> The Weather ‘Friday: Showers - Details page two HE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition rae x * THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 195364 PAGES INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS Tec 111th YEAR I POW’'s Welcome g' United Press Photo }WIFE WAITING — Ist. Lt. Ar- mando Arias. Los Angeles, repatri- ated POW." swings his wife off her feet in Sdit Francisco as he step: off USNS Gen. Howze which brought back last batch of war prisoners.; Rita, Dick Take | Plunge Ath Time ser Crooner, Star te Wed Today at Plush Nevada _ Gambling Hotel » LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP)—Rita Hayworth) and Dick Haymes, nerv- ous as beginners, make it four apiece today when they exchange wedding yows amid the clicking of dice and’ whir of roulette wheels in a gambling hotel. . While a Bay mob of tourists}! play their chips in a casino down- ' stairs, the flame-haired movie beauty and the crooner will say their I do's’ in the press con-| ference rpomi of the plush Sands | Hotel. Rita, M4, acting Mike an excited bride, made this ceremony the simplest of her career. Judge Frank MacNamee was called. in to perform the ceremony | only 20 hours after Haymes won his six-week, quick Nevada divorce | decree from Nora _ Eddington | Flynn on) grounds ‘‘she lost inter- est in the marriage.” Ree and. Rita, who started dat- | ing wheg both wére working in | Columbia Studio last February, in- vited only friends ‘‘who stuck, by us’ during their various troubles with former mates) and the law. Rita’s wedding bonnet was: of toast-colored tulle and velvet with a short veil and gloves to match. - After the ceremony, Rita was scheduled to play hostess at a luncheon for the guests and press. ‘Bul Ownership Must Be Proved; Bounty Stopped North Korean Pilot Will Get His Reward With | Asylum for Others | WASHINGTON (A P )— offered to return to its “rightful owner?’ the MIG15 jet plane flown into American lines by a North Korean | pilot. ‘talks the offer to pay $50,- _ 1000 for) MIGs delivered to ) the West. The statement by Gen! Mark W. Clark, U. N. com- mander, had .nothing to say directly about payment to the Korean pilot who de; livered the first MIG last , week. Pentagon officials. however, Clark statement to make it retro- active. On that basis the Korean) . would get his, money—$50,900 for | the plane plus another $50,000 bonus as the first to take up the U.S. offer. Clark's | statement, simultaneously here and in Tokyo, | | Said: “The traditional policy of the’ United States of America to; ee Tecloose Teste to those seeking remains unchanged, “ i during this period of | armistice duscussions the offer by |the Far East Command on 27 | April, 1953, to award $50,000 for un- dumaged MIGs brought to our side is withdrawn. *‘When the rightful ownership of |the MIG that recently landed at Kimpo has been established we will offer to turn it over to that | owner.” The statement raised a ques- tio. whether the MIG would be brought to the United States, as | the Air force had previously in- dicated be done. In Tokyo, a spokesman for the \ Far East-Command said he did not | know how “rigntful’’ ownership of the MIG would be determined. He said the pilot who brought | the first MIG into South Korea | ‘will get his $100,000 but any other | Communist pilots would get only asylum and no money reward.” Tigers Sign Up Five for Minor League DETROIT The Detroit | Tigers have announced the sign- ing of five youthful prospects to minor league baseball contracts, They’ are Dale Karl Cartier of | Inkster; George W. Carver of Har; bourton, N. J.; Charles Manson Martin of Evansville, Ind. | Joseph Raymond Piacentinoe of Waltham, Mass.; and James P. Kardos of East Vandergrift, Pa. Cartier, an 18year-ol graduate of Roosevelt High School in Ink ster, was signed by Tiger scout Pete Fox. The Michigan youth played on his high school team as a pitcher, outfielder and first base man, iThe United» States today © At the same time the Far | East Command withdrew ifor the) duration of peace | noted that there was nothing in the | released| || Prosecutor Paul T. Betz PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, +- Honored WALTER K. WELLMAN ae | _GEORGE E. BEAN Pontiac seems to be the proving ground for the nation’s top city managers. The present city manager and a former city manager yesterday were elected to top offices: im the International City Mandgers Aaso- ciation, meeting in Los Angeles. Walter K. Willman, Pontiac's manager, was elected vice presi- dent of the organization. George E. Bean, former city | manager, was elected president. Bean left here to become city | manager of Grand Rapids and re- | cently has become city manager of Peoria, Il. Willman came here from Port Huron to succeed Bean when the latter went to Grand Rapids. Prosecutor Away, ‘but Phones Order to Cut Out Bingo DETROIT (#—Lenawee County tele- French Launch Mop-Up Action in Indochina Planes and Naval Units Join Troops in Battle With Vietminh HANOI, Indochina (AP) —French Union _ troops supported by planes and armored and naval units at dawn launched a big mop- up action against the Com- munist-léd Vietminh’s “am- bush capital” in the Red River delta, 30 miles south- east of Hanoi. The French high com- |mand announced that “‘sev- ‘eral battalions,” possibly 5,000 troops, were driving ‘against several Vietminh | units which for a long time | have been troublesome to | enemy ambushes of French patrols | phoned long distance to Adrain today and ordered his assistant | Kenneth Glaser to close the bingo game at the county fair. Betz had earlier denied any | knowledge of bingo and other | games reportedly being conducted at the fair. “’m no crusader,’ Betz said, “but If a complaint is brought to me I will take action.” Betz is attending the annual convention of the state bar of Michigan in Detroit. Atty. Gen. Frank 6. Millard has ordered all county prosecu- tors to see that games of chance are |not operated in their juris- dictions. Millard has said he will hold each prosecutor responsible for any gambling in his |county. Stiffer Driver Licen. sing System Goes Into Etfect for Michigan on October 2 ™ LANSING w—Michigan is ready for the first major change in its driver licensing system in 34 years —a change it believes will save hundreds of ‘lives and take thou- of dangerous canta inary off the highways. The. change. will come officially Oct. 2 when the 1953 Legislature's new driver licensing law takes ef- fect, but!the new act will impress 3,200,000 ually vet poten motorists grad- mean that a will be bailt’ot the scoldents suie gptbem) open | Nicmaanieyyme ond Bob Considine.........0.ssseeee-: 32 OB) ccc vecbecceecscescdeusies 58 County News...) .cccecccccedes 12, 58 Wid Lawremee. .,...ccccccscdepes 6 . George Crame........0s00- toa @ MGdborinls © . 20. cl cccdedeccccgede lee © WOE... . a ceaccdedccseritesetes 2 F News..... Jeocepabec 33 thre 43 Markets cncicccpocsdevccessgoge 4. 87 POCGTHS cccccccccdece veces ededes b ) a neenspes >». 50, G1, 52, 53, 54 | WOUND cen cccpececicce cvs ededes 36 TV-Radie Pregfams........,...4-. 16 Wnt AGG... oc cdeces 50, 60, G1, 62, 63 Women’s Pages.....26, 27, 28, 29, 30 | }to expire. | | from the State Civil Service Com- | | mission the names of 17 men who extended to the next birthdate aft- er the expiration date shown on the present license, Drivers no longer will receive notice from the state when their license is: about | By next week, Secretary of State Owen iJ. Cleary expects to receive | have passed tests to become super- visors of the driver licensing sys- tem in Michigan. ) There will be a chief super- visor, two deputies and 14 field | supervisors, each assigned to a | gtoup of counties. By the end of October, these ‘men will take over the licensing supervision which has been con- AFL Called On to Expose Reds (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) the French within the vital 1954 License Plates Carry New Slogan } + OLD AND nic NEW — Miss Marlene Coin of sors. made in 1909. The old plate was hand-made defense bastior of the delta. They have principally operated | around the town of Hung Yen along | ‘the Red River where frequent | has earned the sector the nick- name ‘‘ambush capital.’ Fighting was under way just northeast of Hung Yen. Fighters and bombers were hit- ting hard at Vietminh troops. Naval units moving in the Red River shelled Vietminh positions and tanks and armored cars helped spearhead the French ad- vance. (Associated Press correspondent Max Clos in Saigon reported that the Vietminh losses so far in the Hung Yen operation were 54 dead and 100 prisoners. French figures were not given. Resistance, the Fren¢h command said, was very | heavy. The French were pitted | against three Vietminh battalions). Very heavy battles were ex- pected tonight and tomorrow. The operation is the nmiost im- portant mop-up action undertak- en in the Tonkin delta. It is the first time that such forces have been thrown against the Viet- minh there. The French reported a half dozen strong contacts with the Vietminh in the early hours of the push | around Hung Yen. French infantry clashed with the | Vietminh in rice fields and along | narrow roads. Dulles Tells Delegates | Laborers Most Abused | in Commie Setup ST. LOUIS W — Secretary of State Dulles called today for a ‘closer partnership’ between the government and the American Federation of Labor, in a world- wide campaign to ‘‘explode the Communist myth” of a workers’ paradise behind the Iron Curtain. He said the Reds had used this myth effectively to extend. Soviet power. In a speech prepared for the American Federation of Labor con- vention here, Dulles pictured Soviet communism as being actually an exploitation- of the worker. ‘“‘No task is more important for us than that of exploding the Communist myth,” he said. “In this matter there should be closer partnership between us,” Discussing what he called a ‘swindle’ by the Reds in their claims of benefits to the workers, Dulles said: “The facts are all on our side. Thé Russian worker is the most 3662 Baldwin Rd. compares Michigan's 1954 ‘“‘Water | with metal house numbers tacked on a leather- |W onderland”’ license plate with one of its reeves: coyeretl wood frame, d Reuther Wants Pay Guarantee Says ClO Will Not Sign Next Contract Without Annual Wage Clause DETROIT w — CIO President Walter P, Reuther is bluntly on record today as declaring. the CIO United’ Auto Workers will sign no new contracts with auto-makers utiless they carry a guaranteed annual wage. Reuther also is president of the UAW, which claims 1,600,000 mem- bers among auto, aviation and farm equipment] workers and al- | lied tradesmen. UAW contracts usually follow the pattern set by the auto industry. Contracts now in force run un- til mid-1955, and Reuther told the Michigan State Bar Association ; yesterday: “We like the way corporation executives get .so much pay a year. We'd like the same guar- anteed annual wage for the work- ers. We will sign contracts — when they open again—only after we do.” Auto production workers now | are paid an hourly rate. Reuther | and other unionists long have com- | plained of layoffs for model change- overs, over-production or a slow market. Auto makers have insisted such are essential to economic survival. Abraham L. Zwerdlin,;, a De- troit labor attorney, told the law- yers he believes the UAW will “offer employers the same sort of inducement” on the annual wage as it did on pensions. , Zwerdling gave this hypothetical example of how the ‘‘inducement”’ might work: ‘‘Let's say that a guaranteed wage of $65 a week were negotiated. The inducement for management comes in the form of unemployment insurance the worker received on the weeks when he is laid off. If he has $30 a week coming in unemployment benefits, the company would have to pay only $35 a week to provide the guaranteed wage.” & Showers Forecast Friday in Pontiac Partly cloudy skies tonight and showers late Friday are forecast for the Pontiac area by the U. s. Weather Bureau. A low of 5 Bulletin CANANDAIGUA, N. Y. (AP) —Fred Eugene McManus, 19 - year - old on killer of five, me sound suiky today 0 felony ie lOwners Made Own Plates for Autos in If you hate to change your license plate once a year, pity the poor motorist back change his plate—but make it as well. In those days the state issued a metal disc inscribed | with the car's license number, said LeRoy F. Kellogg, 1S MICHIGAN -Sq4 00-00: WATER WONDERLANO matali, ee 4A Pontiac Press Phote Early Days in 1909 who not only had to . Pro-Red Gils Surrendered to Neutral Hands U. S. Offers to Return MIGI5; 359 Prisoners Seek to Remain With Commies PWs Unwilling to Come Home Include 1 Briton, 335 South Koreans PANMUNJOM (AP )— The Communists today sur- rendered to neutral nations custody 359 war prisoners —23 Americans, 1 Briton and 335 South Koreans— who the Reds say asked to remain behind the Iron Curtain. The Americans rode in open Russian-built trucks loudly singing the Commu- nist “Internationale.” “Arise, ye prisoners. of starvation, arise ye starve- lings of want,” chanted the tanned, healthy looking men. | The Sduth Korean prisoners screamed |‘‘American imperialists, get out!” |at U. S. newsmen who watched the transfer of prisoners to custody of Indian troops in the demilitarized zone near here. The Americans looked happy and contented. The Communists quoted them as saying they love their country and some day will re the American peo- ple have achi ved “‘freedom.”’ ~ “We hope to play our part in achieving |this and we know the American | people will receive us back on assistant manager of Pontiac’ s branch of the Michigan Red Cross Will Cancel Drive Decides to Join in UF Campaigns in Northern Oakland County Oakland County Chapter, Ameri- | can Red Cross, voted Wednesday | to cancel its spring fund drive in North Oakland County to be in-| cluded ‘‘all the way’ in two au-| tumn United Fund drives. ° The chapter’s executive commit- tee, headed by Harold B. Euler, Chapter chairman, cancelled plans for an independent drive in areas covered by Pontiac Area United Fund and ‘Twenty Townships” United Fund. The decision came at a special session at Hotel Waldron. Euler pointed out that the Pon- tiac Fund had offered the chapter a $47,000 stake in this year’s drive, $13,000 above last year’s $34,000. | The Red Cross, he added, raised only $5,000 in its door-to-door resi- dential campaign in Pontiac last year and some $4,000 in Water- ford, not included in last year’s Pontiac Area United Fund cam- paign. Waterford is a part of. this year’s Pontiac Fund drive Oct. 20 through Nov. 6. The Twenty Townships group offered $22,000—10 per. cent more than the Red Cross raised in rural areas by both independent and United Fund campaigning last year. Euler said the Red Cross will still canvas homes in the string of cities south of Square Lake road in a March ‘‘membership drive.’’ He explained that Detroit United Foundation, which is giving the Red Cross $37,000 this year, is still not ready to discuss taking over its membership campaign. South Oakland cities are included in fhe Detroit Fund Group. Challenger Outweighed. for Heavy Title Match NEW YORK (— Heavyweight a pound heavier than challenger Roland LaStarza today for the 15- It was the lowest LaStarza had weighed since he hit the bigtime in boxing. y Champion, a 4-1 favorite, is mak- ing the second defense of the cham pionship he won from Jersey Joe Walcott at Philadelphia, Sept. 23, 1952. f Free Lecture Christian Science. oan Gee ad on page 32. *Secretary of State’s office. The motorist was re- quired to fasten the disc inside his “horseless car- riage,” then fashion a reg- ular license plate with large numbers for display on the outside of the ve- | hicle. Most of the plates were roughly made by painting numbers on a board. But others were fancier. | One of these (kept at the branch’ | office) was made with metal house | Sumbers tacked to a leather covered board. To the relief of motorists, es pecially those who weren’t too handy with tools, the state aban- ‘doned the disc licensing in 1910 and started issuing metal plates. Carrying the modernization a step farther, license plates are in for another facelifting. The 1954 plates, for the first time in Michi- gan’s history, will carry~a state slogan, ‘‘Water Wonderland.” These new plates will be avail- /able at the Pontiac branch office, ‘The sor: of Allied | “explainers’” are to begin te American, Brit- tives will visit 22,600 North Korean and Chinese pris- oners who refuse repatriation at another Indian camp five miles southwest| of Panmunjom, trying to make them change their minds. The highest ranking American turned over to Indian custody is a sergeant. | The Americans laughed and smiled as they were turned over to Indian) troops. They talked in loud voices and appeared to enjoy the attention they were getting from onlookers. Most shook hands and thanked the Chinese and North Korean |65 N. Perry St., in December. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Avon Father wound in the right temple. Is Wounded; Police Searching for Son An Avon Township man said this morning in a hospi- tal bed that his 11-year-old son, Ronald, apparently discharged a .22 caliber rifle accidentally while cleaning it-and the slug hit him in the head. Robert W. Foster, 50, of 3734 Crooks Rd: is reported in good condition at Pontiac General Hospital with a bullet Foster said he doubted the story of his 10-year-old daughter, Lana Mae, who told Chief Assistant County Prosecutor George F. Taylor earlier today’ that her brother had deliberately shot their father and fled. akland to work as usual at a Pon- tiac factory this morning, but returned: home when his daughter said she was ill. He said he was forced to leave the children alone at home recently > The father said he went*— shooting was accidental, according to Taylor: But under questioning, Taylor quoted her as saying that Ronald forced her at gunpoint to tell her father that she was sick. the early-morning inves- tigation, police said they found an empty shell in the chamber of the __TWO | At Bloomfield Hills | Supt. Eugene L. Johnson Asks School Space Plan for Buildings, New Sites _. From Our Birmingtiam Bureau BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Supt. of | Schools Eugene L. Johnson, in a report to School. Board members | last night, said prime considerd- | tion ‘should. given to ‘a high school for pupils, expandable to 800, and a Wing Lake addition. providing at least fout additional | classrooms.” Johson added that the tential | for growth ahd development in the | district is sych. that ‘we s consider greater long-range pl ning than ‘just the above meh- Birmingham wrerts page 51. Po tioned program. So t suggest Tit would be ideal if we could provite ourselves with sites pf 6 to /10 acres in the; Pine Lake and Lin- tan areas.’ He proposed submitting a plan to taxpayers in the \very near future, “by which a high school and elementary. additions should * be voted om,” In_ stating educatiod the school district,. hé suggested they ‘“‘consider &l} ible écon- omies in any building, needs, yet att news on needs /of | not neglect basic n ” Until recently, he s id, the dis- trict had Adequately prpvided mpst of the needs for a successful mpd- ern elementary schodl program, but a weakness now jis ‘‘lack, of | indoor play space, as Mell as gur extreme shortage of classrooms.’ Johnson stresses inadequac in secondary school fa¢ ee pe several years.” He felt the foun- ) The tree-killer invaded Birming- |ham for the first time, when | one case was discovered. Majority of the diseased trees, for which there is no known cure | and therefore immediate remov- al is necessary, are in the Pem- brook Subdivision area, the east- ern portion of the city. Lebold said sampling has not | Been completed yet, but final re- |ports for the season should be |ready in a few weeks. > > * Arthur Blakeslee of the Rotary | Club has announced that the club’s | square dance held recently earned $862.74. This will be contributed ~ | toward purchase of a station wag- | on for transporting children of the Qakland County Crippled Chil- dren's Society. Mid-week meeting of the First | Methodist Church will be at 7:30 tonight in the chapel on the sec- ; ond floor. * . * A preliminary announcement in- | dicates that the local YMCA will ‘operate a chartered’ bus to the Michigan - Northwestern football game Oct. 17 at Ann Arbor.. Reservations, which include transportation, reserved seat and lunch on the bus, are being taken | at the Y. | Ed Kirbert, YMCA secretary, { said early indications point out the fact, that the 50 places will be taken in a short space of time. = Orders Inquiry | dation was there because of well | trained and ‘conecications teach- ers. | “Teachers usually are willing to do their best.’ Johnson concluded, “but keeping, ahead of population trends to have adequate room and proper teaching tools, |is not the responsibility of the tedchers.”' *- 8 8] BIRMINGHAM — Instead| of | ‘Treasure Island,’’ ag originally | of Plant Blasts District Attorney Calls Peroxide Plant Officials for Conference TONAWANDA, |N. ¥. — The district attorney ordered an inves- planned, Children’s Theater has | tigation opened today into a series gone into rehearsals for Oct. Hans Christian Andergon's ‘'The Steadfast Tin Soldier.” {| Director Mrs. Antholiy J. Da- | ley will be assisted| by Mrs. | George Dix. Tickets for the two | performances on that| day now are being distributed through the schools. Other plays during the season will be “Rapuhzel and the Witch,” to be given Nov. 27 by the Chil- dren's World Theater from New York, and, Birmingh High School's Pro#eenium ub in a Jan. 29 presentation of “Daniel Boone.” : * * . { Sarah Hunter and Jennie Keyes Guilds of the .Fifst Presbyterian Church will meet at 8 tonight, the Hunter Guild at the home of Mrs. Charles Ervin, of Pleasant, and the Keyes Guild at the South Bates residence of Mrs. noes Walker. | 7 * * | No action was taken by (the Plan Board at an informal hear- ing this ‘week. over rezoning four lots at the corner of Lincoln and 16 of explosions that killed at least | master 10 workmen, injured ; 27 persons | and blew a i plant into rubble. Fearing the death tole from yes- terday’s blasts might run as high as 12, searchers today probed a, ruins of the one-story brick build- jing. for more bodies. Ten were | |recovered yesterday, ‘but it was reported that 12 men were in the building. A fire on said ‘the explo- sions, thonght|to have been in chemical storage tanks at the Luacidol Division plant of the No- vadel-Agene Corp., caused dam- age that would run into millions of dollars, | Dr. Franciscus Vissert Hooft, president of the firm, said ‘‘ap- parently In some unexplained man- company’ said the precise cause was not determined. John F. Dwyer, Erie County dis- trict attorney, called officials of the company to a conference today to open’ his investigation. Floyd, from income bungalow to y business A. The rest, of the block where |the lots are bounded by Lincoln, Grant, Floyd and St. James Park, is up for discussion, for rezoning property now zoned business A to income bungalow. The matter will be ‘taken up again at |the board’s next committed meeting. One of the owners of the four lots favored a plan submitted by Pauj Mofatt, architect. He desires to build two units there, one for his firm, the other for a doctor’s office. When questioned; he'said he had | no objection to rezonihg the rear of his proposed office property into parking district classification, thus | assuring adequate parking space! Building pee of Ascension Lutheran Church will meet at 8 tonight with the architect, to re- vise plans for the new church. Construction js 0 wart this fall, | , * City Forester ‘Willianh Lebold re- ports eight more positive cases of Dutch Elm diseased trees, bring- ing the city's'total to 26 this year. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy — and Friday, low tonight near 55. High Friday 74| to 78. | Scat- tered shewers pate riday or Friday night. Teday in Pontiac —— temperature “preteding 8 a.m. as 8 am.: Wind velocity 4 m.p.h.; direction south.) Sup sets Thursday at 6:26 p.m. Sun rises Friday at 6:22 a.m. Moon rises Thursday at, 6:57 Dt Moon sets Friday at at 9:36 a.m Dewntewn » Pemperstures 6 a. m.. dog 08 <81 BG) BM... .0deee 65 TG. Wccccodeg Oh 8 86T OR... 60 erdece 0G BB. M.ccccnce: 54 lpm geese. 14 § a. m., oe. 58 2 Wl Mh vcen dooce 04 10 a. m... .6l Wednesday in Pohtiac (As reeorded downtown) Highest tempefature..........++++)- 66 Lowest tempergqture. ......cecessesr>- 43 Mean temperature... .....ccsseceecns 54.5 * Weather—Fair. One Near Age in Pontiac Highest temperature,........,...,- 65 Lowest temperature. ..........0006). 38 Mean temperature. .:,...6.-s.05-05« $1.5 Weather—Cool. Highest and regings Temperatares This 69 in 1891 34 ib 1887 w Me Temperature Chart Battle Creek 69 47 Marquette 67 53. Bismarck 4 4 Mem 33 60 Brownsville 65 Miami 36 679 Cadillac 63 47 polis 69 49 Chicago z 556 New.Orleans 83 70 Cleveland 48 New York 66 50 Dallas = St Phoenix 100 62 Detroit eo Erpeetergh 63 45 Gd Rapids $0.48 Price | Ta Be ale, Cit: ar! 65 erse oe ss 5 y ! Angeles 75 So Washington os 46 —~ 23 Pro-Red Gls Put in Neutral Custody (Continued From Page One) Communists who helped them from the trucks. “Good luck, Comrade Lee. We will see you in Peiping,’’ one ' American told a Chinese. They were dressed in drab blue Chinese uniforms and wore white pins with the Piccaso! peace dove symbol on their jackets. None spoke to American newsmen |and watching correspondents. The Americans were the | | be delivered to the camp. South Korean prisoners (al- ready inside the) cheered them. i ! | Some of the South Korean pris- oners carried placards on ich i] were, painted the Picasso Conjmu- nist peace dove and Korean sym- bols saying '‘Peace for the people. Communist correspondent Wilfred statement he said all the Ameri- cans signed in Kaesong Wednes- / 2 “We fully) realize that this is a momentous (step that we are tak- ing. Therefore it-was only after much thought and deliberation that we madé our decision,” the state- ment said. . Our stiying | does Americans, we love our country and our people. Therefore we | love our pérsonal freedom. Our | greatest is te fight for | peace @ not only for ourselves for the American “Unfortunately under present day condi in America, the voices of those who speak out for | and thos¢-~who demand ‘preventive “We'do not intend to give the American government a chance of silencing out voices too.” About 3,000 miles of Cuba’s railway system is owned by sugar companies. | ) 4 jranks from ner a bath of material ignited and) the explosion followed.’’ But the | most avoided even looking at} the | Burchett released the text of the- ks duange) cat tenn tae We are: | | STUDYING FREEDOM’S LANGUAGE—A the Chinese Reds in Korea and who was cap’ studies his English lesson in a class conducted by Pvt. George Jelinek, lof} Ulysses, Neb. The POW is one of the many who hope to join Nationalist Chinese forces on Formosa after renouncing their former outh who fought for by U. N. troops, allegiance. Michigan Man Named on Red ‘Refusal’ List igan man was included in the list of! 23 Americans and one Briton reported to have refused repatria- tion which was turned over to Allied newsmen today by Com- munist —_ Wilfred Bur- chett. | The Michigan man is Sgt. An- drew Fortuna of Ionia. While Burchett’s list did not in- clude home ‘towns, addresses for 22| of 23 names on it were ob- tained from the official list of missing prisoners released _ in Washington early this month. The 23rd name appeared on a list of prisoners |here, but no} address wag available. Burchett’s list with addresses and the master list in | brackets: iClarence C. |Adams (corporal; Memphis, Tenn.) ‘Howard G. Adams (sergeant; | Corsicana,, Tex.) ‘Claude J. Batchelor (corporal; Kermit, Tex.) Albert C. Bellhomme (sergeant; Ashland, Pa.) pia, Wash.) ‘Richard G. Corden (sergeant first class; East Providence, Ri I.) (William A. Cowart (corporal; , piplaieariy Ark. \Edward S. Dickenson (corpo- ral; Big Stone Gap, Vt.); ‘Rufus O. Douglas (Washington listed a Sgt. Rufus E. Douglas, San Angelo, Tex.) John R. Dunn (corporal; Balti- more.) Ionia, Mich.) Lowie W. Griggs (Washington, listed a Sgt. Lewie W. Griggs, Jacksonville, Tex.) , Samuel. D. Hawkins (private first class; Oklahoma City.) Arlie H. Pate (corporal; Car- bondale, Ii.) Scott L. Rush (sergeant; ietta, Ohio) Léwell D. Skinner (corporal; Akron, Ohio) ‘Larance V. Sullivan ant; Omaha) Mar- (sarge- Richard R. Tenneson | (private first class; Alden, Minn) James G. Veneris (private; Hawthorne, Calif.) Harold H. Webb (sergeant; Fort Pierce, Fla.) William C. White (corporal; Plummerville, Ark,) Morris R. Wills (POW master list in Tokyo names a Morris R. Willis; no rank or address avail- able.) Aaron P. Wilson (¢orporal; Urania, La.) British prisoner; Andrew M. Condron (No fur- ther data available.) New Sculptor Added to Staff at Cranbrook BIRMINGHAM — Nationally) known sculptor and painter Glenn Chamberlain has been appointed sculptor instructor at Cranbrook | Academy of Art for the coming | year. Zoltan Sepéshy, director of | the academy has announced. A student of such renowned | sculptors as Ossip Zadkine in Paris and William Zorach in New York, | Chamberlain has exhibited sculp- ture at the Los Angeles Museum, Whitney Museum in New York and Show at Philadelphia Museum. His woodblock prints and water colors have been shown at the He has taught at the University of Colorado, Bard College in New York and the Des Moines Art| Center, and has worked as sculp- | tural assistant to the famed Rus- sell Wright. His work is regularly | exhibited and sold by the Sculp- | ture Center in New York City. Chamberlain ts noted for paint- ing| murals if schools and for his ) ings. TOKYO (w—The name of a Mich- | Otho G. Bell (corporal; Olym- | Andrew Furtuna (sergeant; , sculpture reliefs in public build- | Frank R. Boyd Succumbs at 86 Pontiac Native Served as Former Treasurer. for Oakland Motors Frank R. Boyd, 86, well-known Pontiac resident, died at his resi- dence, 99 Orchard Lake Ave. at 4:45 a.m. today. He had been ill several months. Born in Pontiac April 1, 1867, he was the son of Frank and Mary Ann Malpas Boyd. He attended Pontiac schools and worked for many years for the Pontiac, Ox- ford and Northern Railroad Co. He at one time was treasurer of the | Oakland Motor Car Co. | He was Pontiac city assessor from Aug. 1, 1924 until March 31, 1930, when he retired. Mr. Boyd was a member of | First Presbyterian Church and a | life member of Lodge 310 BPOE. | ; A A His nearest relative, a_ sister, Miss Anna Boyd, died in 1950. | His only survivors are two cou- sins, Mrs. Isabelle Knowlton of Buffalo, N.Y. and Mrs. Mabel Hoople of Los Angeles. | A Lodge of Sorrow will be held by the Elk’s Lodge at Sparks- Griffin Funeral Home at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Funeral will be Saturday at 2 p.m. In the funeral home. Dr. William H. Mar- bach, his pastor, will officiate and burial will be in Oak Hill | Cemetery. Memorials to the polio fund in lieu of flowers will be appreciated by the family. Michigan to Impose Stiffer Driver Law | (Continued From Page One) |ducted by the State Police for ;Many years. When they go on the job these | | examiners will be ‘‘graduates’’ of | a three-week school conducted by | | top experts of the Northwestern | University Traffic Institute and | staff men of the American Associa- | tion of Motor Vehicle Administra- tors. Each supervisor will then con- duct training schools in his as- | signed area for the local police | and sheriff's officers who will do |the actual examining of Pere. the same as now. By January, Cleary said he ex- pects to have ready a new and stiffer written examination form for new drivers. Cleary said eventualy he hopes to restore the written test which was given renewal applicants in past years. Important as is the new licens- | ing examining system, more im- | portant, Cleary said, is the central | | Violations file which should be oper- | ating by January. | Lee C. Richardson, director of 'the Driver and Vehicle Service| Division, said the new law does not impose stiffer penalties on | bad drivers, but will lead to much stiffer enforcement of present pen- alties. | Local judges are to report to the central file all convictions for | moving violations and police are 'to report all, accidents. The Department of State; Rich- ardson said, will cite in for hear- ings any driver who has had three moving violations. The hearings may be followed by a warning or suspension of a li- cense for up to 90 days, Revoka- tion of a license is mandatory for certain serious offenses, Each motorist will be given a permanent license number to avoid mistakes in identity. Clear said that when the system is installed, the state will have a file on every motorist, now. num- bering 3,200,000, which will show his driving record. 'Town Now Has Doctor MACKINAC CITY W—This com- 'munity now has a doctor. He is Dr. R. W. Hodges, who moved here recently from Atlanta and practice. Mackinac City has been without a physician | several years. Pontiac Deaths | William J. Breckenridge William J. Breckenridge, 2. of 255 Osmun St. suffered a heart attack and was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday. The son of James and Florence Martin Breckenrridge, he was born in Pontiac Dec. 14, 1923, and attended schaol here. For 12 years he worked at GMC Truck and Coach Divisian. Besides his mother, he is Ssur- vived by two brothers James B. Jr., of Auburn Heights and Fran- cis T. of Flint, and a sister, Mrs. Louis Honhart of Drayton Plains. Funeral will be Saturday at 2 p.m. from the Dudley H. Moore Funeral Home in Auburn Heights. The Rev. Walter Teeuwissen Jr. of | Drayton Plains United Preshy- | terian Church, will officiate. Burial | ill in Oak Hill Cemetery. Christ Church | 15 Years Old Plan Dinner, Program Burial will|{ollow in Oak Hill | rssokr Melee | b bahia fn Friday at Cranbrook to Born in Nashville, Tenn., June Mark Anniversary |5, 1898, he was the son of John Harry Johnson. He came to Pon-|} The 25th anniversary of the con- secration of Christ Church Cran- tiac 27 yearg ago from there. . : hns i Mr. Johnson died Tuesday | brook will be ol rved this \week- | end. Pontiac General Hospital. Bernard H. Ritter | The first event will be the parish After a short illness! Bernard| H. | Mner Which will be held jn the Ritter, 75, of 1498 Edgewood, Bir-| Church house at 7 p.m. Friday. mingham, and a former Pontiac! This will be followed by the anni- resident for 24 years, died at St.| versary program in the church at | Joseph Mercy Hospital at 12:30| 8:30 p.m. |p. m. Wednesday. Born at Meyers Grove, Minn., Guest speaker will be the Rev. July 29, 1878, he th j| Dr. Theodore 0. Wedel of Wash- , Y and } writtee tae de ington, D.C. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Ritter. He was of the Nats Catendral associated here in the grocery busi- onal Cathedral there ness with his son Kevin He will be introduced by Rt, Rev. ; Russell S. Hubbard, suffragan Besides his stepmother, Mrs. | bishop of the Diocese of Michi- Leonard Ritter of Sauk Centre, | gan. Minn., he is survived by five : sens The Rev. Robert L. DeWitt, rec- ends deughtet, La tor, will give the invocation and B. of St. Paul, Minn., Hugh P., : Kova J. ee € ib P. of Pen: Bishop Hubbard the ea William M. Brown, junior war- tiac, Mrs. W. J. Harteau of Bir- den, will preside. mingham and James T. of Chi- Special worship service Sunday cago, Also surviving are six brothers morning will close the program. and two sisters, Fred and Nick of! Turlock, Calif., John, Paul, Peter | and Raymond, Mrs. A. Hammer- ling and Mrs. Ben Ahrens. all of Sauk Centre, Minn. Funeral will be Saturday at 9 DR. T.. 0. WEDEL John Henry Johnson Funeral for John Henry Johnson, 55, of Brush Street, will be held Friday at 1] a. m. from the Frank Carruthers | Funeral Home. The Rev. Ford B. Reed of New Hope in Three New Polio Cases MARQUETTE # — Three new polio ‘cases today brought to 132 the number stricken by the dis- a. m. at St, Vincent de Paul Cath- | €ase this year in the Upper Penin- olic Church, of which he was a| Sula. A 7-year-old Marquette girl, a 10-year-old Gulliver girl, and an member. Burial will be in Mt. Hope | " Cemetery. Rosary service will be | 11-year-old Pelkie boy were taken to St. Luke's Hospital. In 1952, at the Pursley Funeral Home. at ; worst epidemic year for polio in mm Pol Tells Why Dr. Wedel ts canon | Ex-Postmistress Dies ALTO (UP)—Mrs. Josephine M. Salsbury, 77, whp was postmistress He Quit Reds Dr. Korowicz Testifies | Alto for 15, years before she ° retired, died Wednesday. Before Congressional : Committee FOOTBALL SEASON a WASHINGTON @—Dr. Marek|| {§ HERE! Stanislaw Korowicz today told al] compare e congressional committee—and via ices and see radio the people behind the Iron au = = Curtain—why he quit Poland’s your money United Nations delegation and aa ceuignd asked asylum in the United States. = Ba - “I knew it was only in the United HUTCH /Babe Parelli’ States that I could serve to the fullest extent the interest of- Po- land,’’ he said. The 50-year-old law professor spoke in French from the wit- ness chair of the House Un- American Activities Committee. Korowicz told the committee that broadcasts by Radio Free Europe and the Voice of America are heard ‘‘by millions and millions of Poles. “It is a real sanctuary for the oppressed peoples.”’ Korowicz said that even be- fore he left Poland he had made up his mind that he would try to escape from the Communists when he reached the United States. He said he had never been a member of the Communist Party, and then added: “Singularly, none ever invited me to become a member.” Korowicz was attending the U.N. Football Regulation Size | $238 Simulate d Night oys Size Bowling Season Is Here! it’s Simms for Better Bowling Equipment at Lower Prices! Famous ‘TEN STRIKE’ WOMEN'S Bowling Shoes $5.00 Value $988 Genuine elk leather in black, white and black, maroon colors, Ventilated, built-in arch. Sizes 4 to 9. ‘ALL-SPORT’ MEN‘S Bowling Shoes Sizes 6 to 12 a SCD Famous der Pads and $2.49 Complete s¢ 1¢ c tion including styles for be d rsfty. SIMMS.!2. Floor ” Sa ul Oo 54?) “Elk tanned leather, rubber heels, right starting sole for right hand 8:30 Friday evening. the Upper. Peninsula, there were Stewart C. Shotwell 168 cases. After an ilinéss of three years, gceccccccoooooocooosese Stewart C, Shotwell. 48, died Wed-/§ SELF-INFLATING ¢ nesday morning. He resided at ¢ : 94°4 Elizabeth Lake Rd. $ ° Lifelike Born in White Lake Township, © © Easy to Use March 20, 1905, he was the 80n § e Pure Latex of Charles and Nina Shotwell. He! e |had spent his entire lifetime in| § Besides his mother,| who resides He Pojent Decry Pontiac and Oakland (County. e in Rochester, he is isurvived bye three daughters, Mrs. Betty Shough | $¢. of Detroit, Mrs. Bonnie Barrons of | e hy Pontiac and Mrs. Janet Lyons oft | © et Kingston. Cu Also surviving are two brothers, | Earl in San Bernardino, Calif., Otis of Rochester; two) sjsters, Mrs. | Myrtle Wood .of Drayton Plains and Mrs. Leona Gidcumb of Or-| | lando, Fla. | Funeral will be Saturday at 2. \P p.m. from the Kirkby Funeral | Home, Dr. Milton H, Bank of Cen- | tral Methodist Church will officiate | and burial will be in Lakeside | & Cemetery at Oxbow Lake Ceme- | @ tery. Carry A Whole Flock of DECOYS In Your Pocket NEW-—for Duck Hunters! Requires but a fraction of storage space. Just toss ‘em in the pater and they inflate to perfect, life-like size and floating action inting, re- Ask for @ shape. Natural Lifetime service—no pair with tire patch, demonstration. were re-united on February 10, 1840. -wwwweve.yeYYe* pi WEEK-END SPECIAL—Friday & Splarday Only! WHY PAY FULL PRICE? 98 N. Saginaw —2Znd Floor ITI IT J ddedadedadatdededadadaded ~wreweeveevw'eTrTr"T'gr,(,wrvwvwrvwrvrevwevrevyevywywwvwY’ bn bi hi ho i Li hi hi hi hi hi hi hn hi hi Li i hi Li hi i i ll Upper and lower rea | ywws FPUPFUCUCUTT FUT CFV VVV UV wyvvvVVTVvVvVVVVVVeVVVVVVVYTY 4 | . 4 4 a a SO ta mC Big “Family” Size AUTOMATIC THERMOSTAT CONTROL Made to Sell at $27.50——SIMMS PRICE @ FULLY GUARANTEED @ THERMOSTAT. C CONTROL $ 1 6° @ EASY-FLO DRAIN SPOUT ! | Makes Draining and Cleaning Geer Enjoy all the delicious full flavored goodness of deepfried foods right this amazing deep ‘tryer. Exatt, automatic temperature control pre- vents soRey. Brease-soaked foods. The same shortening can be used over and over again without transfer of food flavors. Complete with Automatically Main * DEEP FRY SIGNAL L LIGHT in your Own . prepared easily, quickly and economically with recipe booklet to tell you how to prepare over 100 tempting. dishes. 98 North RS, * ios me _~wrrrrrrrrrrrreerereererrwrrrrerrerrrereervrvrvrevrevwrvwvevevewvwrwewerwrevwrweeuw#fere"eewewvw0510745g4»#trryrrytryrt~v~v~vv~vTrrrrv ty Mirra An Br Airy hr Or Bratld inn nal Drs Balle Dr cain ahve aa tala lt a Rn a ets ah lO ln tO lin dD dn Ora Batre lr rath ie alae On Od 1444444444444 tb bet bd bb be bbe bb he hh he heh hi he hh he he Mh hhh inhi“ . bowlers. Durable Duck Canvas Bowling Bag $349 Zipper opening, rubber base ball cup, leather carrying handles. =~ Name card holder. SIMMS. 98 N. SACINAW AT SIMMS SOCCCSOOESOSOOOEOCEOCE Plain end Fancy Dog Collars 59c to $169 Sturdy leather collars. 1 size range. Some plain and others fancy. Dog Harness ....69¢ to $2.19 Walking Leash. , .39¢ to $1.89 Choke Chain ......59¢ to 89c Tie-Out Chains. ..79¢ to $1.49] COCCCOCEESEHOCECEOOECE Sturdy Rubber Dog Exerciser All rubber exerciser with leather tongue for dog = to pull on for |f healthful ex- 79¢ if ercise. Beds, with Mattress .|.. .$2.98 to $5.98 |} || Dog Brushes ocehoce-- 906 Bl | Nail Trimmer eeeee $2.49 if Brush and Comb seeed ees 04e H Rubber Ball ...... sats a USE | eeccccccececesesooseee — ergeants Koes |N=AZZ\' Skip-Flea ye §=Powder 3 39s “Liule Bandit” scratching. ETT ' SLOT MACHI fleas and lice Sergeant‘s Cough Medicine 65¢ In Minicture Sergeant's Worm Capsules. 65¢ Sergeant's Puppy Worm: Pull down Nee |... wale ee ° .65¢ spin and Sergeant's Tape Worm off’ shows felee feccacte ss wiare ORO No coins nee Powders and Medicines—Main Fleer tions included. | {{@ Appliances (3 Saginaw M / Second rT 3 (@ Street iene tat4 == Floor aw aal oe | i ee | Sih 88 0, Segianw 2nd Floor __ Main Floor—$ a , voeher + eet ee eee tee ere +; peteL — THE PONTIAC.PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 "| (THREE I ‘ ' | ot ca ; - i Simms OPEN NIGHTS—Frideys. Saturdoys senders S A V F $ 4. 0 ] a Anyone Con Weatherstrip Any Door In Minutes | ; ’ ° COMPLETE KIT for 3x7-Ft. “ty! is \ On Th $10 Man's Seca Bronze Weatherstrip |B wef 4gW Simms Prices Are USUALLY LOWER B | ronze Weatherstrip | AES EP Simms Prices Are ecause ‘ ai Yes, $10 men’s jackets at $5.99 .. . anoth- F} cz typical value ‘that shows why more INSTALL] WITHOUT REMOVING THE DOOR | y ~ 4 men e ore are |. ? | saving at SIMMS. ites | 17 FEET $419 | ! Complete | | Sa | QUILTED (| With Nails | | P ! LINING Full 1% inch wide, spring bronze, 4/ 4 4 Ree we, Tie (fetime! weatherstripping. eee @ NO LANDLORD collecting part of profits. Simms store-policy is geared to modern mettlindidl ie = we keep down -— wor we | § all you need is hammer and scissors. ° 7 ve he : ; the ‘cost-of-doing-business’ so we can afford t opacata gna smaller extra weig S MAS rT @ NO “REMOTE CONTROL dictating PFiceS, — margin of profit. IT’S NO SECRET—we rely on aibig volume of business , SIMMS.“ | aa “ to make up for smaller profits. Our customers: reap the! benefits of 98 N. Saginaw . . - FI ge NO FANCY FIXTURES that you pay for. LOWER prices. Here's another ad-full of typical bargains lyou find at . nd Floor ; ! < % | ; Simms tomorrow and every day of the week.| Shop the whole tawn (Detroit, { ~ | se No CREDIT DEPT. to_add to expense: too) then come to Simms for prices LESS than you expect tp pay. | ha ! | f, Simms Slashes $28.45 on This Famous Brand Slide Projector FAMOUS FOR SMALLEST MARGIN OF PROFIT KNOWN Compare Prices Anywhere in Townl Real FUR COLLAR Boys’ Storm Coats y } fe SENSATIONALLY | | UNDER-PRICED $ Sizes 6 to 12. Crease resistant, water repellent treated, nylon and rayon. Full length storm style with belt. 4 colors. Pa * Nylon-Acetate and Rayon * Full Length Heavy Zipper * Concealed Elastic Waistband | * Water Repellent Treated 2 % Choice of Four Colors 46 Week-End Special Checks or Solid Color Boys’ CORDUROY Simms Super Special QUILTED LINING BOYS’ COLORFUL Boy's Gabardine Ze Plaid Shirt School Pant SIZES aid Shirts Sur-Coats | School Pants ; For Men . All Sizes—6 to 18 Years Plain Collar Style { All Sizes—8 to 16 Years } and } , Washable, fast col- S$ 49 $ [Fine pinwale cordu~ Y M t opps ors in a great as- i 49 [roy in all color sol- ) ours inven Brilliant 300 WATT—Blower Cooled sortment of checks 1 [ids and neat checks. : * HURRY, We Expat a “’Sell-Out” and plaids. Full cut |Hepyy duty zipper Ps ; nd il de, { ¥. ’ : Just 144 at this price. Pay cash—pay Vi EWLEX Automatic SLIDE =p ve me FUR Collar Style | | less. Sorry, no sa ed or phone PROJ ECTOR | Deluxe Quality SANFORIZED as pictured .. Boys Winter Weight yer .$7.95 | Nationally Adv. at $78.40—SIMMS PRICE Boys’ Plaid a ee ee Gabardine /Pants All sizes to ant gabardine, iS Ize $ 6 to 12 oe. § { = b> mee oy af Si years. Non- Sank 69 4 7 “quilt lined. - : ‘ : iyears. Half elas- $ 89 , f PA 95 Sanforized cotton 100% wool ‘a ine vd aah ae 3 eed flannel. . Colorful ; innterlined. oe ee ee el] BROTHERS ag Mats ial plaids. Ss haa aa ee loa aad ag ‘Wrinkle resistant \ MEN'S WEAR | 4 Basement ee ~ reales * y, Complete with’ ‘Airquidt Te errr rrr irr eer errr rer erys : : AUTOMATIC CHANGER | - os A press of the finger loads and ak { | Ps J. f 1% } unloads each slide — always level, TT ' 1] always right-side-up. Magazine holds 36 slides. huss Like Finding a $10.00| Billi. « « ‘ LIMITED SUPPLY—$5 Holds Yours In LAYAWAY! The Only Difference Is In Simms Price! | Brillant, true-tone color projection like you've never before been {| |§ able to enjoy at such a sensational low price. All BRAND NEW [| BRAND NEW — LATEST. MODEL with Viewlex famous LIFETIME GUARANTEE. Simple to ; } operate. Powerful blower-fan cooled. Complete with AUTO- = aL, KEQQIT ELECTRIC |] MR siee"ctancee cnic SHAVERS || [RECESS] Famous Make * . ihe . a a edit * Complete with Deluxe Case $26.50 VALUE “HUSKY” Sizes Movie Cotton Sweat Shirts | Ski-Style Pajamas | Varsity Jacket oye Dungaren OR SLIDE White, red, inavy, Knit wrist and ankle, 8 to 18 years. Choice jwaist, i roporsion| yellow and royal Elastic waist. NAZ- of black or royal blue. itailored. Triple} ARETH . brand. (12 to 16 sizes $2.79). istitched. Full zip-| White piping. Full | iper fly. Uncondi-| zipper front. Styled ey OE “f blue. Heavy fleece ; creens | lined. Sizes 36 to aes 46. Snug fitting. { Sizes 6 to| tO years. as pictured | tidnal guarantee. - COCOSHHOHSOHOHOOSOHSOO OOOOH OOOECOOOOOOOOHOHOOOEEEEEOEEOOEEEES COCooooooegegenecoooooocoonooees i Metal Tripod Stand } ’ For Little Fellows Typical” SIMMS SAVINGS! Butfon Front Style ? 3 to 6x YEARS . LONG SLEEVE a Nh Why Pay More: $13.75 enol hep TRIM—AIIl Wool ‘Gi rls’ 100% W | (A —— al Zipper Front iris q WOO * Brand new, latest Beaded 30°40" PP S$ ' & model, full factory x e | ot . guarantee, all in orig- * ae oat Plaid Ir g” oat ets — wea ars a Final cases. ACTUAL P y R lar $15.95 val ) § i$9-55. SAVING. Mo For: Easy egular alue 95 Sizes } i Li la hat Storage 40x40 inch screen .. * $9 Coats CHOICE OF COLORS Z. i203 Yrs. ' F yOu pay ¢ash and-pay A | We can’t mention the ta- . | t e LESS at Simms. RN. mous maker's name because Wool Lined $ 69 ) i \ y of these low prices! G'ass ‘ Mail Orders Filled beaded screen for brilliant $ 89 SIZES R° a(' , Add fle a mee projection Mounted on / . & feohing, (Me ¢ . folding metal tripod stand. 3 to 6x 3 te 6 18 An outstanding value! yrs, . $1.89 : Blue, green 7 te 14 | MAIN M M {{& i Bu Now or red plaids. \ " noo | BROTHERS j 1} oe Blastjc side Larger Sizes—7 to 12 yrs.....$15.89 in ’ 4 E | . % . , c = oF | Christmas teat Genuine Persian lamb collars and pocket trim. eelid colors ia ' rer bertny Full rayon lining, wool inner-lined. Slack style plow or Savy, | i we Gh inner- § pants, inner elastic cuffs. Blue, red, green, teen weet navy. ‘yarn, . SOFT COTTON KNIT ol 100°, ‘Wool or Gabardine Children’s Panties Sno Pants or Slacks seapender ste $495 2 to 12 Years 3 3 $1 Sizes 3) to 6x pr. tn Wd AWN BOYS 6 TO 12 Pea Coats Flannelette 7” Za Red Lining ae | i] | | Large Sizes— 7 to 12 years. .... .$4.95 ae , ; Reg. 59c val- Always the most popular style is ; ue. Full elastic Senalior discs with euopendere. for wear and warmth. Oversize ; ae nug-fit cuffs. Button sides. : : waist, Choice pf green, navy or storm collars. brown. . @ CAMERA @ FLASH dobdencepdevecvedecccccedcccnes ooeccececeebecscococcoueceoce Ceeeeeeeeevecccccccccceeececce BASS INETTE @ CASE @ BATTERIES $ 5 50 . BOYS and GIRLS BOYS and GIRLS Crepe Rubber Soles Girl's NEOLITE|Sole Combination Baby Bathinette Restle 98 8 i soo SBR IT Cm onus ]—& School Oxfords | Pumps & Oxfords | Boys’ Oxfords Sable = { be: flash cam $12. % Value 5 t a ina handsome gift pack. 220 All Sizes $ 19 ae $ § Sizes $ 49 a to te 12 8 Coming Haby beth and $ Smooth . woven fibre construc. - Cameras only 615.96. Layaway pipe + Mei Elk ha: ete wi rame. and plnty of Wuilty pockstay srirdy folding Igy ste met Be ore TAU eROAY telacat | | $i a | Flash Bulbs i’ 4 No. 5 Size , spe eel 21c | $1.30 Value Cc | f: 50c Bottle Brushes—nylon bristles ...... 39c | 10 for 70 | . Evenflo Layette Set, 40 pieces........ $3.00 | New fresh aoe. Fits Mott 100 Kiddie Cap Vitamins for children . . $2.49 RiSheuns. Limits cartons es Heels 12 | ) : Moccasin | eather ice lar fa win Weer ) ar s | i Lee Prouricobefat for infants ..... .. .$1.23 Save On iblalasape ELECTRIC Light Meters uppers. Longsweer sles, Inbar | styler, Lecther pears caroest | Smart youthful eae genuine ith caer ee pect gn | 1 1b. Similae baby formulae... 89 paps cent |e = ————— ———— apes amine Daby iormulae ........... _ Dw.6s ‘ . oe e. SN Ba 3 oz. Ideal Worm Syrup, easy totake ..... 75¢ , METER rong | 60c California Syrup of Figs, special .....39¢ | prick oe ; | ¢s r | | ‘ced to Fit Your Budg iy YOu len ENE | Us | ‘I e th | e lent. and widen | be 3 Ww you Want ws i Oy | | | LL Do the REST! H [Steed HP } i . PEPEEEPEEPEETE "Ni! ‘t | pe Hb an So O8 28 co gt tM dl att sified { ar % ke | Cc 4 e a geal Charge Accounts Invited} | tinaiiaiiieanicibiniacs 3B N. Saginaw St) | : pO ee ee Cea NEW... brand new... Introducing... Buster Brows’ ALL VYLON Dress Hosiery combines luxurious sleek smoothness with wonderful wearability because it’s. . . so sheer—60 gauge, 15 denier so smooth—proportionate fit and lengths so smart—high twist, dull finish so comfortable—stretch-e-e lacy welt so wearable—snog resistant; run stops You'll be wearing America’s finest hose if you choose Kresge’s new 5 ee o pair “BUSTER BROWN nylons. Sheer and sleek with lacy stretch-e-e welt . with three garter run stops. Theyre luxurious—but surprisingly low priced! You'll never know till you try “BUSTER BROWNS.” HURON at SAGINAW ssi eR ¥ tis | | | | } j | 4. Convict 2 of Murder - | in Detroit Holdup DETROIT (UP) — Robert Ken- | nedy, 23, and Blumer L. Waddle, 19, were convicted of first-degree murder Wednésday in the May 29 robbery-slaying of Louis ‘Busker. A Recorder's Court jury delib- erated two hours before finding the pair guilty jin the fatal shooting of the 78-year-old opreator of the Community| Service Bureau. Kennedy’s brother, Charles, 28. | of Scottish Rite Masonry. 1 also was arrested the night| of A . the slaying and since has been dult Education Talks committed to the Ionia State Hos- | Planned Oct. 5-6 at MSC | , } pital for the Criminally |Insane. | . ; Kennedy testified his brother was| EAST LANSING ™—Some 200 400 Will Hear Talks | the triggerman during the holdup. | Commaumity leaders from rover ion Retarded Children | out Michigan were expected to at- !tend the third annual Michigan! EAST LANSING (®—The setond Honor Dow President pre n ei-ci workshop ponteremre annual conference of the Michi- = an | On adult education Oct.|5 and 6. eee y 5 a aia F. en Theme of this year’s | ¢onference of Midland, Mich.,’ president! of is ‘Vitalizing Your Communi Dow Chemical'Co., Was among the Through Adult Education.” Pur- | State College. 