eR ee LT I LT TI I MP ETA IM bowtie bases etaitecetats A “< ‘ “=. THE PONTIAC PRESS Saturday: Cloudy, Snow . listh YEAR. . * * * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1954 —44 PAGES 1D CS eS TERE | Seaway to Benefit Pontiac Locality + Shipping Costs Cut: More Jobs Now Foreseen Steel Mills and Foreign Tourists to Get Break From Project Pontiac business and in- dustrial men agreed Thurs- day that the St. Lawrence | Seaway will benefit the) manufacturer, merchant and working man in this area. Benefits listed by them include: 1. Increased employment in and around Detroit through necessity to con- struct and operate larger port facilities plus handling a greater volume of goods. 2. Shipping costs would be low- ered by sending local products abroad directly from Detroit. 4. Foreign tourists would be able to sail directly to Detroit, thus 2 F Hl : : i See Economic, Security Beriefits Many Years Distant However CHICAGO —Proponents of the St. Lawrence Seaway today hailed | * congressional but tempered their rejoicing in the [ vad i : i vali | Dondero Receives Seaway Trophy | HOUSE GAVEL—Rep. George A. Dondero (right) of Royal Oak, House floor leader for passage of St. Lawrence Seaway bill, is given gavel used by Speaker Joseph Martin Jr. (R-Mass) over the session at which the measure was adopted yesterday afternoon. AP Wirephote in presiding Consumers Cuts. Natural Gas Rate by 6 Pct. New Schedule to Date. From May 1, velit Head Announces Natural gas rates making | effective the reduction of | about $2,900,000 a year ordered by the Michigan Public Service Commission April 30 are being put into effect by Consumers Power Com as of May 1, President Dan E. Karn an- nounced today tn Jackson. “The new rates will apply to all | natural gas used on of after May 1,” Karn said. The new rates are designed to reduce Consumers Power Com- pany’s annual natural gas reve- mues $2,908,458 or about 5.8 per cent. They contain a provision that if the Federal Power Commission orders a further decrease or an increase in Panhandle rates, Con- rates will reflect the SEAWAY PROJECT—Map shows area involved |to finance U. S. share of construction of a proposed in St. Lawrence Seaway plan. Legislation approved | 21-foot-deep waterway between Ogdensburg, N. Y. yesterday provides $105,000,000 in revenue bonds | and Montreal. Seaway Victory Personal Triumph for Rep. Dondero Passage of the St. Lawrence Seaway bill yesterday was a personal triumph for Republican Rep. George A. Don- dero of Royal Oak. Dondero had formed the nucleus of a far-seeing group of lawmakers which fought - * . * - legislation. The representative's sea- way fight lasted through the administration of three presidents over the last 22 years. Though he battled for the bill vigorously through the years, it wasn’t until he was named chair- man of the House Public Works Committee under President Eisen- since 1932 for passage of the tay. Employment Up by Half Million April Jobless Less by 260,000 Encouraging U.S. Report WASHINGTON @—The govern- ment reported today unemploy- ment declined 260,000 in April, the first jobless drop since last Oc- tober. Employment increased nearly half a million in month. The encouraging job report issued jointly by Secretary Labor Mitchell and Secretary of Commerce Weeks in a new com- nemployment 3,465,000 or 260,000 less than the 3,725,000 jobless counted in March. Employment increased by 498,000 between March and April, from 60,100,000 to 60,598,000. New Quakes Hit Greece | ATHENS, Greece #}—Two strong earth tremors rocked central Greece early 7 ) School Board Positions Open Mrs. King to Run Again; Osmun Still Undecided; 2 Others in Race Two'places on the Pontiac Board of Education are to be filled at the school election June 14 and to date petitions are in circulation for three candidates. The terms of Mrs. Lola B. King change. For the average household cus- tomer who uses natural gas for } Monthly bills of these customers vary widely with the seasons and with the size and construction of the bilildings heated. Commercial and industrial gas : Youth Services customers who use natural gas for processing purposes will benefit through reductions averaging slightly less than 5 per cent. The new. domestic service rate, which applies to household cus- tomers including house heating customers, begins with a monthly minimum bill of $1.20 which covers the first 500 cubic feet. The next 1,500 cubic feet come at 15 cents per hundred cubic feet and the next 8,000 cubic feet at 10 cents per hundred. > Gas in excess of 10,000 cubic feet per month will be charged for at the rate of 7.6 cents per hundred cubic feet. Under the old rates,.the month- ly minimum bill was $1.30, which included the first 500 cubic feet of gas used. The next 1,500 cubic feet came at 15 cents per hundred, the. next 3.500 at 11.5 cents per hundred, and all gas in excess of 5.500 cubic feet at 8.6 cents per hundred. Bulletin WASHINGTON (AP) —The Senate today voted to send President Eisen- hower’s Taft-Hartley re- vision bill back to the labor committee, in effect : In New Posts ‘Reds Take Dien Bien Phu After 57-Day Siege Little Fortress Isabelle Still Holds Off Vietminh Fate of General De Castries and Heroic French Nurse Is Not Yet Known By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PARIS — Dien Bien Phu se. JAMES W. HUNT Chief to Resign W. R. McCarthy to Take Seattle Post; Successor to Be James Hunt 'Union garrison’s main artil had epitomized the Indoch 57 days. the lanky commander in ch —_——+ Tells of ‘Threats | by Carr, Cohn Stevens Swears That, M’‘Carthy Aides Sought Favors for Schine WASHINGTON w—Secretary of | the Army Stevens swore today that Sen. McCarthy's aides threatened him if Pvt. G. David Schine failed to get favored treatment They made “exceedingly seri- ous’ threats, Stevens told the Sen- | ate subcommittee investigating the | McCarthy-Army row. And, Stevens declared, he had | a distinct impression from Mc- | Carthy, as well as from the senator's aides, that the more “hammering” the Army would be subjetted te from the MeCar- thy committee. William R, McCarthy, director of Children's Services for Oakland County, today announced his res- ignation effective May 14. McCarthy is going to Seattle, Wash., to serve as administrative assistant to the director of the Charities ‘of the Archdiocese of Seattle and will be succeeded here by his assistant, James W. Hunt. duvenile ,Court Judge Arthur E. Moore credited McCarthy with reorganizing the juvenile services of Oakland County so that they are now recognized as the finest in the state. Since coming here in November 1948 from Detroit, McCarthy has (Continued on Page 17, Col. 1) Low Temperatures, Flurries Predicted Near freezing temperatures to- night with posible snow flurries or light showers Saturday are fore- cast for the Pontiac area by the U.S. Weather Bureau. The bureau predicts a 32-35 de- gree low tonight and a high of from’ 530 to 54 degrees Saturday. The temperature ranged from 4 to 54 degrees here Thursday. About .6 of an inch of rain fell. At 8 a.m. the temperature was 46 degrees, but by 2 p.m. in down- killing it for this year. town Pontiac it stood at 4. Schine, a member of a wealthy New York family, was an unpaid | | consultant to the McCarthy sub- ; committee until he was drafted | last fail. | The McCarthy-Army row re- | volves about Army contentions the | senator and his aides made im- proper efforts to get preferential treatment for Schine and McCar- | thy's countercharges the Army |} tried to shut off the senator's in- vestigations of Communists in the Army. McCarthy hammered questions at Stevens and the usually mild- mannered secretary, in his 1tth day in the witness chair, snapped back with a sharpness not dis- played before. Pressed by McCarthy to say) whether Roy M. Cohn, the McCar- thy subcommittee’s chief counsel, and Francis P. Carr, its staff di- rector, had ever ‘‘threatened"’ him, | Stevens maintained they had | He said that because of the sub- | | committee’s search for espionage |} at Ft. Monmouth, N.J., ‘‘taken in | conjunction with the constant dis- | cussion of Schine, it was my feel- | ing that they were threatening me.”"’ | “If I did not do something, | they were going to do some- | thing,”’ Stevens said. | In response to McCarthy's urg- ling to be specific, Stevens cited | | what he called Cohn's “declaration }of war’’ against the Army after | (Continued on Page 17, Col. 4) | By WILMA GREENWAY In a home in Walled Lake to- day there will be celebrated an anniversary with a history as in- | credible as anything man could imagine. It is an anniversary of disaster and sudden death. The pleasant-faced white-haired little lady who drinks a toast to life was once shipped with a truck- load of dead, her)sheeted body left on a slab to wait identification and burial. That lady is Mrs. George Me- good safe ship..We had been six days at sea, and now we were rounding the Irish coast. “Tomorrow the journey would be Only Known Lusitania Survivor in U. S.J Tells of ‘Death’ in the Sea 39: Years Ago |ended. Three Irish girls, spotting | the coast of home, began to sing: | “There is a green hill not far) away... "I joined in. We were | at the end of the verse when the | first torpedo struck. “There was a deafening crash. | The ship tipped. All the dishes | went crashing-from the tables. | I was knocked over to the side. | "TI tried to get up but my legs were paralyzed. I dragged my way to a staircase, a step at atime. | “On deck, mothers were tying their children to lifebelts and throwing ‘them into the sea. The deck of the ship was almost per- pendicular. Lifeboats tipped as goon as they were loaded, dumping the screaming, helpless women and children into the sea. : “T pulled myself to the side of the ship that was out of the water and clung.- Waves kept washing over me. This is it! I thought. This is the end. “I started praying, ‘Please save me — please God, save me long Ghoiigh to see my mother.’ “A man (Continued -— ee One of the last orders Brig. the Army did for Schine the lees — | past, | umphed in the end to continue as |one of the world’s leaders in all | things that tend to bring greater Premier Joseph Laniel announced late today the north- west Indochina bastion “has been submerged.” A little fortress named Isabelle, site of the. French has fallen. lery, still was holding out ‘three miles south of the bloodied, muddied bastion that | ina war to the world for Gen. Christian de Castries, ief, sent to Isabelle was to fire on his own command post when the Communist-led rebel riflemen finally cut through. There was no immediate word as to the fate of Gen. De Castries, commander of the fallen garrison, nor that of Genevieve de Galard Terraube, a French nurse and the only woman in the besieged fort. She had been decorated for gallantry twice within the week. Premier Laniel told the National Assembly counterattacks had been launched in a vain effort to block the rebels from making a juncture in attacks from the northeast and the southwest, but the defense ef- forts failed. “The government has just | tearned that Dien Bien Phe has been submerged after 20 hours of uninterrupted combat,” Lanie! sald, Laniel said “the French reaction | will be the reaction of the virilitys* of a great nation.” He added that France will con- | firm its instructions to its dele lke Says Dien Bien Phu ‘Will Stand as a Symbol’ WASHINGTON (#—President Ei- senhower said today the resistariée of French Union forces at the now fallen fortress of Dien Bien Phu “will forever stand as a symbol of the free world’s determination to resist dictaforial aggression." Eisenhower said France has suf- fered “temporary defeats’’ in the “but always she has tri- a —- richness to the lives of men.” | gates at Geneva without admitting that the fall of Dien Bien Phu can change anything. “France will recall to its Allies that during seven years it has never quit defending alone a great region of Asia,’ Laniel told the Assembly. All the deputies in the Assem- bly stood while Laniel announced the fall of Dien Bien Pha—ex- cept the Communists, They re- mained seated. Gen. Ho Nguyen. Giap’s rebel siege forces, bidding for victory before the Geneva conference started negotiations for an end to the 7-year-old war, outnumbered De Castries’ garrison by 4-to-1 or more. De Castries was estimated on the eve of the showdown battle to have 14,000 men, including wounded, at his command. These were Frenchmen, Foreign Legion- naires, Vietnamese and North Af- ricans. There were about 1,000 wounded in underground bunkers of the fort. All efforts for a truce to evacuate them had failed. The fortress, situated in a broad flat rice plain about six miles long and half that wide, was pounded by artillery and mortars during the long days of the siege. Each new wave of infantrymen bit off a bit of the original fortress until when the attack started dur- (Continued on Page 17, Col. 5) Governor Signs Law on Higher Jobless Pay LANSING (®—Governor Williams today approved the new unemploy- ment compensation law which was the heart of the Republican - con- trolled legislature's election year BIRMINGHAM — Despite Birmingham Recreation Board Making Plans for City’s Summer Program From, Our Birmingham Bureag , a director of United Foundatica the | and was genera] campaign chair- recent blustery weather; recrea-| man for the 1962 area drive. tion board members discussed the | city’s summer recreation program last night. Reviewed was a schedule to be distributed through the schools the first week in June. A new item included is a junior Three new members elected to} | the advisory committee for the | | coming year are Everel] E. Fisher, | | William E. Roberts and John K. | Stevenson | o a ° High school students of Holy sports program to be offered Mom | sme par , ; Birming? : “WE | Na parish will hold a golf tourn- ings at Sigh School. jament at North Hills Golf Club, Featured wil) be instruction in or-| ganization and fundamentals of | basketball. badminton, archery table tennis, roller skating and other sports. An enlarged instrumental mu- sic program is being offered te non-players whe can read direc- tiens, and all others. Free golf lessons and tournament play will be available at Springdale Park for youngsters 1@ to 17. Swimming and baseball, both in| ade- great demand, have been quately provided for. Instruction and classes for non-swimmers will starting at 10 a.m. tomorrow, It |is sponsored by the Newman Club and prizes will be awarded for the best medal] score . . . . Members of OES Chapter 20 | will take part in a bake sale from 19:30 a.m. to 2 pm. tomorrow at Jacobson s Open performances of the Pup | peteers production, “The Wizard of On,” will be sponsored at 16 and 11 a.m. tomerrow by the St. dames Episcopal Church school. The puppet shows will be in the church undercroft. Tickets may Birmingham osha’ aows ee | be purchased at the duor. page 7. be conducted at the Barnum School “Common Stock Investments il be the topic discussed by a pool, Baseball facilities will pro- repr esentative of a Detroit stock vide for both free and league play. | brokerage firm at tomorrow's Civi- | Tennis courts at Eton Park will jtan Club meeting. The 8 a.m. | be open to all age groups. For) breakfast gathering at Colonial small fry, school playgrounds and | Manor, Royal Oak, will also be a city parks will have supervised activities, A day camp will also be set up at Springdale a = a Succeeding John P. St. Clair, Wil- liam H. Breech has been elected tee of Birmingham - announced yesterday. jPh2Es gee ss ral th ap the only issue on which al! major farm organization are unanimous.”’ Police Hold Pontiac Man in Gun Theft BIRMINGHAM — Police today | of the Mackinac Straits Bridge. are holding James L. Smith, 32.! of 341 Howard McNeill St., Pontiac on investigation of larceny. He has been implicated in the theft of a .38 | revolver, taken from the McBride | Hardware Co. last November. The gun was turned over to local authorities after it was taken from Hugh Cox of Pontiac, arrested in connection with a recent Dearborn bank robbery. Smith wag recently released on $300 bond on another larceny charge. He stood mute in Oakland County Circuit Court Monday on a charge of stealing 37. packages of cigarettes from a local super- market. PONTIAC AND VICINITY cloudy tonight and Saterday. Colder to night with near freesing temperateres ranging from 32 te %. High Saturday © te 54 with light scattered chowers — Partly and snow flurries lhely. Northwest winds | MS te 90 miles an heer. Teday in Pontiac Lewest temperature preceding §& am AS 8 o.m.: Wind velocity © mph Direction: Southwest Gun sets Friday at 7:38 pm Sun rises Saturday at 6 19 am Moon sete Saturday at 12:47 am Moon rises Friday at 0:38 am Downtown Temperateres 6a 42 il a. m coone OF TB. M..cecese- 45 £9 MM... 03acdeas 1 sa.n vee M6 LP. MR... cccsee 53 OB. M.. cesses 50 2p. m Ea] 10 « . i Thursday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown) Highest temperature................. | Lowest temperature orate eae “ Mean temperature. “4 Weather—Mostiy fair, 05 of ean ineh of rain One Year Age in Pontiac WO ss sveces becegenes Meas. temperature. ....... i aS Weather—Light rain Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date tn @ Years * im 19% 3 in 18 Thareday's ture Chart Alpene g Siam “ 7 Creek weukee 61 39 - | the high school speech department, j Condy Dope. | Flint | guest meeting + > | The City Commission this week | turned down a recommendation for | installation of a traffic signal at Southfield and W. Maple. on the | ”| grounds that if traffic travels in its | proper lanes, the left-hand turn from Southfield onto Maple is not difficult to execute Russel Holland } His Original Oration at Regional Forensic Meet Russel Holland, of Pontiac High School, won a first place in the state regional spring forensic con- test at Flint yesterday. He gave an original oration, “Communism and the Constitution.” Sixteen schools in eastern and |southern Michigan, competed in five classes of speech, and no school won more than one first place Russel ic the son of Circuit Judge i. J Only winners in the several con- ferences competed in the finals. Robert Everson of PHS won a fourth place in extemporaneous speaking. He drew the topic, “‘In- dochina.”” Another fourth was won with a dramatic “The American Way.” This was the final speech contest of the year. Walter R. Smith. of accompanied the Pontiac boys to Ground Is Broken for Straits Bridge jand plain citizens swarmed into St. Ignace by the thousands today to break ground for construction Highpoints of the colorful cele bration were a mammoth prade | through city streets and the ground- breaking ceremony itself-a gesture | that signalized another step in a long-dreamed project. Participants in the parade, the largest ever held in the Uppper Peninsula, will be transported across the straits in ferries for similar ceremonies in Mackinaw City Saturday, FREE ‘Mother's Day” Singing Record Greeting Card Without Spending A 4 Single Penny - os str: rare Ci - COUPON to Our Candy -for- Just 350 of first come, first A cee eise nothing offer. these records— Mein Floor | body is at the Donelson-Johns Fu- Wins in Contest | | | } Gets a Ist Award With | ST. IGNACE w — Dignitaries | 7 Mrs. Charles Barber Mrs. Charles (Ethel Mae) Bar- | ber, 67, of 43, Feneley Ct., died | eastern Michigan. Pontiac will be at her home yesterday after a one-/ in close touch with world mare’ | kets, something that every one in She was born in St, Clair Goun-| this area should deeply appreci- ty, June 9, 1886, the daughter of | ate."’ | year illness William and Elizabeth Boshaw | Barden. She married Charies Bar- ber in 1904. A city resident for 45 years, Mrs. Barber wa a charter mem- Mrs. Barber was a charter mem- ber of the Free Methodist Church, and belonged to the WCTU Surviving are her husband, a) son and two daughters, Wilson | H., and Mrs. Marcia ©. Houston, | both of Pontiac, ana Mrs. Elba L. Talley of Mt. Carmel. Il. Also surviving is a brother. Joseph Barden of Port Huron, 5 grand- children and one great-grandchiid Funeral will be Monday at 2 p. m. from the Free Methodist | Church. Burial will be in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery with the Rev. | Howard C. Artz of the Free | Methodist Church officiating. The | neral Home. 5 Suspects Held in Breakin Wave: 3 Facing Investigation, Two Others Charged With Burglary | State Police said today that five | persons believed responsible for | 15 breakins and safe robberies in Oakland, Macomb and St. Clair Counties are being heid here. Two have been charged with breaking and entering in the nighttime. The other three are being held for investigation. All are in Oakland County Jail. Those named in breakin war- rants are Hugh J. Stevenson, 41, of 79 Poplar St., and Mrs. Vir- ginia Stevens, 27, of the same ad- dress. Held for investigation are J. T. Stephens, 2%, of 3176 Caroline, Auburn Heights; George Sheck, 47, of 19% Lafayette St. and Frank E. Allred, 30, of 11 Allison St. Detectives from four State Police posts, the Oakland County Sheriff's Department, Pontiac Police and the Waterford Township Police De- | partment worked on the case. Troopers Henry Deloof and Har- old Wade of the Pontiac Post ar- rested Stevenson and Mrs. Stevens May 4 upon information supplied by a person who saw their car parked at DeMinos Market at Scott Lake and Pontiac Lake Rds. The other three were implicated by the first two suspects, police said. Nine of the breakins took place manager of the Pontia: Manufac- turers Assn., both commended Rep. George A. Dondero for his work toward obtaining the seaway. | te the whole metropolitan area. | | (Continued From Page One) Rogers, and James F. Spence, Pontiac City Manager Walter K. Willman said, “‘The seaway should be a tremendous benefit Any advantage of the project will be reflected in an advantage te every community in the area.” H Wayne Gabert president of the Pontiac Retait Merchants Assn, said. “It's something that business and industry have wanted for years and can't be anything but a boon to Pontiac.’ land is péat bogs. . a 4ERRY A. SHRODER An estimated one-seventh of lre-! pe said = ne ponttac PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 1. 1056 Pontiac Deaths Business Leaders ‘See Boom for County United Fund Official | fo Resign on June 1 Jerry A. Shroder, managing di- rector of Pontiac Community Chest and assistant director of Pontiac Area United Fund, will resign June 1 to become assistant director of Filint’s Council of So cial Agencies. a The Flint council's executive board said Shroder will start work there six days later. Shroder, 28, came to Pontiac July 9, 1951, as assistant to United Fund director Dwight S. Adams. a Shortly afterward, he also took over the Community Chest post left vacant by the death of Clay- ton Springer Adams the United Fund and Community Chest will try to fill the vacancy by June 1 said go.” “Jerry | ~ »Shroder’s done a fine job here,”’ | “We're sorry to see him | SIMMS ‘‘Super- Special’ * for MOTHER'S DAY! STAINLESS STEEL—Rosewood Handles 7-pe. KITCHEN SET Complete with Hang-Up Wall Rack ec, ,’ Alse Gilt Dept. in the Pontiac area. * Pancake Turner % Ladle Original * Basting Spoon * Spatula rigina * Potato Masher * Fork $9.95 Value! : ose at i Exactly as pictured. 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PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 Singer Says Army Didn't Coddle Him 4 q : = . 4 . 4 4 4 : . . 4 4 Z . 4 . 4 . 4 4 . : 7 4 q 4 4 a q . . q 4 . 4 . . 4 4 . 4 4 4 . 4 4 4 4 4 . ‘ . . 4 4 « ‘ 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 . 4 4 . 4 . . 4 4 . 4 4 wrwervwe-yy-"'''''eerererrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrerrrrererrerererererererrer eT ere eee ‘wvwyvvVvwYVVYYeerrrwerrrrrererrrerererererrrpg,eTgTTT?TTTT"""7777 " al ll i he hh hhh hhh hhh hhh hh hh i he ee be he he i be ee i te het _—eeeeerereeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeerrrrrrrrrerererererererreT eT TT ee ee TT eT eee TT Te CT Ce ee eee eee ee eee ee eee eee _eeerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrvrvrrvrvryryre TTT ee eee ee eee eee It’s SIMMS rs Low Priced mv OU IRITY Open Tonite and Saturday Until 10 P.M. 125 TABLETS lodin Ration c ~ © PTTTITITI TTT ttt ecccccoccccoscccoa 250 Tablets Full Pint Bottle of 100 BREWERS 70°/.Ethy! A.P.C. 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Gifts It’s so easy to pick out just the right Mother's Day gift here at Simms . . . and so easy on your pocketbook, too! MOTHERS Nf Sunday, May %h, Is MOTHER'S DAY! Just a Few of Many Mother's Day Gifts You'll Find at Simms, Cuts 25 French Fry potatoes in one stroke. Heavily tinned against rusting. Buy now and | save Sener ee: whee? Covered cake pan is ideal for baking, storage or utility pur- poses. Fine for carrying food to picnics too. Choose From ia Over 100 Beautiful Styles at This One Low Price! for This Quality? ~~ Styled by Adrienne Simulated PEARLS = High lustre alabaster base pearls 2 styles in popular "White Jewelry for All Summer Wear ® PEARL NECKLACES — in 1 to 6 Strands * DOG COLLARS—! to 4 row adjustables ae et eS a ® FILIGREE WHITES —Piair: and Rhinestone studded *& ADJUSTABLE—hand woven. ® CLASPS—Rhinestone or filigree Your Choice... Simms Super Saeek TODAY'S BEST VALUES One Big Lat! Over 300 Pairs of BOYS’ and +) ALL SIZES 2to 4 6 to 8 10 to 14 1 and 2 PIECE Regular and Shortie All Summer Styles! BROADCLOTH and PLISSE Special pajamas. price on these'boys’ and girls’ All good quality fabrics, full cut and well made.. Many styles in 1 and 2-piece pajamas, choice of floral prints, stripes, juvenile designs, cowboy plisse, etc Buy enough for all the kids in your family at this spe- cial price! GIRLS’ Pajamas UNRESTRICTED CHOICE _Smooth Rayon Jersey tie waistband . Choice of squa, rose, Sizes 8-M-L. and leg ul 2 Needs No Ironing Children’s Panties 7 Plisse Material ami i C h tidren's band, Jace trim. Choice of colors. Sizes 3 to 14. FI Regular $2.39 Value Famous Birdseye or Flannelette _ Baby ae V7 Per Doz. Pull 27x27 inch diapers in your choice of a =, Of Plannelette brands. Full dosen at this Nationally Advertised—Tst Quality “Curity” Diapers is $3.75 Per Dozen Value cy quality . ° easter highly ebeorbent . . aint ineh 98 Nerth . easy to to wash $499 FE SIMAS | {a = {{@ BROTHERS "4+ Fey * “Controla”’ All purpose spray is ideal for shampooing and massagi ~ hair Has many other | around house Mh, tege Eee F | Imported Server Choice of 3 styles and sizes As pictured glass ware inside woven pita basket mother Ideal for Famous KENT bathroom scales weigh accurately to 250 pounds. Famous manulacturer MR BS AY For Slicing French-Fries 1 Stroke Potato Cutter 1 98 ee ee ene) Save $1.00—Regular $18.95 Value G-E Steam-Dry Iron SESS Qs labrica. Full quaremies ' Folds a NS ee Case ‘Chic’ Travel Alarm Regular valu ccur ra 8 == ; c nabewper ‘3 9 5 re , ‘Heavy Gauge Aluminum Aluminum Covered Cake Pan e*gis All Pape lney Spray Shampoo ce “ps 98 —— nneeeieeneiaiiaa ee Famous WAGNER Miluaukeean Carpet Sweepe cited by Good Howat 5495 j thin rugs. Big Value! : : a ree | ‘“GLASBAKE’ Pat Basket Server *2*” ee YE? e. av? 2 es | Made by Leading Sale kee ‘Kent’ Bathroom Scale Values to $5.95 399 a er | Ideal for = Cream, Mash Potatoes Serving Scoop a ‘#19 Durable Plastic—Looks ‘Like Wood steel ejector. Ideal for dishing out. foods You pay $150 or more else- where. Large serving bowl with serving spoon and fork and four bowls. 79 { eying es Lifetime—Non- Tarnish 16. Piece Stainless Steel Ware les 4 spoons, 4 forks $ r tablespoons, 4 knives 49 in gleaming lifetime stainless steel! Sweeps as It Dusts—‘EASY ‘DAY’ Vacuum Action Dry Me Sweeps as it dusts, famous ‘Easy Day’ dust mop with vacuum action which retains dust while mopping Se a Sa 2” > eee net < Reale $7 95—' ‘Handy Heal Electric Foot Vibrator Famous ‘Handy Hannah’ foot $ vibra lane, and soteg 6°? for your mother. Si Mk. hetleed 29 i ioctl il Fonaes MEL- JAX First Quality Electric Hair Dryer Elecrtic hair dryer complete with stand and cord. Used for <<) one drying purposes around a me ir wD snorh } , 98 North Saginaw St. ROTHERS 7-Piece Salad Set. ‘398 One Family's Pet Is Pocket-Size Monkey DENVER @® — Gabby is a poc- ket full of monkey. A vest pocket, thet is. A year old and only four inches from the top of his head to . with the George L. Moore family in Denver. Mr, and Mrs. Moore and their three children—Jane, 16, Jo Ann, 14, and Spike, 11—brought Gabby, a marmoset, home to Denver from | Columbia, where the y lived four | years while Moore was’ an engineer on an irrigation project in the ) . the base of his tail, Gabby lives to celebrate PERMA-STONE’S 25th ANNIVERSARY Come in, see the new developments that make Perma- Stone more than ever a wonderful investment for old or new homes. New ledge stone design now in wide- and-narrow combinations. New how-cost ways to use Perma-Stone for decorative trim. New ideas to meet the growing demand for more life and color in home inting or other upkeep expense with autiful — and permanent! Free esti- exteriors. And no Perma-Stone. It’s mate, easy terms. eT ee FREE BOOK. If you can't come in, phone or send card for a copy of this 16-page book of Perma-Stone homes. Shows new and modernized homes, “before” and “after” photos, tells about insulating | value, safety from fire, weather, vermin and other superior Perma-Stone features Call Today! Howard Stites FE 2-8090 Handicapped Cooperate St. “Fred Play Set to Open Tyran) weer Curtain Time |s8:15 Sunday ‘Dotty and Daffy’ Is 3rd Annual Production of Senior Class Curtain time will be 8:15 p.m. on May 911 when St. Frederick High School's third annual senior play “Dotty and Daffy’ is pre- sented The three-act comedy, under the direction of the Rev. Maurice Very- ser, assistant pastor of St. Vincent de Paul Church, will be performed in the parish hall. Sunday and Tuesday shows will have Jane Webster as Dorothy Travers and Geraldine Luna as Daphne, while the Monday eve- ning roles will be taken by Mar- lene Daly and Patricia Humph- reys, respectively. Jimmie Rand will be portrayed by Gary Crake, Sunday and Tues- day, while Eugene Zaffin per- forms the remaining evening. Ger- ald Mazza will have the Freddie Rand role twice and Norman Miller will perform on Monday. Elaine Monroe will appear in the Sunday - Tuesday performance of Mrs. Phyllis Travers with Merle Federico enacting it on Monday. Permanent members of the cast will be Norma Bader as Hilda Johnsen, James Ritter as Alfred Hopkins, and Mary Drake as Molly O’Mulligan. David Grosse has been chosen to take part as Paxton while John Russell will be featured as Jack. Maureen Sweetman will perform as Aunt Hester. In addition to the three evering performances, special shows for the children are scheduled for Fri- day and Saturday afternoons. ‘to Form Observer Team | SAN DIEGO, Calif. #®—The team | of Carter and Thatcher rates ceo as aircraft spotters at the Volun- teer Ground Observer Corps sta- tion at_Rainbow, near here. Carter, 57, is nearly blind. Thatcher, 59, is hard of hearing. He explained: “Carter hears the planes, I spot them. We get along fine.” Mrs. Lorna Blankenship, chief observer for San Diego county, agrees. Additional School News Pages 9, 16, 4&3 DOTTY AND DAFFY DILEMMA—Doing some last minute rehearsing before the opening of the senior play “Dotty and Daffy’’ May 9, are these | four excited St. Fred students. The show, which will run through May 11, will feature Gary Crake (left to right) of 1129 LaSalle St. and Norman Miller THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 NOW... IS THE TIME for you to STORE your FURS in Our Cold Storage Vault! Get complete insurance . . . spacious hanging . . . expert inspection . . . no charge for minor repairs! Be sure they're protected ... call today! Exclusive at Waite’s! While they’re in Cold Stor- age, hove them Hollande?- ized. . like new at little cost to you! THe rue e on Tris SBamuweEenr ; “ae BEEN - Pontiac Press Photo of 29 S. Paddock St. Calm and composed is Marlene Daly (left) of 3460 Loon Lake Shores, while Geraldine Luna, of 632 N. Perry St., smiles in anticipation of opening night. The three-act comedy will begin at 8:15 p. m. in the parish hall, and is under the supervision of Rev. Maurice Veryser. HOLLANDERIZED ‘Twin Rodney Brodie Visiting His Family CHICAGO #—Rodney Dee Brod- ie, the 32-month-old Siamese twin |who survived a history-making op- eration, is visiting his family at Ferris, Ill. Rodney's home thus far, except for a brief Christmas holiday at Ferris, has been the University of Illinois Medical Center, where he and his twin Roger were separated in 1952, The operation cost Roger his life. A medical center spokesman said the visit, of two or three VENETIAN BLINDS Choice of Colors in Tapes and Slats Custom-Made Aluminum | ‘ 2 0. 6 ESSE! T AAT 0% A Male SE ORM FE WINDOW Washable Machine Oil SHADES Up to 36” in Width wont i Home Now > Or Piastic Shaaes «= SO HID Sq. Ft. $1.69 ach Take Advantage of Spencer’s Complete Decorating Service! @ INTERIOR B&B home decorating Gy & renee Oil Base pectromatic Paint Choice of More Than 300 Colors! CAN ALWAYS BE MATCHED B&B Rubberized Beautiwall Paint Fast Drying— Odorless 19 Gallon Most Colors | S Visit S pencer’s for CARPETS A Large Selection to Suit Any Price Range! 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Enclosed] Check) Money Order [) Name AAAcocs \aGr City. . y i iH emnsaneaanseeae ‘ease heh at FET) HON anny mene SYS Ee pte permeates bo * a a - ~ yen eee 130 Guests Visit ats “oma tous," |Friends of Keel Family Child Guidance Clinic! gratomt oettems ws Starting Aid-Committee Pontiae Chi : ' Se ens Serie vaaeesa na es tens te een ey | eee Sa | in clinie records, according to Miss | lems, shares in money raised in Madeline Half, clinic director. | Pontiac Area United Fund car Guests toured clinic offices at | paigns. last night to plan assistance | of the family were lest in the | the stricken parents. tera, SINKMASTER Just insert detergents and th< slightest pressure on the handle diverts a flow of water into the brush. Depress the thumb button and watch the foamy suds speed the dirt awoy! Rinse, and your dish- washing is done. Replace you: present hose spray with this practical wizard of the veety $9.49 YE G. A. Thompson & Sons Heating—Plumbing Supplies 80 South Perry FE 2-2939 This Wednesday fire was the most serious in this area since 1948, when two brothers and two sisters of the Lawrence Garvey family, ranging in ages from 3 to 10, died in a flash fire. Five children have perished in fires here since last Saturday. On that night two babies, 1 and 2 years old, died in a fire at 91% The meeting was called by the | Southwest Avon Community Forum | held in their building at Crooks _. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7. 1954 Baptint ¥ | John J. Schulte and was bound| | whose three sons. died when their) Needle Guild has come to her ald | OV" '° Oakland County Circuit) home burned Wednesday morning. | in clothing, as all personal effects | ©°!"t for arraignment May 10. fire. | Rosebud. is accused of cashing ‘a | 3 a Man Waits Arraignment | on Bad Check Charge A Walled Lake man waived ex- amination on a bad-check charge | } Charlies Clendening, ‘24, of 212 worthless $156 check at the Novi | Inn April 26. Clendening, arrested | May 5 by South Lyon Police, is | being held in oakland County | Jail under $2,900 bond, state Police | of the Redgord Post said. Andrew Jackson, seventh Presi- | dent of the U. S., was once held | a prisoner by Great Britain during the latter periods of the Revolu- | Giese. Granger said a bank account would be opened to handle dona- | tions until the cash is needed. The | fund was started with $360 do | hated last night. | Keel’s fellow~workers in the |GMC Truck body and mem- bers of UAW-CIO Local 54 have | started a fund which may be used to replace the burned home. This fund «was reported at $700 last night. Gisse and Walter Neuby head this effort. Mrs. Keel is expected to be | released from the hospital te at- | tend the funeral ef her sons at | | ‘Survivor Describes ‘Lusitania Disaster | (Continued From Page One) his | but side. He wanted me to take lifebelt. We argued about it, he made me put it on. ‘As soon as I had it on, the | second torpede struck, There was an explosion that blew men, flaming, inte the water. A wave | washed my benefactor over. | board. “The next wave washed me over. | The sea was red with blood. There | Sam Benson Says: I’m Blasting - Clothing Prices! With My Big “2-for-1" Offer! 2 z=, SUITS BOTH FOR ONLY Extra Pants Available a Lew Prices 39 Alterations at Cost! SAM BENSON Open Evenings ‘Til 9 20 SOUTH PERRY ST. 250 YEARS OLD SATURDAY, MAY 8th were bodies everywhere, dead and living. One woman was giving birth {to her child. right there in the! |}water, screaming with pain. A) | dead baby kept floating against my face | “It seemed an eternity, though | \later I learned that only 16 min- | jutes passed between the time tthe | first torpedo struck and the final | | sinking of the ship. i “The cries, the screams, the | moaning I couldn't stand it. I knew no more.” What happened after that, Mrs. | McDeugal pieced together from | the reports. Her body was | | plucked from the sea by rescue | squads from Queenstown, Ire- , and left for dead at the | morgue. Then a man, searching for rela- | tives, lifted the sheet which cov- | ered her and notices that her | fingers twitched. The movement | was, attributed to post-death nerve | action. Again the body was cov- ered But the man was not satidfied Four hours later be returned and | again a finger twitched, This time | the body was shipped to the hos- Sale! Our Jersey pital. Finally. life was the victor ‘Man Jailed in Larceny Arthur Wall Jr., 19, of 7227 E. Nine Mile Rd., Van Dyke, de- manded examination yesterday on a larceny by conversion charge, and was returned to Oakland Coun- ity Jail after he failed to post $400 bond. @ This time uith Here's a jersey checked ¢ resistant! Rhinestone bu this perfect for a Mother's Black or Navy in sizes 12- tre Wilson Gisse, chairman; | Crawford Si l tionary War George Granger, treasurer; Mrs, | ~~ ————————_____ AGEN ; ms | Wiliam Harmon, secretary: Richard Cooke, Mrs. Shirley ee © 9 8 -% 6 Lewe, Mrs. John Kukck and Mrs. e 7. @ Sold out twice at 8.99! D> 99 corded shirt! tionally comfortable. to wear dress with smart corded skirt now an additional feature! today ! Waite's Budget Dresses—Third Floor nee Regular 8.99 Stroller oat-style dress that’s crease ttons down the front make Day gift and you can choose 20, 1442-22'2' An excep- Come in for yours es — 4 ‘ * You save 40c .. ae SALE! Reg. 1.39 Sparkling Cut Crystal 8-pc. Hospitality Set ® You get 4 snack plates, 4 six-ounce cups’ © Attractive fern design decorates plates! ¢ « @ truly terrific buy! © A wondertul idea for Mother's Day giving! , Walte’s Gilts—Fitth Floor ra nylon trim in dainty pastels Belinda Gown Yi, p98 ‘ a Run Resistant Rayon Finest run resistant rayon tricot with dainty nylon trims—full cut— 4 ideal gift for that favorite Mother! 32-44. In assorted pastels! , + No-Iron Cotton Plisse pw -— 43 Jap Lady ~ O8 Ideal Pajama or Mother! Heres a sure-to-please cotton plisse pajama with painted Japanese design. Fast colors allow many tubbings and no ironing is needed at all' Choose Mother's in sizes 32-40, in coral-blue, and aqua. Rayon tricot, too’ Waites Budget Pajamas—Sitreet Floor J give Mother one of these dainty ' + ,~ ® Dacro e wrinkie and crease " e sfarit ® Dacron ‘s easy to wash... dries i; G wine | J ®@ Pack away... omes ou! fres as a daisy . @ Coo! and porous fer comiortab'e summer wear! This short sleeve cooler with its slip-through-tie is on ideal gift for Mother, in sizes 32-38, in bright white’ Waite's Blouses—Third Floor A decorative and multi-purpose gift for Mom! Sturdi-Stool + inn ba gl is tops 1m 7 * Mother’s Day is Sunday! One more day to buy her gift... at Waite’s! J2x12x18 Have extra seating space for your home .. . Sturdi- stools, budget-priced dnd’ wonderfully attractive and useful! Supports up to 300 Ibs.! Easy to clean cover of taffeta - finish plastic with pepper-mint trim in squore or round shape. With thick, foam ~ rubber pad! In green, blue, rose or wine. @ For bedroom @ For game room @ For den @ For bath @ Easy to, assemble @ For decorating Waites Notions Street Floor my THE PONTIAC PRESS Daily Except Sunday —_—_—_—_——————— ‘The Press exclustvety to the use waiide Shes eae ts delivered by carrier for 40 cents 7, yo OE: 00 0 Teal ye 8 - % are paysble MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 a Se House OKs Seaway Bill At long last advocates of the St. Law- rence waterway have triumphed. Their victory came when the House overwhelmingly approved the DonpERo- Wier bill providing for U. S. participa- tion with Canada in the construction of the project. The margin of victory was 83, with 241 members voting for and 158 against the measure. * * * All that is necessary before the bill goes to the White House is Senate ap- proval of minor House amendments. The President already has promised prompt Executive approval. Final passage of this measure . more than 35 years after the proj- ect first was suggested, is a great feather in the cap of Rep. George A. Dondero. Not only is he a long time seaway advocate and co- author of the bill but was its floor manager in the House. * x * From the standpoint of the 40,000,000 people of the Lake region who will bene- fit directly, this is the most important domestic legislation of the century. When completed the waterway will make seaports out of every major lake port. It will enable ocean freighters to bring old world goods directly to De- troit, or Chicago, or Milwaukee or Buffalo. * * * It also will mean that the steel mills of Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania will not have to move to the Eastern sea- board when Minnesota's Mesabi range is exhausted. The seaway will provide cheap water transport to these mills for the rich iron ore recently discovered in Quebec and Labrador. Finally, we believe this legisla- tion will set in motion an unprece- dented development that will make Southeastern Michigan a far more prosperous and advanced industrial area. fT _________ Our House of Representatives has distinguished itself by the decisiveness and wisdom displayed in rejecting the Coupgrt rider. Proposed by the New York Republican for attachment to the defense appropriations bill, this rider would have required Congressional approval before troops could be sent to Indo- china or elsewhere. * x * President E1ssenHowerR, who said he would not intervene in Indochina with- out Congressional OK, opposed this rider on two counts. His first objection was that it was a rider. Second, he also opposed it on the ground that it would be an “artificial restriction” on his authority to conduct foreign affairs. * * * The House showed its understanding of the Constitutional question involved by overwhelmingly defeating the rider 214 to 37. Incidentally, that result was a resounding vote of confidence in the President. Ohio's Rep. Vorys compressed into a few words what probably. was the most compelling reason for rejecting the rider. “Telegraphing your punches is bad enough,” he told the House. “But telegraphing your enemies you are not going to punch is even worse.” Tourist Trade Balance Some businessmen have been con- cerned about the amount of goods U.S. tourists are allowed to bring back from Canada duty free. The allowable amount varies with the length of the tourist’s stay. The same is true of Cana- dian tourists returning from the United States. That this reciprocal privilege doesn’t hurt American business is officially shown in Canada’s 1954-55 national budget. A total of $33,000,000 in tax relief will be granted on the types of articles most Canadian tourists take back. * x * The idea is to reduce Canadians’ tendency to make shopping visits here, and to bring the more expensive > Canadian articles into price competition with their U.S. counterparts. To that end Dominion Finance Min- ister AssotT has eliminated the special excise taxes on a long list of articles popular with Canadian tourists. They include electrical appliances and house- hold gadgets. On many other articles the taxes have been cut to 10 per cent. * * * An Ottawa dispatch explains why this course has been followed and it should end all worry in this country over this trade. The relatively small number of Cana- dian tourists who visited the United States spent $25,000,000 more here last year than the enormous number of American tourists spent in Canada. “AccorDING to Atty. Gen. Brownell, the automotive industry will be investi- gated to determine whether the increasing concentration in this indus- try contains dangerous potentialities.” —Press report. Translation: The big boys in the car industry are suspected of trying to freeze out the little ones. “A HUMAN being and an ape have the ‘same number of muscles, which proves their close relationship,” says an evolu- tionist. It does not. A human being and a catfish have the same number of eyes, but they aren't even 58th cousins. It 1s much easier to fall in love than it is to wiggle out of it. The Man About Town Scared Them Out Novel Method of Persuading Starlings to Leave ‘Town Daftynitien Mother: A person on whom we should spread Sunday's attention and love over the other 264 days in the year. With the suggestion that the same plan might be worked in Pontiac, Mrs. C. W. Hartung of 2885 Leech Road, sends a clipping about how a Pennsylvania city drove out the starlings. They call it the “‘starling terror treatment.” One of the birds was caught, and the cries of its distress trees, come Sn Tenens Bee See he te ee ms I like the thoughtfulness of the Pontiac hardware store that put sieds and ice skates back in their show window this week, A hint to other factories with cafeterias comes from ° W. H. Doertner, General Manager of the new plant of the Saginaw Steering Gear Division of General Motors. When the cafeteria opened he told all employes that the chef would cook free of charge any fish that they caught. No such requests have been received, and the tall stories have dwindled. Several of her friends have told me about an outstanding mother, Mrs. Kevin Ritter of 73 Auburn Ave., doing a wonderful job in bringing up a large family. With his office in a corner room on the second floor of the new city hall, City Manager Walter K. (Bill) Willman says it will be convenient to parachute out of either window should an irate taxpayer appear. There's sorrow among the young ladies at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital McAuley School of Prac- tical Nursing, because “Coke, the Collie,” their mascot, was killed by an automobile. How- ever, they have another dog, Coko’s brother, now being adopted to succeed him. te the merchants Pontiac and Flint old timers are getting chummy. The local Sunset Club, of which Mrs. Charies Little is. president, entertained the Jolly Old Timers from our sister city Thursday. Getting disgusted with this week's cold weather, @ setting hen in the poultry house of Barney Hudson at Pontiac Lake deserted her nest, evidently convinced that she was mixed in her dates, Verbal Orchids to— Mr. and Mrs. Otte Crandall of 691 Cameron Ave.; fifty-first wedding an- aiversary. back. The starling population of the city Point of Order, Plez « 43 bee o & t & ve COS a5 Voice of the People Says It’s Cheaper to Let Ike Play Golf Than to Have Him Cruising on Potomac (Letters will be condensed w neces- omney Sessute of nee & ees, address and telephone number writer must sceom letters but these will not be pw! if the writer so requests, uniess the letter is critica! tp ite nature) ; i E bs akg if ! Li if 3 “Old Line Dem” must have guessed he did not say anything worth signing his name. Edward L. Penny 6341 Barker Route 2, Drayton Plains. Asks If Farmer Will Also Be Blown Like Chaff troit Tigers should climb far be- yond their pre-season rating. In the past few years the roster is holding up exceptional. ly well in batting as well as fielding. The pitching hag been substan- tial and if the team can survive the season without too many sore arms they might finish as high as third with a little luck. Duane Vogelsburg 27130 Beechmont . Keego Harbor Believes Slogan Sure to Elect Jimmy Roosevelt When I was in California last week, I heard a slogan that is guaranteed to elect Jimmy Roose- velt. It reads: “Californians. Send Roosevelt to Washington. Remem- ber, the wife you save may be Traveler From Our Files Chungking in sneak attack. Flames trap hundreds as 2,000 injured dead. 20 Years Ago JEAN HARLOW, famed film ac- tress and beauty reveals plans to divorce third husband, Harold G. Rosson, cameraman. SCRAMBLE FOR increased arm strength given impetus by the Franco-German deadlock and Japan's dangerous Far Eastern policies. Britain’s Fogginess Bogs Down Plan to Aid Indochina but She’s Awake Now ‘By DAVID LAWRENCE GENEVA — No country on the side of the free world has had its of the Indochina war to world peace. . That is why there are perplexi- ties both in Britain and the United States, as well as in France, in facing up to what Indochina truly mearts. | | - ar gg 8 ever be carried out, but it does mean that the Communists are Reg FE EE 5 : i i ; i Ry z ! i ef § i A LF Tit i dochina phase of the conference.” The big question now is whether the moral damage done by Brit- ain’s hesitation can be completely repaired, but American officials here are delighted that Britain and America are working together again. Now, if Democrats and Republi- (Copyright 1954) Case Records of a Psychologist State Your Inner Feelings to Insure Wedded Bliss talk to my wife about “this prob- lem,” hundreds of husbands have Marilyn wonders why hus- bands don’t state their inner feelitgs. Well, most of them don’t know how to use lan- guage precisely. That is as much an art as the talented use of a scalpel by a surgeon. talkative h ifs rtil 52 z% ‘i E : ut ! H f i} Eot be gil! i Z 7 E } eke sEeal 3 $ > a © TT rte al ey fe i i Vitamin E Fine for Muscular Growth, BRADY, M, D. cerning the value of vitamin A for this or that kind of heart trouble. Most of the queries were inspired attest t t Fits rs E Z 4 ef i q i | : | | : | lies rf | : ; i i e s fe i iL te nl z. nl I fi i iid i | ai is ¥% if at itt i iting i : va a #4 il - - — + # ~ ~ ng cog tee ® ge ahr ' ‘ “pe og tg yr * Saneansings stn Ae AMASGSGE SAAR.” 13 enn hedepnsiiodessmeapeinatiiin Baia Ae: E a | Ss 60 wer ls Sufficient | Birmingham High School News Routine Request Turns wf other’ busine mek, @ "oat! Converted Nazi Raider enure for Professor . j i ' Se comme, oun ren! 40 JOUrNalism Students| rac ius ux 0a tom t mie swe tong) NOW Services US, Ft, rut tes ten wee wat U-M Today for Talks - Coma Gat etgueaiion Cedarville College for nearly 60 mh, Beheol eaten as — Special features tnctuded tn the rebder ang eghatiment sop of Jurkat joined the faculty in fecnte sauer at The a . production by Calvin J Onder teed ck clio 1895, just two years after the) By FRANK PHILLIPS See cpt; Some | byterien ‘Church. _— Members of . Birmingham ae School publication staffs attended financing, literary mag- hal over nd inal an er| Am, canerence atthe ‘Univer ba aaa endinedd : new of Keynote address was Prot, Just, who et TT says be|pecgrem on yenrbong ‘end'high| Arter Yascaeia” Wont” eos Please Mom on her day! Dark seam : “EMPRESS” PROPORTIONED GIFT NYLONS 89: 3 prs. 2.58 Here's 0 git che aleoye neodo! One chs'l sully ga for sad ote Fed eral budget-price like this, you won't want to miss it! 51-gauge, 15- denier ultra-sheers with neat slimming dark seams! S shades in short, medium or long! 81-11. For a BETTER fit, wearing qualities . . . these ‘Empress’ nylons are just the thing for Mom! Save! With This Nationally Famous | _ Under supervision of Miss: Vida seven parents, the 40 students were transported in eight cars to the University. ’ * x Miss Angelina Gazinano won a Fullbright scholarship to the University of Flerence, Italy, for ! oT Fa j i fh a EEGES 3 et 4 iL ay rage et wT z Ske ait re atl zs Ff Mothers Day is Sunday, May 9th... WE COME TO YOU AT NO COST OR OBLIGATION! ments, Beverly Harris; publicity, Ph one. fF FE 5 O143 Sele meee, cae one HOME DEMONSTRATION band, Sigrid Halvorson; and clean- d la? e - eee on't miss it! VAG & SEWING MACHINE SUPPLY CO, [7 | PA pra (2 | . Thursday in the little apartment —— ; “Slane Open Tuesdays aya “rt 9 P.M. in honor of Vincent Secontine, —— a 4 USE YOUR CREDIT Mirror top AT FEDERAL’S a eee | rer.0O Ss 149 cm Wee , CONE WEEK 0) | Birmingham, Secestne wen pre- jewel box wallets Ae 2 Dad hf yok ta ne ae : Sn Rayon satin lined, plasticized Genuine calf, cowhide in black, Sanf. cottons, dacrons, nylons in Cred ake nen ot take om's cl take many TOP QUALITY GLASSES served by the home economics ering, gold tooled case! Pastels! red, gray or tan! Ideal gifts! white or pastels. 32-44 in group. is oe aul dae ! . . : Master of ceremonies Tom Maund Introduced Jean Sullivan . who discussed the background, and opportunities available through JA. ee ee Cet ae a ? Achiev t come to maingham, end plans for next year 6 styles to choose from! De Vilbiss the ‘LA SALLE, are now in progress including the] } : formation of two more compa- ) 4 A\\\\}. + “tiga oe x “ America’s Smartest _ f ATOMIZERS os eA WHE 0 eee as! Eye Glasses! — : ao | ' Promes Buckshot Thwarts Rose, silver, clear or 2-tone in all Acetate 2 44 Nylon ‘ 00 : c uf ‘ ' ONE PRICE TO ALL gue..." |! Would-Be Escapees ar oor fetes 1 2 9 umbrellas Lene gloves Here Yu-Vision presents HAGERSTOWN. Md. to 3.50! Hurry while they last! ® ; ; ; ; ; @ sensa optical value! ’ @—Seven Solids, plaids, stri with inter- Double woven nylon with mesh Sas aie eee a GUARANTEE! eames ue te wry he esting handles! 16-rib style! inserts and all-over open vent. Qnty $11.00! Here are first qual- | your money will be re- shot wounds today while officials | = Aspe ml Me. of funded within 66 days if probed their attempted escape this beautiful genuine 1/10 you are not completely from the institution, where two geld-filied decorated “La Salle” entisfled fer ony rencen! riots occurred last fall : sovtption vour «wn exeet if The seven 10 young . prisoners who scaled a 20-foot steel t ! — fence maroundng a recre- ‘ ght ly to be NO SWITCHING! NO EXTRAS! | 22s rss: == from seven - REPAIRS YOU CAN’T PAY MORE! |),.°° Ge Pa Why pay more when yoo get the finest glasses wounds. Three others escaped in- tm Ameries at this emasingly lew price! All yew | jury. pa ee! pay ts $11.00—No ———— Here are t saving to you! this week for only $11.00—Ne Mere! WSCS Elects President a / eres a Le NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY! at Tuesday Meeting i | _— te ae : SCALLOWAY LAKE ov 2 Yardley 1 2 5 Swiss 5. $4 Tewry cloth 4 98 G. E. 1 95 FAST SERVICE the WSCS at a meeting held at Ps bath set e hankies for mules * radio fay alles of Mrs. Oscar Bouck Plus US. Tex Terme phtreaines . et f Bond St. by Yard- Linen with embroidered flowers. Foam soles, terrycloth Contemporary design, -brown- cab- gone cake ad: peed Rang ie Lan ely spring fragrance! Card halder, 10e Sechet, 10¢ as ba pana sabibdbers! +o. ty ‘tar tune di ial big speaker. 9-5:30 i quet at the Methodist Church at . Tides et 9 swe 15 W. perder nf I. FE 2-2895 Me Kon d were completed TAKE MOTHER OUT TO SEE THE NEWEST in Homes and Distinctive Automobiles Medel Home New NORTHWOOD "42" misdrer | With 3-pr. worden’ of famous steiner A See the Completely New Dynamic cs 2.95 | ‘Oriental Lady’. 60-Ga. NYLONS 4 BUICKS | a Plas US. Tex no 6 ete ae ie ig sn 3 prs. 3 °° Pouches, boxes, vanities! Plastic Cotton plisse, nylon tricot,-multi- of dark seam ny ring shades, On display at the Model Home. calf or lambskin leather! Colors! — rayons! Colors! 