fa The Weather Thursday: Fair Details page two 112th YEAR 4 eke * * PONTIAC, Sia WEDNESDAY, JULY 2 1, 1954 —44 PAGES Fire Strikes Bloomfield * * * * * * * * ASSOCIATED: PRESS DVFEARATIONAL AL NEWS SERVICN Hosp Blair Moody, 52, Dies Unexpectedly Viet Nam Split, With 13 Million Falling fo Reds Vietminh Rebels Agree. to Get Out of Cambodia and Laos in 60 Days GENEVA (AP) made peace with her Com- munist enemies in Indo- chjna just before dawn to- day and a new Iron Curtain clanked down on 13 million persons in north Viet Nam. Gen. Georges Delteil of France and Gen Buu of the Vietminh rebels signed armistice agreements | covering Viet Nam and Laos | just 3 hours and 50 minutes | after the Tuesdav midnight deadline French Premier Pierre Mendes-France had set for peace or his resigna- tion A truce for the third Indochina state, Cambodia today. Cambodia signed with the minh at 12.42 pm tives of all parties Yor tite Indo- china conference gathered for the ceremony, including Lt. Col. John EF. Dwan of the U.S. Army. Nihek Tioulong, commander in chief of Cambodian forces, signed for Cam Was Signed later Viet Representa the Vietminh But the big event had come nine hours earlier in the signing of the agreement on Viet Nam and Laos. é | signing cer ny The simple under a biaze of photographers lights in the former home of the | League of Nations, called a halt to an eight-year war in = which 92.000 soldiers of the French Union expeditionary corps died or disap- peared. It also laid a Korea-like tion across the 42-mile waist Viet Nam, Tiidochina’s largest richest and most populous state (Continued on on Page 2, Col 3) — France Ta Quang | parti- | they * * * Last Minute iene. Saee Dishes ; i | | | TRAIN FLATTENS TRUCK—Tangied wreckage a. A ; \ £ ‘5 is all that was left of a soft-drink truck rammed by a train yesterday afternoon on Grand Trunk Western Ratlroad tracks at West Huron street near Cass avenue The truck dmver. Harold B. Walter of Waterford Township, leaped to safety moments before the crash Mervin Keiss of off kottles of pop pushed onto the engine's ° Durand fireman the railway. is cleaning by the impact. for cowcatcher Train Demolishes Truck as Driver Leaps to Safety } Harold B. Walter, 55, of Waterford Township, leaped |to safety moments before a freight train rammed his bodia and Gen.:Ta Quang Buu for| truck stalled on a downtown Pontiac railroad crossing yesterday afternoon. The truck, loaded with bottles of soft drinks, was ripped apart and scattered 75 feet along the tracks Damage was estimated at $4.000 by F. H. Baker, vice president of ; the Coca Cola Bott! ling Co., Grant, Lee Don Uniforms but of the Same Army AUGUSTA. Ga. W + Robert E Lee and Ulysses S. Grant are back in uniform, This time, though are privates — and on the OL] same side The duty S« sated two men at the at How Indochina Is Divided Southeastern ne es have reported for Signal Lt ann) Gordon ia ~ EAST-WEST AGREEMENT—Agreement to end eight-year war in Indochina was reached at Geneva Tuesday with partitioning of Viet Nam along a line running about 12 miles north of Highway No. 9, leading from Quang Tri on the coastal road to Savannakhet in Laos. The cease-fire pact gives north Viet Nam to the Vietminh (‘shaded area). French will control Laos and Cambodia, South Viet Nam goes to French-sponsored Viet Nam. The Phan Rana] Pontiac, which dispatched *the truck Walter, who resides at 98 Calvert, was truck to Waterford Town | Ship to turn it over another driver when the| vehicle stalled onthe Grand! /Trunk Western Railroad) tracks on W. Huron street | just west of Cass avenue. He was unhurt when he jumped | from the truck. No one else was | in the. vehicle Harry Gregory of Durand, train | conductor, said the train was leaving town at about 10 miles an hour. Engineer Joseph Stiff, also of Durand, said he saw the truck when the train was 40 feet from the crossing and “I didn't have a chance to stop.” Automobile traffic ‘and a north bound passenger train were halted for about 30 minutes while work- men cleared the debris from the tracks. Little damage was done to the train, according to the crew Baker said the load of Cokes was a total loss Britain Shivers This Summer ‘as U.S. Roasts LONDON (» — Britons. are | sleeping under blankets this sume; mer. Plenty of blankets. While America pretty | young things in England are wear- ing autumn coats. Many a manly chest is encased in a_ woolen sweater. Landladies, of seaside | guest houses are going broke for | want of business. Seen in a suburban street out- | side London on a day the ther- | mometers hit 111 in Kansas: An | &-year-old girl out for a stroll, bundied up in a woolen scarf and mittens, Most of the season it's been cold, cloudy and rainy, The number of clear, warm days could be counted on the fingers of one hand. Day- time temperatures have been mostly in the low 60s. Once the thermometer slumped to 46. Once it shot up — to 75. But that was just a teaser, At night the read- ings have been in the low 50s. roasts, Osmun's Town & Country, Tel-Haren Open every night "tii § p.m, ‘ ” driving thes ?, Ai Theft Suspect Tells of Spree Charles Woodard, 22, Goes to Police; Spent Employer's $1,800 A_ Pontiac man, who said he squandered $1.852 of his employ- er's money on a two-week spree | of police yesterday his billfold Charles A 685 First St cutor Farrell & gave himself up coming to me.” surrendered to $4 in “fancy living.” with only Woodard Jr of | told Assistant Prose- | Roberts that he | “to take what is ” He spun a tale of high living in New Orleans, Los Angeles, Las Vegas and Salt Lake City after walking _ the Pontiac Police Station at. 2:15 p.m. Woodard admitted stuffing blank paper in a money bag July 3 which he turned into Simms Brothers, Inc., as the day's re- ceipts. Arraigned before Municipal 1 Judge Maurice E. Finnegan yes- terday on a charge of embezzle- ment, Woodard waived examina- tion and was returned to Oakland County Jail when unable to post $1,000 bond. He will be arraigned in Circuit Court Monday He told Roberts he took a bus to New Orleans after driving from | Pontiac to. Detroit: and leaving his | car in-a garage there. Woodard told of living high with trips to the best restaurants and dance halls. Woodard said he failed to give any cash to his wife, Dolores, 21. The couple has two children and Dolores is expecting another child soon. Woodard was discharged from the Army in 1950 with a heart condition after serving a year-and- a-half. He had worked at Simms about a year and was ih line for promotion to assistant manager of the camera — Woodard told Roberts. > ‘ at Square Lake and Woodward All Patients Reported Safe; Are Removed to St. Joseph Mercy through the Bloomfield Hospital near Pontiac this morning. but first reports indicated that all the patients were re- moved to safety At least five fire depart- ments are fighting the blaze, believed to be con- fined to the top floor of the three-story frame building Patients, carried outside while lying in taeir beds, were pur into argbulances and s Mercy Hospital. At least a dozen patients were lying on s on the hospital grounds shortly after the fire broke out Fifteen nurses from St. Joseph Hospital were summoned to aid Bloomfield Hospital authorities by two Catholic nuns who were driving by the hospital when flames shot up from its roof ——~ The hospital is a private insti tution primarily used for conval- escent cases. It is located at Wood Fire swept ward Ave. and Square Lake Rd Firemen at first believed that they would be unable to control the flames fanned by a stiff wind from the east. They were s@gay ing water on the structure from lad ders @A gas station attendant, Ranald Walsh, 25, of 3814 Linwood, Royal Oak, said he saw the roof smoking and then burst into flames. The stat ion is across Woodward from the hospital. “I saw a workman on the roof of the hos pital,” said Walsh, “and the roof was «smoking, He came down on a ladeer and left. About 15 minutes later flames shot oug of the roof." Walsh said he tried to phone the Bloomfield Fire Department, but the line was busy. About five minutes later a fire truck arrived Firemen from Pontiac, Bloom field, West Bloomfield Township Troy Township and Birmingham battled the flames. Three other communities dispatched firemen to the scene, according to observers Clyde Marshbanks, hospital di- rector, said all 45 patients were | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) ‘Pontiac Area to Cool ‘Tonight, Tomorrow The Poatiac area wil) have fair and. cooler weather tonight and Thursday, according to the U. S Weather Bureau A low of 58 to 62 is forecast for tonight. The high Thursday will be 82 to 86. In downtown. Pontiac yesterday, temperatures ranged from 67 to 89. Today the_reading at & am was 64, rising to 72 at 1 p.m. 1uttled to St. Joseph | ‘Death Is Sudden _=Am MOODY Barry Confirms — Van Atta Firing Says Political Activities of Waterford Chief Necessitated Dismissal Waterford Township Clerk Louis G. Barry today confirmed the fir- ing of Police Chief Frank Van At- ta for political activities, by reso luti on at the township board meet- ing Monday evening Barry prep ared a statement on the firing, which said in part “It is axiomatic in our syste m of government that appointed serv- ants of the people in government | must refrain from engaging in or using their public position to abet activities in the political arena." “ . . The police department es- pecially must be kept free of par- tisanship, of political rancor and dissention, for the good police offi- cer is the servant of the entire community, When he becomes the servant of a faction group within the community, he loses effective- ness as a police officer,”’ the state- ment continued Barry said the statement repre- sented the feelings of the majority of the board of trustees Van Atta saidyesterday he had been informed of his ouster by let- ter from the clerk. He added that he believed the firing was caused because he favors Frank Irons as a candi- date for Oakland County Sheriff in the Aug. 3 primary, Irons and two other candidates oppose Sheriff Clare Hubbell on | the Republican ticket. Hubbell re- | voked Van Atta's status as an Oak |land County special deputy Satur- day Township Supervisor Lloyd An- derson said yesterday he voted against the firing of Van Atta, and ‘was completely satisfied with him as chief.” The statement continued, ' Frank Van Atta freely chose to accept the job of police officer, subject to the conditions which necessarily attach to the circumspect perform- ance of the duties. He later found jit inconvenient or inexpedient po- i to observe these condi tions. He was therefore removed.” Death Following Illness Ends Political Career Former U. S. Senator’s Supporters and Opponents Are Shocked ANN ARBOR (UP) — Michigan began a formal .30-day mourning period today for former U. 8S. Sen. Blair Moody who died unexpectedly Tuesday afternoon at the age of 52. Flags flew at half mast in this quiet university town and Gov. G. Mennen Williams, who appointed Moody to succeed the late Sen. Arthur Vandenberg in 1951, said he would issue an official mourning proclamation when he arrives here later today. * Williams, who with Moody was a leader of the “Young | Turks” at the 1952 Democratic National Convention, has | been fishing on Northern Lake Michigan, The Coast Guard notified him of Moody's death. | Moody, who was seeking *——— a Perinaee comeback, died 3:55 p.m. EST, in Uni- \ versity Hospital, shortly ,after awakening from a nap. Dr. Cyrus Sturgis, his physician, said death was caused by “an extensive in- volvement of the lungs.” Moody had been recovering from a serious attack of virulent pneu- monia, suffered June 24 while he campaigning . inHancock in Michigan's Upper Peninsula for the Democratic nomination for U S. senator, He had ‘ff hospital- ized there until last Sunday. His wife, the former Ruth Cur- tis Amadon, was at his bedside when he died. Also surviving are three sons, Christopher Sorenson, Robert Orton and Blair Moody Jr The family home is in Detroit. Announcement of his death came as a shock to his fofllow- ers who had believed he was suxxessfully recovering from his iliness ang seon would resume the campaign for nomination in was the Aug. 3 primary. A state- ment to that effect had been released from his campaign headquarters. Moody's death left Patrick V McNamara of Detroit unopposed for the Democratic nomination to oppose Sen. Homer Ferguson in the November election Messages of condolence began arriving at the hospital Tuesday night. Sen. Charles E.. Potter, (R- Mich.), who defeated Moody in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) House to Gamble With Postal Raise WASHINGTON «® — In an aill- or-nothing gamble, House leaders today called up a double-barrelled bill to raise both postage rates and the pay of postal workers. GOP leaders made no predic- tions on the outcome, but Demo- cratic Leader Rayburn of Texas declared the one-package measure “will be beaten."* Dems Demand Voice in Hiring Insist on Helping’ Pick Roy Cohn’s Suctessor on Committee WASHINGTON WwW —Sen. Jackson | (D-Wash) said today the Demo- crats ‘‘will insist’ on a voice in choosing a successor to Roy M, Cohn as chief counse| of the Sen- | ate Inv estigations subcommittee. Chairman McCarthy (R - Wis) yesterday accepted Cohn's resig- nation with avowed reluctance. He also switched Donald A. Surine, another subcommittee aide, to his own office payroll. He did so as a subcommittee majority com- prised of the Democrats and Sen. Potter (R-Mich) was pushing a showdown move to fire them. Then, in closed meeting, the subcommittee unanimously firmed in their jobs 2 members of the staff, but held confirmation at least for ba time being from a Secret Service Agent Thentas Lavenia, office manager and as- sistant counsel. McCarthy that is was Surine and Lavenia to whom the Defense Department has refused to grant security clearance to -handle secret docyments. He said this was the reason the sub- committee, with his -consent, had held up Lavenia's confirmation. The subcommittee sent a new request to the Defense Department for an explanation of its reasons for holding up the clearances, It got a quick new turndown on grounds that a detailed explana- tion would require the disclosure of confidential information, A Warning From U.S.! GENEVA ®—The United Stales warned the signatories of the In. dochina armistice agreements to- | day that it would view “with grave concern” any revival of ag- gression violating the agreements, fe Research Report Cites Need for a New Courthouse Civic Research Inc., an independ- | courthouse annex, ent fact-finding organization, this week issued a bulletin citing the need for a new Oakland County Courthouse. The research organization, which is located at 503 Community Na-| tional Bank Building devotes its report to material designed to ac- quaint voters with the proposal. Electors in the county will be asked to pass on a $4,500,000 bond issue for a new courthouse at the Aug. 3 election The report calls attention to ‘inadequate space” in the pres- ent courthotse at Huron and Saginaw Sts, and says that re- modeling jt and the county office building at 1 Lafayette St. wouldn't be practical, whose offices are the Huron-Sag- The county, divided between inaw courthouse, built in 1904; the built in 1885; and the former Masonic Temple on Lafayette St., is asking voters to provide a new building. On the Aug. 3 ballot wilt be two proposals ~ 1. A $4,500,000 bond issue | raise funds for the building 2. A 20-year tax of 50 cents on each $1,000 worth of property, as In Today’ Ss | Press to Billy Rese a Rirmingham . + 9 Red Considine el Onbne: TONNE coca cccessccsaes a Comies bd | pecmrte J pe. tee NIC RIOCRAINCONDEAnOCAn 8 Revid Lawrence ........ a Ur George Crane ...... 4 Editorials -» 6 BOS OG. cies tewncis veneers. Fd Markets " Patterns ... Ld Speris 31. 32 eaters ‘ m™ TV-Radie Pregrans “a Want Ads , 9, @, at, 42 Wemen's Pages. .....66s. ul ” valued by the county, the bonds. Only property owners can vote on the bond issue. All voters can pass on the 50-cent tax. A simple majority of votes cast will carry each proposal, The Civic Research bulletin says the 334-acre county “service cen- ter” on Telegraph art West Boule- jvard, where the new courthouse would be built, is easily reached by main highways from all parts of the county. It has plenty of parking space. A courthouse there would be near the welfare divisions, infirmary, children's Home, contagious hos- pital, and other county activities. This should make for more effi- cient county government, the ybul- letin says. A central heating plant, already operating. could be used for the new building, meaning low- er construction cost. to pay off é Because of this, it’s hard to ar- range for office efficiency, the bulletin said, Scattering the offices all around Pontiac, it adds, hasn't helped efficiency either. Moving the courthouse confirmed officially © * ee 0 See eee ay ee “el resuscitator, Donates 2nd Resuscitator to Local Fire Department — _ From Our Birmingham Bureau” BIRMINGHAM — Stnciled on the side of a shiny four-foot case in a handy corner of the Birming- ham Fire Station. are the words “Donated by the Birmingham Li- ons Club.”’ Inside the case is the latest mod probably the great es single life saving device used by fire departments and squads across the country The machine was given to the depariment by the Lions Club at a fermal presentation last week. It was used twice befere the formal eccremony— rescue September. Membership informa- tion is available at ar local YMCA. * Bil Sebetskio of ree Pine 8t. is champlen of Detreit-area treckle-faces. He won the title at Bob-Lo recently when he de- feated competitors from 15 other Detroit YMCA branches. Carole Schmit of 808 W. Lincoln won the girl's divisioin award. An overnight tip to Arrowhead Lodge at Kensington Park near Milford is on the Da-Y schedule for tomorrow. Youngsters in the sum- mer program will be furnished dinner, breakfast and Frittay tion ence to save the life of an ap- parent would-be suicide. The mew machine, capable of service on two persons at one time, is the second donated by the Lions. The first. given in 1942 primarily to revive firemen over come by smoke. is_still in use Chief V. W. Griffith, seeing the value of the device, began using it to relieve persons affected by respiratory and like afflictions, plus those suffering heart attacks From 1942 through last March, 172 resuscitater runs were made, with the department reviving 112 persoms, Twenty - three persons rived_and ten died after treat, ment, were dead when the squad ar- | In the first only four calls year 32 first year of operation were made, Last aid runs with the- device were made, according to | Park Smith, assistant fire chiet. Smith describes the machine as a “portable iron lung It sends oxygen into the patient's lungs and causes them to ex-| pand and contract when they -are | incapable of doing so themselves, | he said. Every four seconds it | surges the life-giving gas into the patient When normal breathing starts to resume, a switch is thrown | and the device becomes an in halator, supplying only oxygen, | and letting the lungs work for themselves. The machine also fas a third use. Another turn of the controls | and it can be used as an aspira- tor — a suction pump - like appara- | tus for clearing congestion from | lungs, chest and throat | ‘Heart - conditions have become the reason for the majority of our runs in the last six or cight years,"' said Smith The machine is also used to aid those suffering from poisoning, drowning, asthma, convulsions, and other physical ailments . s ° : No hearings are scheduled this week by the board of inquiry dely ing into the possibility of neg): | gence at last month's fire in| which three Birmingham residents | lost their lives “We are going to meet by our- | selves this week ahd try to digest what we've heard so far,” chair- man James Spencer said yester- day. Spencer believes next week's hearings will wind up the interview portion of the inquiry * * * k 2 With a nine-hole score of 42, Henry Morin won the first place | trophy at the Toastmaster's Club | recent summer golf outing at | Springdale Park. President Peter Stoffel was second with 43 The group, composed of business men interested in speech making and parliamentary procedure, will resume its regular meetings in Pontiac Deaths ————— Mrs. James Rockwell After a -prolonged illness, Mrs James (Josephine) Rockwell, 76, 22 N. Shirley Ave. died at her residence Tuesday _morning Born in Owosso June 4, 1878 she was the daughter of Henry Clough | and the widow of Mr. Rockwell | whom she married here in 1901. She had resided in Pontiac since that time _. Surviving are two sons, . Byron of St. Clair Shores and Amos of Pontiac. | Funeral will be Friday at 1:30 p.m.-from the Huntoon Funeral Home. The Rev. Charles Roub assistant minister at Marimount Baptist Church, will officiate and burial will be in Oak Hill Ceme- tery. The Weather FPUNTIAC AND VICINITY—Fair_ te- etght and Thursday Coster tenight Low 88 te @¢. High Thersday ®* te "4 Nertheast te cast winds tenight becom ing seutheasterly Thursday oday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding § am 63 At @ am Wind Direction: Northeast Sun sets Wednesday at 803 pm @un rises Thureday at 5:14 am Moon rises Wednesday at 10.49 am Moon sets ‘Teuresay « at 12:55 pm velocity 12 Downtown Tem —_ 6 2 m AP Ror Ip. m ” Tuesday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown u ot temperature = Lowest temperature P Mean temperature .............. % Weather—Fair One Year “Age 1 te Pontiac Highest temperature Lowest temperature... ........5.65 66 temperature: ..sssses 76.5 Weather—Fair Highest and Lowest “Temperatures This Date in 82 Years $1 in 1044 oT tm 1928 i geiionin | Peesday's Temperatere Chart Battle Creek 80 05 Marquette 71 — 2. ements 6 Leia fs 90 0 % iM. Louis 105 % 6 Marie 7% the Traverse City 80 1 baltimore eo % 64 Beattic 62 ta | pointment, mph. | lunch, but will take their own lunch for tomorrow . * The Board of Education last night appointed Paul Neilsen head engineer of the Birmingham Pub- Schools for one year. Neilsen's salary will be $4,650 The Board also approved the ap- pointment of nine the Former U.S. Senator, Blair Moody Dies (Continued From Page One) the 1952 elections, said in Wash. ington he was ‘‘shocked,”’ “IT had no idea he Potter said ow custodians system was that ill,’ “It certainly is a loss ;not only to his party but also lo our state.” Williams, who made plans to come here shortly after learning of Moody's death, said the former Washington political writer “gave unselfishly of his talent and de- | voted himself to public service all his life, both as a newspaperman land as a public servant a8 can truly be said of him that he died doing his best to serve his | country.” “For me," Williams added, “Blair Moody's death is a per- sonal loss, He Tho a g0od and sincere friend.’ Willams passed over many po- litical figurew to appoint Moody to succeed Vandenberg on April 23, 1951. Moody, who was chief Washing- ton correspondent of the Detroit News when he accepted the ap- had helped Vandenberg famous 195 speech draft his calling for bipartisanship Moody was the son of the late Artur Edson Blair Moody and dulia Downey Moody. He was bern in New Haven, Conn., Feb. 13, 1902, attended public school in Providence, R, L, and was graduated from Brown Univer: sity as a 9-letter athlete in 1922 and as a member of Phi Beta Kappa, honorary scholastic so- clety, . He taught school for a year in Providence, then joined the sports | staff of the Detroit News. He soon moved to coverage of the city government and shortly before leaving for the Washington assign- ment in 1933, he helped the late S. Supreme Court Justice Frank |Murphy formulate a debt-refund- ing program. Murphy then was mro of Detroit mayor of Detroit During World War became a front-line war corre- spondent -for the News, covering allied actions in Africa, Italy and other parts of Europe He was a nephew of William E Il, Moody Scripps, publisher of the Detroit News. Shortly after Moody's death, the hospital performed an autopsy and lissued the following statement “The post-mortem examination reveals extensive chronic virus ‘pneumonia complicated by heart which developed today | (Tuesday) secondary to the pneu- 'monia, We find no evidence of primary heart disease.” Moody's attending physician at | Hancock had termed his illnews Hancock had termed his illness “the most virdous and extensive case of pneumonia we have seen survive since the advent of anti- biotics.” In Washington, Ferguson told the Senate he heard the news of | Moody's death “with deep sorrow.” | He said he knew every other mem- | ber of the Senate received the {news the same way | State Democratic Chairman Neil +Staebler termed Moody a “‘great man and a great senator’ who was ‘‘fearless” in expressing him- | self on major issues. | “He believed so deeply that the | people should know the truth that his death was duc, in part, to the ‘tremendous effort he was mak- | ing to bring the truth to the citi- lzens of Michigan.” Staebler said “Every Democrat will mourn his passing.” failure CIO President Walter P. Reuther | said today. the death of Moody “tragedy to the state and was a i to the nation.” ae feel deeply the loss of a} friend.’ Reuther said in a state- |ment released at CIO United Auto | Workers Union headquarters here. | “We in the labor movement, | along with countless others with |whom we share our hopes for a better world, fee} the loss of an intelligent, articulate and gallant champion of the cause of freedom. | social justice and brotherhood.” | August Scholle, president of the Michigan CIO Council. said Moody will be “sorely missed from the | se | American scene.” | Scholle said Moody had ‘dis 2 | tingpished himself as the staunch | supporter of libéral causes and had © | establi in the U. S. Senate ble record of champion- ‘ing legislation to benefir all the ‘people.’ to | DISCUSS RESERVE AFFAIRS—Col. Suffield, Birmingham ‘second from left) vice president of the Michigan Reserve Officers Assn., tion last week THE PONTIAC John Richardson, of 287 joined top ranking officials of the organiza- to discuss reserve forces activities with 1 Ble re: French, Reds Sign Indochinese Truce (Continued From Page One) about at the 17th Parallel of lati- tude. Communist leader Ho Chi Minh will take ever the destinies of the residents north of the line. The 10 million Vietnamese below the partition will live under the pro-Western regime of chief of state Bao Dai. All - Vietnamese elections, not éarlier than one year from today and pot later than two years, are supposed to reunite the divided country. But Western officials here generally conceded the ‘‘tempora- ry’ partition line probably will be- come a political and ideological frontier like those which split Ger- mary and Korea Civilians on either side of the partition line will have one year to move to the other side if they desire The French have the next 300 days to move out of the big northern cities of Hanoi and Hai- phong. Until that day next May they will hold an enclave in the Red River Delta around those twe major centers, Cambodia and Laos will remain under their French-supported roy- al governments. Vietminh troops — an estimated 10,000 in Laos, few- er in Cambodia — will withdraw in 60 days The partition line across Viet Nam runs along the Song Ben Hair River. It leaves Highway No. 9, a principal road leading from the coast across the country_ to Laos, in the hands of southern Viet Nam. The south also retains the major port of Tourane and ¢x-em- peror Bao Dai's royal capital, Hue, both in central Viet Nam. The armistices for Viet Nam and Laos cover the area where most of the Indochina battling took place, There was little fighting in Cambodia. LJ * a During the 300 more days the French hold Hanoi and Haiphong, the Vietminh will hold five pock- ets south of the partition line. Then they must pull out for the north. Neither side may bring in troops or war material, and no new mili- tary bases can be set up on either side of the line. Signifying ‘disapproval of the par- titioning. the U. S. government had decided not to join in the general declaration which the other con- ference delegations were to issue later today taking note of the agreement terms a s * Instead, the United States planned a_ separate declaration, | noting the terms with which it agrees but ignoring officially those of which it disapproves. Vietnamese Foreign Minister ers were splitting his country in violation of the wishes and inter- ests of its people “We have been presented.” he said, “with a fait accompli. We were not consulted and were in- formed of the decisions only after they had been react i + ® ms But the mare weakness of Do's government and its depend- military backing made it certain the Vietnamese regime would go along with the truce. The agreements must be sent to | the French and Vietminh high com- manders in Indochina for counter- signing. They will become effective after that. A three-nation neutral armistice | commission, headed by India and | including Canada and Communist Poland, will supervise the carry- ing-out- of the armistice agree- ments | * * a | All prisoners of war and civilian |internees are to be liberated with- in 30 days, arf each side pledged to help transfer residents who wished to move to the other i} to live under a Communist cegime | The signing was the climax of |peace negotiations which began here May 8 after East-West ses- sions om Korea bogged down in total disagreement. The Communists held the upper hand at the start of the Indochina conference. The day before it opened they captured the northern which have invaded their territory | Tran Van -Pe declared in an inter- | view yesterday that the big pow- | | zone. | | This clause fulfilled one American | | demand that no one must be forced, ence on the West for economic and4-- i. Indochina fortress of Dien Bien Phu, winming the biggest battle of the war Bnd killing or capturing more than 10,000 of the French Un ion's best troops * * * The French defeat later caused the fall of the government of Pre mier Joseph Laniel, whose foreign Minister, Georges Bidault,- had fought hard against surrendering to the Reds Mendes-France then took pledging to get an Indochina ceas« fire in a month or resign. He warned France that she could no longer be a power in Europe and Asia both and that her only hope Was to settle for Europe As the diplomats talked in Ge neva, the military situation deteri orated rapidly for the French Indochina. In recent weeks their | troeps drew in toward Hanoi and Haiphong, abandoning about half! of the strategic Red River Delta. . * * By making good his promise to | stop the fighting Mendes-France has greatly strengthened his posi- | tion at home and can launch his further program: to conclude the | stalled discussion of France's role | in West European defense plans; to work out a program for economic recovery; and to solve the problem | of Nationalist unrest in French Tu- nisia and Morocco GIW Commuters to Pay More Aug. 1 Cast of the ten-ride ticket on the Grand Trunk Western Rail road's commuter trains between Pontiac and Detroit will be raised from $5 to $5.75 on Aug 1. the local ticket office announced to- day- Fares, in general, will be ed 15 per cent, with the increasg for ten-ride tickets ranging from 25 to 75 cents depending on lengih of the ride Tickets bought befere Aug. 1 will be honored until their six- months expiration date. The ten- ride ticket between Royal Oak and Detroit will go from $2.55 to $2.95. The Interstate” Commerce Com- mission said Tuesday was the last day to protest ‘the increase in Washington. Without protests, the | fare increase takes effect auto-| matically | Ward Group to. Discuss Traffic Control Problems The Ward Subdivision Assn. of | Bloomfield Township will meet to- | night at 8 p.m. in Bloomfield Town.- | ship Hall to discuss traffic con- trol problems in the subdivision according to S. R. Teeter, presi- | dent. Over inj; | be rost- PRE | select a LSS. Eisenhower in Washington. Also L. LaBarge, of Missouri, USNR, Seuth Carolina Moody’s De WEDNESDAY, JULY (left) Adm. Charles Thurmaad of pictured are Rear and Col. Strom ———— ath Bolsters GOP Congressional Grip By JACK L GREEN) LANSING WwW Blair .Moody’s | death may have strengthened the | tepublicans’ chances of holding | control of Congress in the Novem- ber election and removed a serious threat to the political future of | U. 8. Sen. Homer Ferguson (R Mich) Because — despite their confi- | dence in publie statemens —Mich- igan Republican leaders have been | expressing private concern about Ferguson's. re-election It is known in the state capi- tal that word was passed re- cently to Ferguson to get back | home quickly and mend his fenc- | es. He was told that he faced | a stiff fight from Moody, the en- | ergetic former U, 8. Senator and | Democrat who was beoted out of the Senate in 1952 by Re- | publican Charles W, Potter, | Michigan's politically potent jun- | tor senator. One high Republican said only a few hours before Moody died yesterday that Ferguson's stock had been slipping badly in recent months and that the silver haired senior senator from Michigan would need to “campaign like {ury’’ unt) November to insure his re-election. Now death has removed that threat — and left Ferguson facing a man who is fot so well known outside of Detroit, Patrick V. Mc | Namara, an AFL official and form- er Detroit City Councilman Politicians are not brushing McNamara out of the picture without-even a hearing but they are pra ctical enough to know thar -he will not bring to the Senate race the reputation and energy which was Moody's, the almost} fanatical devotion of many Democratic groups and the whole-soul support of Gov. Williams’ own political orguniza- tion, which were Moody's for the asking. The first word fram the gov ernor’s camp was that MacNamara had been elevated at once to the 4 | favorite son ranking and that Wil | hams would have no part of any move to put a last minute candi- date in the primary race against McNamara Under State Law, the Demecrat ic State Central Committee could! candidate to substitute for Moody. Local election officials could then be. required to pro- vide stickers and to paste the name of the new candidate over Moody's | ame on the already Frinted bal’ | lots But a_ high-placed adminis- | tration official said Williams would have noece of that scheme. Me noted that oo ‘Namara | al- ] | | | | | | HAPPY DAY—The family ot Senator Blair Moody stand with him | on the steps of the Senate in Washington, D. C. after he was nam amed | to succeed the late Arthur H. Vandenberg. With him when this | picture was taken were his wife (left). and his two sons, Christopher, 8 Moody his mother. Mrs. Julia D and Robin, 4 | party Democratic /unkkown in big | Broadcasting Studios. ready is nursing a grudge be- cause Williams’ lieutenants made no secret of their preference for Moody and because of the short- lived move by a group of Dem- ocratic senators in other states -to ome into Michigan in Moody's bebalf during the primary con- test, ‘There is no animosity in the toward McNamara,” this spokesman said, ‘‘he is well liked and we'll go down the line for | him.” The spokesman conceded there Party who were anx- ious to trot out another candidate to replace Moody, but he said Wil- liams would not stand for that 'and Williams usually had his way in party decisions. Democrats in position to know said that Willams would not re- treat in the face of demands by the Democratic National Com- mittee for a big name candi- date who could give Ferguson a flerce race. It was conceded that the Dem- gh command had marked Ferguson as one of its major tar- ocratic hi gets this fall in aq nationwide drive to break the Republicans’ sli senatorial majority The GOP leadership from Presi dent Eisenhower doown has rec ognized this and thrown its full) support behind Ferguson As chairman of the Repub- lican Policy Committee, Fergus- en's defeat could be hralded by Democrats as a repudiation of Eisenhower's policies. This the Democrats would have spent all to achieve and the Republicans to prevent. That determination among. the | Democrats may be transferred to} but the observers McNamara, opinion of polit ical that it will not have the spirit which would best is | have gone to Blair Moody if death had not taken him from the Michi gan political scene Hockey ‘Unknown’ Gets Red Wing Job DETROIT uP Jim Skinner, an league hockey cir the of cles, today was given one of game's biggest jobs — coach ithe champion Detroit Red Wings The 37-year-old kinner, a coach im the Red Wing farm system, jreplaces Tommy Ivan, who also was an unknown when he_ took over the coaching duties in De- troit se en seasons ago Ivan departed to become general manager of the Chicago Black | Hawks, leaving behind a brilliant irecord of six straight National Hoc ey League championships and three Stanley Cup titles. The Red Wings’ new coach was yhe first choice of genera] man- ager Jack Adams. ‘Celebration Comes Early HOLLYWOOD WwW Comedian George Burns got a black cye when the cork from a champagne bottle popped at a New Year's Eve party yesterday. He and wife Gracie Allen were posing for New Year's scenes at the Columbia 25-Carat Pearl ieoond TOKYO i#—A pearl of more than 5 carats, worth perhaps $2,500, was discovered last month by a Japanese expedition in the | Arafura Sea, between New Guinea and Australia, Kyodo news serv- ice said today. NEW The Smallest, Lightest HEARING AID IN ZENITH’S HISTORY! As erful as some hearing aids at twice its size. oa Convenience! Operates for 10¢ a week on one tiny 100 battery/ only Bene conduction pei at moderate ertra cost Kacy time-payment plan available FRED N. PAULI CO. 28 West Heron - FE 2-7257 — |businessmen and industry, Political Views Oakland Republicans Hear Arguments for Revised Government Donald S. Leonard, candidat: the Republican nomination for gov told suporters Oakland yesterday that overlaping making streamlined |state government necessar) | “It is foolhardy for a candidate on one hand to promise to reduc¢ taxes and on the other to expand public services.” erno! in ln | County jagencies are “Tl do my utmos; to keep the lowest possible taxes consist- ent with the dperation of a sound and efficient state government without curtailing the needs of all the people,”’ he said. the the at of adr dst d party at Leonard a garden group home Mrs. John Livingstone of Berkshu ‘road, Bloomfield Highland The former state police conim {sioner and Detroit police commis- jsioner told his audience that tts | becoming more obvious that to promote a prosperous economy for j eve ‘ryone — labor, farmers, small | Republican governor should chosen to work in close harmony with the predominantly RepuBlican legislature. “We need better roads and they should be planned with the thought of not wasting the tax- payers’ money.” Leonard also cited a need for and support of the Conlin plan for returning sales tax allocations to the school systems on a current basis. 45 Patients Saved - in Hospital Blaze (Continued From Page One) evacuated by 32 staff members and no one was injurad, Assistant Pontiac Fire Chief Max Wells said witnesses claimed men were burning off paint with blow- Leonard Relates. for that a) be | ea JOHN A. RACE | | | Funeral well known jand forme for John A. building Race, 69 contractor city commissione! will be Thursday at 11 a.m. from Huntoon Funeral Home The William E. Hake, assista: | pastor at First Baptist Church of | which he was a men of and burial will te n the vton the Rev ber, \ fieheale }Washn I valle The body is at Mr. Race morning after t cemeters i Cat the residence, died Tuesday 4 prolonged ulness, by his wi former Eva Mable Rowe married in 1909; four daugl- rs, Mr Alfred Short of Port } Huror Harold Waggz of Pon- Mrs. Murray Osborn of De and Mrs. Eldon Powley of Orion and 11 | who | the wm low, survived wi ne Mrs ltroit Friday Deadline in Miss Pontiac ‘Beauty Contest | The \Miiss Pontiac’’ beauty cons Itest being sponsored by Pontiac Jumor Cha vr of Commerce will hold its elimingtion contest Satur- 1 [ ’ it Tel - Huron Shopping } All entries must be tf n tooor nailed to th hanbe [ « nerce office 1 Hotel WV by $ p.m. Frida t ird Minew t r of the contest ¢ riiy ee Final jucdgir will take place at the center. Telegraph r WW. Huron street, at 9 7 Ju 1. Mineweaser said The contest is Det sponsored by the chamber i tron with the Tel-Hur Center's “J ] ores Board of Education Has $30,000 ttre BLOOMFIELD HI aing $30.000 left over from last torches preparatory to repainting the building He said he thought the blow torches started the fire The two nuns, Sister Mary ta and Sister Marv Jamice. head of St. Joseph's Hospital's mater- ; nity ward and student nursing pro gram, respectively, said they were driving by and saw the fire | “We were driving by and w jsaw flames shoot from the roof ind we decided they probabl needed help, so we stopped and | called the hospital iSt Je seph? | for nurses and ambulances,” said Sister Niceta A patient, William H. Schollen- jherger, said he saw a man out- side his first floor window burn jing off paint with a blowtorch I saw him rush down the ladedr jand climb back up with a pail of | wate Schollenberger said I knew something was wrong ‘ He said the next thing he knew hospital staff members were carr) ing patent s out Power Issue Voting Seems Likely Today WASHINGTON appeared ready to test today real strength of opposition new private power source Tennessee Valley But an informal reached last night to show hands on the power issue by no means uy — Senators fo a in the assured an end to debate on the ‘atomic energy bill to which it is linked Republican Leader Knowland (Calif) recessed the Senate after another full day and evening argument with the understanding a vote would come sometime today on whether the Atomic Energy Commission may negotiate with a} private concern for power it will | | inot use directly itself, the | agreement | of | budcet. the Bloomfield Hills Boar 1 of Education Monday night revised ts current budget to include the unexpected funds The money will be used to hire four additional teachers and « truct four adait | temporary iassrooms af Bloomfield ii | School on Vaughn road In other business, the board tuition students for the al- elementary agreed that no would be accepted ready overcrowded grades, but did vot» to permit two students to attend high school beginning in the fall, The school will cooperate with a Wayne University program in pei mitting instructors who have left teaching to observe and practice teaching if the system before again taking up teaching posts Supt. of Schools Eugene L. John- was authorized to sale of the Tuscarora scl and property Driller Fined $20 TRAVERSE CITY (UP)—Nor | A. Nevinger, 17. was fined /$20 Tuesday when he _ pleaded guilty to drilling holes in a boat owned by a neighbor because the | neighbor waterskied close to him ‘while he was netting minnows. son negotiate Lor oe, Phone FE 2-4831 } Try SIMMS to: You: BEST Possible PICTURES | Killed in Holdup Attempt, ‘Detective Was Overdue OKLAHOMA CITY uw — The widow of Detective Bennie Cravatt, killed while stopping an attempted holdup last week, disclosed today he was given up for dead with a rare ailment 13 years ago. Mrs. Cravatt said her. husband was one of a few victims to survive Hodgkins disease oping AND PRINTING ege-Denee—duieh ter SUPER-SIZE Prints All Standard Rolls One Low Price to Simms a3 taster service sharper prints... greater savings. 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor ah Bring your films q 7 WKH { { 98 N. 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Auto Needs or Sports Equipment for your Leisure Hours? . whatever you need it's here Whatever you want . PIFGEL women s — before you authorities Spiegel's colortul pages, America’s most giited designers spread their best before you . your home. in this finest of alf home shopping books. Get a Library Copy Tedey! SMART SHOPPERS BUY AND SAVE THE CATALOG WAY. Millions of {families al! over America turn to Spiegeis for more of the bet ter things of lie. You too may share in the big savings on dependable quality merchandise ~ FIRST IN FASHION - FOREMOST IN DESIGN Everything for modern living can be found in this big 544 page catalog . “finest in fashion . . . ; : SPEEDY 48 HOUR DELIVERY ON YOUR ’ ORDERS. You may pick up your order in 48 hours or we will ship to*your home Come in or Call Today for Your FREE Library Catalog Please Act Now! The Demand is Great fer this Colerful, Value-Packed 544 Page Cate- log for Fall end Winter, 1954. THE | Bob Considine Says: Young Jim Feels America’ Should Take NEW YORK (INS)—One of the great problems facing this coun try is how to win friends -and influence people overseas. -We spend millions each year in this pursuit. Some feel we're doing real good in this line. Some think we're preposterously inept Heard and watched a member of the dissent side on Ann Gillis Slocum’s “Comment"’ show on NBC Monday night Talented young fellow named Jim Robinson Robinson, fresh back from Indo- china, struck a realistic vein. He said “The Communists are on the victory march in Asia. The Communists’ ultimate goal is to conquer all the Far East. They say so and they're in the process of doing it. The Communist op- eration in Asia is pure and sim- ple totalitarian aggression. But it's disguised under ‘‘national”’ movements, ‘reform’ move- ments and such slogans as ‘Asia for the Asians." “Right now,” Robinson contin- ued, “the Communists are winning vast stretches of territory and mil- lions of people in the Far East They're doing this easily and rap- idly Why is this happening? Simply because there's no one willing or, if willing. able to go all out and stop them “Certainly no Asian country has the wherewithal to halt this Red aggression. And no group of Asian countries bound together in mutual defense has the combined strength to halt it “Through Asian eyes, Korea was a Communist victory, and there's a similar victory new Sa Indochina. Always the same story—the backdown by the free world, abandonment of millions of people to the Reds. “The price of our constant ap peasement to communism in the Orient is beyond immediate calcu lation, but this is what's happen ing in the yet free Far Eastern nations. These countries now feel | willing to face a showdown—not willing to use force to stop force So these countries are in the proc~; ess of their agonizing reappraisal of the situation * Already they have the proof the West isn't | | | | ] many of these coun.- | tries are frantically ‘trying to | achieve the role of neutralism. | Many are casting secret feelers toward the Peiping regime. These | nations want to see if a deal can | be made—a deal whereby they | might be able to co-exist with the Communists—or if it might be pos- sible to retain some sort of na- | tional sovereignty if and when all | Asia goes Red.”’ Robinson on the peace proposals “Look what's happening ia North Viet Nam. You have there millions of ardent nation- alists whe are anti-colonists. They are anti-Communist. Our leaders promised to save these people from communism barely two months see But today we il find almost turn to it jor the the latest in design SPIEGEL CATALOG ORDER DESK lilo N™. Wynn wv t. re a-vae'tl } CITIES SERVICE NEW Gc) PREMIUM THE WORLD’S FIRST FIVE- DIMENSIONAL GASOLENE The first gasolene to reduce harmful carbon. You'll enjoy a new high in engine cleanliness with New 5-D Premium. ANTI-CARBO 8 0 me EXTRA-HIGH OCTANE Su! cra and o engi ike. In actual tests it eliminated rust in the entire fuel system . . . pro- sected gas tank, fuel lines, carburetor mechanisms. ANTI-RUST tac cirimesun inc ANTI-STALLING 5-D has today's newest upper-cylinder UPPER-CYLINDER LUBE taoescesc Uctike crber eppercrlinge lubricants, the New 5-D Lubricant has an anti-oxidant that mops oil from oxidizing. The Worlds First Adin NEW 5-D KOOLMOTOR 10W- 30 Buy \ Blienianees constant, cold engine stalling during chilly and — weather. oar ad The only gasolene with ; ALL 5 | TOP PERFORMANCE = _ ial vey Det * ® PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, z aS of course, adds his very cleverly planted seeds of revolt... & PRESC RIP distorted picture. “Either we now move in and = ot take over much of the control of Over 1m Asia Asia or the Communists will. It is as brutally simple as that. If we're Seem to be joining in the netari. | ot willing or able to do this then ous act of handing these people the Communists surely will rule over tp the Reds. What example all Asia in the years to come.” does this serve to the rest of Well said, Jim Robinson Asia? What would you think if you were an Asian? . ae ‘| Puzzled Indiana Woman | t's take an example of | | ‘how the Communists operate in Gets 2nd Note With $50) the field and how the U.S. oper-| EVANSVILLE, Ind. « — Mrs. aire. We will vick ; d Trumon Wood, 53, has received a a second note containing $50 and she Asian nation yet free. We want | doesn't know what it's all about this country as an ally. The Reds| She said she got the first $50 a want it as a satellite. We pick a| year ago with an anonymous note : nice university graduate — clean | saying the writer had taken some « : cut, intelligent, honest, with a|change from her purse “when we i realization that his job is to inform | Were very young.’ 