152\ candidates elevated to honor- poses will be to exchange ideas| An expected 400 persons will hear ary 33rd-degrée Masons Wednes-, and methods in the field. | several of the nation’s authorities day night by the supreme |council Keynote speaker will be Dr. Paul | discuss problems connected with Miller, extension specialist in rural | the mentally retarded child. + + — gan Association for Retarded Chil- + . ty | dren begins Friday at ‘Michigan THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 | sociology and anthropology at the | Applications for State TV Stations Dismissed WASHINGTON (UP)—The Fed- eral: Communications Commissioi: Wednesday granted two Michigan applicants’ requests to dismiss their applications for new televi- sion stations. The Tri-City Televison Corp. /withdrew from a ‘contest with Booth Radio and Television Sta- tions, Inc., for channel 51 at Sagi- naw, Mich. An application by Knight News- | Detroit also was dismissed. Two i other applicants are competing for Trouble for Firemen | this channel. ° is enanne | McALESTER, Okla. ® — Little Trooper's Score Is Tops ve ore eoemuing. city Oe, FLINT (UP)—Sgt. Vincent Neer-| The city recently instituted a ing, commander of the Flint State, painless method for paying over- Police post, won top honors, ame parking _ tickets. Motorists Wednesday asia Flint Poli isto! |; were allowed to place the tickets y a5 ice pistol and 25 cents in red boxes installed team defeated one from the State in each downtown block. This al- Police post, 1,312 to 1,248, in their jowed them to, avoid the $1 police annual pistol. match. Neering. fine. scofed 262 out of a possible 300 Firemen, however, got an alarm points. from the. industrial section soon |papers, Inc., for channel 62 at Little Red Boxes Make FIVE |after. When they arrived, they | found'a farmer trying to jstuff his | overtime ticket and a quarter in a red fire alarm box. Fire Hits Lounge DETROIT # — A_ $25,000 fire damaged the) cocktail lounge of _the Lanes Recreation bowling alley |im suburban Allen Park early to day. Sixteen firemen kept the blaze from spreading to| the 20- lane bowling alley. The cause was undetermined. | 15 vibrant Autumn colors 22.10 23! ’ 100% Wool Fleece ' Others to 22.50 Sparkling creations exclusive at Waite’s by that fabulous designer . Ken Blair! Come, let us show you our fascinating and glamorous collection, in a fabulous array of . Headsizes +. Woaite's Millinery—Third Floor | hon ser ah renenetes cep smartly f ashioned * ne $ Open Friday qp98 _ Downy soft 100°% . wool .fleece coat with warm quilted lining of 100° pure wool cotton back. Your warmly tucked into this five button wrap with the smart set in sheeves with half cuffs. Round wing collar. You'll love it for its} smooth fit and) petal soft texture. Choose your coat in nude, brown or red in sizes8 | _ to 18. || ae { Waite's’ Coats—Third Floor Soft and supple flap pocket style. Or turquoise in calf. AO OBA eh PM oh soft to the touch. 1 Calf or Suede Jackets ope? touch, superbly dyed in fashion’s smartest shades . . . and tailored in a jaunty belted and rust or peacock in suede and brown Sizes 12 to 18. 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Pontiac 12, Michigan U.S. Patent Office Daily Except Sunday Published from Tae Powric Darty Press Building .| Harore A. Prtzcrratp, Publisher Conaap N. Cuuacn Roussel, Bassett Editar : Nat'l Adv. Mgr. Reg. bo Horacz P. Broors | Advertising Manager Entered at Post Office. Pontiac, Mich. as second class matter MEMBER OP Kehoe ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all iocal news printed in this news- Paper. as wel) as all AP news dispatches. Tue Pontiac Pazss is delivered by carrier for 40 cents a week; where carrier service is not available, by mai] in Oakland and adjoining counties it is $1200 a year; else- where th Michigan and all other places tn the United States $2000 a year Al) mail fia are pgyable im advance. Phone Pontiac PE 2-8181 MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS THURSDAY, SEP TEMEER 24, 1953 U.S. Sales Tax Unlikely If Senator Fercuson is right, and there are strong reasons to believe he is, consumers and politicians can quit worrying about a Federal sales tax. ‘The chairman.of the GOP Senate policy committee says he had ‘never heard any responsible ‘person in the Administration say there would be|such a proposal.” He added that) he is opposed to such @ tax and would fight it if | » it is proposed at the next pease. ‘ie tke In further discussion of the subject Senator | PERGUSON| called current sales , tax rumors “straw. men” thrown up by the Democrats. It is his opinion that the Administration instead of lgoking for new! sources of revenue should be seeking more ways to save money, bal- ance the budget and ease the tax bur- den. Undoubtedly the sales tax rumors originated after remarks last June by Treasury Secretary Humphrey before the House Ways and Means Committee. Recently Mr. ‘Humphrey clarified that statement by saying that a Fed- | eral manifacturers’ sales tax is / “just another one of a large num- } ber of: taxes we are considering,” / / J ~*~ & & ae _ Actually, there are several strong . politicél reasons why the Admiriistra- tion is unlikely to propose such a levy. , One of them is the violent opposition of Chairman REED of the tax writing House Ways and Means Committee. Another is Labor’s objection on) the ground that the levy would violate the ability to pay principle. Moreover the House is heavily weight- ed with meynbers| representing farm and. small. town folk who always have stood against any shift away from direct income ‘tax a8 a main source of Federal revenue. Finally. Reed’s supporters are mostly » extreme right wing Re- publicans without whose votes no sales levy would ‘have a chance of passing. Capehart’s Trojan Horse | There is more than meets the eye in Senator © CAPEHART’S proposal to! re- “organize the Republican Policy Com- mittee of the Senate. Tain ! The Indiana lawmaker pro- poses that all 15 chairmen of standing Senate committees. be made members of the Policy .. Committee. On the surface it might appear that Senator Caps- HART has gone in for a reform long urged by political science experts, But the suspicion is growing that the’ Senator’ S real object is not to make ‘he Policy |Committee a more progressive party. instrument. Rather observers see in it a move to put control of the committee in the hands of upper“House members who fought ‘hardest. at\\Chi- cago against the President’s nomina- tion. | if). | In considering this “reform” important fact should be remem- bered.’ Committee chairmen owe -- ‘their jobg solely to the length of their Senate service. When the . American Political Science Com- | mittee, proposed addition of com- — mittee chairmen to the Policy ittee, it also advocated | abolition of the seniority rule. | ‘2 Without- that the inevitable result would “be to load the committee with conseryatives anxious, to overrule Polity Chairman Fercuson and Major- wt paper KNOWLAND. | tuation, of course, greatly in- credser ae _burden Senator FrerGcuson has’. assumed as Policy Committee ° = wy ‘trolling power, Chairman. At the same time it gives him a chance to aid the Administration and boost his own political stock by leading the fight to keep committee control in the hands of the pro-Eisen- hower moderates. ; Two More Gas Gouge Bills A committee of the National Institute ‘of Municipal Law Officers is defending ‘the public’s interest.by opposing further efforts in Congress to weaken control over natural gas rates. Present| targets of the com- mittee are bills proposed by Reps. Lyte, Texas Democrat, and HIin- SHAW, California Republican. These measures are opposed on the ground that their objective is the same as that of the Kerr Bill vetoed two years ago by Pres- ident TRUMAN. * * * At that time foes of the Oklahoma Senator’s bill) argued that it-would re- sult in gouging natural gas users up to $500,000,000 4 year. All this recalls the action of the Federal Power Commission disclaiming authority to regulate Phillips Petroleum Co. gas rates. Thus FPO accomplished for the gas interests what Senator Kerr had tried| to do by legislation though the commission is a Fed- eral agency supposed to safeguard the public’s a * | It is| intere ing to to note that the Dis- trict of Columbia Appeals Court since has ruled that FPC does have the au- thority to regulate rates charged by gas producers. That ease now is on its way to the Supreme Court for final decision. | The city attorneys are on the public’s Side in| fighting the Lyle and Hinshaw bills. Not only would they overrule the appeals court decision but legalize the ' FPC’s abandonment of its rate con- The Man ‘About Town They Like Pictures ‘Men in the Armed Services Welcome ‘Home Photos | Daffynition Pedestrians: Sphonymous with dodger. mn picture is| worth a thousand words,” is repeated by , Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth M. Thompson of 1325 Mt. Clemens St. They suggest that other people adopt theif ‘lan of sending local pictures to their sons in the armed services. Photographs of any kind to show home activities or progress in the home town mean a lot to that boy of yours in a foreign country as he dreams of return to the scenes of his boyhood. | Phone calls from @ number of readers inform us that Pontiac|had a few snow flakes during the second week in September in 1941, | Forehanded, according to his neighbors. is | Jack Walker of Pontiac Lake, who has moved his ice fishing shanty to the edge of the lake. Atlantic City has its famous board walk, and Qakland County jis getting one along the same lines. Construction now is under way at Kent Lake on a similar bathing beach walk which, accord- ing to } C. Cummings of the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority, will be ready for the pas season, The September contingent of young men in- ducted into the army Wednesday received many gifts from Pontiac organization. Thanks for them were expressed by Norman A. Barkeley \ group leader for those from Pontiac City, and by Norman Parsons, leader of the groyp from out-county. A toy balloon carrying a note from Phoebe Ann Henderson, Raymond Giroux and Carol McPherson, all pupils at Lincoln Junior High School, made a long trip. Nineteen days after they turned it loose it was picked up by the aca of a school near Brantford, Cpt. A letter 91 years old, found by | C. T. Parks of 2575 Maple Road, gives some idea of how the Civil War sapped the strength of this community. It is from a Unipn soldier who calls Southern dungeons worse than death, and says, ‘‘The 100 young men in company were the finest in only eight of them are left, the 1 or injured, many crippled for Verbal Orchids to— _- Mrs. Emma Long of 168 Mt. Clemens St.; ninety-fourth birthday. Mr. and Mrs. John Sater of 42 South saris Geet St.; fifty-fourth wedding anniversary. Emma Maxwell of 22 Hazel St.; ninety-first birthday. Mr. and Mrs. George E. Thierry of 3632 Erie Drive; fifty-first wedding anniversary. of Waterford; seventy-ninth birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kraushaar of Lake Orion; fifty-second wedding anniversary. Floya H. Nichols of Farmington; seyenty-ninth birthday. Cane Out of the Lot Voice of the People B. J. Edwards Says Hunters Who Lock Dogs in Car Trunks Will Be Arrested, Prosecuted (Letters will be condensed when neces- sary because of lack of space. Full name, address and telephone number of the writer must accompany letters but — will not be published tf the wri requests, unless the letter is critica) = its nature) Hunters beware! In the past years little has been said to the hunter who on a clear October morning, locks up his car trunk with three or four dogs inside and starts out for a day of hunting. We are hoping this procedure will be changed this year. As director of law-enforcement of the Michigan Humane Educa- tion Association, I wish to cau- tion all hunters that anyone caught transporting hunting dogs in their automobile trunk will be arrested and prosecuted. Humane societies interpret this act to constitute cruelty, and in violation of the Michigan ‘state humane law which provides a maximum penalty of $100 fine and three months in jail. Exceptions will only be made if the hunter has made special pro- visions for trunk air circulation. B. J. Edwards Director of Law-Enforcément Michigan Humane Education Assn. P. O. Box 143. | States He Is a Witness, and Jesus Isthe Judge ~- This letter is in answer to some of those who question Christians. Mr. Beardsley recently stated that I could find fawt with a lot of good, solid Americans. Their be- ing good Americans doesn't clear them of their faults. He said I condemn them be- cause they don’t go to church. They are condemned already. He said he didn’t condemn Chris- tians. That is true because the Christian loves the light and his deeds are manifested that they are wrought in God. He said judge not. I don't judge. Jesus is the judge and I prove by the word of God. who is who, and he accepts or rejects them. In other words, I am His witness and so is the Holy Ghost and by two or three witnesses every word shall be established. Claude Carter 363 Irwin Ni “What would you say if I asked you to marry me?” “Nothing, I can't talk and laugh at the same time.” President's Words Often Misinterpreted; ‘Alas, It Has Always Been That Way’ By DAVID LAWRENCE WASHINGTON — Goyernment- by-headline seems to be'a rather painful experience sometimes — if one sympathizes at all with the people in business, industry and finance who have the daylights scared out of them by a speech by the President of the United States which they read in the morn- ing papers, only to be followed in the afternoon papers by a prompt reassurance from the secretary of the treasury that there was really no cause for alarm. The sequence of events and the facts thereon are interesting to examine as an example of how jitters are often produced in the business community. On Monday afternoon of this week — several hours before President Eisenhower was scheduled to de- liver his address in Boston over the radio and television — copies were made available at the White House to all members of the press. There was ample opportunity to read the text and discover, some- where along about: the middle of the address, a startling paragraph which spoke of how the enemy was “equipped with the most terrible weapons of destruction’ and warn- ing the world that for America ‘there is no sacrifice — no labor, no tax, no service — too hard for us to bear to support a logical and necessary defense of our freedom.” What did this mean? The re- porters had plenty of time to ask the President both before and after he delivered the speech whether it meant that the sched- uled repeal of certain tax rates on Jan. 1 next had been decided against by the administration or whether these tax reductions all Aunt Het of a sudden had become matters of doubt and conjecture. But no such information was obtained for the morning papers, either because the reporters didn't ask the President or because the White House staff didn't find out his views for the reporters, if they did present such queries. Actually, Eisenhower must have been talking of what he would recommend to Congress if the So- viets forced America and the free world into a war. | During a world war, of course, everybody knows there is hardly a limit on taxes or controls. If Eisenhower had anything else but such a theoretical emergency in mind when he spoke’ in Boston, it certainly was unknown to any member of his Cabinet. Now let’s switch to Washington. The secretary of the treasury, George Humphrey, for several days had been working on a speech he was to deliver on Tuesday of this week before the annual convention of the Ameri- can Bankers Association. On Monday evening, like a duti- ful Cabinet officer, he interrupted his labor on his own speech and, with his aides surrounding him at his home, watched and heard the President on televisian. Nothing that the President said seemed to Humphrey afterward to be in conflict with what he himself intended to say the next morning on taxes, and he wasn't at all con- scious of any reason to revise that section of his address to the bank- ers. - But the next morning, when Secretary Humphrey| read the newspapers and saw the head- lines emphasizing the doubt that had been raised by the Presi- dent’s references to taxes, he was surprised. He was sure Eisenhower had not intended to create any such doubts about the tax program for next sage at once and told the secretary the speech was right on the button. It will be recalled that the sec- Wednesday morning dis- played Humphrey’s ction of tax reductions — which would not — have been front-page news but for the doubts. expressed in Tuesday morning's papers. The Stock Mar- ket, instead of taking a nosedive Tuesday afternogn. actually started upward. It appears dhat the President himself was somewhat surprised, too, by the headlines about his Boston speech, because he was talking only about the extent of the sacrifice that would be made if a war crisis developed. If that information had been obtained by the press on Mon- day, some nervous hours for the business men of America would have been avoided. And maybe if the matter had been drawn to the President's at- tention early Monday evening he might have clarified the paragraph in question so that it would not have been the’ subject of a nation- wide apprehension — that the whole fiscal program was being radically altered and that some new and unforeseen emergency had arisen. Such are the mercurial aspects of news-gathering around a Presi- dent of the United States day by day—and, alas, it has always been that way. (Copyright 1953) Case Records of a Psychologist Says Reputable Marriage Foundations Are Multiply Jim’s case by 10,000 others in| your state each year. Then you'll realize that the biggest need in America is not °, for grea “March of Dimes” campai and other local charitable projects. It is for an organiza to solve Jim’s problem y and that of 10,- 000 ot young couples each . year in almost every state in’ the union. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case H894: Jim H., aged 29, was an Air Corps officer in Korea. “Dr. Crane, I'm back home again in Houston,” he said, ‘‘and have re-established myself in busi- ness. ' “I am also active in a Presby- terian church. I had graduated from college before going to Ko- rea. | “My income is now adequate to support a wife and I'd like to marry. But I haven't seen many girls between 25 and 30 at my church. “I am hot a very good dancer. But I like music and am active in church affairs. I come from healthy stock. “So ‘could you suggest the names of a couple of young women that you think would be suitable mar- riage prospects for a man of my beckgroun?"" Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE I gaze up at the stars tonight... And dream of long ago... And in my weary heart there is ...A loneliness I know . . . Or is it fear —a fear of life... And all the days ahead? . ... And do I wish subcon- sciously ., . The years had never fled? .. . Am I in search of some- thing past . . That made me feel secure . . Where now my prob- lems weigh me down... And I am not so}sure?... Where is the courage that was mine? . .. Where is my faith in me? .. . Why am I lonely or Afraid . .. And wanting &sympathy? . No, oT have merely overlooked . That God is every- where . «|. Then let me turn to Him again... And say a fervent prayer. | | (Copyright 1953) Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER International News Service Just fermented a dreadful thought that the bill of rights en- dorses the monopoly of the in- dividual over the preponderence of the plebiscite. How else could the mouth- pieces for the Commies make a running noose out of the legal loopholes ? We know that one person can assemble peacefully anywhere ex- cept in parking space already oc- cupied. And that the freedom of talking to yourself shall not be abridged by a constitutional stut- ter. And that no soldier shall be quartered in your trailer during times of peace without the con- sent of the finance company, And the right of protest against unreasonable searches shall in- clude your trousers at night. Article V says Tom, Tom, the piper’s son, can tip his pork- pie hat to the Mother Goose rhyme. And that excessive straw shall not be required for bail. Proxies at directors’ meetings Shall be permitted to drop their egg shells and burned toast in the suggestion’ box, tilt a checker board or take an executive stroll with their feet on the desk. And that the controversial value of any article exceeding $20 guarantees a trial by jury Unless it’s your wife’s new au- tumn hat, No citizen shall be compelled to finger himself unless there's a bug inside his collar. ‘Needed Several the fact and womeh who are marriage . till go along their lonety roads just because we haven’ t de- veloped aj Scientific =a in my mind wealth still - disvegard |this vital|need! Don’t . you think: happy age is @ proper goal? ‘ Thousanis of men as well as women, write to or come to me in pefson, as Jim has done today, but} I am powpriess to help them. For it is unethical for a phy: sician to p patient's data to another, So hands are tied in : But a Foun- are to his per- sonality. , I would ih such a Mar- riage Fou ome of you far-sighted es would start it. But it ire at least $50,000 pet year to » Joperate such an org gle state. There are h of you mikF lionaires who aig your wealth from oil wells or mines, etc Inheri e taxes gre ultimately going to big slicés of your fortunes. why not place some of that ney where it will con- tinue to rich divifiends through the generations to In the average . such @ Marriage Foundation could stimu- late up td 10,000 additional mar riages each year. And they would be happy | marriageg with almost no divorces whatevpr. They would pair joff! fine men like Jim wi teachers dnd businegs secretaries. Most of church homes, with A ideals — grounds. Many money for milk funds for tene- ment kids, thousagds of whom are feebleminded hy actual test and easy; marks far Communist agitation. So why additignal intelligent 2 or 3 yo “Dr. Cré persons d profit from i But whe they may tion fee. tion for ¥ cans. Besides, cable Marri such §presti reproach, With loc field agents, on all ap perfect typ tion. (Copyright, Fron Years in | GOLD stolen by train rob HALT O CHAM | STORM DEATH toll in New Engs land mount to 483 opens after)a compl tion job. ORACLE! OF TER_ busis reaches 315; mph in re¢ air hop across nation. font Dull, Sometime Throbbing First Symptom of Chronic By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Anoxia means want,.of oxygen, inadequate supply of oxygen to the cells, tissues and organs to maintain normal function. Some vital cells in the nervous system die if their supply of oxygen is interrupted for even a few This explains the long-lasting or permanent crippling of brain or nerve functions in some cases of carbon monoxide gassing. | Depending on the frequency and degree of exposure to atmosphere polluted with carbon monoxide, the colorless, odorless gas which, when breathed in the air quickly enters’: the blood and crowds out oxygen — anoxemia, anoxia — the victim may suffer anything from sudden loss of power and consciousness to mere headache, weakness and perhaps tremulousness in legs. Especially subject to chronic carbon monoxide anoxia are me- chanics in garages, attendants who park and deliver cars in a ga- rage, clerical workers in offices connected with garages, nitwits who run automobile engine in a small closed garage to “warm it up” on cold winter mornings. It is my belief —I can't prove it scientifically — that a common cause of chronic anoxia in Amer- sanitary, labor saving gadgets the typical. American kitchen, equipment to insure thorough ven- tilation of the kitchen, winter and summer, is seldom built in or in- stalled. ; Such equipment doesn’t show — and besides it is virtually impos- sible to provide kitchen cowls, an haust fans and adequate flue for the cubbyholes so many homes. of cary . = bts FOs eee OOO HE As soon as the man was removed: from the danger)|the attacks ceased. | : People who smoke excessively ,: especially ¢igarettes are usualy! chronic me mon-' oxide anoxia. rapier ~ (Copyright 19§3) a: . ] Forced Readership Urged | of newspaper readers, would work by Brazilian Lawmaker _| like this: RIO DE JANEIRO W—A Bra- zilian lawmaker has proposed a| Publishers could start delivering plan for the ‘‘forced reading’’ of | their paper to the home of a pros- newspapers. The scheme, p by Deputy Joag Cabanas, and/ er failed to halt the delivery within a = Increasing the number! two weeks, the publisher could con- Without previous authorization, | | pective subscriber, If the subscrib- |; } scriber. The bill also provides that the ‘publisher could collect for the pa— \per through legal means without |paying court fees. ‘Congress in September 1919. _IHE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 |sider him a full - edged sub-! Police Safari Meets pptie Much Success GREENWICH, Conn, (UP) — A police safari, was sent to investi- , ‘gate ear-piercing cries of ele-| The American Legion was or-| phants, tigers, coyotes and other and was ~— back a tape re- | ganized and granted a charter by beasts near the Fred Hawley Cording of wild animal cries to | home. | The officers cautiously surround- | ed a wooded area and closed in. | They found Hawley, a recording | engineer, hiding in the brush. He jhad rigged up two amplifiers Study Maple-Leafers ‘frighten his house guests. handful of GORHAM, Me. (UP) — A Gor- ham State Teachers College in-| Maine college students knew more | structor has started a course in| about the country just across the | Canadian-American relations “‘be- | border. He set out last fall to rem- | cause a year ago there wasn't a edy | students who could| | | ] SEVEN . ! + Main lle nts | name five prominent Canadians—| ian consul-general in oston, e College Students | name you count the Dionne quin-| it's the only puck course being of- fered in any follege in/the eastern tuplets.”’ James M. Whitten though | United States. that situation. d was founded 1E . | the first dental ip ies re a Dr. George S. Patterson, Canad-| Bainbridge, Ohio. ‘ ROEBUCK AND CO. 4) 4 f MM L 4 ta po A LL he. “A 9 HURRY IN NOW! 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Phone FE5-4171 Calliffaclion guidueddlbed ov your tmeoney back SEARS '54 North Saginaw St.im | ee ie he i ee — Oe Oe ee, ee __ EIGHT Doctors Order Canes | \ Mba ‘this summer to employ in . ° Ing! juvenile patients on their for Obedient Children | Sool) behavior. NEW YORK (UP) + Doctors | around the pay bare ae prescription blanks that, properly, filled out with the names of pa- RC I | F ASTEST KNOWN RELIEF tients ne apcredited nn aed FOR GAS ON STOMACH | entitle a arer to rece ! | frozen dessert cone. MEAVENS! Most attacks are acid it strikes take Bell-ans | test-act pr the relief | They have) bee. supplied with) Rural free mail delivery in the; Old Men Spray Painted by Blowing From Mouth | A. D.: MELBOURNE, Australia (UP)— Australian aborigines used a prim- itive form of spray-gun 2,000 years ago. Anthropologist B. J. Tugby re- i} cently described the system, after lexaming aborigine tock paintings and digging for native implements igine painted a hand about 53 fa oche. ' around the hand. Gives Up and Sells Car 1. Put his hand against the sur-| ce to be painted. | 2. Chewed red, yellow or white 3. Sprayed from the mouth | to the court: Use of insecticides on peanuts | the 10 illegal parking tickets that! . would cost him $5 each and said) test place in the world,” has an | engineers’ ore looking to the red | average rainfall of 458 inches per | Stop sign as a simple but effective “Pardon my language, Judge, | year. It is on record, however, that device to help cut down the appal- but I used to come home from|in 1861, Cherrapunji had 905, ling death rate on America's high- THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 24. 1953 Tugby said this is how an abor- ‘ . ‘ . | place to park. Finally, I would Can’‘t Find Parking Spot; [eadperaniec pay yim and | place. I sold the car. It was a+} BUFFALO, N, Y. (UP)—William | headache.” ‘Goodenough of Buffalo clutched | ae Cherrapunji, Assam, the ‘‘wet-| — Traffic of heartburn gas. 50¢ refunded if not | U.S. will mark 57 years on October’ inh the Grampians mountain range has increased yields an average of , work very tired and drive around| inches of rain, which 366 inches | W4YS. Se ST Fe, Cn eee \|in southeastern Australia. | 500 to 600 pounds per acre. |and drive around looking for a fell during the month of July. Traffic. Commissioner T. T. oarty vee aaa ieee — ' tual 0,000 stop signs in the h city will red, Fe ee rs a ane ! “Many miljtated against we the use of stop until only | very recently,” Wiley said. ‘There | were so many drawbacks against | previous signs abd it was only | until the development of reflective sheeting that a red color has been developed | which meets today’s needs.”’ The idea of red stop signs was | recommen as a national stand- |ard back ih 1924, but the red pig-, ments then available faded too rapidly and red, at night, was too y Mattress Pads | 3 69 Full Size More sleeping pleas- ure plus/ added pro- tection. 54x 76-inch size. Washable! Mix eral in eight stunning Harmony | ¢ 3-Piece Set 8 8 Regularly 1.13 3 bath towel eed? tape hand towel ale + 4be wash cloth ..---> towel ensembles pastels, deep s House colors ong-wearing ‘ig washfast hades. Buy sev- and match | now! Let This Rich. All Brass Ensemble Grace im Home! Fireplace Set ) 87 Easy Terms Would cost 84.85, if bought separately during regular selling season! Pull chain, mesh s¢reen, 38x31 -inches. 20-in. high andirons. 4-piece fireset. Screen. ..43.95 Andirons...19.95 Fireset.. 19.95 @ 7 smart pieces in all © Solid Brass Set Circline Fixtures Instant Starting. 2 Lights Reg. 1285 = Q,.87 special low price! Popular luorescent ceiling fixture, com- plete with 32-W and 22-W oulbs. Electric Irons With Automatic Heat Control rr 6.97 Check the low price! This light- iron heats HARMONY HOUSE Al co bedroom beauty. Mitered cor- ners. tee e Sateen Comforter sheets GOOD 88 QUALITY F ron MUSLIN | 712x108 inches Smooth, bleached white muslin that take day-in, day- out hard wear, launder beautifully aggin' Durable muslins are always a good investment—stock up now and enjoy Sears big savings, 81xlO08-in. size ddd ee eee ee 2.15 Lorge 63x99-inch size ..............,05.0.0... 1,73 Pillowcases odlelep ss eee ceoles ble ce clrele dich. each 45¢ Long-Wearing Sheets BEST QUALITY MUSLIN) y 1 29 ir he = 72x108-In, The ideal sheet where long wear is required! Sears fin- est, heaviest bleached white muslins. Buy now! 81x108-inch Size .................... mele. 2.49 Pillowcases, 42x36-in. ................... each 49c 45x36-inch Pillowcases ............... each 59¢ Harmony House Fitted Sheets | Size QUALITY MUSLIN 29 vourbed Harmony House fitted sheets. Can’‘t pull out, wrinkle, bunch up! Never need ironing. Santorized (maximum ‘shrink. 190). They always fit! Get yours today and save at Sears low prices! Twin Bed Size Good Quolity Muslin. ...-....... . Luxurious Sheets Better Combed Percale) 69 beck Sias Fine, silky smooth , . . preferred by discriminating home- makers for beauty and sleeping comfort! Save! Pillowcases now at .......,........ were .59e 81x108-inch Size ...-.-~..... ina e » be retecete se be - .2.79 @ Guaranteed 1 yr. @ Washable at home Save Over $51 Regular 24.95 ELECTRIC BLANKET It’s value-packed, yet budget-priced! sational offer for your savings! Smooth, 25% wool, 25% cotton and 50% rayon; 9-heat, thermostatic controls, For double bed. Easily stored. Buy now! & 1988 A truly sen- * Part 3 Wool Pair Choice of Rose, Blue, Green With 5 Y Harmony Now Just — 4.98 Hewes Two-tone pastel plaid with ace- tate satin binding. Folded size 70x80-in. Softly napped on both sides. Full 72x84-nc mony House colors. teed S-yrs. against moth dam- 100°, Wool Blankets ear Guarantee! 9.98 ches! Lovely’ Har- Guaran- age! 4-in. rayon satin binding. Reem Esc ” BET. eae Reversible to Solid Color Rey. 398 = QQ copper bottom stainless steel COOKWARE Enjoy the quick, even heating of copper cooking with the easy-to-clean durability of stainless steel. check the first-class features of Sears cookware. Come in... 1 wool filling and acetate vering for sleeping comfort, 68x80 inches. Kenmore Heaters New! Smart! Fan-Forced Check the low price! Delivers 42 cu. ft. air per minute., No radio or TV interference. 6-ft. gord. Reg. 18.95 Come in now... GE Steam lrek 8.97 gular 9.95 With Beige. Famous GE Quality | 14.88 . Save over $4 weight 1000 - watt on this General Electric Auto- Windsor styl . 22 quickly and efficiently. l-year matic Iron! Have fabric con- pi se pa a reted hondle guarantee. UL-approved. trol! See it now! —cup graduations. Satin finish Electrical Dept.—Sears Basement bottom for quick heating. Chet cooks —_—— Now Only quality A Combination Cooker B 5'/-qt. Dutch Oven .. Housewares Dept. Sears Basement Chicken Fryers Save at This Low Price meat to tasty Flavor sealing cover allows per- tect slow frying. C 10-in. Chicken Fryet - : p 7-in. Skillet .-.---°" E 2-qt. Saucepam ----* Also available in other Pressure L 4.49 Reg. 12,95 aluminum tryer Prepares meal. oodness. deliciously and groceries, tender! 8.40 Reg. 8.40 neg 6.50 Ree 3.95 50 4.35 Res- aiiieitediimumnamneninem ait aetna ; sixes Saucepans ix Efficiently 0.99 | s jin minutes... Saves {uel tpo! Extra rack and recipe book) included. || woman athlete. | | | Sen. John. Kennedy, 35, show || up well in com |[ | better i Develop Red Stop Signs to Emphasize Meaning NEW YORK (INS) Wiley of New York City, an expert in the field, reports that all future stop) signs the world’s largest city soon Kard to see. often appearing black, or nearly |so. | | Wiley ted out jthat when he entered the field in 1931, reflective butténs were just starting vut were found difficult to uge in forming letters. In| the mid-thirties. traffic engineers began working with glass and some metals with inverted dim- ples—like on golf balis—but again there was difficulty with lettering. | | “Ther industry developed bead- ed reflective sheeting,” Wiley re- lated, “and this gave us the material we were Iqoking for.’’ | Wiley--said New York City has | been} see Hig a | with various colored ‘signs for e) past two year§sbefore deciding on the new & red reflective sheetigg with white lettering. The new red sighs are much more easilly seen than the yellow | currently in use and can be seen ;more than .a block away when driving in|the city pt night. The reflective terial ‘jlights up"’ at night when dight beams reach it. It contains millions jof tiny glass | spheres, each of which is a re- flector—30|000 beads per square inch of sheeting. Wiley. said New York plans to | use aluminum as aj base for the | Signs, with the silver reflective | sheeting mounted thpreon and the | flame-red |transparegt ¢olor going | over the silver, exc@pt for the let- |ef areas. | | Wiley explains that red stop | Signs are. necessaty eause ‘the public with ‘stop’ or ‘no,’ 4 positive meaning. | sufficient heed to the yellow stop signs. We intend tg use the red Sens only for stop markers—in this way there wil} be no con- fusion.”’ | _ Wiley looks to further uses of re- | flective eeting im other signs, in different colors. pointed out that the New York} Thruway Au- thority is considering the material ‘for directional signs, probably in | blue land white. ° He also expects the red stop sign to become -the national] standard. Wey has been a staunch advo- te of this type sign at meetings 'of the Uniform Traffic Control Devices, 4 joint committee of the Highway Officials. the Institute of | Traffic Engineers and the National | Conference on Street] and Highway Safety. | South Dakota already has be- gun) installation of the red stop signs and by yearend expects to have such signs of 24,400 miles of main | highways. Illinois also is planning to adopt | them generally and spme use pres- ently is being made}in nearly 30 states. American Kids ‘Prefer Younger Crop of Heroes | NEW YORK w—The youngsters | of America have young heroes. a survey of} 10.000 and girls | of 8 ‘18 shows. Elizabeth Taylar. Eddie Fisher, Vic Damone. Jerry, Lewis and Micky Mantle came put as favor-’ ites. i Bing Crosby and Sinatra trailed, as did) ” stars in’ their $0s like Musial, Young Robin vey conducted by Youth Re- search Institute vate organi- zation. Maureen y, 18, 'ten- ‘nis star was the most popular ' ved | with the . Truman, rf HF if ie i : li i | ilk 4 af Ta) if Salixfaction guaranteed ov your money back” CENDE 154 W. Sazinaw St. Phone FES-AITL called “west- erns” or “ .” while those driver from Indiana or Ohio were called |““Americans” or “States.” | i 4 | | if | | ’ | 4} a | | American| Association of State § ' ES «8 a “Ieaving the machines running so FOA. AIDE—Lt.-Gen. William E. Riley, United States Marine Corps (Ret.), ig the new deputy director for management of the Foreign | Operations Administration. ‘In his new post, General Riley will pro- , vide advice, services and admin- istrative facilities for FOA’s opera- - tions in Washington ahd overseas. | Towns Shrine to Communism Zoar,’ Ohio, Tried Plan Long, Before Russia; Gave It Up in 1898 ZOAR, 'Ohio (NEA) It’s a little | unsettling. 10 be driving through | the center: of wealthy, 20th cen- | tury Ohio ‘and find yourself sud- | dénly jn the middle of+a living | shrine to| Géommunism, But that’s what this village is, | and the 6 64 State Archaeological | and Historical Society helps pay its upkeep. | Not only:.that, but communism | was practiced here more than twice as long as it has been in| Russia. This comm tnity was} founded in; 1817, the year® before | Karl Marx, whose theories are| the basis of Russian Communism, | was even ‘born. | In fact, if a lot of wealthy tour- | ists hadnt: come around flashing their money and their fine clothes. and if the: workers in the local | woolen mifl hadn’t got tipsy on} beer during’ the lunch hour; and| a lot:of other ‘‘ifs,’’ Zoar might conceivably: be communist today. Just conceivably. But communism died here in | 1398, and the reasons are inter- | esting. — Zoar was, founded by about 300 | German meh, women and children who had broken away front the} Lutheran church. Théy came to| this tountry to avoid persecution. | The. form, of government ‘they | set up for, themselves conforms exactly to the first definition of | communism: given by Webster's | dictionary: “Any system of social organization in which goods: are | held in common.” But their rea- | sons for adopting this plan were | mostly for economic survival | which required the closest kind of | management. No one’ received any money for his work and all products of the community , were pooled. Profits were reinvested in the productive sources, and things went well. All kinds of crops were. raised, hbootmakers chosen from the com- mon labor’ pool made all the shoes (almost identical in looks), and there was a wagon building shop, a shop for making all the clothes, a tin shop, saddlery, flour mill, woolen mill, planing mill, and even twa blast furnaces with made excellent stoves. Everyone’ worked hard, the wo- men as much as the men. For a time the whole community prac- ticed celibacy because childbear- ing kept. the women |from their work. Children were required to be kept in @ common nursery tp free their mothers for work. Zogrites never | kissed their, children because they | thought kissing was sinful. © The men all dressed alike and the women dressed alike. The wo- men were allowed no/ ornaments, but the men could have a silver watch. But all this work and little play | paid off. By 1835 Zoar was virtu- ally self-sustaining and by 1852) the communal property) of the town | was wo $1,000,000. | The néxt year, though, things began going downhill and they never stopped. In 1853 Joseph Baumeler, the leader of the group, died. With him went much of the fire and idealism whi¢h kept the | community going. A railroad and a canal were} byilt and as visitors came from the’ outer world, with fine clothes and money to buy what they want- ed, more and more Zoarites be- | came dissatisfied with their lot. Agricultural and industrial ma- chinery in the town did not keep up with modern inventions. The workers began to grumble. At the woolen mill the male em- ployes bégan taking extended | lunch’ periods and drinking beer, | | other townspeople would think they were working. This caused a big ruckus. By 1898 the governing body of the community ‘decided it was either give up the communist system or go under, so everything was sold at public atiction and the proceeds divided yp among the people. | Today, Zoar is a pretty, sleepy little place no bigger than it was 100 years ago. 4, a _ | Starting School Early | Has Some Advantages | | PRESTONSBURG, Ky, ®—Un- | like most of the rest of the coun- try, thousands of rural Eastern | Kentucky children start school |in the middle of July. THE ! no one knows just when. Country | | roads often became impassable } in winter, so an early school open- | ing was necessary if youngsters | were to get any education at all. Although the children don't like to return to school in the middle |of summer, they change their | minds along towards February or PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 Editor in Breakdown Over Two Breakdowns weekly Cuthbert Times appeared late recently, Hal Herrin, the edi- tor and publisher, printed this front page notice: “We're a few hours late with | the paper this week. - ‘The linotype broke down Fri- | day, the press broke down Tues- CUTHBERT, Ga. &—When the day, and we broke down Wednes- j day.’’ | Of the 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence, |34 were lawyers. 2 Jailed for Murdering Belgian Congo ‘Witch’ JADOTVILLE Belgian Congo Ph — A witch hunt in the Lualaba dis- trict of the Congo's Katanga prov- ince ended last week before the court at Jadotville with stiff sen- | tences for the witch hunters. : When informed by public rum- ors that an old woman in his village was @ witch, thé chief ordered one of his henchmen to murder her without telling the au- thorities.. However, after the mur- der, the dead woman's family complained to| the Belgian admin- istration. A _|NINE — _-— —~+ The chief got life | imprisonment and his henchman 20 years. Both have appéaled. | Tropical rain foress compose about one-half-of the world’s for- est area. Fgr from being impene- trable, the jungles are fast being The custom started years ago— | March when school lets out. | | a —— ~ —agTEgC %, * ONLY SQ. YD. Thanks to our special 6° | ‘SPECIAL! Harmony House needlepoint effect broadloom carpet yok SSR purchase, we’re able to sell this carpet for much less than you might expect to pay. Handsomely textured, withstands scuff marks and footprints. Blended wool and carpet rayon yarns won't show wear for years to come. Choose in Beige, Gray or Green. Beautiful in any home setting— modern, traditional or provincial. See it at Sears! Sualtioaction puiuadtdleed ov ate x4 Special for our anniversary sale only—one of our best = 2 wearing, most beautiful carpets at tremendous savings. You'll love this contemporary leaf pattern in Harmony mm. House Beige, Tuscan Rose, Sage green or Dawn Gray. ke Styled to look smart in both traditional and modern homes. For this superior quality at an unheard of low price, do shop early—today! af ———w, floor Coverings Second Floor TRAVERSE RODS 2.29 © 5.39 Heavy bonderized steel coated to prevent rough edges Yard Goods Dept.—Main Floor . + + gee % ¥ specially taf E Regular 4.49 Draw Drapes 1 80x84-inches Per Pair... Ready-Made -DRAPERIES Regularly 12.98 Rayon-Cotton, Jacquard, Antique Satin A lovely assortment in green, white, chartreuse, toast, persimmon, gold, na- ; tural. Sizes 44x84, 44x90 inches. 3% Lustrous acetate bark draperies with careful, expensive - looking de- tailing, Pinch - pleated. In many popular’ colors. This Sale Ends MONDAY! Shop Now... Save at Sears! 60 pair $e munity fact” SEARS 154K Saginaw St. Phone pe sun ae 4 i a de Sn (CN SY Ca NC <_ — Ts TEN [) THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 3 ai Be as Sa. Spiele ; Bul Ly c.Q00 QUALITY rersidils . USE SEARS EASY PAYMENT PLAN Totaling $20 or More...) Pay Ask Any Salesperson? } | Pa ses. xv al £3 ses ae sedids TOYS FOR THE KIDS! YOU. CAN EVEN BUILD A Hip-Roof Too! Box A NEW BOAT FOB YOU! NEW GABAGE..., With Reinforced Corners Ideal f he hobbyist... build 1 for fun, enjoyment \ . relaxa- Think Beg bona can ane cre 4.19 tion! Saye at Sears! save! Ask Sears about building Holds 50 to 75 sockets) and plans. parts! Roomy 19x7x83;4-in. size made of 24-gauge steel|. ,, a SN electrically welded. sim aT SS = geanisies Sage D> \ ww ¥ < Phe aS ae << z a, ee, UIA Sots ri AS S$ DI DEEDS BUILD CHAIRS, TABLES, . ha al IS ae ee SHELVES, CORNICE FINISH OFF YOUR ATTIC 32.-Pc, Socket Sets BOARDS! UNTO AK EXTRA ROOM! At a Terrific New Low | Price ire a ars “how-to-do- ake is ream me, tru feavire fete an Bours gpa ae NOW! Power tools pay for them- Reg. 26.50 21 67 department. . selves! t e Ten Craftsman quality forged sockets, universal joint, | 18-in. T A R BOR speeder wrench, tool box, and CRAFTSMAN 8-IN. TIL cea ere, REGULAR SALE SAVE , ITEM PRICE | PRICE | YOU __ OO ; Crofts: 8-in. Bench | , | : Sew nw : 42.00 37.80 4.20 COMPLETE ! Craftsman Capacitor 1/2 _ % _ | | SRS eM orc, 32.00 28.80 3.20 “510 DOWN “f \\ Craftsman Power Tool 17 85 15 00 2 85 REGULARLY 109.04... BUY PS end Bench r +++ , t — | ° | Beat) Pe ° - NOW AND YOU SAVE 12.04 Socket Wrench Set Craftsman Work Light 4.49 4.00 | 49 Join the thousands of home carpenters who have ‘2 and ‘rin. Hex Drive Parts , meg ' aml la an discovered ‘‘how to save money” by doing the Reg. 4.98 Two Table Extensions 12.70 11.40: 1.30 job themselves! This saw combination saves a 3.67 t-- | —-——--— | 4 labor... speeds up work , . . and makes build- Ideal for, mechanic, farm and TOTALS 109.04 97.00 12.04 ing easier @nd more accurate. See it in action incustt a tiedttrenied tn letaned |! ... learn dll the features at Sears! up under severe strain. 21-Pc. ee a as % ye : kare & a> “BS , a an Chain Saw 00 Lawn Sweepers Sturdy Lawn Rakes Stee He Eliminate Tedious Raking 22 Teeth: Wide 18-in. Spread Easy-Roll’'g Rubber Tire Wheel Regularly priced at $239 ....... ; | a cisces $30 . . cree a l ps: Reg. 98c 88¢ Reg. 13.95 11.88 The heart of this David’ Bradley saw is its erpyieipn pure A cies TERMs : coat me 4 inl 2-cycle air cooled engine! jt produces amazing power for Amazingly efficient! Sturdy Easy to use Craftsman .., Husky steel construction. Made its size and weight! Cuts wood up to 12 times faster than Pushel hopper Four cadtantakts Neel tines. Mendweod bindie, fable! ‘tre’ rolls | saspothly, by hand! See it in action! 3 brushes. Green and yellow. Rust-resistant enameled finish. absorbs bumps. Hand grips. Don’t Miss These Values! “ | ° " | | Don't Miss These Values! Good Fences Make Good Neighbors wv TTrre TererrrTere “HAND TOOLS! Every item is reduced ing irons, punch-chisel sets. Your Choice Choose from: duck bill snips, combination snips, handi- kits, block plaries, hammers, squares, brick trowels, plastering trowels, saw blades, bit braces, slip joint pliers, :, ratchet screwdrivers, pipe wrenches, tool boxes, solder- 4 ee, J a y ; : AOE », Lz 67 Each lawn or garden @ Chain link defi ust resistant arranged handled! Cross Country Chain LINK FENCING @ Be a good neighbor! you've © Sofer yard for your children’ es time and weather! — won't @ Installation by skilled if you desire. / > 4 Gi 3 et Ps 4 \ mM j 33 end up Grow that velvety to play in! Bank President, Bright-Eyed at 91, Won't Quit Yet NEWTOWN, Pa. (UP)—Horace B. Hogeland, 91-year-old president of the First National Bank & Trust Co. of Newtown, has completed 75 years of consecutive service at the bank. He hasn’t a thought of re- “I feel fine,” said the former G ’jW 2010 Dixie Hwy. FE 2- bank janitor. “I think I'll keep go- ing as long as they want me. Kind So BLACK TOP © DRIVEWAYS © PARKING AREAS FREE ESTIMATES—EASY TERMS ASPHALT PAVING 6O. | 7 of keeps you in touch with what is going on.’’ t From the point of view of con- tinuous work, Hogeland is prob- ably the senior banker in the na- tion. He began work as a janitor when the bank |occupied one room in a house in this Bucks County country town. His salary was $25 a month to start. Later, Hogeland became clerk, then cashier in 1904 and finally chosen president in 1927. “Some folks say it doesn’t amount to much, spending all this time in one place,’’ Hogeland said TRADE IT IN! GET A NEW WE HAVE ALL FAMOUS MAKES Picture Tube Too Small? Too Weak? DOES YOUR TV NEED REPAIRS? | No Cash Needed! Terms’ Available! HAMPTON T-V 286 State St. — Open Every Nite — Phone FE 4-2525 Tv! } oe ' ij a philosophically. ‘‘I don’t know. I’ve enjoyed getting to know people real well as you can do in a small | town.” | Looking back across his long | life, the bright-eyed banker has | just twp complaints to make about | life today. | ‘‘We seem to get too much pleas- Sam Benson Says: Yes, You'll Find the JACKET at 58% ure from outside us now,’’ he said. In My Side Street Store Worth At Least $12.95 SAM BENSON\ Open Till 9 P.M. ‘‘Men used to find a lot more joy inside of themselves. I think they were happier that .way.”’ Vatican City comprises an } area only about as large as an 18-hole golf course. You'll want to Scoop up a stack of these "just right” boxed toys during this exciting sale. Ideal for holiday gifts, birthdays, rainy day play. Save now at Sears! Toy Dept—Sears Basement Zip Top Game | P Sf, KO MAN OS 4 Lt, Se VY Z ep , ope a?¢ Sag, Stays in workmen can be Alldetails Sears Parking Lot 154 North Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 Tot’s Paint Kit Embroidery | amr z opr Cro-Kay Set Set ; \ use Sears credit purchase coupon books Se eee at Satislaclion guatanBed : : 154 North: Saginaw ot gous“. mone back” SEARS Phone FE 5-417] EE . St. 4 res Satifaction pescanibed oe pow money bach” ENR 7: | | | 1 | 4 I 4 ‘ a oe THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 | ' | ELEY N ee eee ee SS eS EEOC eee see ee BUY NOW DURING THIS GREAT ANNIVERSARY EVENT! . ere - ONLY 3 MORE DAYS! HURRY IN Now! Bate, nr e.. =| Men's Furnishings Main Floor Real dream shirts—the kind men appreciate, women too ‘cause they wash sparkling bright. 16 rib pinwale corduray with an all viscose rayon yoke lining in blending colors. Choose your favorite colors today. 2 button-thru pockets and rounded*duffs make it a value hard to beat. Small, medium and large. Hurry in now! men’s Pilgrim I destovd / / corduroy shirts \ Ay l a real 4.98 9 q ' ca value, now... | a Wi \ ' | Buy Now, You Save 99c Men’s 100% Wool Knit Coats Reg. or 99 4.98 . Wool worsted body with double wool worsted elbow potches. Heather, gray or blue. 36-46. CHECKS @ STRIPES © DOTS N DASHES b oe NEW TO THE EYE AND EASY TO BUY “ and pewvevevwverer Price Ty Le p debe 4 i Pn : tenes + re we nem ‘e vd - Pe - . axe wa 3 obs LA = L a A = ; . < ere paca Cats a> : y : * T'S ~~ CORTLAND > \. WORSTED SUITS Sears Low - 399% “Fibreen Fabrics,” Slim Jims With Seed Effects! Medium Tones, Clear Faced Worsteds! Really superb quality with good looks tailored to stay, not just pressed on to sell. | Double and single breasteds ... all Sizes é GR ROLY LP ERE IES 465,75 é of 4: 4 4E 2 oe we Ask fr Worsteds! REAP CECE ES. ‘“ ? fp il BS iP 7OF Ad 2 hy ep hI PRS VISIT OUR CSeclored lo. Measure DEPT. FOR SUITS INDIVIDUALLY TAILORED FOR YOU ALONE... 44.50 t 89.50 Pinwale Corduroy from “Putter Pants” f 97 Lock at these savings! Buy ‘em for Now Only 2 all the youngsters and SAVE! De- luxe interlined convertible collar. Popular Boyville Jr. pants. Wine, green, royal and cocoa. Sizes Elastic bexer type back. ex- 4.16 Buy yours now at Sears sales! tension tab ‘waistband, zip fly. 3 colors. 4-12. CORDUROY \ Ady Sport Shirts ba priced | 84 ot just .., | ‘d Thick pinwale corduroy _¢@ Beautiful colors to choose a Ay ry sd Boys’ Wear—Main Floor | \ “Roy: Rogers” Sanforized* Cotton Colorful Corduroy, Denim Jeans ds. Flannel Shirts ari ieee Pants For Roughest Wear ie 1.29 1.49 os 2.79 ot. 1.69 Boyville te} fleece lined cotton Boyville Jr. al ized* nacho tela unit chin Sloan soleil washfast plaids Lbop| yville Jr wale corduroys, Sanforized* 8-oz. denim for the elastic back waist, pleated Boyville crew. Double stitched try = Roy ond Trigger. Pizes convertible collar, double yoke.| front. 