32-40, 42-50! AND ot no extra cost, « hentoome New Buick styling in New Buick | OLIVER | dept. SAGINAW AT WARREN PONTIAC ° FEDERA stores © OPEN MON. FRI. SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 210 Orchard Lake Ave. _ FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 o ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, STEWART-GLENN ee. QUALITY FURNITURE SINCE 1917 Coming apart at the seams ? relax in sRarcalounger There's a time in every woman's day when she feels like she's failing apart. The kids have been little beasts, the laundry has lost two shirts, aad her husbaad he's bringing the boss home to dinner. weenie ee pene se Se Te -emambeamar and day- ae dream your troubles away! When you rest in the er ngenapir «rh famous reclining tion, it's truly an adventure in re- laxation. Peet's because has exclusive built-in “Floating Comfort.” you do is sit down and lean back . . . and with no knobs or levers, the BarcaLounger lets you relax in any position. Lifts your grateful feet from the floor . ee toe. Variety traditional and modern styles. An Ideal AS LOW AS aarane a Mothers Day $ 95 tho Susestoutonr ——_ be ma “es Sopewoncs hes bron smieted. bet ite win Gift Chair Pictured 129 $20 shown in webby texture febric. $159.50 EVERYTI ING for PORCH and LAWN PILLOW ARM BED GLIDER SPRING BASE CHAIR This new attractive glider has ball bearing hangers and pn ideal piece to go with glider or suntan is covered in weather resistant vinyl plastic that can 4... cot. U in washable Vin washed with p and water. Best of all the back let down and makes «bed Yor those 759" plastic and heavy spring 194" hot sultry nights . . ALU MINUM CHAIRS “Stacking Type” Feather light aluminum chairs that stack one on another. They have “Saran plastic” webbin = bright colors that is completely ow ies weather-proof. Special..... teehee ee nees Lloyd “CAPRI” Sectionals and Tables Lioyd’s famous woven fibre used on Capri chair backs, seats and table shelves is unusually strong... a steel wire cofe in mer sun. Has a satisfying “give — it 69” pleasingly comfortable to sit in........ 0.0.6. cee lewsvee _REDWOOD PICNIC SET LAWN UMBRELLAS Made from full o are Kiln dried redwood, Large 7 umbrella in Byprg nhpe Screwed and bolted. ed fabric. Choice o ¢ ves, gees Ot Tope ae 3f sae — J fon kp America’s most famous - MODERN SLING CHAIR $Q95 @ Sit comfortably in any position @ Removable washable heavy canvas sling @ Heavy “"% black wrought iron frame @ Vat dyed in black, red, ‘yellow, green or chartreuse @ ‘Indoors or outdoors, use it in any room 4, e our smart Deltox rugs Famous “CHUCK W AGON” OUTDOOR BARBECUE GRILLS Exclusive with CHUCK WAGON @ Heavy Armco “ALUMINIZED” Steel PYRAMID BURNER, rust-resisting and heat-reflecting. @ Designed to give more heat with less fuel. @ A new improved fire grate which burns charcoal or briquets equally well. @ Two dampers in top of hood for regulating hood temperatures. @ Positive draft control and.ash box. @ Raising and lowering cooking grill. Chuck Wagon Pyramid. Aluminized $7 A495 Burner Carries 5-Year Written War- 64. ranty. Models from $29.95 te $199.95 COMPARE seroxe vou sey ye Se: . ag $14.95 to $64.50 BETTER QUALITY GYM SETS An 8 play set with famous ager ho SKY SHOOTER. Unit has strong malleable iron ——— and hanger fittings. Swings have ball bearifig and heavy 2” thick wood seats. Tubing is extra ~ OPEN Buy we Our m4 FRIDAY ss 087: Plan! NIGHT : , TIL, 9:00 86 to 96 South Saginaw Street e your attractive home as low as 18” for 9x12 Rugs so good looking you'll be proud to have one in any room. So low-priced that new rugs in every room will probably cost you less than $100. Rugs so practical you'll be glad you chose them. Deltox rugs have no nap to catch and hold dust and lint. Long-wearing —and reversible (two usable sides for twice the wear). 0 alee eee yee tone squares,” uxury weight sfixitft. $24.95 Delvogue Cosmopolitan: lively “self colors’ oc sft.sizft. $21.95 @ Delfibre Americana: hit-or-miss stripings on textured ground 9 ft.x 12 ft. $21.95 Delfield Suburban: (not shown): “a lot of rug” = for litthe money 9 ft. x 12 fi. $18.95 All patterns except Delfield available in special sixes cut te order, as well as standard sizes SPECIAL MATTRESS VALUE By You ; Would Expect Full Size to Pay 59.50 © or Twin Size for This Available Mattress “SUPER HOTEL BUILT”. MATTRESS or BOX SPRING @ Special 300 Coil “OFFSET” weight balanced unit @ Seat Edge Construction @ Insulo Cushion @ Button Tufis @ Locked Edge @ Cream Felt Uph. @ Prebuilt Quilted Borders ; @ Extra Heavy Hotel Service Ticking @ Matching Box Spring, 38.88 eters + * THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 Cold Doesn’ t Chill AnnualSpring High School Plans Although the unprecedented cold }. emanating from Pontiac High School. That could only mean one the annual Vocal De- another performance this evening. SPECIAL FACTORY PURCHASESA + tCcO New Than Most Old Models NOW ONLY 50% Ligger Sena ¢ lé ti drive results made that perennial victor, Robert Beauchamp, smile from ear to ear. The journalism and English instructor led his third hour journalism class toe victory, (which by now is a foregone conclusion, at PHS) chalking the record amount of sales. 1954 Blessed Sacrament. William Shakespeare occupied the thoughts of serious minded English students recently as they began the study of “MacBeth.” The arrival of May found the classrooms beautified by altars 108 NORTH SAGINAW school while biology students 2 Philco Model 742 ‘NO MONEY DOWN! OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT ’til 9 ¥ gastro- will be the Junior- | Gacttesh Stemey-aniehtee Detroit. if f Ye He ewe Tee Trt i r z z 6 in regular sizes. All Wool Suits Famous Whitleyettes, Robert Mann, Kirbury, and other famous names Reg. $39.95 to $49.95 AR TB a “Terrific Values In Time for Mother's Day Charge Her Gifts at No Extra Cost! Ist Quality “Shanmont” 51 Gauge 51 Denier NYLONS *] Choice of beautiful shades in plain or dark seams. Pair for $2965 Mothers Wear a Brief Size! (She is under 54” tall) and brief All Wool Spring. Toppers Mothers Will Surely Love A wonderful selection of all wool toppers in boucles, fleeces, suedes, cashmere blends, and famous name novelty fabrics. ? Regular $24.95 to $34.95 “17 and 25 "93 LONG COATS for MOTHER All wool coats that are sure to make a hit. Choice of navy or pastels. Regular or Brief sizes. Regular $34.95 to $49.95 ‘29 33 ate tink: Diem i } Shi) ‘ - abe look your loveliest! lustrous acetate robe ‘5.98 Lovely acetate, with quilted yoke, cuffs and pockets, in navy, melon or aqua. Sizes 12 to 20. worth far more! charming dusters Gaily colored cottons, including plisses ond embossed types! Lovely embroidered rayons in the group! Who'd ever dream they'd cost so little? Choose from assorted hues! All sizes! MONDAY — LAST: DAY \. of SEARS DAYS! » IO CO re CREE: TR Re Ry * Pe 2 Ae oy ES Pa, 2p i x Fes fe , ‘| ota 8 oe | Sears made a lucky pur- chase! Scooped up scores of summer dresses at an incredible low price. Now we pass the savings right on to you! Crisp cottons and glamour rayons for street and date-time wear in a bevy of styles to suit every taste. The season's prettiest colors. Misses’ and half sizes. Shorty version.... .. $4.98 % a \a ie s 2% - 3° Tempting fashions to go straight to your head . . . dip- brim sailor— flat-crowned toyo cloth with brim that curtsies in the middle. See them now! “=: OPEN TONIGHT and SATURDAY ’til $ »—_— — Fo) Nylon Tricot Slips Combed Cotton - Charmode Aclon Two Charmede Fancy White and Pink Plisse Slips Crepe Gowns Aclon Pajamas Save 2” Reg. 2 For +3 Now 2°” Now 3” Now! . 1.98 Just Only An assortment of three lovely Gathered bodice, skirt bottom Beautifully trimmed with em- Distinctively trimmed with cot- styles All trimmed with nylon nylon sheer trimmed. Sparkling broidered nylon sheer Ping ton lace and nylon net. Pink, lace and / or net. Sizes 32 to white in sizes 32 to 40. Save seaioam, yellow, white. Sizes 32 blue. maize and lime, sizes 32 Save!.. ‘ 40. fi AT \ NOT to 40 at Sears! to 40 Mother's Day Specials! Your Choice of 3 Lovely Gift Items! Save Now! © embroidered bed jacket $] Floral batiste, hand embroidered.......... Petticoats Grecian Slips built-up shoulder slip $] Ban Mylen Trieet bite Acetate, Rayon Crepe White cotton, priced low at just ........... ss 3.98 m . 3.98 Plisse shortie gowns $ Flounce of permanently pleated Permanently pleated nylon tricot lid col , nylon tricot with nylon lace in- at front, back and skirt bottom. -- solid color cotton, now only . it exc ced. - St. ax: ![UCF™~*~«S ae USE SEARS PURCHASE COUPON BOOKS Ledies Ready-to-Wear—Second Floor a Acae te RARE OEARE: SRE! SRI oc ees AES PRPS eer NES eh a oh rete tik ls re - Fake £. Ae Fs > ae Ee < : ve. ss : * _ > wy | x values to cael summer? é 12.95 ae Ps e Se © Kerrybrooke mesh corde handbags 77 favorite styles to complement your warm-weather wardrobe! Ea. Sale priced! No sticky discomfort in cool cotton and rayon mesh. Front zipper and hooks. Sliding action back. Straight, average or full hips, 3 in sizes 35 to 48. Corset Dept—2nd Floor Choose from 2 styles in all-leather bags for spring aD, and summer. Others te . . 8.98 _™ North Saginaw St. a ‘Phone FE 5.4171 S guy , reRwyT | alain tied Ae TA aa ances \ A beautiful orchid given free with every purchase as an added gift to help celebrate Her day . . . Choose the gift where she would choose her own . « . at Georges-Newports. Pamper Mother With Nylon Tricot Slips by Vanity Fair ds ta Famous nylon tricot Is cleverly striped with nylon net and fluted to give the effects of pleats over the bodice and around the grace- e ful hemline. Nylon lace outlines these flower- FREE! TWEED COLOGNE with 3-Pr. PURCHASE NYLON HOSE " like flutings. Sizes 32 to 40. i Others 4.95 to 14.95 Bi Vanity Fair Nylon Gowns 7.95 to 19.95 Pr. | Vanity Fair Nylon Panties 1.75 to 4.50 Vanity Fair Nylon Half Slips ..........3.50 to 7.95 Free bottle of Tweed Cologne with the purchase of every three pair of either Topaz or Postscript Nylons. Choose from 60 gauge dark seams. Frame heels, heart heel, butterfly heels, in sizes 8'/2 to 11. Proportioned lengths. | ee Mother Will Find These Easy Launder Cotton Plisse Slips United Press Phete PUSHING THE PRODUCT — Coed Nancy Trousdale of Florida ei 2 Southern uses Florida prize grapefruit as shuffeboard weights at a | ~ 7 51-Cauge 60-Cauge Seamless tournament a tourna- ; Berkih Mojud Hanes ee ee - ~- nn $499 : a 1.35 1.50 1.65 f Japs Speculate particles to reach Iigste, reeohly NYLON SLIPS ........ 3.99 h ——— NYLON GOWNS ...... 4.99 ¥ + |, herefore the new radioactivity NYLON PANTIES ..... .59¢ - use 0 i ain a fourth H-bomb test that took ey ° place in Bikini on April 26 or 27,” ¢ Scientists Decide U.S. he said. The scientists said the rain was Still, Testing H-Bombs | ®t dangerously radioactive. ot Bikini Small Boats Searching TOKYO ®— Two Japanese for Shipwrecked Japs Heart Desires Purses Anything Mom's For Mother's Leisure ° Crinkle Crepe Brunch and a Housecoats © MOJI, Japan w—Fourteen men, | Jt! : omen he didi tt Ap, gee half the at the 99 3 between April 25 and 27 Japanese freighter Ajikawa Maru, wey’ : They said their estimate was | ete swept away by gale-whipped * based on Geiger counter tests of | 8°88 that engulfed their lifeboat, | 7 § 9 ‘ rain which fell this week widely | Urvivors reported today. 3 hporeted areas of Jean. Four bodies have been re Seersucker Gowns .....1.99 © Prof. Yasushi Nishiwaki of | Covered. Other crewmen still may Osaka Medical University said | be alive. Small boats searched for | 7 rales oe —regeee eg The Ajikawa Maru sank yester-| © NYLON GLOVES _ .1.99 : -. | day. _ many ti more rad active then rain tested Monday. GABARDINE 53.99 GIFT HANKIES... 59c Nishiwaki said there was a simi-| Health Center Burglar | we SILK SCARFS ....1.00 ar sharp increase in the radio-| activity of rain 12 days after the | Leaves Thank-You Note second H-bomb test March 26 and; DETROIT w—A thief who broke 12 days after the third test April 6.| into the Northeast Health Center Dr. Hironobu Watanabe of Ni- igata University said rain which fell in Niigata, about 100 miles in Detroit and ate four eggs and | 6 four doughnuts left this note: Mothers Like Nice Things! Nylon DRESSES Popular with every- 0 one . . . Nylon in beautiful pastels ond prints. Ideal for sport or dress weor. It’s just the thing for the warm days ahead. Junior sizes Radioactivity. don't get-mad at me. I am 9| Watanabe’s theory is that it! years old.” ‘ WAYNE GABERT — ELECTRIC APPLIANCES GIVE MOTHER appliance The thoughtfulness of giving| - Mother something to use everyday will please her very much. press IHISTTOT Tel $ . 24.95 —— | 9 to 15, Misses’ 10 | e to 20, Half sizes | 142 to 2412. Dormeyer Tall Girl Dresses 14.99 DEEP F RY © Prints ® Cham*ray © Taffetas COOKER ta segue cto” Pully automatic and cooks every- ° , ° ° thing for tasty wonderfully The prettiest selection of dresses in many a Mother's Day. We know she would love something to wear— so, see these cool, comfortable fashions thot will delight her on her special day. Junior sizes 9 to ‘Shop tonight until 9 at our store. A small deposit holds your 15, Misses’ sizes 10 to 20, Holf : chotee. ea ; 1 V 3 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH -_ weil iacatale m6 | WAYNE GABERT : ‘Where You “Get Your Money's Wonh” IY seek eee CE ge ee .. - re ~ . anime Your Electrical Appliance Specialist 121 N. Saginaw St. *. _ THE PONTIAC \C PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 ested states,” including India, | p 15. ning commission, of “Regional | Boy Scout Troop Holds ndonesi rm Pla — Its Purpose, e y p | "The West considecs the “Com- Land lanning and” Organization” and Paul. M. Campout This Weekend i —_—— Tal Korea | munist reigmes"’ of Laos and Cam- Reid, Detroit commission analyist, Tea ) . _ . &§ ee bodia are virtually nonexistent. . on “Economic Trends Affecting ise ong yl eccrine 57| ‘a Resume Today.’ rm. s%.'« 10 Be Discussed x5" mea hg oe » ent would refuse to sit at . Cc s s ul 2 government wo Robert D. Carpenter, Detroit |, camp-out at Pontiac Lake Sat- a the same conference with repre- | Regional planner, will discuss mornin: i. . 7 : . . , urday g and retur® Sunday | ~~ Réd China Threatens wr rs Shay in the imagination| OXf0rd, Addison, Orion | “Village and township land wee, | afternoon. Sigg bert Sa ° present and re” The scouts will work on ad- to Bow Down Parley | of the — . as Residents to Hear Talk wit outline “Guides to Good | vancement Seturday and Sunday. ° Some Western observers view by C | Community Deve lopment |< sf i , ounty Counsel y Saturday night will feature a on Indochina Monday the prospective = move as y ty Through Zoning.” u fire with s, Sharan anal GENEVA — East-West dele- wy - Coinmae would not | Men and women from Oxford,| J. Robert F. Swanson, Oakland | skits and a tenderfoot investiture. gates returned to their deadlocked := dditional tat if | Addison and Orion townships will | County Planning Commission chair-| Parents are invited. Edward — 2S enone meet May 12 to hear a public dis-| man will preside at Wednes- | Overstreet will act as scoutmaster gre EO Ag £4 Wa ESR 4 ee * Se P % in Pe oe Sak ws e “ORCHIDS TO MOTHER! “Resi ei ie = China elem . a down| wreck the tals, demands would} cussion Ca ‘The Values of Com-| day's program. for the camp-out. . munity Planning.” SO peace talks for Indochina as soon v Harry J. Merritt. Oakland Coun-| % wri ae ee al, ee a ay they start. In setting up the Indochina dis- ty corporation counsel, will be key- d aS ae ee a The two-week-old effort for uni- | cussions, Russia and the Western = , . . ; : note speaker of the program at , . . fication of Korea, resuming after| Big Three agreed that nine dele-| 0.4) High School auditorium To All Boys ond Girls Accompanied by Perents a three-day recess, appeared near-| gations would be present at the) — 7 ing its expected unproductive end.| opener. They are the Big Four, next Wednesday at 8 p. m FREE AGA i F GRAB y J j z ‘hina, the three Associated | “We hope this program will 4 ° None of the 19 participating na-| Red China tions made formal requests to} States of Indonching and the Com- launch a new Oxford area plan- Boys ond girls—just reach in an r h Fc i speak, but Colombia and the Phil-| munist-led Vietminh ning council,”’ George N. Skrubb, Y 9 I - and 9 ab a handful ; et ippines indicated they might take| The Soviets earlier this week| director of Oakland County Pian- of agates. No purchase necessary. | oa the floor when the session opened. | said they would propose India,| ing Commission, said today. Sree ‘ =e Girls’ Smart Lan A potentially jarring note in the; Burma, Thailand and Indonesia, Skrubb explained the county and Indochina talks, slated to start} join the talks, But Western sources | Detroit regional planning commis- Monday, was injected by an of-|did not expect the Russians to) sions are organizing small plan- <4 a et. Big: Seth co eda DRESSES ficial spokesman for Red China, | | pr ess this to the point of endanger- | ning councils here. ‘The councils, . Huang Hua. | ing the negotiations. The United | he said, are valuable in helping, © 99 * | States wants to restrict the Indo-/| local areas get ready for the popu- « He told newsmen his delegation! china conference to as few nations lation growth that will come their #} at the opening session would de-| as possible. way in the next few years $ > mand admission of the Communist Speakers at mext Wednesday's ow We've oo. pied ea “governments” of Laos and Cam-| The Danish spelling of Greenland | program include T. Ledyard Blake- a) ieaiaa _— oa ae bodia, as well as such other * ‘inter. "is Gronland. ‘man, director of the Detroit plan- | eaidlns te dressy » nd sleeve. 2s ran A NN NE less styles, 3 to 14 the m4 Girts New Cool, : ae Nylea Teen Chubby hg e It’ ° Ww | Can Com Dresses ¥ N | ote ee: 30 DAY. Con/, | MRO acca : TRIAL OFFER P colle | \let ae | offers POSITIVE PROOF of F ens aa _ i & RELIEF FROM oil |. OUT THEY GO! - MORNING BACK-ACHE! | | ~ Ss as Be an early bird — select your playtime wear now. Denim short ve ols Our Entire Stock of = ae | COATS- SUIT S Virginia Professor Says: Back-Ache Gone Permanently! "I was bothered for some tise in the region of the sacrum and, after talking to my physician, I purchased Nylons, plisse, cracked ice—one and two piece sets. a Sealy Posturepedic. After two sonths of use ay trouble be q has disappeared completely! I believe the Sealy : Posturepedic mattress and box spring make the ideal bed." | Seas 0. W. ADDINGTON a | aes 111 McConkey St. Blacksburg, Virginia | gy “Ooo | - HH $ 7 “ IS aan oe a "paths | ke and | Chicago Sales Clerk Claims “COMPLETE RELIEF"! | as deadbeat | "As @ saleswoman in a large Chicago geparseent store, I | am valk” the equivalent of many siles and lift several — — 7" _ a] | pam road + gen A Lag day! For some months I suffered froa "3 \ } . A mipore’ B back every morning! Then I \ 1 ¥ Py. = Realy F . urepedic Mattresa. Now, that . ox | a + nero vpala is completely GONE! I feei every Frilly Tots - | : — pow Bey for a living should invest in a Sealy 9 oe | Be : urepedic . < MARGARET J. McLAUGHLIN . SUN SU ITS be Values 115 S. Austin Blvd., Chicago, Ill. ¢ \ py Sealy re | ste 859” ‘ POSTUREPEDIC INNERSPRING MATTRESS Te a Cs ONLY $ 50 7 q 7 sets For Mother’s Gift! For Yourself! 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Pontiac nanimously Approves Seaway ll Passage United Press Telephoto ROUGH RECIPE—Roberta, 5, was helping her | The child's right thumb and left ear also became mother, Mrs. Robert C. Sandgren, of Robbinsdale, | entangled. Police were called to pry the pigtail Minn., mix a cake when her hair got in the mixer. |from the mixer gears. The cake?—It was a mess. CANCER RKESEARCHER—Dr. Helen Wallace | Toolan of the Sloan-Kettering Institute of Cancer Re- | was a university graduate at 17, is credited with search in New York, examines one of the hamsters | being the first to grow human cancers in animals, she uses in her studies. HED. CLOCK TURNED BACK—Time moved back 100 | years in Perry, Kan., recently for a centennial cele- a - United Presse Phete The petite scientist, who | a feat that will facilitate studies for a cure. United Press Photo spirit. Gary Lawrence Hamm helps his bride Helen, | into a waiting surrey as guests look on at the couple bration and this young couple was caught up in the | attired in old-fashioned formal wedding dress. St. Joseph Hospital to Acquaint Visitors With Special Techniques at Open House St. Joseph Mercy Hospital plans to show visitors the details of several of its special aids to medi- cine during its Open House Mon- day through Friday. St. Joseph Hospital Alumnae will take visitors for tours of the 300- patient hospital from 2 to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday. A spe- cial evening program next Friday will end the Open House. day from 1:30 until 4:30 p.m. for young women interested in nursing careers. The weekend program at the nurses” home, 126 Fulton St., will include a style show, singing, re- freshments and a discussion of nursing. Special demonstrations will highlight each afternoon's tours of the hospital itself, Sister Mary | trucks were assembled. ~ William, administrator, said to-| ‘The trade paper also said the | day. industry this week built its two Visit Mond , millionth car of the year and Gen- 9 wal be eral Motors turned out its one how patients disabled by di- millionth car for 1954. seases like pollo are prepared Automotive News puts April Ae eave te Rengttel, duction at 535.433 cars and 97.009 Mise Jean Ryskamp, physical | trucks, the highest car month therapist, is chairman of the since last July. demonstration of physical medi- cine, with Miss Joan Bradley, RN, as co-chairman. Dr. F. B. House will speak. Tuesday's tour program will fea- ture a talk on polio by Dr. F. M. Adams. Car Output Reaches |8-Month High Mark week 124,373 cars and 23,400 tricia Smith, RN, will act as chairmen of the demonstration showing the hospital's operating room, X-ray equipment, labora- tory and blood bank. Dr. Everett Hammond will explain how the electro-cardiogram (a heart test) and basal metabolism test are given. Ways in which oxygen is used to give patients extra strength will highlight Thursday's program. Donald Curran, an oxygen com- pany technician, and Mrs. Pa- tricia Okon, assistant nursing di- rector, will give. the demonstra- tion. All tours will visit the newborn infants’ nursery, several wards, medication rooms, X-ray depart- ment, operating room, supply de- pots, pharmacy, blood bank, _ | kitchen, cafeteria, out-patient clinic and several other parts of the hos- pital, More Voting Machines Erwin Township Clerk Darius Kennedy said yesterday that eight more voting machines will be bought for the township and Rose- ville Village in time for the August primary. Open House to Hear Panel Discussion of Nursing to Be Highlight Sunday at McAuley School A style show, refreshments and a panel discussion on nursing will highlight McAuley School of Prac- tical Nursing’s open house Sunday afternoon. All young women_interested .in nursing careers are invited to the program at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- pital’s Nurses’ home, 126 Fulton St., from 1:30 until 4:30 p.m. The program is part of St. Joseph hospital's celebration of National Hoesiptal Week. The public is invited to tour the hes- pital itself Monday through Thursday from 2 until 4 p.m. Sister Mary Janice, director of | McAuley School, will act as chair- | man of Sunday afternoon's open | house. McAuley School's Glee Club and Jaanet Manace, a student, .will fur- nish music. The students will pre- sent a style show, ‘‘What the Weil- | Dressed Student Nurse Will Wear.” Representatives from Mercy College, Highland Park General Hospital's School of Nursing and the McAuley School will discuss nursing careers. A _ question- being inspected by Trooper John Pontiac post. The traditional black with gold strips jon cars in past years, will be replaced with a solid | control. NEW LOOK—The shield of the State of Michigan, something new on state police cars this year, is | blue, according to Sgt. Melvin Will, who heads the Benaglio of the | local post. The letters will still Residents See Boom for Area Poll by Press Shows Everyone Fully Favors Dream Waterway Persons questioned in downtowa Pontiac Thursday unanimously agreed that passage of the con- troversial St. Lawrence Sedway bill was a great boon to Michigan. Approval of the United States to jassist Canada in building the waterway from the Atlantic Ocean | to open the Great Lakes for ocean- | going vessels was applauded by many other residents, too, Mrs. Betty Baily, of 928 Mel- rose, a city employe, said pas- sage of the bill should have come a long time ago since it will mean increased trade and pros- perity for much of the United States. “I'm really gigd the bill finally passed and the seaway will become a reality.” Albert Birch, of 1152 Beech Dr., Lake Orion, said it's about time the bill passed. A tool maker, Birch said ship traffic has out- moded the present facilities and construction of the proposed water- way will be a great economic boon Pentiac Press Phete patrol car’s number in-large block be used.on top of the car for air and-answer peried will follow; | ~ ~ and free refreshments will be served. Steering committee for Sunday's program includes students Anna Drobnak, Dorothy Skerkowski, El- 500 at Dinner Pay Tribute to Retired U.S. Officials to both countries. International representative of the UAW, Charles Barnes, of 401 | Orchard Lake Ave., said the cost jis high but that advantages of the May Tax Sale len LaFayette, Martha Modrich and Madeline Leach. lute last night to Roger M. Kyes, Hostesses are Sylvia Wilson, | former deputy defense secretary, chairman; Doris Holdwick, Isa-| and Joseph M. Dodge, who served | belle Wing, Margaret Siler, Shirley as federal budget director }Herrmann, and Carol Vineent.; +, pair was honored at a De- More than 500 persons paid trib- | Janet Mance is entertainment troit dinner attended by business, | chairman helped by Betty Eslin- industrial, civic end religious | ger, Marlene Schlusler, and Bar- leaders. jbara Dodatko. Refreshments | chairman Helen Showen has Carol Detroit Mayer Albert Cobo Frank, Beatrice Paul and Carolyn| said the “trouble-shooting pair | brought Michigan more recogni- tien than any other state.” Both Kyes and Dodge credited | Hulla as committeeman, | Joan Keefe is chairman of the style show, with Lape Castille, | Mary Ann Quinn, Beverly Shay and Patryicia Reaume as com- mittee members. Washington. | Mercy College's four-year pro-| Kyes complimented Wilson for gram carries a bachelor's degree his “brilliant job for the country.” in nursing. Highland Park's three- He said a sound foundation for year course levaes the graduate| the country’s defense was being ready to take Michigan's exam for! built by a group of “dedicated a registered nurse's license and ” McAuley’s one-year program fits | the graduate to-apply for a state | | Practical nurse's license. son for much of their success in Pojnting out that the nation’s Air Force and other military [strength were the finest in the world, Kyes said, “If you think Players fo Present jive os Sava ‘3 One-Act Plays | ROMEO—An evening of one-act | specialists.” | plays will be presented by the| Kyes and Dodge left key busihess | Romeo Players Saturday in the | posts early in 1953 to serve their |Romeo High School auditorium. | country. Before going to Washing- The curtain will rise at 8:15 ton, Kyes was general manager horror Dodge lauded Wilson and a “staff of excellent assistants and “Overtones,” by Alice Gersten-|here and Dodge was a Detroit berg, are Mrs. Margaret Kaiser, | banker-industrialist Mrs. Lester Poosch, Mrs. Andrew | Downey and Mrs. Ray Dembowski. | “Before Breakfast," by Eugene | O'Neill, the second vehicle, will Current Events Club Defense Secretary Charlies E. Wil- = Featured in the first production, | of GMC Truck and Coach Division | 100 Offer to Pay 1951 | Delinquent Levies on} Lots, Buildings | Sharp competition marked the first day of Oakland County's May Tax Sale Thursday, Some 100 people offered to pay | delinquent 1951 taxes on lots and | buildings. Charlies A. Sparks, Oakland County treasurer, said sharp bid- ding forced bids down to one- millionth of an interest as some 100 pieces of land went on the block. The person who offers to pay 1951 taxes on a piece of property for |} the smallest share of ownership |in that property is the “winner’’ in the sale ROGER M. KYES and homes are up for sale for The tax auction in the fifth floor Elderly Woman C nty office buildi Learns to Play pate be gall ay ‘Costly Con Game |! Proverty i sold. Hours are 10 | BOISE, Idaho @ — It cost an/ through Friday. | | elderly Boise woman $2,000 yester-| Sparks said that very few buy- day to learn how to play a well-| ers managed to get complete | ownership of property by paying | known ——— game tance, Sharp sett) a The woman, who asked her name! 4) we offers down to very small | Mot be used, told police she was | shares of ownership, he said. | stopped on the street by another! n. biaders included one person lady, who explained she had 4 lot | representatives of companies from |of money and wanted to know alas far away as Florida. | safe place to put it. } | | Sparks said some 2,000 lots, farms roughly $50,000 in delinquent taxes. | expenditure. ‘‘The benefit to the Bids He | seaway far outweigh any financial avy | country is the big thing, not the cost. George Braknas, of 47 Florence St., retired, said the seaway will afford cheaper transportation and that construction should have been started a long time age. “There are many people against construction of the water- | way but it's what the majority wants that really counts.” Mrs. Norma Colwell, of 771 Sec- ond St., a county employe, said she has been in favor of the sea- | way for many years since it will promote the growth of Detroit and Pontiac both physically and finan- | cially. Sid Barnett of, 24) Cherokee Rd., a business man, said ‘the seaway should bring a boost in business meaning a lot to Michigan, ‘The cost is peanut size compared to the returns we should get ovtr a per- iod of years. “Detroit will pave to get busy and increase its port facilities te handie the increased shipping,” he added. A sales clerk, Mrs. Cecil Mor- row, of 113 Dennison, Oxford, said “I'm in favor of the project. I think our participation will demon- strate to Canada that we wish to cooperate with her in the economic development of our two countries. “I understand that toll charges and fees for electricity which would be developed in connection with the project will soon pay the original construction costs.” Mrs. Cari Buckner, of 22 Ger- don Ave., said she supported the | star Mrs. Philip M. Stone in the ‘Elects New Officers | seaway “as I think nearly every- story of an unhappy marriage. ALMONT—Officers were elected The finale, ‘“‘Lord Byron's Love | at this week's meeting of the Cur- | Letter,” is by the well-known}rent Events Club, with Mrs. Ina | Broadway playwright, Termessee Kidder named to the group's top Williams. Mrs. Janet Martell, Mrs. | post. | Ralph Toles, Mrs. Robert McGuire| Others elected were Mrs. Fred and Doan Ogden will be featured. | Farley, vice president; Mrs. Ida The plays are under the direction| Payne, secretary; Mrs. Charles of Gerald McLean, Mary Dodge | Waltz, treasurer, and Bess Reid, and Robert McGuire, respectively. ' corresponding secretary. ee OPENING NOTE—All eyes were on director Jeanette Vier, assistant to the supervisor | of vocal music at Pontiac High School as the combined Girls Glee Clubs opened the 19th | repeateti tonight at 8:15 in the high school auditorium. (Story on page 19.) | Just then, another woman passed| Almont Student Offered by. She said she had just found a| os . | wad of currency, and she promised Membership in Rho Chi | that each of the other two could | ALMONT — Included in the Uni- have $1.000 of it if they would only |versity of Michigan pharmacy stu- loan her some cash for a few dents offered membership in Rho hours. ‘Chi, pharmaceutical honorary so- The victim, who is 71, drew ciety, this week was Patrick Mc- $2,000 from her bank and turned | Cormick. it over. That was the last she’s} A junior, he is the son of H. A. ' geen of the other two. McCormick of Almont, annual spring concert, “Say It With Music’ Thyrsday night. one in this area does.” Milton Collard, of Milwaukee, who is visiting his mother at Wat- | kins Lake, said “the folks at home will be happy over the project's completion. Some foreign ships reach Milwaukee now, but when ithe seaway is doze more and big- | ger ships will probably arrive and | stimulate trade.’’ Pontiac Press Phete The concert will be “THESE NEW CRISP COTTON « DRESSES... 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The jurors automatically con- demned the two to death by not San Francisco agency on the waterfront. ing cracked to his lawyer: “Cheer up, pal, the worst is yet to come. Here's where we get that old rocking chair.” s * * As the verdict was read, pointed- ly omitting any leniency recom- mendation which could have re- Triumph. “Well, well, old rocking chair's got me,” he said. Then he laughed aloud at Lear, whose face was strained and taunt. When an identical guilty verdict for Lear, Lear broke encom iP BAA Sp ’ me. ee, 1950 DeSoto Custom 4-Dr. (2) 1950 Dodge Tudor 1950 Plymouth Deluxe Cl. Cpe. 1950 Plymouth Deluxe 4-Dr. 1949 DeSoto Custom 4-Dr. 1949 Plymouth Deluxe Cl. Cpe. BRAID MOTOR SALES DeSoto-Piymouth Dealer—30 Years of Fair Dealing CASS at W. PIKE ST. 1952 1954 Plymouth Savoy 4-Dr. 1954 DeSoto V-8 Sportsman 1953 DeSoto V-8 Fordor 1953 Plymouth Cranbrook 4-Dr. 1953 Plymouth Suburban (2) 1953 Willys Hard-Top 1952 DeSoto Custom 4-Dr. 1952 DeSoto V-8 4-Dr. Plymouth Cranbrook Cl. Cpe. 1952 Plymouth Cranbrook 4-Dr. (3) 1952 Plymouth Cambridge 4-Dr. (2) 1951 DeSoto Deluxe Ci. Cpe. 1951 Plymouth Suburban 1951 Plymouth Cranbrook Ci. Cpe. 1951 Plymouth Cambridge Cl. Cpe. 1951 Plymouth Cambridge 4-Dr. 6 at $50.00 Down 1947 Chrysler 4-Dr. 1947 Plymouth 4-Dr. 1946 Nash Sedan 1941 Buick Fordor 1939 Chevrolet Tudor Palomar Locates Exploding Star in Virgo Grouping PASADENA, Calif. W—An ex- ploding star or supernova has been found in the constellation of |Virgo with the 18inch Schmidt | telescope at the Palomar Observa- tory California Institute of Techdol- said, “‘A rough preliminary esti- mate indicates that it was about as bright as previous supernovae, which have been about 100 million times brighter than our sun."’ A supernova is an exceptionally bright star appearing in the sky where none has been observed be- fore. It is believed to result from a colossal stellar explosion in which the star brightens greatly and then fades out. More than 32 million pieces of mail a year go into the dead letter office in Washington. More than one vnillion contain money, notes or checks. + _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 Guaranteed Pay Tops USW List Wage Increase, Other Benefits on Program of | Steelworkers Union ogy, announcing this yesterday PITTSBURGH #@—A guaranteed | } annual wage—long one ‘of labor's | principal aims—and an unspecified | pay increase keynote 1954 contract |objectives of the powerful CIO | United Steelworkers. The union outlined its program for negotiations with the basic steel industry, due to start later this month, as the 170-member USW wage policy committee opened a two-day conference yes- terday to draft final bargaining | plans oa s s | A four-point program embodying |demands for the guaranteed ah- ;nual wage and a pay boost was | adopted by the union's 30-man ex- | ecutive board and presented to the LN policy committee. Final aproval is seen only as a formality. . > o Rounding out the program are demands for improved insurance and pension plans and better con- tract terms on such items as seniority, holidays, vacations, over- time, severance pay afd local | working conditions. David J. McDonald, USW pres- ident, said the policy committee took up the wage and pension-in- surance points at the first day's session. - * ried He declined to state what wage hike the union wants for its 600,000 members in basic steel now earn- ing an average of $2.14 to $2.24 an hour. ’ . . . On the guaranteed annual wage, McDonald said the proposal to be presented at the bargaining table will “likely follow the general trend of a plan which the union has been discussing.” He said the plan calls for forma- tion of a supplemental benefit in- come to be paid to unemployed workers out of a trust fund. He didn't go into details. f *" MOTO - MOWER power mowers, reel and rotary type. 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M. * Flowers Telegraphed Any Place in the World! PEARCE FLORAL Co. $200 : a 559 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. Lots of Free Parking Space _ ae Safari to Probe Eskimo Ruins Archeologist to Head Expedition to Hudson Bay This Summer WASHINGTON — An expedition that hopes to solve some of the The project is sponsored by the society, the National Museum of Canada and the Smithsonian Insti- tution. It will be headed by Dr. Henry B. Collins Jr., of the Smith- sonian, who has carried on many archeological studies in the Arctic. Seuthampten Island is at the mouth of Hudson Bay.. It offers a spectacular concentration of ruins of different types, including 73 old stone and whale’ bene houses. This is believed to be unique in Canada. The expedition plans to study thre cultures, the Dorset, Thule and Sadlermiut. The Dorset, which existed more than a thousand years ago, pre- sents the outstanding problem to- day in Eskimo anthopology. Nothing is known of Dorset physi- cal types or language. Chief clues to Dorset culture consist of small, delicate stone and ivory imple- ments, some marked by gouged holes. Art works are mainly weird carvings of animals and people Most objects are found in thin layers at the bottom of Thule de- posits or houses. Digging has therefore been difficult. Nose Wheel Won't Work, Airliner Returns Safely NEW YORK @-—A double-deck Pan American Stratocruiser, en route to London, landed safely at Idlewild Airport late yesterday -THE PONTIAC ¢ PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 | ’ Japan to Stop Testing Tuna for Radioactivity TOKYO # — Japan will stop test at Bakini. activity, unloading after. the March 1 hydrogen bomb Hori said latest tests of 6,000 tons of frozen tuna and 70,000 cases of canned tuna showed no radio- LEW IS---Fine Furniture LEW IS-—-Fine Furnitur The Sadlermiut cultyre likely descended from the Thule and ap- parently flourished only on South- ampton and near-by Coats Island to the south. A strange, primitive race, different from other Cana- dian Eskimos, the Sadlermiuts may also have been related to the Dorset people. The Southampton ruins are centered at Native Peint. The Sadiermiut commanity here died out In 1903, probably from ty- phus. The ruins are # miles southeast of the tiny community ef Southampton Island. A mile from Native Point is the site of Dorset refuse heaps, unmixed with Thule material. | Dr. Collins believes the Native | Point ruins may determine the exact relationship between the Thule and Sadilermiut cultures. ——— Glidden [| PAINT FESTIVAL il pooeror> 5 ; (Deep colors higher) 6%, i ——__ SAVE 1.00 Reteciosentcaeaiell FLORENAMEL Paint your con- crete and lincleam for dollars eur HURON EC Sy EMG AT G CUSHION Sf 5 — WARRANTY BOND ote to) ee Pe Ge CERTIFIED KILN DRIED- by Sun or Rain PLAY SAFE! LOOK for the LABEL! Certified by Kiln Dried Your Guarantee of Quality Enjoy Outdoor Living at Home this Summer The everlasting redwood pieces shown above resist moisture and decay—sturdy—no painting necessary. See All These Pieces at Lewis’ 70” Picnic Table with X-Leg...... $39.50 70” Folding Picnic Table ........ 46.50 WOT OID ro. ee Me vcenes 59.50 Contour Chaise ............... 66.50 Captain’s Chair ............... 11.95 NO BS, £5 ss wind ots seen ews 44.95 . Mohng Chale... ccc ccc cess 7.95 4-Wheel Lawn Cart ............ 22.50 Patio Chale oc cc ccc eee 19.50 Patio Settee ..... «eee 29.50 Rectangular Coffee Table ........ 12.95 Coot Miele i cee ees 34.95 Reger. Semep =....5.......... 59.50 42” Umbrella Table ......:..... 19.95 Sa ee ee 11.50 TiN eR 6. disses hurd ones 5.95 Ye Olde Rocker ............... 39.95 TaaT peels re "mom, vou VOURE a (eS era a ee eS REDWOOD FURNITURE, lw ‘Cannot Be Harmed Nothing is too good for Mother and you are giv- ing the best when you give o Luxury rocker from & LEWIS’. 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M. to 9 P..M.—Sun. 1 P.M. te 9 P.M, Johnson Construction Co. Mi 4-0328 Water Show 'Plans Complete ‘Aqua Toys’ Carnival to Be Given by Dolphin Club May 12-15 Final plans have been completed by the Pontiac High Schoo! Dolphin Club for their gala water show Aqua Toys. The carnival, under the direction of Jean Hutchinson, will be presented May 12 through 15 beginning at 8:15 p.m. The complete list of those par- ticipating will include the follow- ing nine girls performing in the Cashin, Judie Cohassey, Patsy Dernberger, Carol Donaldson and Diane Culer. Also performing will be Pa- tricia Farr, Gloria Opie, Carrol Shaw and Marsha Stapp. Featured in Storybooks are Gail Barber, Alice Bego, Carol Ann Borsvold, Barbara Calhoun, Marion Greenlee, and Sandra Hodge. Marie Meyer, Sharon Savedge, Charlotte Stark, Carol Young and substitute JoAnn Uligian will also show their aquatic skill in the skit Teddy Bears will be Gayle Joy- ner, Henrietta Schiaefer, Barbara Schwalm, Jane Steinhelper and Marilyn Glennie, substitute. Betty Oen and Ann Skelly will as Rag Dolls with Enacting Toy Trumpets in the festival will be Gail Barber, Alice Bego, Marion Greenlee, Sharon Savedge, Jane Steinhelper, Carol Young and substitute Marilyn Glen- nie. Clowns for the production will be Marianne Crozier, Sandra Hodge, Gayle Joyner and Marie Henrietta Schiaefer, Barbara Schwalm, Patricia Farr, Charlotte Stark, and sub Ann Skelly will ap- pear as Tin Soldiers, Scheduled for the roles of Cow- beys and Indians will be Gail Barber, Patsy Dernberger, Jane | Steinhelper and JoAnn Uligian. Carel Anna Borsveld will substi- tute. Clock sequence, They are Frances | CARLENE Chosen Valedictorian of the June 194 graduating class of St. Michael High School recently was Carlene Linsenman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Linsenmen of 212 Edison St. Margaret Martin, another senior classman, was designated daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Martin of 530 N. Saginaw St. FRIDAY, MAY 7, MARGARET as the salutatorian. She is the and her classes will furnish the props. The narration tape has been prepared by Vera M. Adams and her Radio Workshop staff. Helping with properties and backstage assistance will be Bar- bara Hess and Pat Smith. Seniors Discuss Class Affairs at St. Michael High Class affairs were discussed at a breakfast held Tuesday, by the senior classmen of St. Michael High School. The event followed a group reception of Holy Com- munion received during the 8 a.m. Mass. It was Guring the breakfast that *| the assignment of the class his- tory which will be written by Maria Leone. The will and testament was designated to Janet Lawless and Richard Doll and the class will be composed by Elaine Kraft Honred guest for the breakfast | was Rev. Michael J. O'Reilly. After the affair, the seniors | made a tour of the Pontiac State | Journalists Attend Press Parley at U-M The Pontiac High School Quiver, Tomahawk, and Journalism class students attended the Michigan In- terscholastic Press Association convention Friday at the Univer- sity of Michigan. Robert Beau- champ and Mrs. Betty Fournier, faculty advisers for the Tomahawk and Quiver respectively, also jour- neyed to Ann Arbor. On schedule, was a tour of the campus, luncheon, and morning and afternoon sessions of work ‘on the college yearbook. Newswriting, feature work, busi- ness affairs, management. and sportswriting were also features presented for the benefit of the high schoolers. Bao Dai’s Plane Makes an Emergency Landing NICE, France #—The controls quit working of the plane of Bao Dai, chief of state of Viet Nam, 10 minutes after he took off today from the Nice airport — but the pilot landed safely. Father, Son Get Old Age Benefits Simultaneously Adams and Sons over to third- generation members of the family. Each said he would receive the maximum $85.a month. Some Books to Read for MICHIGAN WEEK . Between The Iron And The Pine, Reim Mi. Tadersen's Disciple, A Lil of Junko Woodward, Woodiord Mammals Of Michigan. Somme. Quaife A Century Of Iron And Men. Haicher These and others may be obtained at the PONTIAC CITY LIBRARY 47 Williams St. Hours: 9 A.M.-8 P.M—Saturday: 8-6 FE 4-1508 V SENSATIONAL PURCHASE ¥ 1 i : | _H Bao Dai returned to his villa near-Cannes but planned to go on | ito Paris later today, a member | |of his staff said. The Philippine islands are com- OFT'Granches tn Many Principal Cites of Hurry to Arthur Murray’s now if you want to learn the secret to good times and popularity. Thanks to his famous “Magic Step” you really can go dancing after just one lesson. In the Train portion will be Judie | Hospital. | Posed of 10 large and 970 small Cohassey, Marianne Crozier, Carol islands. FOUNDED 190 t | Donaldson, Marilyn Glennie, Ma-| Mo t ‘e ee —SEEE = Emergency? Nol I'm hurrying [rion Greenlee, Sandra Hodge, ther and Daugh er Di | ever te Arthur sfere Gayle Joyner, Carrol Shaw and {Ot Exactly Same Time ‘ ; Murrey’ half-hour private lessen for $1.00 | Substitute Frances Cashin. | BLUEFIELD, W. Va. Mrs. That's because it’s the key step to all dances and is so easy even a beginner can master it in one lesson. Come in now. Arthur Murray’s Studio, 25 E. Lawrence St., Phone FEderal 2-0244. Alice Bego and Carol Young will be featured in the Ballet. Performing as Blocks will be Carol Ann Borsvold, Betty Ocen, Helen Swaggerty, 23, of Lashmeet and her 43-year-old mother died parents’ mother, Mrs. Alma Milles, died in Georgiann Schultz, art director | a hospital here of a heart ailment: = > ¢ | ey &. Vir LP Lady’s Birthstone $1 Weekly pao Benrus Arlene “>sy SURPRISE MOTHER ON HER DAY... With a Jewelry Gift from ...Michigan’s Largest Jewelers = | ye i Lady’s Bulova 17 Jewels $3 52 > PON Including wom ge be mene poss Sel drive dare weet A 1954 2-DOOR TIAC COSTS ONLY 2261" , white-woll tires, deluxe steering wheel, visors, directional signals, dual defrosters ‘end a beceaaee license ond sales tax. Ready to Open to 9 P.M. Mondey Through Fridey-—Sotardey “il § P.M. Mt. Clemens and Mills St. Downtown’ Across From Post Office little... KNOWN FACTS! a ee eae THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 ~had the supervisory responsibility of the Oakland County Children's Child Service Chie fo.Quit Local Post (Continued From Page One) Console Sets = styling. © FULL SWEET’S RADIO. wetitnc: 422 W. Huron St. Phone FE 4-133 FREE PARKING TRADE-IN OFFER on 24” MOTOROLA TV Console $3QQ% mae 100 *‘) 99” MEASURE THE DIFFERENCE IN DOLLARS & CENTS! New walnut finish console features an acoustically matched cabinet with ‘spe- cial Glare Down/Sound Up © FAMOUS LIFETIME FOCUS © EXCLUSIVE DISTANCE SELECTOR SWITCH YEAR WARRANTY ON ALL PARTS Bank Robbers — Taken fo. Milan 5 * c a — - < City Library Showing Books on Michigan ing the current Michigan Week program by giving top billing to books dealing with the history and attractions of Michigan and Oak- land County. Librarian Adah Shelly said more than 20 children's books and 530 adult volumes on the state are available, while some 5 books and numerous pamphiets cover various phases of the county. The books include histories, trav- elogues and biographies. Volumes on Michigan fotktore also are avail- Bandits Get $18,000 From Loan Office DETROIT (UP) — Four armed bandits staged a daring daylight robbery. at a branch of the Amer- ican Savings and Loan Associa- tion today and escaped with be- | tween $18,000 and $25,000. Police said the mon, all armed, entered the association office ai |7-Mile Rd. and Livernois shortly before the lunch hour. 100 GOOD 10 MISS AT SHAWS Michigan’s Largest Jewelers % Striking , +6” bedroom. 7 inches high. SAVE °7* NO MONEY DOWN 80+ A WEEK * No Extra Charge ~ for Credit Terms . = . ao * Beautifully styled self starting elec- y tric clock for living room, den or half on this dependable clock. Just ‘In time for Mother's Day. LA Saginaw St. Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Blue-Mirror Facing Va-inches wide, 4¥2- Save more thon one- Pontiac City Library is mark: | - Testifies fo Threats by M’Carthy Aides (Continued From Page One) Cohn was Stevens: “They certainly did.” When. McCarthy asked how that! sisted were manned by Chinese | these men were lost. asa recruit and is now a private.” Dien Bien Phu Falls After 57-Day Siege (Continued From Page One) Hl ing the past night, only a small area remained. Defense of the little fortress was made difficult by the fact that all the surrounding hills were held by the Vietminh and, to the surprise of the French Union forces, they were strongly supplied with artil- lery, for the first time in the more than seven years that they have been fighting the French. _ Beyond, that, also, they had antiaircraft guns which some French and American officials in- from a high altitude, so that much Vietminh hands, marked the first . all-out frontal fighting that the war in Indochina has developed in its nearly eight minh hold areas spétted through- out Indochina, but French Union forces still possess the main cities, Hanoi, Saigon and Haiphong. There bas been speculation that a rebel success at Dien Bien Phu would pave the way for attacks on Hanoi, 180 miles to the east, é > . ” Meanwhile ,the Geneva confer- ence is ready to take up the prob- lem of making peace in Indochina. The intensity of the Dien Bien Phu attack showed the Communists’ de- termination to present its capture as an accomplished fact before the diplomats at Geneva. Scores of planes supplied by the United States helped the French Union forces defend Dien Bien Phu, but no U.S, Air Force fliers participated. However, American civilian fliers employed by private concerns did participate in air drop operations, and only today two of equipment fel immediately into years. The Communistled Viet- SEVENTEEN The Dien Bien Phu battle|f-: (READ THIS) We-have a few 1954 Demonstrators with very low mileage — Chryslers and Plymouths that are as good as new! Make your Own Deal! If You have a 1947 to 1951 model arrange easy Financing. Telephone us for immediate attention. car we can Filles Foch 375 $. Weedward Mi 6-1200 Birmingham The Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac Famous Brands at Lowest Prices! Make It A Real Mother's Day! G 21 1954 F RCA Victor IANT (4 -INCH eature Packed Sale Price i . Bese Extra a Imagine having the finest in television engi- =f neering along with a giant 21" screen for @ price you formerly paid for smal! screen a sets RCA Victor's exclusive Rotomatic i tuning gives you the sharpest clearest pic- EA sur PRICE Reg. Spindrier Reg. Price $179.95 1392 No Money Down & ‘ 3a Price Cut *60 speciAL PURCHASE! on This Spacious Family Size Kelvinator Deluxe Refrigerator tures ever. A click of the dial and your picture and sound is automatically tuned NO MONEY DOWN SAVE 540 on-a_ beautiful oo SY ° sina! 11 wes ee + ewe sn La SPECIAL OFFER! 50 GAL. Nationally Famous TOASTMASTER Electric Water Heater ity ‘99* Compare with Other Heaters Selling for $154.95 APPROVED BY DETROIT EDISON Wiring Free on Edison Lines SPEED QUEEN IRONER Reg. Price $99.95 ow ‘69° Price YOU SAVE *30 Here’s Your Chance to Save $20! HOOVER VACUUM CLEANER $5995 COMPLETE WITH TIME SAVING ATTACHMENTS The Regular Price $79.95 .. . You Save $20! Price $299.95 rigerator at a new price, and it’s @ deluxe family size tor at that. it, check the price, then you'll want to it. = Teood 51 W. Huron St. = 92399 Beautiful Mother’s Day Gifts Wafle Irons .....16.95 | Coffee Makers ... 10.95 Full Width Freeser "ON “Strigerator 1 Drossure Cookers ..12.95 | Steam Irons ...... 19.50 a — Toasters ......... aa — Radios ‘ aaa e Reasters ware tatete terete . Cie. ..cseecees re ne ee Oe we ee raters | 10” Oscillating Fan 12.95 | Deep Fryers. -... 19.50 NO MONEY DOWN | tlectric try pan...24.95 | Kitchen Radio... 9.95 HOUSEKEEPI of PONTIAC Open Daily 9 to 5:30—Fridays 9 to-9 (Except Service Dept.) \S by Shop by Phone FE 4-1555 . \| THE PONTIAC PRESS: FRIDAY, MAY 7; 1954 of Eastern Junior High of Jefferson . Joe Phillips of Chief Pontiac Auxiliary were in Parks, Nicky Folsom, Nancy Nich- Valeria Armstrong, Judy Ross, Lindy McCurdy, Garry Mc- Dowell, Martin Smith, Shirley Crank, Dorlis Rains and James Gracy. Driftwood Decorates Driftwood for home decoration can be bleached or used in its natural state. Whichever way you prefer, give it a thin coat of fresh, white shellac. A second coat, after the first is dry, will make it look even better. Immediate delivery. ~ High Fidelity Phonographs *Chicago Webcor *RCA °VM *Columbia *Olympic *Decca *Square Root Consoles and table mod- els. Blond or mahogany. Terms Available! GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. FE 4-0556 18 £. Huron, Pontiac Hints Given on Painting With Rollers Do All Edges First, Then Large Areas Are Cinch By HUBBARD COBB Every day, assuming that we are awake, we learn something new. | The other day we learned a lot of things about paint rollers and we | think you'll find some of this! - | knowledge of considerable interest. | The next time you -set out to paint a wall with a roller, don’t go ahead and do the large areas and then get mad trying to finish off the edges. Instead, use a smal] trim rol- ler and do alj the edges first. After the edges are done, doing the large areas is a cinch, Don’t try to do all the edges of all the walls at once, however. Do only one wall at a time. When using the roller, avoid letting it spin at the end of a stroke. This produces an uneven job. There are certain areas, such as in back of radiators, pipes and shelves, that are impossible to do even witha small trim roller. For these spots you can get a small pad which produces the same tex- ture finish as does the roller. When you have ceilings to do, you don't need a ladder when using a special roller with a long handle, and if you have oversize ceilings, you can get a lightweight alum- inum roller extension. fectly even job is the same as for walls — don't stop work until the entire area is done. If you take time out on the job you'll find that the edges of the paint have set and when a fresh strip is applied there will be a seam which will show up when the ceiling is dry. Patricia Fields Married in West Announcement of the marriage of Patricia Fields and Clifton War- ner has been received from her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fields of San Diego, Calif. the First Church of the Nazarene in San Diego March 20. Parents of the bridegroom are the Ciifton Warners of Seattle, Wash. The bride's parents, who are former Pontiac: residents, are re- turning to Pontiac to make their permanent home. —- ING, 7 Lawrence Street. VETERAN Call, Phone or Return this Ad fer Bulletin BEGINNING CLASSES in GREGG SHORTHAND BOOKKEEPING, ACCOUNTING, TYPEWRIT- COMPTOMETER and and other subjects . THIS WEEK Day, Half-Day and Evening CALCULATOR. labidlady Pontine 2-3551 APPROVED The marriage was solemnized in | wwvrevvwvevevevevwvevewvveeeeeeeereeveveeveeeeeeee,r, | } You'll ‘love the cool flattery of that scooped neckline on simmer- ing summer days. You'll love the brief sleeves and flaring 4- gore skirt. Best of all, you'll love to sew this—it’s so easy! Make it in crisp cotton, cool shantung, or a nylon novelty. Pattern 4712: Misses’ sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42. Size 16 takes 4% yards 35-inch. 