4. SAFETY GLASSES | the people how nice democracy is| The latest note, she said, states Oresesintion SUNGLASSES | ; and how bad communism is. t| that the writer wants to repay the AT ONE LOW PRICE at Some Low Vette i t 3 neve : money — about $200 Now, for the first time, you can get SAFETY GLASSES ' — ny? on vail ee to Asia, "No one owes me that much," | that you need at the one low iow price of $10.98! Price includes NO MORE, NO ) Lass : doesn't know the language she said. ‘I wish they'd stop it.” | your choice of 100 modern styles, shapes and colors, with you" _ CAN'T PAY MORE! “He arrives and moves into a | P SAFETY lenses, precision ground and polished to your PREP R EE ETT : lovely home, has servants. a car | ee a — Our _— meat pt die eagrn anod eeaaaaaaaanannannad’’ ee ' : ‘ ; ; harden Each lens is ri ins wit Colma- > ' and chauffeur and an air condi-| U.S. Receives Thanks scope and U 8. Gaeertumens Laoel Balt Test: (a steel ball, > 1,000.00 REWARD . $ i tioned office. Our man zealously : a in diameter is a from a height of 50" on the @ >: : goes to work putting out slick pa- HEIDELBERG, Germany lenses) to meet strict uirements of the Bureau of 3 We will my one eg) | ‘ i , s en West German Chancellor Konrad | Standards coarificatine: © “GGG-501-B” for SAFETY ¢ #nyone w' can pur 3 per pamphlets about how nice Adenauer has thanked the US.) lenses. Our SAFETY lenses are ogee eg > chase glasses here for $ America is and what rats the Com-| army in a letter for “an exem-| protect from injury the eyes of industrial workers, chil- 2 more than the price > S 2 . munists are. Good stuff for read-| plary performance’ in rescue work dren and sportsmen. (Bifocals, if desired, $4.98 additional) $ quoted in this 8 rth $ ee erica eee Rerular Gla y 3090 ieee | e man in the stre s passions egu rt sses.... On > ing le 4 ‘New comes the Comrnounist ‘Quick Relief from Our equine glasses are etttt enly os.04, regardless of the z Insurance $ t t rame of your ¢ a ee al equivalent. First, he is an Asian, pr ecg 2 Peron vie additional) ° , PPPPPPPPPPPPPPPAEY He speaks the local language, he le OcrLIsSTs’ REPAIRS lives with the people, he is one Pi Irritation Ne Appointment Necessary an Breken lenses of them. But he also is highly All Glatées Union Made the SAME Pelee and replaced. - ; : ¥ trained, a specialist in Commu- Paty dal 5 alec russe tion cometh 6 ——— : nist double talk. When the Mr. : itching smarting piles. It brought KE a G Onoti wens of Asia sits down in ua such quick, cooling, soothing, as- Me lo Switching! Mo Extras! No Extras! jocal tea shop he meets $ | tringent relief that its fame spread | 000 CUSTOMERS ardent Communist. But Mr. | across the land making Peterson’s | pliers = gps ° Prapfug tony Dally Enc. Wed. Wong doesn’t realize this man is | Ointment a favorite in thousands 3% S$. SAGINAW ST. & Sat. Prides Wighte “ul 0 0.m an agent. For this man speaks of homes. Ask your druggist today Kay Ridg., Reite we ae oe Veaee - Nex a aa oF his language, talks of al} the P= é5c box Pl TSe rigor tube. | Cor. Saginaw and Pike Sts Bt. tnd Fleer Nest te Meuseheld Finance eterson's Ointment delights or | things bothering Mr. Wong. And, | noney back 8 Branches tm Many Principal Cities im the U a <= a soeerneicceeenentamnn " i f ; t i : $ t ia a : . ‘All Women’s Summer Shoes Reduced! Tweedie Summer Shoes *] |!” Vitality Summer Shoes Reg. $12.9 5 *Q” Florsheim Summer Shoes Reg. $16.95 1" é oe Reg. $15.95 % < rh Todd's Shoe Store 20 W. Huron BG in Size! BIG in Value! in Quality! Upper Peninsula to Be Appraised as Industrial Site LANSING Michigan's Upper Peninsula will be appraised by ex- perts this week as a place for the nation’s industry to locate Ten experienced industrial real- tors from southern Michigan will fly to Marquette Thursday to start a four-day survey of the entire peninsula After a meeting with the beard of directors of the Upper Pen- Regular or King Size Seme High Quelity—Seme low Price New IT cu. ft. Super THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, insula Development Bureau, the realtors will split inte three com- mittees to visit by automobile mest of the 35 communities in the peninsula. The purpose of their survey is to accumulate information on in- dustrial possibilities of the area to be used to interest industries in locating in the Upper Peninsula. _ A report on the industrial possi- bilities of the area will be sent to real estate men and industrial lo- cation firms throughout the nation and to about 4,000 manufacturers. Argentina has 140 daily news papers PER PACK A Quality Cigarette at a popular price 4 | Los Angeles, Calif., second, $3,000; Fisher Reveals Model Winners Illinois and Washington Boys Get Scholarships DETROIT (UP) in the annual Fisher Body Crafts- man’s Guild model car contest went Tuesday night to James C. Fry of Bellingham, Wash Both received $4,000 scholar- ships for winning in their divisions in the contest, sponsored by the Fisher Body Div. of General Mo- tors Corp. Fry's model was judged best in the junior division and Graham's in the senior division. Other winners Senior division — William C., Balley, Kansas City, Kan., sec- ond place, $3,000; Aime 8. Reggi, Wilimington, Del., third, $2,000; derry Sutton, Fresno, Calif., fourth, $1,000. Junior division — Charles Petly, Stanley T. Denek, Detroit. third, $2,000; John W. Bartley, Hunting- ton Valley, Pa., fourth, $1,000 Predict Drop-Out of Cut in Foreign Profits Tax WASHINGTON « — A _ House- Senate conference committee prob- ably will drop out of President Ei- senhower'’s big tax revision pro- gram a proposal to cut taxes on in- come earned by United States cor- porations operating abroad. 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Saginaw St. Heldens ‘jaa dhe Where You Get Your Money's Worth! LEVI’S for the / entire family ot... Ee eee aoe tee ee ee ox MAKE OV THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiae 12. Michigan . Reg. U. SB. Patent Office Daily Except Sunday Published from Tus Powtuc Press Building Hasotn A FPrreagnaip. Publisher a, Cuvecs Horace F. -Beosis Basset? Advertising at’) Adv. Mar Entered at Post Office Pontiac, Mich as second class matter MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The for ted titled a a wd to the use news prin Daper. as well as all AP news dispatches tp this news- n States $20.00 a vear. All mati su Phone Pontiac PF 2-8181 MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 Ike to Continue Fight President EisENHOWER has made it clear that he intends to continue his fight for the health reinsurance pro- gram defeated in the House last week. Besides pledging that effort, the Pres- ident has sent to Congress a request for $35,356,000 supplemental appropriation for the Department of Health, Educa- tion: and Welfare. If granted, this # would provide $25,000,000 for a Federal health reinsurance service. * * * When the House voted 238 to 134 to send the original measure back to committee, the Adminis- tration suffered a major setback. Seventy-five Republicans teamed with 162 Democrats and one Inde- pendent to reeommit the bill. Fourteen Democrats and 120 Re- publicans opposed recommittal. * * * This bill was the heart of the Ersen- HOWER health program and was favored by this newspaper. Its aim was to en- courage private companies to broaden their health insurance coverage by establishing a $25,000,000 reinsurance fund. -From this fund, which would be increased by premiums paid by the in- suring compaines, 75 per cent of any “abnormal” losses they suffered would be repaid. . * * * Undoubtedly. conflicting views and pressures killed the bill for this session. Much of the objec- tion to it came from those who called it a step toward socialized medicine. Others said it didn't go far enough. Also, some Democrats may have voted against it so they could cite, during the campaign, the Administration's failure to put its health program into effect. - At any rate it is good news that the President is standing by his guns and will press for favorable action in the next session. Alfred Leggett Smith Pontiac lost a faithful public servant and a devout churchman when death called ALFRED LecceTT SMITH. Mr. SmitH# became widely known in his posts of City and State building in- - spector. When he retired from the former office July 31, 1951, he had served the people of Pontiac for 14 years. * x * Born here on August 6, 1881, he had lived most of his 72 years in this city. A graduate of Pontiac High School, he obtained his professional education at the University of Michigan and the Michigan College of Mining and Tech- nology. Besides his business interests, which included mining engineer- ing and technical work for local industries, Mr. SMITH’s chief in- terest was All Saints Episcopal Church. Several times a mem- ber of its rotating vestry, he de- signed Stevens Hall and had much to do with the rebuilding of the church after it was de- stroyed by fire a few years ago. _* x * ALFRED LEGGETT SMITH will be missed by a host of friends and acquaintances who will remember him as one who Senaté Agriculture Committee which has voted eight to seven for continuation of basic crop supports at 90 per cent of parity. This vote came despite the fact that under the flexible plan sup- ports for basic crops would not fall below 82.5 per cent. Michigan’s senior Senator made the important point that continuation of surplus-breeding 90 per cent parity would be economic folly. It would be comparable, he said, to continuation of war materia! production at Korean War rates.- - ~*~ *« * ' “In my own state of Michigan,” he told the Senate, “the industrial cutback has been quite severe. . Still, no one seriously suggested we continue the production of military equipment we do not need. We have to make the tran- sition (from high rigid supports) sometime. The longer we wait the more difficult it will become.” x * * There is no place in a peace time economy for rigid 90 per cent price sup- port. That was a war time measure designed to stimulate urgently needed all out food production. The tax-eating, price-depressing surpluses thus created are the strongest arguments for adop- tion of flexible supports. . The Senate should reverse the action of its Agriculture Committee. ANOTHER thing this country needs is a veranda on each house. In the good old days when the wife got angry with hubby in the house, instead of going off and getting drunk, he went out on the veranda and sat and sulked. MEDICAL science can explain almost anything in its field except why a nurse’s hands run a constant subnormal temperature of about 65 degrees F. a The Man About Town Touring the County Republican Candidates for Governor Smiling Upon Us Daffynition Adam: The only man whose wife never compared him to other men she might have married. As the Aug. 3 primary election approaches, hardly a day passes that at least one of the four candidates for the Republican nomina- tion for governor, is not touring Oakland County. It apparently is the hot spot of the campaign. Just after his talk at Holly Monday, - Owen J. Cleary was asked for his personal opinion about each of his three opponents, and replied, “I'll cover that in one sentence, They're all good men.” —_ Our county’s vote on this office in the 1952 primary was: Leonard, 27,891; Alger, 23,198; Vandenberg, 12,448. Out at the Bloomfield Hills Country Club I am informed by as Manager Chick Bangs that in a few days Mixologist Alex. Hatos will complete 38 consecutive years in that ecapacity. Speaking of Michigan’s much publicized murder trial, George A. Cram asserts that this is a Small world. A letter just received from Mrs. Alfretta Waters of Bloomfield Hills commends this column for its item about political candidates defac- ing the roadsides with their signs. She con- cludes, “I also am contacting the members of my elub, suggesting that we all vote against them.” If you wonder about the traffic on our highways, just remember that there are 75 per cent more cars on - them than there were 15 years ago— and very few more highways. After being in business for many years, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Cocking who operate a mink farm on Baldwin Road, say that the mink coat scandals have not materially affected the demand for the fur, served his community and church with though at first there was a letup. my unfailing devotion. Wise Counsel for Senate There was urgent need for the sound advice on flexible farm price supports Homer Fercuson gave the Senate the other day. It is true that the House majority recently approved the-all important flexible price support feature of the Administration’s farm program. But it also is true that this realistic proposal is endangered in the Senate. * * &* That long time booster for the Detroit Tigers, Percival Mahoney _of Birmingham, phones that we should all love them as long as they can occasionally clip a Yankee winning streak, regardless of their other shortcomings. Verbal Orchids to— Mrs. H. D. Leonard of 124 Henry Clay Ave.; nipety-fifth birthday. Charles A. Highfield of 29 Riker St.; ninetieth birthday. “Thomas J, Mulvey of 90 Pine Grove Aye.; eighty-fourth birth- day. : Voice of the People / Ordinances for Posting of Election Signs Should Be Enforced on All Candidates (Letters will Be condensed when neces- sary because of lack of 5: Pull name, address and telephone number of the writer must secom y letters but these will not be published if the writer so requests, unless the letter ts critical ip its nature! It is against the City and County Ordinances to post election signs on city or-county property and right of ways. Why is it that some candidates for city and county offices can break the law and get away with it? Their signs are not taken down by the officials while other candidates try to stay within the law. : Why don't our city and county officials enforce these ordinances or don't they apply to the candi- dates who can get away with it? Marry Tibbetts 5580 Rowley Drayton Plains . Read Some Good Pointers Now on Phone Manners The telephone is a very ‘useful instrument for both information and pleasure. How much satis- faction is derived from conversing with distant friends and relatives and carrying-out our business ven- tures from time to time' Perhaps we might become some- what careless occasionally in the use of a party line for extended visitation while another may be waiting patiently to use the line in an emergency. It would seem that this would be a rather ideal instrument on which to practice be doing, so do too quickly. more rings or they may just hear a dial tone when they answer. Claud McCallum Press Coverage of Twins Ils Rated as Excellent Job The Press did a wonderful thing with that picture and story of the abandoned twins. And the number of people who applied for them shows the heart of America is still pretty big Twin ‘Small’ Jury Made Error Says a Clarkston Reader I think the ‘Small'’ jury made a- mistake. He should have been freed completely! Clarkston Reader Non-Taxpayers Are Nil, Declares Charles Knouse- After an exhaustive study of the number of people who don't pay taxes, I find in round numbers its 000 000,000 Charies Knouse THOUGHT FOR TODAY The Lord grant unto him that he may find mercy ef the Lord in that day: and in how many things he ministered unto me at Ephesus, thou knowest very well —Il Timothy 1:18, * * « God is a being who gives every- thing but punishment in over meas- ure.—Henry Ward Beecher. Give it one or two - Case Records of a Psychologist Dog Owners Should Be Glad to Give Pets Protection Via Anti-Rabies Inoculations Many people dislike “com- pulsion” even as regards the vaccination of school children against smallpor or of dogs against rabies. But such medi- cal .protectign is .so helpful that many cities now insist on compulsory anti-rabies shots for all dogs. Here are the facts. - By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case L-363: Coralie G., aged 20, has a beautiful collie dog which is now almost a year old. | “Dr, Crane, there is a great deal of agitation in my commynity about having all dogs given snti-rabies shots,"’ she began. “I understand that it is com- pulsory in many other cities. But do you think it is necessary “I keep my dog in our yard, which has a high fence around it. Besides, wouldn't-the shots harm my dog?” Medical ‘‘shots” have almost banished,.some of the worst ‘‘kil- ler” diseases of children. Thus, smallpox is now almost unknown, thanks fo vaccination of children. Diptheria is likewise an infrequent disease, due to our widespread inoculation of infants. America requires compulsory. vaccination of school children be- _cause our scientific evidence shows that such ‘‘shots” are one of mod- ern medicine's greatest boons to mankind. And such health aids, plus the Aunt Het use of penicillin and the sulfas, have now been spread to animals, too, thus lengthening their life span. Remember, too, that dogs can contract rabies without leaving the own backyard, for a rabid squirrel may bite them. To give you the facts on this matter of rabies, I had a conver- sation with Dr. A, C. Merrick, fa- mous Chicago Veterinarian, whe maintains a large hospital for various small animals, such as dogs, cats, birds, etc. “Dr. Crane, here in our subur- ban city of Riverside, there has been compulsory anti-rabies inoc- ulatin of dogs for the past 16 years,”” Dr. Merrick told me. **Add there hasn't been a single case of rabies in our city in all that time. “Yet many cases have been re- ported in the neighboring suburbs of Brookfield, Lyons and Berwyn. “Here at my own hospital for small animals, I have inoculated dogs for 18 years and have never seen one case of rabies develop in such an animal. “Moreover, the dogs show no ill effects of the shots. And the cost is not prohibiti e, for most veterinarians charge no more than §2 for this service. “‘So I personally feel the owner of a dog should be glad to avail himself of this protection for his . Besides, dog will either be dead or dying of rabies within those 14 days. And there is stil] time to inocu- late the human being adequeately against rabies after those 14 days. Se never shoot the dog or let it get away, for then you will not know if it has rabies ér not. Not all people who are bitten by rabid dogs develop rabies, even if they are not given the Pasteur anti-ribies vaccinations. But about 35 per cent do! And you never know whether you will be in the 65 per cent or the 35 per cent. If you are in the 35 per cent, then you must be vaccinated or make your will! For without vac- cination, rabies leads to death. (Copyright, Hopkins Syndicate, Inc James Marlowe Says: U.S. Must Be Prepare to Fight -- or Let Asia Go WASHINGTON ® — The Com- munists have won a clear-cut vic- tory in Indochina. It can't be, minimized, The French let them have half of Viet Nam. Now the United States faces one of the most important decisions in its history. It is this: Will this country, to keep the rest of Indochina and Southeast Asia out of Communist hands, be willing to fight if the Communists move any further? Or will the United States just sit back and express pious hopes that the Southeast. Asians won't submit to communism? *. * & There is talk — until it becomes a reality it will remain talk — that this country will try to form a Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) to defend the rest of In- dochina and Southeast Asia against any further Communist advance. It remains to be seen (A) wheth- er the United States can get allies to go along with this plan and (B) whether Congress, where there has been much divided opinion, will take action which could lead to military involvement someday. There was so much national un- iness over the Korean War — and the cost, and so much national relief! and joy when the Commu- nists agreed to a truce there, that there has been no national enthu- siasm for_getting involved all over again in Asian fighting. * > * The Communists knew of this Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER (international News Service) Democratic shillsters still insist the Republicans aren't doing a thing the Democrats hadn't planned. That's long distance dreaming with an option. If t's true it could be the reason the Republicans are be- ing investigated. We know the Democrats booby- trapped the corridors of Congress with unfinished business and alpha- betical bids. The Democrats built castles in the air and the Republicans are carrying the hod. This approximates the happy business of getting rich by renting rewboats in a storm at sea. That one-man dynasty Frank- lin Delano Roosevelt figured @ut more schemes than a hop- head bivouacking on the elbow. There's nothing more beautiful than indoor sky writing with rose-colored fumes. The abbreviations qn 10,000 glass doors are archived in the dream wing of the Library of Congress. The results of 20 years of un- supervised Olympics in a play- pen are as far-reaching as Bi- kini vibrations. The seven union cards of Hercules are merely an apprenticeship to the eighth labor of stopping a merry-go- round in the middle of a tune. It's natural in occupationa) haz- ards that some legislation should slop over into the next adminis- tration. The man who plants the tree doesn't get the fruit. Other- wise Congress would meet in a super-market armed with spray guns and insecticides. The bones they pulled are bleaching on the hillsides. But we cannot subscribe to the claim the Republicans are heirs to the Democratic horrah. That's one job you don’t sub-lease. If the Democrats want to lay claim to the aftermath of the in- credible that's okay with us. There are some capers still to be in- vestigated. My advice to the Democratic spiel-bunkers is to pianissimo this argument in the pre-dated cam- paigns. They shot off the rockets and blame the Republicang for the sticks. : a « a8 i if i sea Fe + i fecctn & : i aE E i f i ag i ih z z fnile, teuy con start open savas ly joc as in Indochina. ne. But the United States has a point where it is going to have to be willing to fight in Asia or stop talking so tough about what lies in store for the Commu- nists if they move one more inch. There's been some tough talk in the past year by members of President ‘s adminis- tain, by a lake . . . Or anywhere you hide... time this year .. . Is not the same as yours... And so it seems we are compelled . . . To take our separate tours ... 1 wish you well, one... will, . . Be waiting at the door . . --To tell._your heart a thousand times ... I love you more and more. ~ (Copyright 1954) From Our Files Tetany in Infants Is Hard to Diagnose; Elderly Persons Also Are Susceptible _ By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Back in the halcyon days, one ward in the county hospital was occupied by babies exclusively — about 40 of ‘em from birth up to the age of 2 years. Practically all the babies were born of illegitimate parents, many of them beautiful babies that any one could not help loving. But only rarely did one of the illegitimate parents ever come back to see a baby. All the babies were bottle ba- bies, and their modified milk was fresh milk from the county's own herd. But the milk was all steril- ized by boiling. Consequently, although doctors didn’t understand this at the time, scurvy occurred every now and then, and when it did the attend- ing pediatrist prescribed for the scorbutic infant (1) orange juice and (2) fresh unboiled milk for a ’ while. This soon cured the scurvy — the vitamin C in fresh fruit juice, and the vitamin C in fresh raw - milk, especially milk from cows on pasture. Eventually all the infants were put an end to scurvy in the county hospital babies’ ward. To the best of my recollection there were only a few cases of legs, sotnetimes in hands, in the night, cramps that a ES ‘ ok oes es ee ae Bs ee ee ie re eee) EF path S F ue i. > g PO Oe eee ES ae | a io de ae ee a Pe et a, eS eee Sa TIFE PONTIAC Goins, Harden Raymond arridell "se on Saturday| | AUBURN HEIGHTS — Marridell “Harden and Raymond Goins ex- ‘changed vows Saturday evening at the Stone Baptist Church in Auburn Heights. . ‘ "The bride is the daughter of Mr. wed bee Harden Jr, Name Cinderellas CASS CITY —Coral Baster, and Estelia-Mae Engler, sponsored by the Millington Grange, were select- ed Cinderella and alternate res- pectively at a recent Grange gath- ering. Approximately 100 subordin- ate Grange members from Tuscola county men in Murray Hall at Wahjamega, Saturday. Richardson Farm Dairy 7350 Highland Rd. PASTEURIZED 35° =. HOMOGENIZED now Of) cm SKIMMED or x Guaranteed DRAYTON JEWELERS Watch Repair A 2. DEXTROM, Prep. 8 Peers Nerth of the Rank EXCLUSIVE . FURNISHINGS L an Gin porphin t= ‘Wwe Geart of Orayten Visine Sashabaw OR 3-171) A Good Used Car? Wheat Growers to Vote Friday Use of Quota Program Will Be Determined; 7 Polling Places Listed Wheat growers of Oakland Coun- ty will vote. for or against: mar- keting quotas for the 1955 crop Friday at seven polling places | open to voters The referendum will determine whether or not the quota program | now in effect will continue next | year, according to County Agni cultura} Agent Ed Alchin. Two thirds of those who vote must ap prove quotas before they put utto, operation. can be A producer is eligible to vote if he will have more than 15 acres of wheat on his farm for harvest in 1955, The voting places in the . will be open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m The -Oxford Co-op Elevator will county MR. AND MRS. ROBERT A. DOAN “| serve Oxford and Addison town | June Devitt Robert Doan ships as a polling place and the | ‘ Oakland Township Hall will be | ‘7 nm for vo n Goodison and | Wed in Church Ceremony [iin oii, bine ie Independence, Brandon. and Grove AUBURN HEIGHTS — June Ber-| Lake and Mrs. Betty Johnston | jing townships in the Grange Hall, nice Devitt became the- bride of| of Milford attended the bride. Ortonville: and the Holly, Spring ragga care lard =| Best ae was Preston Clark of| field, and Rose townships at sal in Apbur Height yterian mire Pontiac, Jack Hartman and Ray-| Farm and Garden Eimplments Co., The Side slort ania of Mr | Frond Barger, both of Royal Oak, | Holl and Mrs, C. J Barger of North gin ry prise Mc Ti | Also on the list are the High Branch wore an ice blue satin floor sivntd CCANN