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Men's Sports Wear Main Floor Tree eee eraeeeeee. “TTT? “TTT 154 North Saginaw St. Phone FE5-4171 TET eee ET TPT OOP TEP TRO OOEET PEE T OTT ee el 8 _ TWELVE | ee Pastor Receives Degree _| theology degree trom Mitt School of Theology in August. HOLLY—The Rév. Lewis C. Sut- ton Jr., formerly: of Port Huron f | and now pastor .of Calvary Metho-| Tammy Hall, the political dist Church here, was one of eight | organization in New York, is men who received the master of | as old as the U. S. government. Church Ready | for Fall Bazaar. « fe | | Board Fills Vacancy NORTH BRANCH—At a special | See meeting of the North Branch Town- ship Library Board this week, Ford. Lake was appointed to fill the vacancy on the board by the rt Walled Lake School Seeks for 1939 Grads . WALLED LAKE — Addresses of members of the graduating class of | 1939 of Walled» Lake High School! are being sought in con- » There’s Practical Economy and Smart, Day-long Comfort i, ‘| in this Favorite by o| | t j tan 3” Soft, pliable upper Non-slip heel and leather...easy to narrow back- part. keep white. CushiN-Crepe sole and Heel ee soft and safe. Saug top-line fit. and roomy foot comfort silent, Sis ses from. Triple A's i B JOIN OUR SHOE CLUB Buy 12 pairs of shoes and ¢ ‘13th pair FREE of any colt! OR SAL em Store Hours 9-9 Friday and Saturday 320 Main $t., Rochester OLive 2-081! i ly MISS vIviN L. H ¥ Rochester Man ‘Plans to Wed \Iinois Girl ROCHESTER — Announcing the lengagement of their daughter, Vivian Lois, to Elwin N. Bishop {are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Holly of Cicero, Ill. Mrs. Mildred Bishop of Roches- ter is Elwin’s parent. The bride-elect, a registered nurse, took her training) at Cook County School of Nursing at Chi- | St. Paul’s Methodist | at Rochester Will Give | Fair Thursday | ROCHESTER—The 53rd annual | | fall fair of St. Paul's Methodist | | Church will be held next Thursday. The bazaar opens at 2 p.m. in | the church house and a turkey} | dinner will be served in the church | | basement starting at 5 p.m, | Mrs, Harry R, Tripp will serve as general chairman. Heading the dinner committee are Mrs, Ed- win Kage and Mrs. Cecil Ennis with Mrs. Leslie Aris and Mrs. | Harry Cook assisting.. WSCS circles will take part in | the bazaar. Heading the fancywork booth is Mrs. Ralph Price. Other |chairmen are: Mrs. Wayne H. | Eddy, aprons; Mrs. CGC. E. Price, baked goods; Mrs. Stella Travis, fish pond, The Youth Fellowship, with Mrs. Kenneth Van Knocker | as chairman, will have charge of the candy booth. Masons to Honor | ‘25-Year Members cago. The prospective bridegroom | ROCHESTER — _ Twenty-five- is a divinity student at Detroit | year members will be honored Bible Institute. | guests Tuesday of Rochester | An Oct. 30 wedding is planned. Fees 5, F&AM, on Old Timers — | Night. The Rev. Edgar A. Lucas and Auto | the Rev. William Hill Collycott Insurance _ Specialists Immediate Claim Service DALE and NINA MARTIN OL 2-976! 412 Main St. Rochester will speak at a 6:30 p.m. dinner. | A program of music and enter- tainment has also been arranged. Chester Chapman, Harry Tripp- | Albert Neumann, Roy J. McCor- nac, A. R. Dillman, Floyd Blair and Car! Benson, 40-year life mem- | bers, will receive certificateg. William Shepard. of Linwood avenue. a two-piece aqua knit dress with a | white felt hat and a corsage of | white orchids. Mrs. Charlies Shotwell, a sister of the bride, was her attendant. | | Clarence Shepard served as best A diver must have nitrogen and oxygen to breathe mixed in dif- ferent proportions than found’ in | te air and differing at different | depths or he é will be Ropsqned) man for his son. 330-332 Main St., Rochester. Mich. Olive 2-2121. Olive 1-9642 Immediate families of the bride | and bridegroom attended the cere- mony. The wedding) party later | ‘attended a dinner at The Villa, | Lake Orion. | After a short wedding trip to | northern Michigan, the new Mr. | and Mrs. Shepard will reside in | East Lansing where the bride- | | groom is a student| at Michigan | State College. | | ‘Garden Club | Holds Annual Market Day ROCHESTER — Annual market | day for the Rochester Garden | Club will be Saturday ic ei \9 a.m, and 2 pom, it was an- nounced today Market day will be held at the| | garage of Mrs. John C, Plassey THe NEW ww SHOES j222= FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY | Mrs. James Arcure, chairman, ; tables, fruits,.home-canned goods, baked goods and plants of all kinds be left at the Plassey home after 8 a.m. Friday. ’ smart women agree... it’s _ Toul agree too — they're the smartest shoes going —in a variety of lovely a ae ee ey eee Glove Leather Cushioned Casuals Smoke, ‘Red, Black NEWS FOR “MEN! , lh, 2, a & ly [| L O N G W E A R flexible sole, sponge “Mello-Stride’s” rubber ingole 1 needs no “breaking in’: . $1595 Other John Robert’s Shoes ............ $8.95 up DEPARTMENT Rit ze i Ai A i > BD Li i i Li, Li Li di Li hi Li, di hin he i, Li, Li i Li Li i Le Le Li i le Li, i, Mi, Li Li Li i Li, Li dn, Ln Li ki i, di di dn, di, in dln dl dl a he La i a hi i i Li hi i i i i i a hi i i Li i hi i i i i , i] GIRLS’ STRAP With Detachable Shawl. Sizes 1214 to 3 The Best Children’s SCHOOL SHOES in ROCHESTER—A talk by /Mrs. | David Zuhlke, president of the De- troit Federation Women’s Clubs, will highlight the opening fall meet- ing of the Rochester Women’s | Club tomorrow. Mrs. Zuhlke ts lal fortner tresi- | dent of the village., The meeting | will begin with a) luncheon at | 12:30 p.m. in the pavilion of Avon | Park for 35 members. Club Honors Member | ROCHESTER — |The Thimble Club, a charitable | group which | has completed 25 lap robes for | veterans, held its first fall meeting | Tuesday, honoring a member, Mrs. George Lindsey, on |her birthday. $799 County Births Mr. and Mrs. marae Klix (Prances | Whims) of 621 West Fifth 8t., announce RED GOOSE FOR BOYS Along with Good Wear. Sizes 8 to 12 Shoes strongly built of finest leathers—Finest Fit the birth of a son, Thomas Scott, Sept. | 1} - } Shh PALERMO Be toahshes | SPA our KLE = | 2 plinoni Care eae + oe “U” Tip Boys’ Full Weather Welt Scotch Grain Toe Oxfords He Man style. Sizes 12% to 3... i as 2 New Monsbers of our Staff: Fels alest STORE CLARA ANN DOBAT LUCILLE THOMPSON AVON BEAUTY SALON | Phone OL 2-811 100s N. Maile St, Rochester Eva Bailey, Owner on OLive 2-2531 MRS. C. WILLIAM SHEPARD Vernita Hamilton Speaks Vows in Rochester Rite ROCHESTER — In a Saturday evening ceremony at St. | Methodist Church, Vernita Joan Hamilton became the bride of C. Vernita is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Hamilton of Adams | | road. The bridgroom’s parefits are Mr. and Mrs. Clarence W. Shepard For her wedding the bride chose #+——— ‘Store in Rochester | register were destroyed. asks that cofftributjons of yege-| ment at 3:15 p.m. Detroit Federation Head | Will Address Club | recent "resignation of Martin E./ nection with a reunion planned Crawford. | for early next summer. Members are asked to contact | Mrs. Vincent Spencer (Dollie Booth), at 3239 Grindley, Route 1, Walled Lake, or telephone EM | 3.4094. The weight of iron in a man’s body is about the equivalent to the weight of an American five- cent piece. ee our Pharmacist Vitally linked for Health! Your baby's future In no better hands! Compounding prescriptions isn’t our only specialty. We know about infant care, too, and for your baby needs—we Carry the best! Let us advise or a$sist you. PURDY’S DRUG STORE Main &t. Rochester Better Schools ean Better Communities 371 Public Is Cordially Invited Paul | to see our gorgeous array of Pom-Pom CHRYSANTHEMUMS for the néxt 2 weeks! Public Is Invited at All Times! Open Daily 9 A. M. te 6 P. M. Closed Sundays LG OR RR In, BS 5 ne LER RIOR A AB OE, TR Fire Damages New ROCHESTER — Defective wir- | ing in| an automatic check-out | counter for groceries was believ red to have been the cause of a fire last night at Davey’s Market, 1012 North Main St. | Patrolman Robert FE, Ragers, | passing the store in a police scout | car, saw flames through the win-| ; tS 4 Rochester es ) dow shortly after 11 p. m. aie E. aad on OLive 2- 9411 , The flames were confined by | aac wen A firemen to the counter. Thomas | "8 — — oot — an | Davey, owner of the market, said | & UA Wa eh, I, eR, the check-out counter and a ml eed ir 00 Feet of I fl Business Frontage on AUBURN RO AD xk wio* Includes: 746 Sq. Ft. of Floor Space! Possible smoke damage to gro- | ceries had not been determined | this morning. Davey said the dam.- | age would be fully covered by in- surance, however. The market recently celebrated | its grand opening. Rochester Girl Scouts ‘to Meet Wednesday ROCHESTER—Intermediate Girl Scout troop of Congregational Church will hold its first meeting | Wednesday in the church base- | Thursday, Oct. 1, the Pilgrim) Building: Now| Occupied! Daughters of the church will have a 1 p.m. luncheon at the home! Occupants Will Sign 5 Year Lease! of Mrs. John Yuells. S De (() $4500 CASH EASY TERMS Consult ROGER B. HENRY Broker and Geacral Sales Agent 3081, Main St., Rochester OL 2- 0011 | Dae seca a SD EE, EE TR AE A AT ee The BENDIX wiz. Washer Aims The BENDIX evtematic Dryer fo ROCHESTER INSURANCE AGENCY 308% Main St., Rochester OL 2-0011 Clothesline! Only 18 inches . | from Washing to Drying! : The BENDIX PER- PECT PAIR gives you time. for leisure and the energy to enjoy it. With this triumph of modern design and r- ing’ you'll be free forever {rom hard work and weather worries. Come in and learn for your- Liberal Terms! Up to 2 Yrs. to Pay! en Detroit Edison Lines! 499" BURR HARDWARE 429 MAIN ST., IN ROCHESTER, MICH. NN EL ee EE lle ——_ _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 ° TH — A newspaper survey shows that | home work. They spend 29 hours America’s working wives. put in 79 | cooking, dishwashing, cleaning and hours |a week on their jobs and‘ marketing. Sam Benson Says: “Ask Your Neighbor! “She Bought Her | Fleece Coat . $292 At My Store and Saved $14 | SAM BENSON 20 So. Perry St. TELEVISION -- RADIO LAWRENCE HANNEWALD REPAIR-SERVICE | At the annual meeting of Michi- | gan District Walther League held | in Windsor during |the past week- | end, Lawrence Hannewald of Pon- | | tiac was named president. He re- | Places Ted Smithey of Detroit. | | Walther League is the official | | youth organization /of the Litheran | ign Missouri Synod. : Police Find Letters © All Work Guaranteed ® | All Makes Expert, Trained Technicians Bussard Electric Phone FE 2-6445 84 Oakland Avenue—Free Parkinc A to Murdered Coed | UPPER SANDUSKY, Ohio (P— | Law officers have! found love let- ters they say will help prove 19- | year-old ‘Roy Schinagle cold-blood- | edly murdered his Coed sweetheart. Sheriff Dean McAllister ‘carried | his investigations from Wyandot | || County to a room in Cleveland where he said he found two letters | to Cynthia Pfiel, 13:year-old White | Plains, N.Y., girl whose body was | | | found mutilated beyond recognition | | last Thursday night. | McAllister said he would use one of them at Schinagle’s trial in an attempt to prove he planned the | murder, * | /|* | He wouldn’t say what was in the | letters. But the Cleveland Plain | Hl | Dealer quoted a policeman as say- | ing Schinagle wrote | Cynthia invit- | ing her to Delaware, where the |! Mayfield Heights (Ohio) youth was | preparing for the fall term at Ohio Wesleyan University, | The Plain Dealer’s source said | Schinagle told the girl to meet him | | secretly and not to tell anyone she | | was pregnant. | Meanwhile, Prosecutor Harold Bowling Shoes . As Pictured Roth was planning’ to file first- | degree murder charges against the | blue-eyed, sandy-haired youth who police say signed a nine-page con- fession. Pig Goes Whole Hog Cushion Insoles « Smoked Elk peer CENTREVILLE, Md. u®—Dai uN VILLE, Md. ¢ airy FRIDAY farmer James Simpler got a good NIGHT UNTIL start toward a pig farm when a 9 O’CLOCK Chester white sow on his nearby farm went whole hog and gave | birth to 22 piglets, believed a rec- Basement—Pontiac State Bank (ord for these parts. GRAND OPENING OF NEW FALL STYLES! MEN'S SUITS ® SHARKSKINS = [$42.50 TO$55 VALUES © GABARDINES © WORSTEDS © ALL WOOLS Shorts, Reg., Longs., $34. 95 Stputs, Portly , “COME IN—LOOK AROUND — COMPARE! See Pontiac’s Greatest Clothing Values!” SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS IN LAYAWAY $45 Men’s All Wool Imported TOPCOAT ‘29” * All- Wool Tweeds © Houndstooth Sizes to Fit All! $3 Men's Flannel SHIRTS $198 2 for $3.50 a All-Wool Flannels ®@ Save 1/3 to 1/2 : i $ $6 School ; ~ $10 Men's Fine Dress Sweaters . @ Button $ $ PA N T S $ 95 | ‘ ae 45 3 | See Our Large Selection! | Colérs $ Sport © Dress © Unpleated Styles $8.95 | $12.50 Men's Quilt-Lined JACKET Men’s Dress and Work SHOES ¥ | © Checks | $7 to’ $9 VALUES “4 99 : See aes 5 9 88 ‘REDUCED BE FRO En aA rwwvueweve,T* a rwvyYvVVVVTeTV* ah Mh i Mi Ma Mi hi Mi i tt hs i hi Aa rwwwwy* ar-77 Me's! Zip CONN’ CLOTHES JACKETS 4 71 N. Saginaw +37 is TOPS OR A 1, ALOE LANES SOMES Ne AMBASSADOR 21' TV 199° hh ie -FREE of Exive Cost Beautiful Wrought Iron Base be Open F riday N ight till of for Television and - Appliance Values! Including Wrought Iron Base 0 Down PAYITIENT / @ Full year parts guarantee! @ Big non-glare, easy vision tube! @ Snap tuner for steadier pictures! © @ Easily converted to VHF when needed! SVR ET EY 8 7 @ Gleaming mahogany finish cabinet! ° Call FE4-2511 for Free Home Demonstration! Waite’s Television—Downstairs Store no Down PAYMENT 299" Up to OF EXTRA COST chase! @ Holds approximately 300 pounds 4 food! @ Two removable rust resistant baskets! @ Gleaming white finish on rust resistant steel! @ Buy now and receive your bonus of frozen foods... in a lifetime opportunity for you | Downstairs Store ~ a once Waite’s Freezers 400 packages of new i“ 4 = = frozen foods with your pur- $40 Trade-in Allowance | Regular price . . Your old range... . 10 DOWN PRYIMENT Pt Magic Chef Gas Range Year |Cost 129° Full size 36’’ deluxe model. titanium porcelain exterior and fiberglass insulation, Red wheel oven heot regulator... either natural or bottled gas! Waite’s Sioves—Downsicirs Store - 169.95 40.00 One-piece top burners with swing-out broiler. Use 8.2Cu. Ft. Philco Freezer 4 (\ AP Wirephote HANDICAPPED MAN OF THE YEAR—President Eisenhower hands a gold and silver trophy to Harry kL. ‘Smithson, Detroit ad- vertising man and publisher, during a Washington ceremony Wednesday. Smithson, crippled for 27 years, was honored as ‘Handicapped Man of the Year,” for having done the most for handicapped workers. lke Is No. leader 3 Municipal Workers THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 _ get miracles. So, inevitably, we are having to search for new sources of revenue. . . It was only natural that people should at least consider a national sales tax.’ Secretary of the Treasury Says Sales Tax ISNot Solution jcsssr.c ss * considered, but that no final deci- Sen. Wiley States U. S. sions have been made on what to Levy Is Wrong Way fo | recommend to Congress. Tax law changes scheduled to take effect | Raise Needed Revenue | automatically next year will cost GREEN BAY, Wis.\ ‘®—Sen. | ’ d ll rs ear. Wiley (R-Wis) ‘said today the °” ™* 3 Ye@r United . States must in¢rease its | defense spending, but he said a national sales tax is the wrong | because it falls most heavily on low Sen. Wiley said a sales levy ‘‘is Such a tax, he predicted, would He offered no specific tax sug- be “thunderingly rejected” by gestions of his own. . Congress. And he said the Eisen-| |. Peed | is hower administration would pro-|, Wiley did not expand on why p and push through a‘ sales tax he felt that defense spending would only “if it wanted to dig its own | have to be upped. He renewed, political grave.” however, his call for the admin- ‘ |the Treasury about eight billion | the worst, unfairest type of tax’’ | way to raise the revenue needed. | income families. Many Republicans in Congress | 'Stration to give the American peo- have ‘ben talking opel ote the minimum facta aba he cutting military expenditures furth- | ; er. But Wiley, arate of the| “Operation Candor is the prelude Senate Foreign Relations Commit- | to Operation Survival,”” he said. tee, declared in a speech prepared| A People groping - the dark for a luncheon meeting of the | Cannot come to sound decisions. Green Bay Rotary Club; . | «,' Defense expenditures pre going | Still Love Horses ave to increase ause we ; LARAMIE, Wyo. (INS) — Ik simply are not adequately prepared | may think pobhia, ue te ols on a continental basis. ‘ i -._|Gray Mare are doomed to go the We are all, of course, hoping | 5 that we will get increased etch way of the dinosaur and the saber-| ency in our armed forces and in | tooth tiger, but demand for copies | other government departments, so of a new Wyoming University | we can make necessary. savings. |P@mphlet shows a great many “As we know, the Eisenhower | People all over the nation still have | administration is leaving no stone | 4" interest in horses. Up to 65 re- unturned in order to try to save | quests a day — 2,500 since Janu- every possible dollar whith it rea- | ary — have been received at Lara- sonably can. mie for the 32-page booklet _ * ¢ “Horses — Their Care and Train- “But it cannot accomplish bud- | ing.”’ + ee ea ST ee es gm Sigs 8 ot v Ps, kes ‘ eh Lay Leas F325 6 + ™ " “§ se coos See. tae. we WS ial. a a eisai Mb Fe i Be Pps Ell Sling-shot Artist |Tayern Owner Dies - Makes Judge rar His Accomplice |Resisting Gunmen OKLAHOMA CITY (~FPolice| West Side tavern owner, was shot Judge James Demopolis, well past | and killed today when he resisted the sling-shot age, found himself | three gunmen who fled after tak- an unwitting accomplice to a 12- ing $100 from the cash register. yeancld boy's antics yesterday. | yC'ile, who erappled with one of Demopolis said he picked up a| and bottles at his companions, died | youthful hitchhiker and was tak-| of a bullet wound in the chest as ing the boy to a football game | he was being taken to a hospital. | when, “Imagine my astonishment} Witnesses told police that before | and consternation when he pulled | firing two shots at Grillo one of out a bean-flip and shot a woman | the gunmen told him: “You're a standing at the intersection.’ — -— fool for fighting back—do The judge, his legal dignity ruf-| you want to get killed?” Immedj- fled, estimated the victim jumped ately after the warning, he fired | | five feet. two shots and Grillo fell wounded He said he got out, apelogized, | to the floor fatally wounded. explained the boy was not his son, A bartender and waitress were and, beat a hasty retreat after| the only other persons’ in the delivering a lecture to the’ youth. | tavern. The boy's explanation, said De- | mopolis, was, ‘Oh, I shoot al] the girls,”’ Nantucket lightship, the first |United States light seen by many inbound vessels from Commerce Secretary Europe, has been placed in a new position by the Coast Says Economy Is Sound Guard. It is now 50 miles NEW YORK W® — Secretary of southeast of Sankaty Head Commerce Weeks says the nation light on Massachusetts’ Nan- ee oe Can Sam Benson Says: WOMEN KNOW! 1 Can Save Them $8 to $14 FALL COATS *19°¢¢. All Wool Meltons SAM BENSON . Open Till 9 P.M. # >. economic climate is good but meee Islanu. federal gvernment would not |hes- Food Hangover? itate to step in to prevent a de-| pression. (Ges, Heartburn, Acid Stomech ?) Tums give top-speed re- Weeks spoke last night before the fall meeting of) the National Industrial Conference Board. ce: lief. No water, no mixing— take anywhere. Always carry Tums. Discussing finance and the igen- eral economy from a businessman’ | TUMS POR THE TOMMY | | point. of view, Weeks said /‘the | confidence of Americans in them- | selves’’ was perhaps the most im- | portant factor for economic stabil- | ity and growth, $l Oty 10¢ Keke ii a ¢ ay oy es “J Y RE te oes oe ie SAR tt BASS ee a BE. Is A FIRST QUALITY =~ LENSES and FRAMES COMPLETE From Your Own FP =e 13° PRICE ONLY * SAVE THE MIDDLEMAN’S PROFIT * FAST, COURTEOUS SERVICE * FULLY GUARANTEED © FINEST QUALITY —LOWEST PRICE * SENSATIONAL OFFER NU-VISION 15 W. Lawrence, Rooms 2.& 3 Phone FE 2-2895 Open 9-5:30 —— Fri. ‘til 9 pt OPTICAL COMPANY l Ove ‘See 4 Bid Sect i Cette a ni . : eee own! ' RIE AA ERE AEE AAAS He ae. Dislike ‘Long’ Weeks CAMBRIDGE, Mass. Three Says Dem Group | Lowell city| workers want Middle- WASHINGTON — Americans sex County Superior Court to arder for Democrajic Action (ADA) said! their) work week reduced from 35 last night. [President Eisenhower to 31 hours because (the shorter has exerciséd ‘no leadership’ and hour bie traditional) since 1898. os | In a petition yesterday the | trio that ‘policy’ questions are deter- said they worked from 9 a.m. to| mined by the Congress with lit- 4 p.m. with 90 minutes for lunch | tle regard ‘to the administration.’ | until City Manager Ulysses J. Lu- | The ADA (World, monthly pub- | pien changed their hours last Jan. 1 to 9 to 5 with an hour for lunch. i woe The petitioners are/ officers of zation whose! avowed aim is to the AFL Administrative and Cleri- | further the principles of the Demo- ¢a) Employes union. cratic. New ‘Deal, said the Presi- oe ~ _— dent has acted ‘as though Con- gress were the government. and he its employe\’ It declared ‘the administration is without a} foreign polify, and that the nation’s economy is as free of control’ as it was iin the ‘boom and bust of the 20s.’ | | | | lication of the six-year-old organi- Get a Good USED TV $10-15 Down—$5 per k at HAMP1UN we 286 State St. ‘ You save on little “\ S =z y Ty | ed Th = TP Our full range of one, two and three piece warm cotton flan- nel ond+knit sleepers are all priced fo give you genuine aii eA: 2 Pe. flanneletie $ insmeae $1.99 , abi pl 44 4 49 ‘pate 2.19 a) snare | anda bes: solids 1 .00 not illustrated Hard Finish, Year-Round Weight ARCHIE BARNETT gift jai Riots hw iii tata era ce cemman cto cute Sore JEVERYBODY’S TALKING ABOUT THE TERRIFIC CLOTHING e VALUES WE HAVE AGAIN THIS FALL! | 3 Come in and see what the shouting’s all about — Join the happy throng that’s reaping these 4 solid savings — and spreading the news like wildfire all over town! See why so many men buy i, all their clothes at Barnett’s! = ‘ oe mre "PA Se eee ne ‘nad i fats: Peper ey if eS PEIN ae ERE RONEN AY ah tA MOE Ae AN nats tad Here’s Just One Value That’s Creating Such a Sensation! § ANOTHER TERRIFIC VALUE! The Coat with All the Features Men Like! LUXURIOUS QUILTED. ZIP-LINED TOPCOATS We Could Sell These for $42.50 OUR PRICE Here’s another value that’s 87 creating such a sensation! You just can’t beat it! Your size is here in regulars, shorts and longs—at these big savings. Be sure to see them! 45° We've proved you make more customers with low prices and small profits than with high prices and long profits. CLOTHING-VALUE KIN Your friends will tell you to shop here first if : you want to save money. ‘PANT { SUITS & All Models—All Sizes! We Could Sell Them for $60! Our Low Price... = AS 8 That why we're called “THE OF PONTIAC.” We must repeat! Only our 250-store buying power could possibly bring you such Open Friday Night til 9 P.-M. Saturday til 5:30 Sid Says: Even at these sensationally low , Savings as these! Friday—Saturday—and every day—you always save at Barnett's! MEN'S STORE - 19 N. SAGINAW 5 “Welcome Travele | -- Today's Television Proarams -- Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel |4—WW4J-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV 6:30—(7)—‘‘Lone Ranger.” ea Ranger investigates stock of | 27d the Senorita.” Film iomioee phony mining company in|‘‘Spe- 10:00—(7)—"Black Spider,”” Don cial “Edition.” (4)—Eddy aAr-| Barry in “Train to Alcatraz.” nold.’”” Western music. mel (4) — “Michigan Outdoors.” Films with Mort Neff. (2)—)| *“‘News.”’- Doug Edwards. | 6: 45—(4)—"'News Caravan.” John | Cameron * Swayze. (2)—‘‘Jane | Froman.”” Jane: sings “f Got Rhythm” in ttibute to) late | George Gershwin. 7:00—(7)—'"‘Cisco Kid." Western adventure with Cisco and Pan- cho. (4)—“‘You Bet Your Life.” Comedy quiz with Groucho Marx. (2) — “Meet Mr. ,Mc- Nutley,” Ray Milland lege professor géts dates mixed in “The Birthday Present,” 7:30—(7)—‘‘Doorway to Danger.” Agent Doug Carter checks dark | doings in ‘‘City of Light.’ (4)— | *T-Men in’ Action.” Clie to counterfeit scheme found im the- ater district in ‘‘Case of the Tell Tale Coat,” (2)—‘‘Four) Star , Playhouse.”” David Niven in “Finale,” behind scenes at a | theater with’ Niven in dual) role. 8:00—(7)—"‘China Smith.” |Dan Duryea as Smith, in adventure. (4)—"Dragnet.”” Friday, Smith traces swindlers of servicetnen’s | families. (2)—‘‘Video Theater.” | Suzanne Dalbert in ‘‘Return to Alsace.” 8:30—(7)—''Wrestling.’’ Film. (4) —'‘Theater;’’ Yvonne DeCarlo as “Madame _ ;44,"’ | gambling hall | queen turned schoolteacher. (2) —'Big Town.” .Steve Wilson, Loreli suspect baseball team of _a fix when’star makes too many | 9:00—(7)—“Boxing.'’ Light-heavy- weight Championship bout of | Michigan: Art Wright vs. Bob | Amos. (4) — “Martin Kane,” Kane helps digagreeable movie | star recover jewelry; discovers a murder. (2)—‘‘Pentagon USA.”’ Elderly German reports himself guilty of killing American sol- | dier in ‘‘THe Lonely One.” 9:30—(4)—"Orient Express.” Alan | 1:00—(4) — Jean McBride. (7)-—'| Furlan, Marilyn: Buferd, in TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHT’S | red | “Holiday,” film drama. (2)— “Your TV Theater.”’ The Saint —‘‘News Roundup.” Jack Le Goff. 10:15—(2)—‘'Sports.’’ Ed Hayes. 10:30-—(4)—“‘Adventures in Liv- ing.” Current interest topics on film. (2)—‘Place ‘the Face.’ Panel show with Jack Smith, guests Piper Laurie, and | Dr. Mason Rose, psychiatrist. 10:45—(4)—'‘Time off for Sports.” Bill Flemming. . 11:00—(7)—“‘Say There Neighbor,” Betty Clooney does a satire on football films. (4) — “News.” Paul Williams. (2)—‘‘Telenews Ace.”’ Ken Cline. 11:15—(7)—“‘Motion Picture Acad- emy,” Richard Dix, in ‘Man of | Conquest.”” (4)—‘‘Weathercast.”’ (2)—*‘The Hangman,” ‘Jade Mask.” film. ’ FRIDAY MORNING 7:00—(4)—Today. (7)—Wm. M. Kelly 8:45—(7)—News. (2)—News 9:00—(4)—Playschool. (7)—Coffee ‘n’ Cakes. (2)—Fortune Whee! 10:00—(4)—Hawkins Falls. (7)— Playhouse. (2)—I’l] Buy That 10:15—(4)—The Bennetts 10; 30-—(4)—Three Steps to Heaven. (2)—Strike It Rich 10:45—(4)—Follow Your Heart | 11:00—(7)—Charm Kitchen. (4)— | (2)—Bride and | 9:30—(7)—Down You Go. (2)—TV | dog for a blind man, a stove Glamor Girl. Groom 11:15—-(2)—Love of Life 11:30—(4)—Movie Quiz. (2)—To- | morrow’s Search 11:45—(4) — News. (2) — Guiding Light 12:00—(4)—Ding Dong School. (7) | —Comics. (2)—Murphy Calling 12:30—(4)—Cinderella. (7)—Lank- er Show. (2)—Moore Show FRIDAY AFTERNOON ? Theater. (2)—Double or Nothing | | 1:30—(4) — Sallye Show. (2) — Houseparty 1:45—(4)—Nancy Dixon 2:00 — (4)—Kate Smith. (2)—| Big Payoff : 2:15—(7)—Strictly Female 2:30—(2)—Bob Crosby 2:45—(7)—Hometown Hoedown 3:00—(4)—Welcome Travelers. (7) —Stars on 7. (2)—Ladies Day $:30—(4)—On Your Account 3:45—(7)—Songs and Sonnets 4:00—(4)—Atom Squad. (7)—Cow- boy Colt. (2)—Lindlahr, film 4:15—(4)—Gabby Hayes 4:30—(4)—Howdy Doody 4:45—(7)—News 5:00—(4)—Willie Wonderful. Auntie Dee 5:15—(4)—Sports Closeup. Kid Kartoons 5:30—(4)—Adventure Patrol. (7)— ()— (2)— | Rootie Kazootie. .(2)—Lady Dooit | 5:45—(7)—Newsreel. (2) — Sports | | Closeup FRIDAY EVENING | 6:00—(4)—Songtime. (7) — Det. Deadline, (2)—Capt. Video 6:15—(4)—News. (7)—News | 6:30—(4)—Eddie Fisher. _(7)—Stu | Erwin. (2)—Doug Edwards | 6:45—(4)—News. (2)—Perry Como 7:00—(4)—The Goldbergs: (7)— | Qzzie & Harriet. (2)—Mama | 7:30—(4)—Life of Riley. (2)—Man | vs. Crime. (7)—TV Theater 8:00—(4)—Big Story. (7)—Theater. (2)—Playhouse 8:30—(4)—Soundstage. (2) — The- ater | 9:00—(4)—Sports. (7)—20! Ques- | tions. (2)—The Norths Golf Pro 9:45—(4)—Fight Scrapbook | 10:00—(4)—Art. Linkletter, (7)— | Club Polka. (2)—News 10:;15—(4)—Adventure. (2)—Sports | 10:30—(4)—Man About Town. (7) tective 10;45—(4)—Time off for Sports (2)—News 11:15 — (4) — Weather. (7)—Mo- tion Picture. (2)—Movie | 11:30—(4)—Theater 11:00—(4)—News. (7)—Say There. --Today's Radio Programs - - Programs, furnished by —-- | CRKLW (300) WXYZ (1270) stations listed m this column are subject to change without notice. WIR (760) WWJ, (850) WCAR (1130) WJBK (1490) ; TONIGHT | WWJ. Bob Maxwell | t2:15—WwoR, Aunt Jenny | 5:45—WJR. Curt Massey 6:00—WJR, News ® WXYZ, Fred FPolfe WWJ, Fran Harris WWJ, Doctor's Wife WWJ, News CKLW, News ‘CKLW, Austin Grant CKLW, News | Cone’ wrettrick, McKenz WJBK, News, Lenhardt WCAR. Noonday Caller WJBK>-Bob Murphy . News WCAR, 7 Vv | Wink fame | | WEAR, . Coftes, With Cleat | s4.c5. sik Molen trent —_ WCAR. News, Ballads 6:45—WWJ, News } (WWJ, Cinderella > " ‘ an C meets set WXYZ. Fred Wolfe | WXYZ, News, Crackers | FRIDAY EVENING $ . Clar arte , CKLW, Your Boy Bud 6:00—WJR, News WWJ, Bud Lynch 7:00——WJR, Dick Burris | 'WJBK, Don McLeod | WWJ, News } WXYZ, Lee Smits WWJ, News | WCAR, Club 1130 WXYZ. Wattrick, McKens. CKLW, Eddie Chase WXYZ, Fred Wolfe CKLW, News ; WCAR, Sports CKLW, News, David 12:45—WJR, Jack White WJBK, Horseman WJBK, News, Lenhardt WXYZ, Talk WCAR. News, Ballads 6:20-WIR, Romolds WCAR, News, Clem i — , Tan ay ° WXY2, Ed. McKenzie 7:15_WJR, Music Wall FRIDAY AFTERNOON a mae WJBK, Horsemen WCAR, Ballads 7 = Dick Osgood 1;00—WJR,' Life’s Road WWJ, Budd Lynch : WWJ, News CKLW, Eddie Chase €:45—-WJR, L. Thomas "Gxvz Pred woite sv WXYZ, Charm Time WCAR, 8po ’ us ran 7:00—WJIR, Guest House he Coe eee WJBK, News, McLeod 6:30—WJR, Bob Reynolds ww), 3 ater ; - . WCAR, News, Club WWJ, Fran Pettay wxYz, ern 7:45—WW4J, News WXYZ, McKenzie CKLW, Pulton Lewia KLW. 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins WJBK, Tom George : wml en CKLW, Walts Festival wae 0 ac e il «. . "WEYR Ghomwora’’ © | Gwe, Minute wremeds | Sayre: Meum, | ¢aswam, Lowen Thomas CKLW. Guy Nunn OP SP fle CKLW. Your Boy Bud ee ee se a 7:30-WJR, Pamily Skeleton| WJBK. News. Gentile waey toe Sere WWJ, 3 Star Extra WWJ, Morgan Beatty WCAR, News | 1:43—WJR, Guiding Light’ | WXYZ, Bill Stern WXYZ, Start of Space » Gabrie] Heatter 8:00-—WJR, Meet Millie WW4, Roy Rogers « WXYZ, WWJ, Pather' Knowé | WXYZ, Musi¢ : CKLW, John Bteele | Ww. WJBK, L. Geatile CKLW. $:46—WXYZ, Vandercdok | WJBK, 9:00—WJR, Meet McNutley WWJ, Truth, Consequences WXYZ, Mike Malloy CKL) « tod & Gun Club | 9:30—WJR, Mejody WWJ, Counterspy WXYZ, Time Capsule J, CKLW, CKLW, WCAR, 8:15—WJR, Bud Guest 8:45—WCAR, Revival | 9:15—WJR, George Morgan | Bob Maxwell 9:30—WJR, Mrs. Page ww Bob 9:45—WJR, Pete & Joe WW45J, Here's the Answer Breakfast Club WXYZ, Byline | CKLW, News CKLW, Officig] Detective ‘ia te $:30—WJR. Nora Drake rt . ww i. s “ bd ad 8:15—WXYZ, Sammy Kaye GKLW. Qood Neighbor wore Mare Carewny $:30--WJR, Plsyhouss JBK, Gentile. Binge CKLW. Your Boy Bud WCAR. News, Rhythm WCAR, Sports Gabriel Heatter Doh McLeod CKLW, Cashur WCAR, Club 1130 Maxwell Kitchen Club ww, WCAR, News, CKLW, Your Boy Bud Club WJBK, Tom George 2:15—WJR, Perry Mason 2:45—WJR, Brighter Day WWJ, R. Mulholland | 8:00—WJR. Hilltop House Life Beautiful CKLW, News, City | CKLW, Pulton Lewis | WJBK, Tiger Talks 7:15—WWJ, Alex Drier WXYZ, Show World CKLW. Guy WNunn WJBK, Tiger Game 7:30—WJR, Pamily Skeleton WWJ, News WXYZ, Lone Ranger CKLW. Gabriel Heatter CxL WXYZ, Fred Wolfe 2:00—WJR. Ind Mrs. Burton | WJBK, Bob Murphy © WCAR. Coffee With Clem wwWwi te oe 1:43—WJR, Ed R. Murrow! g:bo wuR, Music Hall WXYZ, Paul Winter WWJ, 1 Man's Family XYZ. Dick Osgood’ CKLW. Your Boy Bud CKLW, Three! Suns WCAR, Lady, Clem CAR, News, 7:45—WJR, Ed. R. ‘Murrow WWJ, 1 Man's Family CKLW, Perry Como 8:00—WJR, Mr. Keen WWJ, Eddie Pisher WXYZ, Byline CKLW, Take a Number &:15—WWJ, R. Clooney WXYZ. Sammy Kaye 8:30—WJR, This Game WWJ, Bob Hope Heart of the City. (2)—City De- | | ee OO Ee es LSS CKLW, On, Off Record 10:00—WJR, American’ Way | WW4J, Eddie Cantor’ WXYZ, News: } CKLW, F. Edwards. 10:186—WXYZ, Top of Town CKLW, June Christie Wa ee tee iaue ckens WXYS Edwin Hi | CKLW, News 10:46-—-WJR, Here's td Vets WXYZ, Top of Town CKLW, Quiet: Sanctjary 11:00-—WJR, News ww ews ; WXYZ, Pred Weiss 11:15—WJR, Bob Reynolds WWJ, Navy Show WXYZ, Wyatt f CKLW. Manhattan ‘Music | 11:15—CKLW, WXYZ, My True Story CKLW. News, Homechats eLeod 10:15—WCAR, Temple 10:30—WWJ, Bob WXYZ, Whtewerne’ Streets CKLW, Mary WCAR, Harmony Hal) 10:45—WW4J, Marriage Pays WXYZ, Girl Marries CKLW, Mary Morgan 11:00—WWJ, Strike It Rich WXYZ, Curtain Cails News 11:30—WJR, Make Up Mind WWJ, Phrase Pa WXYZ, Dbi. or Nothing 3:30—WW4J, Pepper Young WXYZ, Paul Winter 3:45—WJR, Gal Sunday WWJ, Right to Happiness 4:00—WJR, News WJBK, News, McLeod WCAR, News, Music 4:15—WJR, Deland Show WWJ, Stella Dallas 4:30—-WJR, Matinee WWJ, Widder Brown Z, McKensie 4;45—WJR, Happen Everyda: WWJ, Womem in House . CKLW, News 6:00—WJR, News WWJ, Plain Bil! WXYZ, Don Wattrick Eddie livae “ WXYZ, Platterbrains Bitty Graham) =| PS oR. Monee Party CKLW, True or False Temple Academy WWJ, Road of Life 8:45—WXYZ, Vandercook 9:00—WWJ, Phil Harris WXYZ, Ozzie & Harriett CKLW. Great Day 9:30—WJR, Motor Melodies WWJ, Bob & Ray 9:45—WXYZ, Sporta Report 10:00—WJR, Blue Serenade WWJ, Guest star WxYz, Boxing CKLW. Frank Edwards 10:15—WJR, Agriculture WWJ, M. Kottler W, Pran Warten 10;30—WJR, Wizard of Odds WWJ, Mueller, Preview CKLW, News 10:45—WJR, Fields Trio WWJ, Pro and Con W. Quiet Sanctuary CKLW. Queen for a Day CKLW, Chase ; 11:30—WJR, Japan Sdciety WJBK. Bob Murphy WJBK, New cLeod 11;00—WJR, News WXYZ. Top of Town J WCAR, News, Nads WWJ, News, Laura CKLW MeKeliar 11 4e— WIR, Rosemary WXxY , : WWJ. Second Chance 5:15—WJR, Musi¢ Hall pL SL a tau 11:45—WJR, ight’ Music | t2:99_wsR, Wendy Warren ww, Front ge wi a Pb = ae CKLW. Mi 7 WCaR, ews dag Pont = pt WW. News 5:30—WWJ, Lorenze Jones ‘3 “bep of Tove FRIDAY MORNING Z, Turn to a Priend CKLW, Wild Bil CKLW. Music ) WJBK, News, George WXYZ, News, McKenzie ; 6:30—WJR, arm Forum WCAR, News WJBK, Bob Murphy 11:38—WJR, Midnight Music Comment Refus on Red Jet Report ed ‘King of Hoboes Is in St. Louis Davis said members of the ‘boes have placed him on a ‘“‘ciyil list’’ or pension of $100 a month. TOKYO W-A U.S. Air Force @okesman today declined to con- gi aL for AFL Meet MULL anes fae bebe i y i Filing Deadline Set ALLEGAN @®=—Applications for licenses to hunt in Allegan County's special deer season Dec. | Fach Story Told | Quite Different | About 1,200 Before TV | Annually at Chicago’s Hotel Sherman | | CHICAGO — Welcome Travel- | ers is a program which was not | planned for any particular group of listeners. Instead, the successful show, | | which began June 30, 1947,/has a devoted nationwide audience that is as varied as the tens of thou-- sands who annually visit the Col- lege Inn Porterhouse Room of the Hotel Sherman in Chicago to watch the Monday-through-Friday broadcasts in person. Star-emcee Tommy’ Bartlett and co-host Bob Cunningham an- | mually interview about 1,200 | travelers on the show, and these cover the scope of human en- deavor from hoboes to million- aires, royalty to cabbage grow- | ers, actors, authers, aviators and animal trainers, Ages of the person interviewed range from childhood to those over 100. | All the travelers have one thing | in common — théy are going sorne- | where for a reason, and they have | @ story to tell. It is up to Bartlett and Cun- | ningham to help them tell those stories, speed them on their way | and, often, to lend a helping hand. | toys for the children, a and refrigerator for a penniless widow | | or a college scholarship ta a de- | serving youngster. The entire studio audience en- | joys a complimentary breakfast | | prior to the show. | Because so many different types | of people appear on the programs, | with so many stories to tell, each | broadcast may be a blend of, laughter, tears, pathos or inspira- | | tion. Each day it’s as different. as | each of the fans who come to | visit — which adds to its unusual | appeal. Director Doubts | 'TV Will Raise Movie Standards | WASHINGTON (~-Elia Kazan. | award-winning Broadway and Hollywood director, said today there’s a chance that television | may raise motion picture stand- | ards—'‘but I rather doubt it,”” | “‘Too much censorship,”’ he said. | ‘Too many people telling you what | to do.”’ On the other hand, Kazan con- | | tinued in an interview: - “Television is certain to make |movies more spectacular, more | technologically perfect. And that | jis good. No art ever was hurt by | | technical improvements,’’ * * * Hollywood people may brush off | TV, Kazan said, but: | “Deep in their hearts, they're | scared to death. | “Did you know that Jack Warner — | (the Hollywood producer) won't |even allow a TV set to show up| |on the screen in his pictures?” | . s * b | Kazan is in Washington to direct | the pre-Broadway performances of | "Tea and Sympathy,” a new play | | by Robert Anderson. Kazan, a first- | |rate actor, is best remembered for | |his direction of the stage and screen versions of ‘‘A Streetcar | Named Desire.’’ He says he doesn't go much| | for TV dramatic fare, but: | “I like the fights and ball games. | I think they’re wonderful.”’ | Kazan said the film industry's | } counterattack with such things as | three-dimensional movies, giant | | screens and new sound devices is | | all to the good, and: * * «& “I think there’s a chance the quality of movies will be raised, more or less as a defense méchan- ism. I certainly hope so."’ He said there was little possi- bility of TV working any major change on the legitimate stage because: | | | Each interviewee is awarded | appropriate gifts, which may be! eye | ONIGHT ON TV DAVID NIVEN: IN | | 44 Finale” Backstage drama of two actors who look alike me ITI erry, — THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 Polish Observers Unhurt in Crash SEOUL (#—The Army confirmed today a Communist report that a small American plane carrying four Polish truce observers crash- landed in South Korea. It said none was injured. An 8th Army spokesman said’ the light, single-engine L20, developed engine trouble. It was brought in rs’? Show Covers Hoboes to for ‘‘a perfect’’ emergency landing Saturday by its pilot, Lt. L. C. Caldwell. (Home town unavail- able), j The spokesman said the only darnage was a bent propellor. He said the four Poles were examined by an Army doctor who reported they suffered no injuries. Peiping radio earlier said the four suffered ‘‘severe concussion.” It charged the accident was due to an ‘“‘irresponsible attitude’ by the Americans. Sam Benson Says: Pantiac’s Best Buys! All Wool Zip Lined Ladies’ Coats $274 Yes. It's Hard To Believe! SAM BENSON Till 9 P.M. cu SAVE $6 00 17 JEWELS at this amazing LOW PRICE ni shock nT wel. La et worch! Ovat rosie ent and pon-megneticr soot Exponsior beed. Geld Med. es eS ae 3 a Bea utit 14) Geld Trimmed GLASSWARE S OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT ‘til 9. FREE PARKING SE 1083 NORTH SAGINAW Wee RAR ave & 1F YOU CAN'T COME IN ORDER BY VAIL Men’‘s and Ladies’ SOLID GOLD ——— ( (_ Pieqse read me the Grwen i. . eed OF Be t cate ft oO Crow tered) tates Aeees OCOR y — ge Promt (ome, ; - b | Address. Pe -'™ | ( ( cm . Fete SO mes jj ' Ser Budget Acnowan Mame Fit tn Bete: { j Where Reptoyes Reage of Bee. ( —— 5 \ { More Mad Accownn wink. ] | Practical, “ase eee aasecamaeesecananaamawe! — as $4.95 99 Phone FEderal 3-7114 Hundreds of styles to choose from. L now for Christmas! SS . SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 fl. SALE ZEA 20% to 40% off yy All Nationally Advertised Brands sa * Pah MY Ca - 2 G F , - AT. 8 A x “ P of ‘ <. Se. ce € » € wer Neg 3 ee a = 4 . . * “< ae . ee a ae +s dex ES 3 New, Demonstrators, Pre-Owned Models RQ, Ky . ah Si 7 8 TELEVISION << , Ln oe ba Vial : | i i | | ' ! 5 i | t = Description Reg. Price Sale Price BIG SCREEN MODELS : access 1 Maytag Gas Range $269.95 $179.95 bscpcslatlon hid. Plee Ssks' ise oe } Maytag ben si rete tthe Teletone Console $229.95 $99.95 = or Apt. Size ‘ ‘ . ON THIS BRAND NEW 1953 1 Autocrat €as 30-t. $159.95] $139.95 Comer rable ‘Model, $279.95 $79.95 : 1 Premier Ger 30-in, $119.95. $89.95 ff Bendix Console TV $179.95 $79.95 , 2. Autocrat Apt. Size $99.95 $79.95 General Electric Cons. $199.95 $109.95 © , 1 Norge Gas Range $249.95 $189.95 § Emerson Console TV $289.05 $99.95 4 3 Tappan Gas Ranges $209.95 $179.95 @f Crosley Table Model $129.95 $59.95 i é A | 1 Norge Gas Range $189.95 $159.95 ff Admiral Table.Mod. TV $149.95 $39.95 1 Norge Gas Range $204.95 $169.95 9 Teletone T’ble Mod. TV $179.95 $89.95 ' & | Other TV Sets From $29.95 Famous Name Electric RANGE $] 49* Reg. $189.95 AUTOMATIC WASHERS 2 Whirlpool Automatic Washers i353; now $26925 eteoese® 3—45-Pc. Socket Wrench Sets Reg. $29.95 NOW $] 7? Lower Floor Furniture Dept. | ell 1 | Hotpoint Automatic | c DE nds REFRIGERATOR » WASHERS Washer :.%:; wow $23995 @ Full Width Freezer = © Hi-Humidity Storage Drawer | Mertes wringer Washer $9995 1 AUTOMATIC DRYERS | | ; TRADE e Tall Bottle Jone Whirlpool Wringer Washer $8935 + hal Deeliigtion Reg. Price Sale Price REG. \ ) Bae; $2722 Now 2 Hamilton Dryers $279.50 $219.95 $319.95 @ Automatic Defrost G-E Wringer Washer $1192 1 Simplex Dryer $279.95 $199.95 { © Thriftmaster Unit Evechet Wesher ow 32229! Hotpoint Dryer $379.95 $209.95 = ———_ = = | @ Automatic Water Evaporator _LIMITED TIME ONLY! $09 © 13.63 Sq. Ft. of Shelf Area FREEZERS , ‘ Se tay | Deseigelan Reg. Price Sale Price 1 Hotpoint Freezer $479.95 $399.95 MUST GO: 1 Philce Fieeser $529.95 $499.95 1 Admiral Freezer . $429.95 $340.95 1 Hotpoint Freezer $429.95 $300.95 ~~ » » ‘ ~ - ~~ a -_—-- Reg. Price Sale Price NESCO ROASTERS | 2 Gasinator $119.95 $99.95 FULLY AUTOMATIC $ 95 1 Incinerator $84.50 $69.95 Re}, $84.95 592 2 Martin Incinerators $69.95 $49.95 1 Stand. Elec. Incin. $139.50 $99.95 3 Drayton Pumps $59.75 $49.95 1 Drayton Pump $59.95 $49.95 1 Water Softener $129.95 $99.95 2 Mullen’der Disposals $89.95 $65.95 Refrigerators Speed Queen Ironers Reg. $69.95 NOW 34.9% APPLIANCES NEW CALROD GOLDEN FRYER uh too | cel mt THI BRAND NEW 1953 a N.S” 6 "hClCCNE ee eEe_S:,,rrst‘i‘SOO!WUWUO~—~CSS F S I fat fry likeafine fang Quin gto voc Price Sate Prce | REO"! eopelnowi $695 chef. Built. | . 1 Norge Refrigerator $329.95 $249.95 dk In deep fry- LOOK AT THIS OFF ER 1 Serve] Refrigerator $389.95 $289.95 Reo. King steeds $595 : a 2 Admiral Refrigerator $529.95 $399.95 er included Range oe, 389.95 | 2. Admiral Refrigerator $269.95 $199.95 eager! Fan Heaters $695 with this ! Fryer $29 95 2 Admiral Refrigerator $299.95 $249.95 ff eo: $8.95 — NOW. -cam... ‘range. | , 2 Admiral Refrigerator $339.95 $289.95 Bf Automatic Percolator $1795 | Total 5419.90 5 Crosley Refrigerator $289.95 $229.95 Reg. $27.95 NOW. ..... 17 3 Crosley Refrigerator $369.95 $299.95 | 1 Crosley Refrigerator $229.95 $199.95 I Wernetoe $2195 © King-Size Super Oven PAY AS LITTLE AS | YOU GET GOTH FOR ONLY © Giant High-Speed Broiler OIL SPACE HEATERS || —;;: $ OF @ Lighted Pushbutton Control nt teen [EL te Teleb Homma” 15*| © Color-Keyed Cooking Units vaned ona natin | $39 | Hee Three Storage Drawers re nM ON ine, 15% © Full Length Fluorescent Top Light rm Wi H ——— — © Two Appliance OuHets— ot Water Heaters ) 5 Bre, apeatares eliete Cae -| ware, nor waree, 30 carton || Bowling Balls $19.95 | Gas eater 5 | 09°95 | No Money Do wh! Ph one re renner idea Suan OPEN hand NIGHT ‘TIL 9 Oil Heater $9995 - Years to Pa ! FEdera| ff (cick Pron - FEderal aie 574 a 27 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT ‘til 9 108 NORTH SAGINAW vacivmciuawm = $3995) BYE gral vy Ok Rew rs —_— = a a gg PE ee wet ee — | ~~ | Sevonnokhet = LIK Tchapone (7 Leobo o “Ss As PT eerene — EEE H-Bomb Fears Shadow Confab Security Group Faces! Task of Reorganizing ; | Armed Forces By ELTON C. FAY | WASHINGTON W — Scientific predictions that the hydrogen bomb | may soon explode into practical | reality—a prospect, that set off soul-searching in the Pentagon— | steeped in significance today an | unusual meeting of) the National | + Security Council. | The new Joint Chiefs of Staff, | who comprise America’s high mil- | —j | itary command, already are over- | due with recommendations on the | size and shape of the armed | | | forces for the year starting next | July 1. * . * This entirely ‘‘new look,’’ it was || learned today, was ardered by the White House and Defense’ Depart- || ment primarily because nuclear experts warned that the H-bomb is well on its way to becoming frightfully real. President Eisenhower summoned | an unusually large number of his || government aides and advisers to today’s meeting of the top level National Security Council. RED MEASLES—Newsmap of Indochina shows how Commie | forces dot country as new invasions threaten. Normally fewer than a dozen | persons—Cabinet members and ad- | visers from the armed forces and | other agencies—attend the weekly Editor's Note: Pred Sparks from the| Korean truce frant to a |beot ha cnrrered if explosive jungle warfare in Follow) his ‘trmety — dispatcies on the Special, Page of the Pontiac Press. fresh is back 1950—the Indochina. } By FRED SPARKS SAIGON (NEA)—Whenh it rains ! in Indochina it seems ag if some- one in heaven turned on a faucet. In minutes the pects of Saigon are aswim, Bicycle-propelled richshaws hofst their slight awnings and slosh through the gutters like small outboards. Neat Vietnamese girls in tight dresses slit up the sides, Foreign Legionnaires in white pillbox hats, | French officers with tanned knees under tropical shorts—all take cov- er in the fan-cooled cafes. Then the awful sun comes out like a slap in the face.|In Sai- gon the water is literally, sucked off the streets. But in |the country, on the Ton- kin airstrip next to Red China, along the vital foads feeding French outposts,, the whole land is a giant puddle. At the end of September these rains, the flash floods, will stop. Then will come another flood— the Vietminh Communists. Carrying fresh weapons issued in China, they will attack French and loyal Indochinese garrisons, ambush convoys, and infiltrate the heavily populated deltas. The seventh ry season of war will flame in| this Chinese ‘Year of the Snake.” French forces, now fat with American guns, and newly- trained light Indochinese infantry promise | aggressive actions. to bleed Vietminh areas. Except| for one thing, a ;final decision till seems distant. That one. thing, in the back of évery in Indochina man’s mind, is: ‘'Chinese troops.” Will the forces of Gen. Mao, now | relieved in Korea, move here? And if they do what of U. §. Secretary of State Dulles’ promise that the war will then be carried to Peiping by air bombings and sea blockade? A decision Is hard to come by because the Communist war is im the traditional guerrilla pat- tern, hidden by vast jungles so thick that movement is measured in yards, You can't kill some- body you can’t find. By sniping, harassing and dyna- miting, the Communists have forced French withdrawals and the map of Indochina has the measles. Red spots of Vietminh ring almost every city. A few nights ago, 4 miles from Saigon, a rubber plantation stockade was assauited by guer- rillas in black silk gowns. A traitor unlatched the gate and they poured in. Thirty defenders were killed, 30 marched off roped together like cattle. Certainly, I found French hopes down since my last) visit in 1950. Many of my old soldier-friends have been: killed. And some poli- ticians in Paris talk about saving money, pulling out. . They want the U.N.—and that means U.S.—to take over, send our young men, even as now we are sending half the dollars to finance this war. A sharp blow to French hope was the Korean truce, Red China fin- ances this trouble, and ‘when the U.S. made an armistic arrange- ment the natives said, well, the Americans and Europeans can’t whip China, they. will soon go home, we cannot defend ourselves so we better play ‘it cozy. meeting. But today 26 names were listed in addition to that of the) President who serves as council chairman. * * td Besides the full membership of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the secretaries of the armed services, the White House called to the meet- ing six special consults on conti- nental defense, among them Lt. Gen. Harold W. Bull, retired, now attached to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Eisenhower and Secretary of Defense Wilson, when they picked the new staff chiefs last spring, let it be known their orders were to. take a thorough look at the | military machine and produce a! report, This report, aside from its gen- eral aim of remolding the armed forces, would be the basis for bud- get recommendations for the De- fense Department. * s * But Sept. 15, the deadline set by Budget Director Joseph M. any recommendation by the Joint Chiefs. Wilson was reported con- sidering a mandate to the chiefs to have their report ready in two weeks, Recasting of the defense setup is compelled not only because American physicists have brought - their hydrogen explosive research virtually to the point of a practical weapon. It gains impetus also from ample and ominous evidence that Russia too is racing along the same path. * ¢ ® The United States government thus is confronted with two prob- lems of the utmost urgency and gravity: 1. To convince the world of the utter devastation that would come with war using the new weapon. 2.To seek tighter defense of the North American continent against nuclear attack—a defense which even the most optimistic do not believe can be absolute, Exchanged Home ANN ARBOR (#—Anna S. Elo- nen, associate professor of psy- chology at the University of Michi- gan, has been awarded a U.S. edu- cational exchange grant. She will teach at Jyvaskyla, Finland, her nantive country. . TOOTER’S TUTORS—Marjorie Bevans of 21045 E. Boulevard, a member of the Wayne University band, goes through difficult musical arrangement (seated), while Prof. Mark F. DeLeonard, band director and Dr. Graham T. Overgard offer tips. Bandsman Fred Johnson of Royal Oak looks on. Reds Crashing Trade Barriers Russian Drive to Woo on Wide Front LONDON (INS) |— ‘trade barriers are breaking down in a wide front today in an in- | tensified Russian campaign to woo America’s allies with tempting of- fers. The Soviet Union and her Com- |munist satellites have concluded a long list of new trade agree- ments with non-Communist coun- tries in recent weeks. And there are indication of further increases in| trade across the |Iron Curtain. At the same time pressure is building up in Britain and non- Communist Europe for relaxation of controls on shipments of stra- tegic materials to Russia, China and other members of the Com- munist bloc. Speeches by Premier Georgi Malenkov and other Communist pfopaganda has made clear that the new Communist pattern of trade has a two-fold objective: /1. To make more consumer goods available in the Communist countries, in an effort to gain sup- port for the Red regimes. 