarger with -single con- ensor Will sell all for $145 or separately. FI. 2-12 or 14 Mat- _ thews St. *AMILY MEMORIES in family portraits Studio FE ¢7391 Lost and Found 21 LOST — IN WALLED LAKE FRI. black 5 mos. Border Collie. White paws. White patch on neck. Re- ward: MA 41575. COBALT BLUE PARRAKEET Reward $20.00. Name, bie—Talks. Fred M. Conroy, 2014 Willow Beach, Keego Harbor, FE 5-687 WIDE 22. H WEDDING ring on August REWARD. LOST BLACK FEMALE COCKER Spaniel with grey face. $5 re- ward. Ans. to “Mitzie.” Call __ Dryden 62P5. LOST? BILLFOLD, ELIZ. LK. RD. keep money, return papers. FE REWARD _ Lost yellow tomcat, answering to __pame | of Spike. FE 2-6113. Notices and Personals 22 ON AND AFTER THIS DATE Sept. 5 I will not be responsible fad any debts other than my own. Ira N. Nordlund, 291 Central, __ Pontiac, Mich. BE TRIM IN FALL CLOTHES. _ Reducette. FE 48862. L. Cubley. ITS ALL OVER NOW, WAXING linoleum that is. Use Glaxo plastic type coating Waite's Notions. SCHOOL GIRLS COLD WAVE, $5.50 ee ai Dorothy's, 500 N Perry. CEMENT BLOCK MACHINE | “AT aburr Heights will be seid for storage, if not called Wighin 30 dass, FE 7-8672. 7 SUMMER SPECIAL LD WAVE Fe, Dorothy's N. Perry E 21244 fo : INVITATIONS $6.50. a@pkins, 3 day service. NAPP SHOES __FE 65-6720. HORSEBACK RIDING INSTRUC tions, oma’ only. moonlight rides. FE 46196, ___ Business Service 13 Chiropodists | 20| Wanted Real Estate .31 WTD. AND STONE| MAURICE THOME, D. 8. C. __ work Con eves PE 2-2936. 1203 Pontiac State Bidg. WE WANT Sept Te ae —= TO WORK We want action for our live- ly salesmen and we want to give you ection on the sale of your perties. We can ing, anywhere at > farms, bus. land contracts. sell them we will buy them ourselves. Call now and have a salesman at your place in 30 minutes. “GET RICH QUICK,” CALL. Edw. M. Stout, Realtor nm Eve. Till 8:30 T1 WN. Saginaw St. Ph. FE 85-8165 Trade or Sell We specialize in trades. We made several satisfactory trades in 1952. Large down payments are scarce. Trades are made to satisfy all arties concerned. Call us. Do not ee] obligated. DORRIS & SON REALTOR 752 W. Huron FE 4-1557 WE BUY—SELL & TRADE WE HAVE BUYRS FOR GOOD farm properties. Any location, also need smal) abie down pa ROY KNAUF, Realtor® FE @1421 eon bol with ressem, | Office Commerce Phone Pontiac EM 3-3-1) oF Univ. 1-5798 Johnson The big dane, is sow in his new modern up to date office an. cveds all types of listings. Just phone and a friendly sales- man wil' cal' and help you with your reali estate problems. We are stil) selling per cent of our listings A. JOHNSON, Realtor Ph. FE 4-2533 + Our New Location 1704 8S. Telegraph Rd, just south of Bloomfieid Fashion Shop GHUT-INS| HAVE YOUR SYES examined at home Dr. Harold Bussey, Optometrist. FE 4-5211. SCIENTIFIC €WEDISH MASSAGE 72 ELM 4- ANY GIRL OR Soman SEEDING a friendly advisor, contact Mrs. Vernon Vie. Ph. FE 2-8734. Con- lee Laundry. FE Phone FE 5-8888 ° CACE CUR1.1INS, PI. AIN OR. - Television Service 14A rutfied. beautifully finished. Poo | ~~~ - ~ tiac Laundry Phone FE 28101 M. D. M. TV SERVICE. AFTER 6 Painting-Decorating” 11A |? ™. call PB 5-6727._ HOMB SEKVILA CALLS — $3.50° DAY OR NIGHT NG, WALL removed. FE 2- 0 7 INSIDE & OUT. 8. FE 2-4137 Free estimates. Reas. PAINTING, a WORK, GUARAN- __teed. ~4315. PAPERING, PA ery G. REP. FE T. PREE| all Washing & Painting FE 5-231) MITCHELL’S TV 109 N. Saginaw FE 2-287) DAY, NIGHT-SUN. TV SERVICE, i 5-8390. make. FE ¢-0736. ANDY — CON- DON'S _Radio & rv Service. POX TV. & RADIO SERV. aid call $3.50. Cor. Hatchery & Air- FE 71-7598. port Rd. OR 3-1647. INTERIOR & 2 & EXTERIOR PAINT- _ing. PE 71-6596, PE 5-0242. Building Service 15 IN TER1OR DECORATING, Ex- terior inting, Expert mechan- BASEMENTS, FOUNDATIONS _ tes. '5-9756. rehes, chimneys and fireplaces ullt. EM 3-3506. EM 3-4581. WALL PAPER aa BY steam, D. Hills, PE 27466. SMITH & LIMINGA HOME DECORATING COMPANY Carpenter contractors. Get our specializing in removin wall- bid too. A Terms, OR 32276 oer & painting ae Pages or EM _ 13-5624. ° walls No job too small 3-2183 | - or contact in sop at 180 Wa-| MASON & CEMENI WORK, PREE basso ed Lake. estimates, our work guaranteed. WOMEN ae WALL WASHING, | __OR 3-0402. A. J. Webster & Son. OR 5-2284 ah oe CONTRA WITH _paintirg. GUARANTEED INTERIOR - EX- 4-0859. cre opportunity to bid rough in jobs, _terior painting. FE ¢ projects or otherwise MA ¢174i PAINTING AND DECORATING. contact in iy ‘at 180 Wa- Paper removed, tree estimates. hease Walled Lak __ FE 4-6918. PLASTERING, PATCH ~ PL4STER- WALLPAPERING AND PAINTING.| img. FE 2-807. _ Call for est, FE 4-0258. CARPENTER & CABINXT PAINTING, . PAPERHANGING, _ PA- _ ber removed. Sandusky. FE 5-1043. Moving & ‘Trucking 12 12 PICKUP & Een | MOVING AND STOR- anywhere in FOR PAST, delivery and light reasonable rates cal) anytime. VOLLMAR age. Large vans United States. Quick service. FE 5-8562. 