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. Senior Boys Honor Mothers at Dinner Senior boys of Boys Club hon- ored their mothers Tuesday eve- Mothers Day dinner at the Boys with a corsage and Jim Cartier sang a solo. Michael Firoillo was general chairman, and serving the dinner were Bruce Baker, John Givens, Joe Barron and Jim Cartier. Mrs. Kenneth Nichols presided at the meeting of the Mothers Club, and it was decided the group will serve the board of directors’ dinner June 1 under the chairman- ship of Mrs. Ford Snyder A visit to the Starr Common- wealth School for Bays at Albion was planned for June 9 by the mothers. They will hold their next meeting June 7. Answer te Previews Puasie ] VIA MIA A ~ ~N w A N . i cicoia | A le lalo iris SLIPPER GIFTS Give her lovely, practical slippers She'll tove ‘em! ». ” 20 Of. SEE Mother's Day from our wide selection of styles and colors . . . FOR a Boy at Loss for Words When Dating Columnist Suggests Likely Topics for Small Talk By ELIZABETH WOODWARD “Dear Miss Woodward: Have you an suggestions for conversa- tion going to, coming from and during dates? I have been on only three dates and I couldn't ever think of anything to say. Boy, was it dull! “During the show it was okay— but before and after it was noth- | ing but silence. Come to the res- | you, didn’t cue of a guy who wants to be a smooth date, will you please?’’ Ali right, the girl petrified she? You thought | She was a creature apart, some- | ning by serving them a special | Club. Each mother was presented | {far from dull—for her! body quite different from the people you talked to every day of the week. She had nothing in common with the boys you know, the girls you see every day at school, the folks at home, Date conversation was a spe- cial species of talk. At least that’s the way you figureed it. And you weren't up to it. You simply couldn't think up, manufac- ture, imagine anything that would interest the girl you were taking to the show. So you kept silent. No wonder you thought things dull. Girls aren’t so almighty queer and strange that they can't. be interested in what interests you. And they have interests of their own that might prove highly di- gestible if you'd just get them to talking things over. of your teachers, like best and why. likes best and why. Whateach of you is going to with all you're learning in sc’ Where are you heading? Does family help or is your big a pain in the neck? How seem to be out alone wi What do you like about her to a oy s opreaies 3 but since you're with her, it tastes superlative. Say so. The moon's like many another you've seen, but tell her why This one is spe- cial. You like the color of her dress, the way she’s wearing interested. She'll adore hearing about how wonderful she is. And that will make conversation for you that's s? ee om +4 This happy trio is modeli « aR Rae ek ng an innova-| porous, and they prevent diaper rash. No tion in diaper covers. The new, all-cotton| more hot rubber or plastie. diaper covers are water-repellent, cool and | Pontiac Chapter to Be Hostess Sorority Plans Convention Plans for the fourth annual state convention of Michigan Chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, are Alpha hostess at the Fort Shelby Hotel in Detroit, May 14, 15 and 16. Mrs, Frank A. Jalosky Jr. is clude Mrs. Edmund 0. Smith, | registration; Mrs. Richard Doyle, | entertainment; Betty Lou De-/| Groot, program, and Mrs, Alex composed of Iva Pinkston, Beth Ullom, Mrs. Marshall Rose, Mrs. Rudy Mazza, Mrs. Robert Earl and Mrs. Albert Anselmy. Tipacon Chapter Holds Meeting | The May meeting of Tipacon Chapter, American Business Wom- én's Association, was held Wednes- day evening at the Waldron Hotel. As an invocation, Cleobell Cole- man played a violin solo, “The Lord's Prayer,” accompanied by 3 ’ 3 Bu rH 17 is td 21 23 ™ 37 29 Distant nm 32 Small upright ° y 24 Pine soft wool , Yj Irony , 37 Horn Y q 38 Short jecket 4 Frees 41 Compess point 42 Encountered #4 Profound “A 46 Removes! 49 Rude dweiling 63 Race “ Shore name i 57 Ln a toy 60 Killed anc San —e a 61 Repose ode ef 8 wi —_— ra] quarrel 43 Polds 1 Retain as po “5 2 State 0 Latte desire tor “ ot 3 Nevada city 10 Porbidden food time 4 Publish 1 Sacred bull 28 Elude ts" O My 16 Tidier 30 Scottish ones 48 Disturd Heart” 20 Respond 31 Unusual Chew 6 Away from 22 Galtpeter 33 Numbers $1 Taverna home 4 Eseential 35 Fiy Tidy 7 Prod being 40 Fancy 55 Stitch carved settings. $197 “Miss Michigan” ih Beautifully matched set of Blue White Diamonds masterfully en- hanced in natural gold, hand Open Friday Evening to 9 Surprise MOTHER with a Diamond Ring from SALLAN’S Sallan’s “Key-Lok” tnsert the “Keyten” into either center opening of wedding ring. | too, for a shower gift. Easy to embroider! Pattern 682 has 14 embroidery motifs: two, 14%x7%; six, 4x34g to 6tax5%{; six, 1%x1% to 2%x2'g inches. Send 25 cenc in coins for this each pattern for first-class mailing. Send to 124 Pontiac Press Needle- craft Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly pattern number, your name, address and zone. Sing Fashion ‘Blues’ Everyone is singing the fashion “blues” this spring — navy leads turquoise, powder blue, peacock and teal. A smart combination is royal blue and white. pattern—add 5 cents in coins for, the color parade followed by other | pretty hues from sea and sky, | In-law. Pries Into Private Finances Son’s Wife Resents This Snooping and Fault-Finding By EMILY POST A daughter-in-law asks: ‘How can I tactfully cope with a moth- er-in-law whose sole conversation consists of criticism and asking questions which are none of her business — mostly about money. ‘How much rent do you pay?’ What did that dress cost?’ ‘How much is John earning now?’ etc. “Then she promptly tells others all she has been able to find out. If she isn't asking questions, she is finding fault. “This goes on until I dread time we have to spend with I do not want to hurt her but would like to find the her. Answer: I think the thing to do is to develop a bad memory and not be able to remember the cost of anything. About her finding fault, tell her that you find doing things your way most practical for Dear Mrs. Post: Will you please describe the correct way to hold a stemmed glass? Answer: You hold a large-bowled stemmed glass with thumb and first two fingers around the lower part of the bow! and you let the fourth and fifth fingers fal! natural- ly against the stem. and later marry a man named Smith, how does she sign her name? Answer: Correctly, she drops her | late husband's name and signs | herself Mary Brown Smith. Chi Omega Alumnae Will Meet May 14 North Woodward Alumnae of Chi Omega sorority will hold the an- The group will meet for a 12:30 luncheon at the home of Mrs. How- ard Steggall in Bloomfield Hills. Mrs. Farnum Fitzpatrick of Berk- ley is chairman. She will be assist- ed by Mrs. Beeler Higbee Jr. of Birmingham. Men’s Shirts Chic If you have always enjoyed | wearing man-tailored shirts, now jis the time for you to indulge |} your whim. These shirts, com- plete with cuff links and ties, are getting the fashion nod this season. UNWANTED HAIR Permanently From Face, Arms or Legs a a oe WARREN 6082 WARREN 6891 Salen, Farwell Detroit 83400 Mound 4. (Just N. of 14 ML) ) x - i 3 i aa 8 an: mS inti adh acomns alien intense area nents 4 x lf ne BULOVA HAMILTON GRUEN - WITTNAUER LONGINE 17 N. Saginaw St. ae OL lw a4 a OR ete gee RE ET Ba CE ay Wr gt at ee ee wee . heen Oe ets a Golfing to Begi T Dey ia Gifts by Ss the Score Plenty of Easy Parking! Tuning up for the 19th annual spring concert of the | Pontiac High School Vocal Department are quartet members Sylvan Shores Unit to Hold Card Party Mrs. William Herrmann on Wood- bine drive. Committee chairmen include Mr. and Mrs. Robert Newill, Joseph Grebeta and Mr, and Mrs. E)- dred Mathes. armful of these darting tittle Some in 100% pure nylon. 1 to 3, 3 to 6x. Sizes 7 t's going to be fair and warmer! Better hurry im and scoop up an for daughter. All of them pretty- wise, comfort-wise and penny-wise Sha nter (left) of O d,a| staber of i Fas cea Ven Cie formance of “Say It With Music,” the 19th Lescorts Bill Palm of Roselawn drive and| annual Pontiac High School Vocal Depart- Beverly Bruce of West New York avenue| ment spring concert Thursday evening and to “two on the aisle” for the first per- tonight. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 Pentiae Press Phote slave? | Glenn Logan of Florence avenue. “Say It With Music” (left to right) Robert Stasiuk of Nelson street, Jerry Libby | 9pened Thursday evening and will be repeated this evening | of Mt. Clemens street, Gary y Nelson of Pershing avenue and | at 8:15 in the Pontiac High School auditorium. Pentiace Press Phete PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL . Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. WM $. Starch Wrong Side Clothes should be starched only lon the wrong side. Starch pene- 600 Voices Are Raised inMelody — Spring Concert to ‘Be Repeated This Evening at School -By DONNA ANDERSON They said it again—with music of course. Pontiac High School's Vocal Department, 600 voices strong, repeated once more their often told story of enthusiasm and developing talent at the opening performance of ‘Say It With Music’’ Thursday evening. Under the direction of George H. 2utnam and his assistant Jeanette Tier, the 19th annual spring con- cert had its moments of humor and interludes of inspiration that brought a big collective lump in the throats of an admiring audience. An innovation this year was the organ interludes and accom- paniment by Koebert Stasiuk which tied together the program | of fresh and delightful sciections. “A Thing of Beauty Is a Joy | Forever’’ was the theme for the opening selections by the combined | Girls Glee Clubs. This group in- cluded the intricate “Waltz of the | Flowers," superbly done, and a solo, ‘“‘Only a Rose’ by Edward George, along with several selec- tions written about flowers. Soloing for the evening were Burton Belant with ‘“‘Song of the Open Road,’ Jerry Libby at the piano with a Brahms work, ‘‘Rhap- | sody Opus .79 No. 2,'’ Sue Braid with “A Little Song of Life’ and Phyllis Smith with “Go Way From My Window.” Mary Mount sang “What Is This Thing Called Love?” and the Girls Ensemble backed Sally | Sebastian in “Since You Went Away.” “Three Little Maids’ the offering of the Junior Girls En- semble, and the Select Girls Glee Club did ‘Ave Maris Stella’ and “The Fountain.’ ‘Valse Brilliante by Moszkowski was chosen as the offering of the piano quartet Complete with animated illustra tions, the Boys Glee Club carried out its theme, ‘‘And Away We Go with a group of spirited travel songs for, in their words, ‘getting places.’ Under the title of ‘Vesper Medi tation.’ the A Cappella Choir pre- sented several religious selections was @The choir returned later in formal Enroliments Available in Day or Evening Classes. ltrates more evenly when used as Write, phone or call in PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 rson for Free pamphiet solution first. hot as possible. Put the clothes you want to come out stiffest into the Buys to 14 Others 14.99 to 24.99 Matching Veils 5.99 For Her First Communion Pretty white dresses = Posed lace tri weEach with its own matching slip. 6 to 12. 16” “Best for Children” 39 Tel-Huron Shopping Center Free Convenient Parking Open Tonight and Saturday Until 9 P. M. Sunday. 2 to 5 P. M. WEEK-END SALE! Take Along Special $750 CASH Assorted Cut Flowers . PEARCE FLORAL CO. 559 Orchard Lake Ave. Phone FE 2-0127 Make vour Mother's Day gift even more personalized this year with beautiful initial monograms . colorful styles . . . your choice of colors and sizes... purchased from our store this week BLOUSES $2.98 SLIPS $3.98 PAJAMAS $3.98 apt reeree re 9 South Saginaw St. TH several with every gift ‘9@a NATIONAL CLOTHING emergent | | A cae to do the colorful *'Polevet- jsian Dances’ from Borodin's |opera. ‘Prince Igor.’ and a med ley of tunes from ‘South Pacific “While We Were Young’ done by the Girls Ensemble featured a charming dancing couple as a part of a group entitied ‘Behind the Footlights."’ As the remainder of the returned to the auditorium for the finale, those on stage broke into the heartwarming Welsh folk song “Let All Things Now Living.” giv- ing a performance that was breath- taking as the soprano obligato contrasted against the force of so many voices “I Believe’ and ‘America Our Heritage’ with piano and organ accompaniment ended ‘‘Say It With Music’’ for another year Soloists for. the second. per formance to be given this evening will be Jean Hilton, Kay Walker and Madeline Rallis Vocal Department nists are Ponnie Sue Davis, Judy Dickstein, Marilyn Glennie, Mar iixm Geode, Carol Hobart, Jerry Libby, Lee Patterson, Greta Phipps, Frances Sekies and Rob- ert Stasiuk. John Alishouse and the = art classes were responsible for the stage settings that lent much charm and beaufy to the per formance attire singers accompa Coming Events... Pontiae Rebekah Lodge 450 will have | as ite guests the members of Oakland County District Six this evening at 8 ociock tn the Malta Temple, 62 herkine st ~ 9? Music nce Again Pontiac High Vocalists Enthusiastically “Say It With \i SHIRLEY ANN CHERRINGTON Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cherrington of Tacoma court announce the en- gagement of their daughter, Shir- ley Ann, to Francis M. Chaffee. He | is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank | Chaffee of Clarkston been set for the wedding ‘DAR Hears the Reports of Delegates Convention Outlined Thursday at Home! of Mrs. McHugh Delegates to the 63rd annual Congress of the Daughters of the American Revolution reported to the members of Gen. Richardson Chapter at the meeting Thursday. | Mrs. Earl L. McHugh of Sylvan Lake opened her home for the group Mrs. Frank B. Gerls. regent, Mrs LL. Lee Dunlap, Mrs, E. V Howlett and Mrs. E. G. Clark told the highlights of the six-day congress attended by 4,000 mem- bers of whom 3.120 were voters Music by military orchestras and speakers of national reputa- tion, together with reports of na- tienal DAR committees, made a full program. Among the speak ers were Lowell Thomas and Fulten Lewis Jr. An interesting feature was Amer Town Meeting of the Air, with “Has too much power been was centered In the executive branch of | the government?’ as the subject The affirmative was debated by Sen. Homer Fergu and the negative by Rep. Richard Boling of Missouri ; President Dwight D spoke on the ‘Basic Principles on Which Our Nation Was Founded stressing that all problems can be solved if individuals and nations have spiritual unity son Eisenhower These problems can be solved, the President continued, if we have a common purpose, believe in the liberty. im the equality and dignity of all men, have high ideals and, above all, a spiritual dedication te the dignity of man and the great ness of our country. love of A | Edgar Hoove warned against infiltration of Communists local patriotic groups such as civic clubs. churches. labor unions and schools. He said the pressure is tremendous and the danger is real, At the Chapter business meet- ing Mrs. W. F. Todd related can- tacts which had been made with foreign-born «groups. A scholarship which has heen DAR assee in the south into sent to. the School at Tan tains Was reported or The Memorial Day service witt be hetd May 30 at 9:3 in Oak Hill Cemetery. At this time the graves of the ses eral Revolutionary War soldiers buried there will be decorated by the chapter. annual Mrs. McHugh was assisted bv a committee which served dessert preceding the meeting. Mrs. Harry Chapman was chairmar others were Blanche Avery, Mrs. L. L Echtinaw, Mrs. Vel mor Lewis Mrs. Ivan Royal. Mrs. FB. Wal lace, Mrs. FE. H. Whitfield, Mrs I. A. Woodard and Mrs. Frank Baldwin No date has Californian E | Visits Her Family Here Eastern Resident Also Guest of Area Relatives Mrs. George Burke Jr. of San Marino, Calif., is here to visit her mother, Mrs. Grace Burke, and | her sister, Mrs. Vera B. Doremus of Cherokee road, She is also visit- ing Mr. Burke's: mother, Mrs, George Burke of Lake Angelus. - - . Mrs. Frank Hopson of Bridge. port, Conn., is visiting month with relatives here. Among those she is visiting are her sister-in-law, Mrs. Amelia Bali of Seminole avenue, and ber nephews, Charlies Ball of Lake Oakland, Dean Bali of Cooley Lake and Henry Ball of Drayton Plains, * * . . Mary Crane, a junior at Denison University in Grandville, Ohio. is the newly elected vice president of the Class of 1955 at the uni- versity. She is the daughter of the George H. Cranes of West Iroquois read, . . - R. C. Chase of Oliver street and Mr. and Mrs. John W. Elkins of North Perry street will be among 2,000 parents attending the fourth annual Parents’ Day weekend at Michigan State College Saturday and Sunday * 7 * Announcing the birth of a son, Christopher Paul, May I at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital are the Richard T. Wrights of Putnam avenue. The infant is the grandchild of Mr. and Mrs. Harry William Moran of Onaway and Mrs. Harry J. Wright of Lake Orion. The mother is the former Dorothy Moran. 7 > * William James Craig Ill is the name chosen by Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam James Craig Jr. of Auburn Heights for their son, born April 23 at Pontiac General Hospital, Grandparents are the William J, Craigs of Fenton, formerly of Pon- tiae, and Mrs. Mae H. Bancroft of Boston. i . . Mr. and Mrs. James Steele The infant's grandparents are the Roy Cummins’ of West Rundeil street and Mr. and Mrs. William F. Steele of Globe street Norma Gardner, William Stasiuk Exchange Vows Methodist Church ng Saturday when Norma Ellen Gardner became the bride of William E. Stasiuk in a ) o'clock service performed by the Rev The bride is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. Donald J. Rosx of and Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Stasuik of Nelson street are the bridegroom's parents Oakland Park , aS the sett James Deeg Marlette For the occasion the bride wore a dusty rose suit with white ac- cessories and a corsage of pink roses with white hyacinths and white streamers Mrs. Ray Williams attended the bride in a tan suit with a corsage of pink roses with pink Donald Miner was best man, and seating the guests streamers were the bridegroom's brother, Clifford Stasiuk, and Mr. Wil- liam ¥ Robert Stasiuk. another brother of the bridegroom, played the organ For the ceremony the bride's mother chose a dress of navy blue with white accessories rose corsage. Mrs, navy with white ac- yellow and a Stasiuk wore cessories and a yellow rose cor- sage Following a reception for 200 guests, the couple left for a wed. ding trip to Toronto Ont., and Niagara Falls @ PACKAGED GA f | 6 for Garden Gifts for Mother —-ATTRACTIVELY GIFT PACKAGED-— © BOXED CHOICE BULBS ' SPECIAL Large Tea Roses and Climbers RDEN ROSES >575 $1.29 ea | HARDLE 1580 Telegraph Road We Will Deliver to Mother Phone us your order. JAMES ie Flowering Dogwood or Redbud as a gift. ROSES ‘ash and Carry @ CORSAGES | @ POTTED PLANTS | @ COMBINATIONS ee) Doz c | Long Stem Roses priced from $6.00 doz $950 From Next to Célico Corners F .. NINETEEN for the © . > " ) @WENTY , THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 Dairy Farming Far Too Technical, Scientific for Retired City Couple 4 ee Tests May Uncover Better Line - It's Na Field for Amateurs By ANNE HEYWOOD If you are city people, and he has “My husband and I are think- worked in an office job all his life, ing of investing in a dairy farm," the worst thing in the world you a woman writes me. “He will be | could do would be to invest your retired in. four years, and it| life savings in such a venture. strikes us that a dairy farm might; Farming nowadays is a very spe- be a fine retirement occupation | cialized field, and most people who Faith Tite se ciee Mary Margaret McBride Says: rogon fo Aid 4 S0Phisticated City Folks © ee eaPps Opened Arms for Mama The Tuesday evening meeting | of Faith (for the aid and instruc-| Although Elizabeth Craig McBride died 14 years ago, I still tion of the handicapped) was held 24+ hundreds of letters around Mothers’ Day from women and men at the Oakland County Society for | who never saw my mother and knew her only from hearing her voice Crippled Chikiren headquarters on |on my radio program. Apparently she represents a kind of symbol West Lawrence street. |of motherhood to everybody who came even as close to her as A film was shown to explain the the receiving en dof a broadcasting system. then. succeed in {t have degrees from help the Easter Seal drive will ge =e I have wondered about that a good deal. Was “Please recommend a book | agricultural. colleges. about dairy farming.” To think that you could casa- it her seeming serenity, her apparent forgetfulness ; of self, her quiet friendliness and concern for those with whom she came in contact that made her. unforgettable? With shame I recall that after I came to New York, I worried about what my city friends weuld think of her. With the first money I saved, I brought her here for a visit, but I lay awake most of the night before her arrival in an agony ead any Dees ae yor of anxiety. Might she be too bewildered and mportance 0 vin / : miserable among skyscrapers and skyscraper Bo 15 ped i te coming | ME MCBRIDE arene to ony Mere a adidas, wry to train} 1 Knew her clothes wouldn't be* handicapped children in public | Very nice, that she’d never been! of an amazing experience. Actu- | in a great city in her life, and I| ally the more sophisticated and schools. . Anyone 21 years of age or older | remembered her broken nails, her| city-bred my friends were, the may vote in this election. The next | workworn hands, her stooped, more they seemed to like my public meeting of Faith will be shoulders. Would my new city! mother. They positively fought give to the handicapped. A money-making project is planned by the group to help pay for expenses. Mrs. James Van Cleave is chairman of the proj- | eet and will be assisted by Mrs. | Floyd Clark and Mrs. John Gear- | hart. It I were to recommend a book | ally move into the field just by and leave i¢ at that, on this reading a book would be a tragic slight evidence, it would be a blot | mistake. on my conscience, To show you what I mean, you You say nothing about your | Might take a look at a book in aad vem Gants. the field and see how technical it vaycee Gr ie rr SS read it as insta ation —e bool i “eros a of New Officers | a4 citaow. New officers were installed at Old Mill Tavern Wednesday eve- tures, breeds and breeding, dis- ing when Jaycee Auxiliary met for} *®*** calves, and ts guaran- dinner teed band think twice about entering 18 at 8 p.m. | friends st all ‘that and| . —— “ee realize how wonderful she really | °V€F her. Mrs, John Napley is the new the field. Every day somebody borrowed president, Mrs. James Hursey, ° vice president; Mrs. Joe Benson,| You might also pay a visit to “es | her and took her to a flower sho , Shellac Hand Tools Clean hand tools will do a more | I shouldn't have been afraid | , symphony concert or a play. effective job. Try dipping them in| about Mama. As it turned out, | \i,ma confided to me that she a thin coat of protective shellac. and Mrs. ere Fox, state dele-| You will soon learn that modern: gate. Local egates are Mrs./ farming is a science to the nth Leslie Landford and Mrs. Donald | degree, and that a person has no McCracken. more right considering a farm Mrs. Paul Meredith was a guest | 45 4 nice little occupation than he at the meeting. The group made | 5&s deciding to construct a little final plans for “Kane Hule” | 'adar plant! Hawalian dance to be held June | Why don’t you and your husband 19 at Old Mill Tavern. have some vocational tests as a I was the bewildered one, not | bolieved most of them were down- she. First of all, I met the train | .iont homesick. She loved them and Mama wasn't on it! The all. redcaps hadn't seen her, nor | the Traveler's Aid, nor the sta- | thon master. take the sights and sounds, the ; alarums and excurions of New I sat right down in the depot York, but I needn't have. Yes, | and cried. A sympathetic by: | the buildings were tall and the | stander telephoned my apartment | streets were crowds, but Ma:na I had worried how she would Getn barm— self assurance — in just six weeks, thru dramatic training at home. Be the center fj attrection. Win | to see if a message had come and| yaq been told about those things prepar tirement ¢_ indy in your’ community et || reported that Mama was th-re in | and when she found them as Announcement was made that as , lite through stage — screen or tele- foto dd just met the Wrong | described she accepted them in te a ae gardening equipment was bought Fen ae wine puengh fe be Ee et el en | oo. on oe = ned ue the same matter-of-fact fashion a Bee F ‘3 iN Le for the Pontiac State Hospital thinking of it well in advance, compte | icab-in her life, ha that she accepted life on the ‘ : J j e ; shee ee -¥ project and Mrs. Joseph Nouse| #8 tests might.help you discov- Motion Picture Institute Inc. taken her first one to my apart-| term. : % x! 3 was named as hostess for the June| ¢f ® really excellent occupation ment. ; “ se meeting and cooperative dinner. which you could undertake to- Birmingham 9, Mich. | ; ; re In spite of the strict way she gether That was the startling beginning i ‘tee leeeekl ax sae . . i} —_ ° ‘ seemed to shock her, either. On ; - >» Sw - “7 o — . sae Engagement Ring You still have time to take any | that first trip, one friend invited Thi . . _ nepessary steps, such as courses FABRICS | her to Coney Island and by mis- is youngster tells Mother how special | Mother’s Day giving. Bought by Men ro yneened Pape soln think - | take got into a show that had | she is with a delight{ul new bouquet from| A bottle of toilet water and a generous,| +, people who report a eles Prac ) FOR , dancers with almost no clothes) Bond Th f h ired le-size bottl : sa ale on baying | sotiractery Pog al sen | a Bond street. [he manufacturer has paired | sample-size bottle of perfume make up her |habits in jeweler: stors say they | sively, on a technical field like Su pery ' —— ie and | 10 versions of its famed Bond street | bouquet, a subtle rose and jasmine essence | have this down in columns of fig- | dairy farming. - @ Slip Cover | stess was in a panic if ‘ h : ; i . os ures, and that well over half of all Copyright, 1954 apologized abjectly. Mama's an-|//@grance in @ charming gift package for | for daytime and evening wear. engagement rings are now being Values Poa SS ge Vn pou by You Man Ave. "| Vacuum Bedding to $3.95 that Sister doesn't have to do that Use a Creme Rinse SS ) Vacuum Cleaning baa — t a At least month aca a Pp Off T 8 prevailed before World War II, once every go a living sive your tresses a spring tonic ays wice when 52 per cent of betrothal | over the seams and tufts of mat- with daily brushing and massag- | Upholstered furniture benefits |@iamonds were sold to couples {tresses and box springs with the ‘Cover Bars Tarnish ine Gnd Srequent md lotion cham ‘from being vacuum-cleaned, pret. |S OPPINE to8 . ure of . poos. Winter-weary locks soon turn , Whether today’s girl merely wants | “leaner. To prevent costume jewelry of|to beauty when tamed with a |erably every week. At least once to star in the little comedy calied| Go over the pillows at the same silver, brass or copper from tarn-| creme rinse after every shampoo. |every two months clean the cush- | “This ig So Sudden!” or whether | time. And that's a good time to ions all over and use the vacuum |she really thinks her sweetheart | dust the loose pillows on the living a thin coat of fresh, white shel- | dressing that sparks hair with high- | » mond ; |room sofa chairs lac. lights and makes it medline cleaner on all the area beneath |'§ better dia agp en clean Sicrevah “i ean = — a Sona ———$<—_——_—__-_____—_ Some of the “big city’’ TV stars them while you are at it. rb — ~~ os a. a lcushions. Dust and dirt i h PE ne a TS ’ TS | have convinced everyone that not) Take advantage of the opportun [tee Day. Govtined. to ‘weer tie hidsawes ‘ , bevitatin / , . Shea . a: F becomi ideaways are a cordial invitation all of the ham comes from ham. ity to clean all folds and crevices, ag Rg R shoud be = to moths. lets. as well. Sometimes this pays in = |more ways than one, when lost Sugar, gold and coffee in succes- | nickels and dimes are heard to Belts Preferred sion have dominated the major | go their clinking way into the ‘‘in- by Young Girls GREATEST SILVERWARE BUYING OPPORTUNITY IN YEARS = w="Ssscncsivsc oe Sits Sati . Now at Connolly’s Until May 29th Only ce | | ; * ole! jenk A Saree port enmeuhte win since: € Mother’s Day Specials! bp en soi arse Toke TOW" wake and skirt into a brand new out- 0 fit. | Four leaf clover buttons with tiny clovers peeping through plas- 0 tic coverings can be arranged on ishing, cover the clean metal with | Creme rinse is an invisible hair ges ae «% Io as doe . POT Seaer aS ty bane? Bee SPR ee Ss ee Sree _ : EEE GK: . | belt... h! | An oversized satety ‘pin can be|| "HE PRICE TAG mounted with the same button. Of Any New 1954 To complete the picture .. .four leaf clover earrings, of course! Both the pin and the earring backs can be bought at the same counter where you buy buttons. PETUNIAI ii = Offer: _\” 60-PIECE CELEBRATION SET |; | elem Look at what Ive up and done To make a money Gift more fun / Complele SERVICE FOR 8 in ‘COMMUNITY * beep) The Finest Silverplate : i Se 2, 97’ Value ATS Here’s the china value of the season! Fine imported china with 22K gold band trim, yours at an excep- OR MONTHLY © Yes! This gorgeous set gives you TWO extra 7-piece settings | Save up to 30% ba | 20-Pe. Service for 4 .2.......506.. 3 2.99 til] 32-Pe. Service for.6 <............. $ 5.95 ; ” GBI 68-Pe. Service for 8 .............. $19.95 e 101-Pe. Service for 12 ... ¢Extracum $19.95 e in Community ... the fines? silverplate! 60-piece set includes Choice of 5 Lovely 16 teaspoons, 8 knives, 8 forks, 8 soup spoons, 8 salad forks, 8 butter spreaders, 2 serving spoons, 1 butter knife and 1 sugar spoon in beauty-keeping, anti-tarnish chest. Act now and enjoy the worthwhile Celebration savings! Offer end May 29th Patterns * Trode Marks of Oneide Lid. : RO \ X ae aueoreure | tional low price. This beautiful violet pattern china HiT | \ — Gi “ yy Included FREE On : . | is available in open stock. Just twist wire around \ \ San Sa ly $ ! ‘ F; I — d Chi center of each bill, Petunia pew Ww * A , ; ina — the extra wire forms the Z “ ho Specially Price sesesmccss | |1 North Saginaw’ FE 4-1886 GET 8 COMPLETE PLACE ; oi $495 : : ’ Place Settin | | “For Men Who Prefer the Finer Things” pay weexcy SETTINGS FOR THE PRICEOF 6 =; = |. a ‘ - j i ] ' ‘ ' ' ' ' Osmun’s Tel-Huron Store | / a |) Dixe Porreny || open 1 9 P.M. Bz |) 16 W. Huron St. | || 5281 Dixie Hwy. (Waterford) | OR 3-1894 For Your Convenience Open Daily & Sun. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. P lenty of F ree P arking! wt 66? § ¥e iene i ee os: Villa pas wets Sabebeg re Home, works with Mrs. E. F. Birmingham potting African violets for hos- John Otberg, a member of the Garden| . ; Club at the Oakland County Convalescent | pital patients. Mrs. Brumbaum of St. James Women Direct Horticultural Therapy Auxiliary Brings Garden Brightness to Convalescent Home Editor's Note: This is another itn « series of articles dealing with volunteer | workers in tals and agencies | throughout Oakland County By JANET ODELL Taking the time to help others | is a fine way of putting one's | religion to work in modern liv- | ing. The Women's Auxiliary of | St. James Episcopal Church in| Birmingham is doing that very | thing with its weekly program of | horticultural therapy out at the | Oakland County Convalescent The first church group in the| - — U. S. to start] such a program, | the auxiliary is/| leading the way | in Oakland Coun. | ty by holding! weekly flower-ar- ranging classes at the home. With the full approval and co- _ operation of How- auxiliary members are providing creative work with flowers and plants for a number of the pati- ents. Early this year Mrs. George A. Weinhold, chairman of the Chris- tian social relations committee, and Mrs. E. F. Brumbaum. chair- | man of the horticultural therapy | program, took the short course in | this work at Michigan State Col- lege. Since many members of the church guild are also members of the Birmingham Branch of the Women’s National Farm and Garden Association, they knew ot the association’s pioneer ex- cursions into horticultural ther- apy. The entire auxiliary voted to adopt the program as its way Banquet Scheduled by General Baptists Mrs, Herbert D. Flemington cf Birmingham will be guest speak- er at First General Baptist Church for the mother-daughter banquet Saturday. Mrs, Robert Garner will give the invocation and a musica] pro- gram has been planned by Shir- ley and Carolyn Hampton, Glida Henderson and Mrs. Adelle Wiekle. Mrs. Jack O'’Niell of Dearborn will give a recitation. On the committee are Mrs. Ira | Lewis. chairman; Mrs. Eldon Jus- tice and Mrs. General Smiddy Tickets for the banquet will not be available after this evening. Leal Emes Group Conducts Meeting Ethel Graham opened her home ©n Lincoln avenue to members of Leal Emes Group of First Pres- byterian Church Wednesday eve- ning. Jean Teachworth assisted the | hostess and the mecting was con- ducted by Mrs. Richard Shafto in the absence of the president. The final meeting for the year was announced for June 2 at the home of Elsie Benson on Josephine ave- ‘which to work, including two arm- of filling a need in the world teday. The afternoon your reporter spent with the guild women at the con- valescent home was as satisfying as the one at Pontiac State Hos- pital, That is one of the fine features of this therapy .. . it is as rewarding to the worker ag it is to the patient. It was just after Easter and we had quantities of flowers with loads of lilies, For the first half hour we sorted flowers, discard- ing the wilted ones and putting the usable blooms in water. Right at 2 o'clock “Rusty” was wheeled into the room. Now, “Rusty” is a charming white-haired lady who loves to work with flow- ers. Mrs. Weinhold told us that at | first ‘“‘Rusty’’ wouldn't touch the | | flowers, but timidity offered a few | suggestions about placing the blos- | soms. By now she is a veteran who arranges five or six bouquets at each session, The pale green vase filled with fragrant Easter lilies and soft pink roses that she took fo her own room was lovely. L. loves roses and used all she could find to make her bouquets. > She knew some of the patients to whom she wanted to send the | flowers and took only a tiny vase | for herself, Remember, part of | this therapy is sharing with some- one else. A man wandered into the room to ask if he might have a bou- quet. He went off with a gay red and white one that had been put together twice. Your reporter | knocked it over once and broke | the vase, “‘Accidents will happen,”’ | said L. philosophically. “John of the nimble fingers” | (as Mrs, Brumbaum called him) was in and out all during my | stay. John has a knowing way | with plants and is a great help | te the women who work there. He helped Mrs. Brumbaum pot some African violets and made the rounds with her to point out | the men he knew were Interested | in having an outdoor garden this year. Standing straight and sturdy in | the workshop window were several flats of tomato plants. These, along with other seeds, had been plant: | j}ed by Mr. Z. some weeks ago. | / But Mr. Z. will not get to trans- | plant his seedlings outside; he | was taken to the Oakland County | | Tuberculosis Sanatorium recently. | As we went through the wards | distributing the arrangements that had been completed, there were many evidences that the ‘flower ladies’’ had been there. We pre- sented a colorful yellow bouquet to two elderly gentlemen who seemed pleased at the unexpected offering. In their ward there were some house plants growing and—sur- prisingly enough—sofhe morning | glories climbing up around the window and blooming sturdily. Mrs. Brumbaum told us that some weeks ago she had gone through the wards with a basket of dirt, some clay pots and some nue. at ano C \ CARRY | Special for MOTHER'S D ORCHID CORSAGE $200 e? Love’s Only Emblem “FLOWERS” Y-Sunday May 9th Dixie Floral 5233 Dixie Hwy. Potted Plants $2.50 up Beautiful Brass Planters $4.00 up Dish Planters $2.50 Cut Flowers Corsages—Roses Carnations—Gardenias Ph. OR 3-1488 seeds, Even patients confined to bed could plant the morning glory seeds and enjoy watching them grow, More of this type of ‘therapy would be welcome, But it is time- consuming and back-breaking. One afternoon out of an entire week is not enough to get everything done that one would like to do. The need is great; the workers are THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 195 willing; but time is the enemy. There are never too many flowers, There are sometimes not enough workers, But until all the outside gardens are worked—until every bedside table (and there are many in _ that sprawling building) has a bou- quet of flowers if the owner so wishes—then and only then will the job be complete, But there ti howe ery, Putting together one of the numerous bouquets she Pontiog Prose Phetes arranges each week when auxiliary members of Birming- Brumbaum is chairman jam’s St. James Episcopal Church work with patients in of horticultural therapy at the home and @ horticultural therapy is Mrs. Bessie Rust (left), assisted by member of the St. James Women’s Auxiliary. Mrs. James J, St. Crojx. 4 —~ * jat Longfellow Discussion Led . by Adeline Hook Adeline Hook led dis¢ussion on teacher and school problems at Lorgfellow School homeroom moth- er’s meeting Wednesday. Miss Hook stated, ‘‘Biased critics have said we are neglecting the fundamentals of the three R's today in our present method of teaching. To this we must tell parents, know the correct facts and look for truths before forming an opinion. “Every child has his own rate pregress at their jwa rate of speed so as not to give them a guilt complex, Reading problems consist first of recognition, then comprehension and being able to interpret. Chil- dren lose interest when they can't keep up with reading. Non-promotions prove to be one teachers, affect the child in so many ways. Promoting is favored, for then the child has a chance to “save face” with his classmates and in Florence Pfeiffer Honored at Shower Florence Pfeiffer was honored with a personal shower at the home of Barbara Oldenburg on North Perry street. Florence, bride-elect of gel — Silvis, will speak her vows June 12. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pfeiffer of Collier drive are her parents. He | is the son of Mrs. Rita Silvis of Arcadia drive. Guests at the Tuesday shower | were Mrs. Silvis, Mrs. Pfeiffer, | Dorothy Oldenburg. Pat Silvis, | Jeanne Carter, Arlene DiCea. Jo- | Anne Traver, Mari Ann Sedegi, | Barbara Tate and Shirley Willis. Sewing Unit Meets Mrs, Charles Clarke operied her Park place home Thursday to members of the Queen Mary Sec- | tion,, Needlework Guild. Mrs, Jean Little turned in knitted caps and mittens and the group was invited to the home of Mrs. David Bicker- | staff for the next meeting. | sunlight, __TWENTY-ONF. _ Check Materials _ When buying your summer cot- tons, look for labels that guarantee the garments will not shrink or lose their color. Vat dyestuffs are mest resistant to fading in washing or ae ee DELIGHTFUL DINING Private Party and Conference Rooms Waldron Hotel COFFEE SHOP 36 E. Pike St. have the gypsy in you . the long run reach his capacity at an average level. concluded Miss Hook. Greet Spring with romance and abandon .. . coiffure. A variation of the mobile coiffure trend. RANDALL’S HARPER METHOD SHOP | 88 Wayne Street if you .. Wear a new “Gypsy” FE 2-1424 | Weinhold and Mrs. Brumbaum. are never too many flowers. Women working at the conva- lescent home with the horticul- tural therapy program are Mrs. H. H. Brown, Mrs. G, K. Meeks, Mrs. H. R. Estes, Mrs. Ada Moore, Mrs: B. R. MacDonald, Mrs. James E. Goodman, Mrs. James J. St. Croix, Mrs. E K. | Ives, Mrs. C. W. Frederick, Mrs. | Mother will enjoy dining at Ted's, because the food is so good and the service so friendly and helpful! Enjoy a happy dinner hour with Mom at a From Burton’s Ever Popular OVERBLOUSE New overblouse in washable weave linen slenderizing style—a gift she Ted's, Sunday. .. Woeodwerd et ‘Squere Leke Ted’ 4 A Viried Monn ot Cheice Feeds fer Meather’s Day Home-Made Rolls . . . Pastries BURMIGLAZE +. ideal gift for Mother ~~ - Lovely washable linen : i Sa DESERVE A MOTHER ... for the very finest of gifts for Mother's Wigg’s Beautiful New Colony Shop “Now Open 24 W. Huron Good ha -) WIGGS Gitts Day, choose from Wiggs large selection of world famous china such as Castletton, Lenox, Franciscan, Doulton, Wedgwood and Spode. . . plus Fostoria, Tiffin, Cambridge, Imperial, Reizart and Heisey Crystal . . . You'll find scores of fine valués in pictures, lamps and decorative accessories of all kinds. Open Friday 9 P.M, Pe ad til ee TE ee ee ee em | will cherish. Pink, white, blue, maize. | Sizes 32 to 38—40 to 44. New “Burmiglaze” Linen blouse, an novelty tie neck in contrasting colors, white, gold, maize, blue. Sizes 32 to 38. Sele LINEN on Her day. fabric, new SUPER Nylon hosiery, first qua veciat 898 Special Pr. Give Her LING on Mother's I Slips. nylon plisse, Lovely new cotton p need no ironing, only Give Mother COSTUME Beautiful new array of jewelry -to thrill her on Mother's Day. Necklaces, pins, earrings bracelets. shadow panel cottons only $1.99. Shorty gowns and pajamas. JEWELRY AL APPAREL FOR WO SHEER lity full fashioned, dark seams. 51 gauge, 15 denier. Regular $1.19 value. Sepo0 Box of 3 2 ERIE Jay! lisse — » Pee eb and Night! Fy ida y Open Saturday l se Our Layaway or Charge Plan! 9 MEN me Ges oe Ae Ree ae ee ee _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 aan and \ Your Present Car Will Probably More Than Cover. PHONE FEderal 5-416! ur courteous salesmen will bring a new car out to your home— Drive it! Test it! You're under no obligation! . 33 rae ale TA ee, ON a a 0 NAMES THE WAY | | p IN PONTIAC! MATTHEWS - HARGREAVES “Your NW Chevrolet Dealers * Successors to the Jack Habel Chevrolet Company * | FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE | ], 34 MILL ST. Sales and Service 2. 211 S. SAGINAW (Mid-Town) (South Side) [__2LOcaTions —_| ye THE SAME COMPETENT PERSONNEL TO SERVE YOU = , Ne ee ney ee eee — She’s wishing for something from the Thomas ‘ - Economy Furniture Co. Pick the Gift That Will Please Her Most From This Selection . e Lovely Cedar Chest $4995 Choice of modern or traditional styles, . Fully lined with aromatic red cedar and , all_have handy linen tray. Table Lamps $795 4 styles to choose from in these lovely ching base lamps. Regular $12.50 values that are gift priced for this occasion. Platform Rocker $2995 Covered in easy-to-clean plastic with a choice of 4 beautiful colors. Full spring construction for extra comfort. Telephone Bench $1495 Comes in a choice of styles with plastic padded seat. Shelf for phone and space for directories. Desk and Chair Set.- $6950 Big 45° x 21” 8 drawer desk and matching chair. Bedutifully finished in grained mahogany. Quality construc- tion. . Smart Floor Lamps $795 Choice of styles at this amazing low price. All feature 7-way lighting. Wash- able plastic-silk shades. Save $7.00. Big Drum Table $3950 Measures 28” in diameter. Lustrous mahogany, pedestal base with capped legs. A genuine leather top. Free Delivery Within the County! ———— Boudoir Chair $2750 % Covered in gaily patterned, easy to clean plastic with spring set and ~ ne —a* ’ a ~~ ad ' a ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 vincetown Maple : ioe. EF neal by DEARBORY genuine northern > hardrock maple ‘\ only $ 39” | Regularly $59.95 SAVE $20.00 @ Selection of maple chairs from $10.95 and up _ @ Also available in the same top quality maple are—matching chinas—hutch cabinets—cor- ner cabinets and buffets. @ All have authentic Early American styling—hand rubbed and rounded edges. FREE! . .. 2 solid merthern hard- rock maple lazy susan with the pur- chase of this wonderful table! 2p ete ry > 4 _ ° reer 4 ye fo a oe Ow i ae THOMAS ECONOMY’S COME TO Sofa Bed Stars Provincial Styling Sunbeam Marvelous new features for higher lighter cakes—creamier, dufher mashed ney * ly acer ase iciogs, etc. IXMASTER does the perfect mixing job. New BOWL-FIT beaters 4 to ft both side and bonom of bow!. Bowls revolve automatically. All the baaer a thorough, even mixing in LESS TIME. Your hands are aiways free to add ingredients. $45.75 Sunbeam party RADIANT COnTECL Plog in for STEAM just as you do for current. No Gilling, ipities. running dry Switch from STEAM to Y instantly. DOUBLE AUTOMATIC MONMASTER Bread lowers itself automati- The dry iron that's hor in 30 seconds Heats wicker, nore hotrer, irons fester. Lighrweight, XY : 4/ cally. No levers to push. Teas vases itself sslently—no popping ws or banging. wey alike thin. $26.95 es Ibe. oF lighterweight, 2% Ibs. ¢ 94 50 All you do is drop in the bread. COFFEEMASTER It's auromatic—you can’t miss. All you do is put in. water and j coffee. Sex it! For it! Shots f off when coffee is . Resers to keep coffee hor. $36 95 Ample Free Parking! EASY CREDIT TERMS! 40" YEARS 0) 3 SERVICE THOMAS 3 FURNITURE CO. 361 South Saginaw Street Companion Pieces to Relaxing Three pieces that add up to leisure- $ 95 34 time comfort. Includes 2 plastic TV chairs in choice of colors and modern corner table in handsome limed oak finish, « 5-Pc. Dinette in Chrome, Plastic Handsome, practical addition to your home. 69” Chip-resistant triple chrome plating; plas- tic table top. MOG pera, UE FOP len = Early Americon in design—extremely comfortable, modern in performance. 1 ] 9” This charming style in mople and cotton print. Save $20.00! Limba 3-Pc. Modern Suite Smart appearance, firm construction add $ up to top value. Bed, chest, double 179 dresser included. $i FREE! (2 Plastic Hangers #539 Hf you've @ clothing storage problem you'll appreciote both the size and the low price of this big, good-looking wardrobe. it's wide and deep...with ample space for loads of coots, suits ond dresses. And, best of all, it has SUDING DOORS thet roll smoothly on steel ball bearings, so you don't hove to allow spoce for opening doors, GREAT VALUE! \ \ TWENTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1934 oa. centration of copper, iron, lead} mines. Arizona representing 14 tribes. A large city represents a con. | and zinc to rival the largest of| There are. 50,000 Indians in | Bob Considine Sees: WE SELL * RCA --a Beautiful ATTENTION: FE 4-4792 | REMEMBER | © Refrigerator © Home Freezer @ Automatic Washer-Dryer ® Deluxe Wringer Washer @ Television * International Harvester FREE FOR MOTHER Your choice for Mother with each purchase of $100.00 or more, May 7th and 8th. This offer does not effect our generous trade-in allowances! FRAYER'S 589 Orchard Lake Ave. OPEN EVES. ‘TIL 9 (Except Saturday) A Few Suggestions to Cive Mom Year-round Pleasure! NAME-BRANDS ONLY! * G-E * Hamilton Plant or Corsage! PARK FREE WASHINGTON (INS) — Citizen Harry S. Truman, 70 years oid Saturday, looked as sound as a pre-Truman dollar when he stepped otf the Baltimore and Ohio's ‘‘Dip- lomat” at Union Station yesterday. Bess and Margaret lad come in from Independence with the pep- pery head of the house. The Tru- mans traveled in two small com- partments and ate in the regular diner, en route. As they alighted from the pullman, none seemed to miss the splendid isolation of the “Ferdinand Magellan,’ the private car in which they traveled when they lived in the White House “Leoks like eld home week,” grinned Harry as he spotted Dean Acheson, now back in the law business in Washington; " Oscar Chapman, John Steelman, Charies Murphy, Donald Daw- son, David Lieyd, David Stowe, Bob Nixon, Eddie Folliard and ethers whe had traveled with him for years. The familiar figure of Averell Harriman was waiting for him at the hotel, which provides a suite for the former President whenever he's in town. So were more re- porters. Truman still enjoys the give and take of press conferences, so he held one immediately. The Army-McCarthy hearings, he snapped, are a disgrace to the Senate. He wasn't going to make any predictions about the Novem- ber elections because ‘‘political prophets are usually wrong.” In- dochina? “I don't think I'd go there now.” He couldn't sey more, he added soberly. ‘I don't get briefed any more by the Cc. L A. (Central Intelligence Agency.) It’s hard to believe he’s Bess and Margaret chimed in to say that the only difference be- | tween HST’s life now and then is that he works harder. his head. “‘Nope,”’ he said, easily. “the main difference is I don't | have those responsibilities hanging lover nf® night and day.” He still gets up at 5:30 and takes the morning walk that bowed many a tendon among White House cor- respondents. s 61 to 130 more miles tankful with a Studebaker! Thats what the 54 Champion got in the Mobilgas Economy Run against competing low-priced cars! The Champion with Overdrive got 29.58 miles per gallon! The '54 Studebaker Land Cruiser V-8 got highest gas mileage of any Sweepstakes winner in history! It beat all other eights in the Run and all sixes except the EM tiliolclels] acta @aleliilsliclsh Get a new 1954 Studebaker... Puts you ahead of the parade... Gets you more when you trade! DAVIS MOTORS 608 North Main St., Rochester, Michigan Come in and look at the official AAA score sheet of all the cars in the Mobilgas Run. You'll see that the Studebaker Champion got 61 to 130 more miles pér tankful than its four competitors in the low-priced field. The far-advanced 1954 Studebakers made a clean sweep—first in the Grand Sweep- stakes—firet in actual miles per gallon— firet of all overdrive care—first of all futomatic drive cars. Get Studebaker econ- omy yourself. Duplicates of Studebakes’s Mobilgas Run winners are available im- mediately at surprisingly low cost. They are the best engineered, the best bu‘lt, the best styled cars in America! : . c. 1934 Champion custom 2 $179542. DELIVERED LOCALLY with standard equipment State and local taxes, if amy, net incladed. White sidewalls, McKIBBEN 8145 Commerce Read, Walled Leke, Michigan HST Hale, Hearty in Visii 'to Washington for Honors Truman drives a green Dodge convertible from his home in Independence to his Kansas City office cach weekday, after read- ‘ing Kansas City, St. Louis, New York, Washington and Baltimore papers. He has written or dictated about 600,000 words of his 2-volume ac- count of his public life, for which ‘Life’ will pay him $600,000 for magazine. rights. “If I had known it was all this work, I might not have undertaken it,” he said of the book. “Lot of checking and double-checking on facts,"" he added, ‘“‘because I want it to be more than readable: I want it completely factual. to have research value.” Truman, who will de honored at the Waldorf in New York Saturday night, by Truman Library fnends, and in Washington at the National Press Club Tuesday, said he didn’t ' lay. expect to blast the administration at either place. Later he might “otfer suggestions” in the course of speeches, but not now. Japan Expects to Get 4 Lend-Lease Destroyers TOKYO wW—Japan expects to get four destroyers from the United States under a proposed lend-lease agreement being ne- gotiated under the recently ap- proved mutual security pact. National Safety Director Toku- taro Kimura told a Diet commit- tee Japan wants 17 warships from ithe United States and hopes to | get agreement on the four destroy- jers and a small minesweeper by the end of next week. Eviction Notice Delayed | WATERBURY, Conn. (UP) — A! puzzled judge polled five attorneys | waiting for other cases before de- | ciding that a family must be evict- ed. However, upon the suggestion of one of the impromptu jury, he | granted the family a two-week de- 2 Americans Die on Indochina Flight tiled Dien Bien Phu, killing its two American civilian pilots. The pilots were identified as Wal- explosion which destroyed the plane was not known. It wag entirely possible, how- ever, that it was shot down by Vietminh antiaircraft fire. The plane also carried a French | * crew chief whose job it was to push supplies out of the plane to/| the beleaguered garrison below An average scrapped automobile yields 1,500 pounds of iron and| steel, 20 pounds of aluminum, and 60 pounds of brass, copper and oth- er usable metals. _ Nearly everyone has fa vorite foods thas sometimes Cause gas, sour stomach, acid indigestion. But millions bave found the . s roli of Tums ia pocket or purse. Ee 1 of 2 like candy, and presto—there's wick, soothing relief. T ums can't ovet> alkalize—can't cause acid rebound. Ne mixing, #0 stirring. Take Tums any where—at work or at play. Geta roll today! bet enn Oe « fot Here are the WINNERS! qi\ Ss SUPERMARKET OPEN HOUSE CONTEST MONDAY NIGHT, May 3, 1954 in the TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER FIRST PRIZE Vv _Miss Sara Shively 1690 Petrolia Pontiac, Michigan SECOND PRIZE WESTINGHOUSE Electric Range This full size ‘electric ronge will make cook- ing @ pleasure. Foods teste better when cooked electrically. Mrs. G. B. Gray 27 Palmer Pontiac, Michigan THIRD PRIZE MARTIN | “75” OUTBOARD: Mrs, George . _ 61 Pine St. Pontiac, Michigan THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 Island of Yap, now controlled | in succession by the Spanish, Ger- by the U. S. was formerly ruled‘ mans and the Japanese. PANTS! For Everyone . . . Over 4000 Pair—You Seve $3 to $6... During My Big “2-for-1” Offer! ' 5.87 PANTS 6.87 PANTS 9.87 PANTS 12.87 PANTS >” 11” i | 6” ot 7 das During My Big “2-for-1" Offer! Alterations Free! SAM BENSON Open Evenings ‘Til 9 20 SOUTH PERRY ST. Hal Boyle Says: s|'Who's Who’ to Tell Who Knows What Ey i : z & 2¢ with age of the expert. how can the average man, seeking information about a topic, tell an expert from a bragging bum? * . Well, the publishers: of ‘Who's Who in America” have solved this The big Blue Book lists some 18,- 000 authorities on 33,000 subjects, The publishers are hopeful the volume will prove useful to every- body who has a problem—and that méans everybody. The housewife plagued with cockroaches, for ex- ample, will find listed three au- thorities whose advice she can seek on how to get rid of these , Kitchen intruders. Anybody annoyed by a prowling Aardvark, however, will have to turn for help to Dr. Glenn L. Jep- son of the Princeton Museum of Natural History. He has a monopo- ly on this African mammal. planning. present mortgage. Can Solve Your Problem Your Home Is a Most Important Investment! One of the most important investments of your . lifetime is the home you buy for your family. It deserves the utmost care in its financial The Community National Bank offers a com- plete, modern mortgage loan service to assist you in owning.a home or in refinancing your Feel free to consult us — your problem will receive the individual attention of experienced men who specialize in this service. The Community National Bank of Pontiac, Michigan With Branches at N. PERRY at GLENWOOD W. HURON at TILDEN President and of the Bosra Nat'l Bank A" Olamey, Ine. Marry M. Pryale Beldwin Rubber Cs Member Federal: Deposit Insurance Corporation Chairman unity Pontiac Alfred R. Glancy, Jr. Makes Etfort Emily Post, the hardy perennial in the field of what-fork-to-use-and- when, is the sole authority listed on etiquette—and what Amy -Van- derbilt will say about that I shud- der to think. The same way with raindrop erosion. Now there's a field you'd think would be crawling with ex- perts, but Walter David Ellison of the U.S. Navy. has it all to him- self. 7 . * On the other hand ‘“‘Who Knows —and What” names 2 specialists on horseflies, 2 on porpoises, 9 on turtles and 11 on rabbits. It also names 8 authorities on communism —and doesn't include Sen. Mc- Carthy, although it does mention his former aide, J.B: Matthews. Only a baker's dozen are identi- fied as authorities on sex, and Dr. Kinsey isn't slighted. But some of their approaches to sex don't | pigmentation and other sex char- acters of the cricket frog.’’ And of course we all remember his heady As a matter of dismal fact, the vast field of love isn’t listed at all. How anybody could list 33,000 sep- arate subjects without mentioning love strikes us as the greatest single feat of pure scholarship in our century. Only men could leave out wom- an's favorite word. Sunshine at noonday is about ene million times brighter than the illumination by the moon at its full stage. a PHILADELPHIA «®—Sen. Hick- Heretofore, scientists have ad- . | mitted the possibility of controlling A Hickenlooper, the Joint Congressional Commit- tee on Atomic Energy, did not elaborate on his statement made in a speech yesterday before the World Affairs Council of Philadel- phia. “There is a possibility of direct j of power through con- trolled thermonuclear reaction,’ he said. : Sitka, Alaska, was the seat of government under Russian rule and capital of the Territory under U, S. rule until 1906 when it was replaced by Juneau, . . Sciaaticte Trying | Marriage License ‘to Harness H-Bomb. Applicatiéns James R. Eslick, Clarkston ° Mary L. Kennedy, Drayton Plains Dominic Pramalin, 117 Murphy Norma A. Ritchie, 378 W. Iroquois Delles D. Reynolds, 87 S. Shirley Lillian 1 Ab der, 130 M y Anthony J. Pucalore, Hazel Park Rosemary H. Trovate, Hazel Park Edward J. le Jr., 709 Cedariawn Gertrude R. um, 61 Lyford Iwan Besdolny, Auburn Heights Antonina Pichugin, 407 &. Jessie Nathan W. Myers, Parmington Julia M. Davis, Parmington William M. Punk, Andover, Mass. Marie B. Redmond, Roya] Oak Richard G. Ervin. 22 Crescent Dr Corinne E. Wright, 2196 Gariand James D. Ward, Ferndale Phyllis A. Strobel, Ferndale Edward A. Moore Jr, Walled Lake Vida L. Denis, Milford William J. Little Jr.. Inkster Joana L. Tenkin, Reys) Osk Marshs!! Fielding. Livonia Lucilie R. Esch, Farmington Marold GO. Garner, Walled Lake Virginia L. Lorang, Walled Lake TWENTY-FIVE __ SPRING] TIME IS TONIC TIME *Nete—Iif you suffer from rhes- meticm, erthritis or stemech treuble—er perheps just need « Spring Tesic te pep you up.— remember thet the very best | | medicine thet money cen bey is O-JIB-WA BITTERS AT ALL DRUG STORES Uy; Ya » MAO OOH \ i} yy With Goodyear Airfoam eITROCKS e@ITSWIVELS Choice of Four Beautiful Styles! Pull up a chair and relax... here's modern styling with downright old- fashioned comfort! practical design! | Directional! It Rocks! | wun Hi nS 48 South Saginaw Street - - - Pontiac It’s New! It’s Beautiful! Just In Time for... | A miracle of t Swivels! Rock with comfort, swivel to watch your favorite TV program, then turn for ever getting up! conversation without Decorative! Styled in the newest colors and quality fabrics. It’s large and luxurious . . truly a chair designed livirig. Durable! Built with top for today’s modern construction features to last a lifetime: all hardwood frame with coil spring construction and famous Airfoam cushioning on seat, arms and back! 4sk About the.... WARD-WAY CREDIT PLAN @ No Interest! @ No Carrying Charge! 48 SOUTH SAGINAW cS TWENTY-SIX —— + a THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1956 __ Farm and Garden News Grounds Plants Replace Grass in Some Spots Weed Destroyer Also Ferfilizer New Chemical Changes Into Plant Food After Killing Weeds NEW YORK (UP) — People with weedy-lawn worries now can get a step ahead of Mother Nature. Available to homeowners is a powder that Kills sprouting weeds and weed seeds, then changes into a plant food. The blackish-looking powder has the texture of coarse sand. This chemical—calcium cyana- mide—may be used to renovate weedy lawns or to start virtually weed-free lawns, Fifty pounds of powder treat 1,000 square feet of lawn, Some three weeks after applica- tion, the calcium cyanamide under. goes a quick chemical change and becomes a fertilizer. It supplies lime which ‘‘sweetens” the lawn and nitrogen which is essential to | grass and plant growth, Gardeners should find the pow- | der just as handy as persons beset | with weed-filled lawns. It has a) ‘ dual use in gardening. The chemi. | cal will convert crop refuse speedi- ly into soil humus or it can help | to produce an odoriess organic compost. LET ME SHOW YOU HOW YOU CAN ADD - $1,000.00 Or More te the Value of Your Home ark Bros.” World's UIT die-cast aluminum LAWN. BOY Rotary Power Mowe: that trims to within 3/8-inch of obstructions. The inset lefi t the holly-leaf barberry turn brown DWARF ZINNIALS—Pint sized zinnias are good | tall. Flowers are little buttons about the size of a flowers for the edging around regular tall-growing | nickel and are solid red, white, yellow, orange, lilac, If some spots in your yard are tough to grass over, why not give up trying grass and use grou cover plants? suggests Joseph .T. Cox, Michigan State College (ex- tension landsape specialist. Tak, for examle, a spot under a tree where shade is dense and roots are close to the surface. That's a good spot for Periwinkte, or Myrtle (Vinca minor), or for Japanese Spurge (Pachysandra ter minalis) or Carpet Bugle (Ajuga reptans). Hallis Japanese Honeysuckle (Lenicera japonica hallini) is an- ether good one to try, according te Cox. If your trouble is a dry, sandy bank cover it with Moss Phlox (Phlox subulata) or Creeping Juni- per (Juniperus communis depres- sa). If it's a steep slope where the soil washes out, try Creeing Thyme (Thymus serpyilum) Coralberry (Symphoricarpos chen- aulti). Periwinkle or Myrtle is a good one here, too. It would help keep the soil around the roots of a tree also. Frost Damage Not Too Severe Oakland County Farms | Not Harmed as Much as Southern Counties zinnia gardens. The Cupid variety, pictured above, | salmon and pink in color. They are said to bloom | determine the exact amount of makes a compact, ball-shaped plant about 14 inches | faster than the larger types. Nutritionists Adding Hormones to Rations Animal nutritionists recently announced that practical use of | hormones in steer fattening ra- | and now other) flock owners | tions is near, research reveals someday svon will be feeding these organic substances to up poultry gains | You won't be able to buy and | use hormones (estrogens) just yet. | As with hormones in cattle feeds, the Food and Drug Administra- tion must grant its approval before they can be used in formula feeds for poultry. “We're ready now to show broiler and turkey raisers how to cut costs by feeding estrogens.” Rollin H. Thayer, Oklahoma poul- try nutritionist, said recently j “All we need is the green light | from Food and Drug. Tests show that feeding estrogens gives a more desirable finish. And the birds have fewer pinfeathers.” Notes on Transplanting damage from Tuesday's freeze-up, than counties farther south. Plant Garden Near House to Derive Most Enjoymen ANN ARBOR — Plant a culti- vated woodland garden close | enough to the house so you can enjoy the wild flowers as they | come along. in quick succession of | bloom, advises Felix G. Gustafson, professor of botany. With spring flowering coming to a climax in May, you can enjoy that early arrival, Dutchman's Breeches: next the delicate hepat- ica, which is happy in any shady wild garden; and then bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis), with a thick underground stem containing the bright red juice from which the plant takes its name. The soil must, of course, be suited te plant needs, Gustafson | reminds. “It can be acid or neutral, compact or soft with humus, depending upon the ori- Q—When and how much fertilizer should be given apple, peach and pear trees? A — A general rule for fertiliz- ing fruit trees at this time is to use one-quarter pound of a 10-4- 4 or similar analysis fertilizer for each year of the tree’s age. The fertilizer should be scattered even- ly over the area covered by the spread of the branches, and then thoroughly cultivated and watered into the soil. Q — Each winter the leaves on and drop. Why is that, and what can be done to prevent it? A — Plant in the shade and gway from strong winds. Q — Just what is magnesium, front wheel and trim slot (see) ™uch talked about as an element arrow) just behind it aecom-| arse to plant hs ey mal plish the the close trimming “ae ee 7 | eral in the formation of chiéro- Ga rden Tools | phyll, the green substance on which Trellis | all but primitive plants depend for | manufacturing food from sunlight, Cochran’s “Spectromatic Paint” { carbon dioxide and water. Q—Please suggest a few flow- Bondex Cement — Paint | | ering shrubs more or less tolerant | of any unfavorable ‘ndustrial at- mosphere. A — Japanese quince, the gold- jen forsythia, Oregon holly grape, | mahonia aquifolium; mock orange, lilacs in variety and the butter- fly bush should provide better than average bloom. Q — Is there a fast-growing an- nual vine which will satisfactorily cover a porch trellis? A — Try the cup - and - saucer vine, listed in many catalogues un- der its botanical name, cobaea Tamm’s Water Pool | Paint thedral bells.” This vine reaches 15 feet in one season. Q — Plase suggest a few ever- greens tolerant of city conditions, especially partial shade. A—Evergreens will not long sur- vive where smoke and soot abound. However, where the a‘r is not con- Hardware | taminated you can depend upon the 742 W. Huron St. — wetetine of Japanese yew, in TTy, Aorean boxwood J. 1. Case Farm Equipment A Complete Line | FEATURING: Eagle Hitch and Hydraulic Lift Garden Tractors and’ Mowers ® WELDING AND LATHE WORK e CLARKSTON FARM SUPPLY ‘Corner Ookhill Rd. end M-15 MA 5-4800 scandens, It is also called ‘‘ca-|. j Quizzing the Gardener and the spreading English yew. Q—Our iris suffers from a rot- ting of the roots. What can be done? A—Plant only in a well-drained soil and scrape away all rotted matter, then spray or dust with bordeaux mixture, or a similar fungicide. Clean and burn all dead or diseased foliage and rot scrapings. — Q—A soil-applied weed killer has been suggested for our strawberry patch. When should it be applied? A — Spray before fruiting and again after picking season is over. given a sansveria plant which per- sists in rotting off at the soil line? A — It should be kept fairly dry at all times. One good watering per week is sufficient. Be sure that drainage is adequate. _ Q—Can you tell me how to get rid of moss? While theer are large tree in the yard, there is considerable sunlight. A—Moss is invariably an indi-| cation of an impoverished soil. So | fertilize your lawn now with a mixture strong in phosphorus, using four pounds per 100 square feet. Mix with ten times its bulk of sand, spread evenly, and rake in thoroughly. Repeat in mid- | summer and again in September. Q—How do you get rid of mealy bugs on gardenia foliage? A—Daub each infestation with a little brush, or cotton on -the end of a match, dipped in rubbing alcohol. Then keep the foliage clean by syringing it twice a week with tepid water. “The full extent of the orchard | damage in this county won't be | known until the fruit starts to form,” said Agricultura] Agent Ed- Say we were much better off than the areas south of here.” He said agents in the Monroe area reported that sweet cherry trees and apricot trees were bad- gin of the plants. For shade-lov- ing plants like woodland phiox and Jack-in-the-pulpit, use woods soil and add an equal amount of | erganic matter in all stages of decay, or use soil, leafmold or peat moss, and sand. Ordinary garden loam will do for jewell shootingstar, (Dedecatheon ame- thystinum), one of the loveliest plants for a. cool, shady rock garden.” were hurt. “The trees down there were fur- ther advanced than ours,” Alchin said, ‘‘and therefore suffered heavy damage.” Alchin said later-blossoming vari- eties of peaches probably with- stood the cold snap in good shape, j and apple trees in this area suf- | fered only moderate damage Here are Gustafson's hints on transplanting wild flowers: *‘Some soil should be taken with them to keep the roots moist. Do At the aprieer not take the flowers when they | t Aare stage © toe are in first leaf, but rather wait | ment, cherries, apricots and early until they are dormant. Lor garaond ony and raga y 30 degrees, while “If it is desirable to transplant pears and late peaches coda came when they are in full leaf, it is| back even after temperatures as wise to cut them back so as to| low as 2% to 28 degrees. reduce the leaf surface while they | are producing new roots and es- tablishing themselves in the soil. “If you are transplanting from | nas is mot too serious,” he aed A , | pointed out,”’ as the trees develop- soil, tabs a sod Gach of oul wth | ment was. well ahead ~< last year.” the plants. Dig a hole and plant | ‘e said unprotected tomato plant the flower with its native soit i" Oakland County were wiped around it. out, but the amount of acreage planted at this time was small. “Plants should be watered as | soon as they have been placed in | their pew location, and covered with newspaper or cloth so the| Sterilizing teat cups between sun will not burn them.” cows takes no time at all for a Here Gustafson inserts a warn- | Wisconsin dairyman. The operator ing: eS ot) pushes the lever of a factory-madé “Remember that trees. shrubs | disinfector one way and live steam and flowers along the state high- | SeTilizes the cups. A push on the or on state property are pro- | ver in the opposite direction cools tected by law.” | them. Fast Sterilizing Job or | Although it is still too early to| ly damaged Tuesday norning. Seme varieties of peaches alse Trees Live a Long While, Don f Plant Indiscriminately | By RAYMOND C. KELLER Parks and Recreation Dept. No thing lives longer than trees. Many trees right here in Pontiac have passed silently through the events of Pontiac's history leaving /no record except the annual rings }of growth. | Is it any wonder that we love them? What other living thing furnishes us with so much for so litthe? We plant trees te give us shade, to shelter our homes, to beautify eur streets, parks, and home, grounds; to furnish a heme for our animal friends, te furnish us with fruit, wooed and other supplies, and lastly, sometimes we plant them just to watch them grow and re-live again the memories of our youth when we | swung from their branches or “skinned-the-cat.” | Pontiac is blessed with a climate | that allows us to grow almost all | trees native to North America and many beautiful exotics from far away places By wisely choosing our trees we can dress up our city to present the most pleasing appearance for | ourselves, for our neighbors and for our visitors. It often has been said that trees are a city’s show window, so let's give a little more atten- tion te form, color, and size be- fore planting, rather than plant- ing something just because it's handy and grows rapidly. Remember these things when thinking about planting a tree. It ; | Oakland County fared much better | #5 going to be here a long time | after we are gone so Ict's not wish |something onto our children that jwe would not want wished onto | | us Here again the old adage often | mond W. Alchin. “But it's safe to| Wi! hold true — “The best things come in small packages —.” For | the small growing tree often will fit better, have better form and leolor, and cost less to maintain | than some of its giant forest cous- | ins Also, a littje extra care at | planting time may mean the } difference between a scrawny | tree of little value and one of | lasting beauty. | There is need |More planting of such beauties as | the Ginkgo, the Golden-rain, the | Chinese Scholer tree, the Zelkaya, the Acacias, to mention a few of the exotics. + White Scours Costs ‘Farmers Millions | Farmers can save millions of |check the nation’s top calf killer, white scours. ‘ Despite the fact that this dis- | turies, it still costs the nation an every year. good success in treating white scours with some of the newer medicines, but prevention is eco Romically more important than treatment. Major preventive measures in- clude cleanliness, proper rations, the feeding of the cow's first milk, and protection from dampness and drafts. Veterinarians have reported Sale of Farm Products in State Dips a Bit in ‘53 Michigan farmers marketed | $706,414,000 worth of farm in 1953—or 97 per cent of the amount sold in 1992. More than $432,000,000 of the total was income from livestock and livestock products, while $274,304,000 was from marketing crops. j Moss is an indication of an im- poverished, not an acid, soil. To prevent it, feed the lawn regularly. AERIAL DUSTING SERVICE Insecticide, Fungicide, Insect and Mosquite Control — Pontiac P. O. Box 2206 OR lando 3-9704 Window Glass Hardware & Pipe Fittings Fishing Tackle Gerden Tools Corner Guerds Border Fence Trellises, Steel and Wood Rustic Picnic Tables Adults re Children’s wings Cheirs and Settees ll i i i i i i hi hi hi i hi hi hi hi Li Le i hi hi hi hi Le i i he he i PONTIAC VARNISH PAINTS AND SUPPLIES We Give Holden's Red Stamps Double Stamps on Wednesday LAWN ORNAMENTS Bird Houses and Feeders Bird Beths, steel & stone Ne. 1 Grade 2 Year Old _ Make Your Garden Tractor pay its way the year ‘round SUMMER —Culivating © Grow cutting Mowing hey © Fertilizing WINTER —Snow remove! Weed eviting — AUTUMN —Brush eviting Polling wees © Grinding leoves SPRING —Plowing © Horrowing Seeding © Sprey pointing BOLENS... =s222== See or Call Us Today KING BROS. PONTIAC ROAD AT OPDYKE ROAD PHONE FE 4-0734 OR FE 4-1112 Your Authorized Dealer for FARMALL TRACTORS McCORMICK FARM IMPLEMENTS ' BOLEN’S GARDEN TRACTORS KASCO FEEDS SCOTT LAWN PRODUCTS "to the box elders, silver maples, i j | in Pontiac for | ease has been recognized for cen- | estimated 5 to 6 million dollars | Feeds Seeds Dog Food Fertilizer } Poultry Supplies ': Also needed are the varieties of | Baby Chicks Norway maples, sugar maple, Gerden Tractors Sargent cherry, ornamental crab- | apples, mountain-ash, smaller elm | end Lewn Mowers varieties, oaks, dogwoods and | 1484 BALDWIN SPRINGER’S WAYNE FEED STORE hackberry to mention just a few of the many really good natives. Less attention should be given PHONE FE 4-7634 poplars, Chinese elms, and wil- lows because of their inherent Let's all pitch in and help make Pontiac more beautiful and more | functional than it is today. | White’s Nursery Complete Landscape Service Nursery Stock 71 S. Cass Lake Road Pontiac, Michigan FEderal 5-471) @ PRIVATE NURSERY @ 7000 SPECIMENS TO CHOOSE FROM A © BEAUTIFUL STOCK Open To The Public For The First Time! The GROVELAND FARMS GRANGE HALL ROAD Tere ot Mathews Clinic at Groveland eg Dixie Highway (US-10) half way between Pontiac ond Flint } sour v0 6PPHONES BOLLE wm | —< 4% = Headquarters for SCOTT SEED and FERTILIZER ViGORO Shep Foster's for GARDEN and LAWN TOOLS FOSTER’S 380 SOUTH SACINAW Phone FE 4-9252 $:30-6; Fri. ‘til 9 = FENCING ALL TYPES Chain Link — Lawn — Garden —Farm — Industrial — HARDWARE and SPORTING GOODS 1651 SOUTH TELECRAPH Phone FE 2-3559 Mon., Sat. 9-9; Sun. 9-2 3S ve iff 3 |} a . ‘ Installed or Material Only Chas. D. Zwayer Fence Co. 4430 Lapeer Read (M-24) __ FE 5-090! On Top of Bald Mountain cmvate DOORS....°12" PANELING “=! °159-- Ceiling Tile = 10/2 Sq. Ft. Sheetrock + 1%, THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL! wt STUDS .... 39° C&C WHILE THEY LAST! EACH LUMABER CO. OR 3-2215 i. —- — 7605 Highland Rd., M-59 7 GARDEN WORKSHOP—Inspecting some of the | plants and tools on display at Rochester's Avon Pavilion yesterday at the workshop sponsored by the Rochester chapter of the Women's National Farm and Garden Assn. are Mrs.‘ John Plassey of 440 Walnut Blvd., president of the Rochester branch; Mrs. Laurance Shaffner of 810 Peachtree Ln., general = - |two-day affair Oakland County "__ THE PONTIAC PRESS. ‘entiac Frees Prete chairman for the workshop, and Mrs. Robert Rowlson of 158 Linwood, program chairman. Speakers at the included H. L. R. Chapman of | Michigan State College and Edmand W. Alchin, agricultural agent Rochester merchants had garden supplies and equipment on exhibit at the workshop Bomb Kills Lawn Weeds Stockbridge Farmer Benefits Bunker Silo Saves About lawn ing broadleaf weeds and won't harm the grass. THE NEW ORGANIC ; | A time-saver in, caring for the is an aerosol bomb contain- 1D. It will kill most all WILL NOT BURN © ceatots he “Meg” of sotewre & oct & © setre! wor petetretng He tort quickly end entoraty releewme part otto het = bege end note commved Grow : 4 RAS TWICE THE METROGEN CONTENT POUND IN MOST ORGANIC LAWN FOOOS 40 le AVARABLE AT YOUR | | B® Acriculture Driven Out County by Industries, Population GET YOUR 8 in 1 BIRD | PRODUCTS @ VITALIZER ® NESTLING FOOD ® MOULTING FOOD © DIARRHEA FOOD © INTESTINE AID © COLD RELIEF Free Samples DANCEY'’S PET and GARDEN SUPPLIES 358 OAKLAND AVENUE Fomerty Dixte Feed Store ¥ Bleck Nerth of Johnson FE 5-5981 WE DELIVER Fresh Eggs Daily Also Baby Chicks LINES FEED STORE 3675 Aubern Ave. Ph. FE 5-5442 —75 Years— ROMEO, MICHIGAN East 32 Mile Read mersery stock. 'to stay | ship soon had their appeal to the _Indian clearings were found pro- | ductive. | | Viet Gs for & templete Tne of T quality i STOCKBRIDGE Self-feeding from a bunker silo is another aid for farmers trying to handle more cows with less labor production | a profit, points out a Stockbridge dairy farmer. Farm Economist Karl Vary. of Michigan State College, found that one man who used to handle 30 cows in stanchions now can take care of up to 60 cows in a pen-type barn, with a milking parlor and self-fed hay and silage. Vary has been surveying grass silage trends since 1948 and one of the first farmers in bis sur- vey was Ld Marshall. Ld (pro- neunced “Eldee"’), a man of con- siderable silage experience, has 358 tillable acres 2', miles east of Stockbridge. He has about 100 head of dairy cattle, 75 sheep and a few chickens. Marshall is expanding his herd in the dairy business, he told Vary, who finds that farmers save an average of 36 minutes per | ton by shifting from an upright to a bunker silo. Marshall \figures that with his | 160-ton silo he is saving 9% hours or about 10 days of nearly 10-hour | duty, per year. Besides, he is getting rid of the disagreeable job | of throwing down silage | Marshall's bunker silo is on top of the ground—60 feet long, 6'; feet high, 25 feet wide at ground level and a feot wider at the top. It sets on a Gach concrete slab By JOR HAAS Oakland County agriculture has been driven away from its origina! locations by industry and popula tion growth : But it has not suffered in the change. High real estate values have pushed it into new fields, but production keeps it among the tgp countiés in the state. With the clearing of the Pon. tiac area in the years following the first white settlement in the county in 1817, the townships of Pontiac and Avon were the first where the primeval forest gave way to cultivated fields. Although situated nearest to De- | troit — through which the early | settlers came the low land! through a good part of Royal Oak Township somewhat hindered its | early development for farming. | Our forefathers did not wish to| do any land draining while other | good land was available only a/ short distance farther on. The fertile plains of Troy Town- —_ pioneers. The forest t' ere also was | not so dense as in other locations. | Se Troy soon became the agri- culture leader among the coun- ty’s % townships. “or many years it raised more wheat than any other township in the en- | tire state. Now is it argely sub- divided. As the southeastern part of the | county and the Pontiac area grew | in F a ommaamnel agriculture moved FEN CES MATERIAL or INSTALLATION WEEKEND SPECIAL! PREE ESTIMATES — NO OBLICATION FHA TERMS — NO DOWN PAYMENT Open Mon. Tees. Wed. Theres. Sat. 4 — Fri. to — ARDMORE FENCE CO. Phone 1f No Answer 49 N. Perke St. FE 5-5572 Phone FE 2-4489 Pontiec a 96 Hours of Work Yearly which slopes towards the feeding end—with a of 6 inches in 60 feet The sides are of treated lumber and posts set in concrete. The silo slope | is filled via a dirt ramp approach on the end opposite the feeding end Gardeners Combine Funds fo Buy Tools Lawn mower dealers in several suburban cities have reported an interesting trend. More and more sales of power equipment, they | SAy, are made to groups of neigh- bors, who buy and use it collec- tively The cost of such items as trim- mers is small when divided among them, and each uses the equip ment according to a pre-arranged ' schedule small and medium- thus get mechanical couldn't afford by And according to ail Owners of sized yards aids that they themselves reports, the arrangement has worked out well. Rare earth is a chemical term used to denote a group of certain metals which occyr in close asso- ciation in some rare minerals Pupils of blue eyes contract more in light than the pupils of brown eyes awav from it north and west were being cleared of the forest. and were becoming the county's bread basket. although their many lakes then were re- garded as a serious drawback A county map of 75 years ago shows Royal Oak as being en- tirely covered with farms, with the exception of & small settle. ment by the same name, which | was not even incorporated as a village until 1891. Bloomfield Town- ship's hills also then were farm land Royal Oak Township now con- tains eight cities and is praec- tically all subdivided. lt does the least farming of any township in the entire county, Bloomficid Township's farms now are suc- Ante} Townships to the. larger cities. This also was a larg livestock loading point As the county's railroads were built, reaching all but a few of the 25 townships, grain elevators were built along them at con- venient points, to ‘uy mest of the farm products. Potatoes and livestock also found convenient A STEP IN ve? wiaw - wom eave 5380 Dixie Highway Custom ‘No Sections to be Forced Apart by Frost . Non-Skid to Prevent Slipping. Sizes to meet your needs. Concrete Step Co. FREE ESTIMATES — We Deliver ” BEAUTY ae - On Gare » OR 3-771 Railings Anyuhere! Ser SS Garden Tract TRACTORS Sunday, May 9th o ’ ’ r ° 2. tk oa FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 TWENTY-SEVE ry f } ( T f Watch Out for Rusts | Orn, 1OMadl0 : pemeed ) xercise Care for- Roots * [ | Plantir IQSUUE = When Loosening Mulch ° Loosening or removal of mulch, roses is negessary the old gar- | Small Plants Not Suited and other organic material about dener suggests cutting down the to Sweet Corn Growth, garderi perennials must be done autiumn clematis paniculata almost =: with care to avoid cutting off the {o’the grouhd. It will make rapid | Agent Says growing tips of tulips. narcissus,| growth and bloom more profusely | - Wee ie wae i crrived other spring bulbs and lilies in autumn | Papi + gat ere many O@iland County. sirieuers Old plantings of Japanese an- It is now time to start tubers | = ae , are ‘thinking of tomatoes, sweet tine aes se retech thee ie beroniae| corn and transplanting plants phiox require frequent division ‘or agi’ a sage ” a apie ; started inside,"’ says Edmond W best results. This chore should | So! is _ « ’ < ae Alchin, county agricultural agent be done as soon as the soil is can 1e ae o . re | of AGRICULTURAL LIME ] “he “— ” OF o Alchin calls sweét corn a border. Workable The old center growth | Showing an irregular cavity Is | line crop. He says should be discarded and only the | top. Plant them just below the “Generally if the garden is not young outside divisions replanted. | Surface am shade the boxes from at LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES j larger than 25 by 50 feet the food Three geod = divisions with trong NEN 7 | Value that you can get from plant well-developed roots and planted . ing sweet corn is very small 8 te 12 inches apart will make Spread on Your Farm by One “However, the family usually a geed romp os 7 te 3 av sS aSté s ie! " ; apart, using three or four kernels hocks, snapdragons, asters, de! Experts Are Predicting } per hill. “If. rowing, rather than) phiniums, carnations, and many ee | hilling corn,”’ he says, “plant the | other plants. The reddish brown Best Market Conditions seeds single ¥y 8 to 12 inches apart.’’ | spots on the leaves and stems are in J | | apart.’ eaused by one of the many rust uly SUPPLY co. While there still is some danger | fungi and. while there is no cure - : i ol ; 99 of frost for sweet corn, ‘seed can once the plants are attacked, _rust Pelee 8 hand and ie ohn 30777 Shiawasee, Farmington 15 2935 be 7 nied in case of a —— can be prevented ability of building more farm : = at the gl at always Rust on snapdragons best storage for wheat came in for | gm ————— _ - - seems fo taste ft st he says avoided by usin rust-resistant’ considerable discussion this month _ Because they are more sensi- seed Other rusts are kept under by seven of the midwest’s top LAWN EED tive to frost, Alchin cautions cortfol by application of a fungi-: economu experts against planting tomatoes until cide such as Fermat alphur ot They advised farmers -to hold at least the middie of May. Pep- a fixed copper T9 orn ntil immer for the PEE ] MOSS pers also should be held out to Marke i eh! Where rust disease has been epee arxet o@Gs sligh.!y until ¢ ime, : {ea ' ul\ = a ek. Be eye serious as it usually ix on holly favor holding corn until Jul C and F ViGORO The first step in transplanting hocks, removal a burning of *4' a Purdue economist ACRICO VERTECREEN plants is to inspect the roots care- |; ; ; ' sacco RECAL ORGANIC fully to be sure they are not d infected foliage or plants will If the weather makes a poor Cortitied Seed Potstecs ae ichie - wy are not dam- prevent a source of infestation crop, held cern over into next ag i AVS ‘Transplant my Pm eae The pruming of 1 ild. be Year, as prices will go up, an POSTS and FENCES in the evening. if possible.” he ad AY in the next tuo weeks fowa farm expert peinted out For All Purposes vises. “If it is a hot, sunny day, “hile there is nothing technical ee ee ee Re P use some kind of temporary . shade | Or difficult’ about the job thet much above the loan level untess ONTIAC VARNISH CO. PAINTS to ‘keep the wind and sun from a difference of apinion as ¢a there is a serious drouth wilting the plants whether to prune heavil mod t Discussing wheat storage the an | Further Alchin suggestions ately or lightls roup strong! ged growe te | zZ 4 giv urgec rowers ) : > K t Dig the hole large enough to The old gardener tl buld more facilrties if needed to 7215 Cooley Lake Rd Delivery Service EM 3-4812 accommodate the root without group who prunes moderately. get the top dollar om Sonne following the advice of R The five-year tax write-off for : “It is a goed idea to tilt the Shephefd, famous rosarian and new storage, governmertt loans for plant slightly to the west. Be author of ‘‘Roses."' a dandy book construction and CCC payments ° sure to pack the soil firmly along oon the queen of flowers for resealing are in the farmer's G | thy k the stem. Shepherd's advice ts remsnve favor, they said row a awn so i< “Starter solutions of fertilizer all deadwood; cut out all weak, The difference between ob bd can be used, using one-half pound ustless and diseased wood: taining a loan or having to sell it crow $ out wee $s of regular garden fertilizer to four shorten the retained growth just at harvest may mean from 50 men v4 sca and eae one enough te shape the plant. te 75 cents a beshel this year, , “ a +€ tH +f sebitren per plan . ds eu All i d sonable ca 4 ‘Thorough wetting of the To specify a standard height one ees ae ( B | Seed. | e i , d around the plant is necessary And and spread to cut to would be Pst asked for what arket 7 ale - allgasearia live . ' 4 « <"¢ ’ * f a“ f T er t ] ry ‘4 where irrigation 1s available. wa- ~ wal on soe . ‘ . et eaten 0 imate. ee grade. | ter the plants at least every das comprised of wide diversified n feed the panel agreed . ; : ia ie legueaes a ye . hee for the first five days and once a 1\ pe eariy marketings vith light : avn sparkling gree 4 $C 4 me. ¢ week thereafter.’ . While re Wal of on jest different opimons as to what's == >) Br and goes turthe Pla ot and poorest canes of climbing. eart Their answers went like p NORTHOLT REL LD WEED KILEER ( this + KING P=} Brand Weed Crmntre Ait Cyrt 4 Detroit Bakers Get Pay If- possible. point for eart \ Golf Jstlue Weed Killer + most bro . July marke Sell 17 : caved weeds 1s Craly Hike, End 1-Day Strike Hy market.” Sell by Aug 1 if ( soso jawed a 7 mican finish by then Lawn Willer (a ‘ ‘ ‘ DETROIT (INS Fifty bakers June through September should diseases) and t Ra ar che na ‘ serving a dozen bhakenes in the be period of lightest fat catth So 10 va ‘ » $4.95! Polish trade, went back to work narketing vesterday with a 10-cent hourly O F R W S increase to end a 24-hour strike Better grades of cattle G L B AND LA N EED Members of Local 76 Bakers usually hit seasonal peak about NORTHRUP, KING & CO., MINNEAPOLIS, MINN Union, AFL, received a new wage September. This should be a scale of $2.12-an-hour for bakers good ‘target’ for cattle that can and $1.9 for helpers. A time-and- be scheduled for market then.” a-half clause for days preceding In answer to what effect lowe holidays was also a part of the dairy price supports will have on or \ O » 7 ‘> ) contract ee the industry, the economists pre f y dicted there will be little change in total production Prices will =—————— qown they said which will === speed adjustments Hy brid Tea — Florabundas — Climbers ceeded by beautitul homes and shipping. Most of this traffic now Preservative Spreader FLOW ERING TREES s& SHRU BS. landed estates. ts handled by track New on the market is a distr Evergreens — Plants — 3ulbs In the period between and 7 All er the nation the treat butor for sedium bisulphite that Handy Garden Tools for the Ladies years ago Pontiac was one of the Of agriculture from the cen- puts the preservative into silage ‘ : ’ leading farm marketing points in ''4lizahon of industry and popula The “unit feeds by erect , f Complete Garden Store Michigan. From a wide area, pro- "0D Makes an interesting studs , . “eae a. = = = . duce was hauled here by horses ANd there is no area they ef-s NAS ROME, MASRERe to ‘Exeat an M \ I IL’S NI RSE RY and wagons tire United States that furmshes average load of silage It can be 4 ( “ 4 & “ & 4 ; 7 a more typical illustration than our attached to an nak ) rag > so , ’ - s This was sold to local buyers, ° Oakland pa eal ais ee ae Ve e of forage 6670 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston Near M-15 Junction to be converted into flour and ~ : larvesier or crop bower stock feed or shipped by rail to ESSER SRRERERER EERE eee ITT ryryiyirrrrieriiiiiit tT or Demonstration MOWERS TILLERS ---9 A.M. to 4 P.M. TILLER MOWER Combinati 2 H.P. WITH SAFETY CLUTCH onal answer to the lawn and garden problem ' are easily and quickly attached self propelled or wheeling as operator desires. Rotary Mower has ful] 20 Hand throttle controlled $190950 rite’ $3,450 Unit A sensati Tractor Power Unit Only verer $3,450 Cultivator wi All 3 Un Springfield—The Jewel of 0 - Garden Tractors Units pei and 3 H. P. a rugged and depend able for heavy duty Users EQUIPPED WITH REVERSE AND HEAVY DUTY TIRES {/l {ttachments f{railable! Many Models to Choose From $7.95 5178* A wonderful mower-tiller combination for home, farm. sub- urban property, estates. See it today! 67%, —FREE COFFEE & DOUGHNUTS — BARBER'S FEED STORE 8665 Highland Road (M-59) OR 3-9162 e a + ett ttt ii li tilililTiilIiiililiiitiift fT SSSR ‘TWENTY-EIGHT James Garfield wore the largest hat of any American President— size T%. ; my. George Washington selecied the | site for the VU. S. military acade- Here's the Best Treat of ALL A Wonderful Dinner at Wilkins! ® Steaks e ® Chops Yes, indeed, an evening out, topped off with a wonderful ® Seafood dinner, at Wilkins of course, ® Fowl will always be ao highlight of her Mother’s Day. e | a ORCHARD LAKE AT PONTIAC TRAIL SHARP’S SILVERCREST BAR and GRILL Formerly Garth's . .. 2675 Dixie Hwy. Invite You to Dance to the Don Wilson Trio Every Saturday Night We Cater to Parties and Banquets Specializing in Steaks and Chicken Prepared Just the Way You Like It LIQUOR—BEER—WINE “Our Foremost Desire Is Your Enjoyment” 2675 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2463 (The following \s ‘the fifth of a series of six Michigan Week articles. each dea! ing with one of the state's netural | resources | By NORMAN F. BILLINGS Chief, Water Resources Commission Hydrology Division. LANSING .— Of many prized and famous resoruces Michigan's water stands high among the lead- | ers Half of the state's counties front on Great Lakes water and no part of the state is more than 90 miles from the shore. The volume of high | quality water available along its| periphery is tremendous The St. Clair and Detroit Riv- ers carry aWay an annual sur- | plus from the Upper Lakes suf- ficient to supply more than 800 gallons per day to every person in the nation The state § prospect lor @Xpalr Your ele macs CAMPUS | svc." BALLROOM | «aces: Beautiful | te Livernets-Fenkell | past. 35 y Old-Time Dancing Every | finest cost Tues., Fri., Set. | ell “Kaown from coast come one -- come | THE | sion of a water-using economy are almost unlimited. The inland waters of 11,037 lakes land 36 il 350 miles of stream are no less prized or important. Annual replenishments of snow and rain filter through deep thicknesses of clean which the water may be pumped by wells or may emerge in the countless springs that sustain in- | land water bodies supplies from underground sour- | ces, as so many industries and most farms and resorts, The recreational significance of Michigan's lake and stream system is shown by the size of the state's great tourist and resort industry licenses alone Fishing account ire invites yeu aa neens | Garden Center BALLROOM Balireems | for the ears. The | 7057 Weedward (Upst'rs) s no more | Old-Time Dancing Every Thurs., Set., Sun. Dining at Its Distinctive Best Luncheon Dinner Cocktail Party Banquet Meeting PHONE MIDWEST 4-1400 WOODWARD at LONG LAKE RD. The Barrett Bros. Comedy MC JUSTINE Exotic Dancer SATURDAY FLOOR SHOW @ BEER @ WINE 4904 Elizabeth Lake Road @ LIQUORS FE 2-6052 Neo Miners Allowed is 6 ee , FRIDAY | AND | SATURDAY Qe LEON CEPHAS it Comedy MC WENDY CARSON Exotic Dancer ROCKY SULLIVAN Golden Voice Singer PLUS i ALVIN WALLS and His Ebony Sophisticats BIG JAM SESSION | | TUESDAY NIGHT 4 With Alvin Walls Orchestra & Parade of Musicians Pl ; DELL’S INN Corner of Elizabeth Lake and Cats Lake Roads 1 Short Block West of Huron Street si: Sle wale Sil lll, BLOOMFIELD HILLS © Bette LaRue at the PIANO and ORGAN © v\ Riding and Golf Club 2288 Unten Lake R4. Off Commerce B4. That Are DIFFERENT To the TABLES Down at MOREY’S ae ae eee COC KTAILS OO Kansas City Steaks Chicken and Chops Lobsters and Sea Food VILLA INN , Where Dining Is a Pleasant Adventure Starting Tuesday May 18th The Villa Inn will serve lunch from 11 a. m. ’til 2 p. m. VILLA INN | Corner of M-24 and Clarksto Three-fourths of Michigan's mu- | nicipal water systems get their | PONTIAC PRESS, Water Stand High on List of State's Valuable Assets ™ glacier-laid materials: from | i ! FRIDAY, MAY 7 for more than a miilfon recrea- | tional water users, to which must | be added those who seek water- | side relaxation in other ways. Mich- igan State Parks, most of which are on water, had an attendance | of over 14 million last year Steadily expanded water use is noted also for irrigation, indus- try, power developmen, and mu- nicipal supply. Municipg) increas- | | @s stem not only from popula- tion growth but from higher ‘‘per capita’ needs, Heavy dependence | on water supply is a hallmark of modern industry, Fhe public is becoming increas t ingly aware that this great re source, which we have only re cently begun to appreciate. is high vulnerable to ae The first effe pe te against its po ihuti n we voiced by representatives of fi shermen : hunters and other devotees of out door activities Resulting from their continued efforts. With sup port from the feneral public came, first, the Stream Control | | Commission and, in 189, its suc- DANCING Saturday Night 9-2 Bob, Don and Carl Trio Family Style Chicken Dinner SUNDAY 12-9 Catering to Banquets and Private Parties SPORTSMAN INN Dixie Hwy., Waterford Phone OR 3-9325 TONIGHT , 1954 cessor agency, the Water Re- sources Commission, Vested with the general respon- sibility of protecting and con- serving the waters of the state, this multi-interest commission is earrying on an effective anti- pollution campaign, Water use, flood control and beach erosion control studies and other water conservation features round out its program, Keen interest in water resources | costs are not paid, Atkins will serve |and active advancement of their | 150 days in jail. conservation is evident in all | branches of state government. The | executive office consistently has | advocated intensified attention to! the interim committee which al- ready has developed and = spon- sored many important pieces of |B. egisiation Doctor Stresses Value of Play in Kindergarten Dr. Eleanora Moore, Wayne Uni- versity professor, spoke on ‘The Value of Play in Kindergarten” 'when LeBaron School kindergarten teachers entertained parents Thursday night and Miss’Margaret Hall were hosts | *& at the program. Some 75 parents cy « hose ngsters are in Kinder- ga now or will start school te next fall attended Dr, Moore stressed the im. portance of kindergarten play. The teacher, through watching children play, learns each child's personality and can give him |({ > ‘ | guidance, she said. Parents of next fall's new kinder- garteners are asked to come to LeBaron from 1 until 3 p. m. June 3 or 8:30 a. m. until noon June 4 to register their children. Birth | certificates and immunization rec- ords will be needed. SQUARE RINCSIDE BAR MANNY W. Heren ot Elisabeth Late B4. “SULLY” at the Piano Saturday Night - ; ; 9:30 P. M. to You scrolls 1:30 A. M. STrreereeLeee, a Over 4,000 Feet (” TABULOUS FOOD Donce Floor EXPERTLY SERVED Just Added to BILL'S BARN 47326 Dequindre Rd. a rn 4 | Ss Sadi |= —jriretitt, Detroit Motorist Gets _ 35 Days in County Jail - Farmington Township’ Justice Allen C. Ingle yesterday séntenced a Detroit motorist to 35 days in Oakland County Jail and fined him $100 with costs for three traf- fic violations. James M. Atkins, 40, of 18510 Oakland Ave., pleaded guilty to reckless driving on a revoked op- erator’s license, and using im- | proper license plates. If fines and ‘You Are Invited to the New Club Sandy Beach Under New Management Dancing Liquor - Beer - Wine Presenting the Fine. Sportsman's Class site ei Sandy Beach & RACES All Stars | Every Sundey Featuring Joe Time Trials 1:30 at the Hamond Organ Races Start 3:00 3412 Dinie Hwy. OR 3-9754 9 EVENTS May 9th Only Parachute Jump CHILDREN Under 12 FREE With Adait TRY OUR LS ae ADULTS 4 Tax Ine. Rain Cheeks from May 2nd exchanged af Ticket Office PONTIAC M-59 Speedway Tasty FINE FOOD PUFF’S MIDCET BAR 2661 Dinie Highway OL Oe CHICKEN HOUSE 497 Elizabeth Lake Road st Telegraph Chicken Dinner .... $1.35 Delicious T-Bone Steak $1.95 y Delicious Fish Dinner .95¢ Barbecued Spare Ribs $1.35 BEER x WINE % LIQUOR %2".’.." TO2 A. M. BUSINESS DINNERS LUNCHEONS TO TAKE OUT! ++. served in ous sew Coll FE 3-9821,. your toed Dining Room will be ready. Dial your faver- ® Private Parties © Banawots ite cab to deliver ht! Includes Preoch-teles, Sealed. Bread and Butter RRR ARR AAAAL SS AAA AN Ot LEAR PARR -Fridey & Seturdey 10:00 & 12:30 Featuring: CLAY TUCKER Impersonations MC LITTLE BUCK Sensational Sepia Dancer BETTY LOU DARWELL Exotic Dencer AVON INN 3982 Auburn Rood et Adems Roed—Auburn Heights —Sunday— Freak Perry Orchestre Featuring the Parade of Guest Stars 1! ! ~*~ iw /O y fn A Special menu plan just for her! Phone today for Reservations MY 2-6193 MY 2-9581 60 Parkview Road — Lake Orion FRIDAY NEW BANQUET ROOMS Available for Reservation aaa eee oe ee j a Visit our cocktail lounge with the big picture window HEY KIDS!!! FREE BOAT RIDES! WATERFORD|E=al DRIVE-IN THEATER SATURDAY ¢., witiom — sie Gide teas a8 eo >. The picture a yy » that isco om MARILYN oc oa LOMA vega mano MASSEY *ELLEN- “HUTTON __THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 TWENTY-NINE = ee a és ede . _ — About 72 per cent of. the rubber | | Billie as I can get,’’ she remarked vation Department has under | Forge, in the. Adirondack 'Moun- FRI DA Y consumed in the U. S. is for Jud Holliday | “After all, you can't go on playing ‘Nice idea, but How Do consideration @ suggestion for de-| tains. automobile tires and sundries. Y ithe same role all your life.’ | Picnickers Get Down? veloping a combined winter and| And a chairlift for the project & S AT.! Mechanical goods take 10 per Discards Role “8 » | ALBANY, N. Y. wW — Tt’s| Summer seerention area near Old! would be used year-round. ee oie’ cable ‘atin — f Bill D Knowing the dangers of type | nothing new for skiers to ride up = es J ; casting, Judy has. planned her ca-| @ mountainside in a chairlift, but : cent. O lille Vawn reer well. She held out for the | did you ever do it with a _Pienic By BOB THOMAS right to do only one picture a year, " me ! 60 "for GLORY! +, © . | basket—and in the summer? ‘ oR — Xe | HOLLYWOOD 'uw—Judy Holliday {even though her demand almost | The New York State Conser- PAGAN LIP er | has won her eight-year fight to es- gd oe — : it LD | cape from Billie Dawn. ilm. She adhered to that) Wh S FOR WI és a, A wy DANCING | Bic is. tne, squcaxy voiced, schedule, even doing iss than one || WANTED TO BUY | ite owan | eli s ; eon, |& year because of the birth of her | a He Challenged an Empire's WEMCRA'S |] cinay. seay roe | sey cents tse tie ste oe he bem ots | USED MAGAZINES | DRIVE-IN -= t : : e@ Sell Novelties. Jokes | eee ree . way up in society via her looks ; end Tricks 4370 M-59 ( ; | , 9 P.M. te 1:30 P.M. | and her illogical logic. Judy start. Deer Incident Proves ll Pisai'eMasaiae Outlet | 59 (Corner Airport Road) usic Jimmy Williems ] ed playing Billie in “Born Yester- ; | ple Dileare |day” on the stage. She lasted for Dear to Eager Hunter as Sones ‘ive. | Open 12 to 12 Daily Except Tuesday three years, stopping in the middle} NEWPORT, N. H. (UP) — Mu-| . z ; . Bill’s Barn peciaye oe — char-| nicipal court records bere contain | (0447777 Serving Fine Food acter in am 5s | : | Pome INTERNATIONAL presents 47326 DEQUINDRE RD. ind. Sie wick cmc, | an unusual hunting story. ‘\ New Lake Theater \ Di F . . VICTOR Dancing Every Friday she came West to play the film| Herbert Riley of Tyngsboro \ 420 Pontiac Trail \ inners - ountain, Curb Service pulses of “Born Yesterday.’’ This | Mass., pleaded only to the charge WALLED LAKE | time Billie hit the jackpot—an Os- | of taking two deer. one over the \ ” Wide Vision J \ _ JOE'S Spaghetti lhe o ee At rpes sar ep somats limit, in Washington 4 ‘RIDE CLEAR TO DIABLO’ \ | | tress r © more : s, | —— en ~ a - tne “1 | Riley said he fired at a deer as In Technicolor with a Z House “The Marrying Kind” and “'It} ‘ ound a be ind me of bush- ) Audie Murphy and \ r Kiddie Cartoon Show MARI | Should Happen to You,” but the ae : E Dan Duryea 5 | NOW OPEN roles plainly smacked of Billie | re bg age scared a sect col hel \ —ALso— Shown Seturdey Only! | | D rom same cover, an e| | : : = : 2 P aa til 12 Midni ht awn. . . . couldn't resist firing at it also.| “VALLEY OF THE HEAD \ Phone FE 5.8331 At: 1:00 - 5:00 Plus | . M. g HUNTE Serial and 2 Feotures! Ak Joe Speciali Now she is appearing in a movie | Budge Kennet a “ ‘os with Johnny Weissmuller \ ~~ en oe Specializes in | with the unique title of ‘‘Phffft udge Kenneth S. Shaw saic | h | When I watched her rehearse a | fine. please. 77222424 éd —— and TOMORROW! | scene, there were no overtones or _ . =, | | C icken Pizza Pie jundertones of Billie. It was all | D ° 10:45 A.M sv Teaes TOOAY lJ id oors n : -M, ——tA . end quality food to en | pe ELIZABETH TAYLOR—DANA ANDREWS | - € h k ‘eae eee ee ee ~» in “ELEPHANT WALK” | eat here ot take out bobbed hair. She wears an at-| ‘Strand | | tractive bun—‘‘It's Columbia's, not |] ' a o HEE PHONE FE 3<7396 'mine.” Her once-plump fgu || _2_u=_!__ Barry Sullivan in “LOOPHOLE . 7 ‘Ss Spaghetti now wasp-waisted. Instead of med | garish costumes, she has an as-|| STARTS TURD —ON OUR GIANT. SCREEN House sortment of chic gowns. And the - ; SA _ AY squeak has been replaced with her |] | er : % SERS ct Aes | 1038 W. Huron own modulated, slightly inquiring Th % Block West of Telegraph eee e unforgettable story of fighting men | “Yes, this | is about as far from ewho came home...to leorn how to love again! + LAST SAMUEL GOLDWYN'S a rey aan) THE BEST YEARS | ZS) VIRGINIA FIELD - GUY ROLFE & #14 DAYS! ji] OF OUR LIVES | {Hp PLUS yi UR EW MIRACLE SCREEN! wo A rac Now at 22> TECHNICOLOR 4 | | POPULAR PRICES! cS RRNA WT | SAVAGE INTRIGUE! DEADLY ADVENTURE! : | ace ALSO Shown at: 12:20- 3:40-7:00 - 10:10 All | DANA avontnS = TERESA HEIGHT = HEIN wire PONY EXPRESS Ly Ney st car OSM HARD SEL cn TECENICOMR Tir Sy cuir ro moa rs A Thrills Pete Smith in “FISH TALES” pines My. : : MER | @O ‘all ke | A ale On Our Giant PANORAMIC Screen 3 NEW PERFECTED -D POLAROID VIEWERS! Doors Open Daily . Features at: 1:31 - 3:36- at 12:45 P.M. Begins TODAY Y 5:41 - 7:46-9:51 ir MAULS...IT RIPS...IT VANISHES! A MAMMOTH MONSTROUS MAN-OR- CREATURE RISING ouT OF THE DEPTHS BENEATH THE CITY! SUN.: Bob Hops in “OFF LIMITS” Also “THUNDER IN THE EAST” OT UCU CUCU CUCU CCC CCCCCT? r sats TONIGHT! “ ‘wwuwwevveevereeefveverewnefvrw7«e yyw so TYVTTTTTTT a th hh hh hh hh he hh i hh he —_ commer LARSON ond TAMBA SAT. (econ 1 P.M. mE SKY NOW W SHOWING! .. raging wit pent-up passions! “Now he counted his bullets — because he couldn't count “Om his friends! TOTP Cerro vr OCC CCC CCC CCC CCC CCC CCC CCCUCCCCUCCUN A AAA Ren hh hb bbb bbb bbb bbb bbb bb bie 2150 Opdyke Rd. Ph. FE 4-4611 SEE IT-- BUT DON’T REVEAL IT! Piha i hi hi i i i Nn Mi Mn MM Ni Ni hi a i i Mn Mh Mn MM Mn hn he Mn te tt i i aaa > ' Dia i hh i i i MM i i i Mi Ni i Mi Mn Mn i Mi Mn i Min te i Mi Mi Mi A et, 'wwweve* i a i i i i i i i i i hi i i i i hi hh hh hi he i wv" TEx t BARKER. “PHYLLIS KIRK —~<. musseu. vents . aoe» anont MONSTER FROM A MILLION YEARS AGO! CREATURE rron mx BLACK LAGC ON wTvrwrvrvrvrevrevrevevrererevrevrvrerevreereerereeeeeeerererrrrrrererrrrrrrTTTT TTT Te Tee eC eC Ce TC ee eee CCC ee ee eee ” CREATURE '%" BLACK LAGOON RICHARD CARLSON. JULIA ADAMS ~ Siz uans >. CARLSON: ADAMS PLUS “THUNDER OVER THE PLAINS” | FREE FIRE ENGINE RIDES! w= 3 DIMENSION ano WARNERC 01 OR prec wy recreacou0r "PHANTOM o« THE RUE MORGUE” KAR MALDEN = CLUDE DAUPHIN PARC MEDI STEVE FORREST" PPP L LL LL PPP ' EXTRA: LATEST WORLD NEWS | SUNDAY MOTHER'S DAY STAGE ATTRACTION! * CARTOON—NOVELTY EVE. AT 8:45 VALUABLE PRIZES! | PPAR APY a aad PPA PLP PPP PP EPO IIS OCC CCST CCC TCC CCC CCC CCC CCCCCCCCTC li i i i i i i i i i Ni i i hi i hi hi i i Mi i i Mh hi i hh hi bi hi Mi i i i i i hh tt he i i i PPP APBPBBAPALDLD LA LALLA LP PPP PPP PPL LPP OP LLP QD PPB LBBL CBD BALALD A ADAAAALAADAARARDAARAGORAGA* 4 2OPO2RG 69066604 22008- + Pots vwwwrvVY - 7 _ THIRTY ,,. Bannister Modest in Wake of 4-Minute Mile OXFORD, England «» — Roger Bannister, who broke the four- minute mile, drew back into his shell of shyness today while the athletic world acclaimed his feat of the century. * The quiet, 25-year-old medical student shattered the world record with a dazzling 3.59.4 clocking in the blustery cold here last night and thus won the race to the peak | of trackdom'’s Mount Everest—the four-minute mile “T think the four-minute has been overrated mile * he said quiet ly as if trying to justify his feat “After all it's onty a time. The athletics ts racing essence of ‘SKIPPER’ track coach Jack Hackett happily poses Kerry Keating (left) twin “meal tickets,” Campbell. The two finished 1-2 in AND STARS—W aterford against an opponent rather than a clock.” . * . He saidwhe was tired at the end the race and that he knew he'd just about make it to the end ‘I think people have been fright- ened of this four-minute mile he said, ‘‘Now that it's been broken I'm sure other runners will break j At, too ° Although the slight 157-pounder was unimpressed by his great ef fort. he did acknowledge that the 1>-mile-an-hour wind in the Iffley road might have cost hin two second track . ‘IT think the » mile is within reach,’ he said. But he didny say he'd be the one to dg it This was his first race since last fall aNd along with his mother and father, about 1.000 spectators were on hand for the dual meet. It was on the very cinders where eight years ago he ran his first mile race a8 an Oxford freshman—in more than five minutes When he sprinted those last 300 yards to the finish line and sport- experts wondered {t fou ing immortality ony him what new worlds are kk to conque! 7 *. Onl i ited \ felt he weeks few somewhat ago he con diffidently that Nalft-miler mit hie was a better he. = td , aiTi #. High School Pentiac Press Phete with his ran on a winning relay team to spark the Skippers and Ray to the Inter-Lakes Conference championship, lst three events and | league sports title won by Waterford * * * * @¢ SkippersRomptoTitle By JACK SAYLOR Waterford High School cele brated its Ist Inter-Lakes sports championship today after Jack Hackett's track squad made a waltz of Thursday's 8th annual Inter-Lakes Conference track meet at Ferndale Powered by the Ray Campbell Kerry Keating tandem . ocd captured 9 firsts, including both relays, and accounted for all three records that were broken Keating and Campbell per- sonally accounted for 27 points and combined with Laine Hether- ington and Jim Holtom for 5# of the Skippers’ winning total domination of of 7574. Thus the eyey Walled Lake in Inter-Lakes track was ended as the Vikings finished a distant second with 40% points. Southfield was 3rd with 35's, fol- lowed by Farmington, 28's; Berk- ley, 14%; and Van Dyke 4. It was Keating 1st and C Campbell Major League Results AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lest Pet. Behind € arco +4 + S67 Det t , > 643 I's Cleveland #11 t's F adeiphia ’ vw P New York : on Wachington - 't 729 Ra re 1 ' B 4 ] ‘ Fridar's phone and fl ees Pite hers "iladelphia at Yor Ma (1-1) of > scarrero At ‘ Morga Ve Washington at Boston «night? pm Stebbs (1-2) vs Nixon (1-1) or Kialy (0-2) (Only games scheduled) THURSDAY'S RESULTS Detroit at Boston. ppd. Rain New York 9. B re 6 Chicago 5, Washi 4 Cleveiand 3. Philad SATt RDAY s sc uEDL LE Detrott at Chic ego a % pm Washington at Bo 1 p.im Philadelphia at Nee York 1pm Cleveland «i Baitimore night). 7 m SUNDAY'’S SCHEDULE Detroit at Chicago (2), 1:30 p Cle nd at Baltimore. 1 pm Philedelphia at New York (2). 1:05 pm Was ington at Boston (2). 12% pm NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost Pet. Behind Philadelphia if 6 “7 — Cincinnati 12 8 600 ly Brooklyn it) 8 556 ly Ot, SA Cc cnacccces 10 9 526 2 Po 4 9 71 3 CUCAGD — ...scccce 7 8 #67 3 New York . ss 9 il 4530 3% Pittsburgh 7 318 69 Friday's Schedule and Probabie Pitchers Brooklyn et Philadelphia (night)—. 7 p.m.