2. To woo America's allies by buying from them goods which are increasingly difficult to sell, and exporting to them goods they might otherwise have to buy with precious dollars. The biggest East-West deal con- cluded recently is between France and the Soviet Union. Within three years the volume of trade is expected to reach $35,000,000 each way annually, nearly three times the 1952 fig- ure. East-West A new trade pact between Russia and Greece involves the export by Greece of 5,000 tons of tobacco, 500 tons of rice and olive oil and sponges, in exchange for Russian fuel oil, hard coal, timber, caviar, and chemicals, PONS ERAS KELOA CAN-CAN -— Passersby fn Pontiac's downtown section stopped and stared Wednesday night as 10 oddly-garbed, girls kicked up their’ heels in a street-side can-can — part of their initiation into Keloa Klub. Cutting up on W. Huron St. at Pine St. were Geft to right) Rober™ Johnson, 1461 Oakwood Ave., Sylvan Lake; Deanna Bradley, 108 a Dr,; meee Whitfie sera 'Dr.: Leah Mae PfcNutt, 2483 Normadele Ave., and )iarilyn | Mary Ellen Wait, 148 Ogemaw Rd; ¢ S. Genesee Ave.; Joan Wagley, 91 Hammond St , 2154 Avondale Ave,. Sylvan Lake; Barbara Calhoun, 114 Joyce 38 Neome Dr.;' Sharron Savage, Glennie, 2308 Montroyal Ave. America’s Allies Gains | FBI Says Other Offenses Down Three slayings and 20 robberies during the first six months of 1953 pushed Pontiac's half-year crime record above figures for the same period last year, al- though, all other crimes were on the decrease. These are the conclusions of a Federal Bureau of Investigation crime survey of 117 Michigan cities, released today in Washing- ton. With the exceptions of De- troit and Flint, Pontiac had more violent crime than other Michi- gan cities of over 25,000 pop- ulation with three murders com- mitted during the first half of the year. } It alsohad most aaa with 20. The FBI's sors afi’ report paints this picture of crime for Michigan as a whole: Murders increased from 1.59 for each 100,000 population in the 1952 period to 2.10 in 1953. Aggravated assaults jumped from 52.2 to 59 and auto thefts from 94.5 to 99.3. Robberies declined from 36.7 to 34.5, burglaries from 202.5 to 176.4 and other kinds of thefts from 649.4 to 583.9. The figures are based on re- ports to the FBI from police in 117 Michigan cities. The FBI reported a 2'; per cent increase in major crime in the United States but said this was largely attributed to a nine per cent jump im rural crime. City crime increased only one- half of one per cent. Detroit, the nation’s fifth biggest city, ranked fourth in 1953's first six months in five crime categories —murders, robberies, aggravated assaults, burglaries and auto theftsS Detroit had 61 murders in this period compared with 46 in the first half of 1952. Aggravated as- saults jumped from 1,671 to 1,876 and auto thefts from 2,779 to 3,201. Robberies declined from 1,229 to 1,104, burglaries from 4,683 to 3,- 899. Thefts over $50 from 1,519 to 1,431 and thefts under $50 from 11,552 to 9,567. Aggravated assaults include assaults with intent to kill and shootings, stabbings, poisonings and similar severe assaults on the. person. They do not include assault and battery or fighting. Following are the number of of- fenses of the various types re- portéd by other Michigan cities over 25,000 population in the first half of 1953 (figures for the same period in 1952 are bracketed): Murder—Ann Arbor 0 (0), Battle Creek 0 (1), Bay City 0 (0), Dear- born 1 (1), Ferndale 1 (1), Flint 4 (0), Grand Rapids 0 (0), Ham- tramck 1 (0), Highland Park 1 (0), Jackson 1 (0), Kalamazoo 0 (1), Lansing 0 (1), Muskegon 0 (1), PONTIAC 8 (1), Port Huron 1 (0), Royal Oak:0 (0), Saginaw 2 (2), Wyandotte 0 (1). Robbery—Ann Arbor 4 (0), Bat- tle Creek 5 (9), Bay City 3 (8), Dearborn 12 (18), Ferndale 4 (5), Flint 76 (35), Grand Rapids 15 (25), Hamtramck 14 (9), Highland Park 21 (7), Jackson 7 (3), Kala- mazoo 2 (9), Lansing 1 (4), Mus- kegon 11 (12), PONTIAC 20 (13) Port Huron 1 (7), Royal Oak 4 (6), Saginaw 16 (8), Wyandotte 2 (2). ber 6 (1)! Battle Creek 14 (19), Bay City 0 (0), Dearborn 11 (10), Ferndale © (1), Flint 124 (116), Rapids 7 (14), Ham- 11 (19), Highland Park 12 (14), Jackson & (4), Kalama- + zoo 4 (6), Lansing 6 (5), Mus- kegon 19 (17), PONTIAC 47 (58), Pert Huron 9 (5), Royal Oak 1 Major Crime for Half-Year in Pontiac Ahead of 1952 (0), Saginaw 73 (63), Wyandotte 6 (0). Burglary—Ann Arbor 0) (60), Battle Creek 72 (89), Bay City 53 (48), Dearborn 168 (169), Fern- dale 72 (31), Flint 315 (370), Grand Rapids 275 (831), Hamtramck 67 (57), Highland Park 83 (123), Jack- son 61 (86), Kalamazoo 91 (134), Lansing 86 (119), Muskegon 114 (72), PONTIAC 182 (270), Port Huron 36 (72), Royal Oak 97 (78), Saginaw 108 (124), Wyandotte 72 (49). Theft over $50—Ann Arbor 58 (78), Battle Creek 72 (71), Bay City 26 (26), Dearborn 1% (155), Ferndale 33 (32), Flint 331 (2.661), Grand Rapids 115 (112), Ham- tramck 59 (84), Highland Park 96 png tl Jackson 78 (76), Kalamazoo 88 (90), Lansing 56 (55), Muskegon 66 (70), PONTIAC 64 (78), Port Huron 26 (21), Royal Oak 16 (30), Saginaw 69 (61), Wyandotte 37 (46). Theft under $50—Ann Arbor 120 (155), Battle Creek 3815 (2386), Bay City 205 (216), Dearborn 815, (883), Ferndale 102 (91), Flint 870 (834), Grand Rapids 873 (1,009) Hamtramck 115 (166), Highland Park 300 (350), Jack- son 245 (304), Kalamazoo 457 (386), Lansing (344), Muskegon 196 (216), PONTIAC 285 (344), Port Huron 191 (260), Royal Oak 216 (221), Saginaw 545 (535), Wyandotte 137 (140). Auto theft—Ann Arbor 25 (11), ‘Battle Creek 27 (31), Bay, City 27 (42), Dearborn 186 (166), Ferndale 21 (21), Flint 135 (117), Grand Rapids 95 (125), Hamtramck 56 (51), Highland Park 73 (73), Jack- gon 24 (31), Kalamazoo 31 (42), Lansing 53 (42), Muskegon 27 (30), PONTIAC 61 (72), Port Huron 19 4), Royal Oak 20 (37), Saginaw 66 (64), Wyandotte 25 (29). Seven Homeless MARQUETTE ® — A fire de- stroyed the home and all the be- longings of the Amos Spencer fam- ily of seven in Big Bay Wednesday. The fire was believed caused by an overheated chimney. amp Mahn-go-tah-see Ends Most Successful Season (ite Improved With Additions Sedholm Lodge Among New Buildings at Loon Lake Center Camp Mahn-go-tah-see at Loon Lake has just completed its most successful season. It was filled to capacity for|all four periods, and because so many boys were unable to attend this year many already have signed up for next summer, The camp has been improved with several new buildings this year. The new Seaholm Lodge was opened. It houses handicraft activities in the summer, and is used as dormitory during the spring and fall seasons. It is named for Ernest W. Seaholm of Birmingham, for many years active in the camp’s establishment and growth. The State Audubon Society fi- nanced an addition that doubled the space available to the camp's nature center. |) A new beach house also was added this year with lockers and storage for the waterfront equip- ment, and J. P. Hildebrand of Birmingham donated a pulpit for the outdoor chapel. ‘ This year’s campers represented 22 of the 25 townships in Oak- land County. In addition to the regular camping program two canoe trips, each more than 100 miles long, were taken by groups of boys. Truck trips were taken to Mackinac Island and to the Soo and Tahquamenon Falls. | Reservations already have been made for use of the camp during the fall and spring seasons. The State Audubon Society will hold its campout there next Me- morial Day weekend, and a train- fing course will be held there mext June for training nature counsellors for any camp in Michigan. | A family color tour is being planned this fall, probably for the second weekend in October, ace cording to S. N. Geal, director of the camp, which is operated by the Oakland County Town and Country YMCA. Loat for Health, Medics Advise at State Confab GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. ##}—Two medical authorities—a heart spe- cialist and a trist~ recommended ‘‘plain, old-fashioned loafing’ as a means of staying healthy to the 88th convention of the Michigan Medical Society last night. Dr. Leo Taran, New York heart specialist, said a 15-minute inter- ruption in the day’s activities would be a step toward cutting down the incidence of heart dis- ease. ‘Such a period also would serve PT Mald, et eecuetuk 300,000 Tough U. S. Soldiers HEIDELBERG, Germany (UP) —The 300,000-man United States Army in Europe is being trained intensively to withstand a Soviet atomic attack and would “give a very fine performance” if the Russians struck tomorrow, its com- mander-in-chief said today. Gen. Charles L. Bolte leaves his “It’s combat effectiveness is far and away better than it was 2 1-3 years ago when it was built up to its present strength of five combat divisions,’’ Bolte said. “Then it was a garrison army Today it is a fighting field army. “It is certain that in an emer- gency it would give a very fine performance.” Army in. Europe Trained to Withstand Atomic F ight ‘Bolte said that since it was con- to withstand a possible atomic om slaught. | : E : i +e 5 Hy ait 31998 38 it E § sik i would not be catastrophic." said that if troops scattered sufficiently, atomic weap- ons would lose much of their value. —— _ _EIGHTEEN | NATIONAL OVER- PRODUCTIO Pes OOM ib PrsneD we (eareqeerTs olla... —-FE4-1515 IDE. 95 " AL WE MUST REDUCE OUR INVENTORY 20,000 SETS ON ALL MODELS... ‘STARTING NOW! THESE ARE BRAND FACTORY-PRESH NEW, RECEIVERS!! im WainyT hdmy To you Pike ___THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTE} MBER 24, 1953 West Virginia, a bank account and court order, Mrs. vilece will aut! tele ieeenlaieen and a share in the estate with her | sons Fred and James. Vinson Wills Invalid, | insurance Sons fo Share Estate WASHINGTON @® — Two wills left by the late Chief Justice Fred ,); |M. Vinson were declared invalid Highland Park Judge | Yesterday and his son was ap- Heads Michigan Group pointed administrator of his eS DETROIT wW—Associate Munici- tate. pal Judge David Golden of High-| Py: 0 The wills—one dated in 1928. the land Park was elected president | | other in 1930—were invalidated be OF the al Tuten Ga = | cause they lacked the signatures _ udges last pig | of witnesses. _junction with the Michigan State Fred M. Vinson Jr., in petition-| Bar Association convention, | ing district court for ‘appointment | Judge Clark Olmstead of Kala- | as estate administrator, said his mazoo was chosen first vice presi- GOP-Led Probe | Groups Reaching Near 100 Mark WASHINGTON — With Republi- cans in charge of its investigative | committees for the first time since 1948, Congress has jabbed with | new-boom vigor at nooks and |corners which the GOP said the | government’s previous administra- | | tion left in a mess. are meeting in con-| ; The number of investigations is | | growing by the week, and prob- | | ably will reach 100 by the end of | | 31953, according to a Congressional | Quarterly survey of rections activities by the 83rd Congress’ | first session. | father left about $1,160 in persona] ‘dent; Judge George | Martin of |property here. But he told news-, Dearborn, second vicé president, | men the estate also includes small and Judge William C\ Burke of; | Property holding in Kentucky and Battle Creek, secretany-treasurer. ee —_—_—— ——— +— + - ----+— _ pt Sturdy Shoes and Sneakers Time to shoe the young fel- lows for rigorous school ac- tivity, Let us fil) their needs j | Sizes 4 to 9 | dog Sizes 13 to bays pie 1 $198 MERIT SHOES 43 N. Saginaw St. i] i | The best-known of these are ‘| aimed at alleged misdeeds and mistakes of the governnient’s | executive branch when it was un- ) | der the Democrats. : Bu: | | When the first session adjourned | : early Aug. 4, Congressmen had | BITE-SIZE TREAT — Maybe it completed or begun about 85 in- won't be long before you can enjoy | | vestigations, By mid-September the | ited with 236 probes during its two years. Its first session pro- | duced most > of these, approxi- | mately 150. However, these totals included some staff inquiries not as clearly | Congressional investigations as the list of about 90 compiled by CQ for the period Jan. 3-Sept. 15, 1953, During 1953, Republicans took over control from Democrats and Congressional committees spent more time in reorganization than | Was necessary at the start of the 82nd Congress in 1951. The 1951 session. moreover. ran ;more than 10 weeks longer than | did this year's. It was adjourned on | Oct. 20. i Probes in 1953 stirring the most attention genefally have torn into policies and practices of the Demo- cratic administration, although some focused” on private insti- tutions, such as entertainment and watermelon without loading your } figure had topped 90. | Pretty | refrigerator to capacity. Jackie Rush displays the two- pound, bit-size delicacy at the Los Angeles County Fair. She's sur- rounded by Rattlesnake melons. which average 20 to 60 pounds in weight. Fruit growers claim the ' tiny taste-treats retain the values of the standard melon. ‘Collie Dog Has Surgery, ‘Had Eaten Play Stones See vatile — Bruce the collie | rattled when he walked. When he ran, he rattled louder. | A surgeon found the answer in | Bruce’s stomach—five large stones together weighing nearly a pound. He took them out. Said John Hollely, the dog’s own- er: ‘Bruce must have swallowed | some of the stones I threw for him when we went walking to- gether.’ OPEN EVERY WITE TIL 10 P.M. INCLUDING SUNDAY) I and Pj EN N ALWAYS FIRST QuALITY: t Pa ys to Shop a . TOP QUALITY NYLON MARQUISETTE! ‘iS Bee eb ig : A te Aenea . : Be RMP LAA 9 pone x , %, Po on ates. Sh Rota, GENEROUS FULL CUT! lb. sive hae RO There’s nylon and nylon! And when you can.get Hathaway nylon at this price, you'll want to rush to Penney’s. You get Priscillas unrivalled for flawless fabric beauty, for record wear. Made with generous fullness in the cut ... in the ruffles — with hemmed, headed top. 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Approximately a score more in- vestigations have been specifically authorized by either the House or | Senate but have not yet reached the ‘‘action’’ stage.” In addition to these full-fledged investigations, conducted by con- gressmen themselves in nearly all cases, 40 or more other inquiries will be credited to committee staffs during 1953, | To pay for the inquiries, Con- | gress made available to its com- mittees $3,958,471, including car- | ryover funds. While the figures for the 83rd Congress on number of probes and their cost are not closely com- gress, they indicate the new ses- sion’s investigative activity is on |a scale similar to that of the 82nd Congress, which broke all records | spent / Nin 1951 and 1952, the 82nd Cong- | ures for that Congress are avail- | able but the 83rd Congress is well | year spending of its predecessor if | it keeps on at anything like the present rate. The 82nd Congress was cred- \ (Advertisement) Kidney Slow-Down May Bring Restless Nights When kidney function slows down, cord folks complain of nagging backache, bead- | aches, dizziness and loss of pep and energy. Don’t suffer restless nights with these dis- comforts if reduced kidney function is get- | ting you down—due to commor causes as stress and strain, over-exertion or expo- | sure to cold. Minor bladder irritations due | to cold or Lines diet may cause getting up nights or frequent passages. Don’t neglect your kidneys if these eondi- tions bother you. Try Doan’s Pille—a mild diuretic. Used successfully by millions for over 560 years. It’s amazing bow many times Doan’s give happy relief from these discom- forts—help the 15 milesof kidney tubes and ters flush out waste. Get Doan’s Pills today! parable to those for the 82nd Con- | ‘gress authorized $5,700,870 for in- | _vestigations. No first session fig- | Activities Committee, headed by }on the way to topping the two- | schools. Main object of the detect- |ing has been evidence of |subver- | sion. | Sen. Joseph McCarthy's |R-Wis) | investigations subcommittee of the Senate Government, Operations Committee pried into handling of State Department personnel tfiles, ‘‘mismanagément and sub- version”’ in the Voice of America, | subversive books in U. S. over- seas libraries, and Western trade | with Communist nations, subversion jin the military services, and in the Government Printing | Office, and links between American Com- munists and the United Nations. The Senate judiciary committee's internal security subcommittee, headed by: William E. Jenner (R- Ind), investigated faulty screening of U.S. employes working! for the United Nations, Communist pene- tration of American schools, and for number of probes and money nce infiltration of high level fed- eral policy making. In the House, the Un-American Rep. Harold H. Velde (R-II) | probed alleged Communist acttvi- ty in education, entertainment and religion, ‘ Headline probes in other fields included the ammunition shortage in Korea and waterfront racket- eering in New York and New Jersey. Leading those investigations were Sen. Margaret Chase Smith (R-Maine), head of a Senate armed services subcommittee, and the late Sen. (Charies W, Tobey | (R-NH), chairman of a Senate | interstate and/ foreign commerce subcommittee. | Copyright 1953 Decide Coroner's Fate MUSKEGON; — Muskegon County Board of Supervisors will ask voters to decide, probably ac the next general election, whether to continue under the existing coun- ty coroner system or adopt the medical examiner plan. SAM BENSON SAYS: IT’S AMAZING That’s What Women All ‘Weol! Blanket Fleece Zip Lined I Could Sell for $49.50 MY PRICE 33” It’s hard te believef $33.71. Say When They See My EVERYDAY LOW PRICES! tog a * = COATS, Ceats you will see up te $49.50, | sell for Come in, try one on!.. 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S BLINDS . 23-26 all metal. 27-28 width, 3.00. 29-36 width, 3.44. Save! OPEN MON. FRI. a 3 24-pe. Flat- ware SETS 3.99 6 each knives, forks, spoons, soup spoons. Stainless steel! AS fo ri Priscilla 3 39 CURTAINS . Pair 45x90” sheer ruffled rayon marquisettes wash in a wink! Kitchen Bese Cabinet has Lo top, upper shelves, wer. Easy terms. 11.94 Venetien Mirrors with lov- ely painted bird scenes. 22x 34” size. Easy terms. 5.99 bar sens ? (Ae pa : ee ae ey es of Pe Ratt Ska BE | Bf iin cams RN Pia oe th oie Pa Enameled ROASTERS Self basting cover designed to drip liquids back on meat! koa fails Oud Pair 42x90” each side. Pinch pleat style in many colors. Rush! Unfinished Fasera | r bd Ine. event k Easy tera 10.88 72x81 Comfort Covers in smooth ‘percale snap-on style. Prints. 4.88 BRIDGE CHAIRS Folding all - steel 2.44 padded seat. Colors blend anywhere! se BR i A ane aie SET 99: Limited Quantities—1 to @ customer 4 plates, 4 cups in at- tractive box. Perfect gift! Print Barkcloth or Pebble Chenille Spreads im full or twin size. Many new colors. Buy now! Easy terms. 9.88 SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC SAT., NICHTS TO THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 MEN! Look at these Cossack JACKETS 1577 Terms Top qualit¥ capeskin, hip length. {Framed guatdsiman cuffs. Rayon quilt lining. all wool in- terlining. Rich toned brown. Sizes 36 to 46. Gabardine SURCOATS 77 Easy Terms Spot. stain, weather re- sistant. 32” long. Rayon quilt wool lining. Brown, copper, gray, skipper. Knit wristlet; tab on sleeve. 36-46 in group. sensational savings! ve Check, gab hip © JACKETS 77 Easy Terms Prices slashed! Smart check and gabardine jackets. 26” long, elastic waist. Rayon quilt wool G14 lining. Brown, gray, bt skipper. 36-46 in group. HY ate A ate a \ Ua MT gh Le MEN’S assorted, long-wearing fall COTTON UNDERWEAR SALE @athletic shirts @shorts @ briefs @tee shirts Combed cotton-ribbed knit athletic 4. G mL shirts. 36-46. Sanforized striped broadcloth shorts. Boxer or gripper styles. 36-44. Elastic waist briefs with reinforced crotch. S-M-L, Combed cotton tee shirts, S-M-L, Buy several and save! MEN’S “Waldorf” SHIRTS Fine snow white broadcloth dress shirts . , . Sanforized for permanent fit! Pearl buttons. Wrinkle-free collar with bar- rel cuffs, or spread collar with French cuffs. Freshly wrapped in cellophane! Were much higher priced! Sizes 14-17. CREDIT-SHOP MEN’S winter nionsuits 199 ; whi Y weight, ite cotton, win. ter UNnionsuits. with convenient FEDERAL PURCHASE COUPONS Buy now, pay Men’Ss gab, check, flannel FALL SLACKS rains Taleo gene 4 4 woven flannels, 40/ Easy MEN’S winter Underwear 124., Heavy weight, al] > ) cotton, long ; on gabs, Terms M8 or short sleeve dei. gen axial rayon la ter on ea Sy Sleeve, ankle shirts, 36-46. An. houndstooth. 28 to 42. b udget terms! - 38 to 46, kle length draw. ers, 32-44, MEN’S twist twill WORK SETS Tailored by STUR-DEE Flannel 939 4 Shirts Sanf. cotton flannel. Gray or white cot- ia SHIRTS PANTS Plaids, checks, col. ton sweat shirt, 9 9 9 9 ors. 14% to 17. Fleece lining. SML. 3 7 T 14%-19 29-50 Miah ‘A : BOYS’ | Sanf. cotton | FLANNEL cs 27 | SHIRTS “ie, ees gt ol Se at ee R e , ‘ ee 2 WM ney % % 2 soci _83y ‘ Soe x Na a ay 24 < SA S 19995 Co wiiacdate. in accordance With: Your Old Refrigerator | _jTWENTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 | L _ meee ln ea, ee, eee 6 eee 2 a7 SAAN \ IW OPEN MON., DOUBLE DOOR CONSOLE TV WITH LARGE 21-IN. SCREEN You'll enjoy watching football this fall on this new) Westing- house console! Big 2],” screen with electrostatic picture tube for ‘| sharp focus, single dial UHF- VHF tuning for new UHF sta- tions! Buy now on easy credit! 37 BIG TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD TV EDERAL iat vane 95 Easy Terms 786K21—1954 LIFE-SIZE 21” SCREEN ON A WESTINGHOUSE CONSOLE TV, Better than a front row ticket for football games this fall! Big 21” screen is permanently focused for best reception, single dial UHF-VHF tuning for new UHF stations. Handsome mahogany finish. Buy now on credit! SAGINAW AT WARREN PONTIAC OPEN MON. FRI. FRI., SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 | TABLE MODEL 17-INCH TV 17 It's here! The new improved Westinghouse TV for 1954! Improved picture performance, advanced UHF features and the very best in sound make this handsome 17” ta- ble model an outstanding value at only 179.95! The new Westinghouse features single dial UHF-VHF tuning, 100-mile-plus tuner for sharp pictures in any area, 4- way glare elimination and electrostatic picture tube for edge-to-edge focus. See it today at Federal’s in its hand- some brown plastic cabinet! Buy it uow on credit! Pay Even Less With Your Small Screen Trade-in! LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD TV Youth Severely Burned GRAND RAPIDS «—Carl Kam- meraad, 15, was severely burned Wednesday night when he spotted a smouldering! blaze in a vacant house and attempted to stamp out the flames with his feet. His clothing caught fire. Student Invents Control Device Automatic Electronic | ‘Pilot’ for Lathes Saves | |. Time and Money | OXFORD, Miss. (UP) — A col-| ‘lege engineering student has de- | | signed an inexpensive electronic “pilot’’ ‘that replaces costly hy- draulic control of simple machine |; lathes. Richard Gould of Ridgewood, N. J., says the greatest advantage of his ‘‘automatic pilot” to indus- try is that “one operator can con- trol more than one lathe at a time and turn out a greater volume of work.” Gould developed the device as part of his work for a master of science degree in industrial en- gineering at the University of Mississippi here. General Electric Corporation was so impressed with Gould's device that he was signed to enter GE’s manufacturing training program, ‘despite the fact he must take a three-year tour of duty in the Navy after finishing school. ~ Gould got the idea for his elec- tronic pilot from a hydraulically- driven lathe in jan. engineering magazine. A professor suggested that he use electronics, and five . | months later, Gould had completed : |his pilot model. The electronic control is more | efficient than the hydraulic con- trol, Gould said, and costs less to | build. Gould said his pilot: could easily | | be turned out in a small shop for | ' lless than $100, while hydraulic! . | | | eR ann CE RR ee Rr, i,| controls cannot be made in the or-' Your favorite quality is here, ; | dinary shop. ready for you.-It’s dustproofed, | “I put in the material to be cleanly sized |. . and backed by | Shaped, set the conditions, and the : | electronic _control does the rest :,| while I take it easy,’’ Gould said. |He said hydraulic controls require imore attention from the operator. | Red Radio Says China Corwin Lumber Easy to Double Grain Output 1 & Coal Co. Terms ‘|| SAN) FRANCISCO (AP) —| ; | Peiping radio says Communist 117 §. Cass FE 2-8386 -|}China intends to, double its | annual grain production with- | — in the next 10 years to reach jan output of 300 million nt WANT A‘GOOD USED ‘by Teng ‘T2u-hwel, viee-chair- | REFRIGERATOR? man of the Financial and | Economic Affairs committee of | our guarantee of your entire | satisfaction. Lowest Prices—Famous Makes | the ruling Red Administration | 50 Council, said a broadcast heard $ | by the Associated Press in San + | Francisco. | He said the production in- | crease could be accomplished || Good Housekeeping Shop 51 West Huron “treet only by mechanizing China’s | } agriculture through big-scale | “|| farm collectives. KN SORES po. x ..1 a lamb of a coat 5 ‘a9° Delightful regular length or shorty coats by MARK- ETATE in St. Mary’s famous, murmur -light fleece. a | Men's Handsome ‘ Worsted One-Button ’ || NEW FALL hs SUITS ‘49> Chodse now from Rappy’s ex- hw 3 cellent selection of good look- 2 ing suits for Fall. See the new si stripes, splash weaves and 793K21—1954 solids in these ultra smart suits that are styled with good Easy grooming in mind, Pay No! Z Money Down at Rappy’s. { | | | Terms RATIONAL CLOTHING 9 Rappy S sens wear— womens wean Meet Rappy . Lnass Snappy @ $0. SAGINAW $T.. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN SAT., NICHTS TO 9 \ | f } ae or eB ' t * THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 Private’ Railroad Cars Inexpensive in England LONDON Renting a private | to six or eight persons in each car for rentals as low as $15 to $30 |per| week per person, Cars are placed on railroad sid- railroad car in Britain is not the| ings invacation spots in England, expensive luxury that it is in the United States. British railways rent passenger cars as ‘camping | Scotland and Wales. Included in the cars other, than bed rooms are dining room, living room and kitch- coaches’’ during summer months’ en. Farmers Nead Hounds to Scare Coons Away OKLAHOMA CITY @ — What should you do if you have coons in your corn? That’s the question the Oklahoma Department of Ag- riculture was asked by farmers in the southeastern part of the state. The coons were stripping their fields, they complained. The department said: **A pack of good coon dogs might keep the invaders frightened away.” Some new types of fishing lures use rhinestones to attract fish to it. "TWENTY-THREE Make Way for Progress MUROC LAKE, Calif. (AP)— A railroad is being moved so that planes of tomorrow may be tested today on the sun- baked bed of Muroc Dry Lake. Relocation of 26 miles of the main line of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company’s track around the lake will give the Air Force a 20-mile-long natural runway. The job is scheduled for com- pletion by October. Cats have been known to live as | long as 30 years, No Fish Story ROLLA, Mo. (UP)—Bill Wig- gins and B. F. Thompson didn’t have much luck on a fishing trip but they did land a squirrel. They were coming in to shore when they spotted the swimming squirrel. Wiggins speeded up the outboard motor and they pursued the animal. After half an hour of wild maneuvering, the squirrel was bagged. | Arthur Donovan |was the referee in 14 world championship heavy- weight bouts. ry 7 I SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIA FEDERAL dept. store » eis eh * in NB pd ings | S a AL OPEN 3 NIGHTS ‘TIL 9 MON. —FRI.—SAT,_ + is t | sal | | 1] } i ” T } ; po oN | __TWENTY-FOUR_ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 Nightclub Undergoing Korea Truce Uneasy Fast Change to Church MORGANTOWN, W. Va. Ph — The Rev. Stoneking Groves, direc- congregation, | says his group | By PHIL NEW SOM should be able to move into @ {nied Press Foreign News Editor made-over tabernacle within a/| It is becoming discouragingly month. } ‘evident that neither the Uniled Site of the’ tabernacle will be the Old Cheat Lake. supper club, | Nations nor the Communists ex . one - time plush nightspot which | pect any real peace soon in Korea. used to be the scene of frequent | The best that can be expected is gambling and liquor raids before/a long, uneasy armistice with it was closed three years ago. j troops of both sides continuing in Conservation officials estimate | te war-torn peninsula for several that more thah 174,000 water fowl | years to come. spend their winters in Michigan. Such an analysis results from | _ Wallpaper Factory Outlet 22 West Huron St. "LOST OUR LEASE! BIG PRICE SLASHES ON NATIONALLY ADVERTISED MERCHANDISE SUPER KEMTONE and Another Nationally Advertised Latex Satin © 4» wall finish PURE LINSEED OIL | _ KEM-TON E be fueasges Res. st _ Reg. $5.19 SHERWIN-WILLIAMS SEMI-LUSTRE HOUSE PAINT Not All Colors— ab Amn Fermala pet cron 37 $5.25 value ee can. Aregular $5.50 valee. Look at These WALLPAPER VALUES Values to 39¢ choose 5¢ and 9: Roll from. Values to 69c 19¢ Roll V af aes red fo ill DM #3 Qe ku rooms and ball 49< maby 9 Roll room in wallpaper for all Fas} colored. Stripes, florals—all- Values to $1.25 Values | to $2.50 69° “719° Roll ur very finest wallpaper, for every room—washable— fast coiors over des desi eng, large selection Past colored, washable—just about STORE HOURS: 8:30 - 5:30 © FRIDAY 8:30 A. M. - 9 P, M. FEDERAL cent. stores ‘8th Army Would Do Well or ot the Spina Lite canei'tO Keep Its Powder Dry factors long in existence, and} | others newly added. Lately United States Secre- tary|of State John Foster Dulles said| the United | States was “forced to doubt’”’ that the com- mittee either interided to with- draw their troops! from North Korea or to permi( a truly free and united Korea. | Dulles added that |it was becom- | ing iricreasingly impossible to meet the Oct. 28 deadline originally set |for the start of the! political con- | | ference on Korea’s future. | This week a North Korean pilot | flew into Kimpo Airport outside | Seoul and turned qa Russian-built | MIG jet fighter over to the U.N, | command. | The North Korean gets $100,000 |and the U. N. command gets a | close-up look at the fighting ma- | chine which faced our F86 Sabre- | jets during the Korean fighting. But of possibly {more lasting | importance than any secrets the f MIG may have is |the other in- formation the former Red pilot brought with him. The Red flew his fighter craft in from a recently) reconstructed | field near the North Korean capi- | tal of Pyngyang, only about 120 miles} above Seoul. He added that | the Reds expect the war to resume and that they were $tocking North Korean fields with both jet fighters | and bombers in viblation of the | armistice. | If Lt. Noh Kuen Suk, formerly |of the Communist Air Force, is | telling the truth, then the Allies indeed have food for thought. The armistice terms permitted | reconstruction of North Korean | airfields but specifitally forbade | | their use by warplanes. Noh’s story would) indicate that ; the ink scarcely was dry on the | armistice documents than the | | Reds began violating} them. Assuming that their word would | be no better on, any political agree- | ments reached, then! what is the | |use of a political gonference at | all? | Which is not to say there won't | | eventually be a political confer. | ence. | } There undoubtedly will. The United States is bound by its own moral precepts and the United Nations by its charter to} for the Communists the conference continue to seek a peaceful solu- tion to any dispute. But it is increasingly clear that will serve but two purposes—as a sounding board for all their am- bitions throughout Asia, including annexation of Formoso, and to| Meanwhile, it seems that Gen. further the differences between} Maxwell Taylor and his Fighth the United States and those Asiatic | Army in Korea would do well to nations who might be our friends. | keep their powder dry. | Except for a few smal] openings to the brain, an elephant’s head is protected by about 8 inches of bone. INTRODUCTORY ®., OFFER! 100 CEVALIER (EQUAL TO 5 PACKS OF 20's) coe ee size CIGARETTES IN THE NEW METAL HUMIDOR ! We pay the federal tax of 40¢ for you! YOU SAVE 40¢ Get yours at your dealer’s now! @ To try king-size Cavaliers is to like them. We know that. That’s why we're making one of the most inviting advertising offers ever made ... to get you to try Cavalier, the great new king-size cigarette made by the makers of Camels! Easy! Nothing to do but go to your dealer and buy the new Cavalier “100” at his regular price, less 40¢. While his supply of this special offer lasts, you get 100 king-size Cavaliers at a saving of 40¢ .. . equal to 8¢ per regular pack of 20 cigarettes! Time is limited! Get yours now! One to a customer. The regular price of the Cavalier “100” will go into effect when your dealer’s supply of this special offer is sold! Get your king-size Cavaliers at your dealer’s now! Made by (equals a saving of 8¢ per regular pack of 20 cigarettes). 7 Cavalier 100° METAL HUMIDOR e+ein Cavalier red... Keeps them fresh and flavorful! the makers of Camels. BR. J. Reynolds Tobaceo Ca, Winston-Salem, N. OC, 1954 WESTINGHOUSE Laundromat WASHER 95 Terms 249: Completely automatic with flexible control dial that permits starting, stop- ping or repeating any part of the cycle. ‘Thorough Agi- Tumble action gets clothes cleaner in less time. Delivered, Installed and Serviced 1954 WESTINGHOUSE CLOTHES DRYER 199% Dries clothes completely dry for stor- age or damp-dry for ironing. Direct air flow blows filtered air directly through clothes. Control dial can be set for drying time of any fabric. Dryer wiring installed at no extra cost by the Teaey one Cate ecertente) wih tele approved schedule OPEN MON. FRI. % 6 PEE & ony, ¢ @ +WESTINGHOUSE 30” Elec. RANGE 249% Takes only 30” of floor space, yet you get all the deluxe features of bigger ranges! Features super-fast, Super- Corox surface units, look-in oven door, built-in electric clock and timer. SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC SAT. NIGHTS TO 9J : | : | | | ! THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24. 1953 TWENTY-FIVE Judges Invited FF Would Remodel “z-Fsutssrc."—— One Missing, 2 Hurt to. White House ‘Yury a declared tat mary in NATO Maneuvers U. §. Assistance Seen | xo — ret hee | é Clarifying his stand} on assist- | casualties were reported) today in ¢ a 4 Highest Court Vacancy Ferguson Sees Arms: 22" © na sqvernments, te, tee giant NATO sea exercise | _# a + tj Be < . |‘‘Mariner’’ taking pl in os »~ 8 | ; | on All ‘Minds at Yearly Aid Only as Needed «1 ipean we should provide | North Atlantic Place in the | a | i‘ h = a Social Event for Forei i | only weapons of war jand what. | ‘que sai ™/_ ar + } : Foreign Nations ever technical asaistance ts nec- | Navy anunntoe said pele gd S. = Oe . WASHINGTON The Supreme GRAND RAPIDS (Sen. Homer essary for development of those ciners were injured after a jet|.0 ‘. : Court vacaricy lent more than the Ferguson (R-Mich) would limit nations which heave ponerrns by ifighter crashed and burned Tues- + . 4 * . | a3 usual social significance to an an- |} U. S. foreign aid to the giving potty 9 p og Meu a pant day on the deck of the American | s, MY ; Fy nual tea at/ the White House late of beger oid equipment and tech-} 2) sia a gm oni oarrier Bennington, part of ne | ae he 4 nic ce. prenemic freedens | attacking fleet. = spi ds: |. ; Speaking before the 8th con-| Put into Rracticg these princi- | The plane was coming in for a | a. oh he guests: 11 genior circuit vention of the Michigan Medical) P!¢- landing. The pilot jumped over) se court: federal judges, Atty, Gen. Brownell and presiding justice Hugg L. Black of the Supreme Court. At least two of those invited have been mentioned in specula- tion: over a successor to the late Chiet Justice Fred M. Vinson. They are Orie L. Phillips of Den- ver, chief judge of the 10th Fed- eral Circuit'Court of appeals, and John J. Parker of Charlotte, N. C., chief judge‘of the fourth circuit. The judgés are here for their annual conférence on: conditions in |; | their cirtuifs. The White House tea is the most important social event on. their calendar. Society last night, Ferguson, He said the Eisenhower admin- | the side of the carrier |and was | claimed that foreign aid given by | istration has ‘‘thwarted the Com-' picked up by helicopter. The ex- | the Truman administration | munist effort to infiltrate. and| tent of his injuries was not dis- amounted to ‘overseas boondoggle | dominate gur own government’ | Closed. projects.”’ and that ‘‘we have seized the in-| The announcement said) the miss- itiative in| international affairs; ing man had either been knocked Senate Revabliced Pulicy Com, | from Soviet Russia.” overboard by the crash or jumped mittee said he fayored transfer- | Over the side to escape the flam- ring the responsibility ing. jet fuel. Another sailor was etusieieiarion Aediin sik to ths | Contributed |a 10-month period to badly burried. Defense Depart ‘ Protestant, Catholic and Jewish; Names of the casualties were ‘ | missions in the United States, Eu- not announced, pending) notifica- It now is administered by the! rope and Korea. tion of next of kin. Se an Sage coe ee oe a “Youthtime” gave us a buy on 400 regular $5.99 and $6.99. Sizes 3 to 14 and sub-teen. Girl's Dresses K | PS ta We're passing the savings on to you. And some truly outstanding savings, too. One look will ¢on- vince, you they're worth much more than‘ this low price. New fashions in new colors for back to schodl and dress-up wear, as - a | Soldiers at Fort Jackson, S. C., No news: comes out of these affairs, but this time the chief justice vacancy probably will be on the minds, if not the tongues, -of all thosp present. Besides. Judges Phillips and Parker, those invited: were Judges William Denman of San Francisco, 9th circuit; Archibald K. Gardiner, Huron, 8. CG, 8th circuit; J. Earl Major, Springfield, Ml., 7th ‘cir- cuit; Charlés C. Simons, Detroit, 6th circuit; | Joseph C. Hutcheson Jr., Houston, Tex., 5th circuit; John’ Biggs iJr., Wilmington, Del., 3rd_ circuit} Harrie B. Chase, Brattleboro, Vt., 2nd circuit; Cal- vert Magruder, Boston, Ist cir- cuit, and Harold M. Stephens, Dis- trict of Columbia. ee . 5 os : Bae 5 Wire x gt apa: ee we > |. SR eee 1 SS th Fy a ie a ie oh i ve Er ee ok OE ME gi 8 2 Z 4 De, NR. < Bas Pidint te grt . Bier 3c} p 7 O32ls PRIN. oes bara : is Other Patients [A GHrmRtpE wstectuee. , AS »_ i j 4 ’ ’ xt A -. ; . +s ’ 2 , - 8 Depart as ‘Papa United Press Phote 4 ‘ ; ~ SHOE-SHOE BABY—Trying to select a pair of wedgies to wear | ¥ [ ; 3 Has Oper ation | at Miami Beach makes Sandy Wirth the picture of indecision. Especially | i 2 STILLWATER, Okla. —Pa-, 7C® she’s wearing them everywhere but on her feet at the Miami | # welctve ens “ : tients, and gpectators at the Okla- Fashion Council showing of resort and cruise fashions. i homa; A&M College veterinary | | day when| “Papa.” etalon pe Indian Land New Study Planned . ‘ ho aA Redeem Heilden’s ¥ . ei Siag es P72 - we dee oF Another Big Shipment, After a ‘s Complete Sell-Out Last\ Week ¥ : 2s ed See ee “Papa,” p stender iSveersit.|| Claims Eyed | on Civil Aviation | SSX Trading Stamps . $a tient, made‘his appearance. og te Sees 6-Million Car Sale to determine. There were wide-' creasing its membership to 56. 3 {spread tribal wars and many Dr, Pedro Paz is conductor. , ase ie prekkiect ie ad - hy | moves in the face of white settle- ietz, siden LT. Fi-! ment. : | nance Cory.—auto loan makers— | In| Indiana alone, tribes involved Report Big Cotton Crop today predicted 6,000,000 cars will in tigation include the Miami,, LONDON u—Moscow radio re- be produced and sold this year. | Kaskaskia, Piankashaw, Wea, Pe-| ported today that Soviet Azerbai- Auto sales will remain brisk this | oria} Potawatomi, Shawnee, Iro-| jan has a bumper cotton crop. | 4 fall because auto companies are quois and Delaware: The broadcast said the harvest | ¢3 hastening their changpover to 1954| “ t1j will provide ‘specialists under |in [the Central Asian Soviet re- | cae orga ee Metz said. He said 1954/ 4 $38,000 contract for three years public already has exceeded the | &7 » Will be “another good year in the | to unravel the dwnerships. 1953 quota by 40 per cent. ; motor field,’ with production and | —;-_-_— ae a ne | | sales running to 5,500,000 or 6-| \upejwr ii agmedly ee OM oe, 000 000. ; ‘ 3 “a KARO. 5. A WATS. APR 0a, PES pe Ay ow , Much Allied Equipment | >! Salvaged Since Truce SEOUL @®—Nearly eight million | % dollars worth of equipment and| ~~ / materials has been salvaged since, the July 27:truce from former Al- | = } lied battle positions now in the de- [ militarized; zone of Korea, the 8th, * | Army said/ today. The salvaged equipment is being | / stockpiled pr used to donstruct new | ©.’ |#2¥g knitted cuffs Allied battle positions, (|: Double crotch Sy Other Playtex Girdles... .. ceeceees + $3.50 to $8.95 had a tumor‘like growth on his jaw. | : ; i ‘ oe , . ; . an . aE 3 « magine buying Cashmere and wooh, , He was quiet and amiable during ; : ; 5 the operatipn, although it took | by University WASHINGTON (™ — President e Smooths Your Figure to Perfection 2 wool zeberlines . , . soft sport fleece\ | . three men tg hold him on the table.| BLOOMINGTON, Ind. W — In- Eisenhower has ordered a new i Controls Those ‘Calorie - Curves” a blanket fleece ., . poodle cloth .. . wod He's an eight-foot boa constrictor | diana [University is investigating study looking to ‘‘a clear and com- ** url | from South | America, a star per- Indian | land claims covering the prehensive statement of the (civil) 4 s mm . | former in a} sideshow now playing | whole states of Indiana, Ohio, Mich mee lic t this adminis: | . a eX a ic- n ro er aN at the Payne County Fair. igan and Wisconsin, as well as a emai Pee Se ee ee ‘‘He isn’t mean and not so strong | most!) of Illinois, Northern Minne- | ration. ‘ “f since he’s been sick," his owner | sotafand Eastern Iowa. | Announcing this yesterday, the | ® a assured the doctors. ‘'He’s got just | The university is the investigator White House said the study would | &: & : | enough strerigth to pull an arm off, | for the; federal government to set-| be made by the air coordinating | | a be ‘i tle claims for the lands brought committee, a group set up some | # % e operation was & suCCeSS. | by dazens of Indian tribes. In 1946, ' years ago to advise the President | ©}; ? . 8 Congress passed the Indian Claims on civil aviation matters. It in-| ’ WITH GARTERS Prefers Blackjacks Commission Act, which gave In-| cludes government and industry q ef ; diang permission to sue the U.'S., | officials. | ome | to Hatpins; Gets Fine | possibly for billions of dollars in| No time limit was put on the © . ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. w—It additional funds for lands bought study, which will include such ; 7 used to. be 'that women defended by treaty. matters as federal aid for local | f I ! | themselves with hatpins. | Nearly 400 suits are pending on airports. or on y | But this ig the atomic age, and 79. : P . | treaties dating back to 1795. . F ) apparently Mrs. J. Slade Senior sone Indian tribes were paid as Orchestra Still Grows 1. Without a single seam, stitch, stay of bone — new ¥ | thinks that along with) the A-bomb, little as three cents an acre. TRAVERSE CITY —The Nort! | Magic-Controtier Panty Girdle smooths and firms your a things | and people = tougher. | The suits claim that the price "| \- figure to perfection, controls those “Calorie-Curves’’! | She was given a suspended fine should have been as high as $10 Western Symphony Orchestra con-| #j4 It’s all latex — lovely textured latex with Cloud-soft r : ire sila for toting a an bere. tinues to grow. Six new members, | | yapele lining. And biggest surprise—whether you wear & lackjack. } ; : ‘|. the smallest size or the largest size, you'll think [i : | — IUj authorities say that just! alin Elk ar aapwraid an Be lost full size! you've Se 7” | which, tribes owned lands at the Traverse City, have join © | 4? Magic-Controller Garter Girdle. ...... $7.95 ¥ | Loan Company Head time of the treaties is often hard organization for this season in-| §) Magic-Controller Panty Brief $6.95 e. “ Yes it's true! The biggest line-up of quality 100% wookever offered at such _ a low price. Medium or heavy interlined. All the newest fall and winter colors. Sizes for everyone—Juniors ., . Misses and large. If you need a coat, don’t miss this sale. 6 We Give and Redeem Holden's Trading Stamps Looking for Glamour and Wear? You're Looking for Mojud NYLON $qts : | |\ Permanent elastic Another Shipment| of $139 MOUTONS| PROCESSED LAMB _ O8= We're making it easy for au to own a fur coat. ft, silky moutons, plas- & tic treated to give you Be extra long wear. Every coat guaranteed 2 years. Oldster Burns to Death Despite Phone Appeal TECUMSEH, Neb. —Mrs. Car- oline Borrenpohl, 17-year-old semi- invalid, burned to death in a farm- house: yesterday after futilely shouting into her party line tele- phone; ‘The house is: afire.”’ Neighbors who heard the call it _ Were unable to tell where it was coming from. The most luxurious stockings ever made, the -ulti- mate/in stocking sheerness — ‘Magic Motion’!— extra} ‘give’ and spring-back right in the knit. | ‘ he MEN a cece ct a es wil “ Be an 2 gif " . * Set Sp OOP VR oP ye oe Extra Sheer 60 Gauge Hose $1.50 12 Denier, 60 Gauge Hose $1.50 51 Gauge, Dark Seam Hose $1.35 | 30 Denier Walking Sheers $1.25 Join ie eae ae | Swimming for Diploma se GRAND, RAPIDS @—Board of | }* | Education| member Melvin D. An- derson has proposed that ability to swim be made a requirement } for receiving a high school diploma from the Grand Rapids school sys- | wo pre ag is ee ete =. |The original Lollipop Brief of soft ming for at least > | cozy knit absorbent cotton) Made the new high school build- E to wear longer, wash é@asier with- * | at aes | Your Credit Is Good at ings expetted to be built here. | put ironing. Hospital Accredited GRAND: RAPIDS saean| oe (Padie® Cottons . |. ,.79¢ : — Mi oa ; ’ | chigan | ». {Children’s Sizes 2/to 6 65¢ we Trading Sty mpa Veterans ‘Facilities hospital has) teceived fill accreditation from the!" |) Joint cominission on accreditation |" {Children’s Sizes 8 to 16 69¢ of hospitals, Commandant Walter Fb esos mie inane oe | | a ~ J. Baker has been informed. | ed : ” __ TWENTY-SIX ew 4 Collapsible ‘steel barrels have beendeveloped to conserve ship- ping space, Saleslady of the Week a i« . » LILA HOAG .,- is proud bt this one near Union Lake Attgattive new 3-bedroom ranch home pith breezeWay to 12 car garage. Has. colored bath, tiled Utility room} with Delco furnace Grounds arg 180 ft. by 400 ft. Owner Will sacrific® &t less than cost, Only $3.500 down THELMA M. ELWOOD, Realtor 514% Cass-Elizabeth Rd, FE 5-1284~ 7 FE 5-3024 Denier, Gauge Important When | Buying Stockings | | NEW YDRK (INS) — With hem- | lines on the rise, a hosiery expert thinks it’s time American women | took a rpfresher course on how to have more beautiful legs. Choosing stockings has its fine points, and this is a year when fine points will count. To prevent unnecessary runs, | ; women should wear the appro- | priate denier and gauge for the time of day. Denier means the circumfer- enc. of the nylon thread — the thinner the thread, the whispier the stocking. Gauge imeans the number of needles in) one-and-one-half inches of stocking width. The more heedles, the better the stocking | and the longer its wear. | The finest stockings made today | are 66 gauge, 12 denier, and gossa- | mer sheer. Standard fine stock- ings are 60 gauge, 15 denier tor everyday | wear, take 51 gauge, 30 denier. | | To prevent baggy knees, crooked | $eams and either wrinkled or} cramped feet. make sure you are | buying the right size stocking in| the correct proportion for) your leg, | Modern stockings come not only in | | sizes but’ in proportion) to give | them better fit at ankle, calf and | thigh. Stuffed Toy Cleaning, You can keep baby’s stuffed toys | clean, soft and fluffy if, you dry| them in your automatic gas clothes dryer. For best results, line the bottom of the dryer with a turk-| ish towel -before putting) the toys In. EMIL SUTT ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS: MUSIC STUDIO at | | n | not in this part of the country, and 'a picture of my fiance and me to- | gether to the paper? | 3, | Answer: It is entirely proper to] so muth can ‘be learned about |. send a brief announcement to the | furnishing and decprating just by | the engagement they ask for it. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 Wife, Mom Argue About Army Ritual Each Claims Honor! of Pinning On New| | Officer’s Bars By EMILY POST An Army wife writes: ‘My hus- | band is going’ to Officer's Candi- | date School at the present time. I would like to know, to settle a} dispute, just what is correct: ‘When my husband graduates, | I say that I should be the one to! } pin on his bars. His mother thinks that she should:do this, Will you please settle this?’’ Answer: Usually, this is done by another officer. Hf there is to be a choice between mother and wife, the wife should do it. Dear Mrs. Post: Would it be proper for me to announce my own engagement? My parents are as I know many people in this city, I would like to put'a notice in the local paper. Use ‘Home to Spark Decorating Ideas By ELIZABETH HILLYER Now's the time! to make big strides ahead in |furnishing and Also, would it be proper to send | decorating your home. during It is best not to send picture unless ewspaper. Dear Mrs, Post: My girl friend 71% NORTH SAGINAW STREET | (Room 20) PONTIAC, MICHIGAN TRAINING IN ALL PHASES OF MUSIC School, Students and Professionals THOROUGH Fish chairtin a High School Band or Orchestra, or a well salaried position in a Dance, Radio, Television, Theatre or Concert Orchestra — No matter what you choose — The - EMIL SUTT STUDIO can help you attdin your goal. Usihg the most modern, practical methods, assures you of the training necessary to reath your goal. TRAINING INCLUDES: ~ Private instruction on Clarinet or Saxophone—Periodi¢al tecording of student's work— Sectional rehearsals with instructor—Full Orchestra rehearsals with Arranger and In- struttor—Orchestration—Arranging—Theory and Harmony, ' FOR APPOINTMENT Federal 5-761] — FEderal 4-5076 q } '< For Complete Courses, Teaching Methods and Schedules and I have had a difference of opinion regarding the following: I say that a bridesmaid is al- ways a single girl, as the word means someone who is single. My girl friend says that a | bridesmaid may be a_ married | woman. Will you please tell us | who is correct? Answer: A bride's married at- tendant is, strictly speaking, a bridesmatron, but to ayoid the complication. of calling each at- tendant a bridesmaid or matron, } all are called bridesmaids. Dear Mrs. Post: My_ husband and I do not have any children of our own but we are very fond of children. and because of this are constantly being asked to be god- parents. At the present time we just cannot keep up with the ex- penses of guch obligations, We feel that we have to remember | | these children with presents at | Christmas and on their birth- | days. Is there any way we can tactfully refuse to be godpar- ents? | Answer: To be frank about it is the only thing to. do because it is |a very real problem which every- |one will understand. While many | godparents do give presents, there Home Fashion Time, Sept. 24-Oct. 3 } | seeing the good things and plenty | | of them,) and there’s a bountiful harvest of the best home fashions dramatically on view in the stores. Deep study of périod furniture, decorating principles, etc, is fine, but we learn more than we real- ize by looking at everything, often and with an| alert eye. We learn and develop our tastes through our ey-s. Visit every display there is time for. With so much) to see, there's oe ashion Time’ | such a good chance of finding just | | the that’s-for-me items you've | | been looking for, and) a model | | here or a display there may solve 4% to 10 AAAA-B that hard-to-solve prdéblem, too, DIEM’S Brings You QAULITY at a price that’s hard to believe! 9.95 Grey flannel smart black calf ‘mud-guard trim. Medium or DIEM’S SHOE STORE The Best Friend Your Feet Ever Had! ' 12 West Huron St. i FE 2-2492 pump with high heels. Choose from 15 New. Styles! Straps, pumps, sandals . . Foot Flair beau- ties! Fall shades of brown, rust, black . . leather or suede. | It’s easy to catch the spark of inspiration from new color schemes and new arrangéments, and the acutal home furnishings bring to reality ideas that were vague be- fore. Mrs. E. R. — ,“‘My_ bedroom, which is not too large, is white with medium green paintd wood- work. The furniture is blonde ma- hogany and the white does nothing for it. ; ' “What color can Echange to and keep my green striped draperies, green scatter rugs, and lamp- shades that are fuchsia color?” The white walls are less at fault than the green woodwork, which is too prominent in the small room and breaks up the background. Choose a color that goes well with the green and the furniture wood, Smartly Tailored Cozy, Warm A famous label in girls’ _ are many who can’t and don't. BURTON’S GIGANTIC | q > * All the newest styles! > © All the newest fabrics! | e At one low This special gr While @ All the newest colors! | gold regularly up to $39.95. Now special— ” price! oup of Coats are — They Last 9 APPAREL FOR WOMEN 5 NORTH SAGINAW ST. ! the season! It’s a flatterer from | the’ novel cut of the collar to the | gacetul swing of the skirt. And | of bright ‘color. enjoy it every minut? of.the day. 14, 16, 18,/20; 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42. Size 16 takes 4% yards 39inch é ry . and paint both the walls and the Chatham | Blanket Fleece woodwork this color, to simplify the | Coats. Choose the fitted background. coat and slack outfit at The color could be quite a rosy left in Red Houndstooth beige or a rosewood color, a light or Tan. Check green-blue or a warm gray. Don’t ae | 2 forget to consider the color of the bedspread in the scheme because Sizes 3-6x $ 98 it accounts for a large and con- Coat & Slacks 29 +2, spicuous area [ . Coats in Sizes ,e aioe Mrs. T. N. — “I have Early | Sunday 7-14 $299 American decor with knotty pine | 10:30 ret furniture. Would straight fiber- Matching Montau Trimmed 4 +4 glass curtains and a swag, ruf- rime $3 +-@H fled, in the same fabric as the Pic sig ox) Sarina ET sofa slipcover be too formal for f 5 the windows of the living room? bE o The slipcover is a small provin- tr . se, print. Younger Set Insulated t+Hi4 Ih ain straight-hanging curtains THET of fiberglass are not too formal Coat and Slacks. Ther and the ruffled swag in the slip- cre Ss cover fabric smooths them into the eens tis +L Bes room. The generous hems give Toe } - extra value through extra ' Ta i” Shaves Off Paint seasons wear in this match- j + If you don’t like to paint paned | re ek ee ee Baliq? + | Window frames for fear of get: | colors. Red, Blue, Rust, t | ting the paint on the window, Greige. ; “here's a tip that will relieve you: os Paint on panes scrapes off with a Sizes 3-6x $9 O98 Single-edged razor blade effort- 4581 t2~20;30-42 _| lessly when it dries. Matching Hat ........ $3.98 by Penne tdoms | Step into the smartest classic of + contrast touches add a ndte | Sew this now— Pattern | 4581: Misses’ sizes 12, fabric; % yard contrast. This pattern easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions. Send 35 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for first-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West | 17th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print | plainly name, address with zone, | size and style number. | PETUNIA! | Drat the luck—. Another gone/ ons simply LY, WONT stay on / A Wonderful Professional Shoe | 7.95 to $9.95 | PINT Try coating the center of each button with colorless | | nail-polish, Petunia. It seals | | the thread f Siete! | for Y (ung Women im White a Hy 5 You’re learning to be a fine nurse... Just in Time | so you want to know about a fine for Christmas. Gifting! | professional shoe, too! You'll find Clinics softer, st " rter! New ARGYLE Wonderful range of sizes! and PLAID | SOCK-PAKS |} PAULIS SHOE STORE Acress from Detreit Edisen Co. = W. Heres. FE 4-1213 OXFORD SHOP 35 N. SAGINAW ST. \ 4 EO —— \ LAs 48 N. SAGINAW ST ELEGANCE PLUS In These Seal Soft BEJEWELED VELOUR lO 9 5 OPEN AN > r | ARTHUR'S ‘ | CHARGE ACCOUNT Highlighting TODAY! the new profile ° angles that will definitely |{ bp > se ¥ turn heads your way. | 0 From our complete Enjov This ae ; selection of dark and | C , . “Lk luscigus pastels, | ontenience: Sketched , : f from Stock | wy ; or _ Millinery Salon—Second Floor EO We ~ Pade te } | Look the part without PARK . ek! FREE! ; TWO PIECE NYLON paying the price TRICOT mictllen | l | ! zh ) Locations 100% Wool Hand Fashioned Types. 66.24.95 and 35,00 GOWN. eI _ wai j f + + V9 95 ; iW j across from 1 POST OFFICE across from PONTIAC Others to 69.95 i HOTEL | Cloud} soft, filmy | Nothing can give you that price- is- sheer. ;S6 easy to RIKER | biect look lik drate of bi; tick for | GARAGE no-object Jook like a wardrobe of knit nylor| triéat ta5- | ; j dresses. Smart two-piece with dolmon, ‘plece gown three-quarter or full length sleeves. Have Your set. Fulll cut with lovely Alensbn ‘type matched lace. Parking Ticket Chain lightning Jacquard knits so | | | Stamped figure flattering, with smart detailing for One Hour at neckline, and edges. Smartly : White and blue. ree Forking belted, slightly flared or straight Sizes 32 to 36 WEDGE skirt. Rich autumn jewel tones Store with jewels Junior and misses’ sizes, 3 | ; e i. 4 Better Dresses—Mezzanine Sketched from Stock 1 Lingerie+- Main Floor ee Sige » A) Bed hal Bd bed al #/Z/O101@ MF 1S) -|O)-j|A|-| OF FaOlalm Ualaiz WIZ/Ri Pi 4 PIMVIC/ 4M) {RO} 410 O;G/MIVU TMV >dIo U-i