341 N. Perry. VET WITH 2 TON STAKE TRUCE FE 4-4088. Vast bauling.. & D EXPRESS i cf, Mans Desig service. Mov- 08 Pa —— oe 48158 ee SUDDEN ae Ren VICE, ASHES RUB- a light trucking. FE werk, Call any time. PE 4-8421. MAN WITH % TON TRUCK WANTS MAKER wishes new and remodel work. CARPENTRY, 8B CEMENT Oe a ee PLUMBING AND HEATING. H. 8. Compton & Son. FE 4-3767, FE! 2-5440. ; D ROOFS, kinds. Est. 1916. J. A. Hugus, 352 N. Cass. PE 2-3021. FE 2-8946. CEMENT WORK BLOCKS. rcehes, fireplaces and sea-walls __EM 3-4879 GENERAL BUILDING REPAIR pty stone & cement work. FE LINE OF MASONRY, cement % gg) ge oe brick block laying fi ai. The > Salvation Army. DAINTY MAID FOR SUPPLIES, _Mrs. Burnes, FE 27-8814. 93 Mark. CERAMICS CLASSES STARTING Sept. 14th. Enroll now! Green- ware — firing — supplies. Dis- count to teachers DORE CERAMIC 8 222 E. _ FE _§-5231 Wtd. Children to Board 25 LICENSED BOARDING HOME.— Day care. Over 2 yrs. old. FE ¢# Wtd. Household Goods 27 BUNK BEDS Must be clean and in good con tion. PHONE FE 5-4505 OTICE — IF YOU WANT TO GET the high dollar for your curni- ture, we either buy it or auction it for you. Call L & 8S Sales Co., FE 17-0783. FURNITURE NEEDED Entire home or odd lots. Get the top dollar.’ Will Rae outright or sell it for Poe B. Community Bales Ph. OR 3- 2717 Se eee LIKE GOOD BUNK BEDS. ‘LET Us BUY IT OR “AUCTION IT for you. OA 8-2681. WANTED TO BUY ALL TYPES _of furniture. Ph. FE 2-5523. Wid. Transportation 27A ore WANTS RIDE FROM Dublin School —— Oxford = Pon- tiac. Working b 8:30 5:30 EM 3-3867~ WOMAN WANTS. RIDE FROM Cass-Elizabeth Rad. to Harper Hours 31 p--~ a. to 7 71-9832. ~~ —~ CREE TRAILER FOR USE WITH up. Milford MU 4- 3213. WTD “MURPHY 8 BEDS. RUBBER, Sana tile, flagstone. Commercial: and residential F.H.A. terms. ELLIS BUILDER. FE 23-2671. CHIMNEY WORK rae | tek HAULING 3% TON. Jack Visner, OL 2-5886. Michigan | Let a relia.ie home owned re limited. _ peor ars gt Monn — _—— = our chimney now O’DELL CARTAGE fireplace cleaning and repairing Local and Long Distance Moving | FE 53701. _______ Phone FE 5-6806 : TRUCKING PROMPLTLY DONE. FE 5-2674. CE, — dirt. Pe LNCINERATOR SERVI gen shredded biack top FE 5-0448 CEMENT WORK, ALL KINDS Hecacvin driveways, etc. Jensen FE Bock - BRICK, CEMENT WORK & fireplaces PE 2-2468. Trucks for Rent TRUCKS, TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT _% Ton a 1% Ten Stakes end mp Trucks ~* Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. mt 4-0461—PE 4-1442 Instructions TEACHER OF PIANO. ELIZA- beth Lake ae, 109 Exmoore. FE 5-5887. GRADT ATE a TEACHER. - enroll now, $1 a lesson. aa TAP DANCING CL tion 12th. Jackie Rae's . 8. Telegraph. rite for free bulletin stitute of | dead “abe East __ Water 8t.. t. Mich. Work Wanted Male 9 WTD. BY ELDERLY MAN Painting garages & small horres. A-1 GENERAL MECHANI = ire Wants a = s y or a long « time. Write 71, Pontiac Daily BAFERIENCED norman MAN, wants job farm. operate tractor and milker. Good en Write Pontiac Press Box _— DIGGING. PPOs ayhed WORK. t hauling. Shrub setting. FE LOCA L & LONG DISTANCE Goching & hauling. MYrtle 3-3907. SMITH MOVING _ Van or Pickup Service. PE 02-4864. HAULING OF ANY KIND. REA- __ sonable. FE 26857. LIGHT TRUCKING, RUBBISH AND 2266. PREE ESTIMATES ON SIDING & 3-0583. All types. new & old. Free estt- __ mates. Joy Pennebaker, FE 4-0612 QUALITY ROUGH CARPENTER crew available ‘We specialize in contemporary & ranch home’. FE _ 5-3lea. FLOOR SANDING LAYING PIN. a #1 Central FE -7519 EAVESTROUGHING Coal, of] & gas burners. McLain _ Bheet Metal. PE 4-5051. _ ashes. PE4-2266. = 8 | _ mation 1_or FE 23-7361. LIGHT ANL HEAVY TRUCKING | PLUMBING TING REPAIRS, Rubbisn hauled FE 20603. alterations J. & Wernet. FE Garden Plowing 12A cap "i WORK ROVOHING WTD. PLOWING, DISCING, DRAG-| modeling. small jobs. MA 8-675. “ging, leveling. hay & weed mow-| Cpu ENT WORK RES. AND . Jayoox, FE 4-9997. free estimates. Raymond ___ Business Service — 13 Commins. PE 44-9366. sanding. finishing. 155 naioon, ACE “TREE SERVICE. REMOVAL. _Free est. PE 27188, OR 32304. | _Ph. rit »-a4os a —_ ~ TRENCHING tiens, modernisation, repairs, tile, Tite recreation rms. reofing, siding. CONSTRUCTION |_| =a _ OR 317156 after 6 COMPLETE LINE OF MASONRY. . PREE ESTIMATES |__%rick. block & stone 5-3004. service. R. Dunn. FE|POURED CONCRETE BASE- 4-925 or FE 4-7328. ments Why build ‘plocks?. | Get our bid .oo! Or 3-718. EM 3-8830 ¥- EXPERT REPRIGERATION GERV-| ‘¢. 16 lee, all makes, reasonable, FE) service in o-3 EXPERT fy & by Hutch, Free 3-76.30, TANE COMPLETE ers. Lake Orion. MY 2-2842. ELECTRICAL SEWER CLEANING ~ EAVESTROUGHING _ Gas cae a cnet een FURNA LEA ; REPAIRING. Let home owned clean, Ri nas" waicina” ie F . Wtd. Contract “Mtge. 3u $1,000,000.00 5% for new low-cost, easier, safer joans on farms and better homes from % acre wi 100 ft. front- age. No appraisa) or.closing fee. CHARLES REALTORS 22% W. Huron FE 4-0521 __After 6 FE 4-6862 or FE 5-8891 IMMEDIATE CASH FOR YOUR ee, contracts or equity in your KL L. Templeton, Realtor 63% W. Huron FE CASH FOR YOUR LAND CONTRACT Ralph B. GARNER Investments ~ ational Bank “oe 1-780) Mich OL 2-761) _ Rochester nh _ WE HAVE $200,000 At our gd to purchase new or seasoned land contracts for our aoe eon ~_ | ne you eell. “MAHAN oe 44% Mortgages BO Peerson Owes 2408 310 Pontiac Bank iz Side rE —_— {E PURCHASE your land contract. Call Roche ester. OL 23-9341. __Wanted Real Estate 31 Want to Sell? BUYERS WAITING oy! me | WHITE BROS. Cony, © Se ¢ tee Som Geareenee Ph. OR 3-1872 or OR 3-1769 6660 Dixie Highway Waterford “Bosca Yuur iis ide ds acon pe Our method ualified ve iake im the area or Waterford x Immediate resu! 4 Hu i fant fi niet ; ; i g ) < > ab: > Wtd.. Miscellaneous 28 4 BEDROOMS Buver with large vy ment will pay u for home. No contingent Beatie Quick «ction. Edw. M. Stout, Realtor Open Eve Till 8:30 TIN. Saginaw St Ph_ ‘FE 5-8165 000 Needs and will gi gray listings of all types of real estate. and iven ence geal estate sales sonal, quick service will be years expe appraisals and experienced | our calls. 