— Newcombe (2-1) ¥s Simmons (3-1) New York at Pittsburgh (night)—7:36 pm —Antonelli (2-1) vs Law (2-2) S&. Louis at Cincinnati (night) Staley (2-1) ve Valentine «2-2) Chicago at Milwaukee (night) Hacker (01) vs Buhl (1 Tut rears sac ‘Ss RESULTS 8 pm— o pm— (ricage & Brook ‘ wat! New ¥ k 4 M skee 3, P * rg Philadelphia at § SATURDAY . “scurbe u Breotiyn at Philadelphia ¢ t FT ! Nee York at Pittsburet al 0 5 St. Low's at Cinc nati, 2 pn Chieage at Milwaukee. ? 30 pn SUNDAYS SCHEDULE Brookiye at Philadelphia, 12°35 pm Nee York at Pittsburgh. 1 3 pn Chicago at Milwaukee. 2: p m @. Lea at Cipcinmati (2). 1 30 pn | the half-mile, 2nd in the 100-yard dash, Camp- bell-Keating in the 200 and Keat ng-Campbell, again, in the broad jump. Hetherington was a double winner in the hurdles, while Hol- tom won the high jump and was rd in the shot The “big four’ then teamed to win the half-mile relay in record breaking time Other Skippers Ists went to sophomore (:ale Wigner in the mile and the medley relay team of Chuck Koches, Ron Cordray, | Gary Wideman and Don Jones. Keating bettered the record in the 100 with a 10.2 effort, barely nipping Campbell. Then in the 200, Campbell shaded Keating in | 20.4, also a record. The half-mile relay mark fell to the Waterford combine in 1 minute, 36.7 sec- onds. | | Don Pounds of Walled Lake won | Bob Quirk of South- | field took the shot put and Gotberg | | | Globetrotters Embark on International Tours CHICAGO, May 7 #—Abe aptly-named Sap- erstein's Harlem Globetrotters this month will take off n ational directions inter haskethball announced Thursday will take one unit to London ‘Sunday to begin a fifth straight tour of Europe. Another unit, directed by Harry Hennin, will leave May 13 on a third kar of ‘South America in two on tours Saperstein he Globetrotter | Mile of Southfield won the pole vault, | while Fred Courville of Southfield of Walled Lake heats. and Herb Snell won quarter-mile Won by Hether- WL: ind. Myers 4th, Bvans (8 ‘g hurdies “>, Haniey S Jones iW 163 seconds Won by Waterford Wideman, D Jones Walled Leake Berk iey Sth 2 minutes 44.8 seconds 100-yd dash—Won by Keating «(W Campbell (W) 2nd: Grimshaw (PF) irda Tallman «B 4th Reid «WL) Sth Time 102 seconds (‘Breaks record of 10.3 set in 1062 by Ron Draheim of Walied Lake run—Won bsy G . Wigner Holliday (8) 3nd; Enders (WL) 3rd; Avery (WL) 4th, Young (B) Sth: 5& minutes, 2 seconds ‘ist heat) Won by Cour- Herrin (WL) 2nd. Oldfield Time. 55.5 seconds Ind heat Won by Snell Ww Pheips 57 seconds Hether- ina , Morgan > Parmington Sout hfie, wr Russell ; 21.4 8 | 200- yard dash—Won by Campbell Keating ‘W) 2nd. Grimshew ‘F) Tallman ‘(B) 4th, Roe :B) 5th 204 seconds ‘Breaks set in 1953 by Dennis Harbor $80-vard cw) ard record of 205) by Pounds (WL) Nedeau (WL) Blackwell (B) 13.5 seconds Won by Waterford run— Won Perry (‘W' 2nd Peckham iF) 4th Ttme 2 minutes 880-vard relay (Keating, Holtom. Hetherington. Camp-| the green counts the same. be Walled Lake 4th ul Parmington Time 1 minute, #7 seconds Breaks record of 1.374 set in 1060 by Walied Lake) High jump— Won by Hol berg ‘8: and Nichois Patterson |W Roe and Ward ‘WI tied feet 6 inche Won Gotber F 2nd Philitps «V and Hirneisen 4th Height 10 feet 2nd. Berkley, 3rd; Southfield 5 tom (W): Got- F; tied for 2nd B Clingan «PF for 4th Height Ma irda 1 fpr vaul Poi t c , ra Alfiler Distance Shot put 19 feet. S', inches Won by Quirk «8 2nd. Holtom «W) 3rd, Bernett /( WL: = Grogis (V. Dyke: Sth. Digtance 3: feet. 3%) inches Pinal team score: Waterford 75% / Walled ke 40%; Southfield 35',: Parmington | sate Berkley 14%, Van Byes o j Golfers Down Northern Pontiac High School teams won) two of three Saginaw Valley League contests yesterday Baseball squad extended its unbeaten string to fivé games by edging Arthur Hill 5-4 at Saginaw, golfers beat Flint Northern 8-7 at Flint Country Club, and the tennis team bowed to Flint Cen- tral 6-1 here PHS nine scored two runs in the 6th to down Arthur Hill, Don Daniels singled, but was injured stealing 2nd. Clay Williams went in run fer him and came home on Al Hayward's: double. Ha,ward tater scored on Jerry Vallad’s grounder. Bob Johnston, who relieved Pon tiac starter Ted Wharry in the ord, was given credit for the vic- l. tory oo Walker fired /a 10-over- -par | 82 to lead Pontiac’s/golfers to vic- re Bob Fiori was low man for Northern with an 44, Ted Wiersema and Kurt Lauckner gave the PHS tennis team its only victory, beating Central's Jim | Campbel] and Ed Landers 3-6, al jand 6-1, in doubles. Fontostic Mile! OXFORD. England «#—Here are Roger Bannister's times at every 20-yard check post en route to his fantastic 3:59.4 mile Thursday 220 yards: 27 seconds; 40} vards: 57.5; 660 yards: [:27.5; 880 vards: 1:58.2: 1110 yards: 2:29.6; 1320 yards: 3:005, 1340 yarws 3.30.5; 1760 yards: 3:39.4. eimai — j}and chip-ins | (Wi; | putted real well.’ ically explained for taking the Ist wesainer ven PHS Grid Coaches Py | Hart | ‘s) | Time: | singleton, Keego | THE than a miler. That means he could set out after the SSO-yard world record of 1°486 now held by Mal Whitfield, or possibly the wonde1 ous mark of 1 4.6 for 800 meters established in 1939 by Germany's Rudolph Harbig The world 1,500-meter record of 3.43—held jointly by Haegg, Len nart Strand of Sweden Lueg of Germany—seemed easily within Bannister's reach. He tied it unofficially in his record-shatter g mile. It was unofficial be at in only was but one clocker the cause there that point) and rules -require for official n Incidentally the end of the Boros Assumes three arkKs all three clockers at mile caught him Lead in Rich Ardmore Open Former U. S. Open! Champ Trims 2 Off. Por With 68 By WILBUR JOHNSON ARDMORE, Okla. up Fi National Open champion Boros of Mid Pines, \. C \ wrimer Sulius 166 golfers teed off in the Ardmore Open golf tournament. Boros attained his front running | position with a two-under-par 68) pre- | in yesterday s first round. He dicted his good game would stay with him through Sunday's COA) in this 72-hole event > The Waco Turmers, the event, dished out about $4,000 in bonus money for eagles. birdies and chip-ins in yesterday's play and there was every indication that they would give away a whole stack of their greenbacks before the tournament's conclusion The best guess was that the fi- nal prize money will eclipse last year's $47,000 The chief benefactors after the first round play were Hoge: Glen Teal of Jacksonville, Boros pocketed $500 for the a s best round and picked up an extra $100 for bonus prizes on birdies Teal the player to card an eagle and for this he got $500 Challenging were Leo Buiagett) and was only 69's Sandusky Boros of with Ohio: Walter Burkemo, the PGA champion of Franklin, Mich. and Harold Williams Jr... of Tusca- loosa, Ala Seme of the old timers found this 6,483-yard par 34-36—70 course more than they could handle. By- ron Nelson, former National Open and PGA champion, shot 78.. He was joined in this unselect group by Cary Middlecoff, the Memphis Tenn., dentist, and a host of others. others. 3-Putt Green Costly to Sam Joe Taylor's 65 Takes Greenbrier Snead Shoots 66 WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS Ww Va. ®—"“Your score is bound to be | the century in 11 seconds and the | pijots organization know as Ninety- | aoa it vente putting: good and I broad jump with an 18-foot 9inch | | Nines. was reported in fair condi- | Joe Taylor logi-4 round lead in the ¢ yesterday. Unknowingly at the time, he also put his finger on why Sam Snead came in tnd a stroke be- hind Taylor's 65 on the par 70 Old White course. Snead can hit the ball as far as | — any golfer but again discove that tapping it a short distance on PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 identi al tim es Immdiately of military gets his medical degree months. But he will run for a rarity in itself ahead lies a year service Roger. He in a few the Britain in for before jlNns service, he *Empire Games in Vancouver and and Werner | held the | upper hand today as select field of} rich | sponsors of} _beaten It took MSC’ him three putts to get down on} the 13th hole and a hogey five when a par would have earned the stroke | pau) Smarks F necessary to tie Taylor. Orchard Lake Nine Absorbs First Loss Ferndale St. James moved into the lead in Suburban Catholic | ‘League baseball standings yester- day by handing Orchard Lake St. | Mary its Ist setback, 2-1. Catcher Larry Kress won the | in the 6th inning. . Dales’ Joe Ruhlman struck out "| walked one and gave up only | | two hits while earning his victory. Pete Ziebron, the loser, fanned two, | walked three and was nicked for three hits. St. Mary OL...........001 000 O—1 2:3 Ot. James... i..,... 000 002 x—-2 3 1 Ziebron and ——— Ruhimas and Kress. A Cleveland me ae Hegan; Portqcearrero and “Tas Run—Cleveland. Smith Philadel- phia. Power nolds. L--Coleman Home Run—New York, Berra Detroit at Boston. ppd | 1 j | _ | fame when he poled a 2-run homer | Chie | Washgngton 001 020 100-4 8 Trucks. Dorish (6). Consuegra. (9) and Lollat, Sawatski (6), Pascual and Fitz Gerald ~W —Dorish L—Pascua Home Run —Wa ngton, Sievers Baltimore 0 000 Goo-4 4 1 New. York 0 003 911 4 Coleman, Kosio (1). Littlefield (&). Stuart #8) and Courtney. Reynolds. Kuzave (8) Grim (9) and Berra. Silvera (8) W—Rey- the European championships dur- ing the summer ' Then, when he is finished with his tour of duty, he will begin ae . FINISH OF 3:59.4 MILE—Roger sity ace, breasts the tape as he a in less than four minutes. He performance. It Was “ Jeff Thinclads Defeat Braves Snap 3-Year Streak for Washington; Relay Team Breaks Record mile able Jefferson swept five lst places and tied for another yesterday to beat Washington 382-3 to 38 1-3, and end the Braves 3-year un-| junjor high dual ~ track meet streak. deffs trailed by 22-3 points going into the final event, the quarter-mile relay, but came up with a record-breaking perform- ance to clinch the victory. Team of Martin-Kellar-Anderson Hawkins .won the event in 48.5 seconds to lower the previous dual meet record by one-tenth of a second Jim Hawkins and Archie Brooks Lead QS paced the Jeffs with two victories ~ each. Brooks won the 100-yard low hurdles dash in 12.4 and the 75>yard in 84 while Hawkins won jump. Attend MSC Clinic Pontiac High football coach Ed Graybiel and aides Dean Wilson and Arnold Wjlson are in East | Lansing today, atténding the Mich- |} inga State College football clinic. | Head speakers at te clinic are s Duffy Daugherty, USC's Red | Sanders and Oklahoma's Bud Wil- kinson. Also scheduled to lecture is | itzgerald High grid | mentor Also attending the session from} Pontiac are Em Ghianni of Wash- | ington Junior High and Tom Dod- son of Eastern Junior. ' his Ist race | lene Dahl. ‘Americans Draw Rugged Foes in training for the 1956 Oly mpics *,* hoping to make up for his tauure ritis mateur in the 1952 games when he finished : fourth in the 1,500-meter test. That | still rankles him The British newspapers, natural- | splashed his achievement in| headlines on the front pages, | Stranahan and Strafaci Take On Scots in 2nd Round Play LONDON (Ph Frank Strana- | han, Frank Strafaci and Joe Carr, three of the top ‘Tiger’ golfers }entered in | have been drawn in a rugged sec ond quarter of the pairings for the May 2429 tournament s ly huge for it has been a long time since | this country has had much to cheer | about in sports Toledo mullion aire’s son who the British amateur in ISS and '950 meets a Scot, Andrew Forrest, in the ond round. Stranahan drew a first round bye. Stranahan, the won sec ” . > Strafaci, of Garden City, N. Y., meets another Scot, Dr. C. R Duncan Leeds, in the first round Joe Carr of Dublin, defending champion plays American Air Force Captain John F. McNeilly, Whogis stationed at Wiesbaden, Germany William C. Campbell of Hunt- ington, W. Va.. American Walker Cup player. was drawn in the weak first quarter. He meets Den- ton Guest of England in the second | round over the Muirfield course between North Berwick and Edin- burgh, Scotland ~ . . | James B. McHale Jr. of Phila | delphia, another former Walker Cupper, is in the third quarter Sweeny Jr Palm Beach along with Robert J | of New York, London, and other high society spots | Sweeny won, the British amateur fin 1937 | The amateur again will be one of | the world’s largest golf tourna- | ments. Total entries are 305. Of them 39 are Americans. Fifteen nations are represented, and that could be an alltime record. Native Dancer in Track Comeback NEW YORK (#—Native Dancer probably the world’s most famous horse since the advent of television, goes to the post today for the Ist time in nearly a year Temporarily retired after he suf- fered a foot bruise in winning the American Derby at Washington Park in Chicago last Aug. 22, the internationally known grey colt was entered in a six furlong over night allowance event at Belmont Park “” AP Wirephote Bannister. former Oxford Univer- chieves the goal of all milers—a was timed in 3:59.4 in his memor- r id of the year J ¢ ‘| Kiss From Marie Wilson Awaits Winner of ‘500’ INDIANAPOLIS Uf Marie Wil son. television's “My Frie Irma s . stallion There will be no television or ra- will provide the winner's tradi-;4\,. broadcast of the race sched tional kiss at the annual 500-mile uled for 3 p m., but. as asual, the auto race Mas 31 Alfred G. Vanderbilt colt will be ; mdden by Eric Guerin and was Her official job will be the pres- expect ~d to off an odds-on fav -xpecte¢ av- entation of the six-foot-tal]l silver J So orite Borg-Warner trophy Miss Wilson will be the first It's Time Out! | television star picked for the cere many. She follows such movie stars as Barbara Stanwyck. Loret- ta Young, Linda Darnell and Ar- — @ 2.6 Basebeur Man O'War's Kin Kicks, Bites Woman EL CAJON, Calif race horse breeder. Mrs Suzanne Williams, 55, was kicked and bitten by War Baron, 6-vear-old grandson of the famous Man O' War. at her ranch here Thursday. Mrs. Williams, who is also a charter member of the women air P—A woman tion following surgery for her in- juries, } She was attempting to lead the stud back to his corral, from which he had broken. Quick About- hae “She sure has a goed motion with runners on base ... or when theca Ahindlinasedh for that matter!” the British amateur, | Latins Battle | in TV Match From St. Nick’s ; Argentine Lausse Is by Cuban Opposed Varona Tonight NEW YORK «®—The south of the border boys take ever the Friday night fights tonight with Eduardo Lausse of the Argentine and Chico Varona of Havana meeting in a 10- round match at St. Nicholas Arena, The bout, scheduled for 9 p.m. (EST) will be carried en network radio (ABC) and television (NBC), Lausse, 26 has ambitions on the middleweight title if he can make friends and influence boxing com- missions by stretching ,his lo-fight winning streak. On a “quickee = in- vasion of the States last vear, he knocked out three opponents on the small club circuit. In his first start on this trip, he .outpointed Jesse Turner, April 12 at Brooklyn's Eastern Parkway Despite Varona s pdsition as No. 7 challenger in the welter ranks, he is an 11 to 5 underdog to this | unranked Argentine who will out- weigh him by eight or nine pounds. Varona has a 53-13 record with 33 knockouts, making it a total of 71 knockouts in 120 fights for the two battlers. : Practice Tilts End Grid Drills CHICAGO Northwestern FP — Michigan State, Ohio State and IIli- nois will end their NCAA-allotted 20 days of spring football drills tomorrow with climactic intra- squad games already se ssbons, Purdue and Indiana have concluded their lowa will wind up May 15 while Michigan, Wisconsin and Minne- sota will conclude May 7. Missing from I}linois its blue vs white came record-breaking ground-g Casoline . Coach Ray Eliot said the sensat- tional sophomore halfback ‘‘will not be used because he has beef de- voting major time to scholastic ef forts and has not drilled regularly this spring - line up for will be the ainer, JC, Baseball Instruction Opens on Saturday Pontiac Parks & Recreation De- partment’s annual jumor baseba!! clinic opens tomorrow at three city diamonds. Classes will be held each Saturday from 9 a. m_ to noon through June 13 Clinics will be held at Washing- ton Junior High and Wilson Schoals and Columbia — Joslyn diamond. All boys 814-years of age inter- ested in playing baseball should of the fields Only equipment needed ts a base- ball glove and tennis shoes Shrine, Lakers Tie Golfers from Shrine and Walied Lake High Schools played a 5 man, 18hole match Thursday at Edgewood Golf Club and finished in a tie at 44 strokes after 18 holes Shrine won a one-hole playoff by two strokes. Lloyd Syron took medal honors with a 76, while Fred Howting had &5. Mike Ryan and Dick Hartle each shot 83s for the Vikings report to one ‘One Inch Too Long! | OXFORD, England (?—After | Re wack gust to be cure. The track measured one mile and | one inch. Conservation Commission Now Says They Never Thought of Ousting Osgood By JAMES A. 0. CROWE {who would .admit he had even GRAYLING \® — The state con-| considered action aguinst Osgood. servation commission ‘today did a “I am convinced nothing will complete about-face on its earlier) come of this,” said chairman threat to demote or fire deputy Lawrence 4. Gottschall of Bald- conservation director Wayland Os-| win. He added that reports good the danger ve Osgood had been No commissioner could be found _exaggerated. eh em _— Loss of Thomson, Williams, Parnell at Season’s Start Costing Braves, Bosox Much Valuable Ti By GRANTLAND RICE NEW YORK — Mr. Cornelius eminent chief of the tribe, once luck that figured in baseball came in the matter of serious jnjuries to one of the hired men. * “You can't offset the breaks that ballplayer, because they can rarely With this in mind the breaks that struck the Milwaukee Braves and Boston Red than disastrous. The Braves Thompson badly. Apparently, the Giants also have missed him. The Braves gave up John Antonelli, The loss of Ted Williams for the ist month of the American League pennant jonger before he is right, hurts the Red Sox. The loss of Mel Parnell was just as disastrous. When a team loses its best offensive players and \its lone defensive star in the box, the jolt is a heavy one. Both Milwaukee and Boston got away nicely last in the trade for Thomson and will get nothing in return until the season is about half "100 @20 992—5 11 9 | Spent. 4 year. entire 1953 season, left arm of Parnell who won 21 games McGillicuddy, stated the only a total of 39 wins. To have your staff lose men of that calibre is more than any team can handle. It was tough that the break had to fall across the shoulders of Torn Yawkey, as broad as they are. q . + * cost you a good be replaced.” Sox were more needed Bobby Tom Yawkey has paid out more money for pennant winners than any two owners in either league. From the figures given me he has reached in the big sack for some $5,000,000 and has come up with only one pennant. . . This includes cash for bonus babies as well as for such established stars as Lefty Grove and Jimmy Foxx. Last My. Boston and Milwaukee came bouncing and dancing into early form. This season both | ehtered the month of May around the bottom of the | a star pitcher, race, possibly their general‘ outlook was badly marred and the pennant outlook sadly blurred. Even with Williams missing practically the | the Red Sox rode along on the | Since last year the Red Sex have lost Parnell | and Maurice McDermott who contributed together | league. They were not hopelessly outdistanced but “T have always said we couldn't get a better man than Osgood,"’ said commissioner Jo- seph P. Rahilly of Newberry, named once as a leader in the anti-Osgood move It had been learned on good au- thority, however, that the commis- sion seriously discussed moving Os good out of his job at a private session Apri] 11. Some members reportedly were dissatisfied with his performance as ‘he commis- | sion’s legislative representative. | Legislators led the strong de- | fense of Osgood which developed | when his danger came into the open, «” * oe Reps Hugo A, Nelson (R-Indian River) and Walter G. Nakkula (R- Gladwim) appeared personally at the meeting to present a petition and personal letters from the sen- ate conservation committee and the house fish committee. The petition said the signers ‘have worked closely with him (Osgood) and definitely opposed any move that would deprive the people of the state of his services.” Nelson, chairman of the fish com- | mittee, told the commission that | in his 10 years in the legislature he has always found Osgood ‘‘very | diplomatic, able and cooperative }and never arbitrary or insolent.” ao Pag nag wi S STARS y The Associated Press BATHING’ Minnie Minoso Chicago White Sox. collected four singles. drove in four rums end scored the winning tally as Chicago beat Washi —Lew Burdette, avers scattered five hits lst shutout this ouules pitcher, 3-@ over Pittsburgh 4 -—_——————__— A six-pound northern pike with a embedded pig's copper snout ring in its lower jaw was speared fisherman Albert Lenius of ham, Minn, LIVE « PLAY « TRAVEL The 4 LOl-38 4 2 Way Here are quality-built trailer coaches that give you you want lor mobile living or trav- el. Choose from many combina- tions of living rooms, bedrooms and dinettes. Comp with tubs and showers. Fully equipped —ready to live in. Four tandem sizes — 29’, 32’, 35’, 38’. lete hath See them et GENESEE SALES 2110 Dixie Hwy. ed ‘t menircan Aussies Will Keep. Olympics had fresh assurance today that they are in no danger of losing the Australia’s 1956 Olympic Games. 7 * - Otto Mayer, chancellor of the In- ternationg] Olympic Committee declared yesterday it was ‘‘abso- lutely out of the question” that the the committee would transfer games from Melbourne. With the IOC due to open a meeting in Athens next Monday, new talk arose this week over the possibility of changing the Olym- pic site—a point that has been kicked around almost from the time the award was made to Australia. * The newest pressures stemmed from the break in Australian- Russian diplomatic relations over the now famous Petrov case and the speculation that the Iron Cur- Roseville Pitching Staff Is. Scourge of Oakland B COUNTY BASEBALL Clarkston 8, Brighton 1 Milford 12. Northville 11 Clarenceville 5, Holly 4 Madison 5, Avondale 2 Clawson §, Troy 2 Roseville 8, Fitzgerald 0 Mayville 7, Ortonville 4 Ca Imlay City 1%, Millington @ With the kind of pitching it ha been receiving, Roseville will be mighty tough to beat for champion- ship baseball honors in the Oak- land B Conference. Wildcats got their 3rd ‘straight shutout, each by a different pitcher; Thursday as Fitzgerald bowed, 8-0. Hemele struck out 14 and lim- ited Fitzgerald to one hit. Cilaw- son remained in a tie for Ist, however, by beating Troy, 5-2, on | a 3-run rally in the 4th after Troy had taken a 2-1 lead. | Madison downed Avondale, 6-2, | in another Oak-B contest. * * « Clarenceville had a slim lead in the Wayne-Oakland after beating Holly, 5-4, while Clarkston was downing Brighton, 81. Al War- man hurled a 2-hitter, fanning 14 for Clarkston. Lanny Leak starred at the plate with a triple and single. J . > Milford out-scored Northville 12-11. In the South Central, May- | ville stopped Ortonville, 7-4, and | Imlay City blanked Millington, 7-0. | las Steve Parnicky twirled a 4hit- Regularly $093.85 Paes PLAY SCHOOL PEC BLOX . Regularity $2.48 . HUNTING PANTS Begelariy $4.74 FISHING PLUS Regularly $1.16 COURTLAND 333 LINE Regulariy $*.80 CRIMES BOWS Regularty $14.8 PURE NYLON SOCKS Regularly $§¢.60 MODEL 12 WINCHESTER SHOTGUN Coenen tence eee eeeeeees eRe COCO USOSSOOS COCO OOO CES) Fiat Fish, Seeth Bend, Heddon. Reg. $1.35........ Poeee eee UCSOCECOrerr errr rye Peer ee eeeserereseeseseerees eee Pe eee ee EP er TT ee ee re) . fi STOCK REDUCTION SALE Everything Goes but the Shelves! $72.35 vow 91.98 now $4.50 now 98c ccc ceuecevenceneeeeeees Now 83c ue 91.96 wow 925.12 now 98c Sportsman's Paradise at Middleton’s Dairy in Leke Orion 20 Front St., Lake Orien—Across from Bowling Alley lter, striking out 15. It was Par- nicky'’s Sth win against one setback. Bill DeWitt Says | He ‘Found’ Turley NEW YORK «—Around | majors: | Bill De Witt, who used to own the St. Louis Browns, takes ‘‘credit”’ | for discovering Bob Turley, the current sensation of the American League pitching corps. . | One of our scouts recommended | | him in 1948," relates De Witt. “He | | was only a second-string pitcher for East St.Louis (Ill.) High and I | wasn't much interested. But after | I had seen him work, I quickly } handed him a contract and $500 | for signing.” ; } That's right, $500. Even Manager Casey Stengel! of | the New York Yankees is im- pressed the SAVE WASTE PAPER! We Are Now Paying NEWS PAPER... ."'" 20¢ Scrap lron—Junk Cers—Structural Steel ‘pHOON STEEL C0. FE 4-9582 135 Branch St. Across from American Forging & Socket “He makes even a manager * shudders the professor | League Leaders | | AMERICAN LEAGUE | BATTING—Tuttle, Detroit, 404: Good man, Boston. 370. Jensen, Boston, 344 Groth. Chicago and Avila. Cleveland. 351 | _ RUNS—Minoso, Chicago. 18. Avila. Cleve land. 15: Carrasquel. Chicago. 14. Fox, Chi- | | cage and Rizzuto. New York. 13 UNS BATTED IN—Mineso. Chicago. 7! Fam. Chicage and Rosen. Cleveland. 17: Sehete ae Cleveland and Sievers. Washing- ton. 1 | NITS—GOroth. Chicago. 27: Fos. Chicago and Avila. Cleveland, 2%. Carrasquel and Pain. Chicago. 25 DOUBLES—Groth. Chicago. 7: Kuenn Detroit. McDouga:d and Rizzuto. New York and Busby and Sievers. Washington. 5 TRIPLES—Mimoso. Chicago, 3. Doby and Hegan. Cleveland. Skowron and Collins. | New York Renas. Philadelphia and Busby | and Vernon. Waxhington. 2 HOME RUNS—Jensen. Boston. Minoso . Westlake. Cleveland and Vernon vers. Washington. 4 and Piersall REWEAVING FE 53-6885 Order Your SPRING Clothes Now! SHIRTS H. Vv. HARCOURT & SON Your Personal Tailors $3, W. Hures | Michaels. Chicago. Kaline, Detroit. gaid. New York and Busby. Washington. 2 | _ PITCH —Lemon. Cleveland. Gromek Detroit, t. New York and Trice. Phila- delphia . 1000: five pitchers tied with | 2-0. 1000 STRIKEOUTS — Turtey. Baltimore. 37: Pierce. Chicago. 36. Trucks. Chicago. 23 Garcia. Cleveland. 20° Gromek. Detroit, 4 } NATIONAL LEAGUE | BATTING—Jaeckson. ama 20 391; Mu- | Stal. St. Louis. 386: Snider. Brooklyn, 384 i. St Louis, 381 from engines. Pontiac 84 South Perry St. PLYON OX WITH MOLLY Is unconditionally guaranteed to prevent corrosign — completely dissolves and re- moves acid, gum, varnish and sludge Available at All Service Stations and Car Dealers Distributed by Pontiac Motor Parts Piston Service Co. 102 South Seginew St. Moon and S—Sauer. Chicago, 23 li, Cincinnati and |" RUN Musial. & Louls 2: Schoendienst. St Louis, 19 RUNS BATIED IN—Bell, Cincinnati. 22: | Musial and Jablonski. St. Louis. 21; Sauer. | Chicago, 20; Alston, St. Louis. 19 HITS—Jabionski. St. Louis. 32: Gilliam | and Snider, Brooklyn and Tempie. Cincin- | nati 28, Mueller, New York. Thomas, | Pittsburgh and Musial, St. Louis. 27 | DOUBLES—Snider. Brooklyn and Green- grass, Cincinnati. 9: Musial, St Louis. 8; | Adcock, Milwaukee, 7; Mueller. New York Thomas, Pittsburgh and Alston and Repul- | ski, St Louis, 6 TRIPLES— Temple. Cincinnati Mays and! Mueller. New York. Lopata. Philadelphia. Roberts. Pittsburgh and Moon and Schoen- | dienst, st Louis HOME RUNS—Sauer, Chicago. 9: Musial | St. Louis. 8; Hodges. Brooklyn. Jackson. Chicago and Klurzewski. Cincinnati. 6 STOLEN BASES—Brvton, Milwaukee. 4: | Robinson. Brooklyn, Fondy. Chicago. Tem- | ple. Cinctnnat: and Jablonski, St Louis. 3 | PITCHING—Meyer and Podres. Brook-| | lym, Minner, Chica, Nuxhall, Cinctnnat! and Presko an‘ aschi. St. Louis. 24 - STRIKEOUTS — Spahn. Milwaukee and Haddix. Si. Louis, 31. Roberts. Philade! | phia. 27: Maglie, New York. 24, Rush | Chicago, 2 ectly prepared... Take Her Out to Treat her with an evening to remember, brin her out to the Brooklands for dinner! be thrilled.with our menu of luscious foods, and superbly served in ront of our big open hearth Fireplace. The congenial atmosphere at Brooklands will com- plete her evening of enjoyment. Shel HOURS: Weekdays 12 to 9 Sundays 12 to 10 OPENING for the season on 2 | MOTHER’S Sunday, May 9th DAY 755 MICHELSON (OT Rochester R4. betw. 1 & M1) Golf WE EXTEND A WELCOME TO * Club Dinners and Luncheons * Special Parties * Weddings and Anniversaries @ Business Men's Luncheons ROOKLANDS @ Complete Dinners and County Club e Semi-Private * For Reservations PHONE OL 1-5522 tain countries might join with the Let’s-Skip-Australia forces in vot- ing to move the games. However, Mayer’s strong state- ment on his departure for the Grecian city added new strength to Melbourne's position. Previously Avery Brundage, president of the IOC, had said that | it would be impossible to shift sites at this late date because Mel- | bourne already has made large | strides in their preparations. * s | There is a strong movement to | try to take the games from Aus- | tralia because of that country's | stand on the equestrian issue and | because many of the nations dis- | like the thought of the cost and | trouble in transporting teams | Down Under in what is winter sea- son for most of them. * - . | The seasons in Australia are up- | side down too, with their summer | coinciding with winter in most countries. | Heading the anti-Melbourne, move are Armand Massard of | France, vice president of the IOC, | and Baron de Tremoit of Belgium, | president of the International Equestrian Federation. Melbourne organizers warn that any move to shift the games would | bring a fracture in the Olympic | setup. | THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1955 freestyle AAU THIRTY-ONE ‘ ee Michigan's biggest horse race—| Dale Thomas, Michigan State| Dave Philley of the Cleveland| Craig Wood played it 21 golf the $50,000 added Michigan Mile— | physicai eaucauon instructor, holds | Indians went to bat 26 times be-| tournaments in 11 and won only will be held at the Detroit race| the 19l-pound Greco-Roman and/| fore he got his first hit this sea-| two. But they were big course on July 10. championships. son—a single. Masters and ones—the the U, S. Open,” GALLO WINES | NOW COME TO PONTIAC! GALLO leads all wines in California—the state where fine grapes are grown, fine wine is known! It topped the COMBINED SALES of the next three leading brands! | GALLO is also first in sales in New York, Ohio, New Jersey and Louisiana the next four top wine consuming states in America! Ask Your Dealer for It Today! 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Goodrich Tires, Tubes and Batteries . +. the extreme « Nationally Advertised Accessories pressure oil « Complete Battery Service for today's higher + Car Washing and Polishing compression engines. :; Ask us obout it. o ignition Service e Cerburetor Service e Read Service Producers of petroleym since 1887 _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 __ Temple's Hump-Back’ Hits Spark Redlegs Saginaw Favored in SVC Test ‘sain Drives Courtney Doesn't Miss ‘Sparring Partner’ Martin By BEN OLAN to his batting average. He current-_, NEW YORK w—Clint Courtney, | ly leads the Orioles with a 306 © Baltimore's scrappy catcher, said | mark. today he doesn’t miss his former sparring partner, Billy Martin, but ‘he predicted the New York - + > . “I’m not swinging for the fences anymore,” he explained. ‘I’m just trying to meet the ball and it's Yankees ‘‘sure in heck will.”’ ” seconds es ~ . aig “ be pai courtney, who : : " may ’ By BILL MARTIN horne, Pierce, Russ McLean, Marv-! of four events in Ed Ringgold,| been clocked at 20 flat ‘Winnin Run as Why d 1 miss el has a two-season average in the Saginaw High — winner of 14| Wilinski, should be a strong con-| Willie Wilson and John James. in the lows; quarter-miler Bill Courtney asked. After all I'm American League of .269, will turn Saginaw Valley Conference track| tender to Northern's fleet quar-| Ringgold, one of the Valley's most) Stoner; half-miler Don Saenzer; saving money. Those fights we had cut te be on peeiific & hitter with championships in 22 years — ap- ¢ét. versatile performers, rates with pole vaulter Tom Lampel and cost me a nice few hundred bucks iat ae ee in Wills Mie fal, pears again ready to reclaim the Maturen is given a good chance | Wilson as a strong threat in the shet-putter Tom Anderson. e@am ats be fines. Now that Bilty is in ed | title it relinquished last year to! to crack the 12-foot record in the|!ow hurdles and is favored in Bay City’s Paul Budnik is al- Army, | it's like money in the) cross-town rival Arthur Hill. | pole wault set by Bob Dust of | the high jump and broad jump m« t a tain winner in the bank. * * *« . . ing | Arthur Hill in 1951. Hall likewise James should repeat his 1953 vic- | Ms ae Cincinnati Ni ves... - — — = a |is capable of lowering the high) tory in the half mile mile. He has turned in a 4-min- ne Mo bid Courtney and Martin ‘first came | Sportsman's Class a ee ropa parr pis | hurdles mark of 14.9 seconds and) Other PHS entries expected to ute 46-second clocking this year— Into Second Place With . leo . a i se dday 1 . Modified Stock = , alls = atuahio | colle . are Norris Jacl ~ the hea , . Val. a ine and a three-day sus- 23rd annual conference meet as should add valuable points in the a psonctt hdc paps ey far the best time in the Val 12-8 Record sendin Sar the keapactacten bath: | lows , Glas ’ e | . slim favorite over defending | 7 mile, and George Thrasher in the +. —_— a a _ stop. Then in April 1953 this pair | state champion Flint Northern, Flint Northern's hopes were pole vault Flint Central's, strongerst events By BEN PHLEGAR . touched off a free-for-all in St. | Saginaw has been designated | dimmed when coach Bill Cave . are the dashes (Herb Windom and Associated Press Sports Writer | Louis after Courtney had spiked | ~ test | temporarily suspended hurdier Arthur Hill's top men are Barry Saltman) and broad jump Tobacco chewing Johnny Temple, | Yankee shortstop Phil Rizzuto. Every Sunday host school although the : Lloyd Miller for missing last Sat. | hurdler Seba Slachta, who has | (Charies Thrash). who aims for first base instead of| Mint was $230 poorer after that : run thur Hill's field. | a : ot gellar Ban Time Trials ... 1:30 urday’s Central Michigan Re- ——— the fences, is proving the spark- | one breed to a ee lays. Vikings will feel Miller's plug of the Cincinnati Redlegs’| At the time, I guess, those |PY Baces Start 3:00 When it was apparent that im- loss keenly in both hurdies and ; fight for first division | fights looked like a lot, but I think 9 EVENTS provement work on Wisner Fieid| ‘¢ half-mile relay. Barrier Down Sandwiched inte a lipeup which | We both forget about them after a would not be completed in time, Northern's best chances for in- , breathes power at almost every | While,”’ Courtney continued “In | :| the affair was returned to Saginaw. | dividual 1st places rest with Art Experts See Wholesale position, this 24-year-old North | fact, the last time I saw him, Billy } May Sth Only ; Field events and preliminaries in| Johnson, in the dashes and broad Carvlinian has parlayed his hump- | said ‘hello’ to me and I greeted | Parachute Jump the running races start at noon,| jump; Jim Logan, in the quar- ° back liners over the infield into a | him—so I don't think there's my according to director Herb ‘Kort. | ter; and Gene Taylor, in the shot. Assault on Mile Mark 378 batting average, tops on the | more hard feelings either way. ADULTS CUILDREN Saginaw’s top rating is based Vikings should add anothér 1st in club. “I'll say one thing for Billy, : win Adult Rain Checks from May 2nd exchanged at Ticket Office | this feat was beyond human pow- | 7. * * | though. He gave the Yankees the | ers. Now the new theme song—in | Temple has been personally re-| spark they needed to win those | the wake of the bashful Britain's; sponsible for the winning run in| pennants and with men on base tremendous race yesterday at Ox-/| exactly 25 per cent of the Reds’ | there was nobody tougher. In the | By WILL GRIMSLEY NEW YORK (#—The barrier on i the le gendary four-minute mile is down, and track authorities | the medley relay and will fight it out with Saginaw for 880 relay | honors. Pontiac High and Arthur Hill are mainly on the abilities of four performers — sprinter Marvin Pierce, quarter-miler John Lang- horne, hurdler Tom Hall and pole- Wi a OOO OO aR Ok OO Og og vaulter Bob Maturen. rated strong contenders, but ap-| throughout the world predicted to- | ford—is: This is only the be- | victories this spring. | field he always came up with the | Langhorne, Pierce and Maturen| pear to lack over-all strength to| day a wholesale assault on Roger | ginning. | .- = * big stop in the clutch. Maybe the PONTIAC double in the broad jump and all| seriously threaten Saginaw and, Bannister’s 3.59.4 record. _— - 8 He drove in the deciding tally | reason the Yanks don’t a = 3 Miles West of Pentiac [pg Bd ern Stee Sperling Rey PoP ome rege een od ofa airpert “Free ‘raring ad ad mile relay team of Lang-! Chiets =. a - “ve aime = a “ oe =| | broke a said Dean Cromwell, | and moved into second place in the; With Martin in service, Courtney M-59 Speedway appears to be giving more thought | National League with a 12-8 rec- The Reds trail the first place | dean of American track coaches *“‘Wes Santee can do it any day ord UM Defends Lead Against under favorable circumstances. | Philadelphia Phillies by half a. - Sa = | What's to keep John Landy of Aus-, game Minnesota and lowa Nines tralia and Ingvar Eriksson of While Ted Kluszewski. Jim | Sweden from doing likewise?"’ Greengrass, Gus Bell & Co. aim CHICAGO \#—Michigan’s 1953, Corbett are among six confer-| Santee, the supremely confident, | for outer space, Temple, a gradu- | ence hurlers with two victories so | almost cocky young collegian who ate from the Texas League, is| ' Big Ten co-champions and NCAA . far and the Wolverine team bat-| holds the American record of | satisfied with his Texas League | ; — es Sy ee ting mark of .268 is exceeded only | 4:02.4, was not inclined to dis-| singles. Against the Giants he| ' | tect their conference baseball lead by Michigan State's .315 agree. | dumped one into right field in the | | OPEN | today and tomorrow against third-| Michigan State. in 2nd place} Landy, the loose-armed Aussie | eighth inning that scored pinch! w | place Minnesota and Iowa | with a 3-1 mark, will play a single | whose 4:02 ee” was ae | runner Ne Escalera from second . game at lowa today and a twin/| closest approach to Gu r| base for winning run | BO LING The Welverines, ecoking their bill at Minnesota tomorrow. Ron | Haegg’s world record of 4:01.4,| Cincinnati's rise to second came Ph. FE 4-6016 Every Dey th victory im seven league Erickson (2-0) and Ed Hobaugh | said in Helsinki, where he is/|as the Brooklyn Dodgers fell be- | | . 12 Neen te 12 ‘ starts, will be at Minnessta (4-3) (10) head the Spartans’ pitc hing | running fore the Chicago Cubs 87 in 11 in-| + BURKE RADIATOR Alleys Open Midnigh ; pa Pp teday and then move te lowa staff. Minnesota's top mound ir “I am sure many more will! nings and Milwaukee beat Pitts- SERVICE West Huron Recreation turday double ae : ecrea (33) for a Sa y * lis Paul Giel (2-6) and Ron Craven | a@hieve similar results. Personally | burgh 3-0. The Phillies were rained 1524 Beldwin 1596 W. Muree St ve 5-2288 header. (2-0) also led the Big | 1 believe the American Wes Santee | out at St. Louis Gophers V2 Bleck N. of Walton ——- Michigan's Jack Ritter and Jack | Ten in team fielding with 972. | will be the next—but not I. Il am; In the American League the! =e | not in shape."’ Chicago White Sox stretched ceil . . | Haegg, the swift Swede, was/ lead to@ game and a half over De STOP BY | Free Diaper Service Is V l] Ci d proud that it had been he who pre-/troit and Cleveland by edging | BUMPING AND COLLISION ** "1 Incentive for Orioles auey Linder dicted the bushy-haired medic | Washington 54. The Indians won TED LINDSAY PAINT $ | would be the first to crack his own | their seventh game in eight east- jOB ern starts, we Lots of Bargains BALTIMORE w — A laundry | Champs, Marks over Philadelphia | and New York trounced Baltimore | great record which stood for nine West Pontiac Cooley Lake Collision This Week-End! |) came up Thursday with an incen-| Previous Saginaw Valley Confer: YD 90. Ki Den Wicks—Raiph Rappeb i 1 | . . : im, Aero-Crait tive to spur the weak-h itt ing ence track champions and current | Mal Whitfield. American double! Faulty fielding in left field—e iwanians to 4004 Ella. Lake S ve ye Aluminum Beats _ free es into 1933—Plint Central 1943 Flint North ote ee gee oe bral a? we Pat leo Hear Lindsay — — some runs- diaper service. 1933 Saginaw iestlarther Bai | world mile king who recently | two sea lped Chicago to its Mercury Motors The offer of a free month's serv- | 135 sesinew iset_seginac’ | turned his sights on the mile goal. | winning run. With Randy Jackson| Ted Lindsay, captain of the Na- | ice for the pitcher winning the most | !#2¢—Seeine~ 1947—Saginaw said Bannister’'s feat would only | on first in the 11th. Ernie Banks / tional Hockey League and Stanley Mastercraft Trailers games in May and any hitter bat-| 1##—Seemew Ite Saginaw make him more determined to/doubled to left. George Shuba | Cup champion Detroit Red Wings, ting in at roan 10 ae this month | ime—Seginew iest—Sesinew = = * 1s couldn't mary handle and Jack-| will appear at the West Pontiac = 2 é son scampered home , OPEN SUNDAY was made through Sports Editor ie Phe Central ied—arther Mill Praise for Bannister's great run | * * « prepreg es: fay 13 ALUM AC raft Rodger H. Pippen in his News- yard @ash—Koibe, Saginaw (1933)./C@Me from all quarters. Leslie| Hal Jeffcoat, an outfielder in| 7, Wings’ fiery left-winger will Post column. me 9.9 seconds | MacMitchell, former world’s in-| previous years, made his first ap- rd S | be accompanied by Detroit sports- (1966) caster Al Nagler, who broadcasts St oe a Pontiae door mile record holder, said he | Pearance as a pitcher and picked | wasn't surprised because of the up the victory in relief. Bill Skowron, rookie first base- Quarter-mile—Silk. Flint Central (1963). man for the Yankees, bats and| “Time $1.4 seconds change in running techniques. °* e« ¢ | the Wings’ games. $ Waterford Hardware throws right handed. But as q foot- | Maif-mile— Braden. Punt Northern (1828) o “2 " Early Wynn bested Arnold Perte-| A veteran of 10 years with the 5845 Dixie. OR 3-2526-3-8868 | ball star for Purdue he was a left- Mile—Krebshoeh. Pint Central (1838) f ; carrero in a pitching duel at Phil- | Wings, Lindsay has been the NHL's | footed kicker. skcens Gan Sree dees Meainns | Easy for Martinez _adelphia with Al Smith providing @-star: left” winger” for 5 of the |] Buyers of boats or motors } « SSS = (1852). Time 14.9 seconds | the deciding margin with th | Past 6 years. YOUNGSTOWN, O. (INS)—V rgin with an eigh will be given FREE dock “4 DAVISBURG GOLF co a ye ed G. N. a inning home run. “Vie Power mt Lindsay and Nagler will show nd 9 age URSE Migh jump—Bates Flint Central (1838). Martinez of Patterson. | sted ho: he fi lend comment on the film high- ang ramp use. Golf Equipment. Lunches and Beer Freight & feet 4 inches scored an easy 1@-round decision | &! elles iret Philadeiphia | CHOICE OF $1.50 for 18 Holes Sat. Sun. and Holidays wad, lump Jonnecn Punt Nortnern| Over Harold Jones of Detroit. at | Fun and matched Smith's circu | Nets of he 1004 Santey Cup pliy- THE HOUSE || Season Membership _. $25.00 Pole yault—Dust, Arthur Hill (1851).|the Youngstown arena last night. | Plast in the bottom of the eighth. offs, with a round table discussion |] en ond Wite . $35.00 Shot put—Sehiesswohi, Arthur mi} Martinez, who fights Chuck|Al Rosen and Wally Westlake | following. Bi ° PHONE HOLLY 6631 (1948). Distance 56 feet @% inches | Davey in Chicago May 26, was too drove in the other Cleveland | Their appearance iz sponsored ig Savings Located on Andersonville R4. Medley relay—Piint Northern (1963). ; tallies. ‘by the Stroh’s Brewery Co. | clever for Jones, who was floored in the 1st and 9th rounds. Half-mile relay—Filint Northern (1950) Time 1 minute 31.8 seconds. Buy Mother's Gift at Georges-Newports and Get an Orchid Free! . Sep ae ate oP Mi an nh iat of Tigers Arrive in Chicago to Start Crucial Series CHICAGO WW — Detroit Tigers, , Tigers should be about the most hoping they have left foul weather | well rested club in the American behind, arrived in Chicago for a | League. crucial three-game series against| Tomorrow Detroit hopes to see the league-leading White Sox. its Ist action since last Sunday. Old weather tee th Either Ned Garver or Steve Gro- five strikeouts at the Bengals on | ™PK were scheduled to pitch the series opener. A _ doubleheader their current road trip. Bad Saad “aig weather and wet grounds wiped ae dh will wind up the. Tigers out games with the Boston Red |"°2¢ 'P- Rox three days a row, Inciad. | 5° ia" Detroit has won three ing yesterday. ~ ng P. The Chicago series could be a With no game scheduled today, | crucial one for Detroit although it is still early in the season for long Sensational Purchase of $1499 Reversible Jackets TWO JACKETS IN ONE EVINRUDE 25 H. P. Outboard $5198 428% was 648, all-events 1674 and 277 single game score, Her all-events score included a 479 team score and 349 in the doubles. 3. Values to $35 a ro tin We G AI! ; , ° orecasting. ot’ ty Choi : a Football Queen Again Seat ie mae ied iw mes em All 5 _£ our oice bes Sd * CORONADO, Calif. w# — One place only 1's games behind + % | of this year’s spring brides was | ™anager Paul Richards’ pale 4 § | , | Sharon Townsend, pretty Coronado hose. By winning all three games, A i ~ | girl, who last year was picked as the Tigers could move out in front t ->|a “football queen.”’ In that role |@8a/n. Sales & Service >| she posed for a publicity picture = os top rv oe 422 $.7, nd. va 2-9900 ; | with Bill Wade, former Vanderbilt | 2/ways 4 g morale er tor » Telegraps. Rd. ms j WEAR THEM for SPORT or DRESS ‘| star playing with the Pacific fleet | any team. . \# | amphibious base team here. As a * Values to 49.99 Yes! That's the correct price, only 8.88 for splash reversible bride she posed again with Wade.| WE’VE GOT IT! THE NEW Lehman % Your Choi jackets. This is possible only because we bought out a maonu- He was the bridegroom. 4 ur oice facturer’s complete stock of regular 12.99 and 14.99 values. ECO co a We can’t mention the name but you will recognize the fine Bowler Scores Sweep a s quality and workmanship when you see them. Come, save [% | NEW YORK #~— Marion Turash MARINE ee 4 on navy, grey and brown Splashes and Reversibles, Checks. | took first, place in four divisions S > ° C of the City Tournament of. the CONVERSION Ys ry Sizes 34 to 46. Even at these low prices you may say “charge NYCWBA. Her high net singles & ¥ KITS it.” 3 : Values to 69.95 Your Choice 538) ; 3 All Sizes 36 to 46 %, Men’s Splash Dress Pants. ++. 8.88 Men’‘s Nylon Shirts ..........1.99 Fruit of Loom Athletic Shirts... .49 EVERYTHING IN BOATS LAND ACCESSORIES HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS NON HABIT FORMING See BAIL-A-MATIC "HARRINGTON ON BOAT WORKS 1899 Telegraph. Ph. FE 2-60331 1899 Telegraph Ph, FE 2-8033 eo ee i Pe a pas eee aes eS eee es < ae PES . f + — we ** ae ad THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 St. Fred Nine Is Handed Third Straight Setback St. Fredericks baseball dropped its 3rd straight loss in Suburban |i, clinch its victory. Wagner was Catholic League play yesterday, | gi 4 ow By HERB ALTSCHULL WASHINGTON (®—House inves- tigators called today for more information on the Army activities Bannister Is Invited fo Coliseum Relays LOS ANGELES @—Roger Ban- nister, the world’s new king of the mile, has been invited to run in the Coliseum Relays here May 21. Sponsors announced today that Probes Seek More Dope on Sadler Cas champion “ ernment”’ about an application for a furlough. House Armed Services Subcom- mittee in public session (1 p.m. EST) were allegations of Army ‘coddling’ of Sugar Ray Robin- son, former middleweight champ, and Willie Mays, New York Giants | the outfielder. deputy director of Army person- “full responsibility for any case of so-called pampering of athletes.” Rep. Rivers (D-SC), a subcom- mittee member, who raised the The alleged double-cross was, surprise that the Army had grant- ed the 15-day extension on the say-so of Saddler and of Red Cross | aides who wrote the Army Sad- dier's wife was sick and that a brought out in testimony by Powell. The general said Saddler had signed up for a fight while on leave but that the fight was not ile Ss question of a ‘“‘double-cross” by! --neduled to come off until six doctor had testified to this. Also ticketed for scrutiny by a | Saddler, said he got the impres-| days after the leave had expired. * 8 6 sion that “if there was any cod- . * * dling of anyone, it was coddling on| Powell ‘testified that Saddler the part of the Army.” * 2 - Powell said that was right, and subcommittee lodged no charges of any kind against Sad- dier. The boxing champ was in- vited to testify himself if he felt he had been “aggrieved” by the Subcommittee aides brought out also that while Saddler was sta- tioned at Ft. Jay he took part in two other fights, in Akron, Ohio, and Boston. Ft. Jay officials said he was granted three-day passes at these times. It was established practice at that camp, these offi- cialg said, to grant each service- should not have been on leave at all, stating that the featherweight king had been given a 30-day fur- lough from his assignment as ath- letic specialist in Germany through “an administrative error." Subcommittee members, includ- Selection eof Fameus - Neme Spertewear, Bags and 7 . ~ Brig. Gen. Herbert P. Powell, 3162 W. HURON Accesseries. GOLF SUPPLIES the invitation had been tendered ing Chairman Hess (R-Ohio) and|man a three-day pass once a ‘through the Amateur Athietic| el, said the Army was taking | hearing Rep. Hebert (D-La), expresséd | month. i" Union by telephone. So far the | —_ — ————— sianaaianinss young Briton, who ras the mile | GENERAL SAF-T-MILER TIRES ED WI LLIAMS 451 South Saginaw St. Pontiac, Michigan yesterday in 3:59.4, hasn't an- swered. Bannister’s performance minkes | him automatic winner of the Mir- | cle Mile trophy, a big silver cup given by the Coliseum Relays to the first man to break the four- minute mile. Almont Thinclads Win Almont High School won the annual Southern Thumb League track championship Thursday at Memphis with 59 9/10 points. Ca- pac was 2nd with 4144. Memphis, defending champion, finished 5th. Ten records were broken during the meet. Gridder Switches Spot LARAMIE, Wyo. ‘# — Joe’ Mas- trogiovanni, 1953 sophomore tail- back for the University of Wyom- ing eleven, will switch to blocking back this fall. Mastrogiovanni is at Ye AS SEEN IN POST a 5-feet4 Brooklynite weighing 195. peneeren ete pammmy ONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER jeierats wy | an = nes | | 1952 FORD, Tudor, rat-rorvomaric *1095 1952 FORD, Tudor, R&H.. . °1195 1952 FORD, Fordor nen . 1045 1952 FORD, nen-overonve. . 51195 1950 FORD, Tudor,R&H . * 745 1950 MERCURY, Club Cpe. * 795 1395 * 195 | 1953 FORD, Tudor, R&A... 1950 FORD, Fordor,R&H .. 1950 HUDSON, 2-Dr..R&H. . 1949 FORD, Tudor, R&H. . * 4a5 1795 1953 FORD, Country Sedan Pick Yours Out Today at Cc Owens Used Car Corral: 1946 PONTIAC 4-Door S245 R&H —— 1951 FORD *645 Tudor R&H MRR 1950 CHEVROLET an *7AS R&H accent 1950 CHEVROLET trim for summer... During the dog days, a man’s next-best friend is very likely to be his DIXIE WEAVE* BENGALINE tropical. More than a mere summer-weight, Bengaline tropical worsted is ingeniously “ventilated” by as many as 14,600,000 tiny pores! And by reversing the twist in certain threads even more “‘breathing spaces” are created. Matching the light- weight fabric is specialized lightweight tailoring -by ya HART SCHAFFNER &MARX Wonderfully cooperative about shedding wrinkles, you'll find a Dixie Weave Bengaline as handsome to look at as it’s comfortable to wear. Come on in and try one on. *60 SAGINAW at LAWRENCE . ‘> (2372 W. ee WHITHE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC tts 1952 FORD, Country Sedan 1495 | | 22: $7 4 5 1950 MERCURY, Club Cpe. 795 | ——z 1950 Ford, Club Cpe.R &H * 795 1953 FORD, Tudor, R&H . *1395 1951 BUICK, 4-Dr., R&H .. . 5795 FORD Club Cp. $245 R&H 1949 NASH, 2-Dr........ . °395 1950 DESOTO, 4-Dr..R&H .. he 1950 PONTIAC, 2-Dr.,R&H.. ) USED CAR CORRAL Your Local Ford Dealer 147 South Saginaw THIRTY-FOUR | THE, PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 FROM ATHENS CAME SOLON “Truth is simple---requiring neither study nor art.” HAROLD TURNER FORD “For the Best in Wheels and Deals” Convertibles ‘47 Buick Convertible . . $244 “50 Ford Convertible . . $723 “51 Chevrolet Conv. ... . $799 ‘51 Buick Convertible . $999 ‘52 Ford Convertible . . $1,199 Trucks _ “51 Ford 2 Ton Panel . . $644 ‘52 Ford 2 Ton Pickup . $679 ‘41 Ford 1/2 Ton Pickup .$ 99 ‘49 Ford 12 Ton Pickup . $388 ‘50 Ford 3% Ton Express $499 45 Ford Ton Pickup . . $299 ‘S1 Ford 12 Ton Pickup . $544 Specials ! ‘47 Lincoln 2=Door .. . . $299 ‘48 Ford Club Coupe . . $288 ‘49 Kaiser 4-Door .... . $99 ‘48 Chrysler 4-Door . . . $299 ‘51 Henry J 2-Door... . $99 ‘40 Ford 2-Door...... $44 ‘41 Plymouth 4-Door . . . $44 ‘47 Chrysler 4-Door . . .$123 ‘48 Dodae 2-Door .. . . $299 ‘49 Buick 2-Door..... $199 ‘50 Ford C-8, 2-Door .. $199 ‘46 Chevrolet Coupe .. . $99 ‘47 Chevrolet Club Cpe . $199 ‘48 DeSoto 4-Door... . $399 A-1 Buys! ‘48 Austin 2-Door..... $284 ‘52 Buick Suo. Riviera $1,300 ‘53 Ford 4-Door .... $1,150 ‘52 Plymouth 2-Door .. . $738 ‘49 Cadillac 4-Door . . . $973 ‘52 Buick 4-Door.... $1,013 ‘51 Ford Victoria . .. . $782 ‘53 Mercury 4-Door.. . $1,550 ‘53 Ford Ranch Wagon $1,599 ‘50 Pontiae Chieftain Deluxe 2-Door .... $540 ‘50 Nash 2-Door.... . $299 ‘49 Ford C-8, 2-Door . . $299 ‘49 Ford C-8, 4-Door . . $299 ‘52 Ford Ranch Wagon $1,299 ‘51 Kaiser Traveler... . $444 ‘51 Plymouth All Metal Station Wacon..... $599 ‘53 Chevrolet Dix 4-Dr $1,199 ‘50 Studeaker 4-Door . . $399 ‘53 Plymouth 2-Door . . $1,099 TURN to TURNER for the Best in Deals and Wheels! Visit Our New Location HAROLD TURNER'S FORD WOODWARD Motor Sales 13 Mile Rd. and Woodward HAROLD TURNER =: Your Ford Dealer in PHONES: MI 4-7500 JO 4-6266 oL! 3-3357 LI 3-4436 Bh. eek SE o = for the British Open Championship From 160 yards out, I laid a 6 iron shot about 12 feet from ‘the | hole. For a moment, the section of the gallery around me believed | I had holed out. It was a magnificent failure, however, for I holed | the putt to finish a stroke behind Bobby Locke. | Yet I consider that 6 iron shot my greatest It gave me the golf- ing thrill of my life. The fact that it did serves as a perfect illustration of how hikhiy Walter Hagen is regarded after all these years. My shot was almest identical to one The Haig attempted, you see, and they still talk about his. ‘My position was the same as was Hagen’s years previously. At double eagle, politely asked that the pin be removed from the hole. | He missed canning the ball by inches. He most certainly is | confident, but it turned out that he scored a double bogie. As in my case, Hagen’s spirits must have flared for a second. that time, Hagen, in need of the * By PETER THOMSON I needed a double eagle on the par 5, 360-yard 18th hole to tie | | Final Action in Hands of Council of Deans; Zarza Disappointed DETROIT (#—Football ran into a stiff block at Wayne University yesterday when the university council voted overwhelmingly in of 1952. Vote Hits Wayne Footbal Tartar Council - Okehs Dropping favor of dropping the sport. season. another vote. ‘Parachute Jump Added Feature at Speedway | A special feature has been added to Sunday's racing program at the | Pontiac Speedway. | Between the qualifying trials and the start of the Ist race (about 3 p.m.), a parachute jump will be | made by Eugene Spring of Pon- Irish Set Cage Mark tiac The 2i-year-old Spring, who | i i years in the paratroops, is Ii- | censed by the Civil Aeronautics | last season with 22 victories in 25 | | Association, and is a veteran of | games. Notre Dame counts an 83-/| next April. He said he would keep 34 jumps. 