Wi MM RIOI-|9 WOl4T]> O-[ UM IM Zinc 1%) 4] >| RIO Z| Miwon @)4]>/4 AM A RiMi-4 QaQ>ir And then the giver will be satis- IF tiny woman— Check Up on Windows in Next Rain > Water May Leak Between Siding and Top of Frame By HUBBARD COBB Next time we have a nice hard driving rain you might go around and check to see if there are any damp spots on the inside walls around windows. ‘ If there are, it's a pretty good chance that the water is getting in through an open seam between the top of the window frame and the house siding. Along the top of the window frame on the outside there is us- ually found a strip of wood called a drip cap which is sup- posed to keep rain from getting in through cracks and crevices. If this cap is broken or has ; oo oh become cracked, better replace it: eae is W.—Its new. It's rich Sometimes there are just a lot looking. It's flattering to the tiny | of small seams between this strip |'woman and makes an especially | of wood, the window frame and smart silhouette to wear over slim | the house siding. These can. be | en = ar .,. | filled with cauking compound or skirts, slim dresses and slim suits. white lead _ H as - oO One of’ the outstanding fashions of If you really want to make a Brief 24-inch coats that cover hip top ore new for wear over the slim shirts ond on exciting jacket for you rather than bulky coat. the year, is the shorter fur coat. | water and air-tight joint, then the | | best way to do it is with flashing. | | What you do is pry up the ends | | of the siding right above the wins | New Permanent | There's a new dimension to fem-| dow frame and slip a piece of ininity for women with a distin- | copper-coated building Paper so guishing streak of gray hair or that it extends several inches up | under the shingles. | striking snowy white tresses. Now | | you can fashion your own flatter- The exposed portion is se ing silver coif without fear of hair brought over the top of the a dow frame and fastened in place. discoloration, thanks to a new cus- |tom-made home permanent. Any rain striking the immediate | ACROSS 1 Least m F ¢tfhthpe it?s lla populated area will run down along the cop- per-coated paper and eventually drip off the edge where it won't do any harm. Care For Radiator Before painting radiators, scrape off loose rust and old paint with a wire brush and wash with soap- suds. allow to dry thoroughly be- | fore painting. ' Bifocal glasses have been made appear to first by There are lots of ways to make money, and the prisons are full of counterfeiters to prove it. Benjamin Franklin. No More Backaches ! caraanil If your old sagging mattress is causing a nagging backache — call us to rebuild it — Call FE 2-7695 We'll return your old mattress rebuilt like new that SAME DAY! with more firm sup- port —— just the way YOU want it! ® New Custom-Made Mattresses ® Mattresses Rebuilt ® Pillows Renovated OXFORD MATTRESS CO. 332 West Huron St. FE 2-7695 | state\ , 7 Northwestern 3 4 state | 13 Speaker 14 Each state sends two members to 7 1) 9 [~ Cp the U. Ss. —— 7 15 Sipped 16 ee Be 17 East (Fr. “ - TT? 18 Painful spots 2b Ve] 78 Fs) | 21 Seine | 22 Observes 24 Knock | 25 Weights of India 26 Sketched Yi 28 Wanderers a; > | 30 Seed 5 |% 7. 4 i container 32 Dative ab.) 33 Brazilian 3 A BRS sy 8] »| Ya 45 35 Taciturn | 38 Domesticated 41 Scatters, as hay 42 Organ of hearing ss 44 Animal hide 46 Malt drink 47 Willow 49 Scottish sailyard 50 Georgia is the “———_—«#$ tate’’ 52 Breakfast cereal 54 Champleve 56 Improves 57 Cease again 58 * Ta zs) ee Lf 20 Lyric poem 40 African 32 Calyx leaves antelopes 25 Overlord 41 Malayan 27 Had on ungulate 29 Emporium 43 Allude 31 Natives of 45 Pester Denmark 47 ‘“‘Buckeye 35 Goddess of State” ‘the moon 48 Branch 36 Standards of 51 Feline animal perfection 53 Corded fabric 37 Oriental porgy 55 Displaced 39 Type of sheep person (ab.) 4 Pewter coin of Thailand 5 Accomplishes 6 Pervency 7 Bone 8 Scottish sheepfolds 9 Conclusion 10 Netted 11 Musteline mammals 12 Birds’ homes 19 Operated 1 Memorands 2 Expunged 3 Larger STAPP’S ... Choose from All in top running « built for years of smooth BUDGET TERMS *A Trade Mark of THE SINGER MFG. COMPANY stitching! 102 N. Saginaw, Pontiac FE) 2-0811 > } SORRY — NO MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS ON SALE ONLY AT THESE MMM! SINGER SEWING CENTERS 177 W. Maple,| Birmingham MI 4-0050 famous makes you know for quolity. family shoe store Fall Footwear for Families the new styles, colors and ba i 4 & for Dad or Big er in a Freeman ‘“‘Dress-Up”’. r pole... luggage tan. Sizes "1395 every time a favorite from tot thru teen te campus queen. _ $7.95 STAPP'S FAMILY SHOE STORE 928 W, Huron St. : Ph. FE 5-6189 Free Parking Across the Street in Merchants Lot SHOP! | COMPARE! SAVE! — | Come Straight to | JANE LEE fi COATS 42 SPECIAL PURCHASE $ Q™ If not specially purchased these coats would sell for $34.99 to $39.99. or menteemaninede —_eremetemeatitES SPORT—ZIP-INS , TOPPERS—ALL WOOL FANCIES—CHECKS FLEECES— POODLES— CASHMERES AND MORE All richly lined = and warmly interlined, EVERYBODY LOVES A BARGAIN - . La Pras THE CLASH wise AW pRIEES) FINAL DRESS earance asf DRESSES All 7a OfF and More! BUY NOW FOR NEXT YEAR! Early Fall Dresses Included! ‘9 $3 54 OPEN FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 P, M, 41 N. Saginaw St. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 . TWENTY-NINE ' IMOGENE HALL : Mr. and Mrs, Rufus C. Hall of Ferry avenue are announcing’ the | ~ engagement of their daughter, Imo- P gene, to Jack H. Ettinger, son of | ? Mr. and Mrs. John A. Ettinger of Commerce. Both Imogene and Jack are students at the Detroit Institute of Technology, College of | © Pharmacy. Thé couple will speak their vows Nov} 25. Sweaters Need Lukewarm Suds Whether a sweater is made of wool or a synthetic fiber, it should | be washed in lukewarm soapsuds | and ‘rinses—and@ should be fully | supported by the hands throughout the process to’ prevent its being distorted by the weight of the! wa- ter. H ¥ Ordinary soil! will fall out with just gentle squedzing. Stubborn spots can be ribbed gently with a soft, sudsy rush or with well-! soaped ‘fingers.; Never rub the | sweater against itself or twist or} wring it: After, rinsing, blot it in a turkish | towel and lay flat to dry. Best | way to retain the shape of a wool ; or wool-blend sweater is to outline in pencil and tHen cut a ‘‘frame’’ from stiff cardboard before wash- ing. Cut this in three pieces—one for the body and one for each sleeve. ! © After inserting these into the | ® freshly washed sweater, it can be smoothed and eased to fit this pat- tern of the original size and shape. Bo “ Dedication Held “for Hobby Shop i‘ | Wednesday evening the YWCA_ dedicated its new Hobby Shop. Mrs. John Kinzler, chairman, introduced | 4 Mrs. Fred Hawshalter, president | ‘: of the board; Miss Eijeen Muir, | ©? executive dire¢ttor, and Byron Arkles, diréctor of the] arts pro- These members relatéd the his- tory of the Hobby Shop and told | of their hopes for. its fature. After the service, guests viewed the displayed crafts and. were served refreshments. Anyone interested in) participa- tion in the YWCA arts and crafts | program may gét further informa- | tion by galling the YWCA. Women of Moose Going to Dearborn Plans’ to attend the Star- Recorders’ Day. in Dearborn *Sun- day were madé by Women of the | Moose whén they met Monday evening in théir hall on Mount Clemens street.:Mrs. Furman Hus- ton may* be contacted by those wishing, to \atténd. Reports were}given by chairmen | of publicity, Moosehaven, social service and membership, and it was reported that co-workers of the chapter attended the meeting in Taylor Genter Sunday honoring | » the deputy |grand regent of Michi- ; gan. | i bate Reports Are Heard by VFW Auxiliary |. The New Citizens’ picnic, held | * last week at Cass-Dodge Park, was discussed by Mrs. Harold Potter and Mrs. Hazel Burns when Ladies | Auxiliary’ to VFW Post 1370 met at | the hall Tuesday. Mrs. William Vandecar reported | on the. party) given at Pontiac | State Hospital Thursday evening, | and the, group voted to donate to! the national home for the annual Christmas. party, and to the hospi- tal Christmas fund and national cancer. research. Inspection will be held at the next meeting, | Oct. kt. Enis PRETTY-AS-s-PicTyRE a 3 AERP ES S008, SERRA PARRA: 48\N. Perry Pontiac Hotel Lobby Dorothy Eickmeier Fall’s newest .. . for date-time or any-time . .. from PEGGY'S AVENUE OF FASHIO weed cafk for Fall... R & K's latest Nig y fashion word: wool tweed princess dress that makes a royal entrance anywhere! The collar’s convertible; the belt's to be or not to be ‘worn as Copper, Pink or Gold Tweed .. . Sizes 10 to 16 you please! et ee eee Anything can hap- pen—and usually does—when a girl i dressed for it. A in ‘eee Here's disciplined gabardine to waar morning, noon and MADEMOISELLE night. You're bound to present a a line from your piped mandarin collar (pipe that outrageous pocket too), $22 9 to the tip of your slim skirt. Wafer thin) over-sized buttons . 5 ore yours for a side opening line of distinction on this otherwise uncluttered Manford casyal. Your favorite dress-up colors, 10 to 20. Red—Novy—Grey, OPEN A CONVENIENT CHARGE ACCOUNT! 1 Seat SME OR iA NE ER neh ork & oe ie eS had tah, Ae Rei eS * NOES 4 AA VE ’ a. Elasticized suede dress sandal with smart jet beading. Black or brown. $18.95 b. Curvaceous! pump in black or blue suede, Frosty Brown kid. $16.95 c. Stunning “T"’ Strap in smart stitched calf. Black’ only. $16.95 d. Lovely pump with braid and jet de- tailing. . Black or brown suede. Grey or Cinzano Calf. $16.95 ® setter GLENHAVEN: EVERYTHING YOU WANT (th A SUIT Glenhaven Suits Are Sold Exclusively at Peggy's Fume and fortunes of fashion ere all yours now! Glenhaven puts lined suit flattery right in your pocket and ‘button tabs it for good measure! Glenmere Dot is this fabric that acts and looks like fine worsted. In fall’s favorite colors, Smart Goings-On by DeLiso debs Exciting things happen when you swear DeLiso Webs. , Your ensemble is completed to exquisite, exciting perfection, And you look wonderful, feet wonderful in lovely, lovely | trend-setting shoes... the ones you see in every unportant fashion magazine. See them here . .. see how they fit you, and your wardrobe. | reei, CA | RE ci) Geile. Binal De cea Py Oe io. Jf THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 Pontiac Collegians Settle Down to Textbook Routine 4 THIRTY. ~ Gaetan tas Se Ais BAe ST ELE PRLS RELL: BEM £3 With the golf season officially in the past, Fairway Golf Club members Mrs. Earle Weber of Waterford (left), Mrs. Glenn Hickson of Preston street (center) and Mrs. Keith Tarlton of Drayton Plains (right) were busy this Notice to Brides: | Open Books Press Asks Prompt Data for Another ON Sars Py white glossy prints, as colored or sepia pictures will not reproduce well. In order to assure prospective brides a complete and timely wed- aie = is TOPS | | i é | ding story, the Pontiac Press LAELIA LADLE INGER IEE, a 2 i aes |Wamen’s Department h shane FONE Gi hak sR os. | pated. several suggestions ‘for | Whittier, Jefferson ‘i | Open Friday Night ’til 9! providing fhe Press with prompt, |Hold Joint Meeting i | tion. William Wright, principal of Wedding ‘forms wil} be mailed | Whittier Elementary School, in- ' | upon request, as well as to those | troduced the teachers and spoke who have announced their engage- on the new school building when nts in th , ments ee F eec Pree Jetterson Junior High PTA met The wedding blank should be re- | ““ iw . turned at least two days before with Whittier PTA Wednesday evening. the ‘wedding as this amount of - time is needed for handling such} Kline B. Hartman, principal of detailed stories. Jefferson. Junior High School, These . th spoke on school policies and in- basil lanes m= troduced his staff of teachers. three days after a wedding will The Rev. Donald E. Morri not carry details of reception, - ° : : = bridal ¢ostumes, etc. opened the meeting, which was conducted by Mrs. Paul Brown, Because of limited space, brides- and a_ cooperative dinner was to-be may submit only one pic- | served. ture (either engagement or wed- \ y || ding) if they are to be married | comtianiiy| dee. senate ‘the within two! months of the engage- . : ment announcement, . While it is not always possible | Model Meeting Held || to provide the picture with the| A model meeting was held || wedding information, brides are | Wednesday. evening in the Green Seams Guaranteed morning wrapping gifts for the annual award luncheon that was held today at Twin Beach Country Club. Pontiac Press Phete - SS eaee eter } ||asked to nate that the picture can- | Room of Hotel Waldron by mem- Class Gathers at First Baptist New officers were elected and installed when Eunice Philathea Class of First Baptist Church met Tuesday evening for a banquet. Mrs. H. H. Savage is the teach- | er, assisted by Mrs. Warren Wes- | cott and Mrs. Paul Kemp. Mrs. Jack Maher is president of the group; Mrs. Norris A. Smith, vice president; and Mrs. Milton Brinson, secretary, as- sisted by Mrs. Connie Bearden. Mrs. Harry Miller, treasurer, ‘publication by the third day after | Beta Sigma Phi sorority. Mrs. ithe wedding. James Beal and Dorothy Hart Pictures should be black and! were guests, . q MAG | C STITG t STAPP'S . « children’s fashion centre .. | NYLONS ) | | Present Hand Smocked to ! Sta Strai ht eee || not be used unless it is ready for | pers of Alpha Omega Chapter of y § ' Fellowship Plans Event . | Dinner-Bazaar Scheduled A dinner and bazaar were scheduled for Nov. 19 when the Christian Women’s Fellowship of First Christian Church met in the plans for a chili supper Oct. 10 at the church. Mrs. Harry Knuse has charge of the lesson and de- r votions. Busy Year Called to Classes in Nearby Schools and Out of State Now that orientation week is over, many students have settled down 'to classes both in Michigan colleges and out of state. Dominating the college news this week are Michigan)|State Normal College students who hold State Board of Education scholarships for the year 1953-1954. Among them are William Bird, Lois Blanchard, Nadene Bors- vold, Virginia Demski, Mary Dwyer, William Graham, Ruth Ann McCulloch, Barbara Nichols Dolores Rygiel, Lofti Jean Saw- yer and Charlotte Ward. Mar- jorie Challis also has returned to her studies at Michigan Normal. Wayne University; students en- | rolling and returning from Pontiac are Joseph L. Wagley Jr., Ted R.° Hendrickson, Robert D. Arno, Alice Weimer, Warfield Moore, William R. McCurry, Maurice Stack Jr., Paul Fortino and David Hanoute. Seniors going back to Marygrove college in Detroit are Evelyn Jack- olow, Margaret Soderberg, Mar-~ cella Vaverek and [Ann Zdunic. Joan Mazza is returning to Mary- grove as junior delegate to the National Student Association. Miss church parlors day. A money-making project was set for Oct. 24, and ‘reports of circle meetings were heard. Circle Four met with Mrs. Har- old Brown, Mrs. Clare LaForm gave devotions and Mrs. John Radenbaugh conducted the lesson discu$sion.' Mrs. Lester Stanley conducted the meeting. Mrs. Allen Hersee, president of the fellowship, requested blood Circle Three met at the home of Mrs. David Collison and made > ; POLLY FLANDERS and Mrs. Harold EH. Codling, as- sistant treasurer, are other offi- cers. The banquet was under the super- Amvets Group Elects Officers donors to give blood Monday at the Elks Temple, and the work- shop program was directed by Mrs. Brown assisted by Mrs. John Ap- pleton and Mrs. James Boaz. Mrs. Zdunic has been elected president |of the M Club and secretary of | the Confraternity group of the so- | cial action program, and Miss Sod- | erberg is chairmanjof the volunteer | social service program. Nancy | Rouen, another returning senior, is Hresident of her class. Pontiac residents attending } are - Mercy College in Detroit Mary Marcero, Anna Marie Bald- win, Helen Rigdon; Dorothy Wil- liams, Barbara Kemp and Loretta | vision of Mrs. Martin Jackson and Mrs. Lillian Meadows. Mrs. Savage gave the invoca- »|tion, Agnes Sturman conducted | the election of officers and Mary | | Carls entertained with a vocal solo. | Miss Sturman conducted the in- | | stallation of officers and the bene, | diction was given by: Mrs; Kemp. -|Meeting Conducted >| by Interlakes Group Mrs. F. R. Alspaugh reported on Officers Training Day and Mrs, Charles Allen on Rally Day when members of Interlakes Extension Service Group met at the| home of Mrs. Allen on Watkins Lake road Wednesday. Mrs. George Quine announced Mrs. Robert Scharf and Mrs. Frank Hickson as leaders for the | year. Pe eee 60 cauge | full fashion ) 15 denier: | plain heels A * | Buy 3 pdirs! Try one pair! If you are not de- lighted,|réturn only 2 pairs and recéive a refund for the price of all 3! { 7 ’ by Picturesque cae Coming Events Navy Mothers Club 355 will meet at the ta Training Center this evening at 7:30. Fellowship Class of Central Method- ist Church will meet turday at 12:30 for a cooperative junchi at the home of Mrs. Blanche Gilmore, 815 E. Walton Bivd. ] (Advertisement) Perfume That Clings @ Defy twisting at the seam! @ Never bag at the ankle! | For every occasion you'll like a dainty Aand-smocked Polly Flinders Frock. Practical, for everyday wear, they're pretty for those holiday parties too, Come in today to see them. The fine Everglaze lawn on the left comes in dainty pastel shades, sizes 1-2-3. The round lace trimmed collar features hand-embroidery. The sanforieed and mercerized broadcloth on the right ig available in rich tones of ; Red, Navy, Brown and Green with am unusual lawn cqJlar, Pa Mg glade @ Mold to every | contour af ankle- | bone and knee! | @ Fits like a second on Wednesday Radenbaugh led the devotions. Kotuas. A program of elections and dis- cussion highlighted the Wednesday evening meeting of Jimmy Dey Post 12, Amvets Auxiliary, which | gathered at the Boys Club. Mrs. Peter Metes was elected president with Mrs. George Wy- man, senior vice president. Other officers include Mrs. Fred Olson, junior vice presi- | dent; Mrs. Daniel T. Murphy dr., | secretary, and Mrs. Roy Wil- | liams, treasurer. | A report of a recent meeting of | the Amvets Auxiliary Region Six | Council was given by Mrs. John | Allen. Mrs, Wyman reported on the re- cent meeting of the City Federa- tion of Women’s Clubs. Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Joseph Jackowiak and Mrs. Richard I. Moore. Use Our Layaway Plan Shower Honors | Ann Bronsing Ann Josephine Bronsing, bride- | elect of Alan Wayne Klein, was honored Wednesday with a tea @ White ¢Pink ¢32 to 40. Pa and shower at Bloomfield ead < Country Club. . Hosteenes for the event were | $1.00 will hold ,any three Mrs. Charles O'Connor and Mrs. | Edward Christie. Ann has set Oct. | 17 as the date for the ceremony | skin! : its fragrance just does not last on " me. I have told several of my} Sizes 6-12-18 Months and 3-6x for women who claim that per- | 14 friends that I want a new per-| @ Wears b¢tter! fume, but first I must find out 4 about a lasting one—Mrs. A.W. | @ Looks better... | $9995 to $4.95 <2 Peary eped| see } 0 . oO | ——— fume does not “stay with them” | is a Liquid Skim Sachet. It duller, softer and silkier! | i ae smooths on the skin very easily, | T I~ CHILDREN’S FASHION | sachet base. Tt has slower rate ® f diffusion and evaporation than |, COLORS | S AP Pp S CENTRE any other type of fragrance. TRADE WINE —, 930 W. Huron St, this “Houbigant Chantily Liquid (Greyed Belge) | 7 rg hove Only $1.85 plus tax GREAT DAY |! (Medium) Beige) HIGH NOON: f (Sunny Beige) SIZES 812-10 (shot length) 812-1) (medium) 9’ to 11 (long) TW STLAITIES The stitch af the stocking you’re wearing today... with shortened. loops that stretch so far and no further. 3 with elongated loops for greater ftretc h, greater elasticity, “MAGIC STITCH” MAKES THE DIFFERENCE! | Not just a new stocking , . . but an excit- ingly different hosiery discovery! We are so sure you will be thrilled with these new stockings that we are making this remarkable offer! | ‘ Hurry jin or Call FE 4-2511 Today! 4 to 9...aa to oe Waite's Hosiery—Street Floot ir, Holy Name Church. The Roy J. | Bronsings of Birmingham and the Edward R. Kleins of Southfield 36 NORTH SAGINAW ® Permanently Pleated! ® Nylon lace Bodice, wide lace shoul- der straps! © Complete slip is nylon) in per- manent pleats! slips in our Layaway. Layaway for Christmas Open Friday ’Til 9 P. i. 100% Nylon SLIPS $399 Gifting! are their parents, Mrs. Glen Arthur “| SEBESPSe SE RARER Re RT EES AIRE EARNS, $$$ Manufacturer’s Sale $$$ SAS LOLS RRR Chairman of Group | : Slightly Imperfects Mrs. on gine pies apie e e chairman of Gest, Side Homes Safe-Tee Bunny Suit bers met Wednesday with Mrs. « a § ‘ice. | saa - officers elected were Mrs. | © warren Fitzgerald, vice chairman; | = Zips on easily over baby’s M ty a ger ! : - sleepers. Keeps baby safely : A Are ee, Mrs. Frank ‘§ ; | and warmly covered .. . no Mrs. Arthur served luncheon. | | “ \ worries of strangulation or will beats S thet ja Bessie a % uffocation. Made of super ess the next mee ‘ “4 s . " re 4! ‘ a . soft cotton blanket cloth, < We 5 it is toasty warm with little Now Offering weight and allows complete * Gregg Shorthand freedom of movement. % Gregg Shorthand Sizes 1-2-3-4 (Advanced) % Stenotype | * * Stenograph are Speci riting fpr igner Accounting $$$ Tremendous * Administ tine sic | Savings $$$ ration : P ° * Executive Bunny Suits......... Special Sale Price $3.69 Secretarial Regular Price $5.69 x irene Save 50% On «Reg. $2.95 & $3.95 Also shorter, Te 2 PIECE Plisse and Corduroy crateing copeste to most Plisse Babe Sets “Zipee” | Day, Half-Day, and Reg. $2.95 _ Overall Crawlers” Evening Special Clearance SALE PRICE Veteran Approved $149 | $1.95 & $2.95 auttce || M. PARRISH MFG. CO. INSTITUTE 1777-85 Pontiac Trail at Decker ‘Rd. Lageuiee Steet Walled Lak + Wen se e, Michigan i . Neen 23 N. Seginaw—Open Fridey 9:30 to ee eT a SC ~ aicomenpreeenene ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 ' THIRTY-ONE Plant May Be Textile Source Florida. Student Sansevieria : Fibers Produce | TALLAHASSEE, Fila. to (AP)— Sansevieria ig probably nothing | more than; a practically in- destructible’; house plant to you. But to graduate arts education student Ruth Jelks of. Florida; State University here, it’s a possible source of a sturdy, weather resistant fab- ric. Sansevier{a} also known as sword plant and snake plant, | is the mottled tall,’ ' sharp pointed, dark green it’s a part of:almost every | decorating s¢heme in which green erowins things play a part. Miss Jelks| has found that | its fib-rs can be woven into a fabric’ | which resists weather and salt spray and “should bei wonderful for materials ‘for beach homes and patios,” | Sansevierja isn’t the only un- conventional fabric source in which Miss! Jélks is interested. She’s been experimenting for some time with the fibers of the century: plant, banana and lily leaves, and pine needles. She’s also, exploring the uses | of kenaf and ramie fibers, both of which are widely used in the Far East but so far have not) been employed to a great ex- | tent in this country. Both fibers: are grown in Florida on a Umited scale but | are still’ regatded as in the experimen ns : Stages. They claim Mfs elks’ attention rt ad they e4Florida prod- ucts ¥ Some of ‘her material sources are ¥o new to the textile world that she has to start from ‘absolute bedrock, even spinning her own thread before she can weave it into cloth. Finding ian’ spinning wheel condition took her three months. It} was even longer | before she mastered the almost | vanished art of operating it. old-fashioned Hay-Stacking Farmer Bitten by Half a Snake LEAVENWORTH, Kan. t—Leo | Zimmerman of near Leavenworth | was bitten by patt of a snake. The 42-year-old! man was stack- | ong bales of ;newly cut hay when | he was struck hear the elbow. Fellow workmen jfound the head and six inches of the vody of a| copperhead ip one of the bales. | Zimmerman fecayered. Uses plant | which does sa well indoors that | in operating SHOOTING FOR FRIENDSHIP | Orleans, and a Bavarian marksma HESS . A ut Wnt RNG — Sgt. 1.'C. W, n check their hits during the first postwar German-American prize shoot. Teams used rifles and am- munition apppnee by U as oo Ce S. entrants. Walk- Out Shuts Italian Plants Three Unions Call Out Workers in Demand for Higher, Pay | ROME (#+-Labor threw a short. sharp almost-general strike at Ital- | ian industry today in the biggest | walkout sifice the touch-and-go days of 1948, All three})of Italy's major un- ions, Communist and non-Commu- | nist, called tout workers for up to; 24 hours in| a massive protest for | | higher pay.}: Police in Rome, Milan and Turin | reported ‘‘afl calm,” in sharp con- | ‘trast to thd! nationwide strikes of |1948 when Communists staged bit- ter and often violent demonstra- tions. The current walkout was sched- juled to end at} midnight tonight | but the Communists vowed more 'walkouts would follow. Agricultur- al workers }ithroughout the nation | already have been cailed to strike | 1Oct.5. 7 The union§ said the Italian Con | federation gf Industry refused to discuss theif wage claims. An industty spokesman said the ma! | EDUCATOR SHOES KINNEY’S 3 N. Saginaw St. | Headquarters for | LOTS Sidewoll G Border YOUR CHOICE Discontinued Famous Name Pa Quality Wallpapers! V3 OFF BROWN BROS. + North Saginaw St. tterns in FE 2-4242 | | demands would cost industry more | than 800 million ‘dollars and that} the owners wanted a reasonable evolution”’ higher wages. Labor leaders claimed that from ‘‘gradual, towards six to eight million men stayed off | their jobs today. Generous Blood Donor Gains Weight Steadily QKLAHOMA CITY i — Charles | (Happy) Jones, Tinker Air Force | Base fireman, has just donated his 100th pint|of blood—some 122 gal- lons worth. When Jones donated his first pint of {blood in 1937 he weighed 155 pounds. When he gave his ame | his weight was 205. U.S. Mailmen Do Double Duty as Shoe Testers WYNDMOOR, Pa. (UP)—Sixty- eight mailmen walked 15,000 miles test, the shoes were reclaimed by the laboratory. “‘We found that if you tan with half tannin’ from canaigre you get | as good leather as any other,” |a laboratory spokesman said. He added that further tests will be in four Philadelphia suburbs in al 10-months test to wear out custom- | made shoes given them free. As usual, their job was to deliver | the mail. But their daily treks through rain, snow or sleet also made the United States more self- sufficient. The shoes were provided by the U. 8S. Agriculture Depart- |" ment’s eastern research labora- | tory here during experiments to ' } | prove the value of a leather tanning extract taken from the canaigre weed of the southwest. The United States now imports | 185 per cent of the vegetable mix- |} tures used In tanning leather. The | | mailmen’s experiment proved that | | jeather tanned with a 50 per cent | mixture of the foreign product | and the. weed extract is just as 8 inane the 10-month test, mailmen twice wore out the soles | T. Cadish, - New | of the shoes provided by the lab- | oratory. Each pair of shoes had one sole tanned with the weed extract mixtum@ and the = other | tanned with the usual mixture. After the soles were worn out the first time, the shoes were returned to the laboratory where | , they were re-soled, with the two leathers being switched. After the second complete wear the | | made to} determine the quality | leather tanned with 100 per cent canaigre extract. One of every 15 business firms in the United States — corporations, partnerships or individual enterprises — used match books as an advertising ;|medium | in 1952, the Match |Industry Information Bureau}. / reported today. AVOIDS DRIVING STRAIN T West Palm Beach ONLY $2675 U.S. Tax Plus CREYHOUND TERMINAL 124 N. Perry St. FE 4-2595 iGREYHOUND iW Sam Benson Says: When A Man went The Best Buy 9 DRESS PANTS 58°93 He Takes the Side Street SAM BENSON Open Till 9 P. M. The pronghorn antelope posses ses a rump patch of long, pure- white hairs. When the animal is alarmed, this expands into a! sends warning flashes like a helio-. chrysanthemum-shaped | disc andj graph. It is visible for miles by rapid opening and shutting, | the plains. Tommy Kollman chose the Saxophone (He plays in the ‘school band at St. Michael's School, Pontiac) Tommy Kollman of 1359 North Perry, Pontiac, says, “I like playing the saxo- phone very much: It gives me many hours of pleasure, and offers me extra opportunities to take part in school activities. I hope that I'll be able to play well enough te help work my way through) college.” Lots of young people like Tommy have gotten their start in music. in the school band. It’s a good wav to begin. Apd using Grinnell's Student Rental Plan is a good way to try before you buy! ax” + Rh re RENT a trumpet, cornet, flute, violin, clarinet or trombone! ‘Ask about Grinnell’s Student Rental Plan! Grinnell’s 27 South Saginaw Street for Value oe” Cn ms HEADQUARTERS FOR OK USED CARS AND TRUCKS mmm AR ae % ? ot Sold only by an authorized Yes, you can expect the best in used car values when you choose from your Chevrolet dealer’s wide selection of OK Used Cars. Chevrolet dealers, and only Chevrolet dealers, bring you the six advantages that mark every used car carrying the famous OK tag. Only an OK Used Car gives you the worry-free, pride-packed pleas- ure inspired by your Chevrolet dealer’s warranty in writing. Only an. OK Used Car provides the additional satisfaction of complete in- spection and reconditioning by Chevrolet-trained mechanics. And only an OK Used Car offers you this same protection . . . these same assurances that you can buy with confidence and drive with pleasure. There are thousands of good, dependable unused miles in every OK Used Car. Come in. See the many bargains in used cars. We believe you, too, will enthusiastically agree that they’re the best used car buys. NN JACK HABEL CHEVROLET CO. MAIN OFFICE; 34 Mill St., Phone FE 3-7123 USED CARS: 211 S. Saginaw St., Phone FE 4-4546 eo Pr ry td 4 THIRTY-TWO URSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CAN MEET YOUR NEEDS Come to a Free Lecture Entitled “How Christian Science Blesses the Individual and the Family” by. Arnold H. Exo, C.S,\B. of Chicago, Il!., Mem- ber of the Board’ of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ Scientist, in Boston, Mass. ! Friday, Sept. 25th at 8:00 P. M. Tomorrow Night, in First Church of Christ, Scientist Cor. Williams and W. Lawrence Sts. Pontiac, Mich. , Sarah Lawrence College Employes End Walkout NEW YORK wW—A service em- TEXARKANA, Ark. @—Ev , ployes strike at Sarah Lawrence ist Billy J Sanat y | College in Bronxville is over, and that the International ,Council of the girl students can give up their Christian Churches plans to float | janitor and porter tasks. More Bibles-by-Air Will Be Launched 20,000 Bibles by balloon over the! tled yesterday, but details of the |’ The three-day walkout of about | * Iron Curtain next year. . . Hargis oe = bape 13. mainte ol was set! program for the council.. He pre- ance personne viously has reported the counell | Errement were not disclosed. d F The strikers, members of the had sent 10,000 Bible-bearing bal- ; sale loons alaft in Europe this month | AFL_ International Building Serv- : , t init | ice Employes Union, had demand- oy aes aveeg Sem iano |ed a union shop, one which all new The Joplin, Mo., evangelist di-|employes must join. rected the balloon launching pro-| The work stoppage also blocked | ' gram in Europe. He arrived here | delivery of trunks and baggage to yesterday to visit members of his College girls starting the fall term |“ | when truckers regised to pass | picket lines, Jaycees Provide Tape | family. MANISTEE W—As a first step| um, copper, and plastic—built in a new youth program sponsored into the wings and tails of by the Manistee Police Depart-|S0me modern jets — are solv- ment children's bicycles will be| ing icing problems. These met- equipped with safety reflector tape | al and plastic sandwiches, elec- furnished by the Junior Chamber |trically heated, are replacing of Commerce. jrubber anti-ice equipment. owe * 2 > ; REP BOR ROSTER TT ee: oh Feel ri ~ OTS. Re oR bind «pte. Nii, We an fl ee CE ae Next to your neck there’s nothing better than the knit collar on The Weatherneck jacket by White Stag. Zips up to a turtle neck, down to a square collar, open for nonchalance. The Weatherneck is in 100% Wool Suede, fully lined with rayon twill. Scarlet with grey knit, tan with brown knit, blue with navy knit. 361046 . «, 2. °-+ $22.50 Shop the } | | Lion Store ‘" for Famous Name Quality - s ' TRAVELER ALL W001 sport shir Onecare 98.95 | ‘ . More is that carefree styling af its best — and in all wool at that! A medium weight, cozy-warm irt im exclusive Buck Skein Joe plaids, perfect for indoors ~ and owt. kt has bluffed edges throughout , . . the , spread collar, and the 2 button adjustable cuffs. See Traveler in the newest, fall shades. Sizes, small, medi large and extra large. € aod 4 b, , Sr eR ee EF OE ma) 7 fea Wehy ve® “ ne Foe I KO, DRA Ra. ole ee ¢ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TH | Hot “sandwiches” of alumi-|~ DOUBLE DUTY—Something new in “‘convertibles’’ is being shown at the Novelty Fair in Nurnberg, Germany. If the ice should sud- denly melt, the wearer of the skates can quickly adjust to roller ' skates. Says ROKs to Expel Reds If Peace Fails SEOUL #®—Prime Minister Paik Too Chin declared today South Ko- rea ‘‘will expel the Chinese and Russian Communists from our ter- ritory” if the Korean political con-, ference fails to achieve unification by peaceful means within 90 days after it starts. Paik said his government woll cooperate with the Allies to achieve unification of North and South Ko- ea by peaceful means for only a limited period—180 days from: the signing of the armistice July: 27. Paik said in an interview that the Communists already have vio- lated the truce terms by bringing into North Korea MIG jet fighter planes from Russia after the truce. The Allied Command was believed to be considering a protest. “They are violating the truce terms by every means,’ Paik add- ed. ‘Did you expect the Commu- nists to live up to the armistice agreement?”’ Riek ae Basins we. ~~ Exclusive all wool imported British woolens in your choice of tweeds, checks, houndstooth, heathers, plaids, and overplaids, Westberry tailoring is known for quality and value. You'll be sure to like these snappy, youthful styles. Single breasted, slash pockets, bal collars, in regular, short, and long models. t Buckskein Joe _ _. Boys’ Warm 49§ Windjammer ‘Extra heavy, 100% all wool inter- lining in both and sleeves gives your boy the comfortable warm muffler. Water repel- lent and crease resistant, available in handsome outdoor colors. 2 ¥, LION STORE AT NO EXTRA COST! PARK FREE REAR OF ee. Fda: PEED P BRD. Bee gs FOE: Bs < ‘3 Pee TO Re Famous Westberry All wool Zip Coats Its § CHARGE ALL YOUR PURCHASES AT THE 9M) STORE WHILE SHOPPING REGULARS SHORTS LONGS Other all wool suits in famous names such as famous Gramercy Park suits in all the wanted all wool fabrics. $45 to $55 CP MRP BOOS 0 Sai BO 800 35 A proud addition to the Lion Store's family of famous values.... mbassy Row | .... the finest suit * value in our history! | ie ye § 6 ‘hi We are proud to present the finest in Baltimore tailoring to our customers. We feel certain that you will agree that for quality of tailoring, fullness, and fit that this is the tops in a $65 suit. Regardless of your choice of fabric, flannels, sharkskins, worsteds, tweeds, or gabardines, here is a value that has no comparison. Embassy Row is a suit that will satisfy any man, no matter how expensive your taste. And they are priced moderately for this type suit. Bob Considine Says: | NEW YORK (INS) — No football coach in history ever had to do what Gen. Curt Lemay has done the past five years — keep a team in peak form for a game scheduled for the next day’ which is con- stantly being postponed. In effect, that is the great prob- lem that confronts Lemay'’s Stra- tegic Air Command, whose mission is defined in these terms: ' “We must be prepared at all times to deliver concentrated atomic attack against the vital elements of an enemy's war- making capacity, to strike at his long-range bomber fleet, and to support appropriate area com- manders with attacks on suitable targets.” How do you keep men at)a pitch which would enable them ‘to take off on an instant's notice and head for, let us say, the remotest target in Russia? SAC does it in a variety of ways. ‘It starts with certain advantages. It is the greatest band of profes- “| sional airmen in the world: Every | aircraft commander in SAC shows | an average of 36 combat missions. SAC crews have lived together, slept together, flown together and thought together for years. But everytime this big game is postponed, the spirit of even the most eager of the beavers is in- clined to droop or collect rust. A condition like that cannot be tol- erated in SAC. The security of the free world depends more upon the readiness of SAC tan on any other tool in the arsenal of democracy. TV REPAIRS Work Guaranteed! HAMPTON TV 286 State St. FE 4.2525 (Advertisement) For Athletes Foot Use T-4-L for 3 to 5 days. It actually peels off the outer skin, :|exposes buried fungi! and KILLS ON CONTACT. If inot pleased with instant-drying T-4-L, your 40c back at any drug store. Today at Simms Bros. ‘Coach’ Lemay Has Game Always Ready to Score Lemay, a soft-spoken man from Qhio who can be as tough + a8 an angry bear if a man does not play square with him, is a man who has won for himself a brand of loyalty among his men that is hard to put into words. Every man who works for him knows that Lemay, come the big game. will be in the first plane. He has devised a rigorous and con- stant training program that tests every man in his outfit every day in a way in which he would test himself: There are no, “breathers” on Lemay’s mythical schedule. There. is- only one big game, and he might be called upon to send his team into the air against the big opponent on a mpment’s notice. His men work a 16-hour day. Their medical charts are always up to date. Their bags are packed. Their personal affairs are always in order. No SAC bomber is ever incapacitated in a repair shop for any great Aength of time. Leaves are handied so as not to bregk the unity of any crew. No important SAC crewman ever takes two weeks at a beach away from a telephone. With SAC, the war is never cold. Key officers and crewmen in SAC carry sidearms for a very simple reason. If Russia started a shooting war tomorrow: the very first tar- gets of her host of saboteurs in this country unquestionably would be the B36s, B47s and B50s which make up the bulk of SAC’s ability to reprise with a horrendous Sun- day punch. When you realize that one SAC bomber can now deliver a blow comparable to that of literally hundreds of Bl7s and B24s of World War II vintage, common sense requires that those bombers and men who have been trained at great cost to find the targets, be protected. i You can sleep better tonight be- cause Coach Lemay has found a way to keep his |boys perpetually primed for the big| game. To mildew-proof canvas awnings or covers: Soak in very soapy water; then, without rinsing, dip into a solution of copper sulphate from the drug store. NOT Ic EXTRA 45 NORTH FOR EASY TERMS SAGINAW Oo] AEG -Wae: STREET THIRTY-THREE _ HELP CELEBRATE © PEOPLE'S * WITH THESE AMAZING VALUES....... This is one Birthday: Party when “the treat’s on us”... so come in and take home a big slice of savings from our storewide Birthday Sale Specials . . . all priced way down to show you that we really mean it, when we say ‘Thanks for your loyal patronage through our years of growth and progress.” All These Values On Sale ONE SOLID WEEK Thursday - Wednesday --- ae: 24-30 i Fresh Frozen BELTSVILLE 4-6 lb. Average TURKEYS ee i) Here are choice, tender fully developed turkeys. «. raised especially for small families. Years of re- search have given you this wonderful, meaty tur- key in a small size. Try one this week! MARIO STUFFED 1c 9: OLIVES... = 3 Plenty of FREE PARKING Del Monte — ” SLICED or HALVES s 7s "2 4 No. 21/2 . CAN ' BRACH’S CANDY CARNIVAL Just Arrived a Complete Line of | Fall Chocolate Candy ! With Each Purchase of BRACH CHOCOLATE CANDY YOU GET FREE One Gas Filled Balloon RECIPE 1 Ib. PINK SALMON 39° DELICIOUS BORDENS BISCUITS “ 10° BISCUIT MIX — bn 29° BANQUET a, $439 WHOLE CHICKEN «:. T People’s Low, Low Price on. us PILLSBURY » x Donald Duck GRAPEFRUIT JUICE | Giant 46 Ox. Can Sof «=6SILVER tnrioyy FLOSS. { (Save Kraut OO —=E———E—— OO ———— el aor mrt ;wrtmhmrmr™COCO TS People’s low price Regular Bar ..., } ge’ shai SEAL TEST | Ig NESTLE’s | SWEET ICE CREAM INSTANT PICKLES All Flavors COCOA 25°197°1 ao. 27 Ox, Jor HALF GALLON bb. — Foo D-O-MAT_ ow Potties Once LI | ote ||) ale Wa slcehe Mews) | Vewlehs Whalielsc, | plum tel Gm econ, | —S PIES « - 33° oe ag Ps. 28° WHITE BREAD grey Uh instant Coffee's" Jer Gc r THIRTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 = : Hav crust all rolled out, ready ta go| have a chance to soak through 4 : Top Crust Ready on the pie, before you put in the| the bottom crust while you are It's a good idea to have the top! filling. That way, the filling won't | rolling out the top crust. O t O CO a te im ce *s e re ga in an ae | ) caciniatiiianinanll OAKLAND AOC A: » pay Wet Pon andre, | PACKING HOUSE | "ues? One-Dish Meal: Cookies Make -M. and Fri, 7 A.M. | , at 6 Hestas fe MARKET "has Beef Casserol B Treat Complete Summer Uatl 4 PLM. asseroie real LOMp See Ses 77 S$. Saginaw St. We never get kg gmp recipes Refrigerator Wafers s i or one-d meals. It is so easy to : King Nut WHOLESALE CUTS put meat’ potatoes and vegetables Are Rimmed With Shot FOR HOME USE in one casserole and put it in the ‘or Colored Sugar Oleo 2 ibs. for oven until serving time. This Harvest Casserole is a real It’s hot chocolate weather again. . 38c Lb. | rib-sticking dish. Steaming mugs of chocolate with Y Ch ° Hind quarter Hamburger Harvest Casserole melty —— epee is : u are one great ple pee pore ee se Wc feather . o. can ma (2% cups) espoo: ce e . must me - Center Cuts Front Quarters spoon curry “or chili powder _“— ‘i ot Rogge ch pe a eo Pot Roast 42c Lb 3 veupe’ thinly sliced, pared raw folate -And here's a sige dose . La prenaeumh || . rich refrigerator sie toc Round of Beef. IP package rosen ast corn, thawed that will hit the spot when served Beef ‘Cie, i Lb nia package irosen ieee beans, thawed elongride per denes gg s | ust enough to separate | You can dough at jyour | Sirloin of Beef. 42c | dette Satna Peony american kisare, refrigurate it ale er cheese (6 ounces) e the es it Boston Butt Side of Beef Bic Lb. BB ion. tomatoes, Worcestershire’ and a ae aoeeee: PORK Hind and Front salt. Pat into 1 inch layer in 3 aie ae le ace quart casserole. On top, place in . Whole Pork Shoulder Ac ». layers,: potato, flour, corn, lima] . s,‘cup brown suger | STEAK Sliced Free beans, then green pepper. i | 3 Se cael vanilla extract : Bake at 375 degrees covered for -. ae fhggre ngs Tomy riched flo (aout) Whole Fresh Ham §2c Lb. |45 minutes; then sprinkle with Q e Fvuw..e vies %a ‘cup ehocolate shot wt | ROUND STEAK Sliced Free cheese; bake, uncovered, 80 min- Cream together shortening and : utes longer, or until vegetables are} CHOCO.ATE RIM COOKIES—The first cool |snack to serve with it. It’s easy to put the rim | Sugar until light and fluffy.) Add SIRLOIN STE AK. Whole Pork Loins tender. Eight servings. | weather stimulates the taste for hot chocolate. | on these cookiesroll the dough in chocolate shot. egg and beat well Stir in vanilla ! Small Fresh c ame Chocolate rim refrigerator cookies are the natural were salt. e stir | a m res : : cup flour un ‘ CLUB STEAK Sliced F lb Cheese Balls With Pie ; . smooth. Add enough more flour | cea rree iD. To fancy up an apple pie when! Out in Milwaukee, a company 'P t t S lad Is Better ‘to make a moderately stiff dough. t guests are coming. shape soft yel-| is manufacturing, a new wax- er ec 10n a Stir until well blended. Your PURE $ 95 | low cheese into small balls. Roll| coated wrapper containing sorbic , Shape dough into| two rectangu- : Cc 50 Ib. | | the cheese balls in paprika and| acid. Wrap the wrapper around [f Made the Day Before lar rolls. Spread chocolate shot or Choice Ib LARD Can | tuck two small pieces of green leaf | cheese. and it retards or prevents folored sugar on waxed paper and ue ; in the top of,each. Circle the apple | growth of mold. Nothing happens} perfection salad is an old fav-;ion and salt to taste. Pour on top| roll each portion of dough in it. | pie with the perky cheese balls’ to the cheese. The| mold just géts| before serving. | discouraged. | : In National Home-Baking Tests Amazing New Swans Down Mixes “MUSTS” CAKE! WIN ON ALL 4 FOR HOMEMAD - Win over 2 bod ceive oF scboclen ee! ornip made With finest cake-makings, milled the famous Swans Down way. velvety, homemade texture. These new} mixes are fs down on up cakes with made the old-fashioned way . including flour Make ’em Sure You ge? cake that stays as eating-fresh as cake . stays as fresh even after 3 days—if there’s a crumb left! . Make ’em Easy USE THE MIXES WITH THE HOMEMADE TOUCH! ) On size clone, housewives gave our Our New- Recipe Swans Down Mixes an over-all preference vote of 2-to-1 over other leading cake mixes! Just add water and your own fresh eggs. Our New-Recipe Swans Down Mixes protect the - freshness of their ingredients. Yes! Our exclusive LOCKED-IN FRESHNESS, plus your own fresh eggs, in- sure you luscious cakes with real homemade ,fia vor. orite and still gets a high rating of cabbage mixture and chill until | six individual gelatin for summer menus. It is attrac- firm. tive with its varied layers and has the advantage of being better if made the night before. Layered Perfection Salad 1 et my pm unflavored gelatin 4 Mgatarcgeeind cold water Unmold on beds of salad greens or in crisp lettuce cups and gar- nish with mayonnaise cr any de- sired salad dressing. Serves six. boiling water ry tab espoon sugar VY, teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons vinegar 1% cup chopped celery % cup shredded uncooked carrot Is Luscious Dessert % cup finely shredded or. For a company dessert that looks chopped cabbage and tastes extra luscious, serve 1% cups cottage cheese : . 1 teaspoon minced green onion t lemon meringue pudding. Your Salt to taste d ; - ‘ Balad dressing friends will never guess that it Salad greens took ‘only minutes to make, Fill oven-glass serving) dishes Lemon Meringue Dish ~ Divide gelatin into two equal portions and soften each in two with lemon pudding and pie filling tablespoons of cold water for at | | mix, prepared as directed on pack- least five minutes. Wrap in waxed paper. Place in refrigerator until firm. When dough is chilled, cut into slices about one-eighth inch thick. Bake on ungreased baking sheet in moderate oven (375) about jeight minutes. Makes about eight dozen. Beef Dish Is'Added fo Menu for Baby If you run your finger down baby’s bill of fare offered by a famous food company, you'll find it |reads something like this: Strained Foods renee juice 4 pre-cooked cereals { Add boili = ' ‘| age. Top with meringue and brown 3 mont end vegetable combinations iling w g water to one portion) in a 425 oven 3 to 4 minutes. Cool} 3 ope and stir until dissolved. Add sugary | before serv ing. 1 vegetables salt and vinegar and set container : soadees in cold water or ice to chill until! t's important when cooking eggs the consistency of unbeaten eee | to use a low to moderate heat — This grand total of 32 strained white. ‘ae for custard, cook over hot Fold in seasoned celery, car- | Water. Never let it boil, or you rot and cabbage and pour into ‘| might see that custard curdle. When you fold beaten egg whites | molds. ,{into your custard — you do just Chill until firm. Set second portion of gelatin im , you don't break down those delicate container into a pan of hot water) air cells. And it’s those air cells and stir until dissolved. .