2642 W. H.URON INDIAN VILLAGE 6 rm. modern, 2 story, auto. Hammond Per- | n market} PAUL D. HAMMOND“ FE 5-7741 oil furnace, fireplace. 2 car ga- : Wanted to Rent “TEACHERS a FURN. APT. _ Phone | rh eecaTive Well Setated three or four bedroom lake home in Waterford 1 district. Will pay top rent and assure excellent care. OR 3-1416. MOTHER AND 3 8M. CHILDREN ry oa a to rent. Will ke care of property. FE _ 23-5125 after 5. a EXPERIENCED FARMER WANTS % rent a farm in vicinity of Pontiac of at least 80 acres. Cash rent preferred. Call OR 3-6295 or see me at 4474 ie, Clarkston, Rt. 3. WTD. TO RENT 6, 6 OR 7 RM. house ote will buy. MA & 3 BABIES DESIRE A 4-606. 32B house. FE Hotei Rooms PPP LD PL STAY AT THE HOTEL velt. Weekly rates $12 doubles $17.50 and up. Anne ap: _ tioned lobby and bar. HOTEL AUBURIN — EE pe Ma lan Auburn 1 Rooms With Board 32D ROOM AND BOARD. CLOSE IN, 66 E Pike. BOARD & ROOM FOR THREE men, close in. Good food. No drunks. 85 Auburn. ‘MEN BOARDERS & R®OMERS. 267 Osmun, FE 5-2719. s Rent Apts. Furnished 35 RMS. UPPER APT. PVT trance bath, 39 W. Pike St. NICELY FURN. 18T FLOOR APT, Immediate possession. Adults only. 671 W. Huron. NEWLY fala THREE RM. and bath. 653 Markle Street. Adults only. 1840 CASS LAKE FRONT, COR- ner of Moss, Keego Harbor. 3 bedroom duplex. Newly furn, New stove and refrigerator. New- decorated, automatic heat. n Sat. and Sun. cy RMS., PVT. BATH & “ENTRANCE, couple only. 36 Center. FURN. APT., PRL, ADULTS ONLY working couple ‘preferred. OA & EN- 3 RMS. FURN. 469 E. MANSFIELD. _FPE2-790600 2 RGOM AND BATH, WORKING couple. 325 Voorheis, Call eves, _after 7. 2 RMS., PVT. ENTR., , ADULTS, E. Blvd. FE 4-5458. 2 ROOMS, SHARE BATH. DAY workers only. FE 2-1672 2 LARGE ROOMS |, SPOTLESS. (Mass entrance. FE 2-2704 1 ROOM & KITCH married couple or lady. _chard Lake. 1 LGE. RM. APT. IN a ORION, __ laundry “priv. MY 3-7183 - 4 ROOMS AND BATH, WEST SIDE, | gas heat. Apply 140 Summit. |2 ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE, adults only, exc. location, 1 __ Washington. 3 ROOMS CLOSE TO TOWN. FE 4-5268. t FOR 261 Or- _ Eve. FE 5-4714_ WTD. 2 ACKES NEAR PONTIAC | gmMaLL FURNISHED FOR QUIET or Rochester, Will pay up to working couple ererutiies rivate cash FE 4-7474. _including bath. 65 Summit, 3 ROOMS BATH, NO CHILDREN or pets. 9471 Pontiac Lake Rd. 1 LARGE RM., KITCHEN & BATH PARA AL AR AAA RA RAR ARAA RSS Soper West side. On busline. 3 NICE ROOMS FOR TEACHERS, PLEASANT SLEEPING ROOM. ‘1 hook. vacant, genes can ~ vt. entrance, couple only. 3t AUL M. JO towell St. EAL ESTATE 7? RM, MODERN FURN. "APT. NR. 832 W. Huron PE 4-3505 Fishers, adults a of on a SMALL SPT ttf ble Se on ion e. available For-Rent Rooms 32) 2%s"k Cabins Bay OR 5 eet 2 ROOMS & BATH. ADULTS y ONLY. See caretaker in — after __ West side. FE 2-9002. 6. 99 Franklin Blvd oe NICE ‘BLEEPING ROOM. GENTLE- AVAILABLE SEPT. 21, 6 ROOM man. Day worker. Garage if = r flat. Everything furnished, desired. 385 W. Huron before 7 . 1 leas. children welcome. Nice TRicpborhioed, in cit}. Write box _ 39 Pontiac Press. APT. NO DRINKERS. CLEAN gentlemen. Near Pontiac Plant. FE 4-7922 -working girls. : ROOM FOR EFINED MAN. Board if desea. Lake home. Write Box 64 Pontiac Press. _ RM. Pontiac Motors. FE 5-3662. quiet men. FE _— NG RM. ON Pigs A LINE. _ Man-preferred. 627 -N 2 RMS. WITH 3 acai ‘BEDE. pvt. bath, ~cooking priv. school teachersor any 3 ladies. 560 Lenox Ave. FE: 2-1592. ING __men. ae 8. Parke. with 266 Park TC en privileges. couple. No drinking. FE 2-3593. dies, rant. _ FE 50673. ONE OR TWO “MEN, BUS LINE, twin beds, 284 Oakland, FE 5-7233 233 _ light housekeeping rm. _51 Pine. SLEEPING ROOMS NEAR _ Tennyson. ROOMS FOR LADIES | SIN- le & double. Large closets. Share oi if desired. 531 W. Iroquois. Se eee SLEEPING ROOM MEN ONLY. 652 Lookout Dr. FE 5-0414. SLEEPING RMS. FOR ~ CLEAN, sober men. 46 Mechanic. LARGE FRONT ROM. BEAUTI+ fully furn. for business man, Call afer 6. FE 4-2888. KITCHEN & LAUNDRY. eRIVATE __at bus stop. 499 W 1D. 1 GENTLEMAN, ean WORK, GLEAN ROOM, 2 MEN ONLY. 4: 428 cg % block off “a Cleaves, 1 m Pontiac Plant. 3 SLEEPING RMS. 1° WITH TWIN beds. Walking distance from town. FE 5-5218 s after 6. Wanted to Rent CRANBROOK MAN & WIFE; BHM. or age Desire apt., Bloomfield area. Preferably servants Fe with part time wk. O. RENT "OR LEASE B am decorate at our ¢xpense, ur- _ gently needed. MI 6-1669. __ 1 OR 2 RM. FURN. BACHELO! apt. with pvt. bath for Mar. / T HALL CLOTHES. FE- YED snfurnlobed wert © 3 west side apt. Pontiac Box No. 21, USTNESS B AND FAMILY woud like 3 of 4 bedrm. home. , references. Will lease. OR 37031 < Business Executive Would Like Small Home or Duplex with 3 Bedrms. 