61 victory over Holy Cross as the |on coaching this fall “if we have | He will leap from 3,000 feet, | adult. with the Ist race starting at 3 p.m. opposed a recommendation made NOTRE DAME, Ind. W—Coach | | tves “at 58 Virginia, spent 3 | Johnny Jordan's Notre Dame bas-| said, “but I had seen the hand- | free fall to 900 feet, then attempt to land in a 20-foot target in the center of the track. the matter. iby the university council | shaken by the decision ketball team set an Irish record | writing on the wall.” season's highlight. | enough players left to play.” | Get Ready for : SPRING with HIGH Style Clothing from Paul's Stag Shop Saginaw at Water 8t. Fn ae kt as Gridiron Sport The council, a group of elected faculty representatives, voted 22-10 for an indefinite suspension of in- tercollegiate football after next The question now goes to the university's council of deans for University president Clarence Hilberry said he hoped to have a final decision en the future of football by June 1. Hiltherry must make a recommendation to the Detroit Beard of Educa- tion, Wayne's governing body. The board has the final say on If the board also decides against continuation of the sport, Wayne | will join the ranks of five other | Rain checks from last Sunday's colleges who have quit football rained-out program, may be ex- Fasinee last fall. They are Adelphi changed at the ticket window. Chil-| Case Tech, St. Francis (Pa.), St. dren under 12 will be admitted | Michaels (Vt.) and Quincy (Il.). free when accompanied by an) Hilberry said there is still “‘hope’’ for the sport. However, he Time trials begin at 1:30 p.m. | aiso acknowledged he has never | + | Head grid coach Lou Zarza was | “I am terribly disappointed,”’ he Zarza’s $10,000 contract expires @ No foolin’... if you like to troll you want a motor that throttles down smoothly to just the right gait...and holds it hour after hour without stutter or fuss! So choose an Evinrude! Horse- power for horsepower, we've never seen anything like them for real trolling performance. There's a trolling Evinrude just your size! * LIGHTWIN 20. oooel HP, *% FLEETWIN. 4400.75 HP, AQUABONIC ® Super FASTWIN..15 HP, ® BIG TWIN... wo 06 25 H.P. Rea! horsepower! O. B.C. certified brake HP. at 4000 RPM. Call and see them. Time payments if you like, SALES & SERVICE KELLY’S Hardware 3994 Auburn Rd. at Adams | Auburn Heights FE 2-881! does everything the finest lubricating otl can do, THIS NEW OIL SAVES GAS! 4 = and cuts engine friction so much it can save up to 2 gallons of gasoline in a tankful! = dn <> ee 5 th Oe ee a © New Super PERMALuBE gives you the most complete lubrication and protection that money can buy. Now with an amazing new feature — multi-grade viscosity —it cuts engine drag and friction so much that in average stop-and-go driving you can actu- ally save up to 2 gallons of gas in a tankful. New Super PermaLuse not only saves gasoline but does everything the finest lubri- cating oil can do and gives you all these “advantages: @ Cuts oif consumption an aver- age of 36.8% @ Prevents valve-lifter rusting trouble ¢ Reduces combustion chamber de- deposits @ Greatly increases engine power. Hundreds of thousands of miles of test driving prove New Super Permatuse’s amazing results. Ready now for your Spring change-over. Costs only'a little more and it will actually pay for itself. GASOUNt / a . ‘ ° ( Md RC WOKn Slar} SAUTE. j j Cas today. GASOLINE ERO SE a a AT ah ED 0 PGR Tg DIR RNR St ae ee | + ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 - ed All Grains Dip | but Soybeans CHICAGO ® — Grains slumped in quite active dealings on the board of trade today. Losses were rung up in all pits but only- in old crop soybeans were they large. Some of the selling represented weekend evening-up transactions by local traders. There also ap- peared to be. some precautionary : selling prior to Secretary of State Dulles’ talk tonight and next Mon- day's Agriculture Department crop report. Wheat near the end of the first hour was 1% to 2% lower, May $2.50, corn % to % lower, May $1.53%, oats % to % lower, May 71%, rye % to 1 cent lower, May 92%, soybeans % to 4% lower, May $3.90 and lard 5 to 3% cents a hundred pounds lower, May $18.22. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO (AP) —Opening grain: Sept Wheat 97% May 201% € 1.024%, 2 ae coe 3 044% Soybeans Spt coos 2.98% May... 391 Dec re ae) eee 389 Cora Sept ..ccccce 3.78 May ..... 153‘. Nev . 251 ° July oo 283% Jam ....00.. 356 Oats Lar BBY .cccccce -13% May ...0-00- 18.25 July coe 68 July 3#.10 Sept se MU% Bogs ...c0.0% 16 22 Dee ersee -70% Oct 15.00 Rye Soybean Oi!) May A 92 May ..<- 3.95 SOY cicce coe 96% 13.87 Foreign Exchange NEW YORK AP) rates follow ‘Great others in cents Canadian dollar in New York market 1‘, per cent premium er U_ 8S. cents up 1/32 of a cent. Furope: Great Britain + 15 16 up 132 of a cent 20 day futures 281"’s. up 1/32 of a cent Foreign exchange Britain im dollars open 102.50 und) $281 reat Britain Great Britain 60 day futures 381 13°16.) up 3/32 of a cent. Great Britain 60 day +futures 281 31/32, unc hanged: Belgium (frame) 198 8/16. unchanged: France| ‘franc! .28% of a cent, unchanged; Ger- many (Western) (Deutsche mark! 23.85 unchanged; Holland ‘guilder: 26 42%,. off 00', of a cent: Italy ‘lira 16's of « cent unchanged; Portugal ‘escudo! 3 50 unchanged; Sweden ‘krona: 1934, un- chang Switzeriand§ (franc) = (free) | 22 %4\—. wnehanged; Denmark ‘krone: 1450. unchanged Latin America Argentina (free) 7 24 unchanged; Brazi] :free' 190 up 68 of a cent. Mexico 662, unchanged. Vene suela +bolivar! 36.63. unchanged Par East: Hong Kong Dollar 17.65, un changed . Livestock DETROMT LIVESTOCK DETRCIT (AP) —Hogs —Saiabie 100 Market generally steady on limited sup- ly, most sales mixed choice 180-220 ib rrows and gilts 2725, few sorted choice 1 and 2 lots $2750; other weights and eows absent . Cattie-Saiabie 200 Mostly steady: cows active Compared iast Thursday Market fairly active; good clearance slaughter steers and heifers steady to 75 cents lower. loss on choice and prime cows 580-75 cents higher, bulls steady stockers and feeders strong. sbout two leads prime 0685-1108 lb — $25.25- 25.5¢. bulk choice to low me fed are $22.50-25.00: about six s at including some 12300 Ib averages: yee commercial and geod fed steers $17 00- 22.00: good and choice fed steers $18 00- 21.50; .few prime heifers 622.00-22.75 high utility end commercial steers and ers $15.00-18.00; bulk utility and commercial cows late $13.00-14.50: young | commercial cows of heifer type to $17.00 eanners and cutters mostly $16 50-12 50 bulk utility and commercial bulls $13 50. 1600: most good and choice stockers and feeders $19 00-2200. few choice flesny feeders $22 50 Caives—Galabie 75 Market generaily | steady today. Compared last Thursday trading more active, good clearance vealers fully $1.60 higher; bulk choice vealers %23.00-26.00 few high choice and prime up to 67700 with few in- dividuals above $2700. commercial and good mainiy $16.00-22 00: cull and uttlity over TS jos. mostiy 6 00-146 00. Bheep—Salable 50 Teday's nominal Compared last Thursday siaughter lamb market. highly erratic under aggressive demand, mostly §1.50- 200 higher: sheep scarce, steady; bulk high eet to = shorn iambs No. 1 Tis $22 not many above 7 se ate pom mtg top $26.25 for nine head prime 87 ibs.; wooled lambs negligibdie: most cull to choice slaughter ewes $2 600; few head choice sround 100-110 ibs. | CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP'—Galabie, hogs 5.000 generally steady to 25 lower: decline on weights under 230 Ib: sows steady to 25 most choice 180-230 Ib $26.75-27 25 We $26.00-26.65 few up to 350-600 ib Sa 1,000 calves 100 slaughter steers and heifers nominally steady; small fresh receipts mainiy cows; cows around 25 lower than iste Thurs- Gay; bulls weak; vealers steady: few sales and choice steers mixed year- ‘}ings and hetfers $19.50-23.00; a few head choice steers sold up to $24.50; a load of high choice and low prime 1.275 ib steers late Thursday $27.00; util- ity and commercial cows $12 50-16.00; eanners and cutters $10.00-12.75: utility and commercial bulls | ae 16.00 fd to prime vealers $20.00-24.00; cul commercial grades Sie.es-i0.00 Balable sheep 500: two loads choice and prime mostly choice grades sround 103 I> fed shorn lambs with No 1 pelt« steady at $23.00. otherwise nothing of consequence to test the prices: cull to good slaughter ewes $4.50-5.50 Easton Seeks Ballot Spot LANSING (#—Allen E. Easton, of Grand Ledge, today filed petitions with the secretary of state seeking the Republican nomination for the State House of Representatives from the Clinton District. The planet Mercury makes a complete revolution of the sun in 88 days. STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Probate Court for the County of Oakland, Juvenile Division In the matter of the Liane. Annette, Teafoe, minors. Cause No ition concern- 13456. To Vernon and Sarah Teafoe, parents age CR AT | MARKETS | Produce e Emm PRODUCE UP)—-Wholesale prices on public term Seqmers markets reported by the reau of Markets: Pruits: Applies, Delicious, fancy 6.00 bu; No 1, 350-460 bu; & “areen- ings, No 1, 2.25-2.75 bu; a: Spy, fancy, 5.00 bu; Ne 1, 200-350 > bu: apples, Steele's Red, fancy, 5.00 bu; Ne 1, 2.60-3.00 bu. dor Sens les: Henge. J No . 1.75-2.00 1, 80-1.00 bu; wy on behs. « No ay 1.35-2 bu. Chives, No 1, 1.25- 50 dos behs. Leeks, No 1, 1.00-150 doz behs. Onions, dry, No 1, 60-65 50-Ib ; a. No 1, 60-70 dos bens; . No 1, 2.00-2.25 32-lb bag Parsley. p— hi No 1. 7 doz behs. Pars- nips, No 1. 100-150 % bu Potatoes, No 1, 90-100 50-Ib bag: potatoes, No 1, 175-200 100-lb bag. Radishes, red, hot. hothouse, No 1, 1.00-1.15 dos bens; rhw- barb, outdoor, Ne 1, 60-75 dos bchs. Greens: & No 1,.1.00-180 bu. Collard, No 1, 1.25-1.50 bu Sorrel, No 1, 1.25-1.50 bu. . petaoit | EGGS gy! tog (AP)}—The follewing prices Se were paid f.o.b. Detroit today first receivers for case lots — tuctaded? of Speenet state graded e Whites: grade A jumbo 46-48 w ented average price 46%, large 42-44 wid. av 43, medium 38-39 wid evg. 38's. = . 11%; grade B large 36-30 wtd. avg Browns: Grade A jumbo 45, large 40- 42 wtd. avg. 41. medium 37, small 30 — B large 36-38 wid. avg. 37; grade Paid By | BP | —— | CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO (AP)—Butter. steady: re- ceipts 1.445.262; wholesale buying prices anchanged: 93. score AA 56.75: 92 A 36.75 oe B $135: 60 C BS; care: Oo B 54.78: | Cc 83 Exgs weak: receipts 24.054; wholesale buying prices ‘, to 1 lower; U.S. large 4-35.5: US mediums 32.5, US. stand- 325: current receipts 31; dirties | checks 30 ards 305 CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO (AP)—Pogatoes: Arrivals 63 on track 185 total U8. shipments 1729: old stock supplies light: demand good; market firm to slightly stronger; Idano | Russets 365. Montana Russet Bakers 4.25: Minnesota-North Dakota Pontiacs | 190-200 washed light demand stronger; Alabama Florida Round Reds 385-410: Florida Round Reds (50 Ib sacks) 2.18-25; Cal- fornia Long Whites 4 30-50 —— Poultry PETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)—Prices paid per pound | f.o.b. Detroit for No. 1 quality poultry ; up to 10 am Heavy hens 24-28 light hens 20-21 heavy broilets or fryers 3-4 Ibs. whites | 23-25, Tey crotses 25-26% Barred | Rocks -37%: ot 4%e-5 Ib) aver- | age 31-34. capons 8-10 Ibs 37-38;_ small | type turkeys ‘includes Beltaville whites) | hens and toms 37 | CHICAGO POULTRY | CHICAGO ‘AP:—Live poultry barety | steady. receipts 254 coops rices unchanged. heavy light hens 16-18: fryers or er Nog 3: | 24; old roosters 15-16 | fob paywee | Cele hens STOCK AVERAGES ‘Compiled by The —, lage 60 15 Indust. Ratts wrt Storrr} Net 7 3 Noon change today Previous Week ago | Month O06. ccc! | Year } tose eeeree seeeee sS3aszes3s eeeuwe ew SSLSSSSss : ver eonrnweain | DETROIT } STOCKS ‘Hornblower & Weeks) Pigures after decimal mae are eighths | Lew Noon | Baldwin Rubber* 115 122 D & C Navigation* 124 126) Gerity-Méichigan* = 23 25 | Kingston Products*.. 264 I | Masco Gcrew* etd 27 3 Midwest Abrasive*..... 61 67 Rudy Mig cog 6 4 4 Wayne Screw* 14 15 *No sale, bid ard asked Common Contes Get 10 Per Cent Rate Hike | LANSING w—A 10 per cent rate | increase for common motor car- | riers in the Lower Peninsula was market | | approved today by the state Public ot an —— Commission. The increase will apply except }on commodities with a volume | minimum weight of 49,000 pounds. It will become effective May 15. Some 1,500 carriers will be af- fected. Market Moves Upward Again NEW YORK ® —., News in Brief A defective clock-radio is listed by Pontiac Firemen as the cause of a $200 house fire at the home of William Cashin of 110 Chippewa | Ave. yesterday. Bad wiring ignit- stock | ed a bed, firemen said, market continued its pa of al- ‘ most unbroken adWances today. The rise inthe early afternoon again took the list on average into new high ground for the year ee Nee eee Oe ee and trated in any ass Se oh area: Milton Skafica, 33, of 17520 Gable St., Detroit, pleaded innocent to a drunk driving charge Thursday before Pontiac Judge Cecil Mc- Callum and furnished a $100 bond. | Satie. who is ordered to return a May 13, was involved be olen aks cual aa Trading expanded as pricesj|into the Pontiac Tank Co. at 389 moved higher and hit a pace bet-!| -|S. Sanford early teday, Pontiac ter than two million shares for| Police said. Thieves failed to pry the day. That compares with 1,-| open the service door. 990,000 shares traded yesterday. Chrysler created a diversion. The stock closed last night at 59%. | Richard Cooper of 167 8. Mar- |shall St. told Pontiac Police yes- and then the directors declared terday that his maroon Fleetwing the usual dividend of $1.50 and) bicycle valued at $25, was taken reported sharply lower first quar-| last night from the Boys Club of used car, Is he Check the pod ck) But check the dealer, too! Int Nick... ter earnings. Pontiac yard at 530 E. Pike St. New York Stocks A boy's bicycle, which had been | en nesday, was recove Pigures after decimai ints are eighth stol Wednead y red op us a et veo . gen yesterday by Pontiac Patrolmen ams Exp t 4) , reens ae Aamives 18.6 Int Tel « Ter 166; Marvin Blum and William Bailey, a Rees : ie eas tase a a; and returned to the owner, Joseph elsey Hay .. oS ’ Allied Ch £84 Kennecott..... 79¢| Courier of 308 S. East Bivd. Allied 7 o. Kimb Clk . 8 : Allis Cha Kresge 68 ... 316 Fish supper. Perki - Alum Ltd‘ £67 Kroger ...::. 45.2 ae » & i —~ oe Alum Co Am 124 LOF Glass ... 495) Gay, 5:00 p. m. until. $1.00. Malta Am Airlin 115 Lib MeN & L 9 | Temple. —Adv. | Am Can 422 Ligg & Mey .. 652 }Am C & Fdy 345 Leckh Aire 334 Am Cyan 455 Loew's 46 re Gas & Ei 74 toes S Cem. a Loco 46 ack Trucks 12 m 7 Ma Pay 263 Marsh Pield 28.1 or Ph. MA 5-4031, Guy Carter Am N Ga 474 artin Ol Pot | lam Kod 18 May D Str 20.4 Rummage sale, Mich. Animal |}Am Seating 263 et eee or ae Am Smelt 33.6 Mi ont Pet aon Tel & Tei 1685 Mid! st! Pa 306 & E. Lawrence Sts, Pri. & Sat., Am Tob 41.7 Monsan Ch 906 10 a m. to 5 p. m. —Adv Anac Cop 6.2 — Bi ; eet A Wac 56.1 Mo ee remote « Ps Moterola .... 42) Rummage sale at the Orchard Atchison 103.4 Mueller Br ... 23.8 Lake Community Church May Atl Cat Lime 1114 ee es ee nh. 7:00 p. m. to 9:00 p. m. May toting ae 417 Net Cash R.. 784 | 8th, 9:00 a. m. to 12:00 p.m. Adv. jAvec Mfg 47 Nat Deiry ob) | Bald Lima at — ae Fish supper, 82 Perkins, Satur- Balt & Ohio g Net Stl ..... Sendis’ Av 7 Nat Thee | | day, 5:00 p. m. until. $1.00. Malta Benguet 7 NY Central a6 | Temple. — Adv Beth a! © Nort tm West ate a = Ne Am Av 21 Chicken and biscuit supper.) Bond Sire 126 Mor Pac ss | Community Club“House, 3575 oo Borden eo4 Nor sta em oS5 Win Rd, Saturday, May. 8th, Borg Warn . 84 Onie Oil sa2 |p. m. $1.00 per persdn. Pcl Briggs Mf 334 Sacherd 34 h iville ‘MOMS’. Adv Grist My - 938 Sooamw Air 114 by the Gingellvil : Brun Balke 14 Param Pict w4 — ro #4 Parke Lav 324! Rummage sale Sat. May 8, 8-12 Calum & H at ager 4 (Je) . #14) at League of Catholic Women, 281 Campb Wy 214 pepsi Cols is¢ | 8S. Parke. 3-piece living room suite | Can Dry 14.1 Phelps 38 | included. —Adv. Cdn Pac a Philco M Capital Airl Case (J 1) 44 boop.” bal & e sale. Areme 503 O. E. a a 502 Pit Piate Gi .. 55 8S. 22 State. Sat. May 8,9 a. m. 17.4 Proct Gam 76.7 non ry Oh 36.3 Pullman sa — Chrysler 613 Pure Oi! 612 . Cities Sve 193.2 RKO Pic 61 er amin $ Climax Mo 474 Radio Cp 283 | Ctuete Pea 336 Rem Rand it] Coca Cola 119.4 Reo Motors 264 | Colg Patm 42.4 Repub Sti 556 Cor Gar Tél Reyn Met TT” Fp op |Con Edw rr Rey Tod B »” t Con G 3 St Jos Lead... 38 a . Consul Pw 43.3 Seovill Mf 23¢' DETROIT ‘#—Chrysler’s sharp- 5 oa Gin _— ‘ Sedrs “hee. o38 ly reduced share of the auto in- | Cont Mot s6 po eallicong ee dustry’s overall operations is re- 2 m 7 . . temtey . Sinclair Oil.” 43 44 flected in the corporation's quar- Crue 8ti 242 . terly re Curtiss Wr 92 — Pg HH ail port -Det €cis oe ieaeke w 7 The statement issued following a Doug Aire 1816 aooery 87.8 | direct ’ t in New York Chem 26 § ola. teana. 33 rectors meeting in New or’ | Pont 1274 gta O11 Calif.. 63 | yesterday showed net income for Bagie Pich 194 gta Oil Ind... 61.2 , East Air L 232 sta Ot NJ ais the first quarter of 1954 slid to} Eastm Kod... $15 gia Oil Ohio | 393 $7,681,053 from $24,428,740, the | bs debak “6 4 Ei & Mus'In.. 21 guth Pep 397 Same three months last year. Emer Rad 10 Swift & Co 452 j Gnd Joba 287 Gyiv Bi Pa... 353 It also showed that total sales |§ - : 72 . ; : oh ets na ace a el 3. Of all Chrysler prodicts for this vwestene —o 46 Thomp re 616 year's January-March period! ep Sul 62 imk R ° 41 e Re e418 Gea Bec. ..1167 Tran W AIT 14.8 dropped to $539,478,715 from $924.- | Gen Feds 637 Transamer 14 947 947 ars o Gen wile’. 643 Teent C Pos.. 103, 22-247 in the comparable 1953 Gen Mot . 124 Underwood 28.2 period Gen Shoe 465 Un Carbide 7383 , Gen Tei 50.4 = Pac : op This year's first quarter net was t - i Otllette |. ‘ et one Air tim GF § equal to &8 cents a year compared Goodyesr .. 656 United Cp .... #¢ to $2.81 in the first quarter of last Oren Paige. 12 On Gas 1 42} year Gt No Ry pl. 86 Og ine ist , S.... 193.0 8 Rud. 33.5; Despite the earnings drop, Chrys- Gulf ou * 584 se Boa pt <8 | ler directors declared a regular Homestk - 4 West Un Tei.. 37.:1/$1.50 dividend on the common Hooker El - © wWestg A Brk 6 a Cent - 934 Wwestg El 717| Stock. It was the llth consecutive niand St! - 446 White Mot 33 CO j r ineptr Cop’... 38.3 Ge nverth 32, | Similar dividend by Chrysler. The sntevm "Be .... 348 Yole & Tow. _ 46.3 | board also reelected all corpora- TV neces Hest Bh A 4 | " 397 Zenith Rad... 664) tion officers. — a you're dealing man who has a here tomorrow! Does he ‘sure! And, our mechanics have the equipment and “know- how” to q Are interested in you? hope to sell you a new car, to play square with you. service business, work with cars day in and day out: how to spot trouble fast. service job. Remember—we Ford Dealers want to keep your good will because someday we used car, and we want your service busi- ness. It’s just plain good business for us When you go to a Ford Dealer's and see the A-1 label on a car, you know it has met with the dealer's ‘ A-1 standards, And because you can trust the man : you bought it from, you can trust the car. our Ford Dealer CY OWENS 147 South Saginaw St. he in business “‘to stay? When you buy a used car from a Ford Dealer, with an established blsiness- large investment and his good name at stake. We're here today, and we'll be redlly know cars? lers are in the too; We know expert Ford handle any his prices really fair? Ford Dealers handle used ears and trucks as a service to customers. We get a lot of trade-ins. We keep them moving to free our working capital. That’s why we offer used cars and trucks at rock-bottom prices. or another . y Usep “CARS standards? « et . game Phone FE 5-4101 rm! Busivess Notes: Non-Industrial Jobs Open Up MESC Lists Services Most to Be Demanded Next Two Months Job openings for domestic and service workers held steady in the Pontiac area during the 30-day pe- riod preceding April 15, accord- ing to Luther C. Olson, branch | manager of the Michigan Employ- ment Security Commission office. An increase was noted in the demand for clerical workers and sales personnel and the indications | for the next two months are that | non-manufacturing activities will | provide the major share of new jobs. Manufacturing plants will be seeking only highly skilled men, Olsen said, following the April trend of demand mainly for skilled metal trades journeymen. during the period was partly off- set by a rise of 400 if non-indus- | Retail ment declined by 300. trade and construction | | but =the mid-April employment of | 78,100 is 800 below April 1953. This dipped below the | month of last year Current manufacturing em- ployment ix 1,500 less than a year ago, but non-industrial empley- ment is up by 700. comparable | A small decrease in job possi- bilities to mid-June is anticipated | | with manufacturing plants indicat- jing a drop of 800 due to near A drop of 706 in manufacturing | trial work while non-farm —, | completion of government contract work Moderate increases are enticl- pated in outdoor types of work, Olson said. Mid-April unemployment of 4,- +200. is unehanged. from. the pre- vious month but is 2,600 more than a year ago. With only 800 less employed than a year ago, Olson said, the increase in the number of jobless is attributable to a larger labor force. The Pontiac branch office is- sued 4,579 unemployment insur- ance checks during April worth $200,967 compared with 4,679 valued at $197,883 in March and 4,388 checks worth $186,488 in Febru- ary. Edward L. Cushman has been named director of industrial re- lations of American Motors Corp. Detroit. He is director of the Institute of Industrial Relations and professor of public admin- istration at Wayne University. Donald &. Burnham, former manufacturing manager and as- sistant chief engineer of General Motors’ Oldsmobile Division in Lansing, will join Westinghouse Electric Corp. May 17 as vice president in charge of manufac- turing. He succeeds T. I. Phil- lips, who is retiring after 39 years of service. General Motors Acceptance Corp. If your friend’s in jail and needs | each added 200 workers in a sea-| of New York purchased a dollar bail, Ph. PE 5-5201. C. A. Mitchell, | sonal gain, Olson's report shows. | volume of receivables in the first quarter of 1954 equal to $1,586,575,- 000, slightly more than the $1,577,- Rescue League. Corner of N. Perry | is the first time employ ment has | 935 000 volume in the first quarter | of last year, John J. Schumann Jr., president, announced today. Receivables outstanding at March | 31, 1954, increased 38 per cent to $2.58 | March 31, 1953. Net income after taxes for the first quarter of 1954 was $9.994.977, compared with $6,046,788 in the first quarter of last year. 4a W. Huren St, FLEECED?? | oo __ DON’T PAY ADVANCE Fre Se cath ‘peut testpans de-teale’ estate: Sie’ weathdihdids ita this ealteth WARD E. PARTRIDGE | e 381,241,000 from $1,868 453,000 on | REFRIGERATORS ‘S aw WASHERS COMPLETE tage Fh OF PARTS FOR ALL MAKES ALL MAKES OF Electric Motors Repaired 51 N. PARKE Phone FEderal 4-2569 PONTIAC, MICH. with LOW-COST See Us or Call Today! Capitol ue & Loan Co. 75 West Huron Se. DREAM HOMES COME TRUE FE 4-0561 | | ! One Year Parts Warranty! $5 Down Delivers! $1.25 1954 1 7” “ww 2 9” FREE HOME TRIAL All for Only a Week # Ford, ‘Chevro Plymouth PAY AS LITTLE BRAKE RELINE SPECIAL $19.95 Value! Other Cars, $24.95 Value. .... Alignment, $7.95 Value .... Wheel Balance, $2.50 Value... “e .Now $16.95 5.95 1.50 ..Now $ _Now $ . Famous G-E Washer and _ DELUXE Laundry Plus a 20-Pc. Cart Cannon Towel Set No tire near the price can match Marathons Goodyear. Don't ris dri on smooth worn ures Replace them with -~ dable Marathons May ECONOMY PRICED TIRES! Bring Tire Costs Down! with dependable MARATHON by GOODFYEAR Reg. 513922 Value All for Only 35 Down Delivers 12” wing O00 2 16 Plus Tex end your off tro All Chrome wr Value ONLY $1 Down $1.25 a Week Li mit One to-a Customer ‘Automatic Toaster Cigarette Lighters (Comparable to $7.95 Models) 30 South Cass FE 5-6123 For a low cost value! See the PATHFINDER by GOODFYEAR @ Not a second! @ Not a retread! @ Ws brand new! 10” size 6.00416 Plus ton ond recappobie tire ‘SAVE 60%! 4 TIRES and TUBES Guaranteed Factory Retreads. Seconds Tubes. $4 Down — $1.25 a Week 39” p GOODFYEAR SERVICE STORE Open Friday Evenings Until 9 P. M. FREE PARKING THIRTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 Pitching Horseshoes By BILLY ROSE Last night, after the curtain had dropped on “Kismet,” Maurice Billy. Finds Funny Way to Settle Jazz Squabble would give his right lung: for.” “The Frenchman once showed me his collection,” said Al, the night- | imitators,” said Al, the bistro | hot, huh? Maybe you haven't heard boss. “The Duke and Stan take | Leon Rapallo, or Teagarden, or | Debussy and Milhaud, give it a} Muggsy Spanier, or Frank Tesche- beat and play it fancy. But no Oliver—” “How does Bunny Berrigan rate around here?’’. asked Maurice Stonzek. “Don't mention that bum,’’ said Al. ‘“‘He could read music.”’ matter how they trick it, it all | sounds like that lousy Bolero se Ravel's, Now, for instance, oe stole from Satchmo and the Orig- | | macher.”’ i *Stumblebums, all of them,” inal Creole Jazz Band.”’ | By this time, the talk had got- | ten so loud that even the Pick A Rib customers were turning to eavesdrop. A worried waiter came over and asked us to take it easy. said-Al, ““Whatever_they had; they} { é CISCO KID ~— a a ied ba a ileay imy Stonzek, the music contractor at|club manager. “I thought it had/ «I'd like tosay a kind word about as tee Zittel, took me to Pick a Rb, oo much Chicago and not enough | paul Whiteman.” said’ the ‘lal-| itty tech wince ‘Thent ow vw. @ restaurant on West 52nd Street | New Orleans. hat New Or.| etist. “If Paul hadn't introduced | rice Stonsek spoke up. “Billy's | > A tiie which is patronized by jazz mu- leans sain wai fae dee symphonic approach, there been hiring bands for a long Ss sf ef * & _ sicians ’ - | never would have been an Elling-| time,” he said. “Why don't you ee LA ORAS Ze “d <7, |‘*That nowhere levee music is @85/ to, or Kenton.” 's grows a valve trombone.” | “To me,” said Fred, the pianist, ~ | invited themselves over to Our pon» then, call me Golden) «.whiteman is a dirty word. It was said Al. “All kinds of | / : Maurice ; | his symphonic approacl that drove tadle. bands have played my joint, and) Roiderbecke to drink and killed get his slant on it?” by Carl Grubert FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS “I'm the wrong one to ask about Le Jazz Hot,” I said. “'My fav- orite band has always been Guy introduced them I've never heard anything like the |}, © | Lombardo.” as Rudy, a clar- stuff they used to dish out on | , | As if on cue, the three jazz af- ' inet player: |Rampart street, Fate Marable,| “You got a point,” sald Al. | ficionados began to laugh. Fred, a pianist | Jelly Roll Morton, Louis Arm-| “Bix was the only halfway de | «nid 1 say something funny?” | cent musician whe ever came | asked. “They're dead, but they won't| out of Chicago. And for a white | They didn't ever answer. They | lay down,” said Fred,,the pianist.| man, he played a lot of horn. had forgotten their argument and! |""A lot of cold oatmeal compared | “Sol said Fred. “You think! were friends again — unified by a | to the Chicago bunch — the Aus- along race lines, is that it? You| common disgust. . | : ig oS . McPart- | don't think a white man can play | (Copyright 1964) “Stop running at the mouth,” SIDE GLANCES by Galbraith [as] ~ trong—" 5-7 ‘Geet, 1008 by BTA Bervien. ing), Beg. U. & Pas Gel gk my) N ‘ve had in two weeks—the spring blood!" Wr NANCY ER--- PLEASE, cen Y OKAY, PAL -- “|{ SPIKE---LEeTS WE WON'T OH, OH --- HERE NOT FIGHT COMES SPIKE TODAY PULLS LTA CAG “Yv/fy, Yi, 4, tf SS! GF _ A, FEEL RELAXED! Pome 08 || sees Lowes IT Place o Quick Action DAILY PRESS -WANT AD DIAL FE 2-818) Ask for the Went Ad Vept. good to chew... and good for you . j Lev’ Chew Wrigley's Spearmint Gen. SPEARMINT ; Pleasant chewing reduces strain. Helps you feel relaxed. Enjoy it anytimne, anywhere petresbi®S . peliious ne \K : aa : ae | ____} THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 | \ Road-e-0 Forms Rochester Sees Effect of Its Growth Accept $74,022 Francis Graves’ Deaths in Nearby Communities 4 1,.. \in Schools, on Roads, in Home Building|. .. _, [Now Residing - aise Are Available |.» ser 2 nem |scnumazer tom mast} aes sae. iN School Bids [at Keege Harbor | mwoitri sm T Driving Test Materiag Reshatter Sean Wein ee rE ee ee manager Jack Miller said, pull- Walled Lake Ord are Mr, and Mrs. Francis Eugene | Mr. and Mrs. William Florence of viously been ordered, bringing the | Sue Ann Castle of Keego Harbor | p0.4 Rp pratt, 57, who died Tues- HOLLY — Eight ‘village fire-| cost of new furnishings for the new | was the bride's attendant and/ day at his home on Mill street, was commer-} ing « can from the display rack. ; 3224 Bermuda, will be at 1:30 p.m. jg ee eee Another immediately dropped in- Furnishings for New| “raves. who were married in &| saturday in Sawyer Funeral Home, of Holly 16 new budding develapments tn this preserve the nice cochmunity to place. Bu double-ring ceremony April 24.| Berkley, with burial in Oakview HOLLY — Applications are now | omes have been completed in the | iem created by'the increased build- | ¥® can get later on,” he added. | warren LAKE — Board of | Bentley. a available for the first Junior| ‘tchman’s Haven Estates, and a! ing in the area is water supply. s education members here this week Their parents are the Harry ‘eonveviaa ts idaa San’ pereca aie Chamber of Commerce-sponsored | ™more in amp mame Se teen, “ahead eens y eae Holly Firemen py Ay rege in a Bentleys of Keago Herber and the a brother, James at home, and Road-E-O which will be held May rg fergie — seem to favor the development - | general furniture, library nd | Cl { Ortonville grandparents. = acorns e Jerry Shearer, pa at ne at Helen her, ad best a alt: there tak ra ers ep-jovied Lichen eupment fer aca sls Se of Ortonville, re- loyd R. Pratt president. y ie new home owners , terest , Laboratory equipment pre- NORTH BRANCH—Service for |. The contest is open to teenagers | Commute daily to plants and of-|their planning ‘bodrd and council |: id = Y who wili not be 20 years old be-| fices in Detroit and the Pontiac fore the Road-E-O national finals | rea, filling the highways in the ee en ee school buildings to $98,000. Michael Hickey of Ortonville served | scheduled for 2 p.m. today in in Washington, Aug. 10-14. mee ond evening in the best i veces. dee. ued Ciifford aye re aairepecg a as best man. eens —_ with burial in * comm tradition. . estimated another ’ estia ery. Arrange- The local winner, who will re- Sas award at the organization's meet- | $20,000 would be required to com- A reception for 50 guests fol-| he are by Blackburn Funeral —— Residential development ing this week at White Lake Town- | plete the furnishings. lowed at the Ortonville Veterans’ | Home. Arthur D. Ferguson or and an even stiffer practi- | lems, and Supt of Schools Doa- About 200 of the county’s fire Riaicony Rigen D pool were | Hall. Besides his widow, Mary, he is} ROCHESTER — Service for Ar- cal driving test over an “obstacte ald —— his hands = fighters attended the meeting. | teachers. They were: > ~ fae ey will bo as ar ae course. —— Snes naa te i Lowe said. a _ Miss Jerry Crowe, commer- Detroit Artists Star Pixley Funeral Home Saturday at A325 defense bond each will be See ie eae ee mistakes made at large fires. cial im high school; Mrs, Agnes | 2:30 p. m., wit burial in Mt. Verno presented to the second and third! ing two additions to present ectic these mistake¥: ' 5O C Si Cemetery. He died Thursday in place winners, according to Louis! structures, and = This is Holly's third awatd in|’ junior high building; Mrs, Mad- per a om pany Inger S | Pontiac General Hospital after an school j — . 2 illness of several months. : wa . alled Lake; Edward Jadwin, De! h G ( ] k Surviving are his. widow, Ruth, a Fellowship Group Plans | seventh and eighth grade mathe- 1g tGr oup at arkston a daughter, Mrs. Robert Specia, : : matics and assistant football | CLARKSTON — Voices of five|ed with Miss Roumell for ‘Deep | wo sons, William and Arthur Jr., Mother, Daughter Dinner coach; Mrs. Wenona Manches- | members of the Detroit Municipal | In My Heart.” P| all of Rochester, and two broth- ALMONT—Plans for tomorrow | ter, fifth grade at Twin Beach; | Opera Inc. delighted a small but| Baritone Frank Van Paepeghem | Ts, Elmer, of Detroit and Lester, night's mother and daughter ban-| Richard L. Miller, senior higtt | enthusiastic audience last night|was featured in selections from | 0f Vancouver, B. C. quet were completed at last week's | mathematics and science; and {with a program of light and fa-| both “The Desert Song” by Rom- William J, Cornell Sr. meeting of the Afternoon Circle of | Jack Simenton, fifth grade in | miliar operatic selections in Clark-| berg and ‘The Student Prince.”| BERKLEY — Service for Wil- the Women's Fellowship. The af-| the high school. ston High School auditorium. along with Nagy, singing in a dy-|jiam J. Cornell Sr., 73, of 3357 fair will be held at 6:30 p.m. at| Petitions for candidates for elec-| Sponsored by Clarkston Rotary | namic and colorful voice. Oakshire Blvd.. was scheduled for the school. ~ tion to the board of education | Club, the program included Marie Pees Sawyer Funeral tens of AVOn! An installation of officers high- | must be in the office of the board |Roumell, soprano, and Rose Lu-| "eds Marynewsti, 2 mouse We ik ‘laiel township, is a ; . ; soprano, Was well fitted for the , . lighted the meeting. Inducted | by May 15, it was announced. metto, dramatic soprano, both part of Carmen from the opera | Park Cemetery. He died Wednes- grips community | ¥eTe Mrs. James Burgess, presi- formerly with the Metropolitan “Carmen” by George Bizet, She day at home. Fegelman, who is in charge of prizes. , Judges will be Court Hall, Har-| However, 500 old Blum, George Wagoner, Harry } half day sessions today and popu- Jones, Ed Freeman and Bryce a Dabler, Al Hill, ing chairman, | ® 1970. has announced. — . A new $144,000 parochial school The local winper will go to Lan. | Constructed by St, Andrews Cath- sing June 5 for the state finals. | lic Church will house 190 students Application blanks may be picked in six classrooms, The 28 acre site up at downtown business places. : Move to Pontiac After Canadian ; i Fy af fF F 3 . . interest. dent; Mrs. W. K. Bristol, first vice Opera Co. and the New York sang the fiery “‘Seguidilla” aria | Surviving are four daughters, Wedding Trip Such a move, | President; Mrs. Colin C. Bruce, —- arpa Two terms | Civic Opera, who sang solo Parts) .aq joined with Miss Lumetto | Mrs. Thomas Kirby and Mrs, Gor- ——_ which might in-| Second vice president, and Mrs. | the board expire. as well as duets. and Miss Roumell for the dra- | don McEwen of Berkley, Mrs, By- HARBOR = Mr. ond include both the | Fred Farley, secretary-treasurer. Miss KRoumeli sang the light | matic “Card Trio” scene drom | ron Green of Flint and Mrs, Rich- Mrs. Marshall O’Shaunghnessy National T wist Elevator Company Sold | and gay “Adele's Audition” from | Carmen. ard Snyder of Kalamazoo; four rs Pm ” ohann i ; , Alfred, Lawrence and John - and the Detroit Broach | Foyr-Generation Quartet ALMONT — L. T. Bishop, owner cle erage hich the fix Plates an Directing the program was Stu- at Boring and William J. 2 of 4 : art F. to a $10,000,000| to Sing on Mothers Day | > ine Bishop Elevator Co.. has sold ceived with instantaneous ap- | 204 ind te ee coe Oak Park; 18 grandchildren and ' IMLAY CITY—A four-generation | of Rochester. The : plause. Miss Lumetto’s solo per- two great-grandchildren. } 5 eels. Raymond E. Stuart, staff narra- Service facilities have not been ; , formance was the tender and : : quartet will sing a Mother's Day t ne » | or, gave brief notes on the back- or lacking, as more residents moved | selection at ‘the morning service in peel ae and INC) familiar “Loves Old Sweet Some” | erounds of the various arias. | Charter Member Visits into the area. Eight churches now : from “Sari” by Kalman, sung = : First Congregational Church Sun- ee eal ia ae A Pontiac man, Emery L. Metamora OES Chapter Nadi r H Ids B Dri sincerely a colorful v * | Mitchell, is chairman of the De- Rochester National Bank is ¢X-| The quartet is composed of Mrs. | "0 lood Drive Together the sopranos sang a/troit Municipal Opera Inc. Mitchell! METAMORA—The only living panding to Provide more custom- Elmer Liewellen of Oshkosh, Wis., FERNDALE—To meet the con-| pleasing ‘‘Mira O Norma’ from | said other operatic concerts were | charter member of the Metamora ; great-grandmother; Mrs. John H./|tinuing demand of the ar med|‘‘Norma” by Bellini. being planned by the group in the | OES chapter, Cleo Kelley of Fiint, ; are two new supermarkets, and Balfour, grandmother; Mrs. | forces, the 906th Air Reserve| Irvin Nagy, tenor, was featured| Pontiac area. Clubs, churches or | attended Tuesday's meeting. "| spruced-up store fron MM in Destain Stewart of Lapeer, daugh- | Squadron will hold a blood drive|in several selections from “The | fraternal organizations wishing to| All of the metamora chapter liv- up ts along Main |. of Mrs. Balfour, and from 2 to 8 p.m. Monday at the | Student Prince’ by Sigmund Rom-| sponsor programs may contact | ing past patrons were present and | 10-year-old daughter of Mrs. Stew- | Wilson School, University and Pax-| berg. In clear and romantic voice | him at 3632 Baldwin Rd., Pon-| most of the living past matrons. The bride, the former Barbara ding. “We put in a spacesaving-ert—— - —— + tO —___—_— {he sang the ‘‘Serenade"’ and team- | tiac, or by telephone, FE 5-1487.| All were presented with gifte = . 1 | ° } I . — : Death Notices |___Fumeral Directors 4| Help Wanted Male 6, Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Male 6| Help Wanted Female 7, Help Wanted Female 7 Work Wanted Female 1)| Building Service 12 | = ! A | ren ns | enn il | pemmengoaan Ss ——— —— LBBB LOLOL LD DDD PDL OPO ee eee eee - . TE) N ME WANTED AGGRESSIVE AMBI | MIDDLEAGED OR OLDER WHITE | YOUNG WOMEN 25 to 40 FOR EXPERIENCED LADY WILL | FLOOR . LAYING. PIN. V oorhees-Siple|,. “! a men REAL ESTATE tious men to sell automobiles on women do you need a home? | eneral office work in sautomo- make slipcovers and draperies| &. SANDING iN alr. Beene aan, Myrt Mock. Burton | _ 1-3 off list _peteo, OF 30008 Gistributorship's in this area. The ROUTE DRIVER VARSITY | -\~™_- © $ % P_m_FE TOS. iODLEAGED LADY TO DO OF. ‘hiMdren. Have our car Good FE 24062 = === Plastering and tile wk PE ¢-2a00. . Ployd k ond first place no deposit. no return, Cleaners 198 South Woodward | WANTED EXPERIENCED MAR fice work Some typing and ans-| 5*/8r7 ly person ‘_ REOISTERED PRACTICAL NURSE | ———pURNACES CLEANED — Ce Prayer bottles . Ne- _PE 5-4291. ried man for dairy apd general) wering phone. Apply 66 W. Huron Truitt, Michigan State Employ- gvailable FE 40440 ee Ss lees Ge _FE 5421 oil wering phone. Apply 66 W. Hu i - _ FE ¢+o40 = May 0 oh 12:00 Meee et te pow a Oy My eM peop Panny Bn ly oe MIDDLEAGED LADY. MORE FOR — ~<*: = REFINED MIDDLE AGED wip. | — Se CES —— + BOX REPLIES var net inquire to James P| —*hd form ‘ences Cal) PE $8072. 2246 East Hunters Creek Road.| Dome than wages. FE .4-5834 be- Demonstrator ow, Rursing experience, desires | FENCES with Rev. Andrew 8 Creswell l . 0636 Lahser Rd. Bir- SALESMAN etamora or gall Mohews ¢038 | Tore 2______-_____ For chain and department store | Guty puny comvetent vor will nent | All types—steel and wood. Material o the prayer | ~. PART TIME FOUNTAIN AND _ Experience not necegsary Ouar-| siger on At he or will com. and installation No money dow®. service Black will be taken At 10 am, today a : MEAT ROUTE $10,000 YEAR JOB Sieben, help Apply in person at| anteed —. a pie commission | te ne ouekeeper and | PHA Ardmore Pence. 4 N. to the West Goodland Church replies at time 101 W. Huron Guaranteed salary high com- __Malone’s Drive-In 135 Baldwin) Apply Sem Butler, 8 Kresge| Share Pusne OR nana” 6 | _Perke._ PB 06-0078 (which is four miles north ot | § there were mission: vacation, and $300. Month Draw GHORT ORDER COOK AND WAIT-| Co. evenings, Roosevelt Hotel ee ee | a aie Imlay City) for « funeral serv- the Press office in ca excellent working conditions. Meat | 5... snq supervision. Will give | fess | a nights. OR 3-6357 MIDDLE-AGED COUPLE POR |P 3X. OPERATOR WisHES | GARAGES tee at two o'clock, with intermen: eee Hack at OL ecagtre then, | comaty Racetnn cad percenines- | complete training. Car. College. dairy farm Modern house fur-| "ork on fast board mo typing | i 4199 9595 00 following at West Goodiand Cem- the foliowing boxes: pial, Mowlend and Geanrdale oc | perience with a Petal trade mm | Under 33. Permanently settled. pished Apply J. E Burns, 420/ Long, distance experience. MA 00. pe BL by “, call FE 5-7146 after 6 p. m and around Pontiac the only Pontise vicinity. Send your beck- Rochester. eville Rd, © miles) — - a 1 Coanptete (ath eve the Puneral Home. 5, 7, 9, 10, M, 15, Ba yoe REED EMTRA MONET) | ‘Cuirements. Permencet employ.| ground. to igan | Manager. _north of Rochester, «| TYPING TO DO AT HOME _NEAT.| Sindow “and coment Geek. PUA JQRNOON MAY 5. i904 RICHARD 19, 23, 26, 38, 4, “4, 4%, e heve 8 en plan whereby o- end future. Apply or O. Box 2073, Dearborn, h VETERANS Co erie on 3-1931 Terms OR 3-226. . Chassell, Michigan. ; : r den. A : ,80 CURTAINS EE 7 © gar father of Bara. Michest be- | ¢ 8% Sl. 64, 68, 77, Sl, 84 9] pou sem wort from ote oe | NICHOLS FOSS Help Wanted Female 7, St h HIOM SCHOOL GRADUATES | _ west vite ow 5.4160 °Kiods. Bet W916 J. A. Magus, 383 Srulin, | Doris Marie . Johnson 88, 89, 107. e You can earn * : : was eA ECNOOQTAPNETS | train yourseit’ tor a business WASHINGS AND IRONINGS PICK. No Cace Pe a deal. PE pants. ja P. from RS to $55 per week and up. PACKING CO. career and permanent position | up _and delivery OR 3709 | — —~—gouaE RAISIN Pyykkonen, Mrs. Julia Mattson, a ; is) to 25. Write | 2! Morton St. Bay City, Michigan F i) . z program Alternate 10 weeks ee TRONINGS. ___ OAkiand _ a dog | oe ae - r _ Sox 58 Pontiac Press TOOLMAKER . MUST BE — _ — employment |... ~Wouan orn ums DaY HOUSE R AISING Puneral -1? «@ | FOUR TOP NOTCH REAL EST ‘ 2 ineronk 3- WHITE wis. OE RAIS day May 8. vie tne Couns corded vag’ Ooe! This cadinen an a tak ee ae a lr) EXPERIENCED STAND OPENED FOR CONCES. | —* “Glastnce WANTED —| Secoment cad divecsse. Ba oorhees-Siple i is an y. plus. Call) FE = sa ss - sioneer to run in evening on 100 | W. Howard Schoof ting Press . ; have journeyman card. r cent profit basis. at Drayton | _FE 2-027 7m Interment at Ganiand mine Mas: |{ The Pontiac GARDENER FOR SMALL ESTATE oye ee aise Ball Part Call ON 34182 WASHINGS “WANTED I -Day| — HOUSE RAISING mortal Cemetery. . Johnson and as —— service. Pick up and delivery. FE | 5 : =a Sein Gane ca ee Se FOR WANT ADS near Pontios. Very permanent and | group insurance and vacation pay APPLY Instructions 9) S051 | Brick, block and cement work of Siple Puneral Home. oad pply Avon Tube, 4th and Water . | WASHINGS WANTED Pe cata | —S!!_zinds. PE 5-000. . . St” Rochester Michigan Call Mr | WASHINGS WANTED FE 507M | —*-—0e KEEL MAY 5. i964 DOUGLAS TAL FE 2-8181 JOURNEY MAN TMBERS| White, OLive 1-067 CCORDIO NED | #70_Kennelworth = . a —. Auburn Ave.. Auburn DIAL wanted for stenay work in De- TOOLM XKER pp ig Pins eiven at. your | WASHINOS. ALSO CURTAINS a finishing. 186 Jeste 2 a 12; beloved ge F 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. trett ares. Apply 4 8. Thorn- oun ta é = i Pontiac Motor home. Accordions ise cold. al} a ee apee Pick wp & de-| Casa GE - > Jean N. Keel. rom .. 167% Maple near Crooks ve minimum 10 years es _at factory prices 3-0066 | FE ———— " neral will be held Saturday May = as «@ toolmeker or _— = : — bones tae. Pah 8. at 1 p.m. at the Stone Bap- = : have journeyman card. Machine Sew’ | Work Wanted Mate 10 “sore wut'eery shcveeings PE | Sood cutting. “MY - tist Church with Rev. Tom Ma- an crrgle should be re. UBRICATION AND MINOR TUNE | Dajg,/04rmeyman La. Division _Work Wanted Male 1 | ork Will Deby sit evenings. FE| _¢a9q9 lone and Rev. Lawrence Free . 2 ee ee oe $2.48 per hour in union shop Bhd - ——_._ | MASON ° Sntcrmen assumes no gram aon ALL AROUND PRECISION GRIND. yr - inds 3-488. og ot Perry for errors other || GaN WANTED tien fay A Sy aven Tuber sch | Netionally known mitiinery mer- | er mas desires work Have com- Building Service 12| aeeow 7. CERT WORK. PRES be ‘at the Dudiey Moore Puneral eS a oo he me peiding porch screens, BM) aad ater Br.” Rochester. Mich-| chandising organization wants PERSONNEL DEPT plete tools. MUtual 45360 A) FLOOR LAYING AND anny | eatimate Our work guaranteed. Rome, Aanvern” Helens, wl | ty go re WANTED—— | te) Eee ices | aumwoob ave LOCH UATIOD PRICE, STORE FLOOR LATING AND, SAND | Aud meter 0 Son, Oe Lam ——— vertisement which asat -y Tr AR 7 \ Mast ike te ; seiiin -NTRY Ww rw Manic sett ' : —_ BAL MAY, &, 1050, KEKMETH | Fearred wafers wtorens® | ruts pram: ace produce e try |SAERMEN, WE ARE A'NATION | Aevutues‘GicenMeceacc'stes | rontzac. wicwican | CARRENTRY (SORE NEW AND ot et ice com tines mena PE Swe Meimhis. any 10; beloved son of || tions ‘ore mage be ware te §| iret i i net eold tm ores | There'are ‘pefmanents joo with Eacellemt futsre. good veut around CABINET MAKER AND CARPEX SStemaninio ‘Ew "Sane C'S 'pe ogee, EVENINGS” E - vour num = = te s ® specialty C re = Yreral will be held Saturday May No adtustments wil! be etven og wd fs competition. | focisd eine areuunty — wane, APPIY personnel office | sEAMSTRESS. EXPERIENCED } ae 2 ADDITIONS ALTERATIONS RE. ®!UMBING Fag ellis i fage> & a , Salk 3 Om, 04 the Stone Hom sone without it. ~ oe everybody ss - | We want men past 2% honest.) — - dry cleaning piant FE 2-0304 CARPENTRY WORK, NEW AND peor also new homes MA c mpooe : 7 le everybod AS < ae a repair t 4 js -__— == and Rev. Lawrence Dickens of- time for advertise- rtihery mers y vir. eg tl aM ot eee CASHIER a5 ca Gas aparece Rosset | ae EN fee NET “} BASEMENTS OR FOOTINGS |P & Z PLASTERING CO NEW fi T. | New office do c PENTER AND CABINET Cement work. I iat FE 17-6678. MA 5-5675 efating. Interment at Perry Mt. tres gin. No investment required and ihessevete a khen office downtown location. 4@| shirt units. Apply to Mr. Warren., work. New or repair. Available en tk. Immediate service and repair 7 : 678. Part Cometery Kenneth will be ee ~~ we tram you ot cor cxpense,| _end Ts eee Pe mg yr —Pomtine Laundry 540 8 Tele-| sow, Reasonable FE _2-7061_ re Rone = #88 = RANGER ROOFING CO. “ga Atburn “Fleights, until previews te, publication. manager, apply 188 Oakland Ave. “perience STATION MAN EX-| count Corp, 126 N. Saginaw. Mr. URGENTLY snes tc ee | Wa ial gba Paes agg, ag ay | Be WAY saTageai Spite VSeee | geet Es oz | ropentione'pre Sir "EEN" wena! | COMPTOMETER ape rh fie RE Rg ge . * up : . mi pe pre i Middie aged lady for housework emodeling repairs | sphailt Paving Co. FE 2-2237. _ Flanders 1- __ reverse : Heights, age 14; beloved son ot |} 487 Sf publiestion. market. Pull or part time. MY | to Teds vue “Ane Service, Rest | wages, Post of sitios Ren 155, | S04, care. of 3 email children | S917 After. — san | ATTENTION REMODELIN nerel waned ens stiuticrs ate | GASH WANT, 4D Rares AGED WAN-TO72 Neply belore 4 prom. TN, | expected “and furnish references. |“ fintsh also, small Jobs ‘bod ‘re | Brick block and stone work fire GARAGES AND MODERNIZATION | Sob S bf. os the gene Beant 2 = phewe, Std phous: ‘solieftations. | SALE AND REORGANIZATION OF Telegraph, shor $e iva. e.” | Write Poniiec Presa Box tu | onirs_ Charlie FE Yarns’ "* | places a specialty PR S000” FREE ESTIMATES TERMS oy hy ro Pater SS) seliies Scretres | Cngat sorta of fagmae | “ewteyor sor oemntnn Iams | fea vet “Oe Wet VE Puaee abeemen foe er S'ow | STOPPERT & CECTL Tetethen Satcrmans “at tae hy hy a INSURANCE COMPANY in the Birmingham ares EXPERIENCED DA COOK. NO erly lady in modern country home +0720. BLOCK. BRICK CFMENT wWoRK 42° Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains Cemetery. Norman will be 3 Meci interview man SMenday, May| smote growing scovent inst | other need apply. FE 3-068. Old) oerine ae et PE 20886 oF Or CEMENT WORK _and fireplaces FE 22468 OR 31771. _f_ne_aaswer OS 2am at the Dudley Moore Funeral 10 9 to 1? & m. Guaranteed | Commission tor | _ Heidelberg. cate Ri ei we | ehes BLOCK LAYING REASONABLE rRENCHING Home, Auburn Weights, until salary and commission. while in| Pl@® available to qualified men. | exp, WalTREss DAYS | VHITE GRILL COOK. FOR DAYS Foundations, vasement fioors,| price PE- 7-6421 an “ hoon Saturday. . tas % _ Apply 142 Wayne ask for oe hg WE gam = ween | Jack and Ina’s Grill 4668 Dixie oe 6761 Dixie Hwy. MA! driveways sidewalks and cheap RICK. BLOCK AND CEMENT fepoaiy be aan tile and water KENNEDY, MAY 5) 1954. JOHN Birmingham Office _Mr. Young. end nreferahiv beve eutormodile | Hwy. Drayten Plains. WA labor MY _ 2-0702 work. Also chimneys. No job to Sod CIPPED MASON Thomas. 262 Oakland Ave. age NEW AND USED CAR SALES.| experience r | ot | SEPERIENCED SRAUTT OPRIE- |" Siriscsces in women's end chide) ree nD LANDSCAPE ARD pe I ecaid likes Me tm grubeal Ox : 2 Mrs. man. Experience pret: but | Shuts Motors Inc 912 8 Wood-| tor apply im person. 434 W. : : wor 4-8694 batt 3604 Mattie VanCleve Kennedy; dear Ph. Midwest 4.0844 not necessary, Write Dally Press| ward. Birmingham. “Formerly | Huron va a oe a ee [io experience. 639 E. Tienken | SNICR BLOCK AND CEMENT | “Or =r tint eB FING — are, Pearl MeNeirnie: 90 | W. A Caltrider. | EXPERIENCED CAR BILLER FOR | Qualify and are seeking a per- FARM ee Se ANIFD aaa wert. Get Qur bid before vou de- CL Wh re ther Mrs. Emma Jones. 8 Manent position with a good fu- | ‘| etde. -8104. = Funeral will be held Saturda NEED A BETTER JOB? automobile deslership. MI 6-1200 of any kind 314 Alberta. FE | - bee | Oe eee Stay 8 at the Kirkby Pun 379 Hamilton Would you consider $485 per month | s>\TiGN ATTENDANT. STEADY, | ©XPERIEN WEIVE! Swece t cnd 1s im tee evening, | +008 |CEMENT MIXED ANYWHERE | sitar t CONTRACTOR WITH WELL Meme, at 3 Ken with advancement? I.need 3 men shift: “i g cle weyeer. | Plea a $2.50 -d Mason work. FE 5-1958 | ; neth Wetchineon offieteting “in. tm Oakland County, those inter. | SA allt: mise ‘Orchard Lab qharge of eutire cterteal| frre’, “0,20, Seply unless you | LAWN WORK LARGE GRASS. | CARBENTERY BLOCK AND CE. | (ieatied crew ewe woe. eeeb . - 1 &> Tt 5 ie © in s we and b h ttt Hand | tunity to Bann Me Paton | be - : caty. write P. Oo. SRT Pon. Ave. ply . agency Insurance experiepee, te- veeu stisa “tt yeaceaes teases | ciggine. ; rebbish “bauline had Satbet ree ne re ea aOWR ect_or otherwise OR 3.9391. ah . . Mr. Kennedy may — : : Sh = rable. ecceutial “Rew | _4- : ETE LINE OF MASONRY — seen at the Kirkby Puneral Home. Help Wanted Male 6 | —"**—Micb STATE DISTRIBUTOR | ferstion “couststam “wits apiity. | Site coud es the spporvuntty you | CAWNS RAKED SEEDED PER: | _bfick block & stone EM 38102 Business Service 13 Card of Thanks 1 $ pea, porters epee Wanted salesman with car to sel | Phe FE dcome Inc. 367 EF are looking for Reliable trans-| _tilized and colled. FE 2-090, CEMENT WORK ALL KINDS | Sore eetaiateiaietatate en ADVERTISING of time ects. ing wer | EXPERIENCED COOK Sins | POTtetion necessary. Saiesiady ap. LANDSCAPING GENERAL MAIN Reasonable Jensen FF 27-2340 | ADDITIONS. REPAIRING. AND 111) deckve ‘co5s2e| cleaner on commission basis. This EXPERIENCED . 339 8.| plying for this job would be in line tenance Experienced White FE CONCRETE BROKEN WITH AIR decorating, Ray Carpenter. EM —— a A TRE MANAGER CORT M. IMBLER exclusive rew aan makes | Saginaw Twins Restaurant , for @ management position when 48738 ee hemmers bv toh or hourly rate 3+3233 - Trebae watghnere oor may) — ra reguisy w and the FOR RENT LONG ESTABLISHED we move in our new store in (OCAL LIGHT HAULING FE <“E 20077 ALL MAKES OP Soy toe anaay. onaiey ante of mae | weekly. and "shopper my Senuliy? spacing Sateh Sel feet | beauty shop, completely furnished. | June _ +4842 after 3 pm COMPLETE REMODENING = & REFRIGERATORS Ness, men Call y —_ on a new a’ ‘ { ? Dice PART TIME WORK FROM 7 TO 12 modernizing service Attic rooms . eps < acer cepregaies i ermeetey | BEML Ba Ft wat OPPORTUNITY the "svelte ees. ‘nearicies | Sif, Terr eww wumere OR) | WAITRESS ART TIME WORE FROM] TO iz moternining wervict At Too | WASHING MACHINES the passing of our loved) THE INTER-LAKE lerritorioes available in suburvan | =" aay, Sin Wishiead ha Heenan orntite ee «lens, caren een FAA fy IRONERS, $ MOTORS one hanks to Rev. John- and other ta of Michi- | GENERAL HOUSEWORK only. 6128 Highia Ra ontiac TT ~ tions, custome building. FHA fi- his cdmforting words. Mr EWS gan. Arnly ts Thomas Cody, State | OR +1813. _Airport — | PLUMBING TO ole APTE _nancing FE +5470 PHONE. FE 4-2569 Mabley, and| Ed Bossadertt for , é Hwy. Pontiac. | Gini, TO WORK AT COUNTER | WOM4N WHO ENJOYS MEETING | SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT CARPENTER WORK ROUGH AND | . i‘ their extra kindnesses rt hour and tn 40 hours. Good pay. people to spend a few hours a, would like rt time work daily fimish. remodeling smal) tobs MA Walton's 51_N. Parke of need, the .E.8. and | Arte rs. Rochester OL | day explaining. a service which is| 9 to gpblh pede ly | _5-9675 LL MAKES the Thomas rest for their ing experience necetsary 985 N 27151 | . svailabie througt us and that rE wfens* week * anytime yb . “KS “ ed by factory men | py yd the Metamora Hunt Te Rochester R4. :{ many people are interested in| ¥ouNG MAN 18 WISHES FULL CINDER BLOCKS | at our store, General fe chores God 40. fo training ite _Mldwest ] about, No sell re-| “time work Married FE $1472, ” G VAN HORN & SONS Office Co, 1? W, fim Tomei was Wis will tunity Aa farm. Napier, ROUSERESPER PUT-U5S— | 070d. Will pay 81.39 per howe. | eee eT AND Mow | ——TE S47 and PE sesi¢ | rence ot ve | _ sae Mich. week dl this please ; 7 CARPENTER WORK | Sce TRED , pi Cheri ; ae of oi = 5 1 ; Seo Mr Dull 0:0 0 m.| Reaconabie, FE) ¢ees ‘or PE| Alterations and custom butiding “ae Free estimates, FE 39-1188; @ren end Mr. ae . enced is and et Bee Fey ee = z6 re __ 23-4008. ee _ OR 3-3678. _OR 3.2304, family. woody Jo one, Gare, wen ray er works More for home then | WASHINGS. IRONINOS. CURTAINS WORK OF ANY KIND PART CONTRACTOR FOR ACE ASPHALT PAVING AND EES. end are seeking « Bl erences 616 ford St. FE erence * 4-8215 Attics additions siding and re- homed Lomb tee any sind wey’ p+ FZ-1 f- _ LIVE IN MAID - | We PINTS ATTICS RecREA. TOdeling of all kinds ¥ 21621 OR STAY 4 NIGHTS WANTED EXPERIENCED WAIT-| tion rooms and close in porches — . TANCE SERVICE. 7 tae in . Please do not) No laundry. Own room and radio. ress, apply 345 N. Main, Milford.