| which give your dessert that frothy Add cottage cheese, minced on| frivolous texture so much admired. = 79: RIB STEAK......65° Fresh Ham Roast 09: SIRLOIN Center Cut Pork Chops Cc ‘|that — fold in gently. That way. foods has just! been reached ; through the addition of the newest | dish, strained beef broth, beef and | barley. In nothing flat, father, sis- ter or even older brother can order up a meal for the junior member of the household now. For baby’s very next meal) you'll want to try strained beef broth, beef and barley. Since it contains beef and barley solids, the! broth is thicker than the ordinary |type. These ingredients contribute to the zestiness and nutritive enrich- ment of the broth and produce an easy-to-serve dish because of its medium consistency. Wattles Boast Unusual Flavor of Malted Milk It you have a waffle iron, you're all set for lots of interesting eating. Waffles are good eating any time of the day or evening. These waffles are unusual in that they contain malted milk for |a dif- ferent taste sensation. Malted Milk Waffles 2. cups sifted woe gh rs flour % cup melted shortening % teaspoon sa 2 eggs, separated 1 and %4 cups water Sift flour, malted milk, baking powder and salt together. Beat egg yolks and water together. Stir into sifted dry ingredients. Add shortening; mix well. [Beat egg whites until stiff but not |dry; feld into batter. Bake in hot waffle iron two to three minutes, or until iron stops Steaming. Makes three 9-inch square waffles. | Freezing ts Okay Many people ask if they can freeze canned hams. Here's) the answer to this question. Although freezing is not recommended for regular smoked, bone-in hams | (due to the salt content of these prod- ucts), canned hams may be frozen for fairly long period — 10 months Domino > tb. € | to a year. As canned bams are air- Cane Bag tight, their flavor cannot be af- Pine pp ple Calif. Head Juice . 46-02. can 29: Lettuce 25° LOTAN’S “kp Dixie-Telegraph Market Wing DIXIE HWY. AT TELEGRAPH fected by freezing. | bc kia Cc Campbell’s c | To Pour Over Pudding, 00 g Catsu 14-0. Here’s a recipe for a different . reve Pet. a sauce: One cup susnt. % 4 p muedses. eel and 2 te 09 miniées. wa Gaal ee tablespoons brandy and a few chopped nuts or raisins. Pour Gee podiine. sop cepamn. 6 Coe. BRS PO AE SE BD Lots of Free Parking J j ————————e OO — THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24. 1953 THIRTY-FIVE ———— oJ Hawaiian Hawest = SALE if! ull! a a Baldwin Avenue MAZZA’S MARKET 118 Baldwin Avenue Ditie Highway LOTAN'’S DIXIE & TELEGRAPH MKT. 2135 Dixie Highway Edison Street EDISON FOOD MARKET 183-185 Edison Street Mechanic Street CORNER MARKET 27 Mechanic Street Franklin Road JOHN PHILLIP’S SUPER MARKET 360 Franklin Road Perry Street PERRY FRIENDLY MARKET 1220 N. Perry Street Perr Street ELLINGSEN'S FOOD MARKET 332 WN. Perry Street Orchard. Lake Avenue CRAWFORD'S FOOD. MARKET 701 Orchdrd Lake Avenue OAKLAND COUNTY Aubekn »>Heights COPP’S MARKET 3337 Agburn Avenue Aubutn Heights HOLBROOK GROC. 2287 Auburn Avenue ‘Birmingham FISHER'S MARKET 1248 So. Woodward Clarkston TERRY'S MARKET 12 So.|Main Street Keego Harbor SERBINOFF GENERAL STORE 3152 Orchard Loke Road SOUTH SIDE MARKET 224 So. Main Street 3 inliy - 2 ~ =a} 4 ; ae eT a7 — serene eM! AVS SO TT WEE = «= ms ee. \" z = . « ~ se of ene” Campbell Tomato | Minute KET "Bottle. , 15 oz. C : Bottle R { C = pkgs. . DOLE — Functehis | eryers Frese Sliced —— Ic S$ ALE g-Tesdexe 64 Tea-Bags only PECANS 2: © S -PINEAPPLE 2) { ‘SALADA’ 25: 4h) | 3% Oz, Can Big No. 2 Can VOL! TEA BAGS : Defiance | Birdseye Frozen Cod Cc 2 of = | S$ - whitefish fas Pumpki Cans Nationally Famous | SPRY * Birdseye Frozen Peas Sure Seal Canning Wax FeNG EE Deliciously blended cane and maple sugars gives this fine S Xx SA) & rw * ie sw 4s OAS at 2 2 1 3) Get a \ ww. _ \es | ib C 5 A * bottle of aN Wi, SS Excelsior Frozen Pkg. get _ Campbell's Nie \X 8 Oz. C a =) Ketel =\ \\ PS | VR KS Pkg. 7 a UN Se FRE OF EXTRA \\ COST } Cl Boe Rea RL WHEN YOU SEND IN 3 LABELS FROM ~\- . ae ae =: ° i: A PILES IEE TN DOLE Campbells . DOLE TOMATO SOUP SEE US FOR DETANS as 29 Pineapple Chunks Pineapple Crushed | syrup real maple sugar favor. , Sveethourt Reg. 2 A: C Size MAID SYRUP Beste 23° | DOLE = - | 5 | c Sine | bars GOLDEN MIX»... qc >” PINEAPPLE Soap 1 Sale = 4 BH Woftles and Poncakes " JUICE 's A LE! 4 29 | be Pigs. Hydrox Cookies "hu" BS 7 ~~ yt TT Wispy Crackers ts Pon SNOW... Fie" 28° Leet Detergent } c fy : Quick LUX..... 39 Elastic Starch cLEnuser 2~ 25° .\== me 24° BetterLiving ON SALE NOW > lary Rug Cleaner aMORENe = and so EASY to use BrusH Rugs stay = Qi. 4.29 1.25 clean longer Gal. 3.79 — wee. —_ = —_—~ __ THIRTY-SIX | HE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24. 1953 Don't Forget the Chives ver Ine mrtae to as 10 make = Tom atoas Stuffed Most ‘chilled soups — except the | } b ° fruit type — benefit . from a Keep your electric toaster ciean| With Meat Mixture sprinkling .of minced parsley or| and neat by brushing out crumbs; chives. Add the parsley or chives! frequently. NEVER put a toaster! Now is the time to enjoy baked after the soup has been ladled into! in water or you'll ruin its heating |tomatoes. If you are pressed for |, time, or if the refrigerator does not yield any leftover meat for the stuffing, try using a can of junior » baby meat. Add a touch of curry | powder. Baked Stuffed Tomatoes 3 medium tomatoes « 1 can junior beef, veal or pork % cup dry bread crumbs | 2 tablespoons melted butter or marga- rine | % teaspoon curry powder | Salt to taste Scoop out a hollow at the stem 'end of each tomato. Sprinkle well {| with) salt. Combine meat, bread crumbs, melted butter and curry {| powder. Add salt, if desired. Spoon mixture into hollowed to- | mataes, dividing evenly. Place in a | greased baking dish and bake 30 'minutes in moderate (350) oven. | Serves three. the cups or bowls, sprinkling them element. Give meat loaf a different fla- vor: season it with celery salt and | | | Pepper. SAVORY FROZEN CAULIFLOWER—Frozen vegetables are so easy to prepare that they are a boon to the hurried cook. This nutmeg as well as with salt and| ‘tasty vegetable dish is perked up with bits of chopped green pepper and grated cheese. Try it tonight for dinner. Add Extra Pep to Cauliflower If it’s tempting flavor you want, try this combination next time you serve frozen cauliflewer. Saute mushrooms and green pepper a butter or margarine while the’ cauliflower is cooking. 4 | Then add these' ingredients to; the cauliflower and while it’s still | Apple Season Promises, Many Luscious Treats By JANET ODELL Ever since Eve ate the apple, the world has known about this deli- cious fruit. A member of the rose family, the apple has been culti- vated since prehistoric times. The ancient Scandinavians iK- lieved that the apple was the only food of the gods and that through it the gods acquired their wisdom. Happily for us mortals, apples are now considered excellent hu- man food. There are over 2,000 varieties grown throughout the world, the United States being the leading apple-producing country. ' piping hot, sprinkle grated cheese over the top. Sound simple? It is!! So simple, | in fact, you'll be amazed that the } results are so pleasing. They’ll + work wonders with fresh cauli- ~~ flower too. Me hot filling, beating constantly Until well blended. Add butter, lemon rind and juice; mix well, Enough filling for 93-inch cake. sd | If you have a number of small apples, prepare them in the follow- ing manner as a delicious garnish ior iowl. Apple Sarprise Core and halve apples of similar size. Cook until clear and red in a syrup made of equal parts of water, sugar and red cimmamon candies Lift out carefully and cool! Then fill each apple cavity with cran- berry sauce blended with an equal amount of drained prepared horse- WE GIVE HOLDENS RED STAMPS We the Right Reserve to Limit Quan- tities Savory Frozen Cauliflower 1 package frozen cauliflower 2 tablespoons butter! or margarine ‘4 cup chopped green pepper ‘4 cup mushroom slices , 44 cup grated cheese Cook cauliflower according to! directions on package; drain. Melt | butter or margarine; add green} pepper and mushroom slices and| cook over low heat about five min- utes. Add to cauliflower; sprinkle grated cheese over the cauliflower. Amount: Three to four servings. 'Mincem eat Rolls Will Fill the Bill on Sunday Morn | A lovely, leisurely Sunday morn- | ‘ing breakfast deserves something unique as well as delicious. Fhese | ; fruit rolls fill the) bill. | | Prepare a 1442-ounce package of | | hot roll mix according to. manu- |facturer's directions on package. | Let rise until doubled in bulk. Shape in 16 round balls, about 2 inches in diameter. Place in | greased muffin pans. With | greased scissors cut rolls in half | | and then in quarters, cutting al- most to’ bottom of rolls. Brush | with butter. Let rise until doubled in bulk. Place 1 tablespoonful mince- meat on top of each roll, bake in hot oven (400) until golden | brown, about 15 minutes. | Combine confectioners’ sugar, | milk or cream and lemon extract. 4 Spread on rolls while still warm. | Serve either warm or cold. | String Beans Sieved Makes Cream Soup You can make a delicious cream | At this time of the year the early fall apples are finding their way into our kitchens for cooking, can- ning and just plain eating out of hand. What can surpass the taste of a cold, crisp, juicy apple eaten before bedtime? American settlers introduced the Baldwin and Greening apples early in the 18th Century, and today they are still prime favorites. Each person has his own pref- erence in eating apples.. But some ; are better for cooking than others; for instance, the Jonathan is an excellent eating apple, but it is no good for baking. Cold storage allows growers to keep a constant supply of apples available to the consumer. The canning industry puts about eight million bushels of apples into canned applesauce yearly; apple slices and juice come next in quantity. This does not include all the fresh cider that is made and sold each fall. Applesauce in cake and cookies keeps them moist for several days. So does the apple juice in this unusual cake. Apple Juice Queen Cake 1 cup shortening 2 cups sugar 4 eggs 3 cups sifted all-purpose flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 44 teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon salt 142 teaspoons nutmeg l cup apple juice 1 cup chopped walnuts Apple juice filling 1, cup moist packed coconut Cream together shortening and sugar. Add:eggs, one at a time, beating after each, Sift together flour, baking powder, baking soda, with apple juice to creamed mix- ture. Add nuts. radish. Soup Combines Beef and Barley On days when there are numer- | ous chores to be done and errands to run it is wise to make simpli- city the keynote of family meals. A hearty soup, salad or. sand- wich, simple dessert and beverage meet the simplicity requirements ;and appease busy-day appetites | ad- | mirably. Happy choice as the mainstay of a Saturday meal is this nou- rishing and savery beef and bar- ley soup. The basic soap needs long slow cooking and a mini- mum of attention. Evaporated milk adds appealing creamy smoothness and body to | the soup and at the same time | provides double amounts of whole | milk nutrients plus the extra vita- | min D which the milk contains. Beef and Barley Soup | % pound beef stew | 2 tablespoons butter or drippings Shank bone of beef ‘about 1% 1 quart water 1% cup barley 1% teaspoons salt Few grains pepper } 4 sprigs parsley, chopped } 1 medium onion, chopped fine | % cup finely chopped celery | 1% cups evaporated milk |. Cut beef into: small pieces. Melt | butter or drippings in soup kettle. | Add beef and cook and stir over | low heat to brown meat. Add soup | bone, water, barley, salt, pepper, parsley, onion and celery. lds) | salt and nutmeg. Add alternately | Cover and cook slowly for two or | three hours. Remove from heat. | Remove bone from soup and dis- Pour into two greased 9-inch deep | card bone. Let soup stand. Skim soup out of leftover string beans. | layer pans. Bake in moderate oven | Off fat. Pineapple Juice C Potatoes Mashed Potatoes in 2 minutes Cut-Rite = ‘ mrrve » J Wax Paper 125 Ft, Roll 23° ONIONS | Michigan ‘e * Cooking BRAND NONFAT DRY MILK Large Fancy CAULIFLOWER 25: Snowy *SOEt ap _ SoM Demonstration Friday and Saturday of PET Non-Fat Dry Milk—Taste It! —— You Can Be Sure of Quality — When You Buy Here Only U. S. ‘Choice’ and ‘Prime’ Grades of Beef Sold! U. S. Choice and Prime Grade Rolled Rib U. S. “Choice” Quality Lean, Meaty Boneless (9 lb. Roast.... , Beef . Short 2 G: Ribs..... is, U. S. Graded “’Choice”’ Lean Beef 4G: lb. Pot Roast.... Michigan Pinconning Cheese Friendly Market. “a Press beans through a sieve, al-| (375 degrees) 35-40 minutes. Cool lowing two cups of thin white sauce | five minutes. ; 'for every half cup of puree.,Pre-| Remove from layer pans. Cool. pare the white sauce in a double} Spread filling between layers. boiler, add the puree and let it} Sprinkle with coconut. Cover top | Simmer. | and sides with your favorite white Just before serving, season ,with | frosting. grated onion, a dash of thyme or} sage, and sprinkle with paprika | for eye-appeal. ° Vegetable With Swish Here’s an easy way to sefve a! 1 tablespoon lemon juice |vegetable with swish for a party! Mix sugar, cornstarch and salt. |or family dinner. Mix a drained| Gradually add apple juice, cook | pound can of cut green beans with; over boiling water, stirring con- | 1g cup sour cream and 2 table-| stantly, until thickened. Cover, | spoons mayonnaise, and heat.’ Sea-| cook 10 minutes. |son to taste with salt and pepper. Beat egg yolks, gradually add Apple Juice Filling ly cup sugar 4 tablespoons cornstarch Ye teaspoon salt 1 cup apple juice 2 egg yolks 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 teaspoon grated lemon juice | Measure soup. There should be about 1 quart. If not, add water to make that amount. | When ready to serve, add milk. ;}Heat to serving temperature. ais six servings. | Simple and Delicious '| Way to Serve Lobster | Here's a simple but delicious | way to serve cooked lobster meat. |For each half cup of the lobster, | melt a tablespoon of butter in a | skillet and add a couple of table- spoons of cream. Keep the heat low! add the lob- ster to the butter-cream mixture, and baste the seafood as it gets hot. Serve on crisp buttered toast. | | | For One Cent More YOU GET... 'SOVE-VIAL ( For a limited time only.) BUY 48 TEA-BAGS at regular price 5 . | ® | i Ay » * : ‘ SPECIAL ~ SALE GET 16 EXTRA TEA-BAGS for I‘ more ee a THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1958 f THIRTY-SEVEN ADDITIONAL "?" BREE PARKING = a eS ee © | oe ae Two U.S. Govt. Grades.|FOR KROGER CUSTOMERS ONE HOUR FREE PARKING HAVE YOUR PARKING LOT TICKET Commercial or Tenderay U.S. GRADED “COMMERCIAL” | STAMPED AT KROGER FOR FREE PARKING | WHEN YOU MAKE A PURCHASE STANDARD | CUT N { Soy Good nourishing beef at a money-saving Kroger price Ss ae IDENTIFIED WITH THE YELLOW AND BLACK LABEI e KROGER PARKING hi ee (1-HOUR FREE PARKING) OFmu ECexs Nourishing beef at the lowest priced! Contains < o = all the food values of higher grade beef but / - = = has less fat morbling. rr ae st 3 z| KROGER (= 31 store =& aime Ez KROGER PARKING 1t Be ee es a] AVAILABLE AT gaz knocen PARKING = moon Fs PAREN + (1-HOUR FREE PARKING) THIS STORE ONLY. ea ae Soe a inn d Ria 178 NORTH at Chuck Roast 0 ew” Sirloin Steak 1.53: Sliced Bacon osc. * 79° Skinless Wieners “49° Hamburger “cx~ 31.00. “ * os 2 ved ad i a » . ¢.. ‘Tender [0 Times out of [0 IDENTIFIED WITH THE BLUE AND WHITE LABEL } ' po | U. $. GOVT. GRADED “CHOICE” KROGER-CUT Kroger-Cut Tenderay gives you more mect, less bone—less waste. The Kroger Tenderay method makes U.S. Choice Grade Beef tender without without loss of flavor, and juices. Long end eut off +44. flat loin bone removed before steck is weighed ond priced. Extess fat end bone removed before roost | is preighed and priced. Always a center cut. ” No stringy neck beef. TENDERAY 4 U.S. GRADED “CHOICE” TENDERAY ° Sirloin Steak » 89° v.'S. | GRADED “CHOICE” TENDERAY | BLADE | sti. CUT c a 89° “Liver Sausage satetiver Aes Chuck Roa Ground Beef x 31.19 Fresh Oysters. ~ “i ad | — _THIRTY-EIGHT For a Golden Soup Make a Gdiden Cream Soup of mashed or sieved cooked carrots seasoned with celery, green pepper and a hint ofi.onion. About 2 cups of carrots ‘blénded with the usual cream soup Base will serve from 4 to. 6. ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, Lemon Adds Tempting Flavor to Pork Chops Lemon flavors pork chops for 4} tempting combination: Brown the chops, then place a lemon slice on each. Combine ‘'% cup each of catchup and water ‘and 2 table- spoons of brown sugar. Pour over the chops, then closely cover and cook slowly for 45 minutegor until the chops are done. A quarter cup of butter creamed with a|tablespoon of minced chives is delicious served over freshly boiled potatoes. Fix Main Dish in Jiffy A savory main dish that’s ready to serve in minutes is this varia- tion of an old favorite, Brown a pound. of ground beef and a chopped onion in a iittle fat. Add a can of condensed vegetable soup and 2 tablespoons catsup, Season to taste with salt and pepper; and simmer gently a few minutes. You may like to serve fluffy rice, toast points, or) hot biscuits along with | it. , Add finely diced pimiento to a casserole of macaroni and cheese; tastes good and looks tempting! eo ~U. S. No. 1 All Purpose DRY ONIONS 20°49 U. S. No. \ 1 Mich. NEW POTATOES 20 Ibs. 49: EXTRA LEAN, AND DELICIOUS ' A MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE Well Trimmed of Fat and Waste CHUCK ROAST..... SUGAR Tall Cans 4 WITH Value Packed Carnation Milk 49 3g. Pure Granulated OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY THESE PRICES GOOD SEVEN DAYS 4a Rolls 49° Northern | TISSUE 4 Glen Valley PEAS 49° 303 Cons: BONELESS Roll Rib Roll Rump ROASTS No Waste, Tender Continuiously Ground} From Only Lean, Fresh Beef Grount eef 23: 3 Ibs. ROUND T-BONE SWISS Extra Lean and Delicious KIDNEY BEANS 4“ 49° Defiance Red Delicious Campbell's Pork and Beans 4” 49 Lean, Meaty SHORT RIBS 23. U. S. No. 1 Skinless HOT DOGS 29: SPAGHETTI 4“ 49° Franco’s DOG FOOD 4“ 49 Defiance Wax-Tex, 125 ft. roll WAX PAPER 249 [tb Tender, Lean, Ready for the Oven. Sirloin Rib STEAKS SPADAFORE BROS. MKT, — : ; ‘CUT BEANS b| 4°49 Bunker Hill WEST HURON STREET eee THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 Beef Covered by Rice, Cheese Surprise eating is in the bottom of this oven dish! Ground beef is hidden-uffder the golden good- ness of a marvelously seasoned mixture of tender rice, cheese and | €B8s. | After the top becomes a wonder- ful brown, pie-shaped pieces of rice and beef goodness are} cut and slipped onto plates held, by eaters just waiting to take a great big bite. Al layer of beet te topped With a layer made of rice, milk, eggs | and golden cheesé. The oven takes over to make |a hot and hearty main course’ de- light, and from the delighted} ex- pressions on folks' faces, it is pretty plain that here is a spar- | kling good main dish. Rice, Cheese and Beef Quickie 1 pound ground beef 2 teaspoons salt 'g teaspoon pepper eges teaspoons prepared mustard teaspoon salt cup milk } cups cooked rice ‘1, cup finely chopped onion 2 tablespoons chopped whole cafined pimientos Ma cup grated American cheese | Mix ground beef. salt and pep- | | Per. Spread in the bottom of a 2- | quart oven dish. Do not pack or |prees the meat. Bake in’a pre- heated 350 oven for 10 minutes. | Beat the eggs. Add the mustard, | salt, milk, rice, onion and’ pi- miento. Mix together. Pour over | the meat. Sprinkle the cheese over | ~wremnte the top. Return to the oven and bake 45 minutes or until a knife inserted into the center comes out clean. The top will have become browned pone the edge of the baking ish | Let stand five minutes before cutting into wedges. Makes seven | servings. | Saves Kitchen Work for the hostess if she uses Paper | plates for as much food prepara-| |tion as possible — flouring fish, | chopping nuts or salad greens, 'slic- | ing potatoes and so on. Eliminates some pot washing, which is a! real |help when the kitchen is crowded. | | | | Don't wait tox Christmas to serve | |hard sauce! You'll find it’s de-| ‘licious with blueberry or peach cobbler. Good. too, with a fresh | cherry pudding. in a leading frozen food company’s | Party dinners can be less work |, FROZEN FISH STICKS — The latest innovation of a national frozen food manufacturer is French-fried frozen fish sticks. You have your choice of ocean perch, haddock or codfish. Heating them for serving takes only 12 to 15 minutes in a hot oven. ‘Crisp, Golden Fish Sticks If you like crisp-crusted delica- cies, you will be mighty interested latest innovation—quick-frozen pre- cooked fish sticks. Enough to make a gourmet’s mouth water, these golden sticks | ; are unique for either a main course mainstay or as conversation-piece canapes. Fresh ocean fish are cleaned, filleted and shaped into’ big thick! sticks. After being dipped in a de- licious batter, the sticks are deep- fried in vegetable oil, then quick- frozen in all their crisp freshness. Thus having eliminated ‘the pesky chore of deep-frying, *all that is left for the lady chef to do is to remove the carton from her freezer, unwrap it, put the fish sticks on a baking pan and pop them into a hot oven (425) for about 12 to 15 minutes. When crispy hot, she removes them from the oven, heaps them on a platter garnished ‘with a bit | of parsley and a lemon wédge, ‘and serves with a Sauce Verte to tickle the family palate. Sauce Verte All Ready to Heat and Eat til smooth. Add onion, lemon juice and spinach and cook until thor- oughly heated. Serve hot on fish sticks, or on baked, poached, fried or broiled fish. Makes 24 cups sauce. Vegetable Bake ‘Stirs Appetite It's a good énd-of-the-week cas- $erole, for it calls for just four strips of bacon. This combination of macaroni, vegetables and bacon results in a mouth-watering main dish. Watch the small fry dig in. Fiesta Vegetable Bake 3 ounces elbow macaroni 4 strips bacon, diced 2 tablespoons chopped onion 2 tablespoons chopped celery 1 cup cream-style corn 1 tablespoon lempn juice Fd téaspoon salt ) % teaspoon wordestershire sauce 1 cup cooked peas 1 cup cooked juHKénné carrots Buttered bread emumbs l can cream of celery or cream of mushroom soup 3, cup milk 2 tablespoons grated onion | 1 tablespoon lemon juice Ye cup finely chopped cooked spinach Place soup in saucepan and add | {milk gradually. Cook and stir un- Sweet Potato Growers WASHINGTON (INS) —| The mystery of the disappearing sweet potato has been explained by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. Sweet potatoes, both nutritious and tasty, have practically disap- peared from vegetable store shelves. 1, The government says the main reason is that farmers aren’t plant- ing as many sweet potatoes as ithey once did. - For example, in the relatively short period from 1946 to 1952, | annual production has dropped | from 61 million to 28 miflion | bushels. Why the decline? | For one thing, the crop taWes a lot of work. Not much headway ‘has been made in mechanization ‘because sweet potatoes bruise too easily. In contrast, Irish pptato production is largely mechanized. And, many farmers. are finding other crops more profitable so they’ve gone out of the | po- tato business. The relatively high prices Leas sumers pay when sweet potatoes are scarce shows that a ne demand exists. Turn Backs on Crop this year shows that sweet potato! growers are responding to this price stimulus. up to 35 million bushels if acreage | growing conditions are average or better. However, with the growing abun- dance and variety of fresh and | other crops in many producing areas, it seem unlikely that sweet potatoes will regain fully t former importance at any time in the near future. Perk Up Cheese Balls | Cream cheese balls make a won- derful garnish for salads of all kinds but they taste even. better if some very finely chopped celery is tucked inside. Blend together three-fourth cup chopped fresh celery, one ounce package cream cheese and salt and pepper to taste. Shape into smal] balls and roll in minced fresh Parsley. For a party lunch, roll butter balls in poppy or caraway seeds And the slight increase expec ted and serve with crunchy hot rolls. Production this year may come | frozen foods competing for the con- | sumer dollar and with: shifts to) Cook macaroni in boiling. salted water until tender (about eight minutes). Drain} and rinse. Brown bacon lightly | in skillet. Add chopped onion! and celery and | brown lightly. Combine creaim style corn, lem- | on juice, salt and Worcestershire | sauce. Fold in | cooked macaroni. | Pour into 1-quart casserole. | Place peas in center on top of | Macaroni mixture. Arrange carrots in spoke-like fashion around peas. {Sprinkle with buttered bread | crumbs. ; Bake in moderate oven (350) 13 | minutes. Makes four servings. To make sour milk quickly when | you want to use it in a cake or ti intentions are carried out and | kie ipe that calls for it, mix a half cup of evaporated milk with a half cup of water and a table- spoon of strained lemon juice. | | DET AMERICA’S - BIG FAVORITE TOPS EM ALL ==" 2 for Quality cd for Taste Toke home @ é-bottle carton or 24-bottle case of Pepsi-Cola today. Bottled by } H J ey o ROIT Dealers in Pontiac Serviced by sripATOHr BEVERAGE COMPANY PRODUCTS ay A weet og T=) | Waffle Sandwiches | for Brunch, Supper No need to limit the serving of | waffles to Sunday breakfast: Try |} this recipe for a Sunday night sup- | per, or even for a brunch menu. | Bacon-Tomato Waffle Sandwich Praline Topping on Gingerbread Hungry youngsters will love this after-school} treat of delicately- spiced gingerbread, with its chewy-sweet topping of melted Waffles: brown. sugar and chopped pecans. a cupe pancake ready-mix It’s highly nutritious, too, and 2 eras sites akicienial wonderful served with ice-cold bi ? Topping. milk or ai dish of slightly tart applesauce. } Grown folks can’t resist this pra- line-topped /gingerbread, either — B and it’s just the right size for the *™ average family. _ Praline Gingerbread % cups $ifted all-puf}c.e flour 10 slices processed cheese 10 slices tomato 10 cooked bacon strips For the waffles, place all ingre- | dients in howl; beat with rotary | egg beater until fairly smooth. For | a 7-inch round waffle, pour two- thirds cup batter on hot waffle | ecco euthe | iron. For larger waffle irons, use | « teaspooh soda oe) eS i as ae }more batter. Bake waffles until} b r om | steed bon, PRALINE GINGERBREAD—Fragrant, hott textured gingerbread, | Steaming stops. with a novel topping of melted brown sugar and chopped pecans, is a| TOP each waffle with two slices | perfect treat for hungry youngsters. It’s watritious, too, and wonderful | 0f cheese. Place tomato slices and/| served with a glass of ice-cold milk. |bacon strips on the cheese. Broil | until cheese melts. Serves five. 2 > teaspoor cinnamon 2 teaspodn ginger « teaspooh cloves 4 cup shortening 2 2 cup water cup md@asses 1 egg. unbeaten Sift first’ seven ingredients into | : ped cream and-sliced bananas be-| some cooks like to brush a mixing bowl. Drop in shortening Sf ff d ] f Add one-fourth cup water and mo- uiléd /Omaloes tween and’ over the layers. Ladle| grater with salad oil before grat: | hot fudge over each serving. | ing cheese to prevent sticking. | lasses and beat 200 strokes (two minutes by hand or on mixer ~/Both Pretty, Tangy ei low speed,) Scrape bowl] and spoon or beater Of'tomato salads there seems to; Add remaining one-fourth cup) be) no end. Perhaps because they | water and egg and béat 200 strokes | fit) every meal $0 _ perfectly in | (same as before) . . . Bake in| flavor, color! and} freshness: And | square 8x&x2 - inch greased pan in | | because they jare| so simple to pre- moderate oven (350) 35 minutes. | Pare. | Meanwhile make praline topping | The stuffed tamato salad with} as follows: Put in mixing bowl: | any vaniety of fillings can be a one-fourth cup brown sugar, one- | cool lun¢heon or ‘supper main dish half teaspoon cinnamon, 2 table- | or, add zest to|a heartier meal. And | spoons flour. Cut in 2 tablespoons | there are few things prettier, par- ! butter or margarine: stir in one- ticularly, when the tomato resem- half finely chopped pecans. bles a flower as in this salad; After gingerbread) has baked 35 minutes,-rpmove from oven, sprin- kle topping mixture over top, re- | ial ae sized peeled tomatoes turn to qyen, and bake about} # hard) boiled eggs. chopped ba 2 metiium cucumber, peeled and eight miriutes longer. Delicious | chopped = Fe aren A, +4 cup [chopped green pepper served warm with glasses of ice | 2 tablespoons chopped green onion cold milk. ',s cup; salad dregsing Ss oo Cut tomatoes in sixths not quite Childre@ jin South Lack | through the base. Spread apart} ' | ; and sprinkle sections with) salt. | Enough of Vitamin A Tomato Egg Luncheon Salad | | Mix remaining | ingredients| and A nutrition study of children in |héap in| center of tomatoes. Gar-| Ss riofc i > |nish with cress ar parsley. Serves Louisiana ‘turned up the amazing feck mo P y: fact that these growing youngsters ate only; tone per cent of the amount of margarine or butter Fudge Banana Cake nutritionists say they need. The rich vitamin A content of marga- Rates as Top Dessert. rine contributes importantly to Rating top billing on your menus | growth and health is) Fudge Banana Cream :Cake, | Spreading ‘margarine generously ; since it) is a| pantry-shelf answer on biscuits, sandwiches and toast for a déssert|on a busy day. To is a good way to use this untritioius | your grocery|list add an un-iced BROADCAST CORNED BEEF HASH spread ta ‘help improve nutrition. Some nutrition workers say that a generous intake of vitamin A- loaf cake, one-half pint of whip- ping cream, bananas and prepared fudge sauce. When ready for des- Other nae eceat Try These rich food$ijhelps make a smooth, | sert. slice the| cake into two equal glowing skin. | pprtions, horigontally. Place whip- Favorites, Too! Qader WHY SPEND SO MUCH MONEY ON FOOD ? WHY lgtantac 1s q _ | be tte ! Dunk ! a ake, / 3 ways better: ° | rden w ) ib Starlac is guaranteed by Bo is it! with ° ; with ° pope ality, pasteurized milk (minus | | water and fat) from tested herds only, Wondetful, fresh flavor. 1 Enjoy smooth, rich- 1 Use Starlac for your fa- $® itis otein-protected by exclusive Gives pu exactly the | tasting puddings and |. vorite cake. Bake ten- ara in tested for quality 24 times. same amount of Bvita- | custards wifh Statlac. | der muffins, light bis- protected mins, ins,calcium, | Use it to cream vege- | cuits, crisp cookies. Use because its dairy dairy-sweet flavor is. nd other milk miner- ) tables. Serve your fam- | it in “made with milk” pecans snd moisture by a lightight, mois als as top-quality milk. ily tempting, nourish- recipes. Remember: f package. Stariac is’ milk minus | ingsoupsandchowters | Keep aquart inthe re-* | — ure-PFO? the ie water. | made with Starlac. | frigerator at all times. | 1 ah More women buy: STARLAC than all other brands combined ! ~ | TOPS IN QUALITY...TOPS IN FLAVOR! _ > Ai yeu) wouia'ta ths bat. pkg., and the red 3-qt. envelope package. or. “i —_ | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 THIRTY-NINE _ OPEN SUNDAY 9 wd PRICES GOOD 7 DAYS PLENTY OF FREE PARKING OVENGLO BREAD LARGE 20 OZ. LOAF l 7° Lean and Meaty Pork Roast ‘Fresh Picnic Shoulder 39: HART BRAND—RED KIDNEY BEANS 10 Large 44s tb. c All Meat and Ready to Eat Van Camp CORNED BEEF HASH Lb. Can y 5 Thin and Lean Petter's Brand , DURKEE’S COLORED OLEO *O5' TREN 5 LB. BAG 39’ One Bag Limit Michigan TOMATO CATSUP 14 oz. Bottle Hart Brand EACHES SLICED or HALVES OLER'S SUPER MKT. 1200 BALDWIN AVE. PHONE FE 2-9912 & —~ — oe - —_ - » & ; & } ‘ __ FORTY ee ee eS = ==. Tomatoes Brittany Is Imported Treat Out of ® French cookbook comes this recipe for Tomatoes Brittany. They should make a delicious. ac- companiment for any beef dish. ‘Tgmatoes Brittany 4 ripe ‘tothatoes 2 tabjespoons butter or 1 tablespoon minced 'g teaspoon basi! ‘2 teaspoon sugar ‘2 teaspoon salt 14 teasBoon pepper margarine parsley Wash! tomatoes and cut in half | Garnish Will Be Ready crosswise,, Melt butter or mar-! garine jin: frying pan; add toma-jtouch to glamorize a me toes and saute on both sides. Combiné remaining. ingredients; sprinklg dver tomatoes. Cook an-| other ntinhite or two. Serves four. | Thin Slices of Lemon 'on Soup Give Tang For a deliciously different soup, add 1% cups of cooked rice to 4 cups of water in which 4 chicken bouillon cubes have been @issolved. Heat until very hot. Float very thin slices pf lemon over the top of the soup and add a sprinkling of chopped parsley. Add the lemons about ten miputes be- fore serving time in onder that |the soup may take on some of the lemon flavor. F 7) Here's a way to add that extra for un- expected company. Freeger home economists suggest cutting cran- berry sauce into fancy sHapes be- fore freezing. They'll be fTready at ‘Fill that shaker with Morton, fnend ° WHEN IT RAINS If POURS” | 1odized or plain . a moment's notice. { By JANET ODELL Something cold and pomething hot, Something crisp to Hit the spot, Something flavorful @nd filling, i These four make the packed lunch thrilling. ] In this second article of our series on school lunches, we are going to discuss some suggestions for different foods to include in the lunch box. The thitd article will take up long-term planning. The little verse above might | well be used as a pattern for packing school tunches. Let's translate it into a lunch for a 5 to 9-year-old: A generous serving of meat loaf | between two slices of enriched | bread spread with butter or mar- garine; carrot and cabbage salad; hot cocoa in the thermos bottle; one large cookie and a banana. His teenage brother needs almost twice as many calories. Give him two sandwiches at least, one meat and one cheese, pickles or olives, hot corn chowder in|the thermos, a couple of doughnuts and an apple, He can buy milk a. school. When you are looking for the ‘something crisp,’’ remember rel- send it along with your school child. Include a plain bread and butter sandwich that day. Don't forget the salt and pepper. For these seasonings you can buy tiny containers that will not spill. Keep any small wide- mouthed bottle to carry salad dressing, chili sauce, mustard or catsup. Nowadays you can buy many kinds of fruit and vegetables in small cans, just enough for one serving. They will provide inspira- tion for new dishes to include in the lunch box. Applesauce is welcome accom- paniment to many sandwiches. Prepared puddings carry well. Baked apples make a tasty des- sert. Remember to include a spoon when the lunch isn’t all finger food. Have you ever considered pop- corn for the school lunch? It need not be kept just for evening snacks. Make up some popcorn bars and include them in your child’s lunch. They are like the old-fashioned popcorn balls. differing only in ishes. All sorts of pickles, spiced | | be 8 | late bits. Any dried fruit the fruits, olives, celery sticks, carrot | curls, wedges of head lettuce add interest to the otherwise bland | lunch, No dessert on hand? Tuck in a handful of raisins and choco- child likes makes a tasty dessert. Nuts are welcome and add valu- able protein and minerals to the diet. Occasionally put in some candy. | If there is a piece of leftover | fried chicken in the refrigerator. shape. Popcorn Bars ', cup white corn syrup 1 cup sugar 1, cup water 3 quarts popped corn “ cup butter 34 tsp. salt |and paprika, dot with butter. Bake }in moderate oven (350) about 30 | large enough for mixing. Pour the syrup slowly over the popped corn and mix well. Wet the hands slightly and trans- fer mixture into flat cake pan. Press mixture into a sheet cake and cut into bars with wetted knife. Nuts, candied cherries, gumdrops or raisins can be added to popped corn before mixing. Hot Seafood Salad ls Taste-Tempter With the passing of summer, we are perhaps a bit tired of the same salads. A good idea is to serve seafood salad hot. If you have never tried it, you are in for a taste thrill. Baked Seafood Salad 4g cup chopped green pepper \% cup minced onions 1 cup chopped celery 1 cup flaked crabmeat 1 cup cooked or canned shrimp 1 cup mayonnaise Yq teaspoon salt 1 teas worcestershire sauce 2 cups cornflakes Paprika 2 tablespoons butter or margarine Combine green pepper, onions, celery, flaked crabmeat, shrimp, mayonnaise, salt and Worcester- shire sauce; mix lightly. Place mixture in individual shells or shallow baking dish. Sprinkle with crushed cornflakes | minutes. Serve with lemon slices. ™% tsp. vanilla Put sugar, corn syrup, water, | | butter and salt in'a sauce pan and | cook, stirring until sugar is dis- | Yield: Six to eight servings. Easy but Good Dessert Fold leftover rice into prepared solved. Continue cooking without packaged vanilla pudding and top stirring (270) until syrup forms @/\with crushed pineapple or pine- brittle ball in cold water. it through the hot syrup. Add |apple tidbits for a pleasant family | vanilla and stir only enough to mix | dessert. Use about half a cup of| {cooked rice to one | package of Place the popped corn in a bow] | pudding. GUE BONNET sus “BLuE Bonnet is always delicate and fresh!”’ ; Buy BLUE BONNET Margatine — « Mrs. Robert Cummings **BLuE BONNET is my favorite for food value.” Mes. Jan Peerce —— and Be Sure of ‘ALL3' Flavor! Nutpiion! Economy! “I prefer BLUE BONNET to any other spread.” ° Mrs. Yogi Berra “‘Makes my recipes turn out better than ever.” | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 Follow Rhyme to-Pack Up : Satisfying School Lunch GREEN TOMATO JAM — Don’ Bread pudding used to mean a dull dessert that Mom made t6 use up the old bread. This recipe for chocolate bread pudding lifts a prosaic dessert into the realm of super desserts. Chocolate Bread Pudding 2 chocolate-covered malted milk: bars 3 tablespoons water % cup dry bread crumbs Pinch of galt } % teaspoon vanilla or almond eitract Melt candy bars in the top|of a double’ boiler with 3 tablespoons water. Add three-fourths cup. dry bread crumbs and mix well. ? Scald 2\cups milk, allow to cool slightly. Add one beaten egg. a pinch of salt and flavoring to! milk and mix well. Combine mixtures, pour into a baking dish and bake in a moder- | ate oven) (350) for about one-half | hour or until the custard is set and | a knife inserted comes out glean. Meat Balls Are Quickies For a quick supper, that can be stretched to feed an extra mouth or two, try small meat balls in good rich gravy (canned items, both), seasoned with monosodium glutamate, topped with dump t neglect putting ; sweetness. color, its tangy | It's the unusual Jam on your fruit room up some green tomato jam this year. There's |shelf, You'll like the speed with which it’s made. nothing quite like its rich green vv a. yy" Green Tomatoes Made Into Unusual, Tangy Jam Backyard gardeners are always amazed at the bounty of just a few tomato plants. In early summer when we set out the little plants, a dozen or so seem hardly enough to keep our table supplied. But now, we see tall, healthy vines, heavy with produce—and so we must look for a, variety of ways to prepare tomatoes, raw. and cooked. Whether you’re an old-timer at preserving or a novice, here’s one recipe you mustn’t ove~look. It uses green tomatoes to make a delicious jam. You'll be smart to put up a sup- ply—it makes the perfect gift) you so often need to bring a hostess. to full rolling boil. Bois hard one minute, stirring constantly. Re- move from heat and at once stir in liquid pectin. Then stir and skim by turns for five minutes to cool slightly to prevent floating fruit. Ladle quickly into glasses. Cover at once with one-eighth inch hot paraffin. Makes about 11 medium glasses. Smooth Cheese Mix Spread on Oranges This is an jattractive salad that Should appeal to young and old alike. Let the young cook try her give as a prize, or for, any on® of the dozens of occasions when an unusual gift is in order. Green Tomato Jam 134 lbs. green tomatoes Juice of 4 lemons (' cup) Tle cups sugar 1 bottle liquid fruit pectin Tear off four squares of waxed paper. Stack together and turn up edges. Quarter tomatoes and chop. Measure 3 cups chopped tomatoes lings. For flavor and color stir in chopped watercress or parsley before adding the milk. into a large saucepan. Add lemon juice and sugar. Mix well. Place over high heat and bring tastes better when it’s a crackers— Club Crackers by Hekman! There’s a fresh NEW flavor... rich ’n , that’s an t! There’s a smart W shape adventure in eating enjoymen +. -/an inviting “‘eo-bi every eating occasion. ’s ”? size that adds a festive flavor to © OLEOMARGAR FLAVOR! You will detect Buz Bonnet’s flavor superiority af once! Every delicious pound has the same delicate, sunny-sweet taste. And BLUE Bonnet Margarine makes other foods taste better—bread, hot rolls, vege- tables, your own favorite recipes! It’s no wonder that BLUE BONNET Margarine appears so often on the best-set tables in America! } 2 & F a = oe INE} NUTRITION! BLuz Bonwer contains both Vitamin A and Vitamin D~ which is not true of most other brands of margarine. When you serve BLUE BONNET to hed family, you enjoy the peace of mind that comes from knowing that no other spread for bread—high-priced or low-priced— ig richer in year-round Vitamin A and Vitamin D! a 4, wants t Ceatat, Wotes a seivitn «4 Vay ys VW SI At ‘ aad | \ 9 9 E 10: at any store for " TOWARD COST OF 1 LB, OF Blue Bonnet Margarine GROCER: This coupon will be redeemed by your Standard Brands representative for 10¢ plus the e/ po pin gw een y Corlagiameed ep pe eros any Federal Any other oN. AN AT ECONOMY! Every fuxury pound of Buue Bonner Margarine costs less than half as much as the high-pri for bread! So why wait? Use the coupon below to try BLUE BONNET and save money, too. Once you try it, you’re sure to join the women who demand the best. Buy BLue Bonnet and be sure of “all three’’— flavor, nutrition, ¢conomy! BLUE BONNET IS AMERICA’S ONLY LUXURY SPREAD AT A MARGARINE PRICE! ODI ‘ ‘ | ew Aw! , te”, VV v/s Wavwavavuy —_— es ae ee aw == as « that features flavor! isp ’n flaky . . . kept fresh as can be by Hekman’s famous triple-pack cellophane wrappers. . ’s a real cracker treat in store for you and your family if you've yet to taste Club Crackers by He ‘Hekman Biscuit Company a delicate NEW texture... ekman—the cracker . , «?¢ ‘ x ie BAR é . 2. yf A Bons, ¢ - oe Ee is Ps Grand Rapids Detroit Telede hand at thege fancy orange and jcream cheese, vitamin-packed | Salads. | Orange Cheese Ring Salad | 6 naval oranges | Two “| ounce packages cream cheese 4 cup mayonnaise | 1 cup finely chopped nuts Lettuce = Peel oranges and cut in thirds |crosswise, Mash cream cheese | with a fork. Blend in mayonnaise j and chopped nuts. Season with salt, | Spread cream cheese mixture be- tween thirds of oranges and put together to form whole oranges. Place on lettuce leaves. Serve with additional mayonnaise, if desired. Yield: Six servings. Sp |Vegetable Bin =| Yields -Material ~ | for Centerpiece ety NEW YORK (INS)—A cabbage can do as well as an orchid in table decoration. It doesn’t take money — just With & Complement ixssiss ee we ne for everything you serve! Snacks, soups, salads, ntrees and desserts ... everything | ted with the grand NEW taste in i table that plush “eating out’ at- mosphere. The well-set table needs only an interesting eye-catcher to make mealtimes more pleasant. A small growing plant is always a good centerpiece. So is a colorful combination of vegetables—tomatoes and cabbage, green pea pods and carrots—or radishes. You can even use the salad ingredients as a centerpiece and make the salad at the table. Flowers undoubtedly add color to a table, but some highly-scented flowers don’t mix well with the odor of hamburger and onions. Others are apt to set people sneez- ing. , Brush sliced bananas, apples, pears, peaches, grapes with canned or -frozen lemon juice—especially if they have to stand in refrigera- tor 'a while before serving. Keeps their color and improves flavor. EVERYBOOYS WRITING AOU MEW a JUST MIX WITH Se. COLD miLEt “2 WO POT oy. TO WASH! | i ee, | pal %: , “ INSTANT Pudding TEXTURE - EASY DIGESTION { Pec coemED— we STARCH TASTE—Ne OOROERT MRR HOWDY DOODY’S FAVORITE © KAGRAN 4 ‘in vegetable or meat soups, in any a Beef Supplies Now Plentiful Plentiful supplies of: beef are coming to market. This is wonder- ful news for homemakers. Your choice is wide for there are more than thirty different cuts in all. For this season a porch buffet that features a tasty beef loaf will make a hit with your family and friends.| And ground beef is one of the ‘best buys in your market to- day. Team the loaf with big plump tomatoes filled with cottage cheese’ or with potato salad and dusted with paprika. Deviled eggs | can be the garnish for your platter or wooden tray. For a simple change in your | beef loaf, mold half the beef mix- ture in the! bottom of the loaf pan. | Then place hard-cooked eggs or) pickles {n an even row down the! middle: of the pan. Cover with the | remainder ‘of the beef mixture. | When it’s baked, each serving reveals a slice of egg or pickle. Remember in roasting a beef loaf the same rules apply as when roasting a. standing rib of beet. Slow cooking is a must, Set your oven regulator at 300 degrees F. and keép it at this constant tem- perature. Here's aitempting loaf to serve for your buffet Beef Loaf T's pounds’ ground beef 6 crackers 2 tablespoohs milk 1 tablespoon lemon juice 2 teaspoons salt 14 teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons chopped onion } Roll crackers for crumbs. Com- bine al] ingredients and mix well. It's ¢asy. to make every ground beef loaf different. Here. is the basic seasoning: for Pack the mixture into a greased | 5x9inch loaf pan and bake in a slow oven (300 degrees F.) for 1%4/ hours. Serve hot or cold. Eight to 10 servings: spoon salt ‘and % teaspoon of pep- eache pound of ground beef: 1 tea- per. Alhambra Salad Will Give Meal Air of Festivity Frozén salads give meals a party air; yet they are simple to prepare ard not costly, either. | They may be made a day or two ahead of. serving time, which happily’ avoids last-minute con- fusion. ; | Alham#®ra; Frozen Salad is made with evaporated milk, thus re- ducing ¢ost and calories. How- ever, thejingredient that gives the final stafip of eating enjoyment is the dessert wine which subtly en- hances the flavor of the salad. Use whichever dessert wine you | like best—Port, Muscatel, Tokay, Angelica or Sweet Sherry. Which- ever your choice, you'll be de- lighted With the results. Alhambra Frozen Salad “% cup evaporated milk 2 tablespoons granulated sugar ‘4, cup mayonniase % teagpton salt 1 teaspoon lemon jfuic 1% cup ‘canhed Bo sol tidbits, drained 1 cup, drained 1 cup di¢ed banana “% cup Musc&tel, Port or other dessert | canhed cling peach slices, Chill milk) in freezing compart- ment of refrigerator until crystals | begin to. form. Beat until stiff. Add remainihg ingredients. | Pour into refrigerator tray and | freeze. Serve on lettuce or other | salad gréens. Serves six to eight. | Suggestions for Using Everyday Leftovers Here are a few quick suggestions | for using common leftover foods. | Ground meats — in spaghetti | sauce, chili’ con carne, Spanish | rice; tongue—in chef's salad; lamb ; —in a pot ple topped with baking | powder biscuits; ham—with maca- | roni and chéese, with other meats | added for a’ meat loaf; liver—for canapes, ground of course to make a paste; turkey or chicken—for pot pies, sandwiches, cold cuts; vege- tables, raw or cooked—for salads, casserole dish; soups—for sauces and gravies; egg yolks—in custards, “gold cake or to enrich any sauce; bread and rolls—for bread crumbs, puddings, split and toasted, or | French toast, So Many ‘Ways to Use That Big Canned Ham! For family! use, there’s no need | to heat a canned ham all at one| time. You can cut it in two and use one part: for heating and glaz-| ing. The other piece you can cut | into slices to fry with the breakfast | eggs, or use in sandwiches or on a) platter of cold cuts. The nice thing about leftover | | ' canned is that it can be sliced | into big; slices right down to the very: end. Tuna jn Farina Ring Looking for a new and different ‘main dish sérving for luncheon or supper! . Serve creamed tuna with in a ring of farina. |} This is a good way to use extra hot ceregl from your morning meal — and ih a way that doesn’t neces- sarily tab it as a leftover dish. itato) has been found in the Ecua-|SuUPPer table. Drain fragrant pine- |heated. Serve hot with waffles. | | $tarchy diet. The potato originated THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 FORTY-ONE _ Pancakes Please Men. Please the men in the family with these hearty pancakes. (They also help fill out a light meal.) Grate or mash a No. 2 can of drained white potatoes. Combine with a grated onion, one-third cup flour, one-fourth cup grated cheese, | greased griddle or skillet. Brown two eggs and 2 milk. Season to taste with salt and pep- per; drop by spoonfuls on a hot on both sides. ~ Cheese waffles make a hearty lunch or supper dish topped with creamed fish, meat, or vegetables. Chiffonade Dressing? — Wonder what you're going to ret ‘over your lettuce when you order Chiffonade with it? Well, usually it’s ch dressirig to which chopped hard-cooked egg. green pepper, pickled beet and onion have been added. | Which will add a bit of zest to Covers Waffles. | Fill hollow with ice cream or va- | eggs in a cream sauce and serve Creamed Ham and Eggs 3 tablespoons prepared mustard THE PONTIAC PRESS, C eq H | Crecmy Dessert ream am | For a ‘‘cupcake ice cream cone’’ | simple dessert standbys, cut out the | top of a cupcake with a spoon. | You'll get a cone-shaped piece. Here’s a good suggestion for an ;nilla Pudding; top with cake cone. autumn lunch dish. Use the last of | — the baked ham, add hard-cooked it all on hot waffles. As a time- saver, use the convenient frozen waffles if desired. 6. tablespoons butter 6 tablespoons flour 1, teaspoon salt 3,cups homogenised mi'k 2 cups cooked ham, cubed | 4 hard-cooked eggs, sliced said Melt butter over low heat. Add BUFFET BEEF LOAF ~ Slices of moist beef loaf make a grand flour and salt; stir until well choice for a buffet supper. With abundant supplies of beef coming | blended. Stir in mustard. Remove | 'to market, you'll find ground beef an especially good buy, Here the | from heat. loaf is teamed with tomato cups of cottage cheese and deviled eggs. | Gradually stir in milk; return to err Near &! man Lake Ross | heat and cook, stirring constant- | | Yellow Potato in Andes. | With Hearts of Gold |ly, until mixture thickens and is/ |} smooth. Add ham and eggs. Full of Nutritive Value Meat balls with hearts of gold) Cook five minutes longer or un-| A’ yellow potato (not a sweet po-|#"e & flavorful innovation for the ti] ham and eggs are thoroughly | Club or Sirloin or Shank- End of |dorean Andes which contains more | @PPle tidbits and form the meat) Serves six to eight. nutritive value |than any tato | mixture into balls around each sceviclaty' kacun nen ba nies juicy piece of fruit. Brown in hot Fruit of Two Colors Vin esty 50 ° n | Shortening as usual, then add a can the Indians living in this region | | of itligicn bouillon or consomme Makes Pretty Dessert have subsisted largely on potatoes | land simmer for about 30 minutes; Looking for a colorful and re: and corn, and the high nutrition longer. Thicken drippings left for freshing dessert? Try this easy gravy is desired and serve with combination. Place a scoop of |yalue jof the variety of potatoes | - codies. | vanilla ice cream in a sherbet dish they eat has probably accounted | . ‘or pairfait glass. Next add a gen- LARGE BOLOGNA RING BOLOGNA or HAMBURG Elberta OO Last Call for . ee 4) Get ‘em canned now! Prune Plums ole $928 V2 bu. Golden-Ripe Bananas . .” 10° Bulk Vinegar * 39° al 5 5c Cider. ICE-COLD SWEET CIDER by gallon or glass! for their fine health in spite of the | Try Zucchini Snacks jcrous spoonful or two of defrosted | frozen peaches. Add another scoop | For your next party try this of ice cream and top with a gen- SS | crispy, light-as-a-feather new hors erous helping of defrosted frozen Fruit Flavor on Pork d’oeuvre idea—fried fresh zucchini | raspberries. It’s glamorous, won- | slices, Wash zucchini and cut into 'derfully fresh flavored, and oh so Fruit flavors are particularly| paper thin slices. Dip in milk and! easy good if combination with pork. For | lightly into flour. Fry in Hot deep | instance, braise pork chops with| fat until golden brown. Drain on! Hot rice pudding with cream for apricots. Place a canned apricot) brown paper and top with a good | dinner, say on a Monday? Then half on each and use with syrup | sprinkle of salt, pepper and paprika | by all means chilled rice pudding from the fruit as the cooking! mixed together in a shaker. Serve } with strawberry sauce along about liquid. | them piping hot, Wednesday. in the. Andes. Green Beans Irish Potatoes Peas Tomatoes CANNED GOODS SALE! 2=29 Make Manning’s Your Party Beer Wine “One-Stop” Market! Mixers Foods All Canning Needs FREE, EASY PARKING 1 Days-A-Week Our Own Strictly Fresh Made Ground Beef aod Our Own Fresh Dressed Well-Trimmed mat 99 STEAK Hart Brand ; 69. SLICED OEEZER' i | PEACHES es yi Z ns PECIAL j ty J i Can Choice Young Steers we. LOINS ow AQ | These cut into. Sirloin, T-Bone, ce house and Ground Beef, average weight 40-70 pounds. anwel House COFFEE i Everyday Low Prices at THREE SISTERS | MARKET “608 W. Huron St. OPEN SUNDAY SUPER MARKET + Second Great Week-Long Savings Event Another portion of our herd is ready to be butchered. These have been raised on careful new feeding methods that bring them to the peak of maturity for eating. These give you more tender, greater flavor and finer textured meat. . needs this week at our store. . buy your ha) ROUND BONE WHOLE RUMP BLADE STANDING RIB For Extra-Flevor, for Tender Geodnese-.