2 Childten Recommendations H Desired Write Pontiac Press Box 68 LARGE SLEEPING ROOM FOR LARGE FRONT ROOM FOR TWO baboon FE 5-7496. BOARD FOR MEN, DAY ‘3 ROOM workers. Walking distance to, ly. NICE ROOM CLORe ‘IN, CLEAN | ER’ FRONT, § GENTLEMAN, eud garage. West side. PE 4-6262. ROOM FOR CLEAN _ WORKING | oung man. $6 week. Close in. | FE 56728, to 3 ROOM FOR A NICE CLEAN MAN. FE 40424. ROOM FOR 2 OR 3 ROOM FOR BUDDIES | ELDERLY WOMAN TO ~ SHARE home on east side with working ROOMS FOR SOUTHERN BUD- close to bus and restau- -€223| DOUBLE SLEEPING RM. 1 R FISHER Body and Pontiac Motors. 36 W rite Biot » Hugh Acton, Birming- | 9 __couple. 1035 Oakland. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, 2 . QUIET adults, Clean. Heated. $65 mo. at Lake Orion. Write Pontiac Press Box 106 2 ROOM APT. ~PRIV_ ENTRANCE. Snare bath. Adults only. Must be clean. No drinkegs. _FE 4-6460. FURN. APT. “COUPLE only. 237 Orchard. Lake Rd. Rent Apt. Unfurnished 36 eee ROOM SECOND FLOOR APART- ment in best West side district. $90.00 per mo, With heat fur- nished. Adults only. References, Pontiac Press Box 1. 2 RM: APT., CLOSE IN, i. PARTLY furn. P. W. Dinnan & Son, 116 8. Saginaw. } ROOM UNF. APT. $65 MONTH. In vom merer No children, EM __ 34134 2 BEDOOM. . PVT. . ENTRANCE bath. MA 41031. Rent Houses | Furnished 37 eer BEAUTIFUL 6 RM. ALL MODERN home “near Pontiac @until July, 1954. $95~monthly. References é& deposit. Em-3-4322. | LOVELY MODERN LAKE FRONT home on. Square. Lake. Lake Orion. To lease from. Sept. 15 to June 1. $75 _ Must -have ref- erences and months rent advance. Ph. Detroit VA 4-0823. FURN. HOUSE, ALSO FURN. APT. children welcome. Call Romeo 2 3 BEDROOM HOME FURN. SEPT. to June. 8838 Arlington Rd. Pon- __tiac Lake. 5 ROOMS ON LAKE. SEPT. TO June, $65 month. Ref. and deposit __required. OR 3-2945. 0 a ROOMS FURN. 4 MILES MILES OUT. FE 45268. CABIN FOR RENT. 9050 ‘PONTIAC _ Lake Ra. OR 3-1859. 5 ROOM MODERN FURNISHED house to man and wife. Apply 96 Ruth, COMPLETELY fr FURN. 5 i § ROOM Jog cabin. All miod. conveniences. Avail. f{rém Sept. June. ‘* mile off — Hwy. Apply "1903 modern home, Near Waterford. OR 3-8506 ___ | . Watkins) $on—eMALE AT BUS STOP. COOL, CLEAN, FUR N- SOTAGE R A mm with rch. FE familv, ;ept. to June. All modern goss4. mode pe eniences, reas. rept. Oskley Market 42310. CABINS FOR RENT. OA &8-2728 Rent Houses Unfurn. 38 — RENT FREE. TO BOARD RD OWNER — no children. FE 4-0066 after 4 ., ae Sat. Sun. 9 a. m. to ONE Ke ROOF HOUSE. UNF. COUPLE 4 + ROOIEE AND TOR CHRIB- tian couple with pre-school ohild. K.; $60 mo. _OL 23-2305. 7 § ROOM. her ON PONTIAC Lake Rd. A 2-4483. For Rent “Biace Space 38A 3-0682. Rent Miscellaneous 39 Bimbers. FE coo Sale Houses 40 PPL ~ 5 bedroom home in location. bath & ; Would be ideal for fam or income. $10, terms. Ranch’ style 3 bedroom home. ear garage. Full basement. Auto- matic heat Recreation room. features. Large lot, $14,900 Small hom: with & we- e ter in down. “ Fn ret Ee ee eT ee. 2 STK DOUBLE SINK — TILE DRAIN BOARD Custom-made, knotty pine kitchen cabinets. DINING SPACE IN KITCHEN Built-in benches. FULLY f{NSULATED Paved solid drive. COMB. ALUMINUM STORMS & SCREENS Recreation space in basement plus pine panelled laundry room. GAS AUTOMATIC FURNACE AND HOT WATER One year guarantee. PONTIAC SCHOOL SYSTEM . $14,650 Complete {1 On lots with 60 to 80 ft. frontage. / This home with attached breeze- way and 2 car brick garage — MAHAN REALTY CO., REALTORS W. Huron Ph. FE 2-0263 NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH POST OFFICE written construction 1075 5 ROOM MODERN, GARAGE, TWO Two _ los. Call "E_ =— af OPEN Custom Brick Home © Cor. Edgefield & Noyle Tile bath with built sliding doors, full basement with crete walls, automatic and center stairway to 2 attic. ated on a high in Donelson Park. in vanity, ured con- gas heat) room lot | Open Sunday 1-8 p.m. Open Daily “ p.m. WM. - KENNEDY REALTOR Huron CFE 43569 INE NORTH EN Let the other man a you pay for this ‘ttractive income 5 rooms down and 3 rooms up. Also suit- able for the large family. Quick possession. WEST SUBURBAN 3 bedroom ag , fully insulated, fu beth” util iy rm., oil -cureulator heat, auto. oil 94 water heater. Hardwood floors, partly furnished. Francis °E. “Bud” Miller Realtor Member Co-operative Realtors exchange Dafly 9 to 8 p. m. * unday 1 to 5 p. m. FE 2-0253, 1.rking Space in Rear BARRY bedroom home in village of Walled Lake. Full basement. Oil furnace Auto hot water heater. We ak i inspection. Customer ETT BARRY 148 No. Pontiac Trail at Maple Ra for Carl MA 41333 or MA 41403. Ranch Home CORNER LOT Lecated in Drayton Plains on ® paved stret, this 5 yr. old suburban wand oon ag 2 end. ‘tile There is a full basement, paneled breezeway to two car garage. bs S@uto. of] heat and Giroux & Hicks 4380 Dixie H’ Drayton Plains OR 3-9701 Drayton Plains Out of town owner instructs us to oe. pet let this slip b: m e. y without seeing. Gas Heat Four room modern bungalow on E. Tennyson, very neat & clean, the Th's cha arming plac peyton 3 cha ace can jught bg $3,500 “own and the bal : of $6450 on FHA terms of only $52.00 per month, including taxes and insurance. K. G. Hem cae Ez. mpstead, R Realtor EVE. FE 2.1317 ” CHARLES LINCOLN ST. - investment uired ee 5 and down —— up car garage down paym ac or part do a : Lal aavasmaute this -B. D CHARLES” PE Eves. FE 5-7145 or FE 2-1704. 