OSE) tand, Milford, and White Lake lated at the ceremony and a | ception was held afterwards in the | church parlors. " townships at the Highland Pro ducers’ elevator in Highland, and the Commerce, Lyon and Novi townships at the Lyon township hall, New Hudson, length gown with a finger-tip veil, and carried a white bouquet cen- tered with pink rose buds The groom is the son of Mr. and | Mrs. Arthur D. Doan of 3083 Bessie | St. in Auburn Heights. Following a tour of Upper Michigan, the newlyweds will re side in Auburn Heights, For trav- Mrs. Janette Rove of Watkins eling Mrs. Doan wore a blue All other townships, not listed —— specked suit with three-quarter | Wl) vote at the Oakland County sleeves with white accessories. ASC. office, Hubbard Building on : IT treet, Pontiac. Southfield Club Mrs. Barger wore blue Eeery ae a lace dress with white accessories and the mother of the groom, a rose lace dress with white accessories Seek Clue to Killing Federation Holds Election Meeting SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP—The ‘Mayor F oresees Change if Police Quota Isn't Filled. Southfield Federation association met Monday evening at the High | e E TEL PARK = Marie Ziel School, with about 530 members in Blanket Analysis mund J. Niparko warned today of | Yes a change in the Hazel Park Civil | Howard Palmer was appointed AVON TOWNSHIP — The pink | service Board unless specified ac- | chairman of the committee, com-| blanket of an unidentified baby| tion is taken to fill the quota of posed of one representative of each | girl, found beaten to death Mon- the police department by Aug. 1 member-organization ' day in Avon township, has been Lawrence Fiferlik, the new presi- : Unless policy changes are made, sent to State Police of, the Romeo F »why ; di the department shortage rect! a a newly Post to Lansing for analysis. No “oe . ‘ie vee von stated that the | elected officers, vice president Eu-| further clues in the murder have neil will fire the board gene Swem, secretary Carlos Dan-| peen uncovered. however councht wil fire th | ville and treasurer Urban Hart Apparently killed shortly after The reorganization of the police ine th ; department this spring made that| birth, the child's body was discov = tem sheet (hice mea. The board | Needed S Drink jered » Re nend Exeke 20 ot 1) has delayed acthon pending 4 court ; Hamlin Rd The little girl, found in a corner | of a reoefiess shack, had been struck ever the right ear. decision of status of officers de moted following reor FLINT (UP) It was quite a task for burglars to remove money-less 500-pound from . ganization sale ne -—~ of Alfonse Van Walleg Dr. Isaac D. Prevette. Deputy ‘MOMS Elect Delegates “m ut their labor wasn't com | Oakland County coroner, said th plet ely in vain. There were four | child had been dead approxi- |to National Convention bottles of whiskey in the safe to! mately 24 hours GALLOWAY LAKE — Moms of help them drown their disappoint —_ America, Unit 21. met to elect dele- | ment | 44 at Holl Reunion gates to the ir national convention | at — Monday. The convention will be | | Forewell Party Given ; WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—| held in October in Detroit |The Webb Hall family held. the Delegates are Mrs. Lee Shackel NEW HUDSON Annabelle | annual Hall reunion Sunday at the a 7 ’ ) ford, 93 Ardmore road and Mrs Bowers was honored with a fare-| home of Mr. and Mrs. George W George Scheppelmann of 1265 Mt well party recently given by mem- | Hall of Cass-Elizabeth road. Forty-| Clemens. Mrs. William Craven of | bers of the Extension Club in the | two members and two guests were | 2032 Joy Road and Mrs. Wilham | home of Mrs. Charies Kidd. Miss| present. An election of officers| Becker of 18!) Commonwealth Bowers plans to, teach in _Japan Los as also held. * were elected alternates iFarmers to Answer Census Questions sueh things as labor, machine hire, © Crib © Innerspring Mattress with Waterproof Cover— Complete $292 HAPPYTOWN CRIB SPECIAL! | / GOOD FOR ONE WEEK ONLY! @ Birch—Neoturol Wox Finish when the last census of agricul- ture Was taken. That il because the number of farms reached a peak in 1935— when the depression had driven the city jobless back to the farm —and has been declining in the many years of industrial expan- sion since then. But the job this vear many times as big as it was in 1850. In 1950, the Census. Bureau counted 5,382,000 farms. more than three times as many as a century before. food, ferti®zcers But the answers to some ques- tions may indicate that in the past few years life on the farm has become less lonely and in- corporates more of the frills of city life that have long lured farm people off the land, gasoline and oil These will be questions dealing | with television sets, food freezers, piped running water and other such refinements that have bulked larg- er on the farm in the past few | years. will be For the Daten in Shosaivent @ McGregor @ VanHeusen @ Interwoven Hose ca Nationally Famous Shoes @ Crosby Square @ Story Book | @ W. L. Douglas G REEN’S Dixie Highwoy MEN’S WEAR - Drayton Plains | PRE | her daughter | July jin during a previous meeting. | | bids on new furniture } ity and secretary teacher i were teaching this fall | when | his car SS, WEDNESDAY, SULLIVAN 2329 Harbor, engagement of Catheryn to Olen W. CATHERYN M, Mrs. Bernice Sullivan of Pine Lake Ave., Keego has announced the Pauline A of irs also of Keego Harbor. Hunter Hunter son | September wedding is ing is Planned. Name President of School Board Other Officers Elected at a Special Wasting, in Romeo ROMEO—George McKeough was elected president of the Romeo Board of Education at a special held yesterday evening. He had served as treasurer-during meeting | the past year. The election of officers followed the swearing in of Dr. Ralph G Renwick as member of the board for a 3-year term. Walter Sewell, victorious with Renwick in the 12 election, had been sworn Joseph C. Jelsch was re-elect- ed secretary of the beard and Dr. Renwick, treasurer. The school board agreed to | change the regular meeting date | |to the second Thursday in every | month. The Romeo Saving Bank | was designated as the official de- | | pository of school funds for the | | coming year Bids on a new 60-passenger- bus | were opened and the contract was | to Community Motor Rochester. awarded | Sales, A motion was made to provide bus transportation for parechial students for the next school year. Superintendent T. C authorized to advertise for for the new was | elementary school additions and | |for certain rooms in the North | | grade school and the Washington | School He was then granted the author to make the lish and French and a tendered contracts Lunch Wagon Feeds Cows, Saves Grass ’ WASHINGTON uw — Census-tak- | have a questionnaire as long as | Acreage had increased in a cen-| GRAND RAPIDS um — The lunch | ers will be beating paths to the | your arm |tury by about four times, to 1.158.- | wagorr comes around to the cows on and SAVE ronbalyg of Michigan's farmers There will be ‘about 100 ques | 600 000 — And each farm in| the Russell © Hansen farm ete And as usual, they will tions concerning\ the farm. and the | 1950 fed 3'2 as many people as | Scottville in Mason County. No ——<— —$—$_$______ questioners will be calling on farm la century before — 28 of the na-| tramping around in the pasture ior ers in all states. not just Michi- | tion's 151,100,000 populafion in 1950, | these supe ‘r-contented milkers DRY CLEANING gan. It will be the 16th time since In 1935, the nation had 6.812.350 Hansen and his father, Charles, 1840 that the Census Bureau has|farms, about a third more than in| don't believe it pays to let their \- with a taken a census of agriculture. 1950. Farms in 1935 enclosed 1,054,- | dairy cows forage for food. For 000.000 acres and each farm was|one thing, the Hansens say, Cows 5 “ iffe ” The bureau, however, k ’ \\ Dapper D rence separate farm eae oh responsible for feeding 18 of the | trample and spoil pasture. eS since 1850. x nation’s 127.300.000 persons The Hansen bovine chuck wagon chea™ wet TRIP AHOY! Remem- At that time, the enumerators The Census Bureau js not ex-| is a homemade aca akey rie . ‘ as : ee pecting to find any big changes] folding sides, which they u owe ber that cleaned ie sill aja age me on oe in U.S farming since 1950. This] oug to the pasture, fill with ar td 7 as?? eso" clothes go better. | * A tah fee ; “es year, the farm census will seek as| chopped green feed and haul 38 mi sgn ais it ap ai in 1890, Was | usual to determine the fasic facts| back te the barnyard. The cattle 4 Ns ; . neem ol an Lay _ — of the of U. S. agriculture number of | feed right from the rack, ation’s 23,200, people. deen tes cewes af py tie 7 ieee Phone rel ear) (ihe Ceracn ieee farms, acreage “ i a n. The Hansens figure they get from F > . . crops grown. size 0 arm ype : is og Mt Kot OR 3-7362 will probably find that every farm ay nh at tenure. ownership one-third to one-half more eaten : is responsible for feeding more peo- | hivesto. S hcioation. nmmeriatian green feed per acre from. their FE 4-617] ple than ever before. But in other Ass daletis Hut de malta - , pasture this way, and a great deal respects the numbers mav be ee sin debt a a more milk per acre of graas. = value, ane naing r arms r smaller than they were in 19950, “pe on . Enxkperiments at_agricultural sta- tions with barnyard pasturing seem to bear out the Hansens’ conten- tion that it is a profitable ven- ture Roseville Man Is Killed When Car Strikes Pole LAPEER—William John Demp- sey Sr., of 28067 Schram St., Roseville, was killed last night his car struck a_ telephone pole near M-33 five miles south of Imlay City. o3, Lapeer County Sheriff's officials | said he apparently lost control of He was alone at the time. County Calendar WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Mr. Mrs J. L. Hustin will be honored at a family night supper in the Covert Methodist Church The event is slated for Thursday evening DRAYTON PLAINS— The Youth Feliow- ship of the Community United Presby- terian Church is sponsoring an_ ice Cream Social to be held on the Church Lawn Thursday from 5:30 to 7 p.m. —_ and Advertisement Zemo Great For lichy Skin Rash. Zemo, a doctor's formula, prom relieves itching of surface skin cn eczema, prickly heat, athlete's foot, Zemo stops scratching and so aids faster healing and clearing. Buy Extra Strength Zemo for. stubborn cases. JULY 21, Filppula purchase after | consultation with board president | A teacher of Eng- | biology | all for secondary schools, | to begin | 95% Death in Nearby Communities: Mrs. Walter Hogle DRYDEN — Funeral ‘service for Mrs. Walter Hogle, 70, of South Mill St., will be Thursday at 2 p.m. from her residence, Burial will be in Dryden Cemetery. Mrs. Hogle died Monday evening at her home. Her husband is the only survivor. Dorothy H, Crawtord ARMADA — Funeral service for | New Type of Vandalism SIOUX FALLS. (UP)—Po- lice gearched any toe a new type of auto vandal. Robert C. Schmidt said someobody soaked the uphol- stery of his car with gas, When Schmidt lighted a cigarette the plumes ignited for a second. and early Caused ‘a flash _fire. Your Watch steers $4.50 two sisters and a brother, Mar- garet, Conny, and Joseph, all at home. Grandparents Mr. and Mrs John Tileh of Gaylord, and Mrs. William Schneider of Milwaukee, Wis., also survivie. 4 $400 Worth of Golf Supplies Taken in Theft Dorothy Hulett Crawford, 40, of SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP—The 3601 Gladwin Ave., Detroit, was | Northview Driving Range, on the Northwestern highway was broken into early Tuesday: The thieves es- caped with about 160 worth of golfing supplies It is believed entry through a window, held today under the auspices of an OFS organization and Arma- da Chapter 261, OFS. Burial was in Willow Grove Cemetery, Miss Crawford died suddenly Sunday. She is survived by her mother © Adjusted © Regulated Was made by persons fa- Mrs. Nellie M. Hulett, and a sister,| Millar with the interior of. the E ° i Muriel, both of Detroit, and a} building j xpansion brother, Samuel of Dearborn ——_—_———- Watch Bands Ladies’ - Men's $135 Orion Rotarions View Golf-Teaching Movies LAKE ORION — Rotary Club members of Lake Orion were spec- Linda Tilich ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP—Pray- er service for Linda Tilch, 6- year-old daughter of Mr, and Mrs Tilch of 29123 Tawas, will be 10:30] Special a. m. Thursday from the Hopcroft| tators this week in part of a na- Funeral-Home, Hazel Park. A re-| tional program designed to shorten Georges-Newports quiem Mass will be sung at 11|the learning period for playing | a.m. Thursday from St. Dennis | golf Jewelry Dept. Church. Linda died of injuries re- Attending the program of movies ceived when she fell from her} were Ron Allen, Charles Starrs, | — “lawticassi) 1 tricycle Monday evening | Dr. H. J. Brown, Stewart uma Surviv ‘ing be aides the pare nts are | Clem Kreiger and Ham Creig PILES SHRUNK without surgery! IN CASE AFTER CASE PAIN STOPPED! For amazing re- lief from mis- Full House Former Keego Harbor TIVERTON, R. I. (UP) — Mrs. | Resident Wed in Texas Charles DeMello, 40, has given | KEEGO HAR 30 HARBOR—In a candle- birth to her 23rd child — a five- na candle ONLY PILE REMEDY THAT'S light ceremony in Houston, Tex., ABSOLUTELY |¢Ties ef Simple pound, Il-ounce girl. Mrs. DeMe Ilo | Jackelee Anthonise became the STAINLESS ek i Pais. : Stain Ss azo, and her 51- "year-old farmer-hus- | bride of Dr. James M. Parks Jr., Acts to relieve pain, itching in- band now have 17 living children) saturday stantly, Soothes inflamed tissues, —11 girls, six boys. They live in a| ‘The bride and her parents Mr,| helps prevent cracking, reduce swelling—without surgery! For fast relief get new Stainless Pazo. Look for word “Stainless” on box. Sup- positories or Ointment, at drug- gists. Regular Pazo® available too, SiX-room:--heuse. esas Mrs. Herbert F. Anthonise are | | former residents of Keego Harbor. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs | James M. Kan. | =- Same | meters can stamp up to | 300 tet “tters per minute. Parks of Topeka, SAVE DURING THE LOOR SHOP'S re) KENTILE Guaranteed All First Quality— All Fresh Stock! PONTIAC'’S EXCLUSIVE FREE! | We loan you the tools! RUBBER TILE 9”°x9"’x Vg" Heavy Grade A » pd pt’? ot ol ae bol of of o1 oneneholeketal Gia Lynas: 19° Irregulars Ae acmrnent Baim GOLD SEAL VINYL 42” Counter Top 3 2, ‘Onan on Night ‘til 9 P. M. Plastic Wall Tile Custom 23: Contour 8Q. FT. For Those Who Prefer Profes- sional Installations We Offer You Free Estimates and Im- § medjate Service! = ee aucngunsanull he Floor Shop = 99 S. SAGINAW ST. Free Parking = AT AUBURN AVE. Rear of Store. SRSRTSRESTRASSRSAR ASAE ASR SRE SRR ESR eee eee 4 ’ feist - hein talhalalat «12% 4" 4: oh ’ =~ oo." * By anrra COLBY while the baby is asleep, your stretching exercises while the coffee’s percolating, shampoo your ee when you get home from the office, sa Sel spot exercises the Led thing -. nig beauty Clean-Up Week Ready? Let's go—begin with your face. Clean, lubricate and stimu- “late your skin, every day, every single day, two-or three times. Make your beauty routine con- stant, regular. We are going to “peel down” and discover your ture and lovely skin—skin like a baby’s, It's there. It. just wants out. If you can get your skin thor- oughly, pore-deep clean—and feed it from inside with thoroughly beauty-clean foods—it wil! renew itself all the time. Equipment Simple 1, Clean hands. Fanatically clean. Never tough your face ex- cept with hospital-clean hands. 2. A pure, bland soap. Not neces- sarily expensive—no special per- fumes or chemicals or added at- tractions. Just pure. 3. Soft water. Especially for dry skins, because hard water is dry- ing. To soften, boil and let: settle. Or use a sprinkling of household borax or tincture of benzoin in a bow! of water. . Girls whe live in the rainwater- don't have te save it in a barrel like Scarlett O’Hara. Don’t use bath salts for the face. They're softening, yes—but not meant for daily facial use. 4. A set of clean, soft, fluffy washcloths, and towels. Your own. Rinse cloths in hot, hot water be- fore using. No complexion brushes. Some dermatologists advise only the fingertip cushions to massage soap into face. So, whether finger- tips or cloth, go softly. Always dry face well. Know Skin Type Your skin will lie somewhere be- yofte iov.lwe een thee mes xtre tween the extremes of very oily and very dry. You may have such a well-bal- anced output of oi] that you can really be classified as normal, but most “normal” skins are actually a combination—oily here, dry there. Learn your skin type, its needs and how to treat it. Normal—You have no special problem, so spend your first week in deep cleaning. Wash your face morning and night with mild bland soap and luke- warm water. into skin in cir- cular, upward, outward motion. Rinse three times, last with water, or until you can § feel every last trace of soap gone. If you are a combination—oily around nose and chin, dry on cheeks and forehead, first use washcloth steaming hot on nose and chin, and gently soap-massage to clean and open these pores. Now proceed as above. Very. oily—You can test for oil by laying clean tissue on your nose. If it shows a greasy, opaque spot, you're very oily—if a slight smudge, only somewhat. Firt thing this week, however— A steam bath to open pores, a bow! of hottest water, your head over same, and a towel like a tent over both. Keep running in more hot water—in the warm fumes you can feel your face “open up.” Then with a soft cloth, ric sage face and neck, always in upward, outward, circular mo- on. Repeat around nose and chin, but tread lightly around - eyes. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 Rinse twice in warm, twice in cool ater. Do this twice a day—if possible, three times. Very dry—Your skin feels thight, is always flaking a little, dull and meee. This very dry e if it isn't you reach 40,] skin will lose 20 per cent of its oils, So, ; soap, too, for true cleansing, but on- ly once a day. Either night or morning. Use a bland soap and luke- f warm water never hot or cold: this skin can’t stand-drastie de grees or changes in temperature. Massage neck and face in circu- lar, outward, upward motion, then rinse four or five times in clean, lukewarm water. Be sure, be extra sure you get the last suspicion of soap out of your skin, Dry gently, bat very thoroughly, This skin needs to make oil—water left on it does not help. brown on rich beige...in a BASIC SERV 5281 Dixie Hwy. (Near in the modern decorator trend Featuring the smartest of color combinations .. . cinnamon Vernon's BARKWOOD is unequaled as the dinnerware to accent YOUR modern dining room. Vernonware is guaranteed for 25 years against crazing or crackling. The lovely BARKWoOOD pattern is hand- painted under the glaze... will not fade, mar or wash off, in dishwasher or with years of use. 16-piece Starter Set... only $1Q95 Also complete open stock 4 DIXIE POTTERY For Your Convenience Open Daily & Sun. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. clever free-form design ..-: a ICE FOR 4 Waterford) OR 3-1894 looks | “you impression comes the second: pe bes = Now — we slash prices even = = lower! Every opera, sling and -* sandal in the group is a . new-this-season style, a rare buy! Hi, mid, little and flat Te heels. Patent, white calf, beige, red, blue, specs, pastels. All sizes but not in every style. Women’s Shoes s 7 ITAICO S$ \ ’ : Shoe Sclon—Merranine Floor , - ‘meson ib SDR (GCA A Fee a REDUCTIONS regular to 10.95 NAL DRASTIC % e hea SeTERET . — Never skip—never miss! Do your soap-and-water cleansing every day. . Your face tells the first story of ” to the world, Take care it doesn't tell an ugly story People look at your face first, but right on the heels of that first Your Posture There is a new, and to my mind mighty sensible, trend among good physical culture schools—to wit: Americans have ‘been overdoing the bend, twist, grunt ‘‘setting up" type of exercise. If we could just learn and keep— ture, that would be the finest physi- cal culturing we could do. You can learn to do this, I'm geing to tell you about it... “Animal grace” can be acquired, and kept, long after you've giveh up. basektball, It begins—always— with carrying the body masses properly and keeping them bal- anced, one above the other. Stack up your blocks, little girl— First thing. hang a weighted string down the center of the longest mir- ror you have. Begin a straight body line with your feet. So—your weight's for- ward — your body feels poised This is your foundation block On this block your aim is to keep Failte Your r Beauty Begins With Radiant, Baby-like Skin and Graceful Posture — your pelvic basin level. If it tips¢- forward, it gives you a bulging stomach and a sway back. Haul in hard on your lower ab- domen, and watch results in your mirror, Your figure loses inches! domen, and watch results ‘our mirror, Your figure loses {ja the straight line of your spine is continued straight on up through the top of your skull. If you sag or droop here, the seven neck vertebrae will drop the weight of the head forward and make you a nice double chin, Hold you neck long and high. your chin leve. othe postpone this one for a time. . Toast Old Cake BOY'S 4 Were to $2.95 97: - he % Bh RE Map tote, See ee, ets th hg “i a, de Regularly to a3 £4 3 ¥ ae ounsaulhes POCO SE Wij EIS a 8 to 14.. SHIRTS) Limited Quantity 5 Sizes 3 to 8 G ; Lower Floor ey , RG ee ee eee Skirts — Main Floor e=——=-GIRLS’ a SKIRTS . Cotton prints, crease resistant spuns in red, navy, equa. Sizes - Skirts — Lower Level 4 csateus rapes reas ys ORY goal f= Were to tailored jackets en checks, novelties. ‘seit collar, $6.95 e Completely ir- Cooled including many with new surface interest. pmo a 7 + “@BET TER SUITS Were to $39.95 Slim to flared skirts. All in Juniors and misses sizes Suit Salon — Second Floor e* + STARTING TOMORROW THURSDAY, 9:30 A. M. . . RESORT FASHIONS . . eeBET TER COATS x “eee eo we wee cuffs, and pocket treatments. Coat Salon — Second Floor m7 “gt i, Oe ree oe Reva Novy, cat & 4 Fite 530. 100% wool fabrics, nylon, rayon faille. Full j= length, three quarter, shorty and topper. 2: coe . > keep every minute—correct pos- | there, lefted, alert. | (Continugd Tomorrow) 1 POY if eer Yeo et eyes ee 7h, Sa OR oF Sie he SRS gees aes ah $e aR g Were to x, $69.95 ay “IT S18 524 Every one is suitable to wear the year ‘round. New, slish, dressy, or 100°5 wool fabrics colors, pastels, awe Were $2.95 $y47 Limited ae Sizes 4 and 6 Lower Floor . DON’T MISS THESE BARGAINS! . FOR VACATIONS bp SKIRTS yp MILLINERY s Regularly by Were to b, 4 Were . § ig Sold to Sop ss . $22.95........ . f 31895, 1 Fl we. : is eee y & Regularly ‘95, s > a sod to Spee i s $1295... Ry OF in Ww | i Se a rae é $69.95......... .: $65.00 3] a : Sas ont mana colors, ‘eer 2 22 to 28. ~~ Fe Were to $45.00 . .. New 7" Beau- (~~ tifully lined. Navy, and pastel colors. Junior, misses’ and women’s sizes. Millinery Salon — Second Floor 4 ——=GIRIS’ unr ~ DRESSES Regularly $7.95 Broadcloth, seersucker and cot- tom sheers. Solid.’ print and Sizes 1 to 3, 3 to Gx, 7 to 14, 8 to 14. _ CLEARANCE and SALE! REDUCED (to ‘2 and MORE SUMMER FASHIONS . . . FINE BLOUSES-™ AND SUMMER! waBE T TER. DRESSES, BUDGET DRESS ; Were to b > © Regularly % a 16.95 i Regularly * : Sold to ; $ ees ka Sold to i $3.98 eecee 5 Were to § vb $10.98 *ee F S| ~ $35.00 2 > & Regularly * & es "+ Regularly % ‘ if af Id t Sold to > © Were to s y So i os oe | $5.98 .... 5 $39.95......... a mee >* # €, a Ped = - Regularly Regularly " Were to b) z § s Sold to } — Sold to F $4995......... $14.96 $8.98 .... . | a af f o egulor stock of cottons, : . san: trom our rege } Cottons, sheer rayons, and spun rayons. Dressy i Cotton, nylon. Sleeveless or short sleeve. Con- rayon crepes, knits, jerseys, both one and two HE and coousl styles. Prints, stripes ond solids, =f & vertible or scoop neck. White, pastels, prints, § piece dressy and tailored styles. Dark, light Tl Poctect to weer new_and ine tal, jenioy, & ¢ stripes or solid colors. Sizes 32 to 38. " and prints. Junior, misses’, women’s sizes. poleeee’ Sines. hans % pS a % Also formal J 4; , Blouses — Main Floor a so formas § Budget Dresses — Second Floor & Better Dresses — Second Floor % ; Z * Bo Rie i i mn FS, POD eee ne, PP pe - et. 7 ¢ ; i ah RT aE Ts lng ST: eM ee ee OR ee cy ee ee ee at ca Ae Ce Wel aba ea TY bs a . Blas ot Ls ew | wo MAKE OVER PAC * : c = i A Bs - * : % ‘roa? La we woe ee } s * Park at Our Front Door! 1662 S&. Telegraph Rd. 3 OPEN TONIGHT ‘TIL 9 famous make % * Were 12.95 Were 16.95 ‘8 10° Wonderful Selection! Lastex'! and:‘White Stagg Playwear Shorts Were 2.95 Were 5.50 $9 19 $39> Tail-shirts Were 4.95 +349 : Jackets Were 6.95 $q79 | ~- All Summer Hats + Nylon Print Dusters ida hi Sizes 10 to 18 Launder Quickly! B58 sey meeads Whites! Pastels! } Navys! Blacks! Beautiful New Summer Bags 18339. 