- Our Own Home Dressed Beef ROAST Our Own Home-Made Sausage Products— All Grade No. oe t epecren LEAN SHANKLESS j PORK ROAST “/.y Franks ..* 39° Bologna.» 39 Lb.’ Pac 33 oO DEMING S RECIPE Choice, Hend-Picked gL NAY BEANS....2 -ti. «as SALMON | Base” manage. Pay 5 sa | limit quantities OPEN MON.-TUES.-WED, .. 9 to 6 THURS.-FRI-SAT, .........9t09 SUNDAY ...........,....9to5> Lux or Camay Reg. Ber 5° Deming’s Recipe Pink TOILET SOAP | SALMON Toll 1 ib. Can 39° LAKESIDE PAC KING HOUSE 155 LADD ROAD WALLED, LAKE ~*~ tly _a Dlthdebh beh TPOLEOERGDOGDEGDECURODEAACGE rc iisesLeheheeedsoseseneetereteeretecterretereerecressesser rests a { __FORTY-TWO This Soup Is Sturdy |Grated Cheese Topping joe ees ere ee i nl For an extra-rich soup, combine| Grafed Cheddar or American) 1 can each! of tondensed cream of | cheese and golden pineapple makes} Carefully made white sauce mushroom ‘and! beef soups. Stir in| a colorful, hearty salad. For each| shouldn’t lump, but if you haven't 1 can of water or milk. This makes serving, arrange two pineapple | stirred it carefully and thoroughly a meaty soup that is sturdy eating.| slices or six or seven pineapple| over low heat and it does, just Serve it. with toasted crackers|chunks on a bed of salad greens. put it through a fine strainer and » THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 . | Here’s a delicious accompani- | Ever Broil Pineapple? F FI . mths ‘Tags Florentine i | ment to broiled chicken and curried | | ae | - 4 \rice. Brush pineapple slices with | Fine for Friday 9 | butter or margarine, sprinkle with | Friday menus can be highly ap- pealing when they are built around | Spread with cheese. _|Then top with a feathery mound | reheat. Our CLOROX-clean linens look -lovelier...and protect health, too! tetet yes Rw |sugar, and heat under the broiler | as the chicken is getting done. | a main dish such as this imagina- /§ | tive version of Eggs Florentine. Here the usual mellow cheese sauce, which blankéts the eggs | bedded in chopped spinach, has |= | been considerably and irresistibly | perked up. A can of tomato paste | gives a ruddy look and extra zest | to the rich’ smooth cheese sauce. And for further zip, a wee bit of Worcestershire sauce and a few drops of tabasco are stirred in. |; Good companions for this savory | RE and spinach dish are Harvard || | beets and buttered carrots. : Savory Eggs Florentine 2 i4-ounce packages frozen chopped spinach 143 cups evaporated milk (1 tall can) % pound processed Cheddar cheese, cut in small pieces 4g teaspoon worcestershire sauce 3 or 4 drops tabasco 1 can tomato paste (6 ozs.) 2 cups soft bread crumbs mixed with 2 tablespoons butter, melted | Cook spinach, then drain well. | Save spinach liquid for use in | soup or gravy. Turn hot spinach ‘into buttered baking pan 6x10x2 | inches and spread evenly. Mark off spinach bed FRES| crunchy vpgetables are as nutritious | licious. They will brighten any table and spark six | | | equal sections. Make a depression | in j in center of each section deep | |} enough to hold a raw egg. Break | Crunchy Raw |raw eggs, one at a time into a) ° | cup, and slip an egg into each de- | B rl pression. Sprinkle eggs lightly with | salt. } | Heat milk and cheese over boiling water until cheese is just melted, stirring frequenfly. Stir in Worcestershire sauce, tabasco | and tomato paste, blending |etable gamiishes to go along with your meals. With very litte effort you can |turn such bright crunchy vege- | ltables as ¢arrots, cucumbers, rad- | .,|ishes and’celery into all sorts of | until) thoroughly. Ladle hot sauce over eggs and spinach, Top with buttered crumbs. Bake in moderate oven (375) | attractive | garnishes. Their inti- | | ‘ Mma es mens | . . 1 | crumbs are lightly browned, about | - | shares and colors will bright. | | 30 minutes. Makes six servings. Sn your Thole table. & | Npte: Three cups cooked or eanned spinach, well drained, may be psed in place af cooked frozen chopped spinach. Cut spinach fine The family will find a new | treat in fresh vegetables and by eating them raw they'll gét the most out) of the vegetables’ vak - Yes, Clorox not only makes linens snowy-white... by removing dinginess, stains, even scorch and mildew. ..it makes linens hygienically clean as well, safer for family health. No other hame laundering product equals Clorox in germ-killing efficiency! nove tan white tee ’ | it makes them samy, too! Clorox deodorizes, too, leaves cottons and linens fresh, clean smelling. ..whether dried indoors or out. And Clorox, a liquid, con- tains no gritty particles to damage wash and washer. It’s extra gentle, free from caustic, made by a patented formula ex- clusive with Clorox. uable miperal and vitamin con- | with scissors. tents. A Clorox-clean bathroom is an important safeguard to health! , oa a mE eS Used in routine cleaning, Clorox goes beyond visible cleanliness. Besides removing stains, it de- odorizes and disinfects . .. providing @ type of disinfection recommended by hundreds of public health departments. And too, Clorox is non-poison- ous. Let the label show you the many ways Clorox, America’s favorite, can help you. } | 2. Bright fast colors... Clorox $ removes dulling film res’ GROUND Quaity BEEF 29 CASH MARKET 78 N. SAGINAW TENDER-BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST Meaty-Beef SHORT RIBS 33: Lean-Blade Cut PORK CHOPS 39%. _ |Pots and ¢ut into very thin slices ‘Good for Everyone |lengthwise) with vegetable parer. | Roll each |slice up tightly and fas- Here is a-recipe for a dessert | ten with toothpicks. Chill in bowl that is delicious. It is not to be |of crushed. ice several hours 9r | confused with ordinary prune whip; | overnight. Remove toothpicks ‘| family, regardless of age. outside of washed cucumbers by | Prune-Apple Whip 2 ecg whites B f C R l| '4) teaspoon salt a — i : Beef-Corn Roll-ups "s} eup junior applesauce or junior | ® s F | Ts Tedbpoonas Wreceh epncentrated lemon Tasty Picnic are | fuic@ of 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice | unti} yery stiff; Add|strained prunes | are gone, | it is pleasant to stand | and) junior applesauce. near an Qpen fire, and the fogd | Beat until well} blended. Add | tastes extra good in the crisp ait, | ‘lempn) juice. Serve in chilled sher-| Serve hamburger corn roll-ups| wants his|meat done. Better plan Serves four. for seconds. i ° Hamburger Corn Roll-ups For Bread Variety 4 ears of corn, husked If}you want to be a lavish host- ess land economical at the same Preshiy ound sepper Place ears of corn on separate | pieces of! aluminum foil. Divide of bread (bought at your local | ‘‘day-cid’’ bread source) in mixed | loaves, Then store in your freezer.| Season corn and ground chu¢k | The} result will be variety at each | with salt, garlic salt and pepper. Roll corn jand meat tightly in foil and place in hot coals. ter cooked hamburger, cook 25-30 minutes. Serves four. Wipe Pastry Bag Dry After Each Laundering ef you in Many, many ways. It's wonderful jfor fluting mashed po- tatoes, decorating cakes, or shap- ing French doughnuts. soapy pe rinse with clear wa- ter, and dry. If you're storing it for any {length of time, sprinkle ‘cornstarch! between the folds of Prune-Apple Whip | CARROT CURLS: Scrub car- it tastes much richer. It should be | Slices will remain cufied. good for all the members of the} CUCUMBER SCALLOPS: Scre} 3 Cap sugar a| cup strained prunes Beat egg whites yntil foamy. Add| These clear, cool fall days ate | salt} ahd sugar gradually, beating | just right|for a picnic. The bugs | | bet glasses and garnish with sliv-|&S your main dish. Let each one | red dirmends or wuts if desired. fix his own and decide how he| 1 pound beef chuck Salt time, | freezer home _ economists Suggest repackaging several kinds | ground chuck into four parts and shape intg oblong rolls. meal, and no stale bread. . For rare hamburger, the rolls should cook 15-20 minutes; for bet- Take care of your rubber-lined pastry bag — and it will take care But to rve it you should wash it r every use with warm | rubber to keep them from sticking. .: zi. _ BE WISE! ECONOMIZE! SHOP T Nature’s Gold: Carrots HERE AND SAVE!! BAZLEY BETTER TRIM SIRLOIN, ROUND or SWISS TEAKS “Best Cuts Not all gold in this country is stored away down in Ft. Knox. Nature's ‘|gold,”’ the crisp, color- ful fresh is ours for the | Carrots probably our most im- None portant v ble source of vita- min A use of the large quanti- e r ties . It amounts to about Higher’ | 1.9 per person every year. | Eat them jraw, like a rabbit, or serve cooked, but just be For Stuffing BREAST Choice Rump Cut ROAST 39% BAZLEY’S NATIVE SNO-WHITE VEAL SALE!! sure you ¢at lots of them! Loin Cut CHOPS 39%. Meaty, Leg ROAST - and your soap make} a good team. They! work ' better together. pcm MADE BY MAKERS OF Sani-Flush ad 4 i ghten Up Dinner Table How to |please families and in-;running tines of a fork down the! luncheon meat with thin orange | J . |fluence appetities. Try fixing a!cucumber| lengthwise. Slire thin | wie . ‘ 4 colorful tay of crisp, fresh veg-| and crisp it on ice. | pieces may also be slit from both | ends, leaving a half-inch of uncut | attached blade automatically cuts eS te H VEGETABLE GARNISHES — Colorful, | appetites. They're good nibble food for impatient as they are de- | members of the family. + ? Thrifty Meal Is Elegant Here’s proof that a budget-mind- ed dinner can still look and taste elegant. Garnish a loaf of canned Vegetables Pease fastened to the loaf with whole cloves. Combine one-fourth . ry P | cup brown sugar, 2. teaspoons RADISH ROSES: Trim stem | orange juice and 1 tablespoon pre- —_- a oe | pared mustard; spread over loaf, With tip of sharp knife, cut out- | (375) . . |Bake in a moderate oven oad sewed qtem. ta four be ave about 3) minutes until loaf is sections to form petals. Chill on heated through and glazed. ice to curl. CELERY FRILLS: Cut cleaned stalks of celery into 2 or inch pieces, Cuf into thin strips length- wise—but don't cut quite all the way through. Instead of this, the portion in the middle. Chill” on crushed i¢e until they curl, Carrots may also be treated in both these ways RADISH FANS: Trim off root | end and leave l-inch steam, as} with radish roses. Starting at one | side, cut thin slices: toward the stem end, but not cutting all the way through. Chill on crushed ice to make the fans open. CARROT SPIRALS: These novel garnishes are best made The rich, tangy fle vor turns everyday foods into nutritious “Oriental” treats! Adds appetizing zest to Chop Suey, Chow Mein, meats, fish, chicken, gravies, with a little gadget called a spiral hoked botas, ete. slicer, which may be purchased Oriental ol bly ae very inexpensively in most house. Oriental Show-You Co, wares departments. Columbie City, Ind. It consists of a screw and a blade. You insert the screw in the top of a carrot, cucumber or large radish and as you turn it, the SHOW-YOU- SAUCE the spiral slices. The Original Smitty's Open Air Market SMITTY’S OPEN AIR MKT. Lapeer Rd., Next to Orion Twp Hall (on M-24) Just at the Edge of Lake Orion Don’t delay any longer, # you intend te can. Do it new. Come to Smitty's fer your canning fruits and vegetables. | Macintosh or Wealthy APPLES $2 Chippewa Finest Cooking POTATOES $39 Bartlett Canning PEARS ae oy Atg T Full Bushel | New Cabbage, Dry \ or Mixed Squash YOUR CHOICE 50-Lb. Bag Meats - Fruits - Vegetables POTATOES BOLOGNA eas La Lb. t Michigan = Qc 39 ieaetl lees Tennessee Sausage (Swan... TLE Calitornia IMPORTED Oranges, doz. .. .39c . Cider, gal. .....73c|] _SEER- WINE © Genuine Pinconning @ © imported Blew Cheese Y2 Gal. Milk | party Time Foods va Lh Everything te make Thovo| ‘Chen * 38¢ Relishes, Varieties of | . end come pete Canty: Drinks, @ CHARCOAL @ ICE DAVIS 3597 West Huron on M-59, West of Elixebeth @ BEER @ WINE @ EASY P THE PON To “barbecue” originally meant Hot Conned Apole: Sauce ast a whole anima: over a. -| to roas Bd of cudis taid in a vit in the Grand for Breakfast - ground» Now it means baking, | There’s| nothing to equal a. hot Simmering} or broiling! any kind of 'and substantial breakfast to fortify meat, poultry, and fish in a spicy the children and man of the house sauce. |. against the winds and cold as they ‘start! for’ $chool and fot work. For example, | top a hearty cooked cereal with. heated canned apple sauce, dust with brown sugar and serve with plenty of cream. A dish to stick to their ‘ribs! Also, a pancakes-and-sausage breakfast provides plenty of ‘‘gét up and go” for the family. And try heated canned apple Sauce as the jtopping. for the pancakes. _| Tastes wonderfia! — goes well with | the sausages. You know the af) finity) of apples and pork for ea¢h other! French Toast Variation To(give French toast a new twist, make a sandwich of bread and jellied cranberry sauce, dip the sandwich jin batter, and brown in butter or margarine in a skillet, Serve. with Canadian bacon for lunch. aa +: WHILE SHOPPING THIS WEEK-END Relax and Dine at HOMADE Pontiac's Finest Cafeteria | Rich Cream Sauces Lend | This Dessert Can Go and Lunch Counter. CHEF’S SPECIAL DAILY S| Zest to Vegetable Dishes | vo car mate tis stamorous Vegetables in a |variety appear until lightly browned and tender.! | | n of Quality Ig Butter—79c. Special every Wednesday and Thursday 4:30 to 7:45 P. M.—Roast Young Tur- key with Cranberry Sauce, Choice of Potatoes, Salad or Vegetable, Roll and The $ ~~ — BAKERY DEPARTMENT || > Salt Rising Bread ...,..,. If. 22¢ || Butter Top Bread ......|. .1f. 18¢ || Large Glazed Donuts ......6/28¢ || > - e ‘Date Oatmeal Snacks ...... 6/28c {| S.. Hi teatle s quarts of bentas mux tor | 1 Pecan Syrup Rolls ........ 6/33¢ |i ID French Crullers = Ice Box Cookies ...... .. doz. 45¢ |] 2 < Chocolate Cream Rolls ... .ea. 45c 4 | Wedding—-Birthday—Party Cakes Made’ to Order | Fruit Punch Made to Order—Bowls and Cups for Rental. We Do Catering—Call FE 2-6242. ce CELERY-CHEESE SAUCE — Add variation (and | tables and let each person chogse his own combina- extra nutrition to vegetables at the family dinner | tion before ladling the rich sauce over’ them. | table with cream sauces. Serve a number of vege- Here are two sauce recipes — Economical nontat @ry milk is | so nutritious and versatile. It as little as 9 cents a quart. It dan be used for drinking. with cereals, in most recipes which call heat for milk and it will even whip. stir until well blended | Nonfat dry milk is a rich source | from heat. of protein, calcium, riboflavin and lactoge. | Hefe are our two sauce recipes: Celery-Cheese Sance 3 tablespoons butter ty ¢up chopped celery 3 tablespoons flour I'g;cups liquified nonfat dry milk } 1,“teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 44 tb. sharp process cheese, cut tp cubes ——E—————e —— Hey are FOOD VALUES THAT SAVE YOU MONEY! Here are 7 DAYS OF LOW PRICES . . , for Nick’s low prices are effective everyday of the week, Thursday to Wednesday. FRESH HAM ROAST New Maid, Yellow Oleomargerine 17 Save On This item, Too! | Chase & Sanborn End Cut PORK 49; CHOopS =. Defiance Brand c Instant Coffee 39 (2 oz, Jar ; } Pillsbury | FLOUR «€©6s 3 4 89 25 ib. Beg .|,.|... Demonstration im cur Store Fri. and Sat. PET Powdered Milk, 13-0. pkg. 31¢e. (Makes 4 quarts of milk.) Regular » on the family dinner table through-| Stir in flour. Remove from heat. || | out the year, whether fresh, canned | /or quick frozen, and for a special meny attraction serve these foods with jinteresting cream sauces. Gradually add liquefied nonfat dry milk and Worcestershire sauce;} stir until well blended. Return to}! heat and cook, stirring constantly,|| over low héat until mi celery-cheese and pimiento—which | Smooth and thickened. give | variation to the family’s | favorite vegetables. Both recipes|Serve with cooked ve feature liquefied’ nonfat dry milk. | Makes one cup. Add cheese; stir until Pimiento Sauce 2 tablespoona butter 2 tablespoons flour % teaspoon fait Dash of pepper l cup liquified nonfat dry 2 tablespoons chopped pimiento Melt butter in saucepan Add flour, salt and Gradually stir in liquefied non; \fat dr uk a 2 rm; 4. \ to need ae marie ue * stantly| chicken on foast squares. Cover | [ - "| with rich mushroom gravy; make | over low heat until mixtu ens. Serve with fish, veget chicken. Makes one cup. TIAC PRESS. T H fF URSDAY, SEPTEMB | ER 24, 1953 _ | ce FORTY-THREE Last Period for POWs —_| indian troops in the demilitarized | Bandit Flees as Jeweler Named ‘Freepatriate? | zone, have said they do not wish to} | return to their homelands. | |Orders Him to Shoot MUNSAN —The Allied Com- = VAN NUYS, Calif. “Go mand} today officially named the} I — aa itd final phase of the prisoner of war) Occupy Newest Rooms ahead and shot.’ jeweler Harry exchange Operation Freepatriate.| LUDINGTON uw — Some (150; Sosin calmly told a gunman who It Was so named to describe the| eighth graders began moving this had ordered him to the rear of his forthcpming 90-day period in which| week into the rooms that haye|store on the, threat of shooting explayations will be given prison-| been completed in Ludington’s finst| him in the face yesterday. ers ta try to coax them to return! new school building since 1905. The} The intruder looked perplexed home; remainder of the $650,000 structure | for a moment, |then ran out to a (hea al ret now in custody of! will be finished by Nov. 15. waiting auto and fied. a ee = —— re s The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC Pontiac’s Oldest and Largest Exclusive Appliance Dealer! , ' Once More This $60.00 Savings! Hamilton Deluxe Automatic ELECTRIC DRYER Formerly 259.95 Our Sale Price |in Freezer Days Ahead dessert several days before you are having company. Prepare a graham cracker crust and press it | against the sides and bottom of a || pie plate. Chill the crust for two xture is spreading consistency. Sprinkle the top with finely i|}crushed graham cracker crumbs getables.|| ond store in the freezer compart- i}ment of your refrigerator. Thaw a || package of frozen| strawberries j and serve asia sauce with the ice- cream pie. melted.) ih over eel Rich Mushroom Gravy pepper: Tops Unusual Sandwich Remove}! Here is an/idea far a meal that | satisfies—Chi¢ken and Spiced Ham au Gratin. Place slices of spiced ham and milk re UCR from condensed soup or add || sauteed mushrooms to gravy left ables or trom Sunday's chicken. Sprinkle \|sandwich generously: with grated Making chicken pie? Season the MeJt butter in saucepan. Add gravy with a dash of curry powden| Serve with a Waldorf salad and lery and cook over low heat,! for an interesting taste-change. | a hot beverage. eee — Michigan U.S. No. 1 Size Bar —_ LUX Toilet Soap Bond, Tasty, Wonder, Silver Cup, Shafer BREAD cheese, Brown under broiler until cheese melts. 1% Ib. | Cc Leef |. PET MILK or Carnation Milk Your Choice TALL CANS Beechnut BABY FOODS 3 ww, 29° 3 A. 43° TEA-BAGS 16 Ten-Bogs for 64 TEA BAGS \¢whenyoubyy «so 48 Tea-Bogs ot ee 49° ' or three hours, then {ill with straw- | ice cream | softened to - ee — | PRICE INCLUDES WIRING ' on Detroit Edison Lines No other appliance you can buy saves so much work. Hamilton saves line hanging, heavy lifting, stair climbing, stooping and stretching. It even saves hours of ironing time because FLUFF-DRIED \§ clpthes come out almost wrinkle-free. So |many things can be 99 nays SAME AS CASH OR LONG EASY TERMS folded and put away without ironing. Has if wbnderful SUN-E-DAY SEKEEPING Lamp and look-in door. Good HOU aie now to. save $60.00! of PONTIAC Open Daily 9 to 5:30—Friday 9 to 9 51 W. Huron St. | Phone FE 4-1555 | | | | | i ‘MALING SHOES So if she were wearing’ MALINGS ROUND-TOWN - WALKERS Ever come home from shoppmg as beat as the gal in the illustration? Honey, what you need is | a pair of Maling’s Round-Town Walkers! They're the wonder shoes that let you finish aie shopping (or, fot that matter, dancing or working) as fresh as when you started out! | And in such sumptuous style, too! Now, aren't they worth investigating? You bet your life! And today’s the day to investigate—at Maling's! _ + am en en ee ee rn en Heavenly Comfort— And Only ~~ | A — Black or Brown t : smooth leather ‘ svede and smooth leofher ‘ | CaBlock suede v, a ei - Bi [ Cin iin ie el ei a iia ee ge —_ ? aa — a —_— bas Eat | THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 i FORTY-FOUR | | | ‘ use of hats, they admit sadly| A| on pupil personnel problems of non- : and better carriages — will | ame | bd. Hats a Sad Sto | oc te Br Truants Get Break mel problems of non | Israel Railway Plans | 40, tne public away trom the | Ke’s Birthplace to Get | spokesman for the British felt hat | attendance and izes Ito Relieve Buses de to tt traina’ he said R ‘aq Water at Lost : 4 d t C | lf Off manufacturers’ federation said that | it { hog may be contributing causes | . 8, . unn g | 1952 was a: year “‘of catastrophé in W h N M h d of absenteeism. | TEL-AVIV (AP)—More than) . DENISON, Tex. u—The Denison | _ en 0 ap ‘** the history lof the hatting indus- | | EW MeInods | “Health problems, frustration| half of the bus passengers in| Police Artest Student house where President Eisenhower . * LONDON (R—Hatters in Great, try.” i NEW YORK \®—What has hap- due to continued failure in school } Israel now trayel standing, a Carrying iHis Homework was born will get running water us Ing Qal Britain are so desperate they have, Hatters admit they are fighting | pened to the Truant Officer? He | family troubles and lack of under-| Spokesman of the Ministry of j for the first time. | been manufacturing green bowlers. an uphill battle. Even bad weather | ; : standing between home and school | Communications told newsmen} LOUISVILLE. Ky. —-A 23-year-| The city council agreed to ex- | ‘ Colors are ofe answer to the| does not putihats on many of their . ra ay being yaaa by pro- | are all significant factors,"’ he add- | here when he outlined a new old larg ollege student, was tend a line from a hydrant in the | Famous Port Arises ffend away frp the use of hats| customers, they say. | sston y prained aye ac: | od | Five Year Railway Devélop-| arrested for} carrying around his| yard to the kitchen sink. This was From Rubble Left by Gy men. The men claim they are! + | (cording to Dr. Francis J. Daly, ment Plan. homework—@ razor, asked by women serving as hos- Selling lots of highly colored hats.| General Electric Co. scientists | Director, Division of Pupil|Person-| The history of the abrasive in-| While a large-scale import! Police said they took him off a| tesses of the home—now a show- | World War II Colors also are found in caps for, say copper and brass tubing fan! nel Services, New York Stdte Edu- | dustry 1s almost as ald as the his-| of buses would now be a rather | horse near ajriding academy after | place. Wear at the beach and on the golf} be bent without kinking if ithe | cation Department. ‘tory of mankind. The caveman/| expensive affair, scheduled im-|receiving reports he was riding The ladies hope some day a rest- WASHINGTON—Germany’s port @urse. * | lengths are filled with sand and| The old |‘police-policy’’| of en-| used abrasive materials to fashion provements in the country’s |recklessly and had fallen off the | room will be installed? The Eisen- | city of Hamburg has come alive = But even these sales have not| the end pinched so it will not run| forcement is on the way (out. he | weapons and tools, according to| railway system — including | animal. He gaid he had just pur-| hower birthplace plumbing is of | again| after citizens cleared 6,000 qGhecked the trend away from the: out, sa, :. The new approach is based | an abrasive corp. |more high-powered engines! chased the razor. the outside variety, adves|of fubble|and the kage i L of 3,000 vessels littering the har- cou PON Net tonnage of ships arriving in , ; the port nears the prewar level : | we AT ea GOOD LOOK | a Quality Bristles 4 Taste Regular 10¢ YOU'RE ALWAYS WELCOME A Take a of 20,000,000 tons annually. Virto- 3 Easy-Grip seta RE y Cc DY . ally all docks, warehouses, bridges, ; a Handle 4 = = Sf, al vour cranes-and derricks have been re- | wReg. 19° : ee d i 4 Shipbuilders are again besieged : MEDICINE with orders. Industrial production E Upholstery § 3 Cees 8° 156 - BRUSH uP 512 i R —$ yy. wins yyy rs — SAYE cy with this | is 6 per cent above the 1936 mark. One-sixth of Hamburg was lev- CABINET eled by bombers. Of 560,000 dwellings, 300,000 were de- ¢troyed. More than half have Yes, it's important to ‘take inventory’... been restored, and new homes DRUGS witha REPUTATION now and regularly. Be sure that your Medi- rise at the rate of 25,000 a year. § coupon TH U R S D AY, F R I D AY | S AT U R D AY Ss A L E cine Cabinet is stocked and reed for family Between 60,000 and '80,000 died pe pel Pepcateing i e cies. Be sure you have adequate sup- in the raids. An estimated 200,000 rz, (Limit 1) pam Limit Quantities 67 N. Saginaw St. Stal ct fredavecyiay, deuge ahdlareco td TE eS iad RE a } supplies on hand. Foresight now can forestall on activé duty, By 1945, the city’s ics, Seen Checsiate | worry later! ~ population had slumped to 700, HERSHEY | And remember always: before any sign of 000, but today it approaches its * 10¢ “KISSES” | eerious sickness can develop, see your Doctor, pre-war peak of 1,630,000. Ase b beh eeh OCC RET Abed Bats heh sb enwe wees sHamburg’s trade with East Ger- d , Poland, Romania, Hun DRUGS WITH A REPUTATION dary ah Coschouovabia' ken heen { j , cut off by the Iron Curtain, and { i] ; Northern TISSUE Olive Tablets “* 18° Absorbine Jr. = 76° LuxToilet Soap =. /° pate, 280 Pend bo 49° Foil-wrapped Sweet and plump!) the city is deprived of the central trading position it enjoyed in past centuries, Compensating for the lost com- Med. merce, Hamburg has expanded Le CLOROX IVORY _ | activity in its factories. The city is a center for oil refining, as well BLEACH SOAP as the tobacco industry. Other . ' manufactures include chemicals, ? 0 29: 3 ® 272° furniture, textiles and machinery. R R At its peak of foreign trade, (Limit 2) (Limit 3) about 1930, Hamburg had 60,000 The Crowning Tast % Mineral Oil At Walgreen's ana : Strowberrias! B A A N A C MOIST-TEX Cc workers manning its 36 miles of ; CHOCOLATE! | (25-FT. ~t | crowded .waterfront. It ranked 3 WHIPPED S LIT F with New York and London ; TOPPING! (Limit 2) among the world’s busiest ports. Hamburg is situated on several delta channels of the Elbe River, LOW PRICE HERE! i ee SSS ‘eso a ees ars <= luna —— — = _ . _ — = S . «- ee ae _ _ a as —— comes es ee Sew ean nn ee ee a Two dips of ice cream— CARTON F at the head of its narrow, T3-mile- you name. your flavors! @J OF 50 0 Cc Detergent long estuary to the North Sea. 7 c The ,harbor is tidal, without (Limit 2) R locks, and is reached by a buoyed channel which has a depth of 2944 feet at average low water. There are 16 basins with about 20 miles of docks, 19 miles of mooring space and 2% million square feet of sked space. Flowing through the heart of Hamburg, the Alster River splays Dr. West’ rors BRUSHY LOE MCC Durable Canvas 23:. Cleans Teeth Better! Campho-Lyptus Because It’s built right! Your Choice! $2.75 Value! -- se svacate © aes midst of the el an usiness districts. JAMBOREE of NASAL DROPS Shops, restaurants and shaded Containing Ephedrine Soothes nose & throat. !-o2. Relieves stuffy head. promenades fringe the inner lake- front. Behind them rise striking office buildings of modern design. Lake Alster’s further reaches are ringed by the city’s finest subur ban homes. The old section of Hamburg, ‘almost destroyed by fire in 1842 and later rebuilt, is laced by narrow canals, Small ‘taxi’ boats, piping toylike whistles, transport passengers. Barges carry goods direct to the back door of shops and warehouses. The waterways become mudflats, help you roll ALARM CLOCKS Guaranteed 40-hr. 1 98 POWDER Dentute Adhesive Darby, Corning or Exton 59 Ring. Special........ bristles. Attractive ivory or black cases. Ammoniated Get Quick Relief Four-Way Help! | Tooth Powder “Swing-A-Way"’ ANEFRIN 4-Way Cold when the tide is out. ' 100 abe a | Antihistamine TABLETS Leading attractions in Hamburg | GLEE PA Vuette Book 'n’Bed Hones EdgesEven Super-Absorbent! Tube 36 89° Box of 23° include St. Nicholas Church, whose | CLIP-ON Wall Knife BATH tablets 12 for.... 482-foot tower is one of Europe's c highest, he f 47: & 63 | LIGHT Sharpener TOWEL WALTHO GARGLE § 4Qe do rein 1% $1.98 89° ant 43° Washes bacteria away. 4-o2... Trosicaliv, 4h hamburger not shade!.... Value!... x4#0-in. A In four colors. Safe for fingers Modern shades. VICKS INHALER | 33° Fambere. it as Piso hon Carry ia puree or pocket. ... south Germans waiting in the port 4 “ WH OUGA SYRUP aptly. for ships to America. Although the 4 36¢ Spring 19¢c 25¢ Dish Mop 19° sede wees Cos 3 35° |" iy dish was named in honor of the ; Clothes Pins Cellulose sponge ..... , — Jar 35 city, it was not popularized until it emigrated to the United States. Seaforth Deodorant Y | STICK 5-Day Pads Aussies Employ S41 for men Dab, throw away " Plane to Catch Preying Eagles GUNNEDAH, Australia (UP) — H. H. Austin used a plane in his 50c Lint Brush 49° Rubber Firm wire bristles .... Soap Dish 25¢ Dust Pan 17° 49c Reynolds : C Rubber edge gets all.. | Wrap Save now on 8-ounce . on jars. Each. 10c TUMS 3 ° 25° NYLON BRISTLE SHAMPOO [ee were 3:25" gummy { HAIR BRUSH cee re ; BEN-GAY for Colds 793 c- Professional style with 5 Ginnagulla. : Analgesic balm. Reg. or mild. ¢ of bristles. Gemtone colors. Austin got tired of losing 30 Unguentine for ums BQ? [4 — Be Brushless Blue Blades pounds sterling ($110) worth of : | Soothing, healing ointment. @ S25 pita tial . Shaving Cream ’ Double-edge rrr sheng : ae FAMED Castoria 38° He got bold c bis friend Rea Fletcher's laxative. 2'/-oz.. oP: oore, presi of the worth t * 72 Grove’s Five-Wa it $ FOOTBALL Time! y Gun Club. They called on another Tamwortt friend. Jim Packer, and } Melcalose Tablets 98° BROMO- $2.98 Value FOOTBALL, For constipation. Bottle 65 QUININE ZINO PADS 39° F =, mappe* out the aerial campaign. 6 , Box 16 Dr. SCHOLL'S. Box of 15...... S$ Packer owns|a kinall singlecngine SO MEET g OG A atm tan cam ASS sie 39° FREEZONE for Comme qe [40 ete 6 a |Seeee 98 Pain-relieving liquid. %-o8.... ype Each SERUTAN 435 - — On “E-Day”, Moore strapped Family size 9-ounce package — : FAIRYFOOT PADS 10° i» a a alongside ha ; . : on Auster. ALOPHEN PILLS . Quick relief for bunions....... snartead us gun, al, ee | Porke, Davis laxative. 100's. 49° 19¢ COTTON 15° Packer at the controls, they SIL-MIN-OL a Physicians & Surgeons. 1-02... aro ot. They soon caught up { Gentle internal laxative. Pt. 98 SEDAGEL 112 “I had time only to fire one bar- 5 : Soothes upset stomach. 10-oz... rel into each eagle,” Moore re- *) Lambswool '2-Price Now! F ported. ‘‘I think we scored a hit on SHOE PLASTIC Ue een eam reste ittredteee teil i ) Readyni the first one, but Tam not cer 3 ag suppos ash tain it a kill . : NU Maa = MOUSE- = -Y Lubricant Jelly 35¢ ca ruber camers 39 thet socal coaiy (iene dows 3 PRUFE " : , 35 AL iter 620 with feathers horseman 3 Regu'ar C Ef 2Z-ounce Pal © Guaranteed to Soluble, sterile. Med, size...,.. § album-size pictures cn the ae with @ t canes I2e for S wk destroy mice! APEX E. Q. 53 98° stick.” - SO JOHN —_ a Bie self-feeder. Mothproofer lasts 1 yr. Pint... +» Waterproof en ee ee ee 2 RUSK en on Toiletries, Luggoge, Billfolds: we ++ TOomy sti up 3 Pertecte Soeres Half r Ld 7 KODACOLOR FiLm eagles but couldn't find them, 3 Mild ’n pecks C Q U ie O A — —————# Indoor, outdoor. 4 3 mellow! 2 2 for 21° 90 I —-4 12-02. No. 120 or 620, Use Detergent to Clean othe. oe con con pire 19: One A-Day k 15° MINICLIP HS GERITOL SM | cacti Potter Photos 7 Lows Gon Expensive Gazing Glass 3 @CAMELS @LUCKIES 3 fa &D 4 2 qu Rel : DENVER \# — A detergent was Scomsvenpates | (PPC emobe—ne bevab-int Vitamin Tablets NAIL CU Y | ER NIC ot OHOT on Walgreen's used when $100,000 worth of astro- ; CARTON $] 94 rims CIGARETTE HOLDER e 17 i Nail file on it. c j TO-F INISHING nomical glass was washed at Den- ; of 200... P§—— 1m Se Value WHIZ—ejector. . bond aoe see Senos: ) onl carey een 3 — a = Dr. Albert W. Recht, director, : | said the latest wash job removed . k | ; soap film left from the 1936 clean- = | | : an a et | ' , of Ms 4 - 4 ra a Poke i ou es { 2BEDS..2 MATTRESSES. 2 SPRINGS..GUARDRAIL..LADDER NO MONEY DOWN! Reg. $109.95 ALL FOR ONLY 5 G* aN | gre" 3] ‘(Le Nothing else to ; Buy ——€, ‘ J ee ||| } sw 4 d “ Full L 39 Inch . Width | Sty is sy What You Get wi ving — _ Here's H af a k A ANG 3 or * v7 oe al sem! ’ esc SE eae £e Bier rgd ot a a ae bee h =. : F “ RS van — OF -s ~ yy ce : . Modern Double Bre : reset Bedroom Suite f° or Cordovan Seatemahosany 599 PRICE INCLUDES: | 4S . Mirror Big LandsraPe ie Dresser | * sin Size Panel Bed * Prieea * Extra, $39.9: y 9-pc. LIVING ROOM ENSEMBL Reg. $1 39 | = 2 Textured Ru % g No Money Down Gy 2 Years to Pay! Nie ‘ Ses : ; e 3 > etn of y" a 3 “a ce _ VJ Wy ™ . - - onalwe ‘3 UANITUR Pt yg p ty i * oh a | esi ‘| shim® Daa ww FREE <:: Beautiful 9x12 Choice of: Green, Wine, Gray, Blue, Coral Ma ivwan® 2 BEAUTIFUL / BEDROON | SUITES! “SE CULT é you Choice ” y ' hs A —_— “Se BP oe * A. § by *: & \ aati Ce Fey ame 2 , ‘99 a. For 3-Pc. Modern Set 1S Z Z > WO MONEY DOWN ae 2 YEARS Cheat of Dresser TO PAY THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER |24, 1953 _ _____ FORTY-FIVE _ DEPT. SPECIALS 3-PC. CHROME DINETTE SET Reg. $99.95 Now 69 Bar eee ica Tep Table with Leaf— O'x40""x48" ee PEE | See 3 "= *» 4 oats . - e se i “ Bo te 4 Chairs in dur-| ra veh | SOEs a | A A color plastic MG FEderal 3.7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW i ees 8 6 anit | eee ee 0 eee 6 ee ees eee 01s ee ee ty i i | = | FORTY-STX | ee THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 ~ Perens eee seen perme | s and immediately set about to | which he made from an old Hal Boyle Says: i “That old thing is worn out. I'll N i Good Neighbors fix things up, not only fer | automobile axle and wheel. - have to have a new one.” C their own three children, | “If you spin it right, it’ll go Machine O | Cold Stee] But if you really gave the poor W | Kj d but for all the kids in the | round for 4% minutes,” he S Nn y faithful departed machine an hon- e : | neighborhood. claims. ‘'W W h B f est post-mortem it would have to DR. H. A. MILLER =m CICOME IGS | “peice starsea with « swing) But Felice isn't reaty saus-/CO|Women, O BOSS CIM [pe tis: “Nervous breakdown from bd Es ° and a slide. Then he fenced in| fied with any of this. NEW YORK — It is not only, Women are always bragging Overwork induced by fear of a - % 1| Yar a vipment | totter, a baby-sized swin , @ a big, free amusement park| @‘Taidjof women. Machinery is too. tenet , function by replacemen fright- 7) North Saginaw Street “Sao 1 Chi jren sand ‘box and some wheeled |for the kids. I've heard of a/, Fem things show the difference PY J#Eling them. They don't T8al | stripped gears and prolonged rest : 9 . . to All Children e ee ° between the sexes more than their | |Y fix them. in strictly male atmospherere.” | toys. During the summer as| piece of vacant land not far attitude toward machinery. When a woman goes over and Woice and nieleate cl ore | yard, in additions to the vouns|2™8Y that might be just] A bby loves his bicycle almost, jigsles a balky machine, it nows| Norwegians Set Mark elice an , ’ Felices, Connie, 244; Joey, 4: | right,” he said. “Then I can |as if it were a horse. A man feels! she is threatening, ‘You start ° ° in ‘52 “Petter Things ini Sight” the kind of neighbors most and Diane, 1%. : * "| sit and watch the kids and | the same way about his motor car. | working right now, you silly clump for Emigration in ‘5 . folks wish they had had when| ‘The reason for the backyard | Kind of get back what T lost. | He pats it on its shiny faithful side | o¢ metal, or out of this warm house; OSLO u—Norwegian emigration . they were kids. playground is that “when we You know what I mean?” and in his heart he hears its an- you go right into a junkpile.” to foreign countries set a new post- : The Felices don’t shoo chil-|were kids we didn’t have a "i swering neigh. \ hi . war record in 1952 with nearly one « dren from the yard or keep/nice place to play or anything With only 7 per cent of —_ Men feel a real kinship and _ = , pi a A out of every 1,000 Norwegians sett- - a dog to chase youngsters|to play with,” Felice explains. | “04's population, the United loyalty tq many machines. They | rene nn Prempey s ling abroad, police records show | away. Far from it! States turns out half of the world's ’ working again — but only out of oat : One of Felice’s proudest | industrial products, because we] [hink) of & machine as another | pure fear. It is running on sheer [TC included 1,535 men : hele hand Bis wife bought | backyard installations is a |have the most tools and the most) living thing with a personality | nerves, overwhelmed by a dom- | Emigrants in Saarty tien thie * ome three years " : : : | own. ; , . y ago omemade merry-go-round | efficient business organizations. | inant feminine personality. of the total, of 1,988 persons settled The pld engineer has a pet name| The sick machine goes on chug-|in the United States, while 906 for his iron horse. The combat ging frantically until it collapses, | Norwegians found new homes in Phone FE 4-6842. Closed Wednesday Afternoons { —— > - . 2 ts } | flier has one for his plane. So does/ and the woman tells her husband, ' Canad f ih, | 1 és 7 i. , ptt ; | many Bn infantryman for his rifle. * ; ? ? ¥ a s } ; | . re rons ta cry Ph: Since a man does think of a favorite machine as having a life of its pwn, he respects the quirks in its nature. He knows he has his ups and downs, and realizes even the best-hearted and most willing | machine has its bad days as well | as its good days. KY?) TO KRESGE’S | Therefore, when something goes |wrong with the machine, when) it fails to function for one reasan or other, it makes him as | uneasy a$ if a human friend fell ill, | His jgeneral attitude is one of, | “What can I do to help you, Bud- | | ‘'t Wait! § ti 1B d Don’t Wait! Sensational Bonuses an - . | | , dy?"’ And he tries with understand- Price Cuts End Soon! Hurry! ing hands to find out what ails his | » ‘ machine, and fix it and make it | feel well enough again to go about its usyal work. Few women go in for this kind of nonsense. They are superstitious about many things, but they don’t endow any machine with heart, Corduroy and Velvet ee SS ie 4 Lec , 3 os ee e ' . ey soul or spirit. bring There is no real camaraderie . Re between a woman and her cook- drama to Ae stove, refrigerator, vacuum | S ii? 3a, | cleaner or hair dryer, : ——— t g FOR THE )| She never thinks of a machine | ee Ge PRICE OF { |.as having a mind of its own, and eae, | ke 3 | it had/better not act as if it did. | dees She has enough mind for both of es ee ’ teed : &$ | them,|and a machine jhad better Baa ake Guaran 2 Years Against fas. | obey her, if it knows what is good | $ sora. mabe All Road Hazards % : for it. She is not going) to put up | IT . : "i =, TE SORE sy oo ma; | With any metal whims. ’ - ) CLUDE f doderel ste soll rons < ~ pf '; | A man never trades in an old At Kresge S.... [ust . > Fh a eS 2 motor car without silently saying, | wo Pp ivery e a ee <\ / j . : Smetiens ‘pe Ty. ond in — mat ee A Oe OE “Goodby, old pal, goodby.”’ He has | The jaunty jockey cap goes high hat in moss-soft a) — =F “| a twinge of conscience,| and feels | ; : e 4th Tire Your Bonus i like a| cowboy who sells his old | velvet or corduroy on Ke 9 s, but stil keeps its cap- - e d Choice $1 5 . . e horse. They know the difference | size price of $1! In cordurey, choose brown, red, rust, With Wizard Gas Range Merchandise! Hurry! Ist Line Tires! voir tien 7 9" [kelly or gold. Vetver—block, brown, navy or red We're especially proud: of this Carnival offer... . tor it ” You choice! D L Ride. the f low- | combines.a Valuable bonus with a sensational low price! 2! Table Tv! tire, or Super enfaiy, ode (neki Teguide pressutl You i o oe aila heal be | G-piece Flint] cutlery set in Hardwood Holdster sells for |. Your choice of $15 in mer- buy three and get the fourth as a bonus! 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Seat Covers | Poot fey STORE HOURS: 12 saxty pai shields to Amazing offer! Up to 24 en- eames rade a eon FRIDAY 3.5 srt toy temccicm Mama mgt! Gemere | Sonny Gh ion Pr SATURDAY 9-6 Ja oa vile $995. With Bonu . ane abc Aes in | CREDIT CLOTHING COMPANY . — Finns 92 ate $172. pera hvond $267 | 6 North Saginaw St. FE 2-4410 FORTY-SEVEN _ For Nice Take-Home Pay, Red Plane Business Is OK By ARTHUR EDSON they then had to pay their taxes. WASHINGTON ®— For real! 6p it’s obvious the North Korean, nice take-home pay, you can't) beat | who said he didn’t even know about THE PONTIAC PRESS, S, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 234, 1953 County Fair didn’t expect much | competition from the only man en- While Burglar-Hunting _| tered. Offi Orval | But, sure enough, Everett Os- | . diene a ates born of Leonardsburg won, second | mayor of Naha, Okinawa’s largest | | Bennett, scouting a Baptist church prize. city, died Tuesday from ja he art Suffocation ranks high as a killer | here late at night for a possible ailment complicated by pneu-| of newborn babies, atcounting for | | burglar, accidentally came a crop- | monia. | about 5,000 deaths a year. Mayor of Okinawa City | Matayosi_ was president of the) Officer Gets Baptized Di f He Ail Ryukyu Shimpo, one of Naha’s | eso eart Ailment | four newspapers, and was elected | OKINAWA: +Kowa Matayosi.| mayor in 1952. New Mexico Warns Like NEW again! Children’s Rubber or Leather BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL! ! | per. | Creeping down some stairs in | the darkened church he felt his | feet getting wet. Trying to deter- | mine his location he slipped. | Kerplash! He ended up in the | baptistery. . | He caught nothing but a cold. '11 Women No Match for Cake-Baking Male DELAWARE, Ohio w# — Eleven women who entered the white cake baking competition at Delaware Texans About Honesty AUSTIN, Tex. @—Texas motor- ists caught breaking New Mexico’s traffic flaws may find the going reugh in the future. Justice of the Peace Robert L. Ayers of Albuquerque notified the | Texas state police that one Texan |recently paid his fine with a | check—then stopped payment on). j the check. | Ayers said in effect that the practice is frowned upon in New Mexico. flying a Russian plane into a United Nations airport. The 22-year-old senior North Ko- rean lieutenant who did it, bring- ing a MIG15 to an airstrip near Seoul, picks up. the $100,000 re- ward this government had offered anyone who first delivered a Rus- sian plane. Let's take a look at what that $100,000 means: The Internal Revenue people have said it is tax free, even if the pilot should come here, since it was income earned outside the the reward money when he took off, is flying in a fast financial league. i The Internal Revenue man said, the way he heard it, the plane was worth $300,000 or $400,000, so he figures it was a bargain quite aside from its scientific worth. “But I keep thinking about that $100,000. without .taxes,’’ he said. “You know, how about sneak- ing into Russia, stealing a plane, flying it back and picking up C—O ea Ww $100,000 oursebves?”’ Furthermore, in answer to a There is just one little gimmick. question, they figured out that any-| The offer was $50,000 per plane, i is singl plus a $50,000 bonus for the first with ae eee tects gant ait Red flier to deliver one. But even to earn $940,550 in a year to have $50,000, tax free; is not to be jeered My Store—Over 3,000 Pair $100,000 left after federal taxes. | 2 “Of course,"’ said the income PANTS o # - | : | tax man, ‘he probably would be $ 587 $687 ‘$9887 SEVEN YEARS BRINGING BRIDE HOME—Robert Tucker, 35, | nicked by state taxes,) and maybe N N US. Embassy editor in Moscow, points ‘out the skyline as he and his | by city taxes. He ‘undoubtedly Russian-born |wife, Eugenia, 29, arrive in New York aboard the liner | WOuld have to make well over a 20 So. Perry St. United States. Sam Benson Says: Men Who Want the Best Take the Side Street to Small Sizes Only. Must Also Present This Coupon @ While-U-Wait @ KRESGE’S SHOE REPAIR Basement United Press Phete million dollars.” America. Tucker has been trying to bring his bride to the U.S. for =. tax oe the past seven years. The couple will spend several days in New York aumeuice fades on ke sel in and Washington D.C. before leaving for his home in Kansas City. come, but it’s a safe bet that — not many 22-year-olds make a million. a year. And it’s money in the bank that | — ~~ SPECIAL! Ute ene vase | RED TRADING Toe | edeeieaiel | WRT at | ° ; C FURNACE ST AMPS Grom The only incomes announced are | FF 2g Olt ‘ those paid by some corporations A G | which have to report to the Secur- | Br prrrrerwesrrgerererrnee |ities and Exchange Commission eloued Perfume | (SEC). PHONE B [Sin tao, tor exams, toe nigh | FE 5-6159 | the $626,300 paid by General Mo- tors to Charles E. Wilson, now secretary of defense. . ; iJ reporting | Fuel and Paint Go. that year, 817 executives had salaries of $100,000 or more, but 436 Orchard Lake Ave. PINCH-PLEATED at DRAPERIES * et no extra charge with ovr , @wn matching cologne... Of the companies "| © DRUG uae “is “itt STORES NOW! | SHAMPOO | | Lasting COLOR |. 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TRAY OnLy ; 1 = 00 Slight ___ soar - $ TT Dollar Day Special BABY AUTO | -_ : SEAT | : > Medical bank Mayonsais Large Size Aluminum (§' »@ Dish Towels J) Picuic — Bowl & Tray 70% Reg. SET | oe | Safe, Enjoyable Way les 54 tumblers dstching pol 8 FOR $7 pe ray, Bow : Spon : it. ] B by to T l! pone ty ght Irregulars ie tary to reve 18x30 Cott Large Size BABY if S$ : Koy women) WASH CLOTHS |. Training hf THROW RUG 12 Non-Skid Back Reg, $3.95 95 Genuine FIBERGLAS _ Pay Nationally Famous BIRDSEYE DIAPERS 12°47 % 71 TT STORES ROD | ' ‘ | | | | | By MURRAY ROSE NEW YORK-@ — Heavyweight | Champion Rotky Marciano tests Sive, powerful 29-year-old cham- the homes from the park. A tele- his vaunted wallop and risks his | Pion. coast to coast. * s | Roland LaStarza, a supremely confident challenger title fight! at the Polo Grounds. | knocked out; 9-5 that Roland | The handsome, 26-year-old New | wouldn't finish 12 rounds and even | Yorker firmly | believes he beat | money he wouldn’t complete eight | Marciano! (Rocky won a split de- rounds. It was 8&1 that LaStarza dent Jim Norris of the Internation- al Boxing Club, stuck his pre- With the weatherman forecasting | him before and I know I can out- | fair and warmer te i Presi- | Cision) in their first meeting 342 years ago‘and' he is sure he is going to (make) it official in the bal! park with) some 32,000 fans looking on. | . * “7? « i wouldn't stop the durable Marci- ano. * * ® There was only light wagering reported on the actual outcome ‘it- self. Most of the betting was con- diction that the fight would gross about $400,000. The IBC will collect a minimum of $100,000 from the theater-cast, making a possible to- tal of $500,000 the gladiators will share in. Despite the challenger’s opti- | centrated on how many rounds the! More conservative guessers fig- mism there were only a few of | the fight eXperts who believe the | scrap would go. Starting time for the outdoor ured the fight would gross no more | than $350,000. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 if } but Marciano Is Favorite If the melon reaches $500,000, | ‘Reluctant Rollie’—so named for | to break draws. The points broadchested challenger. ‘‘I beat box him and I can outsmart him. | | ‘Sure I know he knocked me | ‘down with a right in the first | fight,’’ said Roland, “but I got | Up and was going after him at the | end. In a few more rounds I would | have stopped him."’ | Marciano, who rarely makes pre- | dictions, told several newsmen at | the camp that he would win “with- | in seven rounds.”’ | The consensus of opinion is that 33 Games Set in Area Friday By JACK SAYLOR | tackle Bob Missel. The 130- While last Friday’s opening prep! Pound senior, who was the Fal- football games. pf the season pto-| coms’) top lineman, was lost for | duced much evidence of unsteatty| the season when he suffered a | play, there’ nevertheless $ Other top performers last week were Fred Burnard and Norm Norton of Troy, 22nd Don Komraus of Romeo, were | broken leg while making a tackle | Bill Long and Phil Labner of | tain Hartland, while Port Huron | pick here is Marciano kayo!in five rounds. bout will be scored with a supplementary point system hard enough hitter thur Schwartz scored for Marciano ard time. |ed for LaStarza, 541. Referee | Jack Watson had it even in rounds | | but yoted for Marciano on points, | | 945. | | Facts, Figures Louis Baldacci on Title Scrap | " | NEW YORK «Facts and fig-_ Key Performer in UM Opener ures on tonight's heavyweight title fight between champion Rocky Michigan Starts Soph Signal Caller for Ist Marciano and Roland LaStarza: Site—New York Polo Grounds. Time—3:3 p.m., Eastern Stand Time Since ‘38 By JOHN F. MAYHEW ANN ARBOR ® — Michigan At stake — Marciano’s heavy- weight title, Distance-—-15 rounds. or less. Radio and television—no televi- sion or radio broadcast direct from ringside. Some TV and radio sta- tions to broadcast a brief | Challenger Feels Relief | From Tension With Bell By TED SMITS “It all depends on how much GREENWOOD LAKE, N. Y. | money I've got. I'd like to go into —This is the day of decision for | television but that depends on the Roland LaStarza. What does he| TV people. I'd sure like to go back think about as he climbs into the | % college for my degree. (He had ; two years at City College of New York.) mune ak the end of each round. | Theater telecast—over closed cir- cuit to subscribing) theaters from coast-to-coast. | Prompter—International Boxing Club, Jim Norris, [president Crowd—about 32, Gate—about $350,000 Theater network television fee to IBC and fighters—$100,000 guaran- | tee. | Prices—Reserved seats at $5, | $10, $15, $20 and $30. | Fighters’ shares—Marciano 42% | makes its 1953 football debut against once-beaten University of Washington here Saturday with a sophomore quarterback at the helm, * * -s Louis Baldacci, a black-haired. 195-pounder from Akron, Qhio, will direct the team. He is the first sophomore to get such) an assign- ment here since Forrest Evashev- ski, present Iowa coach, called the signals back in 1938. dim Lothrey | ey I'm going to make,” he re-| “I’m getting a little old and if plies with a boyish laugh. I'm ‘going to go into another oc “Actually I feel relief when the | Cupation I'll have to start fast. rings. Up to then it's all ten-, ! : . sion.” papnarieldge es ea Rion || The money is considerable. La Seckene fs he akland. |Starza gets 17% per cent of the | Holly will be after its 12th | not receipts, which could total | Straight win as the Brorics enter- | $490 .000 from the crowd plus $100.