4 SIDE t $7900 with $1500 dn. FE 5-7217. | { OPEN Sunday 2 to 5 p.m, 1340 KRason Rd —just south of Watkins Lake, Choice su- burban home with lake privileges. All - white bunga- ow, built in 1942. 5 extra large rooms and bath plus large attic room finished in knotty pine. Ecreened ter- Tace and recreation room. Lot 1lux412, Good garden soil 2 car garage. City bus service Owner transferred. May take small house or land contract in trade. Ph. FE 2-1947. John Kinzler, Realtor 670 W. Huron St FE 4-3525 Open Evgs. till 9 Co-operative Realtors Exchange RANCH’ HOMES, rough plumbing and wiring, lake privileges, SMALL DOWN PAY- MENT. Schneider, 924 Pontiac Trail. Walled Lake OPEN 8U | DAYS. Phone MA 4-1554. YOUNG SYLVAN VILLAGE A wonderful buy—5 rooms 2-bed- rooms, completely remodeled tn- | side and outside, new floors and | plastered walls, new auto. fur- mace in full basement, 1'2 blocks from lake, Full price $9500.00 with terms COLORED Several practical new 4 room homes with full bath, plastered and painted walls. Only $1000.00 Down $1000 DOW $4150 ful price, cant be beat, large 4 room with large front porch, lot 50x150, quick possession REALTOR | 412 West Huron St. FE. 4-4525 ___Open Eves ‘till 9 Sun. ‘till 5 select, oak floors, | BROWN Ovr office will ve closed Sunday and Monday. Visit our Tuesday and loo. over our many | right at door. ‘‘Enjoy yourselves over the Lmbor Day week end, But please drive carefully.” ’ L. H. BROWN 1362 W. Huron Ph. FE 2-4810 Member Co-op. Real Estate Exch, West Suburban Here’s an ideal home for a large family. Beautiful -set- ting with peer of shade trees and shrubs. 4 bedrms. stool dn., full bath on sec- ond floor. Lake privileges on oe Lake. $8,500, $1,000 down. Ranch Horhe Only 2 years old and like new this 2 bedroom bunglaow is located on ex- tra large lot, 980x260 ft., forced air oil furnace, hard- floors, full bath, close to school, bus line past the door, located on good black- top road west of airport. ie Wood Co. Realtor _ Office Open 9 a. m. to 8 Knudsen Donelson Park New ranch type home, 5'2 rms. ani bath. attached garage a -_" scapin: Only $13. FH. -terms Let us anee you his fine home. { . Ottawa Hills Well restricted subdivision, very convenient to schools, bus and gue 3 center. 7 rms. and 1% baths, including large sun room. Extra large lot, 2 car garage and paved drive. Now is thectime to see this fine \ property. WM. H. KNUDSEN REALTOR 510 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Ph. FE 44516, Eve. 2-3759 — 2-3285 MODERN, .CLEAN 2 FAMILY IN. come, full basement. stoker heat, arage. aved driveway. Near Idwin Rubber & €ab, on bus Piatt ance oo Phone FE 3:15 p. m L.R. TRIPP Cherokee Road . Brick ranch home. 2 bed- rooms, elled den, sun- room, nice kitchen with Br. nook ile en stall Pull room, Attached garage and many other extras.-Let us vou this Meal home Oakwood Manor Brand new custo brick ranch home beautiful ti Cc. built Sis son windows. Formica coun- and natural birch Full divided* base- - space, 82 val fs water heater and oi] Cc. eed garage. site with shade. sonointmert vt lovely home today! Seminole Hills Are you ‘ooking for a good 3. bedroom family home near Webster © \ ashineion B-*>0!8? Fxtre bo troom °n4 bath on third Mod- ernized tile kitchen. new gas fired heating system, full screened porch and many other Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor W. Lawrence 8t. Eve. 33 OW. Sepeitl or PE ¢-2003. HOUSE [ 3 ROOM large lot, ove FE Russell Young, Office | Phot@ listings. Conv enient parking | ALTOR 1725 Willtame Lake Rd, cn 3.1235 Pu Ortonviue 132 reverse charges. PARADISE 10 acres with 3 bedroom all mod- ern home, all kincs of fruit, tractor & spring equipment’. sev- eral hives of bees with separat- | frig equipment. All this for only $16,000 with $5,000 down or $13,500 without equipment. F. C. Wood Co. 1725 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-1235 Office Open 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. BY OWNER-2 BEDRM. -AND! bath. Living rm. with picture window, large kitchen with lots, of cuvboards, utility rm. with 52) gallon electric water heater. Or | bus line, 2 blocks from grocery, | lge. tut. Beautiful location, $6,950. Easy terms. FE 2-4855. | SHELL WITH) N- | a | j ae aglady will be closed until Sept. CRESCENT LAKE © Mouern ped.™. turn. home liv- ing rm. 15x27 \ict.80x318. Renting unit n rear at $460.per month. Reas at $9. mac ubstancial down, $60 cer min EAST SUBURBAN Qui nset home, full basement. nicé garden, ? | Priced at only $2000 with reas “terms. CUCKLER LTY Eves FE 2-8002 or F -8119 236 N. Saginaw PE 44091 $45) 00 DOWN - 3 R_ House Ye acre. full Car garage 2750 _00- v0 down | R_ Basement house fuil bath basement, quick pos- sessfon Income—Beautiful wood- ed lot with 24R houses cém- letely furnished, * block to Lotus ke Waterford GEO. MARBLE, Realtor 6261 Audersonville Rd. Waterford a Phone OR 31268 NOTICE or vacation For any infor- matiou during Pee een call FE- 4#9'51 bet. 9 12 PON Cl AC RE ALTY 737 Bakiwin FE 5-8275 LAKE ORION 6 room home, 3 bedrms. Plus 3 room furn apt. Exc. cond. Only $2500 down. Beveral good listings to offer. _MY