| FE 2-3038, EM 3 36 APPLIANCE § set —e proms gee in ‘this fla ana can; roundings Wena bite Pentine ‘ts. j Want EXPERIENCKD = » WORK WANTED BY MAN WITH -2 2 pi eeeviee Of = setrigas. : : - | AIT—+- 12 years experience in_ suner = ar | @tors, w : Fiewrrs 4S IT’S WONDERFUL, the rigid investigation. If you| perienced wii children. Cook Fess. Evening hours. Apply in, market ks stock man Ph FE CUSTOM BUILDER HAS OPEN, ana an topo a aa ~~ toy have top in your ce : well Belehts ine in & schedule for immediate | poy's 8 owen , ; _ porese. Walgreen's Drug | 5 eee oon ee cones ee start of | or 2 better class Bomes. » 28 Ave. - : ~ AQ ~cate tm nonte—-ot—garenem~-OR - CRA RAP RADE commercial and remodeling. Plan tines. | : Want Ads! Start TO- f17 Paie fi POOKKEEPER, PULL CHARGE (tivict Fazcriepeed, best reter-| Ppp Eda eee pa WOMAN, EXPERIENCED, TO ences e 2-0923. j : ’ ants permanent position FE - UA) ; manage vunch foom end | foun 300s. Donelson-Johns DAY. Call FE 2-8181. complete mes Gend de. | EXPERIENCED GIRL woutd| EAVES TROUGHING : ee Sees | Eeeeresep aes | tae S Sar. | em- : . : ¢ ent to Press pox 1s.! references. Call FE 17-8861, re coon ! > a ee an ae amen Oe | SE ee | " parr ae ’ ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 ee a . Business Services 13) Moving & T 19| Notices & Personals 25, Wanted Real Estate 32A| CARNIVAL by Dick Turner Rent: Stores 40| For Sale Houses -43| _ For Sale Houses 43 LY} REDUCED RATES |¥#_ S84. anv. uy BETTER | | ACTION ON YOUR LISTING - 20x20 ROOM IN CARIBOU INN, City East . 1 ee van to serve you, Smith g Baginay. et | Se tT FOR Y Y5, ‘ tha ‘Sooen - vd B Y LINES Seven room Y gen, three bed- | “Aibviog PR aoe : | ,CASH FOR YOUR. aks STORE PACE wn DINE rooms, flows furmsee, Je 52 : ms Wiad. Child, to Board 26) HOME OR EQUITY Hwy. Wil be avaliable May iu. | | 00 SUBWEST and paved street. W4i50 = RO ahetean' Vas | tame lows fr par Maple Pras | vine tac cal We be a cag PN Ir I hag Spr Ne ee Serena ee Reba | felt tenes inte | elaine wos ens ae fore LICENCED BOARDING HOWE. Worreat’ on. mmediats “ca. | Saree, 3 bedroom arr bath, picture | , of D itignway tive ainting & Decorating 20| -Prescnoo, FE +10. W teres Gieen Pontns, a : window in iintag room and eneb- | K. G. Hempstead, Realtor 7 wreaicn «wx. | Witt Household Goods 22) _Sutt"Spen Frenten RRA LEAS | Sl Seceaie gan sees | ee eee os eet ay FE| “feclon ts per cont disc. for cash. NEEDE CASH AT ONCE | , __felterson, ‘i9us6 ~ "good Boat weit ea Ace a Work tree estimates.| FURNITURE } D | 94.000 cash wil! buy 4 or 5 room alter Phone FE Located on double lot, new 2 bed-| acre. rE Entire home or 068 lots. bad the — at once. No equity. rE, reom home ving room| room with led fireplace. Din- 8 éoser 7 pepernanging & clean: wel ip tor you ae. Gases | Wilt foom, ‘automatic ol a beat whe Screen poreh down. maintenance. sale. he 3-atht. SH Offi s electric . heater. s . UGH SE iTind aER: for_ you, OA e268. = . - me 41 —_ carmne. . one ai Rpte Seabr Hee s NIG | bates ee sina P| Ries Soret cm wane p 24 HOURS : seatar Nai Deayte, Cora Bre | DONELSON PARK i XTER . ha an ee , + Nearly new brick home Ww da de a deli GILES "cues iieons | areas or INTERIOR DECORATING. YOU | WE PAY CASH POR USED PUR-| jour"home within 1 nour, " Good condition, Phone PE $3083. | scaped. large liv. rm. with, fire. ee HEN caBINETS are next. Call OR 38876, Mr.| uiture. PE 5-2766. | Get our offer before you For Rent Office Space en. 2 lovely bedrms. & bath Custom medo—Preduction Prive | _Gidcun’. : WANIED FURNILURE, = 3a ee $25 per month rent om this down, staize to large waren i, “tad wortmanenip| Painting and Decorating Uf you have anything for | EDW. M. STOUT tere ‘uilding only. 2 blocks BE attic” You will like OR 3-T196 | Wall yomeng end paper Peso ite svtervice. ad te, Sigh | oe we. Saginaw 8 uP FB 9-0008 | further information. G. I. RESALE — contractor, PAINTING PAPERHANGINO AND Boers a orl a Rt OE . Nearly new rm. home. ; rare! speed. Free ecimetes.| L. & S. Sales Co. CASH FOR YOUR | GILES REALTY Co. SURE TO WATCH tan Th Seer Screens & storm PAINTING AND DECORATING | USED FURNITURE BUYER HOME OR EQUITY #2 W. Huron FE 646175 OUR AD can't vet Me K Let we Mason Thom +24 —PE_22066 ___| if you have @ home or equity you me FOR THE —_ PAINTING WANTED. APARTMENT SIZED wish to sell, call us. e have 32 OFFICES FO aRaes. EeAe s SIDE Interior and, Exterior —Ree_Sere, FE SOee.. cash buyer end in many cases light furnished. Reasonable rent.) , FAST SID san eS NCTE | ee Miccotanewes 28) Fone Le writ wiaswmeeme | Unexpected” | sect“cn'seas’no"mader § ‘| * PAPERHANGING | Ginrep to Ber coco Lowa | Gpmeres M Clark, Rocltes, hh | 7 OFFICES ONE APPROXIMATE. gg Me ge ly a wheel base stake body truck, | W. Huron Street. Pontise. FE Ae E47, - FF . enclosed front poreh. Call for par- Must be im first class shape. | —**##2 Boul > Bished. Mr Blackerdy. 300 Hub- ticulars—e buy for somgone. | - q Re te greet. Our cules FURNISHED COTTAGE. § ROOMS, ‘SS2 “Ri, wren Bat Prccay | peresma. panslied tue car ing and lawn. Don't fail to see sting will certainly <3 . _year pone re ecacen | ePONLY $1,800 down, J oa aokae we - ar ke this at once. 32 ft. on lake. win od a = IDEAL FOR YOUR VACATION! | c: errenged, WE SELL—WE TRADE Fi years ') Silver Lake Front one in Pontiee assures pon peated 40 evaltable, alse Owner built cement block home Flizabeth Lake FE DORRIS & SON We handle ‘all detafls for financ- two weeks. Beautiful } bedroom, with double attached garage, /-!!Za t -ake Istates REALTORS CO-OP MEMBERS and closing. Call us today large © opt. os Case Lote.| jovely view Bem git. were eee 732 W. Huron PE 4-1557 t 5 732 _W. Huro ___FE 4-1587 — to Uist your property. Re -~ 4-8-4 Ee down, teaming oak floors | DRAYTON - WATERFORD AREA, TOU BUY TroWELL INSURE rr | ae ie ce WE BUY AND SELL 230 with fruit trees. You'll rage. 2 los. Lake _ privileges. ‘ — Per a LAND CONTRACTS love the - location, Only Aluminum storms, Y vo ' MAHAN ee eee ee Piste booony 62.050. Terms. ——. ——s or: on @ Orion, by season outems: heat, refrige tr Good safe swimming beach. App't NI HOLIE: tor, electric stove. 20° TV, and collect ( Terms 3926 Suffolk % mt t furniture, upbolstering. 4 5. Tele eee ae Pane 1 ES MODERN CAbina ON PONTIAC Income pert of Walton Bivd. off Disie 3 ‘ PLOYEE SEEKS REALTY CO. REALTORS . ~ East _ Hwy. __ Thomas Upholstering pr +t >i BE Member Co-op Real Est. Exch. Ine. now, 90000 per weet. On 30000 | AND HARGER CO. and bath down 3 and ‘bain | EAST GIDE. 6 ROOM " ' Phone FE 5-8888 BACHELOR A PAR T- FE 2-0263 _R&K Cabin Bay ____ |33 W. Huron St. Ph. FE $618) up. separate entrance. ot! home, oak floors, painted walle MENT IN CITY. CALL @pce Bren, 3S 0-Gun, 104 7 ROOM CABIN. LAKE ORION Open 8:30 ‘til 8.30 neat, cluminom storms, 36 in living room, comtinetion storm t "DT? ~ = ¢ re \ windo Treens doors, love- NEXT weeewe. ’ beth and utility. On schools, store and bus, garage, ON = | > 7 room house with pore * acre ground with ved street. LISTINGS WAN & miles from Lares sor. sit down and s45 mo. Now is Lakefront Income — pon metern, steam Surnsee j Buyers are waiting den space. Older with no the time to get your spring gar- 3 temit ; water heat, large bedrooms : We buy, sell, or trade chidren preferred 940 month, OR ¢° | ; heute Geel aemaan. eear SS bes : H. C. Newingham, Broker _| 2éieanerep m s_ WILLIS M. BREWER | $2,000 yearty income. Own- CARTY WEDsieo _ 381 8. Marshall : For Rent Rooms 37 116 Reosevelt Hotel er leaving state, make us ‘ PE 6000 or FE 40661 only. $65 ean = PE 45181 PE 23-8532 an offer ~ = t K. G Hempstead, Realtor 1 SLEEPING RM_ FOR GENTLE- cw RY a | E LIZ. LAKE ESTATES 102_ E. Huron. FE 4-6204) _man 20 N. Cass. * garage OR b4ses — | am sen dition. Fireplace Otl FA heat, 3} ROOMS AND ‘BATH. Wear. i ROOM = K _ painted basement, 1% car ge- electric refrig at 6 Hudson. rage. A bome we are proud te eet ees = [20000 e D vate entrance, Aduils. Call STATE ST. WORKING GIRLS. ADAM : . show. $14,500. with terms. LISTINGS WANTED after 5 p.m. : tote beds, Enchen privileges of | Realtors FE 4-0528 $1500. DOWN f and 7 86. T — Eves. & Sun. Eeegiaen Taek lelake teens + SO tagne, Wer com ‘get yoe Francis E. “Bud” Miller pn, HORRY. RENTAL oo | Susan tnd tontmurents: #1 Whitte 3 i E : i i hi rT fs ffi i ie el Hi Rp si i E $ p i F 8 a j 4 ; af % it iL es) "VU O = 'Z 8 : z i 39 Ff z mf Bs iy Co. : " SAN LOS CAREW YORE On 3 of month floors. Windows, tle beth. nid of Pm Palin: sun tos log FoR FOR 3 vate Puraitere’ incioded Ke. lot, | $895 Down. “New 3 bedroom Pull divided basement, ofl fur- Quick R —_ -. — Si vance. Call — = close to iske. Only 95000 ar com, mace, —- water hoster Ew > COUPLE TO regardiess of condition if price &@| quired. 2068 Commonwesith. Commonwealth. With BATH FOR |» Located in Lake Orion with! © o. hisben ait, ecto: Laundry Service 18 a for , a a +0821 AND APTS KINDs.| ™an, with referencs Private en- — s. One fireplace,| matic hot water and all interior mon Wrist band in vicinity of Pontise ‘Press, Box 100. or FE for _ immediate i At, ce trance. WEST SIDE. Phone FE| biack top You can buy | studding. Soundly built. Attractive Huron Theater. Reward. 7243 Ar- service B. D. CHARLES. Realtor, | Family _Rentel_Agent FR COS} sis. * this income for $1800 down. | design. FOR FAMILY LAUNDRY SERV-| cola Drive. Wtd, Contract Mtgs. 32) _1717 8. Telesreph ___ || OWE ROOM PURNISHED WITH | + Ge CLEAN. FRONT ROOM #780 26% W. Huron st FE 5-206 Laundry. FE fost saTURDAY WIGHT. MAY TRADE OR pELL Hares FE tee, ture“ W- | “Private entrance. Close to Huron |4 room modern house, Shown by | $14.50 “Income special.” § lox Open ist. diamond in room | CASH FOR LAND cCONTRACTs.| Tr#des are made — bus Use of appointment enly. Located in Pon-| rooms yee a eS uae Tovorn, Watertord, | H Z.,,vanwen. eee Disio Mey.) sreeerere, Arise “your property, | by bo ; M| cont wouseeeEinc noow | te pes Sereme sol vplen, Pere: | SAaF BEDE o Qratimonte ard, —OR 31355. at Beit nee i) Men. Frigidaire, 163 Whitiemore |, om modern basement bouse sure can't beat this one aoe see cue. ont Onn, o& 3 Landscaping = 18-A | LOST: YOUNG PARAKEET. CHAR: ‘ S_ & SO! CARGE CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM | Ce, chy, of land. Located i | 411 seq Large well constructed ¢| § foom modem. steam heat, bus, ~ uste and grea, to vem! Cosh Waiting |petor coor menmen| Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34| “wan nenen privieges. Clow in. | DIVO Fine sy room: metets went ene, tence | paved” sire. tems ¥ BEAUTIFUL LAWN FOR AS LOW! ward _ 1$2_W. Huron +1581 | - PE 5-1606 after 4 p. m. 2 bedroom. house. Basemeat, off | tol in basement, screened front Estates, a lovely $l per week 3 years to pay. <= | ~ Por contracts, Call or see | WE NEED P 2 ROOMS, STOVE AND REFRIO- beat, garage chicken re Eat 6 oe ¢ room, sunroom, fireplace, break- = = 4 Bt eee 6 | ee Mr. oa personally for quick, ROW INAUE Realtor” erator, on bes ine, Clee to| PF. 0 5 ode it - -%, - t, ° Z. terms. tact sect. pee. hes oak floors; i { : } yr. old, brown and white, with , » Realtor | _stores. TPURNICWE ROOM. | © aaer SIDE $14,100, Geet bungetow nome with| ft aed lovely ower delivered id. C brown ears, brown spot on back. A. JOHNSON, R Itor | %%_¥. Buren Pp 2-401 | 2 . ‘ heat and water FE : 14 bedroom home with 2 complete | @re¢ semifinished altic. ofl fur- pg bh y ithe Fe Si Heme “Lemen.” Reward. EM FE 4.2533 = WE HAVE BUYERS WAITING FOR | $94, trigerater => Sigs ROCE. CLOSE i FOR Ste. beths. Basement blond oak fore, | BAe errno er eted ae | Sue: SeZeam neues, cael gad, clee- A 10. - 4 to 6 room houses. _— a eee 2% car On paved street. _. “Located ’ Needs work. $4650, $1280 ‘ sER = Syivan Shores,” Shown by ap- 3 | Lost: COLLIE REWARD POR |. 7 AND) ROOM UNPUANISHED | Smoking please. af Augusta. PE) Tyi4°%5 Sur of the month. ROSE McLARTY '—_—*PE 2-262 conser Ou Sant cc PE canis. | information or suave He cece | 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. K. G. Hempstead, Realtor ee = we ROOM itt PaIviLEOES Only $3000 down ghown by app't., Pomtment only we prOURTH STREET 4 neem SB anabe 600 ae ra to HOME | CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS W. 102 R Huron Street “2&7 Res. ; for 1 of 2 airs on west side.) AI)AMS REALTY CO. | L. H. BROWN, Realtor }| tus caameueet Vase lide paeet : i. $aarl a geal s-enen t, xie y. | WE 4-828 Eve. PE2-1317| RUSSELL H. YOUNG RENTAL +3770 | ses rte re ¢203 | 1262 W. Huron FE 24810 «61-2 bedroom, plus attic. 1-3 bed- 4. NURSERY 89D EVERGREE? week ago. Belongs to Danny and Gash POR CONTRACTS IF You “iL' BUY OF Lisl YOUR LaKE AGENCY. _PB 4-1446. PVT. FAMILY. LIGHT HOUSE. | 782 Aubura Ave. FE #3393 ' Member Coop Real Estate| Exch. | room. 1 Sheer. Bote hove full ‘ shrubs. Spring cleanup and trim. Becky Wail. Answers to Toy. Li- ae [ok cae ee pl 4 property : Purchbasets wai. ing. 1 ROOMS, PRIVATE FRONT EN-| keeping On — kitchen- ——$——_____- ———__—. .—}+__- on cored end peed bee ecevies @ ing Topping. fe rolling _eense No. 1481. Call FE 53-6953 | us fe have plenty of | - F. McKINNEY n 1 or 2 adults. 3-7671. __privileges. EnaiVir SLERPING | 8Y OWNER 5 ROOMS PART Reasonable terms on doth. Call s Patios terreces and rock garden. LOST: ONE MAN'S GREY | funds at reasonable discounts. Otten 6000 | Canmccest aa 7 AND UPPER. OIL HEAT. | QUIET, INEXPENSIVE NO fa MS ae , ear guarantee Plans drawn, es striped suit between Stout and Sring your abstract and land com ph Pontiac EM 3-331) oF New, nice, FE 2-7425. soem. "poaleasion — | a On Soayn NEAR FISHER Y ; timates free FHA terms. Lawn Green Streets. Reward FE 48163 | tract. Ask for Mr. Clark / Univ 1-579a J ROOMS AND BATH, MODEAN,| DUTiDess of esstenal. Write Pi scm dome “ya. | «This home ts in very nice con : maintenance Robinson and Sons — = = = = — ~~ CAMERON H. CLARK . — SN; | Daily Press a ip tery, ise com Lincoln 6-4068 | Realtor Eves, WANTED 2? OR J BEDROOM am. Cem bene. ROOM FOR RENT ON WEST SIDE. ; down plus 1 bedroom al Der ye er LUSt CAR KEYS 7 rE | house with either basement or | 22520. OFFERS > ANDSCAPING. CLEA CORNER HJRON & Warne =| 283_W._ Buren ____FE ¢003) oom. ately 61800 down |e] St. most completed. Excellent beth wet. service. FE 4-6196. STREET PHONE OR 3-2133 CASH ee price, Write Box 24 sinetarences - pa og : SPRAYING Physio-Therapy 24A |S! rr i "SAvINOS * LOAN CO gxPERT al yaaa OF ea fw : : : Sulomatic washer. Only $0000 with ; trees shrubs, lawn | ~~ eee = how to write powerful Want Ads! & r est HERE—ST . to eliminate dandelions. SCIENTIFIC SWEDISH MASSAOE. H Dial PE 32-8181 for a Pontiac Press x trimming. OL Special” foot technique. Ta im CAS ode A CORT M IMBLER- : Sopa OS Nicholie & Harger Co. Cie Sy ar ates | IT aI OR woman vena {a wena 8 Pew reine! = PEOPLE Ike YOU MOVING? Cali Pe Vernon Vie. Ph. FE 2-8743. Confi- | land contract or equity tm your KILLED , 9-4808 for service—bvig or email dential. The Salvation Army. home, ie a good location. Living rm., dining Reasonable rates. ANYONE HAVING INFORMATION K. L. Templeton, Realtor | 1.4, vereante time last week. Toom, 2 dedrooms and down. put ere retin’ Mic katte Linee’ | 2330 Orchard Lake Rd. PE 44563| much to the embarrassment of Living room, dining room, 2 bed- PILL Bia Fa, Sees Gamma St San Diese, Call’ | TO GET THE MOST FOR YOUR | White Bros. real estate office, voume Gnd beth up, recently G09- "LACK DIRT, ROAD GLEAN YOUR OWN RUGS AND | iand contract, Realtor Partridge | because we did not have enough orated. Basement, het air fur- ST et ee vel, mason | “upholstery with WHIPP Sham. | 8 the “bird” to see, 43 W. Huron nes A a SS sutomatic hot water. A good Rauling PE 2-1 "| poo. Restores beauty of original | _St.. Ph. PE 32-8316. a desire for your home not just : MAULING OF aLL KinDs REA. Pattern. WAITE'S Notions U li ° ed ® house, we offer the services of 3 bedroom home bardwood floors, sonable PE 3-6ns7 SAINTY MAID POR GUPPLIEA. nlimit oar cities. We taow how se automatic hot Water, paved street, NCINERATORG RD | ee erene, VE 20008, 08 _Mork. vantage fore quick sie. we wil ee Ashes b vruvbish hauled Ciees | OF YOUR DRINKING “Has BE: F d loam aaihent ‘about your Se er m ow +5134. come s problem. Py ane unas oy cog oo RI . We... garden spot. information, call Mrs. Spears, a AND | holies ous. PO. Box St] oon, or! [ihe Cerne the desize to A -¥ for. 100 W. Pike PE Goes rubbish Reasonable ae a ae make your house his, home. WE Drive : 7S ens contracts on finished of semi-/ make your hows net to misre- G. Hempstead, Realtor Gems look over re E. at GREEN LAKE ul 4 cots 8. sertney. mone finished houses. Also tor TRUCKING. AVES, $7. AND . tracts on one property. a maren-aNb | Doromy' Persia TPS) oe ee ae an "| Rent Houses Furnished 35 CAMERON H. CLARK | $i, Sette fied mil | f SS . : for the right house $2206 or FE 27625. Hi-Fi Headquarters Francis FE. “Bud” Miller | Phone’us when you wish to sell. PE 4.6492 living room AULING, CHEAP. AN nationally advertised compo- Realtor , T Nf tare window i. rE a nents Gf Get pelece. Bound Gimen- ea WHI E GRpsrative heal Brake tecbense a. room, DOING BUSINESS AS STONE REAL RACING 7 | eeo-4ii E M Ave | $19 . m. Daily Ove, 8 BROS Ga. Wir FONT ROTE WON FROCK iF -YOURDRINEING is Be-| 5% MORTGAGES ° bare Gay me. FE) Ree BO Bee th ON FARMS OR SUBURBAN {rom | _ Open 9 to 9 Sun. 1 to § . Ee TL CARTACE— KNAPP SHOES Sorsise’ or closing ine ** | se60 Dinte Highway, Waterford CHARLES] & A A May 7. 1954, I will not be re sponsible for any debts . pone. v other person Magee 2 tt HOE ad gt ‘ Tru¢ks for Rent fen! ail Wile | . vine > LAREPRC Fiore SANCY P< DER fase 0 Jone nats 4 room te bars 4 AP | Sets Se etree | bens | Pscome cal. Pisies Fo Roy Annett Ine he ae eve | Pate Barta eng | paige Bett CAGE PohinS, AND APES SUE |. Motel Rooms —-39| ‘OY ¢ ATIC.) Sonu A A VE SERVICE PE 2-3125 | rae CARE ; Be y Pa! BY 5 ! J ’ ~ Toe iene Se 7 B. D. CHARLES, Realtor) Russell Young aly FE 40521 saggy Co-operative Real Estate Bes Ee gf Oy ETE Eee Re RCO TN CATON a tg Pe CORRE Merge! ; ‘at in , fn eee Per La eee “SP ees so ; ‘ = 4 i * \ ; a ‘ ‘ 3 a 5 a aoe . THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 ‘ ssh Wes : . For Sale Houses 43|" For Sale Houses 43| _For Sale Houses 43/SLICE OF HAM [~ “For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Lake Property 44 Rea, Bevnoom nance! IT PAYS TO SEE | were we oe ee oe: ie Williams Lake GILES NORTH SIDE cute 2 bedroom utility pe — furnace, ures, & car ge- s !! Oa ‘erms too. PAVED STREET LADD’S HOMES Don't miss this good buy in & 4 bedroom home. It has eve: full b t auto. oil heat, near trans- If you can han- die a $2,500 down payment, see it now. 2 FOR 1 This 6 room house with a 3 cot! on the reer eof the lot located on the east side. It's close to transportation, schools, and stores. The 6 offer this ty to t rty ou at @ PAIR C PRICE. so hee this today and make money tomorrow. GILES REALTY CO. REAL 92 W. Huron. . ‘TOR 2 FE 54-6175 Open 8 till ® T ROOM MODERN IN DRAYTON 1 acre near . T room ~ nem” R-altv Ortonville. GATEWAYS to HAPPINESS MACEDAY LAKE PICTURESQUE LAKE FRONT Here's a home you'd te proud to own. In & scenic s over —— welers of M ay Lake. To see the land- seaping of a wealth of flowers and = oer al —s - slg spacious one f plen § room end 20 ft enclosed porch, featuring a 23 ft living room with fireplace 2 master bedrooms, 20 pod 16 f{ respectively. Com- pact kitchen oil heat, storms and boat goes, Lo $16,500 LL BAY IT'S OAKLAND LAKE THAT TIME OF YEAR To enjoy health Youll love this peo | ranch attac. 2 combination M6 ft ze et 627 500 rms FUL ITs V'AITING FOR YOU To Buy-To Seti you su MAHAN REALTY = REALTORS To Trade 1075 W. Huron NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH POST OFFICE GI! RE-SALE Two bedroom buncalow beth Lake Estates Has oak floors plastered walls. stairs to unfinished attic, tile bath tile Kitchen. full basement pace. and automatic hot water heater This home is al! newly decorated and has fenced back yard and beautiful lawn in Eliza - per once. GEORGE R. IRWIN REAL ESTATE 260 win Avenue ____ PE 5-O101 or PE 2-8544 @ ROOM MODERN HOME. FULL basement 2‘, car -arace chick en coop. fruit trees. and berries. OLive ere a5 Olive Road. Oxford Os @3231. FS HOUSE FOR SALE $700.00 DOWN. All modern. 4 rooms end bath privileges. By owner. Phone a ia HURON GARDENS Modern 2 room, full ba. INCOME a J bus Sarah down oe today SYLVAN VILLAGE BEDROOM and SCHRAM JACK LOVELAND +166) re 24875 rz 2189 Cass Lake @. Keego Harbor Johnson FOR BETTER HOMES PRICE REDUCED On this § room modern with lake privileges om Elizabeth Lake fronta Its “EW ITs BEAUTL- IT-WELL INSURE IT | to $7,450 with $1,250 ¥n, ent. gas heat glassed in sun gereh. and 2 car ga- rage. Best of all only $1,500 down and immediate possession. Own er says sel) HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! * ou don't want to m this . feereation room. and “atoKer heat Fruit trees A. JOHNSON, Realtor FE 4-2533 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. KE with fur- | Established 1916 ONLY $1500 DOWN On bus line 5 rms and bath, full base- ment with stoker heat side lecation. paved eo ft frontage porch. Total price $7,500 bedrms.. in- > rental come pa’ : units, some furniture included Cal tonight FLOYD KENT, Realtor 24 W._ Lawrence oo Eves Next to Consumers Power KINZLER Brick and Frame lot Lake privileges This ts the best value anywhere in a new home | Brick Bungalow — 2 Lots _Orchard Lake Village At Upper Straits Lake. New- ‘John Kinzler, Realtor @70 W. Huron &t. FE 43523 B ae enous, Fh. Fp pcm Knudsen West Suburban Se Pass S secose and lover ' tory up. Middlebelt Rd. 3 bedroom. brick home, — many good features “e Elizabeth Lake Ests. hy. ranch home with util- WM, H. KNUDSEN $10 GAYLORD ful eee an good homes. This with wall . 31 @o , me Scan an hehe | nee om > Da’ West Suburban Ae 1% story Modern 5 room, 1% story home, fe er | Se large, somblngtian vulchen and | L*stedlent epnation Gu farsacs im 8 good netsbborhoed Frenty | nonig i ~ - S of egnre? cones, oueh 2 car garage. Priced at $11,000 See This One! ——— iadme> sce a a WE ie oe es| KENNEDY Wells and oak fects. Pull base "Evenings "ul 8 ment with a nice recreation room. | 3007 W. Huron FE 43569 ferens ieixias fteparcel ef fand.| LAKE ORION ~ —— CC" LADD Immediate Possé¢ssion om Open Sunday 10:30 ) A re to gy Deon oT ee) ee ee A NVE ss to lake. . 3 Ee tile D.M. Taylor, Real Estate floors, located on 4 lots fenced in. | $04 8 BROADWAY. LAKE ORION. LAKE ORION 2 BEDROOMS ATTRACTIVE BUNGALOW b daa ox in . good rujt . arage, outside grill, and more. $9,000. Terms. 180 soil, f J. R. HILTZ REALTOR 148% N Saginaw St. This ft it ated beautiful This. this ead ¥ $6500 Hurry! Open to Phone OR 3-1872 or LOTUS LAK room bu is situ- e's ded leeniee on a well Just 1 bieck from this lake with an A-1 beach. rn home features lar ie. kitchen : You part et—steady, folk: comes—the full e see Dixie Highway. MILLER Veterans ean BuW process for you an home under a Ol mortgage older whieh will eliminate the additional t te an installing sternm sash anc screens and other new heme requirements Cali ux for 4 | Francis E etalls “Bud” Miller Realtor DOING BUSINES: AS STONE REALTY 8 to 8p w Daily; Sun. 1 to 5 | RAST BIDE See this home located | mortgage “MILLER - SMALL FARM of land, modern 3 bed- bath with shower NORTH SUBURBAN 5 2 bedroom b full tor. room. 3 full full reasonable bedroom home basement OFF JOSLYN alows, full be basement. Near jac -Mo- A good buy for veterans. Francis FE. “Bud” Miller 8 tw 8 m. Daily; Sun 1 to § 819 Josiyn FE 3-025) ~~ MACEDAY LAKE 3 bedroom year around home. Partly modern. Mas ratural fire ced at oniv $5950 w ow Ap ho thie C me erage @. 2 lovely screened hes e $1350 FRANKLIN RD. excellent §& froom =modern — gas furnace 1‘, car nice dis t Only $7350 with terms. UCKLER REALTY 172 West Ann Arbor FE sss2 NORTH FND NICE 4% ROOM nice fenced ‘ | $270 for my equit- “with $1509 down FE $4372 3 bed dition, Gas heat. tot. Russell A. Nott, 170 W. Pike in 1950. Has full ~as heat and hot we- walls, oak floors. A yard. NEAR 8ST MICHAEL'S room frame in excellent con- garage large paved street. $9800 terms EAST SIDE furnished. paved street condition terms. Realtor FE 450905 ak ; i 2 s yd > vours soe thee are woodg M. GREWER H iH i 35 Su - x QO é > Zz A ce] © ZH full basement 2 car | Corner of Williams Lake Rd Can be sold on GI | OnTONVILLE 1 ACRE $9,000.00 | or will sell — stop myself!" “Sorry, Joe, but when I get an urge like this, I can't For Sale Houses 43 ___For Sale Houses 43 NEW RANCH TYPE 3 blocks from Wolverine D basement with ‘ ture window overlooking 5 pond op | acre. Low down ment to t pase or will car in ie +1031 OPE 3 Bedroom Ranch Home ‘inished on exterior only. 1's miles — of M-5e end Williams Prices om your lot $3,695 up If you like evergreens. you couldn't fled & more scenic Bs acres. Lecated only § miles of Pon- find r * eect 2 Bedroom ram. . 7 bling log home extra large bedrooms, 24 ft. ling * cut stone fireplace oungstowna itehen cabinets, electric water at, enclosed porch, and 2 car garage néstied tn this beautiful spot. Price mecluder TIVINE room carpeting, electric stove, and ice- box $12,500 with cash to mort- eace Small Farm off Elizabeth Lake Rd. on Hospi- tal Rd. $460 down. F. C. Wood Co. REALTOR & M 50 OR 3-125 Oifice Open #8 WITH 3 room house newly decorated Only $500 down Waterford 8 room basement house extra large jot Only $800 down Waterford 4 se mi-modern. corner lot $4800. with terms Waterford 4 room tered walls oak terms Davisburg. 2 acres. close to floors. 96050. Good 4 room churches and school. Only $750 down. GEO. MARTIN, Realtor 6261 ALL NEW LISTINGS INCOME—Located on quiet ood resi- dential section. s tous rooms on first floor includ- ment, gas furnace, asuto- matic gas heater, 1%- —~ 20f . A nice home, @ wise investment. $13,000. OAK STREET — A clean bungalow, ideal retired couple, 1516 liv room, dining room, 2- rooms, and sunroom. al! on one floor bath, built in Garage but takes substantia! down payment We have the key let's go look EAST SIDE GI. RE- space. way to pansion. Oak and — walls. it. utilities, au- tomatic and hot water. JOST $1,750 Bal. at 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE WATERFORD RANCH A_new stone and frame ranch pring per $1400 DOWN Two bedrm. home on two nice lots West Side. Living room, dining room and kitchen. Large shade trees and ulet street. Total only $6,950. Don't miss this a Call PE 4-0564; or at 136 BE. Pike St. LAWRENCE W. ve Real Estate range from | odern. las- | yy ate V4 | Co-operative Real Estate Exchange POSSESSION AT ONCE 4 room. basement. furnished rage and breeseway, with 2 lots. excellent lecstion Rea- sonable. 22 Auburn Avenue. office in rear RANCH HOME Let 120x150 im good sec rooms, Parstan fey pie tos lg a he GAYLOR Co-operative Real Estate Exchange SHELL 2 BEDROOM $50 « month Ope, Syeda * SPECIALS $6.0 dow- . rooms out Oakland $1000 down 1 al cutie Perry Park $1800 down large 6 rooms East sid 39500 log dun; alow Brinde!l Lake k. J. VAI -CET. Realtor SYLVAN , HARE VILLAGE. BY storm +0417 HOME. $500 Walled e @ priv- 1918 M15 Charges Small Down Payment 2 bedroom, - room, ki . bath, utility room and near & Country Club. Large lot. Only $10,500. Roger B. Henry Inc. 611 Min OL 1-811) Rochester, Michigan Special! HURON ———_ ‘ Pr; ——- ae gaiow with vestibule en- trance to ant liv seam’ Pult duing soem, of ficiency kitchen, full bath, complete basement. oi] fur- nace. Lot 50x160 new ga- rage. A dandy home in a | aaa location. $10, erms too RAY O’NEIL, Realtor Phone FE 37103 or FE 3-1648 page gg Rea! Estate Exchange vi) . Huren Open An SMALL DOWN PAYMENTS $650 DOWN. Brand new house on large lot just out- side the city limits off Baidwin. 4 rooms and bath with stool enly. Completely oo Needs trim. fin- shed flooring and electric pump. Move ® days. Geneva and feet deep Now vacant. 3 downtown $750 DOWN. Large 4 rooms and bath with high acre of land 6 miles northwest of town $700 DOWN. 19 acres of land, smell 3} room house with weter and electric only. 18 miles north Edw. M. Stout, Realtor TT N. Cagine wo ath See The All Woman Realty Donelson Park this doll house. 2 large bedreoms Walk in closets. Beautiful stone fireplace in living with bay fleors square ft. of furnace Recreation is. Pull corner lot. 5143 Cass-Elizabeth Lake Rd PE 5-1284, FE 4-3844—Open STOUTS BEST BUYS TODAY ELIZABETH FRONT INCOME A very lovely building with 5 —— renting units each with private bath, in- — over ar monthly us carpet ‘a ment in owner, full ses with of] heat. 5 car ga- bg od with overhead 8 4 s with 75 feet of solid sandy lake frontage end Nothing else ike it and only A s 10 ACRES Almost new semi-bungalow with 5 spacious rooms and bath with fireplace down space fer large sedroom Large basement with oi) furnace and electric hot downtown DRAYTON PLAINS Like new 5% room bh t bun with at- tached car- Kool- Vent awnings boxes. 13x20 living . 2 bed- rooms, den, bath with col- ored fixtu area and rt kitchen. Utility Edw. M. Stout, Realtor ae SMALL DOWN PAYMENTS | 3 f ; i 35 ze 55 ii zi < 2 re He ah 3 i : : . TR Pp Near St. Joseph Hospital Luxury its yours at low cost with this home = Spa- cious living room. kitchen 2 bedrooms, tile bath Un- finished attic. excellent basement of] heat, gas wa- heater. Wall-to-wall car- ter fase North Here is your moderately priced home in exce t con- dition and packed full of value Aluminum siding basement with rec. room, hobby room, asphalt Moor and oi] heat 5 nice sized rooms full beth Pias- tered walls. 2 biocks from St Mike's Full price 69.- $00. terms West Side This neat home can by your pride and joy. Utterly eharming living room with Tay wall-to-wall ca i. lovely bedrooms, full base- ment, rec ance. Vacant, too Leshe R. Tripp, Realtor 22 W. Lawrence Open Eves PE +0161 -or Fr 5-839 = This Week's Specials $1000 DOW N Frame. 2 bedroom. Modern home Convenient R summer log home on river. ayy a $2000 DOWN 2 bedroom frame home. Has living room, kitchen, 3 piece bath. Kegon on steed leoation, ok EMBREE & GREGG 1565 Union Lake Rd EM 34303 or EM 3}-3251 Call OL 26131. Ning i : i i Lake Rd. EM 3-5182. Also one under construction. Realtors are invited to cooperate. ano WE ARE BUILDING 6 new home: at Oxbow and Eliz mentor nt, iat . Bryan m jase. oak firs.. e front witty KOSS "ise "Soon Wait till you see the interior of REAL ESTATE eut | room | windows. Exceptionally nice walnut trim throughout | tached garage. Nicely landscaped i-Huron shop- “t miss this bar- ping center. gain at $12,000. terms THELMA M. ELWOOD 9 to 7 | 222 8 For Sale Lake Property 44) ~---storm -aui screens. 2339 ORCHARD LAKE RD. OUR NEW LOCATION East Side One acre of land ® four modern home with full bath, and mall ed at only 500 with $1,000 attic, in excellent condition, y priced. 250 LAKEFRONT LOTS WATKINS Lake Terms. FE 5-6396. ~ 2339 ORCHARD LAKE RD. OUR NEW LOCATION » WILLIAMS LAKE K. L. Templeton, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lake Rd. PE 4-4563 Office Open Eve. For Sele Resort Prep. © CABIN AND LOT $295. $25 K. L. Templeton, Realtor 2338 Orehard Lake Ra PE 4-456) Office Open Eve. $400 Down Two bedroom, modern. full Aluminum storms and screens Large \ot. Lake privileges $1500 Down at Clear Lake. 1910 M-15 __ Ortonville 133, Reverse Charges space hea’ | ler terms PONTIAC REALTY CO. 731 Baldwin Rd. FE 56275 5 Acre Parcel Kelchner FE 54-1201 “BUD” Nicholie 2 ACRES Hospital! Road 4 rooms modern except tub. Only $4950 with terms JESSIE ST. large room, 3 piece beth and automatic hot water 2 lots $6300 with terms CARROLL G. PORRITT 26% West Huron FE }11264 Eve. call FE 27288, $6,950 BRAND NEW FHA BUN- GALOWS 12 bedrooms. pia» tered Walls oak floors full bath with built-in tub and shower Picture window in the 144 foot living room automatic oi! heat 52 ga! electric water heater ity sewer water and sidewalk Investigate at once. We only have 7 $1250 plus FHA mo eost 643 per m incluties everything oe s look pow We have the ey. RAY O'’NEIL, Realtor 7% W. Huron 0 FE 3-7103 Open Phone or OR 3-1668 Co-operative Real Estate Exchange ‘ $650 DOWN Large 3 room modern, 3 piece bath. of] heat. West Suburban location — . . JIM WRIGHT, Realtor Co-operative Real Estate Exchange Telegraph E_ 5-0693 tion C DENNIS O'CONNOR REAL ESTATE PE ¢5281, or MY 2-0040 HILLSIDE TRI-LEVEL iN THE pines. 100 ff. f e on beau- tiful pvt. lake near ke Orion 3 bedrooms, 1%, bath. 32216 living ari dining room. heem ceiling balcony fireplace 25 ft screened terrace radiant heat recreation room, heated garage aluminum com munity Washer. dryer nctnerator Dish- master curtains knotty cedar in- terior $26.400 MY 3-7062 Owner IF YOU CAN QUALIFY AND ARE interested im a nice year round home in Seven Harbofs. on White Li We have them $10.200 to $27,000. H 86. Mar- 3500 Duck Lake Rd. (M-t8 West) Ph. Milford MU i FOR BETTER HOMES Two beautiful lake lots on Long Lake in Bloomfield Township Very exclusive. Will accept lan contract or small home in trade ~ full information call Mr. oll. A, JOHNSON, Realtor , FE 4-2533 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. aR TLaDeS, MOE | A Ee Lake 3-806. ei ft Year srovnd 458 ft. @ _22.500) MOD OPEN SUN. 1 _——— TO 6 ee oe Otter Lake Ove of the finest views in Oak- lovely %y sere let overiouking to the approva! of owners. $1. with terms F. Cs Wood Co. REALTOR | | per tiful : ec om the yA Lee Swallow — [abe rae Open Sun- ay vellinacmmascsiean - GOOD FISH! near by Thousands of scres deer and small game bh _Clare County Mich EM 324 Perch Run You fishermen are missing the boat if you — inves- ot | =e ar price $4,400, terms Call $750 DOWN A. Taylor, Realtor, FE Near Williams Lake. 3 bedroom +2544, Eve. FE 23-8710, | Bungalow, walls sheetrocked,| _ _ rouge plumbing in. wiging in 5 . PULL BATH weil 1002150 lot Finish yourself utility rm Commerce Lake area and save mone ach. Only 63800 cash im North of Fishers mediate vossession EM 3-610) eft i f late ‘ant 3 ne ton Woods HOLMES-BARTRAM 4307 Dizte Highway OR - ig Eves R ann IDEAL RANCH HOME SITE Dre, 100X150 CLOSE IN woney tees . 5 Acres, $150 Down Only 1 left. Just off Baldwin A level parcel on @ good road Easy te drive your own well L. C. LADD Dixte Hwy OR 3-2361 Pontiac Lk 84 FE 20207 Corner Cass Lake Rd. LARGE LOT IN SOUTH field Wi on near Rut i LITTLE FARMS Lares one acre tracts. Excellent 11,000... = | REAL Close to bus etores and — ols, “Only $15 Down and $15 io Lovely 5 acre tract near Oxford Sandy loam School bus door “Only $200 down 1. th. BROWN, Realtor 1362 w _Huron __ FE 2-4810 LOT ON INDIAN LAKE E 2-1117 LOTS 50 X 320 ON PAVEMENT P. W. Dinnas & 80n. 2 LOTS ON STANLEY ROAD. Phone OR 3-1821. $50 DOWN % acre lots near Auburn Heights WILLIAM G. WHITCOM ALTOR $25 DOWN Easy ter~ on the balance of $125 want investigate Sate Elna Germs Labes. -Red Horse FE 2-9179 SYLVAN CITY Choice building cites. Cor Pontiac De & Ferndale Two 75 ft. wide lots $1,508 and $1,800 or $2.800 for both. Sewer stubs n. Ward E 1100 lots on easant and Partricce Realtor 43 W Huror St FE 7-834 a 10 LOTS 440x120 CLOSE TO FISH- each Box! er Body plant $1200 _47, Pontiac Press. A WEEK BUYS A — lot tn of tiac, on Columbia off Jos Owner #1122 days, nights 5-5925. For Sale Acreage 47 city Six Secluded Acres See thi« heavy wooded site s00n brings wild flowers «alote it's T's close in only 3 miles CAR}. W, BIRD, Realtor 516 Pontiar Stave Yar’ Bid re +4211 __Evennes FES 2% ACRES SUITABLE vision rposes 5 Large ranch bome sites In Dray- IN yton Wood s. By owner. FE +o — LARGE HOMESITES A of as ae a ron St. on Cass e Rd Close to new W Some rol A a few wooded. 7 as 8 A besutiful country build: site with some trees An site wit * ‘ose neighbors On «a BLOOM- Devonshire +5458. NG | TY i. Member Co-op Real Est i F J obit iat Ey To Buy—To Sell—-To Trade YOU BUY IT-—WE'LL MAHAN PRIVATE LAKE 25 acres mg A 3%) miles and atte Hh By gE ef Fee Gas Station & Garage M-1, Shows excellent income —cail fer further particulars John K. Irwin REALTOR 101% N. Saginaw St. SS PE 54031 Eve PE 31006 wtertard HARDWARE esta BUSINESS AND } } j i at your ' j= THRO Nl INCOME Well established grocery and meat ss fesponsible party. A investment. Terms. _C. HAYDEN, Realtor % W. Huron St. FE 5-290 “pees awe ‘jocated near Fa a hae wf It Dusines frontage fust west of Telegraph Roed Now has 2-bedrm modern home buy for investment or home and business All for only $9,750 with $2,750 down. Liberal discoumt for cash. GOOD CORNER Excellent eorner drive- lunch or. gas station, "Pronts o 2 paved . 240 MT. e ins Mere oe —= $4,500 with only $1,000 own. FLOYD KENT, Realtor 24 W. Lawrence FE 5-6108 Open Evenings Next to Consumers Power 300 FT. ON PAVEM, NI ALL OR part Inguire #4) N i Business Opportunities 51 AUTOMATIC SELF SERVE LAUNDRY AND AUTOMATIC LAUN- DRY SUPPLIES WHOLESALE Located in rg a. tiac, Can ° Cash $16,000 on caress” e3e.0u with $5,000 down. Call ‘tual 48292. or write Box 19 Pontiac 1.23, ee as COMBINATION DRUG AND VARE ety store M-15 og Pag 1880 Bela Eagte e. 6 miles north of Clarksten Phone S4F3 Orton- * = ee ae ee See ~ a 7 1 ¥ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 STATE-WIDE Serv ot eg Jehan f. Landmesser, Petes ——————————— = —— — Money to Loan 53 CASH PROMPTLY Get & cash of & here y 8 for @ loan a single trip) Write or mn more con You’ way we business \. PROVIDENT pop teni AN Boe ag a TaBrence, Se, LOANS $25 to $500 Coulourity Loan Co. 1! 30 E. Lawrence FE 2-7131 Priendiy Service LOANS $20 TO $500 — On signaiure oniy Household Finance Corp. of Pontiac ™% © Seginas & wr 4 ner Partridge THE “BIRD” TALK To, THE mont eiMAN WHEN YOU WANT TO BUY A BUSIN AUTO DEALERSHIP . Titmess forces lor appointment today HARDWARE - BONANZA HAMBURGS, ICE CREAM DRIVE-IN - autre imn thet hes excel- . . ‘round esa. Both WARD E, PARTRIDGE OrrADksite "AesninG "MOUSE COAST.-TO-COAST ‘Werld's Largest " 43 W: Muren. Open Eve. FE 23-8316 fis y | x 2 a f x = Nn peu if iF VARIETY "Y STORE — main St. Davisburg. Mich ree clean stock, soda fountain quarters over prove un! e town. Hurr e Box 47, er leavin one Sale Land Contracts 52 @O00D LAND CONTRACT FOR Fe sas mt NNO. Phone SOLD FOR $7900 $1300 DISCOUNT. your cost $5356. Excellent invest “CORT M. IMBL -ER 11 Josiya th @-Sund tne Geeperetive _Real_ Bvtahe Rachenge | J. VALUET, Realtor Co-operative Real Estate Exchange GET CASH QUICKLY UP to $500 1963 tae, pe 3 misttes. Coane also ‘mace on fur — other OAKLAND LOAN CO. FE 2-9206 302 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG Up to $900 CASH for You Today 30.000 FAMILIES IN PONTIAC and Oakland BUCKNER'S = TRE OLD RE. LIABLE UP. DATE LOAN COMPANY WHER 1 You ARE ALWAYS WCLL “FATED When lnes come Whe © are ‘ayofis or short time employmen vo ill be clad Buckner FINANCE COMPANY Pe} 1 oe Need Money? ls as cea: a8 *our telephone Just FE 5-8121 Por aut fivametng cefinancing pay~ert of debts or any other worthy purpose ost wans are — A oo your first visit and a few tnutes Libera) repay non olin | Home & Auto Loan Company com- ~, oe Nationa) Bank Bide to *: Saturday Gt? | FEAGUE FINANCE CO 202 N. MAIN - ROCHESTER, MICH: LOANS 825 TO $500 AUTOAS VESTOCK _MOUSENOLD GOODS ester OL «o7' WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $500 " pestems "Eitan jee eoren You an # and reper & email! ~ y pay- Ra Telerrone us or call at our office SiRTE FINANCE CO. , Ponti*¢ State Renk Bidg FE 4-1574 $209 "HO00 Quick. Friendly Service Baxter & Livirigstone re 41538 ™ at Case Pag | to 9500 Finance Co “4 W Lawrence 5100 On Your Name Only QUICKLY = “a worthy pur- Geer orea® to ol GENERAL PUBLIC LOAN CORPORATION 69 W Huron Street Phone FFderal 3-718) LOW INTEREST yrdveune: or single fam- a G G PETERSON 1310 Pontiae State _ Pho FE PE sese or PE ACCESSURIES SquPMENT comulete trailer home store | re‘-igera- toof co attnas ‘ine of gas stove and herte y also car equinrent tour springs. care wired «nd eqiipment = inetriled terms | See eR EXCHANGE @ S. Telezraph Ra __ Oven Bve: and Sunday pm BABY GEM. ALL AL’ casb 2101 Dizte Highway. UITY ike a. May be ke ent priva pire pen AMERICAN. ai Enapire 32-6145 at Als to choose from. Gevera! us more. Ask about our rental pur- on used trailer has “GENESEE SALES 2101 — Highway. owe, OR 3808" Mortgage Loan, 54 WE HAVE » 0000 THESE For Sate | Housetratlers 55 55 aid and ther oitches over load brake or 4 “GENESEE SALES IN 1982, 28 FOOT ROYAL. ES FE 2-8786 éxi0, SLEEPS For Sale Used Cars 6 For Sale Used Cars 61| FUNNY BUSINESS - ~ PON RETAIL Goodwill “Not a Name Across From Post Off BUY YOUR C | | DEALER Y BUY NOW We Don't S-L-A-S-H _ PRICES! We Price ’em “RIGHT” 1950 Stude. $695 | ‘4 SEDAN WITH NICE “Wom OREEN PAINT. NEAT AND CLEAN INSIDE AND OUT RADIO AND HEATER. 1949 Ford $395 Used Cars OU KNOW! 4 DOOR CUSTOM SEDAN. RaA- DIO AND HEATER WELL! WORTH THE GOOD LOW PRICE. | 1953 Ford For d . Gol same the rms | end “heater, * custom, “*de- $1895 $1095 | Haas = "MODEL AND Teese A T8BE "Pwo owe GRE: iOnET 10, YEARS OF LE St Ri Poetoue aneT | CRDFoutieee bette || FeMing RAVEN wit CaRs DON’T MISS, ae 1954 | EE Pontiac | Pontiacs jug, woes MSs $1245 SELECTIO GOOD SUYS ALL HAVE RADIO AND HEATER. PON RETAIL FACTORY 63 Mt. Cleme Phone F TIAC STORE | But a Policy” ice On Mt. Clemens St. AR FROM A and SAVE! by Hershberger & | “Sorry, Joe, I hope the wat WE DON'T er will keep you warm for the night—we have no extra bed nor blankets!” Have To PRICES Here’s What We Have “LEPT” For Sale Used Cars 61 eee eee AWAY WEGO WITH SPRING | WHOLESALE ‘1950 «Pontiac convertible, radio and heater, § cylin- der biue White side-walis Your car down will make @ deal 1950 Dodge 9795 | se 3 sour canon : Ford & radio and heater, over- COME IN_AND TRY gooD drive, Figg -- y "1950 «Oldsmobile 98 = con- vertible. radio sand heater, hydramatic. power seats, power windows. red leeth- er. green 5 al Master white sidewalls. Low down paevment. CAR ITS OUR Usual HIGH Ures. sum QUALITY TYPE OF USED CAR tap color. 9566.60 full price. AT A GOOD LOW PPICE- ‘1960°. 2 door 6 cylinder Ford adio «and eater, beautiful chartreuse green $495.00 faul price 1949 Chevrolet $695 Pontiec, 8 cylinder. heater, ear for the family $196.00 Gown and you own this gem. MERE IS A SHARPIE OF A CAR! IT 18 A SMART-LOOKING CON- aa Poster ah ah food Ores VERTIBLE. HAS RADIO AND owecs. Very harp, . GEATER this car and you will buy . tt Your car wil) make down pay ment ‘47 Chevie, 4 door fleet master radio and heater, 1951 Save! YEs. YOU'LL GET PONTIAC'’S ee AND BEST ars re TORY OFFICIALS’ CARS. TIAC | BRANCH aA eae ns at Mill St. |= E 3-7117 BETTER BUYS! 52 Chevroiet reluxe 2 door $1 Chevrolet Deluxe 2 door Power- Chevie deluxe club coupe Pow- 8, deluxe 2 door Hydre- 195] Chevrolets tte +-+or-Sale-Housetrailers se} 4 Ten 4 ~ ft Many floor plans 1954 demonstrators Priced right fer before you buy and save TRA'LER. IDEAL HUNTING. fishin, housetraile: type Li- een PE 47642. 871 Robin- wood . [ae 71 FT. HOUSETRAILER. EXCEL- ‘: Jent condition. 45@ Elis Lk. Rd. iis) 22 PT. NATIONAL WITH bath. Like new. Phone FE 56-7733. side 12x16. traite Sita Heseimery, PE 4-487) ee een ee eee lt | ine ANDERSON 3 PT. WEL ‘ : way pes rent? sacrifice. Lot 38 Huron Trailer Stet ae Baits | Pak ~ | Sess eres Se eee Bae "Good condition MY a OXFORD TRAILER |i PONTIAC, SELL IN P SALES 3 FT AMERICAN HOUSETRATL- as Sy ‘sell aa oe vires come First $408 or will rent $10 week. fir t served _Detroit TExes 48866 the new ptewarts and ‘irest | 14 HOUSETRAILER | $300 6640 rT Flagstaff, Union Lake eon Nine ll Fat to Bn ete ane pew po ETR. ER Fens and arias Homes The te te ohn. nousETs aes best deals are here gas 40795. — + rete oe ate SP 8147 “SPORTSMAN, SLEEPS "4 ore made Accessories Screened in el oe and awning 1 MILE South, of Lake Orion M-24 ie Pr N._Per a } sleeps condition. $56 . goon, BA @ month. Terms. p tj OR_3-2568. On 1aC Auto Accessories 57 . AUTO GLASS 1e We alize auto glass FREE ON& POUN' Se Ga MOBILE HOMES tans Sr windehie™ Hub Auto mht to 45 ft - ‘eth «mt 6 jase 122 Oekiand * nue veare t oa oF You can bur @ Les Hutchinson ATTENTION reconditioner tratie $100 down e low as an nN Hutchinson’s Trailer Sales We are wrecking 1049 to 1 and 615 Dizi Highway Draytoe Pieins| election of 2007, parte. | aise corny + Saha octware | SCHRAM aS BARTS we ee o- agg 2539 oe el. we SMALL HOUSETRA FOR | Open Bren ideal we A) a week. sale. FE 5-0829. Starters and up. 9% Ave. Ph. FE 44613 Exchange | "ERcuRY. we “RACE |, oore Sales—Service | OnE AiR COMPREEIOR A, "| Wanted clean cars, '42 te ‘$1. Cash Auto Service 58 | CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE | 14 Reautiful New Car Trade-ins _— ear, cylinders rebored. Zuck Ma. | Sse, “P Moo Ph OPE LOW AS REPAI é& PAINTING eTFREE “ESTIMATE 695 “biyMaNT PLAN BRAID MOTOR SALES| __ ° d Variety of Body Bi Styles & Colors anted Used Cars 59 Pat Give It Away Get a good end fair 150 More New Car Trade-ins Drop’in today Gove vents ALL BARGAINS! : d S - c tenn’. aa ee tun MICHIGAN'S INDIVIDUAL LL GOOD USED ‘sO Ford Chevie. FE sat after 3:30 ~ READY TO SELL? FINEST THE BIO PAVED Lot N THE CORNER 0 WOODWARD AND 13 Mine ROAD : BARGAINS we sb at FS ieee Ford wastoar 9 ar. . r ; | Aute_Ina_Gerage—Aubure_ Heights T Trade your used ‘ ree ede #- | used car and So a ce save $$$$ at _~—_____ OR. See M&M Motor alt" =e es On. 31603 D Price for Your Car | .ss Clarkston “To wey Depre ae Goes A real buy 1946 Ford four door, $148. Clarkston. MOTOR SALES cupsien, M «.m.-8 p.m. we ick 18d SPECIAL DELUX a For Sale Used i Cars 61 a iid For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars 61 Dum "Only the Ti Pr $1395 1951 Buick Riviera, radio, | heater and Dynaflow. A one-owner car with beau- tiful two tone finish (blue), One you would be mighty proud and happy to own. There's a 30 day written guarantee for your protection, $2295 1953 Buick Super Riviera, This is Buick’s famous hardtop design. Two tone _| green finish, whitewall CY OWE Used Car Corral 53 Ford tudor, radio and heater. 53 Ford Country Sedan, Fordomatic, radio and heater heater, Fordomatic. ’S2 Ford Country Sedan, overdrive, radio and heater. ’S1 Ford Tudor, white- walls, Fordomatic, radio and heater. I-51 Buick Super Sedan, Dynaflow, whitewalls, radio and heater. $1 Mercury Tudor, over- drive, radio and heater. 51 Chevrolet Tudor, radio and heater. ’530 Chevrolet Tudor, radio and heater. 50 Chevrolet Club Coupe. radio and heater 50 Ford Custom &, white- walls, radio and heater. ’50 Pontiac Tudor, radio and heater. 50 Hudson Tudor, radio and heater. '51 Buick Special Sedan, radio and heater. '51/Ford Custom 8, Tudor, radio and heater ‘50 DeSoto Sedan, radio and heater. '49 Nash Tudor '48 Dodge Sedan, radio and heater. ‘46 Pontiac Sedan, radio and heater. ‘46 Pontiac Sedan, radio and heater. Not a “Rough Rider” the lot, Come in today and try out the car of your choice. CY OWENS 48 CADILLAC “62” Cs ith it Sete 150 More New Car Trade-ins ALL BARGAINS! MICHIGAN’S FINEST ‘52 Ford Sedan, radio and | in| } tires, custom trim, radio, | heater and Dynaflow. S | It is less than one vear old | and has very low, mileage No Down Pay | ‘48 Chevrolet Club Coupe, good tires, radio, heater, runs good and is mechani- cally sound ........ $295 ‘49 Pontiac 4 door Chief- tan “8.” Radio and heat- fer. A real bargain buy at this low price....... $295 Over 22 Y 2100 (Cor Op 'FE 2-910] De Dum} res Have Been otect the Drive $999 1951 Pontiacs, Several of these fine cars to choose from. Various models, 2 door, 4 door, all have ra- dio and heater and some have Hydramatic. Be first and get the car you want. Your choice at the low, low price of $995. SAVE! 1952. Buicks — Specials, Supers and Riviera mod- els. You have your pick of good colors, so’ see us to- day. We're open until 9 daily. Prices on these good Buicks start at $1,395. ment Transport 18 Months to Pay Very Easy Terms ars to Choose MO SALES ears a Good P! rchard Lake Av ner of Williams en 8a.m. to 9p. “_ Dum Changed to a r $965 1991 Hudson. Fully equipped and has all the extras. If you are a Huds. son buyer, check this low mileage car today, Re- member, we will be glad to give you a demonstra- tion drive in any car, just call FE 2-9101. $899 1951 Ford 2 dogr Crest- liner. The 2 t6ne green finish on this’ beauty 1s spotless. NEV whitewall tires and excellent inte- rior. Your Older car could handle the down payment, ‘ation Specials! '47 Pontiac 2 door, Stream- liner 8 Radio and heater. Ideal for use as a “second "49 Chevrolet 4 door, De- luxe. Radio and heater, Locally owned, well cared HOD sais sivlelcene a sle ss $445 From ace to Buy enue St.) m. \- FE 2-9101 For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars 61° \ For Sale Used Cars 61 1953 Chevrolets Executives’ Cars Demonstrators New Car Trade-ins 2 Dr., 4 Dr., Sport Coupes & Convertibles LOW AS $1195 : co as or 490 35 Der month 150 More New Car Trade-ins ALL BARGAINS! MICHIGAN’S FINEST Your Ford Dealer eS ef al radio, Ph ge 147 S. Saginaw St, eemenee Phone FE 5-4101 generator —e 1952 BUICK RIVIERA. MUST BE | 1940 4 seen. $1,450. 574 Madison Ave’ 29-6810. See it today... $995. Community Motor Sales Ot sant Seen mn eee Bantews "49 Plym. 2 dr. down. Low | Only | Economical Transportation 46 Hudson Sed ...... "47 Kaiser Sed. ....... "49 Packard Sed. ..... 195 47 Chev, 2dr. ........ 95 50 Hudson Sed. ..... 295 "Sl Henry J . secccese 399 "48 Dodge Sed. ...... 195 49 Ford 2 dr. scecees 295 "49 Pont. 2 dr. ....... 395 SO Mercury Club Coupe 150 More New Car Trade-ins ALL BARGAINS! MICHIGAN’S “1952 Chevrolets Choice Of 15 Beautiful - New Car Trade-ins -, 2 Dr., 4 Dr., Bel. Air ‘Sport Coupes LOW AS $795 Softee Sekt” ome tow 150 More New Car Trade-ins ALL BARGAINS! MICHIGAN’S FINEST “| er, undercoat, 75. ‘92 Chrysler This good 4 door model has radio, heat- auto- | matic shift and has had the best of care from the original owner. Beautiful Ti- tian Red finish and very good tires. Real- ly a fine car at terrific savings. $1,395. - © OLIVER MOTOR SALES 210 Orchard Lake Ave. cE OO THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Care '.¢! Bright Only Full Pr ‘49 Ford 8 Custom 2 dr., black. A little rough but good transporta- ton, $075 ’49 Hudson Commodore 4 dr. radio, heater and whitewall tires. $245 50 Hudsor Club Coupe. Clean. Radio & heater. $395 ’47 Willys Station Wagon, heater, overdrive, ex- cellent body and tires. $295 °$1 Olds Rocket 88. Local doctor’s car. $945 50 Mercury Club Coupe, nice clean car with ra- dio and heater. $695 ’$1 Ford deluxe tudor, ra- dio, heater and excel- lent tires. $695 The Jerome Used Cars — Orchard Lk. at Cass \ Phone FE 4-5324 SOO ae $2 ice Only $95 t 46 Ford 8, 4 dr., green, radio and. heater, Ex- cellent tires, runs good. $175 "46 Pontiac 8, 2 dr., Streamliner. $245 Grey '47 Pontiac 8, 4 dr., green, thoroughly recondi- tioned, Radio, heater. $295 "47 Chevrolet Club Coupe. Needs a little work, but is good transpor- tation. $95 $1 Pontiac Chieftain de- luxe 2-door, radio, heater, spotlight. $895 ’49 Dodge 4 dr., blue, radio and heater. Sharp. $395 ’49 Ford Convertible. Fire- engine red, whitewall tires, radio and heater. $495 Bright Olds - C For Sale Used Cara 61 For Sale Used Cars ol For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars. 61 For Sale Used Trucks 62 For Sale Used Trucks 62 Li rgains Down o $495 SO Buick . 4-door sedan- ' ette, Dynaflow, radio, heater, whitewall tires. $695 ’48 Chev. Club Coupe. Ex- cellent condition. $295 49 Chevrolet 4 dr., excel- lent condition. . $445 radio and heater. $450 ’49 Chevrolet, 4 dr., green, | ™y 49 Ford 2 dr., black Cus- tom 8, radio, heater and overdrive. $450 ’50 Chevrolet Sedan Deliv- ery. Low. mileage, good paint and good tires. $495 50 Chevrolet 4 dr., radio, heater and good tires. $695 Spot adillac New Cars 280 S. Saginaw Phone FE 4-3566 — Used Cars 61 LARRY JEROME Rochester, Ford Dealer 53 “FORD AND LINCOLNS Factory \ Officials’ Cars, 1953 Lincoln Capri four | \ LEANES door, four way seat, elec- tric windows, power steering. - $2750 LARRY ' JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer ar TOP TRADER _Oekland Ave. MIKE’S AUTO SALES PowTtAcs *S2 FORD SUPER 2 DR. Ref eeu al 0 beouly of 0 pelos. 150 More New Car Trade-ins ALL BARGAINS! eee een ees Community Motor Sales o an st Rochester Oven ‘til 10 vo. @ For Sale Used Cars 61. For Sale Used Cars 61 “7 a “ard heater. Trade Dick: NO | MONEY DOWN! Our plan is ethical, honest and true. 1949 CHRYSLER : ~~ series. four Windsor xceptional condition. ig aed green | tater heater, and suto- matic transmission. Very nice interior. Good tires. $34.00 a Month 1949 DESOTO interior. $34.00 a Month 1948 PONTIAC Streamline eight. Excellent finish, really good tires, h. matic. radio and heater, pe very good, Appearance ex- $30.00 a Month 1948 CHEVROLET 440 ton ba Si go ‘omtt- cellent black ydara- lke new other: nice cars @ airanged. or will accept contr Specials _ $7 DOWN DOS OO wr nw GOO, CONDITION, RA. | AT Community Motor Sales 6 Main &t. Rochester ou 24311 Open ‘til 10 p.m. $ EAST BLVD AT PIKE 8ST 53 PONTIAC 8 AIN 150 More New Car Trade-ins ; | 150 More New Car Trade-ins ALL BARGAINS! MICHIGAN’S FIN EST ALL BARGAINS! MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BiG PA AVED LOT THE CORNER OF iN | WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD CGuar- anteed Good Cars ‘S32 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR $1,005 "62 DODGE 4 DOOR, GYROMATIC $1,295 ‘S| PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR . $795 ‘$1 DODGE 2 DOOR sas "80 PONTIAC 8, 4 DOOR 9786 ‘30 PONTIAC 8. CLUB COUPE $845 ‘% DODGE $706 ‘S1 PLYMOUTH SUBURBAN $805 ‘0 MERCURY Riemenschneider Bros, DODGE- PLYMOUTH 232 S. Saginaw St. Phone FE 2-9131 From Came “Truth is simple—requ art.” HAROLD TU | “For the Best In "Ky! 48 Austin 2 dr....... $284 52 Buick Super Riviera ...... ap Lb 300 | 53 Ford 4dr. ...... 1, 150/ ek OF, ccm we 738 ’49 Cadillac 4 dr. ..... 973 52 Buick 2 dr. ..... 1,013 51 Ford Vic. ........ 782 53 Ford Ranch Wagon...1,599 50 Pontiac Chieftain DeLuxe 2-dr.—.-.. 540 "$3 Merc, 4dr. ..... 1,550! Specials! 471. incoln 2 dr...... san) 48 Ford Club Coupe. 2 49 Kaiser 4 dr......... 48 Chrysler 4 dr..... 9 ‘Sl Heary J 2 Gficies cox » "40 Ford 2 dr........... 44 ’41 Plym, 4 dr....... von’ '47 Chrysler 4 dr......123 48 Dodge 2 dr........ 299 "49 Buick 2'dr-. 22... 199 50 Ford C-8, 2 dr..... '46 Chev, Coupe . ’47 Chev. Club Coupe... ’48 DeSoto 4 dr....... 399 | Harold Fo TWO LOC 464 S. Woodward Birmingham Athens solon iring neither study nor RNER FORD Wheels And Deals” BUYS | ’50 Nash 2 dr........ $299 49 Ford C-8, 2 dr.....299 49 Ford C-8, 4 Ping ee 2D ’°52 Ford Ranch Wagon ........ 1,209 51 Kaiser Traveler. ..444 51 Plymouth All Metal Station Wagon... .599 53 Chev. Dix. 4 dr...1,199 ’5O Stude. 4 dr........ 399 53 Plym. 2 dr....... 1,099 | Convertibles! | | '47 Buick Conv, ..... $244 | |’'50 Ford Conv. ....... 7237 "51 Chev. Conv. ...... ria 51 Buick Conv. ...... 999 52 Ford Conv. ..... 1,199 Trucks "51 Ford “3 ton panel $644 ’52 Ford % ton pickup 679 | 41 Ford Y, ton pickup 99) ’49 Ford 4 ton pickup 388 "50 Ford % ton Express '45 Ford '4 ton pickup 209 499 Turner rd ATIONS: 13 Mile Road LOOK FOR THE BIO SIGN “CARS” - | |_For Sale Used cars 61 mileag a Di 5 i _tain, ¢ dr. _@ eyl, $1378, rE $2728. PONTIAC. ‘ TIC. _al! nece ssories. Cail _ 3-820. | PONTI an 52 viymewt gue Cpe. P — . oo: Dyna- "1 Ford Victoria Fordomatic “Bob” Boles Auto Sales Tee serene eee eee ag8 ipyee if ls $e ii it i oft eat 2032 Gariend Ave. Syivan Lake dig A Market) phone efter 6 p.m. | WILSON GMC > CM 1961 Pontiac convertibie, top Uke new, equipped with hy- drametic drive, radio and Its custom hester, white tires. 2 See it today... Only $1195. | Community Motor Sales | st Rochester | Open ‘til 10 p. m | STUDEBAKER COMMANDER V-8 Starlite Coupe AL Your Ne Nash I Ticalee 65 W. LAWRENCE AT ces | STUDEBAKER 1083 5 ports oe CG Overdrive. v000 own payment. Take ered pat Maar ’°52 WILLYS SEDAN Redio, heater and overdrive. Spot- less finish. Motor and tires are) -rcellent. 