5539 Were 5.95 and 7.95 : : | | i Straws! Black Patents! } ‘| hundreds of beautiful Formerly Sold Up to -29.95 * il . . -* : 4 ee . | =Hloomficld Pedal Pushers Y. Off ‘8 a 12 16 ALL SALES FINAL! NO RETURNS! TASHION SHOP ___ | OALE! Swim Suits | Were 19.95 12 Failles! Prints! famous make summer poplin Halters Were 1.95 $75 Skirts Were 5.95 $4) All Colors! All Sizes! Washable! Summer Gloves *] 25 Were 2.95 Pastels! Whites! Famous Make Jersey Dresses Special! ° G Pastels and Navys' Briefs and Regulars, 10 to 20! Summer Dresses havon 9 to 15 Misses 10 to 20 —— | ‘ "y . | The John Livingstones of Berkshire r THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 a cali "7 oad | the Republican gubernatorial nomination. ;)} were hosts at a reception and garden party Shown greeting Mr. Leonard (left) is Mr. (right) and Mrs. Livingstone were busy with details of the honoring Donald Leonard who is seeking | Livingstone. , | } | Good Budgeting Gets Marriage Launched Right | Getting married is like forming a corporation that will pay divi- dends in happiness if it is properly Sure a budget is a nui- | sance to begin with but it won't | managed 1} take you long to find it's a god- send | Advice to brides suggests that | you start out on a_ businesslike basis. Sit down with your husband- to-be and add up your expenses. Then see how this fits your in come. | Experience will show you | Where you have to cut, where you really have to add, but even- | tually after a little trial and. | error arithmetic, you'll arrive at v something you can live with, a workable . , Having a budget doesn't mean rushing around with a dollar sign flitter in your eye looking for the lowest price tag. Learn how to judge values in different types of | merchandise and buy the best quality possible in floor covering, furniture or equipment which you can use through a lifetime. Women of Moose Listen to Reports Reports on publicity, child care, Mooseheart, officers and homemak- ing were made by various com- mittee heads when Women of the Moose met recently in Moose Tem- ple. Future activities will include a garden breakfast on August 15 from 9 a. m, to 1 p. m. at the Mont- calm street home of Mrs. F. B. Huston. Aug. 2 is the date for the next meeting. Let Fashion .. Permanents 11 N. Perry St. . go te your head ... with the easy, casual look for summer. Phone FE 2-6361 Opposite Hotel Roosevelt | $5.00 from A FINER _ | CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP Special Purchase! PRINTS! : Sizes 10 to 20 PLISSE! PLAYTONE! Flair for wash ’n’ wear with NO IRON care Summer blessings... light, cool cotton Plisse ... so pretty and practical! A dream to wear and heaven to care for because it presents no pressing problems. Modern print, styled with ladder stitched pique. _ Also in solid colored Playtone®, a no-iron cotton. SWIRLS are mationally odvertined $ 98 Regularly $7.95 . . . Now Ve Hy ag? ve 4 ye & AP ve. eae Mr. Leonard's family was introduced to | those attending Tuesday's affair. graphed with Mrs. Leonard are their three Among the hosts jor the party. Photo- youngsters, Donnie, 10. junior Ben Jeromes of Ottawa drive. Barbara, 8, garden party Tuesday were Mrs. Jerome ¢ Pentiac Press Phetes kiddie, 4, and BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Mr. and Mrs. James C. Zeder will be hosts at the rehearsal dinner next Wednesday evening preceding the marriage of their son, James Chur- chill Zeder Jr., and Barbara Bayne of Grosse Pointe, The wedding will take place July 29. . * * @¢ “Ping” Wright is visiting her father, Washburne Wright, for sev- eral weeks. A classmate of hers at Old- fields School in Glencoe, Md., Christine Smith of Wilmington, -Del.,. is visiting her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Draper of Barden drive, and the girls are attending many gay swim- ming parties and picnics here and in Metamora, * s s _ Another young visitor is Sheila Darnell of Pasaden, Ala., who is spending the summer with her uncle and aunt, the David Walker Lees. Mrs, Lee's niother, Mrs. W. L. Bone of Topeka, Kan., has just returned to her home after a fortnights’ visit here, and last week the Lees were also hosts to Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Newitt of Hart- ford, Conn. Mr. Hewitt is headmaster of Kingswood School for Boys in Hart- ford, Conn. Mr. Hewitt is headmaster of Kingswood School for Boys in| Hartford, and he and Mrs. Hewitt, a classmate of Mrs. Lee's at the Wheelock School, are en route to the West for a vacation. ~~ LJ ~ Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sylvester | have as their guest Mrs. Libby Pulsifer of Rochester, N.Y. In another week their daughter, | Mrs, William T. Beresford. will | come for a visit from her home in | Hyannis, Mass., to be followed a | week later by her husband Mr. | Beresford is at Otis Air Force Base on Cape Cod. _ * * * | Mrs. Henry S. Booth will leave Saturday morning for New York | where she will spend a few days with Mrs. Travers Carman. She will go from there up to Blue | Hills, Maine, to spend a few days | with her sister, Mrs. William H. Gerhauser of Cleveland, at her summer home there. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gordon are planning a box supper for a group of friends Saturday eve- ning in their home on East Long Lake road. * * * Mr, and Mrs, R. Jamison Wil- liams will go over to Grimby, Ont., this weekend to greet Mrs. Wil- lidms’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ken- Zeders Will Host Rehearsal Dinner Preceding Son's Marriage on July 29 neth Culpan,. who are here from Sydney, Australia. The Culpans are visiting another daughter, Mrs. Peter Della-Porta, at present. They plan to come home with the Williams’ Sunday for a visit in Birmingham where | they have many friends. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Walter O. Briggs Jr. will have as their guest for the next fortnight Mrs. Brigg's mother, Mrs. Basil Manly of Wash- ington, D.C. Mrs. Manly is ex- pected Sunday. - * * * Mrs. C. E. Wilsdn, who is at the Wilson lodge at Walloon Lake for the summer, has her daugh- ter, Mrs, Philip J. Hoyle, and small Jan of Delray Beach, Fia., as guests for several weeks, = a He Virginia Beresford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James FE. Beresford, is traveling in Europe this sume mer. She has been visiting a Swiss family with a daughter of her age, and she will have a bicycle trip through France before returning home. J * bd Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Gillette of Rochester will give a supper party Saturday evening for Mr. and Mrs. Willard Dickerson who are moving to Rochester. re ; i ‘i a \" ye a) t NO LAYAWAYS Nellie s July Clearance Time at Nellie SAVE ~. 20% — 50% Cotton Skirts -- Dresses -- Blouses Swim Wear -- Sportswear--- Play Shoes GOOD SELECTION FOR ALL SIZES ALL SALES FINAL 3507 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 1 Block: West of Huron Pontiac, Michigan a Coo l Lime Sherbet Is | Delicacy | Mrs. Albright Has | Easy-to-Fix Recipe| for Frosty Dessert | By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor | Lime Sherbet is such a cooling | Irene Al- | bright has an excellent recipe for dessert for hot «days this delicious frozen delicacy a Se She- Says she likes best to serve it} with chocolate cake Many Pontiac people know Mrs Albright as the principal of Bald- | win School. This pleasant woman | has a number of other irons in the | fire also. With her teenage son | she enjoys golf. Membership in} Delta Kappa Gamma, the Ex change Club = and __ the Junior | Women's Club fills other hours of her leisure time. LIME SHERBE1 By Mrs. Irene Albright 1 package lime gelatine | 1 cup hot water | I's cups sugar Juice and rind of 2 lemor : 1 quart milk | Dissolve gelatin in hot -water. | | Add sugar, lemon rind and juice Freeze to mushy consistency. Beat | hard and add the quart of milk Freeze again. Makes 10-12 | ings sery Big and little sister like matching dresses in bright solid B il T - |chambray with novelty embroidered clock-and-watch pocket | » Ol omatoes First | design for the bodice. Riviera stripes in many colors form To save time in preparation, dip | the full skirt and sleeves. Crisp uhite collar is removable ripe tomatoes for salads in boiling | / water for about One minute, chill in the refrigerator, and peel when | you're ready to use them or easy laundering. ] ‘Recent Births | el ' Below are recent births reported \ a fa t = , I ) to Pontiac iCty Health Depart- | \ _— ment. The father’s name is given | |for each’ child | a in 9 a Meche » Hughes i T We Nalied Lak TURE) | se ig Harry L Bock. Wa Te ; ae —_— e fF Ca G P at a RdcaraLUPrckese RE Os Deserves Good Frecenice AT stilesk) 208 ° e ( I ' Oak Part : mes H H echig W Bioon Workmanship oe es | a F Ee B A / 4 "y F " Wa i and Materials er Seecua tee | E i177 8 M , } “ ' 1 ' mS UW SOY 1 | / When You Vilar M Oliver W Bomb le . r Barke 7 Rerwick Da ri Kettering. B ghia Reupholst pain te aio eupholster eee Ra E Pia wee R 1 Oak ~ r art - . A "> wee Kees We A Vw t - } K } \ D F ; | Ae A } 8 } > | " ( I eH 7 a i f Ay oa re i ed 3] RB ; ic : 4 FE j Girts Chairs ee | ninkie Ee Sepia re Re-Upholstered Soe ele oe | ’ r A Sa a } I ‘ F ¢ . Fa As Low $35 Gerald A. Doble D As | Rr v Fraleig? R Oak a V g no W OW raul 3 lg. 4523 \ Call Today and Save hd cess kw ae ee 14'4—24% on Manufacturer- Marti c . to-You Prices! } A. Beber | eld Q- yu ices D as J A ert Me } " Nalle Lake ne = F M. Sustar ¥ . ili : Wiltam Oo s P ect | Half-sizers' Cool off in this mM ‘ H e ‘ rR mfjeld | Wwillia wright Charts . N [= Me a4 | bright and breezy style. It’s sew- nen stis ail On Furniture Makers F A Phelps Commerce | simple — no side opening! Just un- d Upholst eho greater Pear * } button the shoulders — slip it on a Parr rarer Myrot . Bir at | 1-2-3 quick! Make several in a “all work guaranteed S‘yrs.” || 5, “ "D. Medie 301 Secor ps | jiffy in cool, tubbable cottons. Cut | Twins | “I = _ 270 Orchard Lake Ave. ak Meek. Srpenaencs iney) | 02 fit the — fuller figure—no ec girl) | alters ems. FE 4-0558 ames R. Gieyre, 407 N. Perry (twin | uiteration Pro vos boy | Pattern 4523: Half sizes 14's, (Advertisement) : (Advertisement) ~ | 1649, 184s, 20's. 22's, 24's Size 16'y takes 4% yards 33-inch. This pattern easy to use, sim- - . E ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has DRY, SWEET UNDERARMS “2: . a i Send 35 cents in coins for this EVEN ON HOT, STICKY DAYS! 4 to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- Use this New Vanishing Cream Deodorant |‘! Press Pattern Department, . 243 West 17th St., New York, New with PERSTOP Daily. Keeps Underarms Dry ae ° ; : York. Print plainly name, address and Odorless—Saves Clothes from Stains | with zone, size and style number. pattern — add 5 ¢ents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing. Send This summer you can get a new kind of pro tection from perspiration and odor—rubbed- in protection. Arrid now contains magic new PERSTOP. Rub it. in—rub perspiration and odor out. Used daily it is actually 11 times as effective as any other leading deodorant in keeping your underarms dry, sweet and mois- ture-free. Safe for mormal skin and fabrics. Get soft, creamy Arrid with PERSTOP today. er i ey Rub it in—rub perspiration eut! No other deodorant gives you Arrid’s exclusive rubbed-in protection. Arrid is America’s largest selling deodorant. So don't be half-safe. Be completely safe— Use Arrid with Perstop to be sure. ea tor who is called in to share the blame. 43¢ A consulting physician is a doc- | So Wonderful for Summer! SHORT, COOL ’n’ SMART Cutting & Styling by Oscar! LANOLIN - ENRICHED No Appointmens Necessary! --~- OPEN WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY & FRIDAY EVENINGS by APPT. h” -'PARISIAN BEAUTY SHOP 7 West Lawrence Over Of Frets "FE 2-4959 Book Store by Alkaline in Concrete Check Your Pool With Litmus Paper Before Stocking. It By HUBBARD COBB Here is the sad story of a man who wanted a garden pool so he went to work and dug a big hole and lined it with concrete and ended up with a pretty fair-look- ing pool He filled it with water and then sat back to enjoy life, but he didn't get much enjoyment because the pool was taken over by a bunch of mosquitoes He found out, however, that the way to get rid of the mos- quitees was to put some fish in the peol. He bought some fish, dumped them in the pool, but they didn't live long. Now his problem is whéther or not to buy more fish, drain the pool and give up the idea, or just get used to the mosquitoes. The reason the fish didn't last long was because of the, strong alkaline that you find in fresh | concrete This will disappear in time but you can hasten things considerably by filling the pool, allowing the water to stand for a few days and then draining. It will also help if the inside of the pool is coated with sodium silicate You can find out whether a concrete pool is safe for fish by testing it with litmus paper which you can buy at drug- stores. Place pink litmus paper in the water. If the paper turns blue, the water is not safe for fish. If the paper remains pink then it's okay. If the paper turns blue, drain the pool, refill and repeat this process at weekly intervals until | the paper remains pink Keep Hats Secured If the grippers of your new shal- 4ow hat do nag secure it sufficiently against spring breezes, slip bobby pins through them. To prevent the pins from peeping out, use the dolls’ size ones you can buy at toy counters ___THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 |Fish Killed Fourteen glorious full-color li- lacs in heavenly lavender § and green — no embroidery, just iron them on aprons, towels, blouses, pillowcases, sheets, curtains, ta- blecloths, napkins! So effective, so easy — washable, too' Wonderful for gifts! Send now! Pattern 717: Transfer of 14 color motifs from 2':x9 inches to 1'4x2 inches. Washable' Send 25 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 egpts for each pat- tern for Ist-cjass mailing. Send to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft Dept., P. O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, New York Print plainly, pattern number, your name, address and zone. Travel ing Can Be Fun for Children Sensible planning before vaca- tion-time will make traveling with the children easier for mom and the other adults in the car. Aside from planning the wardrobe, itine- rary and frequent stops, here are a few suggestions to keep in mind: Use separate luggage. Infants’ garments should be packed sepa- rately, with immediate needs on top for easy access, Tots enter into the spirit of the vacation when they are allowed to {fill their own suitcases — even if mother finds them packed with unmatched shoes and toys, she can rearrange the selection later. There are inexpensive sets of miniature luggage designed ex- pressly for children which in- clude little train cases, overnight bags and hathoxes; many are decorated with favorite cartoon, fairytale and television charac- 4 ters, Give older children responsibili- ties. Allowing a boy or girl to be keeper of the extra key case (should father misplace his) gives the child a feeling of importance. Junior navigators will be thrilled to have custody of the map case with the vacation route marked in heavy crayon for easy following Provide extra comforts. Refresh- ments are best kept in one of the new ‘feed bag’’ containers which fasten over the backrest of the seat; food and liquids are kept at an even temperature, never get spread out all over the car. Tea consumption in England av- erages 11 pounds per person each year, 718 West Huron Street ® jewelry ® China - FLORA-MAE Infants’ Specialty Shop By @ Such @ Such @ That | @ Such SPRUCE UP. YOUR LIVING WITH REBUILT — REFINISHED — REUPHOL- STERED Furniture by Elliott! i i aN ’ mm. PA VS ee 2 Elliott's. UPHOLST ERING | i Piant ‘and Showroom 5390 - 5400 Distie Hwy, ‘Waterford OR 3-1225 Elliott Put New Life in Your Living Room Only Elliott Can Give Your Old Furniture- superb modern styling! glowing beauty! sound experienced craftsmanship! solid —— made to live in comfort! ROOM TODAY 1 | Open Evenings by Appointment FE 2-3220 ® Lingerie ® Linens PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11% S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. Enroliments Available in Day or Evening Classes. Write, phone or call in person for Free pamphlet PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352. _f * *& Andre CBeauty CSalon 2 COLD MACHINE or 4 New Mobile 4 **Multi-Curl”’ se ‘ Mid-Summer Specials! 315° Permanents ... 510 312°° Permanents »- 5 8 Including Any Style-Cut Shampoo and Set Open Wednesday All Day— Friday ‘til9 P.M NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED! IMMEDIATE SERVICE! WAVE MACHINELESS Cutting Haircut $150 $] 75 Floor Pontiac State Bidg.—Ph. FE 5-4490. DRESSES SWIMWEAR SHORTS SEPARATES COATS al July Clearance! Save Now on Summer Clothes SKIRTS — BLOUSES JEWELRY PLAYWEAR TOPPERS 6 {ll Sales Final—No Layaways POL Telegraph at Huron Open Every Night ‘til 9 — Saturday ‘til 6:30 — Sunday 2 to 5 Park Free = in Rear r FLAVORS: .@ Fresh Peach @ Vanilla @ Peppermint @ Ripe Banana @ Pineapple Sherbert @ Chocolate @ Butter Toasted Aimond @ Cherry Vanilla @ Strawberry @ Black Cherry ae DELICIOUS each BUY 3 OR MORE AND SAVE? i en ee (Advertisement) Fajr and lovelie | |. . Z ~ oer ‘ * ° (Advertisement) TIE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 (Advertisement) \ (Advertisement) PONTIAC BEAUTY FEATURES | : Published for Consolidated Cosmetics, Inc., distributors of specialized beauty aids (Advertisement) (Advertisement ) (Advertisement) ° Get Lanolin Plus At All Cosmetic Counters .. ? PONTIAC, MICH, JULY 21, 1954 z VOL. 2 NO. 1 ice. f fs S Feet? fowh a 7 XN a \. Smooth Them Into For Your Smile ' “Crow’s-Feet,” heretofore presumed to be an outrageous trick of Nature,-may be-the result of neglect. It is assumed that the most common cause of these youth-stealing lines is skin dryness! for when dryness is even partially overcome, “crow's-feet” become less noticeable and a more youthful look blooms in the face. By the new and simple process of properly handling dry skin (described below) the younger woman can help herself to iron out her “crow’'s feet” and make them, in fact, glamorous accents for her smile. The older woman, too, by reducing her skin dryness, can soften the appearance of her “crow's-feet,” thereby defeating her age to a pleasing extent. Understand Your ‘’Crow’s-Feet’’ and Dry Skin p Then You Cen Help Them Skin dryness is caused, obviously, by an-tnsufficiency of natural lubricants. And Nature has a- hard time making enough of these essential lubricants to keep up with the rate at which dry atmosphere, improper cleansing and exposure take them away from your skin. “Crow’s-Feet” then deepen and deepen. So you must ask these questions: How can I correct this deficiency so as to make sure that my skin will have enough of these vital substances? How can I help it to overcome its dryness? How can I help it to become more normally supple, soft and smooth, so my “crow’'s-feet” will show less than they do now? These questions have always been difficult to answer, until the discovery of Lanolin Plus Liquid, but now, because of Lanolin Plus Liquid, millions of women have younger-looking skins than they had prior. to their use of it. Why Lanolin Plus LIQUID Does Such Wonders for Your Skin Lanolin Plus Liquid ts not just lanolin. Instead, it is lanolin with a plus — a wonderful plus with a rich content of cholesterols, esters and other lubricants, joined by a patented process with other ingredients to give an unusual penetrating action. Consequently, Lanolin Plus Liquid is able to supply your skin with more than enough lubricants, including cholesterols and esters, to make up for those lost to improper cleansing, dry atmosphere and exposure. Only $1.00 plus tax at all cosmetic counters. GIVE YOURSELF THIS HOME FACIAL TONIGHT— See a Difference Next Morning “4 1. Hold a hot washcloth to your face—par- 3 oS P ticularly around your eyes—for a few sec- a | onds to open the pores, Notice how re- | =, freshed and relaxed your face feels. 4 2. Warm your bottle of Lanolin Plus Liquid '4 under the hot water tap. Gently massage i Lanolin Plus Liguid into your face and around your eyes until your skin begins © to tingle. After a few minutes, wipe your | * face petal fresh and find it smoother. 3. Massage a few more drops of Tanolin Plue Liguid into your skin with emphasas.- _ around your eyes before retiring. Its gen- tle, penetrating action will work while you - Sleep... and you'll awaken next morning ; to find a new -softness and elasticity “crows'-feet” beginning to fade. There is no question about it. Lanolin > Plus Liquid will do wonders for YOUR skin. In fact you could spend $1,000 and not get ; more beauty benefit than you get from a *. $1° bottle of Lanolin Plus Liquid. Get » started tonight. Give yourself a Lanolin ; Plus Home facial. Check your “crow’'s-feet”’ ; NOW! SEE and FEEL the difference to- } morrow morning. YOU WILL! (*Plus tax) Glamorous Accents | ™.: dieses. You'll Suddenly Seem to Have Grown an Entirely New and Flawless Skin! You will be startled when you see yourself - your friends will be startled whé.. they see YOU and oh, how envious they will be! And now comes a truly NEW liquid make-up that will do for you exactly what you want done LANOLIN PLUS LIQUID MAKE-UP. really covers the sins of your skin. Those tiny lines and imperfections you so thoroughly hate, vanish from sight. So amazing is the covering power of this heav- enly liquid, you could, if you | wished, use a shade lighter than your own skin and still have a perfect new-skin look. But it does two more beauty wonders for you 1. It Mstantly_imparts a kind of youth-giving radi- now you can “erase’”’ dark circles— shadows and blemishes. with—. comparison. You either have to agree hearing that here is the answer to dark cir- @tance Max Factor created to hide cies, lines, Pech clang ° 7 - shadows, blemishes from the money will be refunded! serutiny of motion picture and sterision cameras, Now, this epg amc - “i —— oes very day in, day out b air, Natural, Medium, atu- the beauties of Pmt y ral, Tan, Leep Tan, one of which will is available to you in aformas ‘~4tch your colores perfectly, So to use as a lipstick. ret this wonder-working Raper el ay... you te wit AFEW STROKES OF ERACE and swiftly, struction booklets *™ effectively, imperfections can disap- your favorite a on a way applying r metic. You apply Erace before put- Ping on your regular make-up. a at the startling ___ SIMMS BROTHERS — MAIN FLOOR — COSMETICS . ‘ . * 59¢ CREME RINSE SHAMPOG Plus ico AND ChEME tinegy Combination OFFER... Flow Ca shampoo “;; and 59¢ creme rinse. REGULARLY $t.59- 7H 8d | LIMITED TIME ONLY SIMMS Ae. 98 North Saginaw St. Tbhat-is because its five + shades are the living colors of ‘your skin. They LOOK alive. The living shade most flattering to you is easy to find, teo, as you will discover when you see them all. 2. LANOLIN PLUS LIQUID MAKE-UP containing pure Lanolin in a very effective form, helps to soften and smooth your skin every min- ute you wear it. Imagine a make-up that not only gives you the ap- pearance of having instantly grown a new, flawless and younger-looking skin, but that also makes your skin, softer feeling and smoother looking. $1 plus tax at all cos- metic counters. Indeed, there is nothing in all the world like Lanolin Plus _ Liquid He Ever Held Before This Entirely new kind of lotion does wonders for - your hands Lanolin Plus Hand Lotion actually MAKES your hand s5s smoother by making them actually softer. Amply rich in lano- lin (yet not greasy at all’, Lanolin Plus Hand Lotion performs its miracles by sup- plying an abundance of pene- trating, lubricating choles- terols and esters to your hands. Results are unbeliev- able, until you see them your- | self. Then, when you find he can’t leave your hands alone, you'll KNOW how truly won- derful Lanolin Plus Hand Lotion really is. $1 plus tax at ail cosmetic counters. Appli- | cator pump free of extra | charge is very handy. No cap to take off the bottle and put | back on, Softer Hands Than | This New ; * & Liquid Cleanser Softens as It Cleanses The fresh, clean feel of your skin after its first cleansing with this creamy liquid will make you promise yourself that you'll never again bother with other cleansing methods. For Lanolin Plus Liquid Cleanser, richly endowed with lanolin and its rich bgse of esters and cholesterols, penetrates your skin and softens as it cleanses. Lanolin Plus Liquid Cleanser is compounded so that there are no harsh drying effect. Instead, it offers the wonderful lubricating influence of Lanolin itself that combats drying conditions due to lack of natural oils. There’s a good reason why lanolin is so beneficial to your skin. It is almost identical to the natural oils of human skin. So when Nature's: own lubricants are so closely duplicated, it’s no wonder that your skin responds quickly and eagerly. LANOLIN PLUS LIQUID CLEANSER should be a “must” in your daily skin care. It’s amazingly effective ... delightfully refreshing ... and so economical! Only one dollar plus tax at all cosmetic counters. Totally New Kind of Shampoo Not only a perfect cleanser, but a beauty treatment for your hair, too. Fills your hair with millions of dancing highlights and puts new spring in your curls, at the same time making your hair not only beautifully managedble, but softer and more silken to the touch. Lanolin Plus Shampoo is $1 (no tax) at all cosmetic counters. Be a Smoothie All Over From Top to Toe and Feel Better Dressed (Your Girdle Slips on Easier, too) will feel silky-smooth when you caress yourself with this lanolin-rich body lotion — after your bath. Lanolin Plus Body Lotion imparts a soft- ness and exquisite loveliness that is new. You'll begin by slipping into your girdle with more ease and the feeling of luxury that follows somehow makes your clothes seem smarter than before. The large 12-ounce bottle of Lan- olin Plus Body Lotion is only $1.50 plus tax at all cosmetic counters. . Between Shampoos Keep Your Hair Shining and Perfectly Manageable © = Date tonight? No time for a shampoo? Brush a few drops of Lanolin Plus for the Hair through your crowning glory and look more than lovely. Its lanolin action, too, of course, does wonders for your hair. Before or after shampoo, it makes and keeps your hair gleaming and more easily manageable than you ever believed it could be, re- | gardless of how much. ex- posure it has had to sun, wind or too much dry at- mosphere. Men find it a won- derful grooming aid, too. Lanolin Plus for the hair is $1 at all cosmetic counters. Good News For You Who Prefer Cleansing Cream Now you have a cleansing cream that replenishes your skin with a new supply of cholesterols and esters each time you use it. But this won- derful softening action is not at the expense of cleansing thoroughness. Lanolin Plus Cleansing Cream for Dry Skin seems to dig out every tiny a dry skin and you prefer a cleansing’ cream, this oné will give’ you immediate and beautiful results. Lanolin Plus Cleansing Cream for Dry Skin is $1 plus tax at all cos- metic counters. Make-Up. Special Size . . . take your choice of eight COTY classics in this generous bottle. Each one, a world- famous fragrance beloved for years! Special Atomizer . get the new “Lock” Atomizer with your favorite COTY TOILET WATER. Won't: leak, spill or evaporate! Special Price...COTY TOILET WATER complete / with new “Lock’’ Atomizer and travel container! 