WALTER GREEN | 2-5831 LAKEFRONT DELUXE| The LIVING AREA in this beau- tiful lakefront home expands from the 16x33 ft. living room ‘natural fireplace) into the lovely sunroom the rumpus room); into the glass enclosed porch and outdoors on be patio, the wonderfully shaded wn — down to the 80 ft. per- fect sand beach. Modern home indeed — even to a 3 dimen- sional mural! Top grade utili- | Also utility rm. and i courteous salesmen would be { ties. Excellent construction thru- out. Double garage. All furniture. rich carpeting and big speedboat included. The price IS RIGHT — $23,500 terms. Humphries eerste rs Realtors Exchange Telegraph FE 20474 Open, Evenings IRWIN > * LAKEFRONT Want to beat the heat? Have a look at this lake home situated in a lovely setting just seven miles! from downtown Pontiac. Has 2} bedrooms, living room and kitch- | en. Completely glassed-in front porch, has 3 piece bath up and stool and shower in full base- ment, has laundry tubs and auto- matic hot water and heat. This is priced right with low ‘down payment Call for appointment, A three bedroom home you dream about, completely modern and just newly decorated. Good full size | jpasement with automatic heat. “Joslyn area | glad to show you anything we Rave, just step to the phone end -make your appointment at your convenience OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 GEORGE R_ IRWIN, BROKER 269 pot a Johnson dowatoewn with basement and au- Seg eA an: ‘tami garage. deal spot ~. arge fam La Am Onl $2,000 down, Call Mtr. re) 5-514) days. an afar FE 43473. AUBURN HEIGHTS ae This home is especially a hard the man who works Truck and Coach. Very gy $ bedrooms, 1% car garage. Beau-| tiful large ot. Labia f painted in- side and out Som © yoo will | ust by lookin t. Priced | right with 41,500 qown. Evenings | r 6 Cail, Mr. Joll, FE! IYCOM*® PROPERTY If you have money to invest then read this ad. Beautiful 4 family all modern a i condition. Situated on. large corner lot with fag. io 2 Oxbow Lake. bring- in $250 a month. Owner re- tir and says he will take a free * and clear piece of propert as part down yment, ig heed ate this now. Evenings after ‘all Mrs Snyder, OR 3-1975 5 consists room modern home. shed. It is a little. to - Johnson. FE Phone PE 4-2533 17-1636 Gilford. me FE BRICK OR FRAME 2 or 3 bedrooms, built on your lot, intertor unf‘r. ished ‘ow as down. Come and see models. HAROLD GOODELL 3200 Rochester. Ra. ou 6-0831. $800 BOWN Why pay rent? Only $4,400. full price for this 4 room & bath. All fprnished; close to-~school, stores & bus. Better hurry on “AUBURN HEIGHTS 5 room mod.rn 1 story frame with plastered painted walls; full base- ment: Venetian blinds; storms & screens: ? car garage; lot 100 by app. ‘300. $10,500. with $5,500 down. WEST SIDE room modern with natural fire- Place in iiving room: oak floors & trim: automatic gas furnace & water heater; recreation room in basement: a lot of shade. A good buy at $8950. Cash to mortgage. J. C. HAYDEN REALTOR “26'4 W Huron st. FE 5-2264 aree EM 3-5042 or FE 17-7906 8 ROOM MODERN HOUSE. 1 CAR garage. Needs repair. $5200 com- plete price. Must be sold im- _mediately MA 5-4831. FE 429584 © EAL LOCATION etter 6 room home mm excellent con vn, 3 bedrooms, oak_floors, plaster~walls, gas furnacé en- closed porenes, 2 car garage ™A Peal to be proud of, only $2500 ow LOOK AT THIS 5 room home outst city, lot 220x300 ft Full baseme garage, excellent neighborh price | $7500. Good terms. Call Now, CLOSE One of our most desirable bomeds +. 5 rooms, 32 up large Treom and sn tchen Pee Full base- — gas h $2965 down MONEY 3 bedrooms bath up. living room dining room and kit.nen Gown. Full basement, deep lot Only $7100. rms, LOW DOWN PA seat 1l'g storv home, be sbath, oak floors, plastered walls full One block to school. @nly $6500 with $1350' Down. ‘ FE 4-9584 ‘ CUSTOMER PARKING ». OPEN EVE Lawrence W. GAYLORD __ Cooperatives rkbaners Exchange ELIZ. LAKE ESTATES. BY OWN- er. 1% story Cape Cod. 1 yr. olc. Landscaped [enced yard. Lake Privileges. ran rice $12.- 465. $4000 down A mort- _ gage 371 Avery | Ra. FE 5-5318. DON'T MISS This 2 bed.vom home with glassed in porch Ful) bath. Hot water heater. Basement. Furnace. Fenced in yard. Ku service. Lake ele aa iy gh ete School. | tn.s for 8143 “as -Elizabeth Rd PE 5-128: FE 4-3844; Open 9 to 7 UNFINISHED CEDAR SHAKES ranch house. Built on your lot. _ $415 down. OR 3-0052 J ROOM HOUSE. $2100 CASH. FP 40002 after 6 p.m. 3940 Nearing _ St. South Blvd., Rochester 4 ROOMS, MODERN ~ 2 large bedrooms Large livin room. Extra large kitchen. Fu orl 3 xtra large lots. All for HOLMES-BARTRAM 4392 Dxie Hwv. OR 3-1950 ______EVES OR _ 38001 FOR COLORED 3 room house on Arthur St. only $3200 with $1000 down & $35, | per month. — . 2: C. HAYDEN, Realtor W. Huron FE 5-2264 # oe FE 17-7906 or EM 3-5042 CLARK Closed Labor Day Happy Weekend Do Drive Carefully CAMERON H. CiLARK REALTOR 1362 W. Huro.. FE 46492 EQUITY FOR SALE IN 4 ROOM and bath modern house. Full. __basene en 1009 8S. Merrimac. __ OPEN | SUNDAY! 