- '000 from the closed circuit televi- some outstandipg individual pér-' on the opening kickoff of the | Southfield, and Dick Bachmann formances. Teams get back fin | second ‘half. | and Bob Andrews of Walled action with 33 games listed for the, Dick Smith, Holly's hard-tunning ae aa Oakland County; area. ‘| fullback, sparked the Broncs as | Ball handling) is being stressed | they stretched their winning streak at Waterford this week after the | {> 11 games with a 27-14 win over most teams waiting until next and Utica go after numbers 20, and 14, respectively, against High- | ‘land Park and South Lake. hosts Dearborn Roosevelt. Head sion. His cut of $500,000 would be about $70,000. After expenses are paid, and his manager takes his Another heavy schedule of inter-/ Brother will match wits against) share of one third — but before , league games is set this week with) brother as Royal Oak Madison| income taxes — LaStarza’s purse | would be about $35,000. Skippers. fumbled 10 times in their | Grand Blanc. Smith scored twice | week to open conference action. | coaches Don Scott of Madison and| Money isn't all that this youth- | Roosevelt's Jack Scott, Hazel Park | ‘boys, both attended (Central Mich- 0-0 tie with Keego Harbor. Water-' on runs of over! 30 yards and con-| Nine league games are on tap, in- nected with end, Wayne Freeman | cluding Waterford at Southfield in Pe ee eS ee | lon a 45-yard pass play for another the Inter-Lakes and Milford at | ful young man has on his mind. What will he do when he gets | through fighting? tally. Johnny Malone, Van Dyke's all- around star, made a sensational’ , showing against East Detroit. | Though he carried only six times in the first half. he made two TD | trips of 70 yards and returned a _punt 80 yards for a third score. Don, Colegrove of Milford and Jim Van Wagoner of Oxford, op-_ SMITH also vas nse ie posing fullbacks, were big guns in | t 4 tight game won by Milford, 7-0. : grou Don Perkuchin, Redskin end, and om on he pee | Larry ‘Spencer, Oxford tackle, also Pass defense) problems al$0 | were standouts. cropped up at Rochester. in the 26-6 | 64) Leach én offense and Jim loss to Grand |Haven. Offense, | arnold on defense were Lake with new quarterback Ben For- ' Orion's pacesetters in a 140 vic- bush directing, léft little to be de- tory over Clarkston. Marv Evans, [il Height... ¥n sired. 'Ron Shore and Joe Schwerin of Coach (iene Konley’s biggest | Avondale sparked the Jackets in task, however, is réplacing | their 124 win over St. Mikes. | wall held. Keega virtually withou Shades te Immortals! New UP Prep Grid Ace Compared With Gipper MARQUETTE «®—Biggie Munn; Here’s what Barry has done to and Bennie Oosterbaan would do date: well to read this story. | | 1. Seored all of Calumet’s 51 It's about Fred y, who points in three games ‘this sea- plays left halfback: for umet | son, - High Schoot football team in the| 2. Averaged 13.6 yards in car- Upper Peninsula. rying the ball 19 times for 260 Calumet, tm ‘chee you ivan?’ yards against Ashland. That gave | heard, is the school whi¢h pro- duced such all-time greats as the cewee ae ee READY FOR TITLE 8.9. |¥ BOUT—Heavyweight cham- }him a three-game total of 752 pion Rocky Marciano (left) and contender Roland yards in 84 carries, an average of LaStarza exhibit their respective measurements and igan College. onere 5 < United Press Phote boxing stances. The two meet in a title bout at the Polo Grounds in New York tonight. legendary George Gipp and Hart- ley (Hunk) A lérson. Now they 3. In the Ashland game, his , touchdown runs were, respectively, de er ce lad with these 39 “77, 33, 2 and 46 yards. Another . — arta ; /run of 70 yards was nullified by Wrote the Houghton Gazette after an offside penalty. Barry led Caluinet to a 33-19 vic-, 4. And if you're looking for a tory over Ashland, Wis.: | ‘two-way player, Barry is your By GAYLE TALBOT “None of the stars of the past boy. He plays a vicious game’ NEW YORK (m—Having given could have been any better than defensively, | the matter much thought and ’» — tossed out a vivid dream to the Big Reds Aim | nicknamed the Bronx Buzz Bomb, |contrary, our conclusion is that | Roland LaStarza, whom we have for No. 21 Win _|\win tecome the new heavyweight By the Associated Press | champion of the world shortly be- ; 1 Host 9 Wins | | ! Bouncing around on the high | school football fronts: Series, Title arm“ |fore this midnight. | As we piece the picture together. it will be a hard and closely waged fight for | LaStarza the winner by a decision, | Maybe it will even be a split de- cision of the three judges, as it was in their only other meeting, but we would prefer not to slice things quite that thin. * s * Practically everybody else is picking Rocky Marciano to keep | Writer Picks Roland LaStarza to Win Decision in 15 Rounds Over Champion with the ichampion, and 2. Take|ers at halfback. Captain Don’ the man with the big punch. Off for lowa, Big 10 Debut | Fullback, End Are Only | ‘Starting Positions Not, Yet Determined | SAST LANSING @ — | A 38man | | traveling squad was set to take | | off for Iowa today for Michigan | =* | §tate’s long-delayed football de- | ' but in the Big Ten. suspension, the “‘baby’’ of the Big : | Ten will finally get to play on equal terms Saturday. | Michigan State was a one and word from Iowa was that coach [Forest Evashevski, a former MSC assistant, is aiming every- thing he has in hopes of upset- ting the number two-rated Spar- tans. ° , Named to the 38man roster by coach Biggie Munn were 13 seniors, 14 juniors and 11 sopho- ; mores. | | Several of the juniors — such as | Flint’s Ellis Duckett and Leroy Bolden — won letters as freshmen | however and have as much game | experience as any of the seniors. | \By positions, the squad listed eight tackles, six guards, seven | ends, four centers, three quarter- | backs, six halfbacks and four full- | backs. | Speculation on the probable starting lineup centered around | two positions. There’s a chance that sophomore Gerry Planutis may start at fullback instead of | Senior Evan Slonac, regular at the | position last year. Ellis Duckett of Bill Quinlan will | Start at left end. Quinlan has | looked best on defense and Duckett ‘has starred on offense. | |Tommy Yewcic was sure to | Quarterback with Leroy Bolden | and Billy Wells the probable start- Dohoney will be at right end and We do not expect to see La-| Jim Neal will start at center. Starza want of has been a total of 56 fights. Just ause Rocky still was strong enough in the 13th round to chill Jersey Joe Walcott in their | | out because, for | Other starting positions shaped up better reason, he never | 45 Ferris Hallmark at left guard, | Larry Fowler at right guard, Ran- i dy Schrecengost at left tackle and | Morley Murphy at right tackle. A member of the conference | since 1949 and currently under) two touchdown favorite. But the | on the kickoff, either | an easy and lazy way out. for all) see it, to assume that he will be they have to do is invoke the first as dangerous at the same stage tonight. Joe was an elderly gent, the full 15 rounds, with Créeekites Dump ‘Okla. | Huron boasts the longest Class A, ———- inning streak in the state. Big: Team and Kalamazoo ‘Reds walloped Bey Cty Bande i i ; ‘in their opener 43-0 and figure to | in ABC Finales | |make it No. 21 this week against | a. | i Creek won‘ the “Amateur World | ries’ on Monday nig | CHICAGO w—Briefs from mid- - but) Here's an odd one: A coach Who | oct football 1 = _ . didn’t get around to it WaS | thinks he has a good team, which | oT. ; | THWESTERN — is a rather pleasant departure from | NOR There will Wildcats Taper Off Drills; Iowa Fullback Is Injured |two rules of experting: 1. Stick | Sive assignments in preparation for | the opener Saturday against South- , ern California at Los Angeles. and by that time he figured to be dog tired. LaStarza is only 26, at his physical peak and in perfect condition, and the longer it goes the better his chances will be. * | ¢ There is some regret! at picking against Rocky, for the boy from Brockton is the greatest ornament the boxing game has known in . Being champ hasn't Prep Schedule the smallest detail. | his title by a knockout. That is first title bout is no reason, as we lvory Rangers Win: ‘Captain Sets Mark | Detroiter Jack Ivory, captain of | Mister Upset Himself!" |the Ivory Rangers, became the | Ist Michigan polo player ever to, “store more than 100 goals in a: season as he led his team to an! rout of the Darlington Paolo Club in Darlington, Pa., Wednes- a ball season to its opponents | Women Sports Fans Puzzle Ferndale Man DETROIT @—James S. Pooler, é i f : it F %2 #5 i ad => Base Congress’ eastefn crying-towel ‘be no contact work today or Fri-| WISCONSIN — Badgers went ofts aon last night. When oe the a | |day for the Wildcats as they taper | through a drill on defense it beat Kalamazio, 124; |Log’ Bontern team: (off for Saturday's opening game against Penn State's attack Championship game of the east-| ~..,, oe against Iowa State at Evanston.| [LINOIS—Illini held a short of: ern playofis was postponed because I'm greatly pleased with my/ Coach Bob Voigts has three regu-|fensive scrimmage against the of rain last Saturday and) delayed | °°YS 4nd we will cause some trou: | jars sidelined with injuries—Guards | freshmen in pteparation for Ne- | around Ontil last night to permit) playing | CIC ‘% the Six-A league teams. We! Fred Nosal, fullback Bob Lauter|braska at Champaign Saturday, | of the ABC's Amateut World |e ce rey eee 70m (and Heft halfback Bob Mc Keiver.| '1owA — Binkey Broeder, the | Series.” Both Battle Ses as| ™S elaine A PURDUE pagar — 38 Hawkeyes’ No. 1 fullback missed Kalamazoo . Incidental strong—are lo seave Wednesday’s practice se s 8 ion to wan, cheitie for Haale pant > feo Six: A gue | University airport Friday for Co- | rest his swollen knee, but he is ex: wa tc , looks leaded again this year: /jumbia, Mo., and the 1953 starter | pected to be ready for Michigan Battle Creek whipped Oklahoma ane Plate ong rt a peners | against the University of Missouri. State Saturday. City 21 for the “world champion- psa = RK" “i | INDIANA — Quarterdacking of | OHIO STATE — Buckeyes sharp- ship.” i a tree Florian Helinski proved en- | ened their offensive plays for In- i + Tip: Keep an eye on Royal Oak's | couraging to Coach Bernie Crim- | dian’s visit on Saturday. Dick Nash. He shapes up as one| mins as the Hoosiers specialised | NOTRE DAME — Irish staged of the best backs in the Detroit, Im a long defensive drill in prep- | a light drill on @ soft turf in order to take no chances on injuries to the squad. Inj Johnny Lattner | punted for the first time since he was hurt Sept. 6. The big halfback ig expected to be ready for action against Oklahoma at Norman Sat- Race on Tough Course PLACERVILLE, Calif. (AP)— had _ to 65 for the opposition. in County Area _tam Wh, tle te icago White Sox, started ss ; “Waterford of Soethficia:| ball career in 192 as a pitcher. Keege Harber at Walled Lake; Farming-| Ven Dyke vy bat Ghemanay interé ® bd gepeeoee zc=| Marciano Picked Lyea; Oxtere at 0 Seeai \avcndals Wt Lake Orion; Gewell at Lapeer; Trey at / sae col m. she thal Grosse Eh acsoet sor aot el Fyfended Layoff Ber at Park; Seuth Lake, vite nt deserieh ; Imlay City ot Supima P| vite} ‘Meingtin C4] Chesening; S05B et - By GRANTLAND RICE Kerth Sent: eee atves! cArmetsi| NEW YORK—The stolid, unemotional, unhurtable es Seen, * Dr7éen:| Rocky Marciano, who can also hit with either hand, per cent; LaStarza’ 1T™ per cent. Michigan, in most cases, as- Fighters’ records—Marciano 44-0. 39 knockouts. LaStarza 533. 24 knockouts. Neither has been knocked out. Odds—Marciano favored 4 to 1. Judging — A referee and two judges tobe selected the night of the fight. Scoring on a round! Baldacci will lead a veteran basis with supplementary point sys- | Michigan team against Washing- tem to avoid draw. Points on & | tgp beset by injury in its opening 1 to 4 basis. 71-20 loss to Colorado, Halfbacks Return bout—return bout within Teq Kress and Tony Branoff will six months if LaStarza wins. again be the big guns. Weather prediction — fair and) Teamed with fullback Dick Balz- iambic . hiser, the Wolverine backfield will Postponement date—Friday. combion a strug rubbing ‘ Tale of the Tape [™™ ™™ts® anh Smicteney- TALE OF THE TAPE Washington is without a pair of | prompted coach Bennie Ooster- | baan to make the tradition-shat- tering move. /MARCIANO LA STaRzA | fine. halfbacks who were sidelined 2 wit s-1e2 | during the game against Colorado. +5185 Weight *-190| Right halfback Bill Albrecht broke oS in: cua «kai rH =< his leg and left halfback Mike 68 in. Réeac 74 in. | Monroe suffered a broken wrist Me _ Waist 33 tn. | : 16% tm a ul 34 Game, first between the schools, | 16 in. Ankle 10 in.| Will serve as a big test case 14% ts cou 16 '®: for Michigan. If Baldacci meets lints t Fist 12 in.| expectations, Oosterbaan will be n. 12% in. *Exact weights te be ammeounced at | formal weigh-in today. B Horses in |faced chiefly with minor adjust- | ments for the season \ahead. = s * | Some concern is expressed at the | inexperience of Michigan's defen- sive backfield: Kress) at safety, Branoff and Balzhiser at the halves ’ ’ ® and Baldacci and center Dick | J Classic O'Shaughnessy, behind the line. Ug No such concern is expressed p | | \for the Michigan line, anchored DELAWARE, \Ohio ®—Thirteen by Art Walker, the standout tackle horses are set to break from the from South Haven. Gene Knutson gate today, in the race of 3-year- and Tad Standford provide better- olds for the Little Brown Jug’ than-average ends. Walker and Jim trophy and a share of the $54,-, Balog provide strength at tackle 972.21 that goes| with it. and guards Don Dugger and Dick | In early betting, 'Keystoner, with Béison are proven performers. Frank Ervin in the sulky, has been ished vorite 3 4 ai Gt an ludre wil bes cue 2 elevision Fans 'pionship traditian riding with the . | pacer owned | by George L. Stip- May See Kicker ling of Cleveland. . | Keystone, whet ve charging (Without Shoes — out of position four, is a half- © LYNN, Mass. (UP)—Television | brother of Tar Heel, 1951 Jug fans may see a barefooted kicker winner and world champion. Er- in the Holy Cross-Dartmouth foot- vin was behind Good Time when ball game at Manning Bowl here | that all-time big money winner (Saturday. | wom the Jug in 1949. The shoeless punter is Dart- interesting sideli 'mouth quarterback Billy Beagle, oe oo * sor sophomore from Danville, Pa: | big pace is the appearance of : re q , 'Wayne (Curly) Smart. | It is said his unshod kicks will go | The veteran trainer and driver, 6 yards or more. who has been in and out of the| The barefooted Beagie wears a , Sulky with court decisions affect- | specially zippered shoe, easily re- | ine a one-year suspension, will} movable for when the fans yell handle Dutch Dandy, a 10-1 shot. | ‘‘take it off.” By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE | Wake Forest to win from Duke, Heh-heh! The football filbert | veritably is a queer kind of mut! | vumtanevs 19, Texes 14 Clemson 13, Boston ? There is more than mere fan- fat In Weet Virgtnse 10° tasy behind the appellation, | Gorpet) lt Ceigate 13 | however, for Saturday after ene, ae ts Saturday, amazing —— Michigan State 21. Jews) 7 versals are predicted by your | Dtichicun bmg torch of intelligent forecasting Portes st, Sitasonas 7 ” This week, prepare to receive Sa.’ etote oh. Kieweare ia even more startling news. In 20| Xcuteeny is” musciectee! 1s important games billed for Sept. Georges M8, Telane IF | 26, I am giving you at least six UCLA's, Geant. | no ether: cage leer from | Stanierd’ 1%, Orecen © First of these is Cornel) to de- feat Colgate, but not far behind Arthur Prudholm, who won the in the scope of its signifi¢ance is | Middleweight boxing title at the Minnesota to beat. mighty South- | 1920 Olympics, now is a cook in ern California. Prepare for | Mining camps in northern Sas- Clemson to beat Boston College, | katchewan and Manitoba, Canada. jamborees with Joe Louis, Rex Matthews, Joe Walcott and others. s s watching him in a number of contests. i to Keep Title in From Real Test Hurt's LaStarza factor from what La Starza has done since; which is practically nothing. Winning from game but in- collision is i att : de é g f THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 FIFTY-ONE Cranes, Maples Renew Rivalry | Williams a Perfectionist ‘Extra Sharp Vision Given 1 (- Year Lapse By JOE REICHLER | ed's hearing may have been ; i Pierce Contest BOSTON! .®—What makes Ted impaired from: flying those zoom- |W illiams so great a hitter even at! ing jets in Korea but his eyesight | Game ls Season's First | the advanced baseball age of 35 Pi iene o a ns We ‘octane | uring Wor ar avy ors for Both Birmingham, | ‘when moét ball players are either sald ‘is even: wold cece cols aix| Cranbrook 11's |mearing or have reached the end | tines in 100,000 persons. | of the trail? incident referring to his An old rivalry will be renewed at’ 7° begin with, the tall Boston | remarkable vision told to the Pierce Field, Birmingham, Friday | Red Sox slugger’s reflexes are as | | writer may be worth re-telling. | ; | quick as ever. He still is the per- | The first time Williams took batting night when Birmingham High | fectionist, refusing to swing if the} practice after his return from School opens its 1953 football sea-| pitch is a fraction of an inch out-| Korea, he yelled out to Joe Cronin, son against Cranbrook. The game | | side the strike zone. Red Sox general “Manager, that also is the first of the year for the! Cranes. Friday's meeting will be the first Bengals Ready between, the schools since 1941 when the Maples rdlled to a 45-0 iat vil for Final Series At a glance,*the; game would | spemtday and Sunday. Then it’s ajl over until next year. Detroit, safely out of the Ameri- |p League cellar, holds a 1% | game lead over seventh-place Phil- adelphia. The Athletics have four games to go, one more than the appear to be a mis-match. The | Tigers. teams met only oné common op- ponent last. year. Birmingham Hope to Clinch Sixth Leese eo ould beet peur Place in 3-Game Set Detroiter Buys Stock he Skippers had | laced’ Cran. | With Cleveland in Hazel Park Racetrack the Skippers: had | laced Cran- areck, 20:7; DETROIT (UP)—Detriot Tigers, le DETROIT W—P. L. Grissom, However, Maple coach Vince/ still hoping to nail down sixth | Detroit automobile dealer and Secontine has only two players who| place, move on to Cleveland Fri-| owner of a string of race horses, Faw anywhere near regular service | gay for their final | series of the | has bought 55,000 shares of stock last year as Birmingham was | in| the suburban Hazel Park race winning five and ty ing one of nine track for a reported $220,000. games. - The Tigers, rested after two | Grissom bought the holdings of. Meanwhile, the Cranes, who had | days of idleness, take on the | Leon Slavin, Kalamazoo paper | a dismal 2-6 record, are well. | Indians in single games Friday, | manufacturer. stocked with veterans, Only: holdovers tb go with the new look at Birmingham are end Bill Watkinson and tackle Jerry, Beck. The 165-poumd Beck, who! was elected team captain this week, has a sprained ankle and is a doubtful starter Friday. Three other 'players saw enough! action to win: letters a, year ago. They are center Bill Hohmeyer, end Chris Christie and quarterback Jerry Wedge. Friday’s game, whieh starts at 8 p. m., matches the single wing, used predominately by Secontine’s team and the. split-T coached by | Fred Campbell at Cranbrook. | | 1953 season. ——-—_- — Ee FOR FALL UNDERPRICED FOR PRE-SEASON SAVINGS! | Bowling Clinic | By BILLY SIXTY CASE—Push-Away Action. CURE—Get; Ball) Into Swing—As | bowling has no set’ pattern of foot- work or body ‘position (stance), do | what comes natural. Try three,’ four, or five steps, and stick to:the style that gets 100% AUSTRALIAN Sa > WOOL LONG SLEEVE SWEATERS ] Handsome all wool sweaters In a large selection of styles and colors are specially priced for pre-Autumn. savings. And big savings they are, too. Undisputable Oe ity ypu'll recognize on sight at a value price) that invites comparison anywhere. monet fancies and ski types. NONE HAVE SOLD $ Z 88 LOWER THAN $10.00 you to the foul line smoothest for easy ball release. Regardless of , number of steps taken, develop push-away of the ball. | Push-away puts the ball into swing, as illstrated, and swing, co-ordinated ‘with footwork, pro- duces timing: Stand comfortably, rélaxed, fairly upright. Hold | ball waist high. [n four-step footwork, first step with fight foot, timed with push-away. Sawchuck Sharp as ff ; | - jeopacs NOW tor Ted's Tremendous Hitting Ability | crazy since hundreds of ball play- ‘the bother. Now all this hullabaloo Most Credit home plate was not level with the | | Pitchers’ $ mound. “Get those surveyprs of yours to | fix home plate,” Ted roared. ‘It’ "| cockeyed."’ Cronin, told Williams he was | ers had taken their place at the plate and nobody had complained. |To satisfy Williams,| however, he called the groundkeepers who, after careful measuring, found that home plate was off its diréc- tion about a half inch. ‘He's remarkable,’’ marveled Hern, the able Boston Post column- ist. ‘‘Williams today is 20 per cent | better hitter than he was before | he went away. He is/sore in every | part of his body, his hands have | blisters under blisters, yet he is hitting the bal) harder than he ever | did before. | Williams laughed off his aches and pains but admitted he was/| tired. “All this moving about, the fuss ‘about my hitting. What's so ‘strange about that? I'm not hit- ting any different than I was five and 10 years ago. Why talk to me? Why don’t you do something worth while and write about Ellis Kinder and Jimmy Piersall? They've been ,great all year. Never mind me. I’m just trying to find out if I can play ball again."’ SPORTSWEARSPECGIAL MEN’S GABARDINE | WATER-REPELLENT JACKET just One color to choose from, but 7 handsome new Fall shades in Wings Top Edmonton f | SAULT STE. MARIE # — Terry | Sawchuck turned in a_ top-notch | goal tending: exhibition last night as the Detroit Red Wings downed | Edmonton 5-} for their wer pns successive ptie-@ason victory ’ navy, powder blue. SELLS EVERYWHERE Sawchuck kicked out 26 “shots | before Edmonton's Jim Uniac beat | him in a goalj mouth scramble. Bill Dineen, puck blaster from | Toronto St. Michaels, continued his | bid for a 'with the five-time | NHL champjons by scoring two! goals, He tallied while playing at | both center and right wing. Marty | Pavelich also bounced a pair into | the nets while Alex Delvechig got the other goal. | if cate ae — \fee po ym Tranks 95c up ale. | eA ‘Bas, rs ao oe a 5 Shoes, Football Pants ... .$3.75 up Boys’ “Plastic Hel- mets .......$3.75 $3.95 Spalding Football ..... $2.90 WELDEN Sporting Goods 51 Mt. Clemens FE 4-6211 (A 4st #: “ie ee): } Oy | \ i 4 PAK TREE IN ANY DOWNTOWN PARKING 107 Lea aaa aaa. PPD IPP POI IPOD , LL { wear. extra comfort ... lar and breast pockets, elasticized bottom, button cuffs. In gray, toast, CHARGE IT — PAY IN 30, 60 OR 90 DAYS. OsMiNG practical good looking light- weight jacket that will wear and Lined with sleek rayon for hand stitched col- light green, teal, beige and FOR 12.95 ‘o” 3 DAYS ONLY ! Thursday Friday Saturday ON BRAND NEW FULLY GUARANTEED DAYTON TIRES! BUY Brand New First Line Fully Guaranteed Dayton Tread Blemish Tires at 50% OFF Regular Price! FIRST LINE WHITE WALLS Size | Reg. Your Price You Price 50% Off! 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Caster, Camber ond Tow-In All work done on our new Bean Visualiner with the latest modern equipment. --- SPECIAL! - -- WHEEL BALANCING cA eBUY ON BUDGET! @NO MONEY DOWN! @®ONE FULL YEAR TO PAY! $7750 Headquarters for -| AUTO-LITE Batteries ! Special Discounts During This Sale! All Wheel Balanc- $808 ing Done on Our New Bean Wheel Balancer! 98 136 South Saginaw Open Eves. til 9 P. M.! _ -FE5-4503 - “| | nial i ~ _| |FIFTY-TWo Good. Recovery Man Blaine Earon of. the Detroit Lions’ led the National Football League:in fumble recoveries dur- ing the 1952 season. Earon, a de- fensive end, pounced on five enemy fumbles. | | Montcalm Bowling Centre ‘OPEN League Openings Stil) Avaliable FREE INSTRUCTION 3 P.M. te § P.M 30 E Montcalm. FE 5-2221 Robe (- | & {4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, (THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 By BEN P GAR |timistic experts, Roberts didn’t} 1. Win possibly 24 games, as AP Sports W 1. Win 30 games. many or more than anybody else Robin Roberts is going to fali| 2. Pitch 400 innings. in either league. 3. Start every third day without; 2, Pitch more innings than any National Leaguer since Grover ly in the season buf Iphia strong boy has te a year. ontrary to some pf the op: right-hander is sure to | ' BUYING A FIN COSTLY BUSINES | BUYS A LOT O | TERIALS AND W ; BE CONVINCED | ... COMPARE! | eae | Enjoy the : PeeeeeeeAseKeeevescser2e 3. Start more games than any | ts Ending Fine Year Despite Late Slump other pitcher in the league this year. Despite a bleak month starting in early August, Roberts’ control a> record has been phenomenal. He Roberts won his 23rd game last | jeads the league in strikeouts with night, edging the New York Giants | 196 and has walked only 61 men, 2-1 on six hits. It was his 40th | an average of less than one every start and his 33rd complete con-/|five innings. Christy Mathewson test. For/the 14th time this season | pitched 18 games in 1908 without he didn't| walk a man, giving up a walk, but the best | a | PONTIA E - 4 i j | i i j | ] i convenience of a Mout, #42220000000¢0¢0000806¢8008 ; ; | S AT THE HUB... HERE’S ONE PLACE WHERE $45 15 IMPORTED ALL WOOL FLANNEL SUIT IS NOT A QUALITY, STYLE, COMFORT AND VALUE IN MA- ORKMANSHIP. SHOP THE HUB TOMORROW AND | ; : A tremendous special feature— Finer quality imported flannel suits at a very special price—$45. Well worth a $60 price tag. Light and medium shades of grey and the new popular charcoal grey — blues and tans in plain and fleck patterns—1. and 2- button and 3-button models .,- . Styled and tailored by one of the best makers in this country. SEE OUR WINDOWS C’S LARGEST EXCLUSIVE MEN’S! STORE. the Hub... Featuring America’s Finest Clothes CLIPPERCRAFT EAGLE KINGSRIDGE DON RICHARDS ° _ HOUSE OF WORSTED-TEX | ROCK KNIT | PHOENIX SCCHSSSEHOESEESOOCCES SOOO CEOS 4-—— + the great Walter Johnson could do in one season was 10 walkless games in 1913. Another pretty fair pitcher turned in one of his usual excellent per- formances last night as Warren Spahn of the Milwaukee Braves beat the St. Louis Cardinals 2-1 for his 22nd victory. Spahn has lost only seven games. Roberts has been beaten 15 times. * * * The combination of Roberts and Spahn moved the Phillies and Cards into an exact tie for third place in the National League. Each club has three games to play. In other action yesterday the pennant winning New York Yank- ees defeated Philadelphia 3-1 and Cleveland clinched second place in the American League with an 8-3 verdict over Chicago. . Cincinnati nursed its hopes for fifth place finish with a 4-3 decision over the Chicago Cubs. Ed Lopat took a seven inning World Series workout against the Athletics and everybody on the Yankees was) satisfied he's really |ready. He gave up a run, eight hits. walked no one and struck out four. It's Time Out “Oh, good! |Mavis is here—I was afraid she couldn’t come!” The deal of two years ago which sent Johnny Sain from the Braves to the Yankees for Lew Burdette has been paying off for both teams. a eed Erskine Slated for 3 Starts ‘in World Series . Roe Set for 2nd Game; Meyer, Milliken, Loes to Work Others | BROOKLYN ® — Carl Erskine. smallest and lightest of Brooklyn's pitchers, will attempt an iron-man | stunt in the World Series between | the Dodgers and New York Yank- | ees starting next Wednesday. * * * The 5-10, 160-pound right-hander, only 20-game winner among the Dodgers, ig slated to pitch the first, fourth and seventh games Brooklyn Manager Charlie Dressen disclosed today, That is contingent of course, on the series going the | limit of seven games. | Dressen’s overall pitching plans | are pretty well set except for the third and fifth games. Preacher Roe, the 35-year-old southpaw, is a certainty to pitch’ the second | game. The canny veteran has a perfect 2-0 record against the Yankees in World Series competi- | tion. | . * s “T hope to get two games out of Roe,’’ Dressen said today as the Dodgers went through three- hour workout at Ebbets Field. ‘‘I may start him in the sixth game unless I find I need him in relief before then." Dressen is undecided between | veteran Russ Meyer and Bob Mil- liken for the third game. Meyer has a 15-5 record but he hasn't been very effective of late. Milli- ken, on the other hand, has been | more impressive with each game. “It will be either Meyer or Mil- liken in the third game,”’ said Dressen. ‘“The one who doesn’t go then may pitch the fifth game. Then again, it might be Billy Loes in the fifth game. I haven’t made up my mind yet.”’ WEDNESDAY’'S STARS By The Associated Press BATTING—Larry Deby, Cleveland In- idans, hit bis 29th home run, breaking « 3-3 tle as the Indians went on te clinch second place with am 8-3 decision ever Chicage. PITCHING—Warren Spahn, Milwaukee Braves, won his 22nd game against sev- have taken to Tweed. L And Alpagora Tweeds are young, bright . . . as stimulating im a coat as laughter on a man’s face.. ! ALPAGORA See what brilliant styling have built into these coats: womistakably smart, different, with painstaking detail that will ever be a part of your coat. Priced wousually low .. ! the Alpagora specialists 106 N. SAGINAW THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 | } FIFTY-THREE | Irish and Sooners Closely PPOOT OOO CL LL Ld hh fl IV Deal Enriches Pro Elevens tazied‘since“s season aM, IIOP POCO OC LLL 4 ve) Vit PaO aaa aaa aw. | NORMAN, Okla. #—Ever since | Press ranking poll. ret = = =a — t | they got! together on the idea that | The next year they reversed TODAY A YEAR: AGO—Calumet , to win th¢ $29,050 Lawrence Reali- | Df ) Farm's Mark-Ye-Well pulled away | zation at|Belmont Park. | Saturda Ni ht [eran oe pour) thos¢ places. Last year, when they HERE'S WHAT WE DO: : anneal Senator Asks | play one, another, Notre Dame and | | finally met and Notre Dame won © Remove front wheels and © Inspect brake drums. Check ’ | Oklahoma have | been almost like|@ 27-21 thriller, the Irish were inspect lining. | and add brake fluid if | needed © Adjust brake shoes to secyre | M ar ti al Law G t Aid | twins in| national ratings. co third and Oklahoma ee Py ° ° Vig | m w | year e pre-season . e mer rome. Bowling Ball & Bag Combination jo) in Press Box GMOS 10 AIG. | wetter they stay that way | aut” Notre’ Dame “iret and ihe} QA * Upset clan and repack ful contact with rams * after Saturday's big game and | cooners sixth. through t : The Ideal Gift for Ever Bowler | Desperate Measure to | Ramrand-home! eres may de Notre Dame will fly in from FRONT END ALIGNMENT rer eer .$1.98 > BRUNSWICK or ERO ITE | Halt NCAA Ban on TV | C0 overage. peed upon the lendotes of talent ||scur ont ind. Feiday afters TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED FOR ALL WORK \ Sought in Oklahoma | Juxeting in this year of the big switch from platoon to individual Grann WI | is Ne. y Hamner, shortsto; BO ING BALL ‘dirs wate CITY 7 Okla | Commissioner Predicts: football, Philadelphia Phillies, has . aoe 146 West Huron Street FEderal 2-9251 ~ ion t ‘ | homa state senator ay (us| One of Closest Races | The contract which set up Sat-| er. Wes, who formerly played with ng Handsome Luxurious NA AHYDE .@!\ costed martial law as a final | in NFL Histor urday’s clash wag signed just after | the Phils and St. Louis Browns (hahaa ahah arharhathatharaharhataath BOWLING AG desperate way of breaking the | yi | the 1949 season, ip which Notre National Collegiate Athletic Asso-| PHILADELPHIA u — National Dame was first and Oklahoma | cjation’s ban on state-wide tele- | Football League embarks on its Both for only | casting of the Oklahoma- Notre | 34th season Sunday, financially bol- | Double- Qualifying Setup $ 70 | ed oo io game in Norman | stered by a $1,300,000 package deal | Out in National Open , | ees | for television rights. NEW YORK @® + Double-quali- | | Sen. George Miskovsky, long a | It's the biggest TV deal in pro) fication system} for the National | foe of NCAA television policies, | football history and the first test) |Open golf tournament, which was $33.70 Value | paid iho would suggest fhat Cov. | of the league’s plan of scheduling| in effect for | the first time this | Johnston Murray declare mar- | Saturday night games as a means year, diéd aj quick death. Remember: tial law and as chief executive | of permitting more TV coverage} United States Golf Associjation | Ackerman's is | exercise his’sovereign right over of out-of-town games without cut-| said yesterday if would not use the the only stpre the stadium press box to invite | ting down home game attendance. ' method again, Next year, the old if County that any TV station crew in the state Now the fan can see a pro foot-| system of 36-hole sectional qualify- SID BARNETT ae fe ee hyd ie to work, ball game televised from out-of- ing rounds and a 7i-hole champion Complete Line B rune wick The NCAA has authorized only town Saturday night and still see ship proper will be used. Bowling Bags, Bowling O4l WKY-TV. Oklahoma City, to tele-, the home team play the next day— ’ Gilt cast the big game. Since the sta- OF Vice versa. Shoes, Shirts, iy B li R | Certificates tion reaches only the scentral re- And NFL Commissioner Bert OW ing ceSU 1S Dress Plaques. TODAY! Team game—West Huron 925; series lem for the pre-season dopester | Robert Craven | 2496; {ndiv. game— | with the aging Cleveland Browns | ]${'7 Temple 22%; series-Joanne Padar | given a so-so chance of repeating —s | over strengthened clubs like the | DADE EAGLES Available gion of the state, football fans in, Bell predicts one of the closest | AUTOMOTIVE The Hit of The Country | southern and northern Oklahoma] races in league history—which wie | wh ‘ : ' O§ have besieged the governor and, could give grandstand attendance | 7 ag eas ae Sit mgr Hh Is Yours at Ba rnett s i university officials with protests.| a shot in the arm, obviously. | Cent. Line, 5/3 Aute Gl R53 . " P “Every team is improved,” said| Retersens'| 53 Kimmel | 33 Value-Packed Price! ! i a ; FIVE YEARS AGO — The In-) poy hg Ar Ta Pie eleture ot Rim'nschn'ider 5 3 Oak! Auto 35 | . sole a: Ul? ie iy Meee ar prem tlig loem 0 | Reversible ieee # | costs are taken out. And millions | Greenwoods 624; series—-Mac & Jims CAMPUS | more TV viewers than ever before | . | will peer through the ozone at NF L| N| LAKE JACKETS contrasting stripings, self dol- lar, knitted cuffs, snap buttons. A finer melton |wool with extra: warmth from the water fepellent gabardine by SYLyAs awit on reverse side. In jet black, » BA | scatbacks and bruisers. Only areas | Warwick $0 Pont. Piston $4) Knit Trim royal blue, jmaroon. Sizes 34 | within a 7Smile radius of an NFL| Baker;Hansen @2 Dxb.ieege = 44) MH. , to 4G: (ur |priga only S1S.80, - i contest will be blacked out from | Jerome's ut §3 riven Gen. 26 Same Colors ie RCHASE PRICE...YOU KEEP RAZOR KIT! watching another league game on si. Cinrs. 4.4 Huntpon 26 $ 87 t + ae television. oO, C. B. 44 James Firs. 17 pe Games will be carried on the| '™*”: game—L, Manning 235. ABC and DuMont networks each | ROLLING PIN week with a number of national spack par 1d 2 WeamNe& 34 : and local advertisers picking UP | Team Ne — a Airway i rae the tab. Buirley — 5 Pont. Pistg. aa Open day of intersectional battles | ot - | : Se oe 48 | takes the Giants to Los Angeles, | inate. me: strlen Kenamann oe : the Eagles to San Francisco and | ‘$¢t)—302; team) game—Shore Mkt. 784; Pittsburgh to Detroit. Chicago oprice—Team ee al Raina | Bears open against division rivals WES 1] SIDE “ape aH | at Baltimore, Cleveland clashes | Triple ‘x Me. ber url ) with Green Bay at Milwaukee and| Feat 13 Melia "Fern ‘4 | Washington plays the Cardinals in w. Ss. Ree. 5 Coca . 3 Chicago. Blue Cinrs. 14 Fou me 1| Ellis Truck. | 4 Spikes e| Indiv. game—F ai irbrother 228, . Marsh Heads State ——— . | Writers Grid Body ; 3 DETROIT — Mill Marsh, Ann | — Arbor ‘sports editor, yesterday | | % SS : was named president of the Mich- | ' . igan Football Writers Association. | He succeeds Hal Middlesworth, | Detroit sports writer. e Four vice presidents also were \ named. They were Lloyd Northard, | of United Press, Lyall Smith, De- | | | troit sports editor, Harry Stapler | |and Bob McClelland, Detroit writ- | ers. . Paul Pentecost, publicist for | | This offer being made to prove to yow = =| Wayne University, was named sec- | that Schick Injector Razor and Blades retary spelis ieiticasiainbmngeal duane | Bi, give you smoother, cleanet, faster, safef | Title Bout in Detroit | shaves. But hurry .. . supply is limited! 2 ° | troiters, Bob Amos and Arthur , ) HERE'S WHAT YOU GET: | Wright, will meet in a 10-rounder { — po: | HERE'S ALL YOU jector , at Motor City Arena tonight for Today + for fhe world's bow serena Gold-Ploted —- | the vacant state light-heavyweight | : scarce Ingnerow Razor KE f9s OU he campo | a Effective October 1, 1953 ly 98¢! | for | | "U SGold Peck” Pineyes you | TWENTY YEARS AGO — Mike | c $ E 334 3 smoothest, cleanest, safest, fastest shayes you ve “T oo aad empty rtrid (2) in- 1 blade ca: ge; structi obey uae razor, and (3) Special Ratued aces ly filled out. Use Certificate be- Contino I your dealer will give you Mail to one! sole Pi Inc., Box 12, Brooklyn 1, N, Y- Donlin, 56, former outfielder with the New York Giants, died. - Pontiac General Tire Co. Will Be Changed to WILLIAMS TIRE CO. ' ’ f HERE'S WHAT WE DO: he 98¢ you paid. Or 1 immediately refund t f © yeh wish, we will send you two jector 20's rth $1.46. | a bladoet O eaaaste Free Offer! sgdoand scluice INJECTOR RAzoR gives you hme fie ad aaah ane an 0 | adiesting - | =a lips... y “Fite” your face— ips u'll be happy you did! geben eco 350 Beh Ave, NT. C New Schick Injector Blades Shave You CLEANER, FASTER THAN ANY SINGLE OR DOUBLE- EDGE BLADES IN THE WORLD—REGARDLESS OF PRICE! No Change in Ownership or Management a razor is matched only by SS a aoe bg hace aad | | precision e qo? . . ' i ee Under our new name we will continue to serve our many | ; | ie ea. ay ee ee er a ee ee ee friends and customers with the same quality GENERAL >_L_-SPECIAL REFUND CERTIFICATE | 1 | SAFETY TIRES and the same courteous service.as before. | this cortifies that | purchased © 98¢ Schick Injector Razor KR, and have complied with the term of this offer. ! | Enclosed is the instruction sheet from my sew Schick Injector Razor and, the empty 12 blode cartridge from the Ki. | i | | Please Send me $1.46 worth of Schick Injector © ) Mtend ow 8 i | | Blades —2 pocks of 20's : To be Filled in by Dealer: ' \ DEALER'S NAME; PURCHASER'S NAME ' | ss | (Please print) ' | 1 ADDRESS. - WOME ADDRESS. i f 1 cit¥_. i STATE city. __STATE ' ; SOLD BY: DATE SIGNED * (Purchaser's Signature) ° e e | This special offer limited one to a! customer end ik made ond empty Cortridge must be mailed before expiration dete, | 77 W. Huron at Cass Pontiac, Michigan | Fh ds dees pale per egy ervartingeadlnedee pre peeps yoann edi 1953. (Remember to ellow your: 5 purchaser not requested by neugh blodes , | eny other’ party. To be velid, Certificate, Instreciion Shoot Tan Gocldharps bol, Bon 11, Groat 1, $0. ¥. i Locally Owned by Ed L. Williams ; ¢ TO BE VALID REFUND CERTIFICATE MUST BE RETURNED WITH MeSTRUCTION air 12 CARTRIDCE. 23 N. Saginaw St. | ns ; | } : 4 v | . | | | | | | | j . a | ie, et, he Se eR OTEe, Cin OS Tete 6 OR Oe thee ee? tig few te* - rn eee . FIFTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953 Chiets Seek —_f a ven Hamtram Baltimore Men Want fo Buy Browns Stock St. Louisans Planning Last-Ditch Fight to Keep, Team BALTIMORE (# — A group of wealthy Baltimoreans was all] set today to plunk out $1,115,000 for working .contral of the St. Louis Browns ‘if Américan League ‘own- ers O.K. the ttansfer. Meanwhile, a group of St. Louis- ans announced’ last-ditch plans to fight thé transfer, saying © they would fly to New York to seek a hearing’ before) league ownets at the special meéting Sunday. Developments came as a time for decision neared on Bill Veeck’s second attempt to move his srewns from St. Louis. ‘The league turned) down his request to come te Baltimore last. spring by a. 5-2 vote. The feeling here was one of 'con- fidence | that this year’s attempt would succeed iwith local baseball men claiming | the necessary) six votes for the franchise shift would come Baltimore's way. Most .of the! ¢lub owners who voted against} the transfer last spring were reported solidly in the Baltimore , camp, Clark Griffith of the Washington Senatorsa pre- vious foe of the; move—has publicly stated he will vote for Baltimore | regardless: of what other owners do But remembering last spring's defeat when the transfer, was re- garded jas equally certain every- thing was down with a note of caution ‘last. night—contingent on Sunday’ action. A special American League com- mittee fas said only that it will recommend transferring the Browns “to ‘‘another city’ to be determined by ithe owners. Veeck, reached in St. Louis, said there could bé no financial ar- rangements made until such a time as. ‘‘we have something to sell, and we havé nothing to sell.”’ | Crusaders Plan Running Game for TV Audience S. Telegraph, Pontiac, of Mexico off Clearwater, Fla. operating out at the ! GMC Golf lest Scheduled Saturday Sefenty- five 2-man fteams will | compete in the 9th annfal General | athe golf tourname at t Field will tee off at J a.m. Both cash prizes afd trophies will awarded. Competition will be held in five fligh@, under a handicap system. SURPRISE CATCH—Charles B. Weedon and son, Benson, surprised themselves by a string of red and | blac grouper they cought recently while on a 1-day trip into the Gulf Weedons were fishing on a arina on Clearwater Beach. a Seget end ee of 1661 boat TEN YEARS AGO—The Dodgers | defeated the Cardinals 43. t Saturday | e Bald Mountain{ Golf Club. ' | Defending championsjare Charles | Barker and Charles Cappell. i Hadel Park Feature May | Be Run in Two Divisions DETROIT — The $10,000 purse | ip to be run Saturday at Park is attracting so much pions Haze | of + Michigan Juvénile cham- | Visio Ss, | retary Horace Wade. Lagt Saturday the track’s Border | BOSTON “ + Holy Cross ob-| Cities Handicap was fun in two) viously is planning a strong run- aire for a purse of $10,000 each ning aftack against Dartmouth j ree of an oversized entry list. | Saturday in their nationally tele- | vised fpotball| game at Lynn's Manning Bowl. Dr. Eddie Anderson, Holy Cross Le sue Leaders | attention it may be run in two di-| according to racing — } + | Ni Count | : Nine County Cosmos Open -Giveteteres SB Home late for PHS Friday members of this season's Olivet Detroit Suburban Team College football team. Pontiac rep- resentatives on the squad include Holds 3-2 ASE in Games Clifford Officer, Leonard Compton. | Charles Twitty, Dick Powell ana | Jim Hawisher, Also playing on the varsity are | Warren Mellor of Royal Oak, | Fred Harbrueger of Keego Har. | bor, Ed Bryant of Farmington ™ PHS-HAMTRAMCK SERIES 7 and Donald Card of Waterford. | 6 1922 6 seeereeteeesee EPR seme wen eeeriae Clark Balch, formerly of the Pon-| 5--+----+ +--+ “ noscjsenaoodioc i tiac High coaching staff, is as-| 7°22°225.2°2°''! yese (of 20222 "19 sistant football coach at Olivet. Plas inlet Mea te beh ie enue il __ Willie Troy Moves onions Pontiac High's football team will seek to square its series with Hamtramck Friday night, when WASHINGTON \P—Willie Troy Up in Ring Ranks pont the Cosmos come to Wisner Me- 9 Leo . P “ a 21-year-old | from = | morial Stadium to open the stepped up aj notch 5 lg mn Chistes’ 1654 home seasan world’s middleweights ‘last night . shila B . - The two teams first met in 1922 by knocking out Lee Sala, Pitts- on and then, after a 25-year lapse, | burgh veteran| started their current series in 1948. Jt was a pretty drab fight, | First meeting ended in a:6-6 tie, this nationally’ televised affair, ex-' and Hamtramck has won three of {cept for a brief offensive flurry, the next’ five contests. lhe San 4 | by Sala in the second round and Cann Jas) Recbedi. ta bis 96 | the left hook) with which Troy | Cc head coach ha | flattened Sala jat 2:09 of the fifth. | ae een) telecine incluging tear i ‘ i tant blow | rmen, a se oa regulars, back from the 1952 | i ae a heen in ne Pea eleven that suffered a 44-0 drub- Im his ian bing from the Chiefs. And that blow is likely to give | | Troy a shot at) some of the higher | Regulars back are end Ronald guard Gerald Brown, | ranking fellows in his division. He | McRee, | demonstrated enough ring savvy | quarterback Dick Sosnowski and ; | last night to jearn himself some | fullback Ed Szczypanik, while | competition inj fast company. TRAVLER 178" BIG 17” SCREEN... MAHOGANY CABINET! INCLUDES TAX AND WARRANTY! other lettermen are tackle Marcus | By ED SAINSBURY Recruiting of Preps Hits. ‘Peak Under Rules Change k Series need so many players now, so the CHICAGO (UP) — Recruiting of | smaller schools ran put everything high school football stars by col. | into getting fewer boys, of better leges has reached a new peak | ability. since abolition of the grid platoon | | charged today. | issue, “T’ve never seen so much com- |: system, a Big Ten football coach! petition for some players,” | adde, he | pectations that the return to one | both large ang small schools, ‘to | platoon football would cut bidding , 8&t an outstanding boy.”’ by the colleges for players, reverse was true. “There are a lot more schools after the good players now,"’ he said, ‘‘and with that competition for the boy, the idea of getting more has increased, “I think it’s because you don't ‘Triple Crown Hopes Slim | EAST LANSING (UP)—Practice — — | starts Monday for Michigan State's defending Big 10, ICAA and NCAA 'eross country champions. Coach Karl Schladelman, greet- | ing only three lettermen, said pros- pects for a triple crown are ‘“‘slim.”’ Patton, center (Ge Kunnath, and end George Kowalczyk. Harris \Blow at guard, Andy Safronerko ‘orge | repeat | at tackle and Myron Love and Ken | Smith at halfbacks complete the starting lineup. Hamtramck was unimpressive in | winning its Ist start last Sunday, | / 12.6, over St. Ladislaus, a Class B Hamtramck parochial team. Ros- beck was disappointed in his squad's show, having expected to »win “by three or four touch- downs."’ Game is scheduled to start at 8 p.m. Friday, | } | | | | “More schools actually are | Refusing to be quoted on the making offers; to boys, and they | he said that contrary to ex-| come from alf over the country, Forest Area Will Open for Trials in October LANSING (UP) |— Michigan con- servation departnient officials said | today a 2,500-acre field trial area | in the Huron County National For- est should be ready for trials early in October. The Alpena Grouse Field Trial Association requested the area be set aside for trials) and it re ceived approval by the state con- servation commission in August. Federal Forest Service later ap- proved the project. | \ : \ : KEEGO HARBOR dd ichirhirhirharhrhrhnhodh the Fra hehehehe ethan ha hall N Join Our Mixed Leagues! Bowl Sunday Nights at 8:30 P. M. Couples and Individuals Needed SPILLWOOD LANES \ FE 3-9723 \ reewww. Come in dnd Meet JAKE A veteran of over 35 years in the automotive |business, Mr. Jacobson is just the man to bring your car |troubles to. f JACOBSON’S Motor Sales Your Mudson Dealer 58 W. Pike et Coss poe 2 THE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIACS:3eRei mamas | Gene Schiller and the strong Chick i , Murphy: Softball Tourney Field . ne hid tiret ete sk e Yes! © $3 a week puts a big 17” | coach, has his first string back- | By | rise. Ajsaala tha |Peess = cave vens ripe aa | | field in top physical condition and AMERICAN LEAGUE the Wetld Seriest running! full tilt in practice ses- BATTING—Vetnon, Washington, .336; . | sions Rosen, Cleveland, .329; Goodman, Boston, || ¢ Big 17’ self-focusing rectanguler pic- | yt f | 342; | Busby, Washington and Minoso, ture tube .. . sharper pictures! | prikcly gets “4 likg PO pplort he TRU S—Ros Cleveland, 108; Yost | @ Finest hand-rubbed mahogany venee | 7 Pay! 4 To : osen, eveland, : ost, n or r j moutl ¢goach Tugs Mc Laughry 1S | Washington, 105; Mantle, New York, cabinet! Handsome fornitore otyline? | spending much time striving to} set; Minese, Cihieage, 102; Vernon, ‘ pane : ad | ml fashin n. : find his best defensive group, one | “gy S BATTED IN—Rosen, Cleveland, || pias ee — sw sone! ere that will also be able to put on} poe en 14; Boome, y tation ‘ : efra, New " ; Ama = 4 ; some sort of) offense. | Devs ee and Zernial, Philadel- | te ape eae pe knob vonet i ~y Ko \le ; P hia,/ 102. | nstr _ McLaughry is seeking another | WE. can. GECROTE. Six Vor-|| *oO* A fore hee domens ation line baeker tO pair with center! non, [Washington, 200; Rosen, Cleveland, | ‘ackr icip: 192; |Philley, Philadelphia, 187; Busby, ' Paul Mackrey, in anticipation of | Westhieten,’ 178. 1 strong running: by Holy Cross’ fleet | DpDowBLES—Vernon, Washington, 43; “ ss] Kell,| Boston, 41; Goodman and White, | Bostan, 33; KUENN and NIEMAN, DE- * | TRO and Jensen, Washington, 32. | TRIPLES—Rivera, Chicago, 14: Ver- — non,| Washington, 11; Piersall, Boston | and Philley, Philadelphia, 9; Five Players | tied with 8 cach. | Le) —Z ial, Philadelphia, 42; | Down to 3 Teams Today | meet. clewiand "A? moby Chelan, ( — Field in the | ‘TRO T, 23. MIAMI, Fila. STOLEN BASES—Minoso, Chicago, 23; Amateur Softhall Association world | Riveda, Chicago, 22; Jensen, Washing- Tournament will be trimmed to| Werdington, 1 Faiedeipiia and Bewty : three teams ih today’s play. PITCHING—Lopat, New York, 16-4, ' Detroit's defending champions | *8' etd Mes. 114; Sain, New York, ik and the Clearwater, Fla., Bombers, | 14-6,|.700; Raschi, New York, 13-6, .684. Shoulders look more nat- only unbeaten teams remaining in Tespiagtisnng tt vral. Lapels are longer, the double elimination event, will Bost — Cleveland, 134; Parnell, STEVENS pale | . meet at 8 p. m. (EST). Both have *°**f" f . _ FE 3-0 records. NATIONAL LEAGUE MODEL 820 the new TREND in tli Minneapolis; (2-1) and Blooming- senchadionst, Si. Leola, "355" Suider: > ; s ton, Ill. (3-1) will) clash at 1 p.m., Dreckines 337; Musial, St. Leuls, .334: SET OF SPARK PLUGS ait in we | prune up exainal Tee one nn ' AND OIL CHANGE The American male is undergoing a change of style Miami, ° 2 ALL NS ni er, rooklyn, 131; iam, . } . es Detroit moved into the finals of | Brrg™Seq!"Yortt ict: ‘Maters) Mi ee re nee ere in glothing. (Did you Feed ebout * in tivef) He ett t ieliced Gea, sae 3 Completely remenutectured! is bidding farewell to exaggerated broad shoulders, shutting out Minneapolis 6-0. Clear- sreckiya, 14%; Mathews, Milwaukee, 106: Guaranteed 6 months or 8000 4 Rich tone! Low i: dding 7 oe water blanked Midland, Mich., 1951 ore ene da = er é miles. Prices stort et $108.95 Ex- eaiae le al wide lapels and ‘‘drape”’ appearance. In ita stead world champion, 4-0. coal . 290: change! ore power! : ) . . ° : is Y wskae 196; Mest St. Leah a he is embracing a new, natural look of tall, trmm : 194;| Dark, New York, 188; Schoen- } ne . 10 BOUT DOUBLES Musial, Si, Louis, 3: 6-SHOT PUMP GUN neatness. Nowhere is it better expressed than in _ fia | toe, SO” 1.19 HEATERSTAT 98¢ RIM WRENCH Suton ere lower, the coot the new Hart Schaffner & Marx body style balled, 4 i ti, 36. , : | - BOXING SHOW “*FiIPLES— Gillam vBrowtlymy 13: Bre. | $1.50 Weekly UMctont! Pp Seve New! slightly longer Bit teeta appropriately, the “Trend.” The small pictures at a ge ge I fay gE el ; + seep | in | Saturday, Sept. 26,8 P.M. | sethis sna Musial St. Lou '9. | @ Fast hammerless action! 97¢ ¢ c=. left show the various changes of style in detail. Pontiac Armory | «21 Campanciia and Mulder, Breeklyn. . perfect wi qun’ r Better still, stop in and let us show you the new 41; Kiner, Chicago, 34 merican walnut stock! All Amateur Events | “hoe anak trates, uilnaates | You Save 22c! Four-way cross! Trend in a range of fabrics and models. | From I ny fh nl | lym, 20; Rebinson, Brooklyn, 17; Snider, | . Get faster heet in Removes lugs cod spet-omcs | |Segzayeet eereer. esbereh 16 | winter quickly, ¢asily! Building Fun | .769; Spahn, Milwaukee, 22-7, .759; Meyer, if res es A Brogklyn and Burdette, Milwaukee, 15-5, -750; Staley, St. Louis, 18-8, .692. STRIKEOUTS—Roberts, Philadetphia, 196; Erskine, Brooklyn, 183; Mizell, St. Leuis, 164; Haddix, St. Lewis, 151; Spahn Milwaukee, 143. HART SCHAFFNER &MARX Fy 49% WHEEL COVER ee =, < Durebie Moher aa: Drive without loves! Your || stay warm sHN" | Dickcinsons SPIEGEL J&R futo Stores | SAGINAW at LAWRENCE i att : 272 W. Maple—BIRMINGHAM ) SE ONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER a | iiaan er label is wn- chonged, the symbol of fine tailoring. Dual Exhaust Systems | Increase Horsepower — Reduce Back Pressure Sandee Dual MUFFLER SETS Complete Belond EXHAUST 1932-48 Ferd, Mercury. 18.00 HEADER Systems— 1949551 Berd, Mercury 20.00 Ford-Mercury .. Porter Dual MUFFLER SETS; Oldsmobile ...... HEADERS & ecranisions- 1942448 Ford. Mercury 34.00 1949.53) Berd. Mercury 34.00 All Fords & Mercurys. 38.00 Box of 25! Famous Brand! Dependable! 115 N. 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