98 .N. Saginaw St. } GREAT VALUE L'ORIGAN ©@ MUSE @ L'AIMANT @ METEOR @ EMERAUDE @ A SUMA I Ounce Size with Atomizer . —Main Floor NEW “LOCK” ATOMIZER given with Your Favorite C C)TY Toilet Water Fqvorite Fragrances— PARIS @ STYX it Seceseeeeseeseeseesesseeecece COSMETIC DEPT, MAIN FLOOR $6.50 VALUE $3.75 The fragrance value of the year! The cologné. . . and the 4 perfumes—-TABU, 20 Carats, Emir and Plastine for the price of the cologne alone. (Plus tax.) Pog se f eeeeceee * SSSSSSeeeeeseeeeeeee { _ t = { . ‘ Ultra-modern . . . completely different. Wear it to shake your world a little! Toilet Water $150 : *% Purse Perfume ..$2.00 * Stick Cologne ..$1.00 * Perfume .. ..$15.00 “Denee Fragrance Windfall 4 Ounce TABU Cologne and - Four Purse Flacons of DANA Perfumes “Every square inch of you — speck of dirt. So, if you have. h THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 CMON OUT and JOIN the FUN at Ain tihes AN ALL-EXPENSE VACATIC aN is —/ during the PH JAMBOREE at these Leading Tel-Huron Stores! = Py Shop and Save i . HELP US SELECT “MISS PONTIAC’ Sponsored by the PONTIAC JUNIOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ~ =: and Stay et one of the febulous THE TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER ee Wns meals a day and many other To qualify for entry, girls must be between 18 to 23 years Only unmarried girls who have resided in the Pontiac area for at vacation wonders are yours of age, high school graduates or students, and all those least one year are eligible to compete at no cost to you! i under 21 must have their parents’ consent. Contestants for the title will be judged on the basis of posse, Personality, character, beauty, talent. a. T yoAll| eaeace tear "Fly Delt C&S to Miami via luxurious scheduled ht Lath : J —Jp . hi t win 41Nes8 Pic ‘n’ Pay Drug Store : | Enter Your ‘OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK: Sen's Weer Favorite Now! : - MURRAY SISTERS » For the “MISS PONTIAC” peng t For TIAG” CONTEST ap sNAME .........0.....0. 00.44... . Town & Country Store ' ' SANDER’S HADDRESS 6... Retail Confectioners : SHOE BOX tAGE seston eg bevpessnvenonn denn : ALL EXPENSE Family Shoe Store ‘ . TW S. S$. KRESGE ‘PHONE ....................... tr TRIP FOR 0 Your Family Thrift Centre ' Queenan ewe BEBE BE EE Nothing to buy . . . just BOSTON SHOES an Santen Mee ort Ne Later Than Saturday, pick up on entry blenk Ledies’ Fashion Shoes 2 ad ° in any store in Tel-Huron. Wem set Applicetion blenks| * acl me ca WINKLEMAN’S - should be sent tothe Pon-| | : = —_— Fine Fashions for Women tiec Junior Chamber of | store in Tel-Huron. WONDERLAND ti«zs ; Commerce, at the Hotel : Infants’ and Children’s Weer ms Weldren. — —WRIGLEY’S | Super Market OVER PAGE \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 . a a es — He agke d the Utah attorney gen- ° \ . removal of his gall bladder and | Truman Takes Ist Ride ape oirian 2 Aid Program Legality eral to find what legal steps ait. Pontiac's Most Complete | | Since Leaving Hospital | 7, to Be Tested by Lee citizen or a public official “must - (Selection of ) le trip appe arently didn't tire take to prove that “it is a viola- Unpainted Furniture ‘ | KANSA CITY ® — Former | him at all,”” said’ Mr Truman.| SADT LAKE CITY u—Gov. J.| tion of our U. S. Constitution when ‘He seems to be getting stronger | Bracken Lee said yesterday he is|/our government gives our hard- | The . : President -Harry 5 Truman took | b the re E Ig ay U hig“fifs automobile ride yesterday | all the time going to test legality of the federal | earned money to foreign nations.“ TT Pick and Point Store | government's foreign aid program : since leaving Research Hospital. | Air consists of about 78 per cent | by bringing action before the U.S.| Sorrento, in southern Italy, is 143 Ooklond Ave. FE 5-9562 | Broom Makers Stage where he underwent _ surgery for | of nitrogen by volume ‘Supreme Court built on cliffs 160 feet high Sitdown Strike Over = ——— 4 Piece Work Wage YOU ALWAYS SAVE AT | ene” *Columbia BICYCLE | i cans wn st a room last night—men who “‘want = Stur construc- , ti dy oar to work and don't want charity.” The 20 are blind. . . , vality tes. New Cleans sé ’ » > eam lier They are broom makers who n 4 ” ‘ = Aj AX To a Cunningham's Pharm. cist your prescription is per- sonal business. He respects the confidence you've placed in him and fully realizes his responsibility. Relie on this and bring your prescription 7 \ | to Cunningham's. i: / f [Especial otter] f é “¥ ' SF | Departure brakes have lost their jobs and they're With the sweet smelli DRUG STORES ran wong on a sitdown strike 95 | The men took over the euitatinl ‘of the Pittsburgh branch of the Pennsylvania Assn. for the Blind ict egy Tama a foo ~ §ALE DAYS THRU SUNDAY 25cSACCHARIN Tablets of leaving, police were called. Officers made no attempt to evict | | the men. A detail watched as ea 100 TABLETS: %yGRAIN -SAVE!/ONLY.... : The blind broom makers went ¥ on strike last March 2, protesting j HEY BOYS! am y ¥) nar at d J ie Lhe # | James Leri, 29, married and the fathe f one child, said 7 . ° “We had ‘bom said $1.13 a dozen OUNCE CAN : LIMIT é CANS : ONLY. . Cc 3-speed gears—tool bog—pump and stand. with a marked deck of course, marked in Braille | Lovely 2-Piece f || Salad Y»- || Dressing Set next step. A few played cards— We now have the famous Sportsman Whizzer! Just J} tried to cut us to 78 cents a dozen and we walked off the job. But Think! A smal] down payment and 1 year on the a short time ago we offered to igo back to work for 90 cents a ENGLISH BICYCLES $4395 [fiir cite "inen tated of the to make brooms, The association REGULAR SIZE BOTTLE OF 36 PUELS..... MAXWELL SMOKELESS balance. | i Your complete new Whizzer oe decided to put on a sitdown ‘ Ci a rette Makes plccory fasbal ah whe ee strike and went to the cafeteria 4 MILK OF g Ideal 3 lined. Big 3 h 5 Winns for a meeting yesterday. Some of Gift motor. Kick starter. Up to the association officials called pe- Cc DE LA XER lice and said we had to get out 100 TABLETS -LOWARDS BRAND ‘ONLY.. 100 mi. per gallon. 5-40- mph by 5 p.m. Well, we're still here and we are going to stay for awhile. We might try to picket 5 the place later in the day. | don’t | know just what we'll do. z | “We just want to go back to work and we don't want charity— FLUE VAX end CiCONSs that s -all there is to it.’ | The plant operated by the as- EASY TERMS — SMALL DOWN PAYMENT! J s:ation has several departments etal, Porce aa elite name | About 100 blind, in addition to the 6 MONTHS ON BALANCE! /broom makers, are employed ° ‘ However, there isn't enough work to absorb the blind broom makers. WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL! a | tke and Mamie Can Sit 4 Al E y on the Love Seat Soon OSHKOSH, Wis. — President B-inch diameter plate, with cord. and Mrs. Eisenhower's love seat ——— should be available soon. iy G (= SSCOVALTINE Large aweenens Pt hil 0 CHOCOLATE FLAVORED: smoking with your favorite brand and a Relaxer. Styled in smart looking clear cut Cuts Down Cc glass, with decorative gold-trim Smoking edge ; c Not a cigarette, not a tobac- { co, does not light. Alternate aA 2-PIECE DISH SET = 3” | Genuine hand painted complete service for four S. T. Ginsberg, general man- BIC y CLE H ager of the Badger Lumber & Manufacturing Co. here, says the love seat was shipped with two |sofas yesterday to the Denver Free Parki 20 E. Lawrence St. Brey Trims «PE 22-7221 firs reach which the President ordered them. All Purpose . "Sticks ¢ te any Filet Surface . SHOWER SP Wall Can Wall Attachment OF ENER With swivel spray adjustable $198 9 w tee @ny angle for showering. Fits on any wall in @ 8: i Still Going. Strong! Plenty of bargains are still available in all Departments. COME! am oree GAVE! Infants’: Wear, Boys’ Wear to 16. Girls’ and Sub-Teens — Apparel for Chubbies, Toys, Gifts. | MYONDERLAND Ig : Here's Just a Few of the Many Savings in All Departments: : Reg. $1.59 Girls’ Shorts—Halters Smart styles, cool plisse,-cottons. Sises’S to 6x. 110 14.77. Reg. *4.99 Girls’ Dresses or CHAIN Pits Over Door Identification | an meter TQS asst cotors POE Heavy base, motor \X 7 bi safety gurd. NS Mere Smoking Satisfaction DRYmatic PI PES temovebie $495 Brier Bow! ® Gold Plate Stem * © Lightweight ® Smokes Cool Extra Big Beach | Towels Sweet and cool summer ayes, cotton Plisse. Sizes 1 to 6x and 7 to 14. Reg. $3.00 Girls’ Cotton Skirts 1° haere eT oe ona solids. _ “ea 3 9 } Reg. $2.49 Girls’ —Boys’ Pajamas $ i ce. | Be 2 and 3-pes. styles in cool, no-iron plisse. SARAKA A choice of sun- bright. gay & a? Ay pee pened os noo poOnopy pe se pons on og oanbedous La xative ily ee pile terry cloth 10 Ounce Box For Lavelier Hair BOBBI PINCURL PERMANENT it's All NEW—Easier .. . Faster Reg. $21.99 Girls’ Spring Coats a = inal clearance, all wool toppers and full lengths. Sizes 7 to 14... 12.88 Sizes 8 to 6x... .......0........ Reg. $1.49 Boys’ Polos—Shirts 44 c Fine cotton knit polo shirts, plisse and gabardine play shorts. ~ $1.09 Value ENOZ SALTS mines S to 10-.- ol. cc cee cere ccucss esses sas Reg. $2.99 Boys’ Sport Shirts $y44 Cool and dressy, no ironing. Plisse, cottons, nylons. g. ’ : Full 13/, Ounce Dice ats | Sizes 4tol4..............., Pence es sala ee cere a epee teu, ombowe ‘. ae ” i i 3 s M unce Box Reg. $2.99 Birdseye Diapers ~ AQ9 " arkling clear. Seve today. First quality. Absorbent. Birdseye. Limit 2 dozen........ DOZ. ‘ Reg. $1.59 Baby Sun Suits Darling plisse, bloomer styles. _Bises ee ey er ee re 54""x54" a Plastic Va > Tablecioth | MosauITO Tin of 12 Only Assorted Colors: Linen pattern; sorted colors. 23+ 79+ |PRICES GOOD at BOTH STORES 3+ 2 SAG oor So ‘ . " , a , ‘ Snep-Back With tanback Tablets ay Ta A beautiful, all-purpose chair of sturdy wood construction with canvas seat and back built to last for years. For lawn, porch; boat, recreation rooms, efc. As- YJ Convenient to carry Lerge Size Pocket Size “Best for Children” 39 TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Open Thurs., Fri., Sot. “til 9 P.M. FE 5-9955 MAI iE THIK AL THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 All-Star By TOM BRANAGAN CHICAGO W—The College Aill- Star football squad, its roster completed last night, begins train- ing Friday for the Aug. 13 charity game with the pro-champion De- troit Lions. A total of 51 stars et colleges throughout the country will report to Head Coach Jim Tatum of Maryland at Purdue University. They will have three full weeks to gear themselves for the annual Soldier Field battle with the Lions, a vVeteran-packed club that has Gridders Prep for Battle With Lions won the National Football League title two years in a row. * ¢ *@ The Lions beat a similar group of All-Stars 24-10 in last year's classic. This gave the pros their llth victory in the series, which this year observes its 20th anni- versary. The collegians have won six games and two ended in ties * > * The pros undoubtedly will be favored to repeat as victors in the coming game—their experience, to give the college boys too much to cope with. However, the All-Stars will have the advantage of playing under the limited substitution rule—which means the Lions will have to play both ways, offensively and defen- sively, a practice they normally shun. The colleges, after a post- World War II fling with the so- called “Two Platoon’ football practiced by the pros, have revert- ed to the old two-way game This issue caused some contro- | Parker, the Lions’ coach, coming out strongly against subjecting his boys to the rigors of playing both offense and defense when they aren't used to it. * Lo = He was overruled after a con- ference between NFL Commission- er Bert Bell and Arch Ward, Sports Editor of the Chicago Tribune, which sponsors the annual grid show * * ia Members of the All-Star squad individually and as a unit, figuring | versy a few weeks ago with Buddy | have been appointed over the last Foxy C By JOE REICHLER NEW YORK .—Casey Stengel is @s crazy as a fox ... and twice as sly. Talking to newspapermen before last night's game with Chicago, the shrewd New York Yankee manager spied Whitey Ford, his ace southpaw, sitting within ear- shot of his gravel-voice. “You want to know who is the best lefthander in the league’’’ he asked. ‘That feller (Billy) Pierce with the White Sox. He's better than my feller. Sure I picked my feller to pitch the All-Star game But that was only because the ofh- er feller had just recovered from a sore arm. But the other feller is better.’ . * + Ford undoubtedly heard every word uttered by Casey, but he said | strong pertor mance —_ f ' | } nothing. A few moments later he arose and began throwing warmup pitches. About two and a half hours later, Ford walked off the field | with a neat eight-hitter, after pitch- | ing t Yankees to a 4-1 victory | - over icago that kept the Yan- | kees hot on the heels of the -Cleve- land Indians. Reached in the clubhouse later, Ford declined to take issue with | Stengel. He admitted he was de- termined to show his manager that he was a pretty good pitcher, too The 24-year-old ex-serviceman turned in one of his best efforts of the year. He struck out five and walked only two as he posted his | ninth victory over the White Sox | since he entered the league in 1950 He has lost only once to them It was Whitey’s opi straight t after «a poor UPHILL WORK—On the new bicycle track at Vancouver coming Dominion daily workouts for the Colin Dickinson of New Zeal#nd. of South Rhodesia, Sharedelon of South Africa. “roadwork” on the track. The sprint champion; meter Olympic champion an@ Australian champion, AP Wirephote B.C. for Games, are (from left) 1,000 meter ch∓ John Vanwyx Lionel Cox of Australia, 1.000 and Tommy riders do about 60 miles a day TV Boxing Fans to See Jackson Again IBC Planning Return Bout Between Slade, ‘Hurricane’ By PAT ROBINSON NEW YORK (INS) — Although Jimmy Slade showed him up for the paluka he is and Nino Valdes stiffened him in two heats, TV ad- dicts have not seen the last of Hurricane Jackson. Believe it or not, the Interna- tional Boxing Club, already is planning a return bout between Major League Results AMERICAN LEAGUE and 61 @ _ New York ......... 223 «1 — Guieago ...........- 70M CSS Detront osceecees o>» o . s = 4 < we z Washington ......... 6% © 45 D% Baltimore ro ‘8 «356 29% Philadelphia 5 - 348 at New York, 4 p.m.—Trucks (12-5) — Wiesler = veland o.m —Houtteman “brewer “e5) . 73 pm (7-3) ja, 7 p.m —Zuverink RESULTS —Turley (7-10) vs Stone Detroit at Prilbdels (34) vs Dixon (2-5) TUESDAY'S Detroit 12-4. Philadelphia 0-3 Washington 9. Balt Cleveland 4. imore 1 Boston 5 (le-inning tie— 4-4) ¢ New’ ‘Yor @ Chicero, 1°30 , pan —thagite (® vs 16-10). Gusmaat i 1 (13 ineings) eae't bean: st schedu! DAY'S GAMES Brooklyn at innati, 2 p.m 2 at. Milwaukee, 2:30 p.m. Phisbarah St.Louls, § pm N York at Chicago, 1:30 pm | Slade and Jackson, or they may put him in with Roland La Starza. As one official put it: “Why not? Sure, the gauy's a paluka and he can’t fight a lick but what of it? The TV fans will stand still for anything. Didn't they even make a here of Chuck Davey? Se why shouldn't we continue to collect all that nice TV cabbage with Jackson?’ What about Valdes? Well, the big Cuban certainly proved that with no handcuffs on him, he can certainly handle a Jackson. But could he handle a Rocky Marciano” Valdes is now shouting for the first crack at Marciano but he won't get it.” Marciano will take Ezzard Charles again in Septem- ber and probably take him fast this next time: That leaves Valdes available for a nice date with Marciano in Miami next February. And what are Valdes’ chances of licking Marciano? Just about what yours would be. Favored Entries |} Vania Hes record, which once was 9-H. * * * spring 2-4, is now ‘I was all mixed up early this | year,’ Whitey explained. *‘My con- | trol was off, my curve ball wasn't fastened a thing and 1] sceme “d to be | the bullpen asey Stirs Up « a Win going from bad to worse. I finally } lost all confidence in myself and if it wasn't for Jim Tyrner (Yan- kee coach), I might be -sitting in now or pitching for Kansas City, He straightened me out. ” several weeks. The final two, half- backs Paul Cameron and Bill Stits of UCLA, were named last night. Tatum will have the following greats of the 1953 college season available for duty - against the Loins: ENDS—Don Dohoney, State; Bill Fenton, Iowa; Gary Knafelc, Colorado; John Carson, Georgia; Carlton Massey, Texas; Bob Mischak, Army; Ken Hall, North Texas State: Dick Deitrick, Pittsburgh; Hosea Sims, Mar- quette; Sam Morley, Stanford TACKLES—Art Hunter, Notre Dame; George Jacoby, Ohio State, Harry Jagielski, Indiana: Ed Meadows, Duke; Charles Doud, UCLA; Stan Jones and Bob Mor- Michigan gan, Maryland; Melvin Brown, Oklahoma; Dean Chambers, Wash- ington; Matham Gressette, Clem- son, GUARDS — Menil .Mavraides, Notre Dame; Crawford Mims, Mississippi: George Timberlake, Southern California; Morgan Wil- liams, Texas Christian; Bob Hant- la, Kansas; Jerry Clem, Southern Methodist; Phil Branch, Texas. CENTERS—Kim Schrader, Notre Dame; Jerry Hildenberg, Iowa; Ed Beatty, Mississippi; Bill McHenry, Washington & Lee QUARTERBACKS — Zeke Brat- kowski, Georgia; Bob Garrett, Stanford; Lamar McHan, Arkan- sas; Cotton Davidson, Baylor; Vince Dooley, Auburn HALFBACKS — Johnny Lattner re Dame; Paul Cameron, “LA; Veryl Switzer, Kansas State; Bobby Cavezos, Texas Tech.; Bill Stits, UCLA; Dick Noland and Chester Hanulak, Maryland; Jerry Norton, Southern Methodist; Gene Filipski. Villa nova. FULLBACKS — Neil Worden, Notre Dame; Stan Wal- lace, Illinois; Bucky McElroy, Mis- sissippi Southern; Ralph Fenton, Maryland, Tommy Allman, West Virginia; Rick Casares, Florida We + * Assisting Tatum with the coach- ing will be Bud Wilkinson. Okia- homa; Chuck Taylor, Stanford; Bob Voigts, Northwestern; Stu Holcomb, Purdue, and Forrest Evashevski, lowa. Worden, Advancein Penn State Net Test Coss Is Only Casualty Among Seeded Players in Tournament PHILADELPHIA U®—Top-seeded | players entered the quarter-finals today of the State 55th annual Pennsyl- | Court } championships at Merion | Cricket Club in suburban Haver- | Men's Grass tennis ford j Only break in the seeded ranks came yesterday when Tim Coss Eastern Intercollegiate champion from Swarthmore and Washington, D.C., eliminated severnth-seeded Jack Frost, San Francisco, 6-4, 8-6. . . * Today's pairings pit top-seeded Vie Seixas, the nation’s No. 2 player’ and defending champ. against Don Lesch, Los- Angeles Seixas breezed to victory 6-0, 6-2 over Fred McNair of Baltimore yesterday . * Second-seeded Art Larsen of San Leandro, Calif, meets Don Flye Tacoma, Wash. Larsen played two matches yesterday to catch up with the field. The former U‘S. champion “whipped Dick Henry, Merion, 64, 6-3, ang? Richard Gains, Edgartown. Mass., 6-3, 6-3 Straight Clark, third-seeded from Pasadena. Calif, defeated William Tully, New York State champion, 6-2, 6-2 yesterday and | meets Bill Quillian, Seattle, in day's round. Fourth-seeded Ham San Francisco to- | — > “Wk « AP Wirephete ICE WATER IS WONDERFUL STUFF—National | the background, Frank douses his head and neck League umpire Frank Dascoli, sweltering back of the plate in 110 degree field heat at Crosley Field, said: it's _wondertul " While fans look on in | won, 2-1. ‘Ice water | with a ice water yesterday's 13-inning Reds-Giants game. soaked towel in the 9th inning of Giants Richardson meets Fred Hagi “Motors 9 Gains ‘District's Caddies Enjoy Other matches today pit fifth- seeded Hal Burrows, Charlottes- ville, Va., against Jerry De Witt of San Francisco; sixth-seeded Gil Shea against Allen Morris of At- lanta, Ga.; and eighth-seeded Ed died Moylan, Trenton, N. J. against Charles Masterson of Washington, DE ‘Honor’ Caddies Get Jobs at State’s Open At this week's conference of taddy superintenden{s and caddy- masters of the DDGA, it was de- cided to send squads of 15 “‘honor’’ caddies from each of the district clubs to Lakepointe for the Michi- gan Open Play in the state's big tourney at Lakepointe begins a week from Thursday, ends Sunday of that week. | Special rates and cash mileage for trips to and from the Open will be provided the boys, says Pat Brazil, Orchard Lake caddymaster. Drawings for players will be made™ July 27 at Lakepointe. Bill’s on the Beam! Bil} Graham, general profes- sional at the Bloomfield Hills Country club hasn’t played as much golf as usual this year three SNE We Tat three i 5. t's staying on the beam for an oc- casional participant. in League Play Adds Half-Game Edge by 6-4 Victory Over | Milford Merchants League-leadmg took a half-game lead over idle Stadium Inn in City Men's Softball win- General League standings last nicht ning 6-4 Milford Merchants Coachers overcame a 3-2 defi- cit in the 5th inning, when three runs crossed the plate on two Over hits, a walk and an error. GMC | added an insurance run in the 6th when Jenkins singled, ad- vanced on an error and came in on a fielder’s choice play. 3irmingham. Riteway kept alive its hopes for a tie for the cham pionship by edging CIO, 2-1. Win ning run came in the last of the ith inning, when Charles Revnolds doubled and was driven in by Jerry Wedge's single GMC > oo1 1310-6 7 1 Milford ’. 102 001 0-4 7 Wieeler and Pocci sila; Dudzineki apd Reed cIo 100 000 O-1 8 1 Birmingham 000 001 1-2 6 2 Wright and 6tilweil Waiker and Kothe The lorest area of ‘Canada is approximately 1,220,405 square miles, ‘Hot’ Yanks Still Trail By BEN PHLEGAR Associated Press Sportswriter What does a feller have to do to get into first place in this league? Casey Stengel didn't ask it in so many words but it certainly would be an appropriate question today for the resident genius of the New York Yankees. * . + Stengel is running the hottest ball club in the American League. Only 3% games off the pace on July 1, the Yankees have won 17 out of 19 games gmce then. * And they still aren't on. top. Last night they came withif one putout of reaching their objective. The Yanks fought off third place Chicago handily, winning 4-1. The huge scoreboard in Yankee Stadi- um showed Boston leading Cleve- land 5-3 after eight innings. But in the ninth inning at Boston Al Smith coaxed Willard Nixon for a walk with two out and Bobby Avila drilled his second home run of the contest to tie the score. That's the way it stayed through seven More innings as it. wound up a 5-5 tie after 16 innings with the league curfew forcing a. So, by four percentage s, the Indians stayed in-first place. It missed being an exact tie be- cause the Yankees have played two more games than Cleveland, winning one more and losing one more. * * * The issue may be settled tem- porarily this weekend when Cleve- land invades New York for three Indians Keep AL Lead by 4 Percentage Points as They Tie Bosox in 16 Innings games beginning Friday. night. While the American League race ! Brooki was tightning. the National League became more lopsided with the New York Giants stfetching their | “Srrs—schoendienst, St.Louis, 130; Bell advantage over Brooklyn to seven —— ae "a eee hob et : Snider ir - ; oon Anais games, their longest lead of the |“ DouBLEs—beil, Cinemnait, 28: Snider Rreoklyn, 27; Schoendienst, St : 8; year. Kiner. Chic 23; Thomas, Pittsburgh * * * and Le ‘st Loe. 2 . The. Giants won a 13.inning| piRipee Seater, eres, 81 lanes: struggle in Cincinnati 2-1 and Moon. § A Lane 7: + Ollliars, Brooklyn, ware. Brooklyn lost in 10 innings at Chi-| “Yome RUNS—Mays, New York. cago 3-2. St. Louis defeated Phila- delphia 4-2 in the only other Na- tional League action. Other results in the American League included a 91 triumph by Washington over Baltimore and two .more defeats for the Phila- delphia Athletics, their 9th and 10th in a row, this time to Detroit 120 and 43. Motors | its 13th victopy in 15 starts. | Tourney Play | By H. GUY MOATS | the of the | |summer vacation, to give caddies | |of the Detroit District Golf Assoc _ j ation some recreation, and experi- | tournament lines, the | Round Robin Caddie league has | proved immensely popular. This is |the word from Pat Brazil, caddy- | master at Orchard Lake Country Club and ‘“‘father"’ of the league. Instituted at start ence along “We have a dozen teams play- fing each week in this league,” Pat reports. ‘There are six on the West and the same number ‘League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUL BATTING .