2 TO 6 2426: ST. JOSEPH ST. In° exclusive Sylvan Manor. At ae W = offer jd the dis- c livability is remarkable tn such a moder- ate price Home. Tiled vesti- bule entr---« to 14%x18% gar- disposal. Com plete basemenis, A. C. Frorced Member Co-op. x _S. WATKINS LAKE f v MOVE RIGHT IN! 560 Ove . Nermanent | | | and | |. {5 | | Cope. 1953 by NEA Service, Ine. ) “IT never saw it to fail—plan a picnic!” For Sale Houses 40 For Sale Houses 40 LAKE FRONT HOME. oe bath. Full _equity. OR To settle-.state lot on Orchard -two family, 5 RMS. & $5,800. $3,500 large Lake Ave. between Green and Johnson. $10,000 with $2,000 down, s of he'rs ubject to approval CAMERON H. CLARK REALTOR 1362 W. Huron FE 4-6492 CLOSE TO PONTIAC 3 apt mcome baths & entrances, trees, outside 2 apt furn. comple on vavement, back Idea) set 8 East sice. ~ room Separate hea F several fruit lace, garage. 4 large lots water on side up. Good payment stool, fire house, . electric oi] heater & drums. ved street. $4250, terms. ROSE MCLARTY CPE 22-2163 _ $1,250 DOWN 2 bedrooms Large living room. Kitchen & cinette: Basement with ~ auto. oi) heat. 2 lots with lake a Quick possession. Only “3. BEDROOMS All op 1 floor. & modern> closet space auto oll heat. on pavement Full price ng os tits before it's too itchen Large living room Plenty of ‘ull basement with “extra large lot school. CRAWFORD AGENCY ALTOR OPEN EVES 2141 Oodyke. FE 46617, FE 41548) RAMBLING RANCH, Mo peremt breezeway. garage omp! modern. O heat. Only $8500, __ $2500 down FE 22731. _ ~ 2and 3 BEDROOM RANCH-HOME Finish n exterior only. 1% ate west of airport corn of M-59 and Wiilliams Lk Ra $450 down on your lot, $3,685 up. Prices range. from F. C. Wood Co: REALTORS 1725 Williams Lake Rd. a _ Office Open 98 floors breakfast with rec. room. landscaped with flowers, shade trees, trees, »raen farm Ww Ov and has A.M, to 1,500 SILVER CRE ST THELMA M *ELWOOD| A oneee neat 2 bedroom home plastered walls, Modernistic nook. and oak kitchen - with Full basement 2 lots, beautifullv fru.t and healthy chased a home this -fine pr.ced to sell immediately at caly $10,900 and convenient tefms. Sce WHITE BROS. Open 9 to 9 for Your Convenience Ph. oR 3- 1972 5660 Ditle Pig ROOM BUNG & 5 Ov? 3-1769 Waterford or Sway, ALOW, GARAGE. | EXTRA LOTS $7950 cash buy with full basement, Silent Auto. fur heater. Late show you this WEST SI privileges. s this lovely home new Timken nace & auto. water Let us DE BRICK GI resale. 5 rms. with expansion att'c, & a Pol i heat, storm Paved corner sash lot. Offered oy $12,950, terms. Bateman & Kampsen Office m Sunday 1-5 p. m. 8. retogre: ee ge — no. Orchard Co-op member *opea 3 "ive. ere 9 -DORRIS Two EX 7TELLENT POCATIONS Six beautiful spacious rooms with oak floors throughout. kitchen, Also and Pull Jovely tile bath, mod fireplace, lastered basement, walls gas ern two lots on attractive one tollet, sewer, automatic hot water and other desirable features. $10,500, terms. room home LAKE NEW H Very attractive baths, 3 bedroo fireplace, therm dow and 70 ft. All for Might consider 2 near bus ip trade. FRONT OME home with two mr, ofl A. C. heat, opane picture win- on lake, $16,975 DORRIS & SON REALTOR CO-OP MEMBER 462 W. Huron PE 4-1557, FE 2-2161 WasKington Park brick front 2 bedroom —. with s ous unfinished stairs, basement, = beat, automatic hot water. food sae cing fous, Youngs ment windows venetian down See | ~~ Partridge 18 THE “BIRD” TO BEE $1000 Dn. SPARE TIME MEANS $8$$ FOR YOU | Immediat> possession of this 6) room bungalow that needs a little | finishing. New furnace, bath and | “kitchen in. 2 rooms have been | added that need finishing. 3 lots, 2>-car garage, lake privileges. Onl}. $7,500 with just $1,000 down. Much of the material already on hand to. finish it. If you are the least -bit handy you'll soon have a 10 or 12 thousand dollar home. 4 COZY ROOMS CUTE AS CAN BE This neat and attractive little home is just a little doll house and you il agree it's the best buy you've ever seen. It's heey rane 4 modern except a basement, ' though it has an under floor au- tomatic oi] furnace, 2: bedrooms, utility room, screened porch, Bt tached garage and lake privilege on Middle Straits Lake. Loca vO ft. cat Gre Lake Rd this one quick, it's priced at only $7,000 on terms or 10 per cent less for cash. DESIRABLE BRICK DIGNIFIED LIVING ey the enjoyable recreation room the 2 ane bedrooms, you a find anything to displease you. 2 natural fireplaces, extra lavato carpeting, sunroom, a/| mest e ficient heating system and | a 2 car posae Let us show you! all the living enjoyment and the wonderful home investment that | can be yours for only ¢22,50). | You're ing to like the 3 big, beautifully landscaped west side “lots, too. It's really a gem, folks, so hurry to your telephone and | ‘ block tehind Scribs.) | IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. & | room & tile bath Terrace. Gas | heat. Modern kitchen. Good cond _Ver Teas. FE ci ae _ Homes & Cottages WALLED LAKE & VICINITY, LAKE LAND REALTY CO. \ 924 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lk. MA 4-1554 3 MILES EAST OF Te OUT- SIDE OF CITY YRS. OLD RMS LIVING RM. 2 BEDRMB., ee WALL TO WALL, i- Ol. TTS KITCHEN BREAK- FA:. 3aR TILE © WITH | 8 2 C4RY i GAR SUE TORMS & SCREENS. CL oe Se 8 SCHOOL, | | SCHOOL BUS TO HIGH SCHOOL. | | rooms and bath (3 bedrooms) basement with fur- nace and electric hot water. Ga- rage. Over an acre of land. $450 DOWN ; Open aa & Sunday Auburn Height's a lot with lawn, 3 rooms garage new insulation s electricty. About sion and low monthly payments. Edw. M. Stout, Realtor atmosphere, this beautify! TIN. Saginaw St. Ph. FE 5-8165 3 bedroom and 2 bath brick ______Open eve till 8:30 ranch type home is situated INDIAN VILLAGE on a lot 200x300 in exclu- | 6 rm. ern, 2 story, auto. sive Bloomfield Fiehlants oil furnace, fireplace, 2 car ga- Some of the features in- rage, vacant, located on Mo-|* clude a tile stall shower bawk. $14,000, $3,000 down. bath, mahogenv paneled sun M, JONES room, cozy den, 2 natura! REAL ESTATE fireplaces, full basement 832 W. Huron FE 4-3505' 30x70 ha peeten oy soon $1000 DOWN area 16x30, gas baseboar Not too impressive outside but radiant. — and seer very lovable inside. 12x16 living Ritchen S36 000R within ets rm. 2 bedrms. Lovely kitchen. Directions: Apnrovimatelv *- 3 pe. bath. Over an acre. Needs mile south of St. Joseph ‘ Hospite!. turn rt. off Wor, ren FOURTH ST. 2 nice bedrms. sion attic. Tile in kitchen and ath, full base Recreation space down. BEAUTIFUL In the trees fo home near beara Lake. Large kitchen. 50x165 tot a block from beach. Only | 5 ACRE FARM. 3. bedrm., full Tage, fruit. be ose.in Only CORT M. 1111 Joslyn. TO BUY, TU Partridge IS houses, 1 income of all on one floor $700 $40.000 with Area Situated on cozy and .cute iyPe home with iding, water and 10 days posses- 2-7 p Offering per month, plus livery. Could be develope’ as high class beach in ad- dition to present business 2 ne north oe Pontiac. Buildings cone'st of 2 $1,500 DOWN . 3 Airport Road with 200 feet of paved road frontage. There are 6 g*creq double cottage. 6 single cottages and boat livery. Property showing an approximately boat $10,000 down Bloomfield Brick Ranch the modern living with country ultimate in ward Avenue to 170 N. Berk- down with ex-/: shire. Watch for ‘Open’ signs. “ye ae x |ROy A I LOCATION oy Annett Inc. r this 3 bedrm. REALTORS 30x13 | 9g FE. Huron ADAMS $1,000 DOWN 26 ft. 2 bedrm. home, wiring & rough tank and well, 2 large lots, Some finishing work to be done inside. LAKE ORION all modern home. ! bedrm rice $7500 with or appointment. NEW 2 BEDRM. $500 DN HOMES. Crescent Lake rel waa: eb | exterior comp finis , interior , pret erapes, cre | meeas finishing, $4,450 and up. | $2700 down. FE 4-2482. eee ee if IMBLER OPEN DAILY FE 4-9524 end —— rye " a This oearly new orivately ov in roe ranch type home has all the convenience of modern livinc” carne *‘,acious rooms of ex: ann'ng and construction Beau Firat landscaped wooded corner lot with ‘ake priv A auick «ale <2 a We ‘tnvite vour in living rm., plumbing, septic| 170 W Pike F¥deral 3-7193 Open _ Evenings and Sunday 1- 4 Russell A. Nott, Resites Full $1500 down. Call —— SPECIAL LAKE FRONT RANCH TYPE HOME -— All laree beautiful rooms with water heater: ing day. ca Mom and Dad and drapes — lovely sirened in porch overlooking large well land- hood with no scaped yard and lake. Two Toon a 2 ot big lot. rooms and paneled den, ook at this bedroom in basement, plus 24448 2 sf recreation room more you. make your %, J. R. HILTZ REAL Complete Real feetures to ‘be seen when , bar and many appointment. ainted walls, rge Kitchen. TOR Estate Service room Apts. and 148% N. oe cee Street | FE 5-611, FE 2 — —_ as ter Oi $1,000 DOWN wails, paved location, St. Mike Area. $8450 with $2450 down. See- ‘s beileving, “BECAUSE OF YOU" find a better buy, $2500. Down. 2 car garage, O'NEILL | First Offering on this pleas- ant little bungalow located . make your appointment right re on one acre of good tillable away, nila vFzE ne land just 15 minutes from = Gr —_—_ v — downtown. weet of 4 f es af +’ rooms and bat it's just WARD &. PARTRIDGE, INCOME fooms end bath it's juss REALTOR. FE2-8316|.— 7 se ies iat only 06.308 43 W. Huron st. Southeast Side with reasonable down pay- —_- . “iw 3 family 5 room and bath down mert. same up. Excellent condition ze throughout. All iarge rooms, good “THIS IS IT’ — 5 large MUST SELL basement. gas heat. nicely land- veautifully decorated rooms. “ scaped corner lot, and backyard includes living room, fulb Modern 2 bedroom bungalew, fenced with 2 car garage. Only dining room. a picture book with attached garage. Oak floors, $0,400 to handle Kitchen fully tiled and plastered walls. Full basement } separate gst Bee, ; with auto. gas furnace. —_ K ‘L. Templeton, Realtor ecan, paleted dpa 9 ful down. Inquire 112 Pioneer, ( 83% -W. Huron E 26223 ges ‘fernace and sutomatic street Only see it to- have been looking for a nice neighbor- traffic and Have them immaculate Bedroom Ranch Type with its attached breezeway and Garage. Plaste oi] furnace, You won't and only BRICK INCOME: Two 3- Bath down, 6 rooms and bath for Owner, hot water goers, plastered full ILEGES. $2.000 DOWN Schaar well constructed 3 bedrm. basement. $215.00 per. Mo | rx. 53458 me Water & toilet in. “Has Income. Price $12,980.00 Call beautiful fireplace in living Now! IMMEDIATE POSFSSION, OWNER| jsercencd front 4 4 lowes Fa} scree! ront por : e 7 O'N LEAVING STATE. 5 rooms and| price $6000. $1000 down. RAY O’NEIL, Realtor bath, automatic — furnace, and EMBERS aE R REGG athe — Bure ... sales hot water heater, car garage. |