- Noren, New York, 358: Avila Cleveland 346. Minoso, Chicago 324; Rosen, Cleveland, 318 Susby. Washington and Mantle, New York 115 RUNS—Minose, Chicago, 75 York, 76. Fua. Chicago and Yost ington, 65; Avila, Cleveland, 64 RUNS BATTED IN—Minoso. Chicago and Rosen. Cleveland, 72; Mantle. New York, 70. Berra. New York. @9. Doby. Cleveland 4 Mantie, New Wash- HITS—Fox, Chicago, 117: Busby, Wash- ington, 112; Mueso. Chicago, 111. Avila Cleveland, 43; Vernon. Washington, 106 DOUBLBS—Vernon, Washington, 21: Me- Dougaid. New York, 18; Bolling and Pier- sall, Boston and Avila, Cleveland, 17. TRIPLES — Runnels, Washington. 13: Vernon, Washington 12: Minoso, Chicago, 10, Tuttle. Detrott and Mantle, New York. b HOME RUNS—Mantle, New York, 19; Deby and Rosen. Cleveland. 16; Sievers, Washington, 15; Minoso, Chicago, Boone, Detroit, Zernial, Philadelphia’ and Vernon | Washington 4 ‘OLEN BASES—Jensen, Boston, 13 aca and Rivera, Chicago, 12: Busby, Te ©: Fox and Michaels, Chi- c oO *SrtcHING—Reynolds. New York, 10-1, 906; Feller, Cleveiand. 7-1 875. Con suegra, Chicago, 12-3, 800, Morgan, New Yor <2 ; Lepat, New York, &-3, 777 STRIKEOUTS—Turley, Ballimore, 108 Trucks, Chicago, #2; Wynn. Cleveland, 8; Pierce, Chicago, 62; Coleméar,. Baltimore 80 er, tow 359; Muel- ler, New York, ‘be, Musial, St.Louis, 339; Schoendienst, 8t Louis Beil Cincimmati, 337 RUN isial,’ St.Louis, 77; Mays, New York and Schoendienst, St Louis, 75; Snider, yn, 76: Bell, Circinnati, 69 RUNS BATTED [N—Musial, St.Louis, 87; Hodges, Brooklyn and Jablonski, 8t Louis, 78 ll, Cineinnati, 77, Snider, Brooklyn and Mays, New York Sauer, Chicago 27; er nae Breckiyn and Klusee wski, Cini. nati STOLLER BASES—Bruton, Milwaukee, 18; 6; Cincinnati, outs, La Methews. Milwau- Louts, 14-2, See De New York. 3, x, We 700; Grissom my Maglie, New. York 692 Ra Anionelll, Kew Roberts ia York, 9: Erskine and spahn ir Milwaukee, ™. in Own Loop on the East division roster, rep- resenting 12 private clubs.” Pat explained that the teams play weekly on a 4ball-best ball basis, and the schedule includes 10 matches for each club team of six players. Player's are rotated to give all a chance to Play Season 5 Sports Pages i in Today’s Pontiac Press ends -in August All boys must be regularly listed caddies, under 18 years of age Current leaders are Onkland Hills for the West (4-2) and Frank- lin Hills East (3-1). Match points are based on both 9 and 18 hole ecards and ‘for individual match wins. A match has a total of 27 points Orchard Lake plays O'Shanter today, with the OL team including Jack Reynolds, No. 1, Jack Brown No. 2, Fd McWest, No. 3. Larry Hollister, No. 4, Lloyd Sappington No. 5 and a new lad, Roger Steel of Detroit, No. 6. All but Steel are Pontiac area boys. Rest of the league standings: WEST EAST Pine Lake 3-1 Western 2 Tam O'Shanter 2-2 Birmingham 2 Orchard Lake 2-3 Plum Hollow 1! Bimfteld Hills Hes Red Run 1 Knollwood 0-3 Forest 6 cate Tam) | Big Stuff for. Juniors By BILL, MARTIN Two no - hitters featured yester- day's &game City Junior Baseball League card, Neither game went the regulation seven innings, A Class F contest was called after only two innings when Boys’ Club Americans piled up a 21-1 margin over St, George. Jim Skin- ner held the losers hitless, struck out six and } walked one. Winners a (en Reds Tebbetts Top Choice for Pilot of Year Former Tiger Catcher Has Done Sensational Job at Cincinnati By GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK w — At the rate Birdie Tebbetts is going, there should be little difficulty in elect- ing the Manager of the Year for 194. With the National League race entering its second half, the freshman pilot of the Cincinnati Redlegs has turned in a job little short of sensational. | A year ago at this time the Red- legs, with almost exactly the same talent, were floundering in the sec- ond division under that hard_task- master Rogers Hornsby. They nev- er attained the 500 mark under the Rajah, and they were destined to wind up a bedraggled sixth, 37 games off the top * * * Today the slugging Westerners, goaded and. smartly directed by their new manager, are battling tooth and nail for third place be- hind the Giants and Brooklyn and, on their current form, must be conceded at least an _ outside chance of pulling one of the biggest upsets of recent baseball history. Few experts gave the club a hope of finishing any higher than it did last season. Thirds place would represent a genuine triumph for the popular Birdie. . * * Probably the only one not great- [ly surprised by the way the Red- legs are staying in there and slug- ging with the leaders, despite their uncertain—pitching. is Teb- betts himself. The stocky ex- catcher who took over after a single year of minor league man- agerial experience at Indianapolis never ceased to swear stoutly in the spring that he was going to climb over some clubs — “and I don't give a d—n which ones they are.” Robinson Puts Finger on Black Marketeers PARIS (UP)’— Police today said former world middleweight box- ing champion Sugar Ray Robinson was the finger man in the arrest of two black market operators. Robinson, starring in a Paris mu- sical revue, told police he bought $700 on the black market from the men and did not find he had been fleeced until a bank teller told him the bills were counterfeit. The boxer-dancer spotted the op- |< erators again and informed police The operators were identified as Waclaw Souhrada, 32, of Prague, and Isidore (Zizzi) Ben Ali, 33, an Algerian. 7 Publinx Champ Plays in National Amateur DALLAS & — Champion of the National Public Links Golf tourna- ment will play in the National Amateur Tournament at Detroit Aug. 23-28. Gene Andrews of Pacific, Pali- sades, Calif., and Jack Zignmer- man of Dayton, O., clash for the title today. USGA rules make the semi-fi- nalists of this tournament eligible to take part in sectional qualifying rounds for the. Amateur and the champion goes to that tournament without qualifying Planning. a Drive? YORK, Me. (UP) — A sign here, just north of the Maine - New Hampshire border, reads “Now that you are leaving delightful New Hampshire, don't forget to see Florida's Silver Springs, near Oca- - tla. ” Ocala is only 1,700 miles away. Two More No-Hit Mark City Loop F L-C | Boys’ Club Keating and John Studt sharing honors in a 52 win over Boys’ Club. Nationals in Class F and GMC's Dave Abel's beating the Yankees 21-2 in another Knothole. the Red Sox a 163 shellacking, White Sox forfeited to Senators in another. Knothole - National game. : CLASS D - Griff's ...... , 000 000 200-2 € % Nichole es 000 200 000-2 6 4 Paterson and McLarty; Jones and Oary Rochester 000 010 1-2 2 3 Clarkston 000 001 6-1 2 Robertson and Koans; Yaehnke Johnsen CLASS E Butier and Conley; Nester and CLASS Wms. Lake bo 10 2-5 7 1 BC Nationals 00 001 O—2 4 Roatine. Studt and MGhetbaner: and Os St. “George... raueaeee {tf 2 BC Americans —8i11 t Nicholas, Savas, araing ym Savas; Skinner and Gideumb, Johnsons. KNOTHOLE Avondale 198 Tigers @ GMC 21. Yankees 2 Orioles 16. Red Box 3 “Senators 7, White Sox 6 *Porfeit Jets Increase City Loop Lead by Beating ClO. Front After 10-4 Win on Tuesday Pontiac Jets moved two full games ahead of 2nd-place General Motors in City Class A Baseball League standings yesterday, beat- ing 6th-place CIO, 10-4. dets the 6th to win easily. Jets starter Octave LeDuff gave LeDuff, Lothery and Johnson; Rouse and Osika. Remember? probably was best known identity will be found on today’s final sport page. Tennis Champion Maureen Connolly Is Seriously Injured When Horse Throws Her Against Truck SAN DIEGO, Calif. #®—Tennis champion -Maureen Connolly—ser- iously injured when thrown against a moving cement truck while rid- ing her horse—rested in a hospital here today. “Little Mo's’ injuries—a broken -|and severely cut right leg—will prevent her from defending her U.S. Singles title at Forest’ Hills, N.Y., Aug. 28. She has won the title. the last ‘three years. * * = Dr. Bruce Kimball who operated. on her leg shortly after the acci- dent yesterday said the fibula or small bone below the knee was fractured and that some muscles were torn but not severed. She was J i surgery-more than three hours. o Her leg was ne in a cast’ oil "| Dr. Kimball said she would ’'be LI hospitalized at least a week. ‘He said, however, that the injury would not permanently cripple her. He ordered her not to touch a tennis racquet for a month, and perhaps longer. last night and will not learn the extent of -her_injuries until today. She suspected the worst, however, and her raced words before entering surgery “How bas ‘will it be?” The 19-year-old tennis queen was Colonel Miss Connolly was under drugs | truck “We were riding along Friar’s Road. We stopped our horses as * + J i Mrs, Kathryn F. Walker, @ ; ry poy scene and applied a Miss Connolly's leg to check the loss of Noel. ha “Little Mo's” first the Colonel Colone! - “Little her throug after she came. - ‘| r . 4 in Class D, Williams Lake's John” beating Bays’ Cieb, $9. ries, Now 2 Full Games in. Ps PS A BRIERE G oe Seem serene Senate Dina ak hn cals, a ae ae & i bs if 3 { | ; 4 | i ' Ce Le Ete ayn Oe RED, em Ome ee, — leeeeeeneel aniedinenietions ee New Soybeans | Fall Ten Cents CHICAGO w — New crop soy- beans fell 10 cents, the daily limit, on the Board of Trade today and all other cereals turned weak fol- lowing unexpectedly wide-spread and heavy rains overnight. Corn tumbled as much as eight cents, the daily limit, in some pee crop futures at the opening, but this grain rallied slightly from its lows. It still remained far under the previous close. There wasn't any rally at all in| 5 75 new crop soybeans, which re- mained offered at 10 dents down. Im contrast to the action of everything else, July soybeans held firm. They gained as much as ming cents at one time, but lost this upturn later, Trading in all July deliveries ends today and urgent short covering de- veloped early in July beans, Wheat near the end of the first hour was 1 to 15% lower, July $2.0642; corn 4% to 6% lower, July $1.60%; oats 2 to 2% ower, July 74; rye 2 to 2% lower, July $1.104; soybeans %& to 10 cents lower, July $4.16, and lard 38 cents lower to 5 cents a hundred pounds higher, July $16.55. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO (AP)—Opening grain Wheat Mar Square D to Build New $700,000 Plant DETROIT w — Square D Co, announced yesterday it plans to construct a $700,000 plant at Se- caucus, N. J. Square D is a major manufacturer of electrical equip- _ and switches. company announced last aM it was abandoning plans for a new $750,000 plant in nearby “labor trouble.” today both the Secaucus and Royal Oak plants were decided upon some time ago and there was no con- nection between abandonment at Royal Oak and decision to go ahead at Secaucus. Detroit employes of Square D, members of the independent united electrical workers, have been on strike since June 15 to support demands fof a 15-cent hourly wage increase and other benefits. The company has filed unfair labor practice charges against UE local 957 and two of its officers, and has sued the union for $310,000 dam- ages, charging breach of contract. County Deaths ROYAL OAK — Funeral arrange ments for August Rohiman, 72, of 26521 John R. Rd., are pending. The body is at the Sparks-DeMund Funeral Home. Mr. Rohiman died Survivors are his widow Julia; two sons, Edward of Hazel Park and Fred of Ferndale: two daugh- | \ ters, Mrs. Evelyn South of Hazel | butchers and Park and Mrs. Virginia Friskey of Royal Oak township. Chrysler-Production Scheduled to Halt The strike, which already has idied 32,200, will put an additional 3,400 employes of Chrysler Jeffer- son out of work unless the dis- ler officials charge it is unauthor- ized, The international has made no statement. Before the thermometer was in- Produce raspberries. red, ; Cabbage, . No 1. 318 box. ae No, 1, 3.80-4.00 crate; celery, No. 1 1.00-1.35 doz. Corn, sweet, No. 1, 2.80-3.00 Sdos. Cucumbers, hot- house, No. 1 1.26-1.15 dos; —— dill size No. 1, 6.00 bu; slicers No. 6.25- bu. Dil Ne. 1, “i108 doz bchs Kohirabi. No 1.00-1.50 bu Leeks, No. 1. 1 se a bchs Onions, green, No. 1, 60-80 doz — Parsiey, curly, No. 1, lp 4 dos lo. 1, .15-85 dos ~"Radishes, red 4 ; No L. hot- house, No 1, 4.50-5.50 14-lb basket; toma- toes, outdoor, fancy, 3.75 14-lb basket; No 1, 3.00-3.50 14-Ib basket. Turnip, No. 1 yee glk wehs; Turnip, topped No 1, Lettuce and Poaind greens: Endive, No. erate; Lettuce, Lettuce, leaf, fe - 15-1.00 bu. Romaine, No. 1, 1.00-1. oliard, No 1, No 1, 1.25-1.% bu. 1.50 bu 200 bu. Spinach, 1.50- Swiss prey “ttt be bu. Turnip, No 1, 1.00-1.50 DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (‘AP)—Eges. fob. Detroit, cases included, federai-state grades Whites—Grade A, jumbo 60-64, weight- ed average 60; large 54, medium 43-46; wtd. avg. 44; small 32, grade B. large 46-46; wid. avg. 47%, peewees 23 Browns—Grade A, jumbo 58, large 52- 53, oe ave. $3; medium 45, small 32; ade B, large 47, grade C, large 30- . wtd. avg. 31, peewees 23 Checks x CBICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS (AP)—Butter steady; re- 41; Us stan , 38.5; current receipts, 30: dirties 25.5; checks, 4 CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO’ =‘ AP)—-Potatoes arrivals 153; om track 396; total U.S. shipments 420; supplies moderate, demand moder- ate. market on whites about steady. slightiy weaker; California Long Whites $4.45-5.05; Texas round reds : Idaho and Oregon round reds $4. 35-4 40. Poultry DETROIT POULTRY IT (AP)—Prices paid per pound f.o.b. Detroit for No 1 quality live poul- try up to 10 om Heavy hens 18-22; light type 16- 17; heavy broilers or fryers (2'2-3% Ibs) whites 26-29: gray crosses 27',, Barred Rocks 29 Caponettes (4-5 ibs) 0-4 CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)}—Live poultry steady om young stock see te to firm on hens - 146 ; feb —- rices y to % ase a pound her; heavy ae 16-18; light hems 13.5-14 brofiers 24-28; oid caponettes 27-30 “ ; fryers or roosters 135-14; Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)—The Detroit livestock report Hogs—Galable 226. No early sales Cattle—Salable 300, Small fresh re- clepts mostly cows. narrow outlet for slaughter steers and yearlings, sbout : cows steady: litth more action very siow. weak stockers and feeders slow, steady, most sales good and choice fed steers and yearlings 20.00-24.00: mest utility and com- mereial cows 8.00-11.50; canners and cutters mostly 1.00-9.50; part load good eround 860 ib. fleshy feeders 19.50 BD ergo gr 180. "warnet not estab. lished; most buyers going slow, under- tone weak lable 206. Receipts mostly spring lambs; 28 head choice and prime 06 Ib. springers steady at 25.00 offerings unsold other AGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, (AP) — Galable hogs 10.- 000; moderately active; unevenly steady than late last 33.00-23.75: latter price freely or weights 190-220 Ib: few loads and lots py No. 1 and 7s 190-2710 th. 23.85- 19.50-21.00 19.24; tb. sows 16.00- lighter weights 18.75-19.25; large lots -600 sows 14.00-16.00; in- stances 16.25. Salable cattle 19,000; calves 600; steers slow; steady with lest week's close; hetfers fully” steady: canner and cutter cows fully canner and cutter steady to 50 a few loads hetfers 18. 33.80. utility and commercial cows 9.50- 13.00; a few heifer ty; iat 14.00; can- ners and cutters 1.00-10.00: utility and commercial bulls 13.90-16.00; good and '7.00-21.00: cull to can- mercial grades 10.00-17.00. shee a”: spring iambds lower: but three peceag Bb oll still unsold; yearlings mone 60 lower; — p weak around 25 prime ensiee native «pring good slaughter ewer Group to Give Opera INTERLOCHEN (UP) — Inter- lochen's national music camp will present the first of three world premiers of chamber operas to-| night. The , “Daelia,” will be presented by three singers and two pianos under the direc- tion of Barrie Hill, former opera star. The opera is a Boccaccio tale set to music, Hill said. Sonutesd-Dawe-Gveve Insurance of All Kinds n16 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Ph. FE 2-8357 Keep your thermos bottle clean jo aly oy Britain in dollars, while you store it- We cover | Canadian dollar in New Yor the top of ours with a sandwich | market 2% per cent premium or 160.78 8. cents, up % of & cent. | @urope: Great Britein + » $2.81 6, ott 1/33 of a cent; t Britain t ® day futures oer 13/16, off 1 1/33 of « DON’T LET a dey, lore 28) 13/16, off 1/32 of cent; Great Britain 90 or futures Ie 18/10¢ oft 1 ofa : franc! 00 1/16 of a cent —_ of @ cent, ‘- (Western: (Deutsche mark) 23. un- DESTROY e ; tquilders 26. YOUR 0% of « cent: Lad 16% of ey ane eden trees! 1804, un. cha: (france) free; a " anehanged . Denmart ~wikrone) Latin A Argentina ifree 7. SAVINGS ! unchanged; Brasil free: 1.75, = a, THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 Market Swings Higher at Noon ~ NEW YORK Ww — The stock market swung higher today after a hesitant start. In the early afternoon, prices were up between 1 and 2 points at the best with fractional losses dotting the list. Business was brisk at a pace around two and a half million shares for the day. That compares with 2,580,000 shares traded yes- terday with the market lower. Good earnings reports continued to bolster the market, and there appeared to be a revival of buy- ing interest all down the line. Steels were well ahead together with the rubbers, radio -_televi- sions, tobaccos, building mate- rials, motion pictures, airlines, and many oils and railroads. Among highegstocks were Tex- as Co., Baltimore & Ohio, Ameri- can Telephone, U. S. Steel, Good- year, Boeing, Radio Corp., Liggett & Myers, Loew's, and American Airlines. Lower were Mack Trucks, In- ternational Harvester, Northeast Capital, General Electric, and San- ta Fe : New York Stocks »| Adams Exp BL) Jones & I ™6 Adimra! 4 2¢7 Kelsey Hay .. 23 Air Reduc 257 Kennecott 43 Alleg L Stl 332 Kimb Cit . 14 Allied Ch Di] Kresge 88 . 0.7 Allied Chal 466 Kroger aos Sen Allis Chal 67 LOPF Olass .. 57 Alum Ltd 66.7 Lib MeN&L .. 06 Alum Am 826 Ligg @& My .. 576 Am Airlin 1445 Lockh Aire . 371 Am Can 456 Loew's 162 Am Cyan #6 tone 8 Cem 44.3 ross Gas & El 374 Lorillard 22.5 m ad 17 Mack Trk 201 Am M & Pay = i7 Marsh Pield 362 Am Motors 112) Martin Ol 256 Am Rad 182 May D Str_.. 33.7 Am Smelt 373° Mid Cony Pet 81.2 Am 8ti Fd 27.1 Mid sti = 32 Am Tel & Tel 173 Monsan Ch .. 804 sm Deny Ment Maram res orb 2 171 Motor Wheel 23.4 Anes Co 2g Motorola . 434 naae Wac 52, Mueller Br ..28 Armco 6ti 2 Murrey Cp 33.4 Nat Bise at lat oo. oo Con ‘ ¥a ™7 Atehison use oo eer = "] Atl Cet Lime 1714 Net Oye 3.3 Atl Refin oe = Atlas Pdr oe 4 Avoc f ) Bald. Pyae 1o1 NY Air Brk 195 ae hs = ao ie “Pe 108 Nut “ , Bendix Av ail Norf & West 406 Benguet 11 Mo Am Av 2 Burroughs 202 Nor Pac 5S Boeing Air 51.6 Nor Sta Pw 18.3 Bohn Alum 214 Nwst Airiin 10.7 Bond Strs 13.7 Ohio Ot! ed Borden 684 Oltver Cp 107 Briggs Mig . 39.4 Otis Flev $7.2 Brist My 212 Owens I Gl sts Brun Balke 15 Packard 3 Budd Co 423 Pan AWAir 141 Beth Stee! .. 704 Panh 7% Calum & H 9% Param Pict @ Campb Wy m6¢. Parke Da 11 Can Dry 133 Pennev JC 64.2 Cdn Pac 23 Pa RR «ee 162 Capita! Air 104 Pepsi Cole ... 181 Carrier Cp 5a Phelps D .. “ Case JI 146 Phileo 37.3 Cater Trac $96 Philip Mor ” Celanese 21.4 Phil Pet 59 Cen Mm PS . 23.6 Pit Plate G se4 Cert-teed 18 Proct & G «2 Chis & Oh 1333 Pullmen $33 Chi & NW 11.3 Pure Oj! 56 Chrysler 26 Radic Cp 32 Cities Bc 925 Rem Rand.... 204 Clark Equip 476 Reo Motors .. 27.1 Climax Mo $12 Repub Sti 6e5 Cluett Pea 361 Reyn Met ™44 Colg Palm #7 Rev Tob B 4 Col Gas 141 RKO Pict «5 Con Edis 457 Rock Spe 202 Con or 31 Safeway St 455 Con Pw 416 st Jos Lead 375 Con Pw pfé's 1097 @: Reg Pao 26 Cont Bak 2 Scovill Mf 291 Cont Can 7126 Sead al RR 593 Cont Mot + Sears Roebd 647 Cont Oil £22 heli Oil 45 Corn Pd 174) simmons 6 Curtiss Wr 114 Sinclei oO 02 Det Edis 324 Secony Vac 0.7 Dis C Seag 306 soy Pac aie Doug Airc 916 sou Ry 576 Dow Chem 43 Sparks W 47 86 hy 133-2 Sperry . 63.2 E yd Std Brand Mo ast Air L 26.6 Std Ol Cal 60 ost Kod... 82 ons On tnd |. 159 Std Ot) NJ “3 El &@ Mus In. 25 sta Of! Oh... 373 Emer Rad 12.7 Stevens JP 5 nem ie] stew War 2.1 . Studebaker 18.2 €x-Cell-O 12 Sun Ot! n6 pirmtene goo: S08 puther Paps. en Bak if) 97 Swift & Co 7 Gen Elec ws 436 + lag a a8 = Gen Fads .... 763 Tex G Bul 082 Gen Mills 85.4 Thomp Pd | 728 — memrae Me 5 Timk R Bear. 46.7 Tel 142 Tran W Air 174 Gen Time... 29 2 Transamer BD oo Ti 9 Twent C For 211 Oillette 112, cag Underwe =: seece Un Carbide Le Goodrich 884 Un Pac 18 Goodyear 721 Unit Air Lin 25 Grah Paice 13° wnt Aire 62.7 Gt No Ry .. 313 united cp 5.7 Gt West 8 ... 194 Unit Pruit 4 Greyhound - 12.3 Un Ges Im 371 Gulf Oil - 517 UB Lines ..... 61 Hayes Mf ... 4.7 98 Rub 4.7 Hersh Choe ., 40.4 US Smelt « Holland PF 14.1 US Steel sie Homestk - 6 8 Bteel pf...156¢ Hooker EF! 20.4 Tod . Ee | Houd Her 153 Van Raal 294 ™ Cent ++ 45 Walgreen ba) Inland Sti .. 616 Warn B Pic .. 171 Inspir Cop 236 W Va Pulp.... 33 Interiak Ir .. 14.7 West Un Tel.. 43 Int Harv 314 Westg A BE 24.2 Int Nick . 431 Westg Fi 972 Int. Paper 17.2 White Mot 35.5 Int Silver 49.4 Wilson & Co £6 Int Tel & Tel 232 Woolworth 432 Johns Man 746 Yngst 8h & T 507 Zenitn Rad 724 STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by The Associated. Press 15 15 6 Indust. Raifis Util. Stocks Previous day....1743 06.5 62.8 128.5 Week ago....... 176.3 980 624 1306 th ago......1717 042 60.0 126.4 ‘ear seecees 138.0 866 524 107.3 1954 high..,,,...177.1 08.3 62.9 131.0 1964 loW?...665.143.8 T7.8 86.4 108.0 1963 high....... 151.8 036 55.8 1163 1953 low 130.2 73.5 60.5 00.5 DETROIT sTOCKS (Hernblewer & Weeks) Pigures after decimal me are — igh Noon Baldwin Rubber* D. & C. Navigation* ,, 1 Gerity-Michigan .... Kingston Products* ., Masco Serew* euee Midwest Abrasive’ ... Rudy Mfg* yne Screw *No sale; bid and asked. of — Prone Veeweouow *Foreign Exchange YORK (AP)—Foreign excha NEW rates follow are. war) 30. 5 Par East: Hong Kong dollar 17.60, un- upanged The incisor teeth of a pocket go- pher grow almost an inch a week and the animal can keep them reasonably short only. by constant gnawing. GIANT SPONGE—Little Toby Miami, Fia., looks even smaller as he relaxes on the largest sponge ever taken in south Florida waters. The huge sponge was found 10 miles south of Miami Ebbets, 1, of in Biscayne Bay by Walter Thompson Sr., been dragging for sponges in this area for. 0 years. in the foregroand is a normal size sponge. oF United Press Phete who has Ad Agency Names Public Relations Man James R, Adams, president of Mac Manus, John & Adams, Inc., today announced the appointment of Arthur C. Scheifle as director of public relations for the agency. Long ‘ associated with advertising and public relations in Detroit, Scheifle recently operated his own agency. Prior to that he was an account executive with Grant Advertising. As executive secretary of the Huron Clinton Metropolitan Author- ity, Scheifle promoted the St. Clair Metropolitan Beach and Kensington Lake Park. For nine years, he was active in the development of ex- pressways and parkways with the Automobile Club of Michigan. His civic activities inchided the pro- motion of aviation in its earlier days; traffic safety, and the WAC recruiting drive during the War In his new post, Scheifle will head the agency's public relations de- partment working with the com- pany'’s major accounts. Business Briefs Don Williams of Cleveland, regional director of the Small Business Administration for the Ohio, Kentucky and Michigan area, announced today that his office is now handling collections and information on disaster loans previously granted and serviced in this area by the Reconstruc- tion Finance Corp. The Small Business Administration office is located in Room 248 Ferguson Building, 1783 East llth St., Cleveland, Ohio. John P. Bennett, research di- rector of Bull Dog Electric, has been elected president of the Michigan Chapter of the Ameri- can Marketing Assn. for 1954-55. He will be assisted by Vincent H. Bergmann, D. P. Brother & Co. vice president; Helen M. White, White Field Service, secretary, and Albert Moellmann, the De- troit News; treasurer. Maryland Residents See 7-Foot ‘Panther’ HAGERSTOWN, Md. ih — Resi- dents of the hilly, wooded area between Hancock, Md., and Need- more, Pa., have been seeing strange sights and hearing weird noises lately. Farmers living along Pennsyl- vania 76, which runs along Cove Ridge, say they have seen what looks to them like a ponthes. * * There are also those who say they have heard the creature scream at night. They are wild screams, resembling the screech of an hysterical woman, it is said. The animal is described as about seven feet long, with a long flow- ing tail. Some say it is of a brown- ish hue; others say gray. There are even some who claim to have shot at the beast, but one claims a hit. , Opposed Power Grab WASHINGTON «—The attorney for Burton C. Bovard said today Bovard and another government housing official lost their jobs be-| cause they opposed an attempted power grab by housing adminis- trator Albert M. Cole. os '?| River Claims Swimmer tempt failed. Plastic Bodies for All Autos Still in Future DETROIT \wW — Widespread adaptation of plastic as a substi- tute for sheet steel in auto bodies apparently still is in the very remote future The auto makers have carried on a great deal of research in plastic bodies. But despite its great saving in weight the plastic body cannot be produced as eco- nomically—or as fast as the sheet steel unit. Many plastic bedies have But still to come is the means of such iw | rate that will match the require- ments of the customary final assembly line. - None of the industry authori- ties will flatly assert the plastic type body never will replace sheet steel in car construction It is, noticeable, however, that plastic car bdédies are not as widely talked about in industry circles now as they were a couple of years ago. Death Hits Coincidentally CLEVELAND (® — Alfred Goetz, 42, staff musician at radio stati WTAM, collapsed and died day after completing a tuba solo with the station orchestra. The song was “Grandfather's Clock,” which tells how the = clock stopped at the time grandfather died. .| ments underway Lodge Calendar Special communication of Pon- tiac Lodge, No. 21, F. & A. M,, Thursday, July 22nd, to conduct funeral services for brother John Race. Lodge opens at 10:30 a. m Robert C. Burnes, W. M —Adv. News in Brief Frank J. Malinowski, 41, of Ham. tramck, paid a $35 fine and $15 costs after he pleaded guilty to reckless driving Tuesday before Avon Township Justice Luther C, Green if your friend's in jail and needs bail. PE 5-5201. C. A. Mitchell Re-elect Clare Hubbell Sheriff, Republican., Vote August 3rd. Adv Diamond Rings, 4 off. Georges - ee Jewelry Dept Facsimile Machine Set for Distribution The Intrafax machine—Western Union's recent development in com- munications—will be available for installation in industry and other enterprises Aug. 1, said J. F. Slattery, Pontiac manager for Western Union office A facsimile system leased to cus- tomers for speeding intra-company communications in ‘“‘picture’’ form between departments, offices and buildings, Intrafax systems already are in use by several groups in Pontiac Slattery explained that this unit has a sending and receiving limit of about eight miles. However, he acded, the company's ‘Letter-Fax’’ and ‘‘High-Speed-Fax'' have a longer range with new develop- The three ma- chines will be standard equipment in most Western Union offices in the near future. he said Some elevators travel as fast as 1.200 feet per minute : We Pay 2% On Savings ITS THE MODERN, CONVENIENT WAY to SAVE! Hundreds, yes, thousands are saving by mail with us these days! They are making deposits withdrawals and transfers without even setting foot in the bank! You, too, will find it a great convenience to bank by mail. Just drop in and ask for the necessary forms A Muteal Savings & Home Loan Association : 16 EAST LAWRENCE STREET maine Ue Li PT nire a? The residents -of Greenland are Daily ear = ee Se world have a sheltered locations on the island, 217,174,490, LOANS In al or furniture e Up to 20 months to repay @;;HOUSEHOLD FINANCE —Coysoration of Pontiac 314 South ha st. The Key Bidg:, 2nd Floor PHONE: FEderal 4-0535 Loans made to residenis of nearby towns th yy Meg ARERR ay ge em a delim ae : é * FULLY GUARANTEED! * SHOP US and COMPARE ! © FAST SERVICE ° FROM YOUR PRESCRIPTION ! Open 9-5:30 Friday ‘til 9 You can phone anywhere in the U.S. for less than *2 a - tr nt A is AY MG yuan gto == Se and envelopes. To call most places it costs far less. For example, from PONTIAC: YOU CAN CALL | CANTON MILWAUKEE SEATTLE BALTIMORE ~ So na These are station-to-sigtion rates for the first 2; tree minstes, efter 6 o'dedk enery ae anes _ oll dey Sunday. ( ; Don't wonder. Don't worry. Call today and be sure. MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY ie ee spc sical al; you “BUY iT. OWE LL TINSURE IT BENJAMIN R. BACKUS Huron Street Eve FE 8031! Prove PE "tits bre, GATEWAYS to HAPPINESS CHILD HAVEN OVERLOOKING WALTERS Lane | ideal, bright, modern 5 room. bed: and bath home. Built Py 1463, kids need lots of room to tile new electric stove, utility room with washer and dryer, 4 huge picture windows overlooking the | still waters of beautiful Walters $12,750, terms FOR YOUR) Offered at AN IDEAL HOME ~* FAMILY CALL 4 GOOD BUY UPPER STRAITS LAKE This west side ranch type home s with 2 bedrooms Lake and ath storms and - sc reens. | ol heat. breezeway to ap aly | tached garage 2 fitely land scaped lots, privileges on Upper | Straits Lake Offered ‘at . $5.995 terms ITS NEAT AND TIDY CROOKS ROAD LOT 65's237 Paved road New 4'» room and) bath 2 bedroom bungalow Fully insulated best of materials and workmansh! Centrally located to Detroit Pontiac Let 652220 with garden spot, Offered at $8,700 with $2,400 down IT’S NEW AND NICE uy . MAHAN REALTY CO REALTORS Co-operatiye bee Estate Exchange FE: 2-0263 Open Eves 1075 W NEXT MOOR TO POST OFF GET BACK TO ro RRANCH cE pss Es Sadat SS aro gag ro G, PORRITT FE 27164 omar to GMC § Rooin family dwelling, full a for -detalls call Mr Donaldson FE 56-1201 or FE ¢3156 ‘BUD” NICHOLIE __REAL ESTATE HOME OF THE WEEK The family will be happy and comfortable in this beautiful mod- erp four room bungalow. West of the ectty, on a well shaded lot and paved street away from the | Rolse ard serial bomb section Fenced pack yard with large ga- rage. The children will love it and the price is with term. arrang K. G Hempstead. Realtor 102 E. Huron Street PR 48784 Eve FE 2-13f7 | HOME ‘Cw & COTTAGES | WALLED LAKE AREA | Lake Land Realty Co 924 Pontiane Trai! Walled Lake | HOLIDAY FARMS | _____—C OR lando 3-1101 only $)1.000 | Income 1! com & 4% Laths, near Bt | Vincent's, paved street Shows ex- cellent return on money, 2 apts 8 & bath in one and 3 & bath | tm other gar parage {West Suburban Attractive home on iatye lot lon x300° consists of 4 rms & bath & utility Oak floors, circulation ot! lteater aute water heater. Screens and storm sash $1 Call for ar appo.ntment today G1 3 bedrms ranch ty homes Téa 154 ft) lots pated vl ocation Aluminum of brick sid plas- tered wails AC off heat As low as 10 per ce! da including mort gage coct . John K. Irwin t's N ne Street Phone FE 2-40 Ey INCOMES 5 room and beth down with 4 room apt up. full basement, on a large lot a 250 located near Utica Wil) sell or trade for smaller home 2 room and bath down and a 3 room apt. up- New.Oi forced air heat and electric hot water. jot 50s Upper rents f r $65. and the prop- erty is sened commercial Invest EARTH | apts separate entrances on a 502200 ft lot lecated west of town 2 ACRES Here's # nice 2? acre parcel with @ modern 4 room home. Just & miles west of Pontiac Close = to pavement and only 2 bioecks te school In this listing we fea- ture large itv room. 2 nice — basemen with plenty of ace. Fuli bath ang spa- hen with more’ than a area Part base- with automatic off furnace on ampie ment owner of ths property have buy o boat, because it's included in this unbelievable low price “ealy $7,750 with sp down. Murry on this one-call to- day! WILLIAMS LAKEFRONT 3. bedroom Ae i knotty nine cupboards full tile bath shower and lavatory in basement Recreation room with briarstone fireplace Torrid ofl heating sys tem 2 car < Brick sea- wall. lo’ E Weeutifully land- escaped. 1 price is $26 with terms. Call f appointment to- BROS. reopen Mae" gy or OR 43-1760 a 8 to 8 fun ft to 8 GILES Lake Privileges Want to beat the heat? Then you should see this 2 bed- room home with full base-. ment and ® gatage 2 nice wooded lots Only with $950 “down Older Home. Wonderful family home for that large family Living foom is ted. Extra nice kitenen, 2 large bed rooms up 1 bedroom down, Basement — auto matic heat. giassed-in and heated porch Oarage ce- ent oF Shas Value plus here for only Terms can be Need a Little Extra Income ? $ rooms for the owner here and @ 2 room ay. to rent This is a modern home clove in with large lot for $8,000 Incomé Property Consisting of one 4- and one 3-reom ‘a4 close to . Invest $2000: and os dividertis imme- diately! GILES REALTY | Co. 2 W. Huron 56-6175 has House FOR SALE OFF JOSLYN PE 46189 -Humphries 40 acre “Gentleman's Estate.” } ned charming large white spall bas been beautifully mod- Yined kitchen modern t s down. ? up. Good ee Ment, automatic heat. Fair pa barn Seen jocetion on jfanwood Road. . con venient terms . Guanhrics Koo Pp ee | eter metorn way Drive. Carpeted) 20 ft. living y telroomy u foom. of] heat. Screens wie included, Fenced ya a Soe to the mortgare convenient terms sifenged Humohries gftumphries Full basement. Also | 4 p.m cent mortgage if ex Fah 2.0474 today for wmorrow'’s profits Two four reom and two three room with separate baths and $3500 down will handle IVAN W SCHRAM FE 5-5091 26‘, W Muron Realtor Oven Eves. Until § 00 Co-operative Real Estate Exchange | IMMEDIATE POSSESSION, 8SYL- van Lake, bargain for quick sale 5 large rooms glassed porch, full ba.ement, gas ceak peat and clean Double garage fenced, lawn, shade. Owner leaving city. PE 41861 Johnson FOR BETTER HOMES YOU'LL WANT The key Ww this ai] modern 4 room home with nice besement and of] furnece. I's car garage with paved driveway and lovely and shopping. with very good cams ' HERE WE GO Again folt» Bé sure to see this 3 room home with stool and lave- tory om lot $0n'45 all fenced in You also hav privileges on Wii- lames Lake An ideal setup for a small family Oniv $450 down GI RESALE Three becroom modern bungalow jocated. in Drayton Plains. Of) .furnece and electric hot water Newly decoraied Situated on nice lot 809x130 {. Payments only $57 including taxes and insurances OFFICE OPEN 68 A. JOHNSON, Reaitor FE 4-2533 1704 S, Telegraph Rd. LOTUS LAKE. LAKEFRONT, NEW 2 bedroom plastered walls. Oak fleors. Tile bath. Delco perimeter beat. Immediate occupancy. $10,- 500. FE 2-5562_ _ LAKE ORION 4 rooms Bath Ot) furnace Elec tric het water Lakefront $2000 down WALTER GREEN MY 2-5831 KINZLER Picturesque Lake Front Well located on a secluded ~ gite 184x300 Individually de- signed level ranch home 6 nice rooms l', baths, paneled recreation foom and 2 stone fireplaces. At- tached »%» ca* garage. Ot heat. Widow owner Bungalow — 2! Actes 5% rooms and’ tile bath (3 bedrooms) Full base ment — ot} heat. recreation room. 2 car garage Brick and stone fireplace All car- peting included Well. located about 5 miles north of city Lake Front Strictly modern 5 room bun- gaiow plus Florida room and large screened porch. Full basement with extra lavatory and shower Oil beat 50 ft lot — tall shade ‘trees. Also 1 acre across road for garden Garage and carport rice $18,950 with $5,000 down 6 Room Ranch Ott Baliwin near Fisher Rody 6 rooms with attached 2 car garage. 26 ft. living room with dini.g L; large kitchen with pienty of cup ards Has fireplace. oil Meat afd aluminum storms and sereens 2 lots Price $11,880. terms. Eve Ph OR 3-0003 $1,000 Down In Webster trict. Modern story home 1% car ga.~ JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 670 W at FE 4-3525 If no answer, Ph | pen Eves. Ope Co-operative Real Es ite “gachenge | KNUDSEN|: South Berkshire Rioomfield area, home_on 1% e- tached 2 car garage Pirechess, ‘unreom Schoo! bus ao family ‘VK iizabeth Lake Estates Lovely ranch trpe home, sity ted on 2 landscaped lots. Large breerewa: ven attached 2 car eerece. Finished reereation \ Foom privileges WM. H. KNUDSEN "Ay aise, * bases 4 tiful view ov r 4 beach im it. 26% W. Huron FE 5-141) INCOME, Don't wat. P. W Huron. 024 Pontiac Tra ¥ an WEST SUBI 4 reoms, bath. Full nace Automatic Bus service W bus North, 4 room — with uttlit Automat! payment ee net VE: TE FRANS We have 7 houses that can be sold.on GI or FHA loan. Very low down payments. Sto 8pm. daily: 010 Josiyn 14x22, garage shrubs, 1% secres Bt __ Eve. CLOSE IN, REAL Buy. Dinnan & Son $990 monthiy Tm motiate occupancy Lake Land Realty Co. down payments 800 cash or terms Twelve rooms, 2? baths, and beau- ivan Lake. Sand and beth unit at lake level Caeag for $100 ber For Sale Houses 43 wee aoe NEAR ROCHESTER, 2 BEDROOM w uity in smal) balance. OWNER. : basement. close mediate | small down ayment > ROOM House wits LOTS, Lore, Priced for seuk cae Sate Goma — Geleges .=—_ +4 Putnam, after Ld Partridge 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE A WHITE GLOVE HAMMOND | re. Seanie w “MORRISON-HEUGH CO ie West Arh @ 6-8621 G) uODdE a Walled Lake. MODERN 2 BEDROOM (| HOME. Bow in "53 a lot ot ult en. wn agmen, 508 } price uire T17 Bey 8 , Pontiac. “MILLER & STONE IRBAN 2 bedrooms basement water heater Fully tnoutahed Lake privileges. aterford se ae Excellent condition purchased on Gt or PH i NEAR BALDWIN * and 2 bedroom room. New oil ec water heater to wall renga te in living Foid attic ie oe Bee for de- tails STONE REALTY CO. Sunday | to 6 NICE 4 BEDROOM. 6 ACRE PARM Clarkston . M- = of woods MA 5-4008. NEAR Ranch type with e built in beth, nice is garage ! . outside and priced right Near Drayton and 1 year old. Three clous Pict = and dining py ote oom me FE 5-010) NEW GI $1375. dowr ine trade for 3 of 4 bedroom $2,100 DOWN if you would like «a northern Michigan, call us IRWIN & ROSA RD. acellient kitchen, breeseway with storms ané i, lot 238 $6,200; or will in city M-6@ Less than bedrooms, spe- lovely binches ot} heat, and business in FE_2-2161 “HOMES ~ tudes mortgage cost. 3} bedroom ranch type brick suburban jot. sleeping Lo, oh 8 E REALTOR try home Pull home on large wet Plastered wails, oak pie ture windows, marble silis tile bath, full divided basement. o furnace, & elec water heaters. MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE 1 ediate po jon on this year aroum home ‘ block from lake on ph shady lot. Inclosed wast" hurry on with terms. HAYDEN OUR NEW LOATION WALTON BLVD OPEN EVES. NEW. WN. LAROE 3, BEDROOM iM GOUN- FE 0-041 x. 3 3-2239. OP 6 to and spaciou = ture Ww plent beautiful tile ba painted walls sewer, water. venient to St Benedict shopping center Huron 8t to $12,450 FHA ter 7 W Hu Phone FE 57103 Co-operative Real 1 living MODERN ern home; ed walls, fast bar. furnace {t today $8950 $1500 DOWN east side home - Oarage. Full price only galow | floors | with plent Painted —— Huron yaaus FE 3-7103 features vestibul liv m4 room dining etl efficiency kitchen, of built-in in the full basement RAY Ne Ing roor full dinin appealing kitchen down. nice bedrooms and full bath up Newly decorated Am- ple closet space. Basement, KAx! furnace, gas hot water full basement furnac Home in excellent condition. Ri AY O'NETL. Realtor Tonite & Every Nite 8 #7 COLEMAN — Brand new bed bungalow with cupboards, th with col- lots, paved street, sidewalk, ov furnace School, turn right to model. Realtor Lad or f 44178 Estate | “Excha’ nge ONEIL INDIAN VILLAGE — 14224 room with natural fireplace in this & m scaped corner lot with 1%- ear garage ‘amily dining mm. mode kitchen, 2 extra large > rooms and full bath, com®- plete basement with utilities Immediate SeR- sion. $12,800 Terms, HOUSING — 80 convenient to stores, schools, bus, and shopping — tmmacuiate 2-bedroom plastered exceptional en. tiled to cetling. break- full basement, gas First offering, see eat rms Good clean . 12a17 liv. room 50x150 lot. 050 : $1900 DOWN — Cute bun- walls, oak cy kitchen ete. or FE atte a Co-operative Real Estate Exchange OWNER T AKING A _ LOSS fu rooms. & bath down, 2 bedrooms up Onl foreed heat Easy to com vert *o e Close to all_the schools Owne, wants equity. Pay- nents $40 mo - VACANT jon "Shock ig. Oh Aubury “Xve ne: Auburn : Buitable for ‘buivter. to Led JOSEPH F. REISZ 53% Ww. a be month. ge Woods, of this 3} bedroom sub- lot Téxl%- with 2 car garage. | urtan home wouldn't find « Price = eubstantion down to complain. about It's es vaymen and clean as « pin. plas- PAI IL D. arog becomes, mogte floors, € porch, garage, and ckicken coop Plent of ex- tras tmcluded at only $14,500 on terms EASY LIVIN’ in this cozy @ room en 5 acres near ark- all & takes price just 65 SUBURBAN BRICK ame ‘a. Seo" on pal and storm door Ful aoa just $10, terms. WARD E. PARTRIDGE Realtor, FE 2-8316 43 W. Huror &t. Open Eves. 7 to 8 Dein Sayer Lavender LTOR 3100 WwW. ener at FE 211 RANCH HOME JIM WRIGHT, Realtor 9 rative Real Estate } wet} Rent Beater $395 Down ents enly #4750 per month Williams Lake STOUTS BEST BUYS TODAY Blue Sky Bungalow @x300 Lot LAKEFRONT “FIND” that on hp bane and 55 Beautiful Here is place rt sea wal) you Same voet c'on terme, bere. Edw. M. Stout, Realtor. 3 bedroom, liv room with oak tered walls, ful) tile bath. shed gtumtnum storms end oan be privileges INDIAN VILLAGE 2 : 4 Se price terms. Russell Young j Ld 432 W_Wuron &t. Eves Open FIND IT INTHE WANT ADS! Yes. look in Classi- fied for a job, a place to live, a business — any- Gun. ‘"tih 6 thing! CARNIVAL. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1956 | by Dick Turner “You're right, Mr. Maloney! You certainly do have to be careful what you do in a canoe!" For Sale Houses “ 43 SILVER LE g bree, beta Ses borers | Mp street. lots of ‘aod ler VEST Ss BURBAN ens Boe Saeed co LTY CO. SMART BUYS WING LAKE AREA For Sele Houses 43 A a geo street. Pgh with $2,400 do oa redroom op pe erage. $8,700 ere Templeton, Realtor 0 Onsnerd ta Late Rd. FE ¢-406) 1 DAY POSSESSION AND LOW DOWN PAYMENT Te q hye era Wi bedroom bunga- low. A Harbor joce- tion. 87: full e. (AGENCY) ANNOUNCING OUR NE 8% W. Huren W ADDRESS FE +150 SMALL DOWN P AYMENTS 5 score oie Era $12) DOWN Sd ar pan By s eeteieg eaeee Ge yee s ~~ . room, = niet Ma EMBREE & GREGG aE “CUCKLER REALTY Marin AE 2302 or OR fa fo pe Exclusive 5 2h iei me = es District w : brick Knotty breeseway, ga- rege lake s full bese- ment, heat. bath, ideal _ corner rr E WEST 3 at 4% per cent, FE 54-0510. YOUNG HAS DONE IT AGAIN! HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE Low As Daily & Sunday 12:9 209 PRINCETON COMPARE! *Lath & Plaster *Aluminum Windows *Ranch Roof *Fully Insulated $6,020 Russell Young 412 ~W. Huron FE 44525 Open Eves ‘WW 8 Sun ‘tO 6 j00 DOWN Large 3 bedroom home with 19x13 living room, fenced jot s tendos shede. Call es, on one floor. 3. piece tile full basement Sto- ker 115294 lot. Only $685¢ total e. 500 N = — iw. So. nice beth. ies water “CORT M. IMBLER 11ut ren ° " Ao) poo Real Estele Ex id ACRE HILL ESTATE in‘ nile mens Rochester” ‘Bull fer ae pe eed state. to x at $24,500. Very favors! rms if desired. J ‘Pata ylor 100 Oakiand Ave. +2844 Eves. $1 000.00 DOWN fb, rent receipts. ae Ieee geome some modernising. “BUD” NICHOLIE REAL_ESTA For Sale Lake Prop, 44 CASS’ LAKEFRONT shaded terms THELMA M. ELWOOD mV THE EAR es PONTIAC REALTY co. eS me ee Se ct — Bias DORRIS & SON 4 CAKE acreage. (400 beach). Ideal gub- Ra ag trees. terms. MACEDAY LAKE 560x250 ft. Safe —_ — Pa Good site. FLOYD KENT, Realtor 4 W. Lawrence FE Next to Consum 56-6105 open eves ers Power ‘BIG LOTS 100 x 200 Nr. Auburn & Rochester Rd., $205 aha aed Giroux & Hicks ot Bae is ‘til %-Sunday 1-5 James K Blvd. You Zara's quick to thie ‘hee For Sale Resort Prop. 44A 2 COTTAGES FOR SALE OR for deal. Jack Loveland | tits ads pe — Rd., Roope Meche Betre a at Cenrscey 31-0575, VACANT a ease of Son ‘cM > would * Sale Suburban Prop. 45A Fu $1904 ot EM 34008 Well constructed 3 Zor war etd house For Sale Lots 46 rows IN, Realtor. PE 23-4810 “BEAT Es - REALTOR SF stages Be Re a ee a be cae Ressouele TE Som. a bein pe Nr. Auburn '& Rochester Rd. $295 WOodward 2-9700. Detroit. ¥%, TO 5 ACRE TRACTS bay linet Pg a agg Mee tls g yIM ‘WRIGHT. Realtor. Se°Oekiend Ave” : ven and Haines oy MY a Just Look At CHFROKEE HILLS! Compare t of tte bath Lake Rd. 1 mile W. of Telegraph —and select vour alte soon! ranch home sites in Dray- ton HOLMES-BARTRAM OR Red Horse FE 2.9179 RANCH HOME SITES Two 56 5 ACRE LOTS is with good Hwy. Located aE rd, Mich ESTA Mr. Fielding, MA FLOYD KENT, Realtor % W. Lawrence FE 54-4106 open eves te Consumers Power you's For Sale Farms 48 10 ACRES BY iveweit t eres MAHAN. REA Co-operative Rea} Estate Exchan ra ": : 4 ge Open Eves. aglt Bleces 10-4 1073 W. NEXT DOOR *~O BRANCH POST’ OF FICE 43. A with included. CRES Sacrifice. Near Leonard. 2-acre Nearly new ayer bed: a i L ia Very scenic and private. tanese forces sale 006 down $17,500 with © 84 ACRES 7 tillable acres in this farm located Pontiac. Mod- em ¢rm. brick home, kitchen. dasement oi] furnace. 5 acres of timber. 60 ft. barn with stanchions house, othe good out s. Quick pos- session. $18, rms. 8 ACRES cups. milk b beuee, Frood do ture fry viin 7 down. Near Ortonville. §-bedrm. home. N in pas- 160 ACRES Near Howell rom dairy ‘farm. cluded rm. and $16,000 wa $5,000 down. -FLOYD KENT, Realtor 24 W. Lawrence FE 5-6105 open eves Next to Consumers Power FARMS OF ALL SEVERAL take fame W. Dinnas Dixte | _saate © 4X30 — building on ‘ot 60x185 — — 62711 dave, Terms. COMM ERCIAL BUILDING fe in front This beautiful brand new mod- and planters and rear. Lot is BROS. | Phone rE Palig gvod OR 3-1768 Sun. ito § & MAN UFACTURING REA 3140 W. Huron St. Office Dorothy Snyder Lavender TOR FE 2-411 Sunday 10 am to 4 p.m. ent-Lease Bus. Prop 49A A GOLD MINE! Bc, et th concession, Only si8,o00 THELMA M. ELWOOD rE 5- Ban E ace. Open $e 2 ote ag For Sale Je Lake P ean 44 For Sale Lots 4 Business Opecrtunitlés 51 ROUN . . NEAR OAK-| Grocery & Meat Market a cer Leceted 10 tat) efowing lag SM gC fe mea 9 tunity 11.080 | including Will lease at $130 ‘per mo. including lights and heat. EMBREE & GREGG eM ae a EM 3-325} GULF SUPEK SERVICE For we ys ae well nan pg This ‘+ opportunit Susinese ag Sourself "can Cole Ot} Company FE 2H GROCERY STORE WITH 58 .B M. aia expansion area. 521 Op- vke. per mo. Now show- ing a good gross Has beer and wine take-o Real estate, busi- ness and a’! for only $17,500 full price Terms WARD E. PARTRIDGE OFFICE OF NATIONAL BUSINESS BROKERS CLEARING HOUSE OFFICES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES COAST-TO-COAST World's Largest 43 W. Huron Open Eves. FE 23-6316 out. RECTAURANT | ~LJVING “QUAR- — - He aga sovtere Excellent in- service. Corner of OR 36355 after 8.00 2: “hey P. Restaurant Pully ‘equipped. 60x533 site on Dixie Hwy 2 cabins A bargain at $§11.500. terms Bateman & Kampsen Real- ty Co, 377 8. Telegraph Ra FE 40628 4 SMART “BUYS Lak Orton as station Well e» ‘ hy Has lube pit, inventory neat. well land- scaped ya garden and fruit trees included in this one CRAWFORD (AGENCY) ANNOUNCING OUR NEW ADDRESS 53's wt Huron rE_ _ #1540 Templeton RESTAURANT Fully equipped ready to do busi- ness. Owners must sell. Will sacrt- fice equity for $750. Smal! balance can be paid. $6250 & mon age opportunity for the right K TL. Templeton, Realtor 2330 Orchard eae Rd. FE 44563 Eves. TOWN TAVERN A small spot in a town with one other tavern — po liquor in area. Has nice room living quar- ters upstairs, brick building and lorat on main highway right tin town Can incregse gross con siderably by active operator Bus!- ness, property and all for $8,000 down os pe for appointment to see No. 16 NT ’ FUN WITH A FUTURE A small hotel (8 rooms) with @ first — kitehen, dining room an¢d liquor bar — top all this off with orer 200 foot 5 inland lake frontage and a lawn from the porch to water edge. A won- derful deal = Pl ep conve rs. Property uipmen Suckeese and all for $40,008 Ferms svailable No. 2019 STATE-WIDE Real Estate Service of Pontiac Pontiac State Bank Bidg -ohn A mé@sser, Broker FE #1 FE 5-007 TO BUY TO SELL REALTOR Partridge [8 THF RIRTY tr see WANTED SOMEONE WITH $10,000 to invest in the manufacturing of a fast selling item. or someone dealing in the manufacture of with extra space ourself $25,000 in . Harry Pikal, Route No. 1. er Michigan, Phone Bangor WANT. GENERAL REPAIR IR MAN ed a over garage. Rent $50 a Pleasant Lake Service. EM 3-471 __Sale Land Contracts 52 150 £10,000 _LAND CONTRACT. WILL t- FE 44155 aasone LAND CONTRACT, $5900 balance. $25 per cent discount. R. J. VALUET, Realtor a eens Real Estate Exchange Oakland Ave. FE 5-0693 Money to Loan 53 (State Licensed Lenders) CASH PROMPTLY Get $10 to $500 quickly on car. furniture or Loan and Savings Society, 2.0749 LOANS $25 TO $500 Baxter & Livingstone 4 _W. Lawrence St. FE +1538 GET CASH QUICKLY Up to $500 “ity” done _asaie closed 0 30 S Eeene aioe made on OAKLAND LOAN CO. FE 2-9206 2 PONTIAC 6TATE BANK BLDG 173 BROKE? Sell things you don’t need through Class- ified ads! Phone FE 2-8181 for an ad-writer. *