150 More New Car Trade-ins ALL BARGAINS! MICHIGAN’S FINEST ON TRE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD For Sale Used Trucks 62 PONTIAC’S ONLY Exclusive Truck Dealer | '45 FORD % ton stake | Woodward & | | For Sate Used Cars | 3 XIMBALL | A-! A-l OWENS = RELIABLE TRUCKS TO DO YOUR JOB ‘51 FORD F-8 Tractor, 10 00x20 Tires, Air Brakes ’52 FORD F-6, 2 ton dump 1 CHEV. i ton stake 51 CHEV, % ton pickup 51 GMC 4 ton pickup 50 FORD % ton panel 8 ey ies ‘47 FORD % ton panel 8 cylinder ‘48 FORD Dump 3-5 yard Lt ag a aaa take over 7 tween ye: Sale Motor Scooters 63 NEW & USED AN 8COOT- ers.. 12 8. Pad . FE “a CUSHMAN i0. OR +8711, For Sale Motorcycles 64 oe MOTORCY Pontiac AND SERVI ON Davidson see Harley jes Co. 372 § Gas 1939 yo ;DONNAVILLE MO- _tor FE 4-6 ‘@ HARLEY | DavIBSOW 61 OVER- head $425. MY 21957 & GER . C, Sale, 1950 MATCHLESS: TWIN, GOOD condition. FE 17-9737 For Sale Bicycles BOY'S 2% INCH BICYCLE, $20 PE 17-7806 after 5 pm. week Hand 65 Ho daye. All day Saturday and Bun- day _Call after 6 pm % INCh GIRLS BIKE i ARDY used. Front and back lights. _Cal anytime, OL 2-140 BOY'S SCHWINN BICYCLE, _sexcellent condition FE 4-1775 Boats & Accessories SOOO ALUMACRAFT BOATS EVINRUDE OUTBOARD MOTORS PENN YAN BOTS TBOARD REPAIRS ALL MARIN egg Fo & Me -600 MIC! AN OPELLO: IN STOCK 70 rire ALL boats 50 GMC 4 '49 GMC !% fon pickup | ’48 FORD 114 ton Cab and Chassis | ’50 INT’L !3 ton pickup '47 INT'L Dump 3-5 yard 49 FORD 1; ton stake 8 cylinder | ’S1 FORD Vanette 12 ft. ” '30 FORD J; ton pickup | vite 'S1 Ford !4 ton pickup 544 ’S2 FORD F- tractor | Cab-Over-Engine ‘SL INT’L % ton pickup | 'SQ FORD F-6 Dump 3-5 yard *S) CHEV. Tractor Cab-Over-Engine They're "A-] Buys” CY OWENS 147 S. Saginaw St. Phone FE §-4101 A-1 A-] ! a CHEV. fEV. TRUCK. BAROAIN. FE. a INTERNATIONAL 7 TON. Larry Jerome Rochester Ford Dealer TRUCKS Pickups Stakes Tractors F-1 thru F-8 1951 Ford F-6 12 ft. stake as low as $795. LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer ‘PH. OL 14711 “FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS A ACE TO BUY~~ TRUCK SPECIALS! ’41 Ford 13 Ton Panel $65, Full Price ’'47 Ford 1% Ton Panel $95, Full Price ’47 Chev. Sed. Delivery $295, Full Price 52 Chev. %4 Ton Panel $795, Full Price ’51 Chev. Sed. Delivery | $695, Full Price "52 Chev. 1 Ton Pickup $695, Full Price "50 Chev. 1 Ton Pickup $495, Full Price 25 More Trucks To Choose From ALL BARGAINS! MICHIGAN’S FINEST ~~ fan? Zaree, tay NER OF wooW AND AND_13 MILE ROAD ; “REAL LIFT 1: FORK-LIET TRUCKS | 5 bay gg | MARIN ~ FOR SALE GIRL'S BICYCLE PE_ 2-139) | Daily 7 Sun 62 ——— |POR SALE ‘41 66 Stake Body truck. { _ trade for smatier truck. AND _ MOTORS — SALES AND SERVICE | f. TELEGRAPH 4 ton pickup _Immediate delivery. —_ models TING GOODS 1751 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 52424 We give Hoidens Red Stamps EQUITY IN 5 ROOMS ALL MOD- ern for $3500. Balance $3100. Can eeit4 late model housetrailer FE i CHEVROLET. $200, or will PE 5-s20¢ GooD F PORTABLE IRONER POR _type writer, or sell. PE 23-7361 couse RA. nie iG. EQUIPMENT. MY WaUrY “ae SMALL HOUSE for late model car and cash oF ! alle: d cash. FE thing of value NORTHERN PROPERTY. ag lent — 200 «miles 28 BOAT OWN WE FIBE RGL ASS BOATS POR FREE ESTIMATES CALL GLAS-KOT CO. Days MA 6-6470 Eves. and 6un- _days EM 3-2560 CENTURY S0ATS OIL CIRCULATING STOVE. USED cariaaisen fer en es ; re era’ or Ww ve you Ph. Ortonville 130 TRADE [OUR LAND COWFRACT. © ema. house, furniture, autes vier 'ele a aoe well known RTABLE KS. INLAND LAKES BOATS AND OTOR SALES 3681 SYLVAN SHORES DRIVE FE 23-4122 DEMONSLRATING DIAL PE 2-6960 iat fa DAYS WE WILL HAVE P. Mercury and « 14 ft See Craft Shooting Star for sale as demonstraters at a 10 Marine Division, dial PE 5-6362 FIBERGLASS | “FINISH FOREVER’ Two Y utility , will de that outdoor Dienic table top. ‘‘Ciass-in-fiber. ll end trial Kit. 61 on W as m—Gun. at 3 p.m w A BOAT 32650 Northwestern Between Orchard Lake Ra and Middlebelt Ra MAfair 6-6150 IT’S HERE 2 bedroom modern 1 acre lot, for 1953 sute. or sell, reasonable terms. FE SWAP IN YOUR OLD LAWN MOW- one. Lewn mowers WILL EXCHANOE C. PAINTING OR MATERIAL. BOX 1. PONTIAC PRESS. ae ‘@ FORD WILL TRADE FOR your equity in ‘34 model. FE Be The new Mercury 4 HP Mart, 31 FT HOUSETRAILER. SELL OR aes will take clean car in trade. ott Lk. Rd oe end see this fine og a "pee Craft shoot See Wwe cose = 2 matic sell or trade for television uP io Gomenstzetor 1004, set FI joe Leopard per cent 5"T OTS ON KINNEY RD WILL down and m wap for late model car. FRB | “SHORTY HOOKS — | _S3the ‘She Ter’ cmves | 9600 EQUITY IN ‘33 - a , tonal % ton pickup. $300 or what ‘at Pine Le FE 23-6260 = have you nee $1200. 7016 Or ae oe MARINE poIVIsION | chard Lake Rd. Emergenc rE oll. For Sale Clothing 70 HEAVY DUTY MARINE — PLY. 6 ee an ee ee A LARGE Onour OF NEES BACLEY AUTO PARTS| In aususs TY SEP FE 22544 or «FE 63588 $20.00 and $25.00 —__!70 a. OTORA | NATIONALLY JOHNGON OUTBOARL MOTORS! BRANDS VALUED UP TO 988.00 | @tarcraft alaminum boats. Tee- | U AL OF- a. trailers. Everything for the! ALTERATIONS FREE! | 06 Owens MARINE. SUPPLIES ALL SALES PINAL! e Ave. y a » KAUFMAN 12 FOOT FLY 00D Osmun’s Downtown boat. Mastercraft tratier § hp. Store Only Mercury. $491.70 value for $451. \. PHONE FE ¢4551 GENESEE SALES SPORTSMAN'S WOOD sHOP 1995 Cass _ pane Rd. Keego Harbor new f ouRISCRAPT DE- jase . -bout. 52 transom ¢0 | beam. coats Boatlife rr Bottom ‘ames red; a cod green: dark ee Rice control anchor railer will take any large outboard motor A BEAUTY. Sst BE BEEN. 1191 R Birm EW TS Be - “0 pone 12 ft. rig Bey =a FanpUM AXEL, ig TRAILER, 8 ff. wide, is ft. — Elgin motor, like new. ates +17 20 vr. LONGO, 6 FT. Good condition. ‘Reason- aoe “pose Fiagetaff, Union Lake WE HAVE OUR NEW MARINE store open now at 1978 Cass Lake Rd. Ki Harbor. Fishing | tackle, petite paints. varnishes boat hardware, skiis, aqua planes. ski harnesses trailers, boats winches, bumper clamps, etc. We are here to serve you. Let us know your needs in anything per taining to water sports. We 1/1! try to furnish tt. Sail boat own- are going to be We have ce- poh bared ae week for your con- “SHORTY HOOKS PLACE Marine Division, 1978 Cass Lake. Rd., Keego ! Harbor 7% HORSEPOWER rds motor. 3-1676. 14 FT. jel BOAT, GOOD CONDI- tien. ; MERCURY $125.00 OR | WATER 24 HORSE POWER Witch _motor _ $25 _rE 5-1626 18 Foot CENTURY 8PEEDBOAT V-4 Fibergias bottom _Bhown i appointment. OL | 6.9021. | For Sale Airplanes 67 eee 3-3 CUB, METAL PROP, RELI- censed in March. MUtua! _or MUtual ¢6387 afte 1 ransportation ( Offered 68 AIRMAN So . ome | 14 FOR Camp Kilmer . Riders wanted. Share ‘anu’ and ex- _penses. EM Mecet |\CEAVING FOR ARRISBURG Il. Fri. night on _ driving and Sapeneee, F Pies RANSPOR TATION PAID fo Los Angeies. Sap Olero Prisee and other points teady t oow PONTIAC DRIVE Away sERvicn 53% UNION ST =e ers, let us know what your needs, semi-formal worn once, See ee ee ardine suit, like new, pr Both A-l condition “0 each. FE 2-2095 | QUANTITY a USED CLOTHING, "E 2-8792. | SMARTLY HL AND | cotton dresses. Gise 14. Also one _mink ca Reasonable, 2-800). iw 10 a rolter Sea * ee | Sale le Household Goods 71 | APT ar: * GAS STOVE. ALMOST _NEW T 6-0685 About Anything You Want Can Be Found At L& S$ | New Garden cultivators os = Lawnmowers | leew jamps oles 4 Used lamps | Beds al) sizes Refrigerators ess = MAL gas & elec. - ne 3 Rad ‘Miller chrome dinettes Living room suites $33 | Dining room suites 18 WE ay SELL OR TRADE - THIN ME ACRES night til 0. L&S SALES CO. 3345 ag 1 mile east, of rt ghte. sezt $5255 67) wir, y { ’ ud ‘ a . . ‘ FORTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 ~ Sale Household Goods 71| Sale Household Goods 71) For Sale Miscellaneous 72 MODEST MAIDENS By Jay Aian’ For Sale Miscellaneous 72 Sale Sporting Goods 78| Plants, Trees, Shrubs 80A LOL ee “4 PPB ll ll PABLO ~ . LATE NEW GAS STOVE. ... | ANGLES, CHANNELS, BEAM MIVMNE ' pag val me waemen, ire | MEW OM Sree. | gL SARS, Et MERI SLSCTRE GATE OE" | CLL, Pi, REMSIRENR come | PAR TROREEO AF, SETS A electric GOOD CON- posts. complete line of structural of, > « plete with bag, $22.95. > and r) oe NORGE OAS AS RANGE, ae a. : fer 8 reels, $11.50, | trimmed lu hh Norge relrigere- Pirst_Ave, PE $4304./ S00 coe” prance (across Zz ' REIN NCRETE "GER | Cisse’ sone Geades, Tibet cs |" wenn vom bale her's eal MY ‘an PRACriCaLLy aay REPRIGER-| from Ame Forging & Socket) once, co OR }- 35 Prom Binoculars with ¢: x Wa) stor, half FE 4-7993, PE +0543. $19.95. discounts up to 40 : TR Oval extension drop leaf PHIL Ga® Rahoea, jES, WATER | — ~ALWAY™ WRECKING y K HOUNDS cent. Philip's, 70 N. Saginaw St\ A “Set of high ladder| heaters 10 per cent down, $5 Save on used bidg material » mil- eae Cabachons. mineralites, mineral & | MAN'S COATS AND SUITS LIKE EVERGREENS ‘ | PoraToes, sEED AND EATING. % 4308. _ ero aes o* ek 1 a good sound bumper. — spe.imens =e slab | _Dew, size 4 . FE 24213. @hrubs, fertilisers, grass seed. 336 W. Silv-rbel) Rd. out Perry. BOOKCABE. S %S Orch ric e 4 ven inion = € mate SAVE UP TO # CENT ON a $1 bushel. MATCHI : *| Rd. FE 2-06.95 doors. plumbing si ane ieee ‘ 71 »? olf clubs - C. Tear sery

ee - | 5 “i = “o way, OR 52401 + ae Miss Orchard: Lake. Riv | Asphalt Pavine Co. PE 22227 » Festival prices at Warwice ge7¢| 4-1 TOP BOIL, BLACK DiInT,| Cell efter 5 PE 71-8432 ALLIS CHALMERS MODEL CA GHROME DINETTE SETS. AS- reecent. 303 | - Orchard Lake Road. FE 4-500 FILL, SAND, GRAVEL ine time, new ME DINE Tireel! and save.|ROLL-A-WAY BED, @°, NEW ALUMINUM COMBINATION DOOR. ——__* __ SCHAEP-| AKC BOXEP PUPPIES, REASON- cesar, r m se . : STALL SHOWERS — COMPLETE | _PE®__PE 5-714. 1-1308 | gh ew. Road. MA guipment 1g” auger. auger. 96 val-| with mattress, never used FE | $40 value now $35 We can install =|; ‘apie “ 1 So These are Urend new | 3-1972 _ MIDWEST SUPPLY, _FE 2315) “~~~ ferrite value, “te fot $69.50 of a2 soIL. B oe Trew cultivator. fala cults — : | ue l models famous make For | RerpiceRaTOR 1 cuBIC FT| ANCHOR FENCES | ——, complete with Levgtories | Girt gseret. tut PE Ea UATIC GARDENS | ‘etor’ pianter and seeder | grad- . popular colors. ood condition “FE 60413 or FE. , « faucet $14.95 Bene ee ai < T er biade, 1 side weight assembly, See, etic tatctinany |, LB anor 3% a Vo sid amas ee icteey S| Saat owe tre Cotte | wT par rise 8 SOrrE aa | [veritatis Clad er pone M7 o se extraor ry — — é " | is 2. PE 62853 fic $2150. ret Se eee arg Lee At | REPRIOERATOR, $98: RADIO 21% | moroMaTic (GAS (HOT WATER sede enigan Plvoreseeok, |X) TOP soit AND BLAck bint. | PEAGLE, PUPPIES, Tie OREER. ppt FoR re e e | heater. 45 gal Ca or Chuck, | v NT 288 _Orehas i dition’ FE 5-4410 bes | 1 ae _Delivered. Reasonable FE "| _Keego Harbor FPE260 = | Sapy CHICK EQUIPME ARMETING, 2, PAE NO IRE | INGEN, wanna MACHINE. 9 yoy e micvecex wape we exe:| -(C— 9 A// SEER PE ERS | oa row on Rae aE Abeta aoa an) ess OY, TE : c 2 a e carved Wilton. $300. 4641 _years old, $46. FE $7768 __ | land. Slightly scratched in transit. | _80 8. Perry. . Gravel end watch dog. 5.3486. way Dr, eo sia 5 | SMMONS RIDE-AWAY BED. OL | $80 30, terrific value oe Michi aes eo —s AMERICAN STON PRODU BEAUTIFUL 70Y AND MEDIUM ia ROTARY mS table . : . ec Set : driveway size terrier . other AWN WALTON TV OR are ARE WARNER wayatoun. | (ste"ave os OTShOrS) Snort 2 a,tel come foot | SES Rap sat Bacher Tl] Smauoreca puppies, duo" of ex-| EVANS FQUIE. so) DIXIE, NWT. WALTO?} ator, § 1445 «| 0 «GA. M1-RECOVERY GAS WA- | 226 East Blvd North, _ | BARN FULL OF MANURE change for what have you. Could OR 3-8506 or M Pe 22957 Josivn Cr Walter STOVES BOUGHT, SOLD & EX- ter heater. $55. New ilet bowls | E after 4 mn White Lak deliver. Ph. Flint CE 66323 or CARLOAD ) = ° J a Bao TS ttion cooler etting sed wringer washers... .$19.50 up __seats six. FE 17-6790 | eeaiblatel = A gleaming aretsma’ SUMMER PRICES ON)! ictal ae ae stone. Van- CANARIES FOR SALE. oa here 2 your —- ts save Geed retrigeretore...... 630-50 ad en” er e = Ex. faucets 7 $14 95 pbteul showers. ¢ COAL NOW IN’ EF- BLACK ee OP SOK SAND: ru. Ee : money Open dey and night siz Easy 6pin- cellent c BC 4 ichigan Fluorescent, 393 Seeman ie eae . - 2 SAND, i days a wees bd ieseeen pages aged up TaBLETOP P OAs Stove aoo Orchard Lake Ave _ Cone’ — a FECT. GOOD COAL vel and fil) dirt FE 5&-4758. tered. 7 weeks old. Ma eat oe : agg Tor eng homes pM mo we ” aa _ condition. $30. 157 N. awn 6 CBA THTUB AND 1 AVATORY_ BE |. rAYS , A 3 YEARS OL > py beatae T ; r ALWAYS Clemens and Armada Phone New oe ‘Sakiand FE 2-402) -J = 7 aT BEDR &U Away and metal cab 2 ~ dirt, and gravel. Vern Goy- Housebroken. Beautiful dog to see H Pioneer 95300 SSURTATION RADIO AND PES. cheap. Dining set. @ pc. 659. FE | _FE “som = : : _ 5 en ay AN ette. FE 3-9575 and ret: 3148 S. i < * wees... ; saatintion AAD gi PHD] VAP HT sae sre roar wane Sa Aw [MA BENSON ase Sar Ey Ba Pa 00 a mews Me cro bie and Penaire" $7, odd oe 7 TWO TWIN SIZE BEDS MAT-.| duty sealer. Wil} stop that leaking “ _gtavel, sand, soll PE 40172.| for sale. PE 4-096). Reascaadie. 2 sacs after 6.30 ete. Cheap. Saturday, "tresses. Good cond 38 Newberry | -Pasement of building See Oas- My goodness, Mr. Bixby, I had no idea golf was such a 54? N_ Saginaw CHOICE TOP SOIL ENOLISH TYPE BAY MARE. - Pp. m. | _Pisegrove. Sent sibe. COMPLETE wiTH ined Fuel and es 496 Orchard | romantic game!” | SHEETROCK 4x8 $0 for five yard led. Delivered. / _Ue Lincoln ¢3709 after 6 p_m\/GORN PLANTER FORD, 3 ROW. Casi FOR FURNITURE inner spring mattress eac Te oes, FOR SALE 2 MALE REGISTERED | with fertilizer attachment, Like | PR 4a FE 5-7100. | KITCHEN CABINET _| ceo. pt | DRAYTON SAND AND GRAVEL | _dachsnund ouopies. OR 3.9004 _] _New_FE_&2002 DEEP FREEZE UPRIGHT. ONE | VACUUM CLEANERS, BRUSHES. . COMP. : VID GARDEN TRAC- | ~ gy Pht Bo A LOGON RAMEN Myre Corner Cabinet 40 value, tor $27 | For Sale Miscellaneous 72 For Sale Miscellaneous 72 COLONI AL ™ Sand, gravel, and top soll. OR FLO’s HOME ee eS aa area. Yar and Food ea for 5 years > APPLIA? OU $21 Call or come in. and get car! EIR — St J pA last summer. Used very $495 value Suightiy scratched UsED WB gp geno gd stew other bargain prices. MIDWEST GARAGES | Lumber Company FOR SALE, BLACK DIRT, ROT- AQU ARIL M little. MY 32001 or MY 34708 in transit. Mic thigan weecont. | washe TV. w | SUPPLY. acréss from the Tele- - WO’ “pre , 1O n Dail 8-6 S 9.2 ted manure road end cement Tropical fish eee. 186 after 6:30 pu 349 Orchard Lake Ave. cari te iets, checked and| Mutom Shopping Center. FE) Liszt $i0eee. | MOT + R'S DAY Phone ORlaado 3-218 | | ene ae cavern en | ren etaw |PORD PEROUSON TRAC BOUBLE LINED DRAW DRAPES. ox — —— | Complete with overhanging doors SPECIALS one ando 5 | FILL. SAND. AND one AMSTER.— TROPICAL 8H. | "with 14 inch double bottom plow, beautifully covered cornice boards The Good Housekeeping Shop ' ! hd . — : : . 7605 High! _livered. Jim Foster. FE All Pet Shop. 69 S Astor, FE disk, mow d power take off. to match; bedspreads complete for $1 W. Huron PE 41555 a comem, work. FHA | AT LIQUIDATION | "eee MiaBloné_Ré._(04-00)__ FenriLien We 2 +433. on tn very. is ca? Ae _Terms ‘ont ‘3-226 “e TRUSCON PARATEX WALL FOR | GARDENS OR s © room house Reasonable Call | PRICES | Coating, 08.98 Cel. 01.77 lawns. Orgetic sewage disposs! | LABRADOR RETRIEVER PUPS.| 4 drawer filing cabinet, Like new. . between 6:20 p.m. and 0.30 p ‘| Unpainted Furniture | OPEN + aM TO 8 P. G & M COMPANY _ PRICES Yins uk aacens oe ee cs jerd 810 FE or FE | Excellent nunters, good com-| MA 63871. FE 20% —_ _ | Adult Rocker eee s AY 16 TO 5 | N _pentons. MI 6130. JOHN Di CTOR SST BOT ETN |S ep mats, mew Be LUMB al SS GEM ees ot es amomees iiAVTOck ” "|" “Farm Top Sail |SOghal"is W Wakao | Gata ext SS" Se mower. a neo” r¥ rom Pontiac and kland - = . . each. Table | GERMAN SHORT FMAIRED POINT-| {) have learned that © dollar; Coal & Buti Bieck dirt. cand ond grovel, end|GenivGn COLLINS NOEL| fm EM 32323 after ELECTRIC STOVE. wt 2540 HART-| ,, ROUONT Ih IRON FURNITUR F 6 fir beards No. 3 | trot - Walnut ¢0606, hon os ” —- Vormeus | ° 1 Orshard=ieke J — oe 37101 fl) dirt. . ties). Lovely show and pet Sain SAWS ® - a 1 : fe bu or L h , PUNY ° lime, Auburn PICK & PAINT STORE 1x6 fy boards No 1 $110 per M. | Gas WATER WEATER AUTO 30| so here's the place to come for TALBOTT LUMBER > J. L, TRUCKING pice Rescamabic, Dtartats SEE | Sales, service © rentals. MY 3.0008, n ; MonyHS je: Oakland Ave. ae yE o-eees ah Ww Pine boards | $85 per M | _ gallon, Consumers. PE 2-4376 _ Mother's Day Gifts! | Lamner, doors pare. | PEO One ieee yeart old. Mouse brek-| tn mcwer ¢ aor aoe = o 2 fir $il8 M oH D | . ¥ iLL s a . mower, drags sell or ° land stove, 3 years old od $50. | USED REPRIGERATORS, $4850 2x8 No 2 fr sil ed MM. ee ae Padre NP SEWING MACHINES | oO eg fe. Teer | ae top aire et noe] onavi _ ee Registered. MAfair ¢€315. for large tractor MA 5-548s 47001 _Ds and up. Used automatic washers —_ A birer door ... 90.66 | aa WA Dae Latest type round bobbin Admiral! ¢ystem for wet besements. sheet p v3 77% 3-w " DOG BOARDING KENNEL AZER ROTO TILLERS. NEW HEPRIOERA-| $29, up. ° 4, “ptyece. $5.50 | BOT be ge TANK. AND WHITE “‘ciectric. sewing machines with, fock rock isin, ond wet wok. |" See GRAVEL FOR |" ooen Come out and see it. Also * ig ees tee tel tor a machine ty: good R. B MUNRO ELECTRIC po in. ‘fir pivwooe .. §. .| Cnamel side arm heater, FE 41! attachments at prices lower) 1025 Osh!and rick. | driveways. and ing lots. : for sale Le-La-Ru ware ma | 9-932 sea Ba PR 42623 Cement ie ~ Service, ise Opdyke Rd. FE ey _ All 3 for $75. 1060 W. Huron 2u4s No 2 fir coves T6 per f. ~ La roa | than meny rebuilt old style ma- TRENCHING FOOTING AND PILL ner's ee dirt. Tap | Kennels 1 Crooks Rd ‘s mile) 44380. OR 33-1960 7 oe Tc - —— eo 7 4x8 Sht rock $117) HEADQUARTERS POR LAWN- |. ¢hines In handseme mahogahy r AND FILL vel of OR north of Auburn, FE 1-4324. CTO! x ELECTROM USE D TR. ADE -IN Rock Lath MOWERS | er blond console cabinets f tile, FE 6-0331. . 3-7768, PE ¢3263. or or PE 23-1466 i ANA fF 3 3 i 4 tid a Part Put. > Rock Lett ing ee tues Me | stow Master. Toro, Master Cut and | only $1900 Portables for” ont, 120 ‘s STEEL CABLE $10. STAR PROCESSED ROAD & DRIVEWAY PARAREETS OPALINES. CA Craftsman walking 10° and eo DEI ART MENT Combination door” Peieds | Others, rotary and reel type. Also | $0 this weet only. ¥ “motor, good condition. $10, Pack- | grave! Pit run cad openten | m0 0 Comens, Pe Ce cultivator. exellent condition. OR Rocker | | eee $14.95 HARDWARE - PLUMBING some good used mowers. See Al . | ard chassie good for toat trailer | Wilkinson Sand & Gravel PARAKEET, = - sk re Y DELL PAINTS your lawn mower pa! Terms HELBROS WRIST WATCHES $10. V-8 85 engine, complete With ve caste a FE 29303 { 791 Metrose. 3338. GARDEN donee = ae ME AND TOOLS. Davenport and chair ..... she so io ARE BUILDIN HOUSE Lee's Sales & Service Helbros"is famous for its preciston en nega Bc Howe beam PROMPT Di DeLivaa? 3° | Panakrers | CANARIES CAGES | _ Tools Adurabie eos ee gute, ORIVE OUT fo BUM. sTER'S “ik ce a onseusl of te tel cue ae | es fe “sewing me A on S-ssee | sewn a a ave | HOUG TEN’ > A. room suite $ 4 AMAT Tredias Largest stock of mowers in Pontiac — ede offer these watches at | oe ina ci ce room suite OPrE!. MANURE. BLACK DIRE i pone ee «6 Auburp Fy re FOR tional - ri a aaa — © savings | . se | MANY OTHER oo re GaLy te $71 $0 indies wrist watches $2080| Bot water tank ee po oss sn coy BEST BUYS!!! THOMA ECONOMY Bu ist ' Plumbing and ‘esting Supplies. | 992.5 fine wrist weiches oy? se | Lake Rd ot J | pwn ee orO TELING SERVICE - PUPPIES 2 Sie DUTTON RD ) , ) m x Open Baguette Wrist watch $44 75 | USED BRICK awa DE. sort t as | _PE ¢-7823. a ree nem pric FURNITURE co . os ae _ _ Bundy ar ae Scene onvies to Radney or $42.50 | livered PE 1-0252 AXED . Slade rr $0448 .” wt A ; 1 eee he have oom . Northern Lumber Co. | rrcw&n CABINET SINKS Pa-| lsd At BIO SAVINGS. RHINE. OSED REPRIO sTOVES, PUR- = Pa mite” si Nebrecks fe of ee ee Se 33 S&S. Saginaw 8197 Cooley Lake Rd. mous Youngstown make. 54° mod- STONE AND PEARL COSTUM | paces ofl burners blowers, ete SPECIAL seo a in POF farm lawn mowers. etc. . . ! ‘ Sy ei, $130.50 value. $90 50 These are JEWELRY LADIES LEATHER | Wayne Hea’ and Air Condition: Loading farm top soil Wholesale & ine Jsed Trade-in Pt. » DELIVER slightly marred. also several 3° | HANDBAGS CIGARETTE ine Co 4 West Hurca | “and retail $10 per teed amy piece | - De _otee Mi, 1S Marz Vache pancams Topas 27-530" plate mirror 195 70 Mile Radius 66 models at extrordinary| LIGHTERS LEATHER TRAVEL URED SHEETING I LUMBER PH | 1m Pontisc area Truckers, 98 All | REGISTERED TOY POX ‘FER. | Wow tien cals chredées | - ee ecuseeses 74 te ; Trucks rt 3. 0%, ie lg age Fiuorescent, 383) CLOCKS, ETC. day Saturday Turn right off| fiers. 3 females Weaned ‘° 7 =O disk herve 7 ee 4650 3996 | e Ave ECTRIC MOTORS wa’ M 89. at Waterford town hall. _ 32001 i Fe Living Room ........ gies | ERCHS AND” PICNIC Mf 3.3996) HOT WATER HEATERS. 30 GAL 419 sELRETRIC, APPLIANCES beso oa Ee Seen S chere | _™ile in Sub PE 4-4 44196 . REGISTERED C TOCKER PUP.| pune Desre ring. barrops 2a approv use on over electric iro: ° a ahh 705 3 Rugs 19.06) 6045 Van- Sncumers tines $98.50 and $119 50 $1996 Casco steam tron . 614.50) elects the ig Mee toe | Shredded > Peat. Humus we Atak PUP “ a a frig. guaranteed $79.95 | soreen, 1 “piten spast Cooley Lake | values $40.50 & $50 50 1 Houseceeping RROISTFRED “FaxiOese PUP Po a on Elec Stove $39 95 fn , al slightly marred wr 1 Big nog S05 Brotlquict geno yan es a BR a | a ve 1 ——— mane are hgotepests —— Joha wn peyments. Pree Park: ot +} Use ou R pa — ms obson. NYMANS | CATHROOS fxrones 3 ot T| gil snd bettie’ eas heaters ai | red rotisserie |, 02090 plumbing. wirlm ‘repairing, Com | Te 1 Qisce Servers Pe Baas | PRINOER, | TURN IES a crecer:| Bean Case Rew Blea cod Dus | 18 W, Pike On! and gee weter neater, oii ang cent 393 Orchard take Ave | fryer #12 98) plete stock soll sewe: crock & STATE TESTED TOP SOIL. SAND | _tne_ Lawiaxt Kennels FE 20019. , | USED Gas Ri GAS RANGE. Ocean coal fernsese,. otcom som ont het wat- HOME OWNERS! ALUM ~~ awh | $29.95 famous ‘coffee maker $147 Supply tse 2 — Buileers’ gravel MA S7em 0 TROPICAL Fish AND SUPPLIEs HOUGHTEN’S aati 3198 Warren | *f, boilers, tngs factory price FE 46089. | $2590 popular popup toaster $1250) S40hs pe sree wattctlm FE SAND. ORAVEL AND PILL DIRT.| Precowe’ © Part & Oxford , i Drayton | Piaii Plains e HEIGHTS St SUPPLY HOLLiINOSHEAD VARIETY | 89 GE Vacuum cleaners $5450| 8 to 630 Close every _ FE 2-785}. OA 8-2076 Open Evenings — 628 N. Main Rochester WAYNE GABERT'S 2605 Perry ot Beare Tnites out Baldwin Arm | Sten aber tanche AT mavinos VAN, NORMAN BRAKE DRUM | P L = ig lla iy FING BR sone “Mt S ] reeee FR Stas paints. Phone Pres. WE DIDN'T PO EM 93011 wr daienaiom domes ) I Dogs T ained, Board 82 oS. sToP liance Specia s BUILDING PLANS FOR SALE: JACKSON'S RENTAL . SITHER! 7 ef _— : THE MEN EITHER! | VACUUM | CLEANER. WITH arT- FARM STORE $14.95 | Complete set plans, business| Mixer, chain sews, Skilsaw | gSpecia) this week only 9s '.° | _ tach From the farm. best for all UTHORIZED : poten tse. wr es teage, A-l chape $33 living quarters, combined.| electric hammer. drain pumps. ori _— aa, FS pose lawns We deliver” PON.| ALL BREEDS OBEDIENCE TRaIN- | 4 DEALERS POR: ouse Paint... .Gal. $1.95 | Qawersal ng tvoner. A-3 tis | sae 20x68 feet. 's rooms upstairs, store | pavement breaker, Post auger. Wal teow ane dureiinty cat oisse-| WOLVE ERINE _TIAC LANDSCAPING. PE Seem! | ed Former US Navy training PARMALL TRACTORS HIOH GAL. $2.95 - Utility +8, 80 4" drill on! y 20 1 Other | L A TOP sOfL LOADED GOR DELIV- rect Lake - ° Sam yee. of mle a autom i 4 as: Pear garage po Br e100 00. LIKE NEW REFRIGERATOR. BI- famous git ar at compar- Ay ag rong vane ered. On South Bivd One nels PB 17-0356 E ROTARY —— RUBBER BASE corre. Gat. Lg ad Dutchess dix. washer, like new 869 CEDAR TR PENCE P ote ANY _ecycle and couch. 220 Ferry ory —— co il a 3 oak per a. PE so? _ of Croats Road | SOanorwo ig ig xD Cur eros saws PLASTIC L ge..." Bendix clothes dryer, Al | POSTS Lany’s *% CARAT. WHITE GOLD s ¥ meaus | Mahogany fush door ..... : venings. PE ¢-00s0. wn EA it Bet OL re FeAgtee LimGe GUM. 7e...... 20s | Readin ot moet FY A} shape s62/ “length. PE 14278, OR eee ee Frais $54.95 6." popular sew Es bem flush doors ....... TOP SOIL SAND. GRAVEL AND | DOOS & CATS. PRIVATE RUNS.| SCOTTS LAWN PRODUCTS \y price wn Mee cheese from {3 POOL TABLES, ALL Saute: | ed by Lake Jewelers of ine- pba 8\," famous saw $5600|1xé ImB +x)2 ett Mocs a. dirt re. &-7850 or FE + _Heat. Burr-shell, 375 8. Telegraph. CLOSING OUT 12 ft legeae FE 56199 | wick Anniversary. 4x8 with ball) ham win eeerifice | for uiek Cale | 943.95 6” “famous make saw $2475 234 used. per nee a poy aay ay RED TOP FARM FENCING BONNY MAIL INLAID TILE... 10¢ “Oe te ee meats to bay | return, deus Snooker. ‘All com-|_ Write Peatiec Prese Bon os | “LSP BAROAING IN TILTING | 3x0 new. per f gra i a Le oe SAND AND Hay, Grain & Feed 83 preons res iii2 KING BROS , eT Be os S| oe letel B BAND SAWS. Masonite, 7 i RO RADAR ROE ; % ft. Wall Tile......10c | tn AxXMINISTER RUG. 21 CHAR! BITS pone evenines, EM 3- a8 | JG SAWS. ELEC WAND SAND. | 2 0c. baihrm set Sea" ies Topsoil & Gravel CUTTIN ' HAY EAR CORN ee 141 W. Huron. FE 4-3064| —lotte days, MA 4.0550 ERS RBENZOMATIC BLOW New free stand toilets $72.95 opsol &, Urave ee SO tac sek 1c sent | Us shOW YOU OUR COM- TON WASHER, USED VERY | "17," in and baa” Poceuent con, | CIRCULATING O11. BURNER, HOT TORCHES HOM SPEED ELEC. a PER CENT DISCOUNT ON Pune’ wartet aasa' and TILE | from,stPtiie nem MAS Cas | Beerel em Ieee and’ Gent tons shape mechanically MA/ dition “535 el Hand: Vac | water tank FE 5 SETS AND MANY OTHER Pow.| “2ermen ct a Berry Bros 4.1108 or PE 4-6119. Pa = arious makes of used sqeip- SAFGGOD WAREPIELD BATTER | S000!, pew: slectric einger cow. | CHINA AND OLAgS WARE #RIC:| BUILDING SUPPLIES | ®* TOO8 food Fuel and Paint 400 Orchard TOP SOIL DEL. way AnD eraaw. alll eemnmeniailigela couch and matching Youngs halr.| i SINGLE BED AND MATTRESS | ‘Ar”ing set. carden of -comeiery | Seqhrock S63 .C,8 6 At28| |, 4, MISCELLANEOUS Sg ree a —aowER PE 40012 STRAW_LAROE BALES toe PER |M. & ROTARY TILLERS THIF CT ELECTRIC APEIO- 2 dining Nae a ving lamp ara ago to sae wank tanita, | eka _ a ie On H. P. Used 1 season. $295. MA TOP SOIL ea 4180 Baldwin ple ee gs’ tillers. 5 $Sq reom. ving. room hg BR rh oa Jong | Foes gg gy ME omecd Gn Fr. ite Pir tee fine 0, pinctic garden hese .. $2.08 ee ATE Ein ee 5 yprte, $10. FE 40172 Carpenter's 6 mile out Joslyn Bedding, dishes, kettles. and p~ N — y = om) tanks, various wher tous 3 guality Bo waste V8 Je, a mower $14.75 mower taupe with sulk 1, 2 OR 3 YARDS | _R4 FE S-10'0. Lee’s Sales & ——— Sea eee ree ere Drive |? DBLE. BEDS SWEDISH FARM | Strect and Pain between Schoo! 358 f w better ft. Ide Doors tor | 268 {t 142 Romex type wire 98.78 mowers. Cost new Sid fit. “Also “treet ro ad fay ga I none PE 300 5 ve, . airgrove. : is steel tape ...... 495 oe over $1100. 3 . a house | de | terior some as low $6.00 z ——————— Se eee eer —ivec.| fe with Slipcovers Tusitey| CUPBOARD DOORS AND DRAW. | Doors, Exterior large stock gis.ee |e ft Evans steel tape ...... Ht | | sacrifice a id: ~ Ge -- Fy —ot_Jostyn FE F109 ___ EITCHEN bg rom SLL. chairs. 6 Indder. back woven cane ets and kitchen sink. FE 2 & up estic Im- Pg tol asm care. ped a rine. = | ti grove For Sale Livestock 4 NOW IS THE TIME ’. : ie i, : wood Pir coppered rafter square $1.90 | » © tray. WASHED sAW Se ~ masiree sah Sateen. vent] seals cate wer tee oot CASH CASH CASH pine & Birch Welter Wedge- | 100 ft. extension Iiehts ..... 3.95 |, Cost new ilo wit sell for 948. “coment end mortar, tull aire We écst be _fusrantee PE 48264 after 4 | boys bicycle §=Mimeograph. Mi Por anything you nave of value wood Surfwood & many others ee $2.25 | matt wheel barrow. pneu trucking Pontiac Lete Building | ALBINO MARE 6 YEARS CLD | We ch gag Me iggy nec a@° ROLL-A-WAY BED & MAT- 43355 Pri auctions Michigan Auction Roofing & Siding. wood & asphe't len hand saws, 5, to 10 mam ies eeae bene culttvator. Boa OR 32-1534. _FE & §-1072. either store and thet means tress. New, never used PE 2-7272 § DINING ROOM CHAIRS ~6o00 | Mart. MO. Lake Orion MY¥3-1631.] | enn. eee for Gat, neontitel! Dee een nen need ieee ad an YDS BLACK Dut OR PEAT Fine SELECTION OF = Yours ae See oe ee een a Waa wee 5 en ee ee |S butes F_ FLUORESCENT FIX-| _ Quatity HUNDREDS OF OTHER ITEMS AT! $200 and $20 Wo srixos ar ee ee eer sor te Croke Guaranteed to be safe M Tee & thteking of 0 trade. voy eens p. ASTE REEN DAVEN- ures. neWes rightest and st . , SAVINGS FO : _ , 3800 i | ea w e dea FFIECE DARE BEDROOM TUITE. |) pot snd chan. vonew haarea |. modern type of. lighting for Rich- Paul St. Cyr Lumber Co.| Gut" parm GARAGE: SHOP tone © MM 2. lame Atzin | pile. Priced right for ‘sot | did sentie “Priced right for quick | oot fal, Mn Oates for ons good condition FE 44128 blond batrel-back chair 115 State| ¢@D%. dinettes. bedroom and rec- 6120 Bogie Lake Rd. Tel. now st| OR GARDEN SEE US FIRST E_ 27611. aa | 6h(ew Ferguccn “30.” * {653 DELUXE KELVINATOR. 73 _ Apt. 20 reation ro_ms $1195 value $5.95, 39 AND SAVE YOURSELF ‘TDMPOR- a | [coun POWER Wood, Coal & Fuel @0| oo. Sas thao Lane na Cart cu, fi bome, treseer. sued couple couple 1 FRIGIDAIRE. DRYER AND ope een ffl Magy Sha calla Genuine Kentile TART MONEY. | ¢ wheel ‘trailer chassis, 680 00 eat _ oe =e p-—,3—* - a; _ofcscent_383 Orchard Lake Ave | Asphalt tle. perfect quality OPEN WEEK ENDS ONLY chen sinks, $1 GOOD DRY SLAB Woop, 93,59, YOUNG GUERNSEY Cows. MAR- BLACKETT, INC. ss ge COOR STOVE. om. Eos rag to maton aseg 1 year. CASH FOR FURNITURE seers © Maroielzed. | rriday a toi pm. Bu faye 26 inch 1G Bnelbrook ese a.) ‘ve i i snEvon B cows AND ro0n rEROOEON peste : ———— 1 dresser. 1 General Mills elec- . . pee re vacant | geet Cute bit Soom | CINCINN NATI PLANER dient R SHOP el GENERAL ” dan ae. One :| HARD DRY SEAR WOOD 6 |-Samcne? cor wim calves TE we Dine RON T1vtxNG Room "FURNITURE. ot, 0. 8. ee genera haste ” Parking Ip Rear Of Store WAREHOUSE CO. * peard meter condition. $30. 7" 3 year old erred by rf bad “ame ion Sag Cad | PPO Dak GE | Paves Bete. ‘suacem vom _| "Raed WS tie eee “un| 8 _MA0INAw, or powriac _Faayivan’ olen Kes Naveer™ Gouna A lapel by PS =e LOUNGE CMAIR, COPEE TABLE. vrmece FoMED 0 “oak “DINING CEM — BLOCKS — RW FENCING x36 = a. ER ” table. aay for gia- | Plants, Trees, Shrubs 80A Oa A fay ~ vagy & Loewe ies. 6 8. Holcomb. Clarkston ‘y veces, yt = Sheffield Lt , 2255 Maddy Lane vor ston, vatory. ” sink. POOLS Woodward. of 14 Mile) neem 2 FE 2-640! . . Beechiand, eff Cass Lake = LINOLEU M. Ox12. $3.95) & Mg Russell arn _— We uow have in steck 42” and 48 oa “HEATER sERVICE wa | Sheen Fe | 1 so nye HILL SPRUCE FOR ot. apne Phone MI ¢-9000. y hes 0h 08 nenan 1 scales lo. of books 1704- Cres- | CLOTHES —— as single and double scroll in a pete. need* extra money. Always have * - TRAILER. MISC. ITEMS. you. _ Norway and Col- | Se; aHOMA RANGE FORSE. TRACTOR, LIKE NEW. Jack's linoleum paint, 92,50 sel | cent take Ro : IES Posts. STEEL. 4 HOOK.) ed & woven fencing. Shop around o few y space and ameter eaters, OR 31902 oe reer Pine Mugho, Austrian and | "yor gentle. ‘saddle horse. . cultivator cise. snow plow. : MOWATR DATENFORT. 0000 | “ALNUT, DINING ROOM farce B50 ihland. Re ~y Fee via that SE ere ee ee | ae ee 84, OG | site Enpire Ssee. ____ | _ plus oniras. oe ow CONDITION FE ¢1670_ : Pos as —, — 6 _— | DEEP WELL PUMP. & MP- com. Tom's Hardware ae really get a going pkey ouuni. also Diese aa oak ae | trees. Dig your own Brine Toate ovreRgrenenr “tT ca weLt New esed PRICES! MAY BARGAIN DAYS | Several “Odd pieces and tables,| Dlete with tank and ft of | AND SPORTING (ODS besides company time or Sun-| and misc. FE 2-0804, pipe and burlap. 2922 Rd. Take | one of our riding horses. Either oe On Sit nonce of Wrasters Be and, dressers. Combination radio, _PUmp rod. FE 47302 after 4pm. 1751 Orchard Lake Rd —“ays, OR 3-2046 10 VENETIAN BLINDS: 5 Tike | — at Commerce Village | Geiding gt Hunter Mare Repeirs on ai oe Bedroom suites, bed, chest. double! and recor¢ changer. nice Cal]! DEN MOTHER'S UNIFORM si2E Daily 97 Sun 6-2 | haasacoged - ~ _4 ply. Good condition Tres. west on gravel road 3} miles | MI sa dresser. limed oak, cherry. wal-| evenings after 4 p.m FE 419i. 12, Never. been Baby car. —We Give Holden's Red Stamps _ Overhead Garage Doors at. m oa bearing right af eech ture. Opes DISPFRSAL SALE OF REGISTER: Pontiac ot Porm Supply hut or mahogany. Only §1 ‘ EEP-WELL PUMP A Standard sizes lab . ~ Sale usicat Goods . ; ire sheep. Sat. 7 — me. Ophoisterea chairs, reg. $40.95 30 INCH ELECTRIC RANGE 0080 | ae cach FES nays biezeles. arms y. A coal bet water Y ber 1 and tectory vefote. "May ine. Teed ortios at 12 noon at | 2211 Pontiac +40 Fed “tables $12.98 cater pm. at {00 E Huron Drive, Call afer “00>. m.- Fopltcing’ peur. present teees | Rane ETRE Loading Hy PAB he ~ &, ' Cavweeeees an 2 . ‘our t Living | room’ suites, citsigoms ane WALNUT DINING ROOM | SUITE. DAYTON SHALLOW-WELL | JET with steel ? overhead, ue oO -S- begin- dai ft ie wweacents a! 180 head of ewes with lambe st treighe Feverse 6288. plus bm po Po Ro See, tk cc ce a B MOTORS 1 _§. Paddock. PE 2-0003| tunity, 1 Prall S oa we ne ‘ 5] ee eens Peed rocks, tamnb- with reverse $190.90 plus ~~ < Baan eden nn — = im. event ie oad, Bir- mga interior sem! a CLINTON ENGINES Basement : WE DELIVER ing pens, dipping tank, water/9 with & speeds $165. plus eds.” ‘reg. $2798, “now (sie F ETEce DINING poo sorte | "McBride Hardware ee ee OUR ARO 70 DAWLIA, ROOTS. 00 VARIETIES "and other ‘niseelieancrs items. | A esmplete ine of low cost quich- 8, comp an SANDERS RENTED N Terms: on sale. Wm.) hitch we Chests, "4 and’ S drawer, walnuts |-33 NORGE REFRIGERATOR. #175, Open Sundays 9-12 KELLY'S HARDWARE NEW LOW PRICES SPINET PIANOS 5 Rass one ~ es E Scripps Estate, Detroit Trust| strate “Ea ‘Bodget Terms, CLAYTON'S | sito" ‘Bendix Sane he modern | St Auber Ra, (ot Cracks) =| song auburn ot Adams. PR 9-001! Sheathing" wo oe pet Bl) 2 gee large awl ag LAL bulbs ‘st i | _ Arnold Scholz, hw ABD GARDEN Seek Cech bookcase $5. hollywood bed $25, Auburn Heights Ye in ywood, $4 sheet | @iseounts. mor aslo $1. AS rat ah ‘ese | catalog write Hovert W. Per.) ti mara man Ra, Keego| EMoire 238 1 IN POWER LAWN MOWER | MAHOGANY DINING SUTTE. #5 | Siri fovaie ong yidoee oan FE cosss *| en. 1 miles of wetioncer and Bales} _ ¢-184 vr $8811 or PE 5.8974 3 PIECE FRIEZE LIVING ROOM | Ree! type, almost new. 875. Cost) s=pener. $10. Two sinks. $4. air tight alu. inum weather @PINET PIANO RENTALA WITH | Otford. Knobloch erssey. aster . 134 Clifton Ave. Find: - __ r suite. $86. 4019 Motorway Drive,| $140 kes runs like new.| Pal gazes. $2.) and d dalaccer $15. Cement Silo | SPINET PIANO fe mora. , Met « th A. Priteh, Oxford,| 1 Garden Tractor. All models on MODERN, DINING ROOM 8U after 5 PE 54-4287 a to buy. $10 monthly Gal- " auctioneer. Gisvlae Oven niehte and Sun- hgh AL ITE. Au ae prices a iJ +0508. ; cove, Boe . Mastick Co. M. &® DO IT YOURSELF MESSAGE FROM BL. ACKETT'S Ss LW ~ ; soe |e fle Merete 7 an ED] UNION lau 22hier tet,.| Serena | EVERGREENS) py BRITS epee, es chair also extra chair, like new ASP TTA ALT TILE .... 3c GARAGE ' ~ FHOROUOMLY RECONDITIONED. 3 FEET TO 10 FEET _— ae Er | Tier ate ss Wrecking | PLYWOOD M [appa zeeme . OR | MAY SPECIALS Paint | "ies eat] AND cEVENT EXTRA An kinds, plain & decorative, Kiten- apices ce eniay tose umes Ke, Wall Tie gx 10c HAGGERTY Co CE shines doors—arawers made .. ae Plastic Wall Tile ....... ze each} LUMBER COMPANY ° SOntuc PLrwoce C0. Kenmore Datle our songs, O06. |e toe we OE ee Hageerty Hwy Walled Lake We ore | dlemantiing 4 szecutive 1408 Baldwin Ave. 2-2943 Oar was Harold’s, 140 S. Saginaw od of operation gives 7 oe beige SPECIALS ound oak table, $6. FE ?-5450 Free Delivery ~ SALE INSIDE HOUSE DOORS. best salvage materials, a tanks . Zenith radio, $15. Double Red Stamps Today P._ Sutton, 4750 Joslyn Rd. | YOU can't up. 4 in. weg gh for SS Montgom ar i : a Jar Shallow ont go: vA RRL. renge $28 Open Fri. & Sat Nite ‘til 9 pm —_ FURNACES 7 ORDER Now Wie aurea to fai A Ae FURNITURE CO. ACTION —___| “det or rount, ‘ol or gas coover| 2x8°s 10 cents lin. fi : 104 S. Saginaw. PE 2-5523 ACTION © J eurnere VFA, frm Call . s cents Im. ft, pg eg po elgg tg ACTION FOR t SALE A VERY ECLUSIVE Shiplap $6.50 100 sq. ft.. ESe,gtmere "© “Winns” re | Combai tec dy tech atat| Fiabe, spas" ana Gree tet | By" fceee t Eapeans 10. 12 Brick 1 cent each ~NEW FURNITURE | sgvavge'or acess your'pores | Sigs” PY mt acount’ FE) AnoIe iron 30 cents ft. “WAREHOUSE PRICES| mew ¢” ‘coll pipe, 03.95 length, | PER ands, 0 eas ie Come in—Look around Rolla & Ce bristle b beds da, ——— pa} New Dutch (hou cbr) 8 3 gal. wtp pede. 02.68 opae | Some, 0.00 por bee ne coe} UNI fone oe TEeine Co. vise gee lve... ofS | he a — Claremont wenpurt and chair 2x10's $66 per M. t covered ..... me $139 e — Look around. Fees chest ven eeee 7.88 ap Amasing bargains that will rock pt Re t ~ joes rop heat ‘abies 8 * ther, aye to $ om. a "be ‘maple finish bedroom | UNION WRECKING CO. z 8 tables $1.96 Main Yard A... % ea sz 31245 W. 8 MILE RD. p+ bea ** gs0.s0 |. L_mile West of Middiebett : mattresses Hes Ph, Farmington 268 or KEnwood 3.0% es " 195 53-1660 . r- 203: ‘ve Tugs .. ro 7 PLA. = 3s Sr S a Sat er mer Vernet’ i THE PONTIAC PRESS, / ./ FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 FORTY-THREE Carlson Plays Part Week ly About Li ving Man -- Today's Television Programs -- Channel 2— WJBK-TV Channel 4 — WWJ-TV Channel 7— WXYZ-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00—(7)—Detroit Deadline. Bud (4)—Time 6:15—(1)—News. (4)—News. 6:30—(7)—Stu Erwin. Stu judges beauty contest. (4)—Eddie Fish- er. Popular ballads; Fred War- ing Glee Club, guests. (2)— News. Doug Edwards. 6:45—(4)—News. John Cameron Swayze. (2)—Perry Como. Perry sings ballads. 7:00 — (7) — Ozzie and Harriet. Orzie, Nelson's feathered friend makes him town’s hero. (4)— Dave Garroway Show. Variety; guests Paul Winchell, Jerry Ma- (2) — Mama. vemily away with dancer. (4)—Life of Riley. “Riley Faces Mother's Day,” gets in- volved in confusion of plans. (2)—Topper. Ghostly comedy. $:00—(1)—Pride of the Family. | Paul Hartman stars. (4)—Big | Story. Reporter promotes bet- ter immigration regulations. (2) Playhouse of Stars. John Ireland in “Prisoner ~ in Town,” deputy aiding lady charged with murder. 8:30—(7)—Range Riders. Jack Ma- 9:30—(2)—City Detective. Rod Cameron in “Cruise Ship.” 9:45—(4)—Fight Scrapbook. Box- ing. 10:00—(7)—Black Spider. Lloyd Bridges in ‘Secret Service In- vestigator,” (4)—Mr. and Mrs. North. Sleuthing Norths face dangen (2)—News. Jack LeGoff. 10:16 — (2) — Weatherman. Dr. Everett R. Phelps. 10:30—(4)—Adventure Special De- livery. “Paginini,’’ drama of fa- mous violinist. (2)—Life With Father. Family comedy. Bill Flemming. 11:00 — (7) — Soupy’s On. Guest Hamish Menzies with Soupy. (4)—News. (2)—News. 11:15—(7)—Motion Picture Aead- emy. Gene Evans in “The Steel 9:15—(4)—News. (2)—News. as | 9:30—(4)—Ding Dong School honey in Western adventure en- | Halloween Hugh “The counters notorious gang. (4) — Soundstage. Reilly, Pat Crowley in Gold Band,” drama of unhappy | marriage. (2)—Our Miss Brooks Tea leaves predict June wedding for Connie; Eve Arden stars. 9:¢0—(7)—John Wayne Show. John in “Wyoming Outlaw,” film. (4) Cavalcade of Sports. Middle- weight bout, Eduardo Lausse vs. Chico Varona. (2)—My Friend | Irma. Marie Wilson stars in comedy. 11:30—(4)—Danger Fighters Blinkey. | 11:45—(7)—Capt SATURDAY AFTERNOON | 12:00—(4)—Weather, RFD. (7)- | Headline Hunters. (2) — Ranger. Hartz 12:30 — (4) — Mr. Wizard. (7)— | net Time. 10:45—(4)—Time off for Sports | 5:00—(7)—Detroit Heart | } } | = Lone | | (2) —Cowboy G- | 11: 30—(4)—Sat. | 1:00—(4)—Quiz ‘em. (2)—Play- house. 1:30— (4) —Garden Show. Tiger Game. 1:45—(4)—Industry. 2:00—(4)—Feature. 3:00—(4)—Salome. 3:15—(7)—Meet the Governor. 3:30—(7)—Back to God. 4:00—(7)—Meet the Press. Movie Party. 4:30—(7)—Faith Is Power. Feature. (2)—_ (2)}— (4— x ‘Herb Philbrick Stamps His OK Dick Is Counterspy in ‘| Led Three Lives’; Has to Take Kidding By ALINE MOSBY . HOLLYWOOD (UP) — Richard Carison has become one of the top 10 television stars—by being the only TV series actor to portray a living character who's still around to watch the impersonation. Carison’s weekly program, “! Led Three Lives,"’ is a suspensful serial based on a book written by Hi Philbrick. For nine years 5:30—(7)—Christ Crusade §:45—(4)—Mich. Report. SATURDAY EVENING 6:00—(4)—Some Watch. (7)—Life at 80. (2)—Dollar a Second. Helmet.” (4) — Rasslin From ; Texas. (2)—Theater. “Death Is | 6:30—(4)—Ethel and Albert. (7)— a Mockery,” film. Dottie Mack. (2)—Beat_ the Clock. = —— ee | 7: @0—(4)—Spike Jones. (7)—En- terprise USA. (2)—Jackie Glea- son. | for t Phil posed as a Communist | FBI and is still very much around. As a New York newspa- | per columnist. Philbrick keeps an eye on how | Carlson\ plays Philbrick. “It's » tremendous responsibil- ity te portray a real person every week,” \ Carlson said today. “Furthermore, we are dealing with material that is the most | important \thing in the world to- | day and that’s a y. | Also, the FBI has to be satisfied with the sctipts.”’ Wayne University. |} 7:30— (4) —Amateur Hour. (7)— | 9:45—(7)—Animal Time. | Sports. | | 10: Space 1 |8:00—(4)—Show of Shows. (7)—| leas — | Boxing. (2)—Two for Money. ° 9 artoon —— ‘ 4 8:30—(2)—Favorite Husband | 4 -S ts. i ore a cei 9:00—(7)—On Your Way. (2)— a | ‘That's My Boy 10: 45—(2)—Barker Cartoons. _ ese — (0) — Hit Parade. (7)— | 11:06—(4)—Cartoon Express. (7! | Wrestling. (2) — To be = an- | Stu Erwin. (2)—Big Top. | nounced, (T)— | 19:e0— (4) —Stars of Tomorrow. | (7) — Red | (7) — Wild Realm. Skelton | 10:38— (4) —Paul Winchell. (7)— Zane Grey. (2)—Kent Theater 11:00—(4)—Mich. Barndance. (2) News. 11: 15—(2)—Theater Show (7)—The- ater. -- Today's Radio Programs - - Programs furnished by stations listed im this column are subject te change without notice. 7:18—WJR, Music Hall . City Hospital WXYZ, Sports Afield wm, (7) CKLW, (908) ww, (858) WXYZ, (1278) WCAR, (1138) WIBK, (1490) TontasT 1:15—WJR, Bob Reynolds CKLW, Lyn Murray WCAR, News, Ballads Orws, Laure WJBK, News, McLeod 5:18—WIR. : 6:00—WIR, News CKLW, Music WCAR. News, Harmony : » Garden Gate ww) 11:36 WIR, Musie ian ww). Beauty Doorway | 5:90- WXYZ. Bd McKenzie CKL wWxYz, ; © ose Gardens 5:45—WJR. Symphonette we — [nes 30—WXYZ, Sandictters CKLW, Jack Brickhouse WCAR, News. Ballads — | ‘WJ, Woman in Love — ae _— SATURDAY MORNING | cKLW News, Bud | SATURDAY EVENING Got oe ow Dick rris | y J ¢: Sey == ck Bu | 11:45—WXYZ. Manpower 6 co wae. aural CKL Chase WXYZ, Saturde — 12:00—WJIR_, News, Theeter WW, News WEAR. Fox Sports CKLW, David WWJ. News WXYZ, Week in Washington WJBK. Rise and Shine SAT got Reach ‘ pf a = ‘ Reynolds W. Your Boy Bu w , News, Records righ oo og ot 6:15—WCAR. Cottee WJBK, News, George WCAR, News, Ballads warn pun 6:30—WJR. Voice of Agricit,| WCAR. News WCAR, Sallegs WW, Daybreak 12:15— WWJ. Les Brown 6:15—WJR. Dinner Date CKLW. News, David WCAR, Noonday Caller | WWJ, Ben. Perguson ¢:0— WIR, Lowen ‘Thomas | WXYZ, As We See It w 6:—WW), News tt: abl Parm Digest CKLW, Sec. of State WXYZ, News. Sendoff WWJ. Army Band WCAR. Talk Sports 7:00—WJR, Guest House WCAR. Coffee WxYZz, americen Parmer WwW, Three Ster 1:00—WJIR. Dick Burris CKLW. of the Saddle | 6:30—WJR, Bob Reynolds SRW oes Lewis WWJ. News WCAR, Cie 1130 WW), Show Case WIBK. Balleds way hs daton Davia 12:48-—WIR, Jack Whfte =e Forte Mill ° un v WCAR, Bows. WJBK. News, Shine CKLW. @ons of Saddle WCAR. Ballads re fren Pettey WCAR. News, Coffee SATURDAY AFTERNOON 6:08— WIR. Industry CKLW, Guy Nunn WJBK, Tom George | dent in the jtiens, is rated among the top 10 = wea gig eo pig a and Home CKLW teh. Cathoiie 7 phonet . News, "Ww Meee, CKLW. Toby David cae acy ow. ae 1s Epeitient WXYZ, Lone ger WJBK. News. Georee AE Bando — CRLW: Gebriet Heatter = | 7.08 WIR, Farming WAR, Tiger Tunes a :s—W Ba, R. Murree WXYZ. News, Wolfe 1:18—CKLW Canede WJBK., Record Room S34, | pane Pamily 2:43—WWJ. News WCAR, Warmup Time WCAR, News, Ballads CELW. 8:00—WIR Jack White 1:39—WJR, Hollywood Stars| 7:15—WXYZ. Sen. Perguson Ores" Den i nore, Ww, News, Melodies WwW" Parede of Bands 7:30_WWJ, Big Preview WxY3. J, Oreqen WXYZ, News, Wolfe Ste ee nas WXYZ, Green Room CELW, Thester w x. Rico '@ amano WJBK. Tiger Gene CKLW, Keep Healthy $:15—wws, P. faire we. WCAR, Det. vs. Chicago 7:45—CKLW, Globetrotters 6: 44— 6:15—WJR, Music Hall WCAR, Coffee With Clem _8:38—WIBK. Proudiy Wall * WWJ, Egbert and Ummly WJBK, Best WCAR, Radio Revival 1:48—CKLW, Ray Bloch 2:00—WIR. Let's Pretend WW. Road Show Pestival CKELW. Your Boy Bud Bands 2:18—CKLW. News. Johnson 8:00—WJR, Gunsmoke WXYZ, Dancin CKLW, Farm 8:30—WJR, Gangbusters CKLW, Southern Ramblers 0:08—WJR, Two for Money Party is » | mints, a hah +1 Wm, Sheehan cCKLW 2:38—WJIR, Way for Youth Your Bud CKLW, Barndance WIJBK, House Party ware Fe ‘_.. 3:00—WJIR. Les Brown | 9:30—WJR, Jamboree 9:30—WJR, House Un-Am WJBK, News, Mc WXYZ, Horse Races | WWJ, Grand Opr Bee WCAR News. Rhythm =| $:15_WIR. Science Adv ae oe World We Live 18) 9.13 wJR Mae Hawks WXYZ, P. Carter _ CKLW, Take,s Number CKLW. Your Garden 5:50-0UIN. Vets 10:06—WJR, News, Country 9:46—WW, Top This = ha Mrs Page WXYZ, Pen American J. Country Tune 7 WCAR. Rhyth Hotel’ Statler wee wares oe | en mae rm SRW: Worse Kin Faber.) rae Ha Living | 3:45—WJR, Agriculture 10:15—-WWJ, Dude Ranch CKLW, Prank B¢warés Radio Temple COE Fee eed Coane | 10:90—WIR, Truman Library 18:18—WIR, Music Metropol Feiner Osien Drake CKLW 7 Hegde WWJ, Pee Wee King Kottler Storyland WJBK. wxyYz, Town ome, Date SRL, “New News, Party | WCAR, News, Ballads CKLW, Music By Roth 10:30—WJR, Senate JER, Hews, Melcos 4:15—CKLW, Rose Gardens | 1¢:45—CKLW, Sen. Perguson WWJ, Listen to, Weal WOAR. News Temple WCAR, Taik Sports 11:00—WIR, News Genate Hearings 10:18-—WWJ. Musical Youth | 4.09 wp Quest star WWJ, News w. Houseparty 10:30—WJIR, Q Lewis XYZ, Concert CKLW, News WW, Mary Lee Taylor CKLW, Seared. Heart WJBK, News 18:45—WJIR, Curtain Time WXYZ. 8 ; WCAR. Beilad 11:15—WJR. Sports Final oaAN Sanctuary WCaR. armeny Hall 4:45—WJR, Ones Sunshine WWJ. Laura 10:46—CKLW_ Here's Health WXYZ, Tep of Town il: gy News 5:00—WJR, Todays Topte CKLW, Jewish Horizons ww), 11:00—WJIR. Robert Q@ Lewis WXYZ, Nevy Hour WxYz, au Lounge WWJ, Waltz Time CKLW, Teenagers. Un'imtd | 08: *®—WJIR. CBS Orch CKLW, Ven Kuren WXYZ, Platterbrains WJBK. ‘Melody CKLW., Phil With _Muste xperiments in plas- Brothers Convert |™ *™* plas’ U.S. Treasurer to Speck Musical Hobby to Full-Time Job NEW YORK (INS) — It isn’t ‘ i HH EE ties, among them vinyl. They had done considerable research in vinyl which is used in the making of records, and had read and publisted papers on thelr findings. At the end of the war, the brothers decided to go into the number of production kieas they wanted to try out. They knew the have been in business. They give their subscribers the world’s best musical, recorded by some of the world’s best artists. to GOP Women in State record business, for they had a | “ay. Mrs. Priest will also speak that LANSING &® — Mrs. Ivy Baker at a luncheon of the Republican Women’s Federation of Michigan in Lansing May 17, the Republican State Central Committee said to evening at a meeting of the Isa- bella County Republicah Committee at Mount Pleasant. Geologically Australia is thought to be the oldest of the continents, _ month records of its deliveries of | Priest, U. S. treasurer, will speak | Philbrick reads each script, all of which are \based on some inci- \k. From New York he notifies ZI in Carlson's impersonation. “When we first started the shdw, I wore slacks and a sport jacket, the way men dress out here in Cali- | fornia,” said the actor. “Philbrick sald, ‘Remember, I'm an eastern a\ivertising man in the story,” so I bought those | | suits with the vents in the back, | | the knit tie and button-down | | shirts. You know, real Boston. “I used to: wear a Windsor knot | ;on my tie, a big knot, but I was | told to make a smaller, eastern | | knot.’ The program, seen on 157 sta- shows in the country, and has col- }lected several awards including |the George Washington Honor | Medal of the Freedom Foundation | at Columbia University. | Carlson emphasized that the pro- gram is “not Red-baiting, not in- | tended to teach anybody anything. but just to entertain.” bat Fen nef cure,” ho cald with a | grin. “Around the studio here the tele- phone operator calls me ‘Comrade Herb’ and others on the set say, ‘This is Philbrick’.”’ He added, ‘“‘The show has changed Philbrick’s life, too. He's jin tremendous demand on the lec- | ture circuit now.’ Mint Says ‘Says Coins Act as Indicator of U.S. Economy gah ee (#—Records of the U. Mint suggest economists on the poten for new and more sensitive pointers to whether busi- ness is getting better or worse may have been overlooking something good—the piggy bank economic indicator. ° For instance: Records of the nation's three kept here as records of "The Mint,”’ indicate that the pub- lic begins pinching its pennies, and other small coin, before, the | | big, impressive pointers to eco-| nomic trends like industrial pro-| duction show clearly that a down- turn has set in. s * * And, the piggy bank indicator indicates, the public doesn’t loosen | up with its jingle money until after | | business has definitely turned up! | again, | It's too early to say definitely | yet, but latest word from the piggy | bank indicator suggests that as of early April business may have taken a turn for the better. How the public gets so wise, and just why ecohomic trends should be sensitively traced in coin tisage, are mysteries the mint has not ‘unraveled. But it keeps month-by- /coing to the nation’s banks, which |put change into circulation. And |the records of coin deliveries. fore- | shadow and parallel the major }economic turns. | . * Through April 23, coin deliveries totaled only about 20 million piec- es, compared with nearly 85 mil- lion pieces in the full month of April 1953. But maybe the piggy bank indi- cator is indicating a new turn. In the week ended April 2, inventories of coins at federal reserve banks showed a decrease for the first time since the end of 1953. That meant increased demand for coins that week—not enough of an indi- being the most level in surface | cation to judge but pérhaps and the most regular in outline. pipe pm cln R acre pairs 9 ssnemnnemeneemmenel 3149 W. Huron PONTIAC’S OLDEST TV SERVICE DEALER Authorized Factory Service tor 1$ Different Manufacturers BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE | productions, which James Deeg of 497 Lowell St., film the popular series, of his ap-|the first Pontiac High School stu- heron Comdr. Mitchell said proval. Often he suggests changes | dent to be awarded the new Pon- tiac. Council of PTA teacher schol- FE cian “rT spiritual adviser and two addi- Genel percons must make suffi- cleat rec The student, who must attend an accredited college in Michigan, is finally selected by a committee composed of the principal of Pon- tiac Senior High School, the presi- dent of the PTA Council, an ele- mentary principal,. the chairman of council, and the sen- ior counselors. This committee will review the progress of the student at the end | of each year. Virginia, who will graduate this coming June, plans to attend Al- bion College. Coast Guard Saves DEEG VIRGINIA C. PHS Student ‘Wins Award Reverend’s Daughter Is Given Scholarship for Teacher Training Virginia Charlyne Deeg, daugh- ter of the Rev. Mr. and Mrs. is arship. The schplarship. which is a grant, not a loan, amounts to $00 per year, to be used by a student training for the teaching profes- sion Those vying for the grant must be students of Pontiac High School with an average or better aca- demic record, and planning on entering the teaching profession. The student must like ‘be socially well adjusted, with a| spiritual ideals, healthy. Although the oceneuie status is | to be considered, the scholarship is non-sectarian and is open to those of all races, colors and creeds. The principal of the senior high and school, the senior counselors, a initiative, re- | AF Pilot From Lake | TRAVERSE CITY uw — Coast 'Guardsmen Thursday rescued an Air Force pilot who was forced to bail out of his jet craft while flying over Lake Michigan. Capt. H. W. Nelson, the pilot who is stationed at O'Hare: Air Force Base, Chicago, suffered severely from exposure in the icy waters. He was flown to O'Hare Base for hospitalization. Lt. Commander Warren Mitchell, | piloting a Coast Guard amphibian rescue plane, set it down in a chop- py sea and took Capt. Nelson from ;a tiny life raft. The Air Force pilot was too exhausted to tell what Comdr. Mitchell said the rescue | oce urred 17 miles east of Lake For- est, Il. Show MOM You Love Her! A) MERMAID A jewel fantasy in the /ebulons Triferi manner Leaves of golden Trifanium ... clusters of creamy psuedo pearls. Earrings $3.00 Neckloce $5.00 LINOLEUM Colors - é finance | Symphony Rubber Latex Wall Paint Fast Drying *3” MONEY BACK CUARANTEE Inlaid9 x 9 Marbleized Asphalt Tile Essay Winners Will Be Given Automobiles NEW YORK (INS)—Five mem- bers of the alcoholic beverage in- | dustry in as many states will re- | ceive new 1954 Packard automo- | biles as their prizes in a nation- wide Business-Builder essay con- test sponsored by The Server, na- tional business paper of the indus- try. The first national contest of its kind designed to promote trade, public relations, sales and mer- chandising ideas and promotional experience, the event drew. thou- | sands of entries in five cate- |gories representing all segments | of the industry. Grand prize winner was Mrs Jeanne M. Hall, Oshkosh, Wis. The ‘other winners were: J. H. ‘Mike’ | Elwood, a package store owner, |Los Angeles, Calif.; Irving S. Mei- | sel, a package store clerk, Shreve- | port, La.; ‘‘Marco,"’ a bartender of New York City and Sherwin J. | Teener, a liquor salesman, Minne- apolis, Minn Server publisher George W Blakely said Mrs. Hall was voted grand .prize winner on the over- all excellence of her entry and the merchandising skill demonstrated in building her establishment from literally nothing into a successful and profitable business. USED TV et HAMPTON TV $10-$15 Down—$S per Week Get @ Good $25 West Huron FOR MOTHER! OPEN HOUSE EVERY EVENING 825 W. HURON See the Letest TV Demonstrated! HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. 825 W. Huron. FE 4-2525 Brownie Hawkeye EPPERT’S CAMERA SHOP snap your 57 W. Huron FE 5-6615 TILE 9x9 You Will SAVE More When You Shop at the Do-It-Yourself Mart OPEN EVERY NIGHT ‘TIL 9—SUNDAY 10 TO 2 Kem- Tone Super Kem- Tone Kem-Glo We furnish tools FREE plus instructions and layout Plastic Wall Tile Vinyl Tile Reg. 48c Factory Close-Out Ye Solid 9 Vinyl Plestic 27" Counter Topping Sq. Fr. 14'2° 54° Width Tile Design Wall Covering 26°. 6 Foot Felt Base Linoleum Cc Rubber Tile Heavy 'e” 6x6 lk Aluminum Paint Quick Dry Enemels MEDICINE CABINETS TRAVERSE RODS - eS ee ee ee ee ene ty I nn na em a meme tran ar — Linoleum Tile Floron Vinyl Tile Solid Vinyl Tile Aristoflex Tile Corduroy Plastic Tile WINDOW SHADES Run. Ft | PAINTS ie LINOLEUM Outside Paint Rubber Tile Felt Base 6’, 9’, 12° | Interior Paint Aspholt Tile Roll End Bargains Undercooters California Originals Factory Close-Outs Inlaid Linoleum Linoleum Rugs 6'x9’ 9x15’ STAIR TREADS Open Daily 9 to 9-——Open Sunday 10 to 2 Pontiec’s Most Convenient 7TY¥a'x9 = 9x12’ 12’x15’ t male aetna atl Gag Somes eitalanciaahi Dali's ‘ the party in power last night at a _ FORTY- FOUR Democrats Cry for End Use Cement Mixer as a Carnival Ride WATERTOWN, N. broke up this sion in a hurry. Ten boys mixer supply to GOP ‘Circus Luxuries’ WASHINGTON « —Democrats $150,000 for the drive to elect a have put up a cry for the admin- |-Democratic Congress this fall Speakers. told _ the cheering tion t rcus istre to be _ _—_ throng that Republicans have luxuries” and ‘TV spectacles and created ‘‘messes of their own” in come up with actfon to prevent a! the McCarthy-Pentagon row and cold war from blowing hot have suffered serious ‘reversals The Republican campaign slogan | ©" the rane question of 1952, “Clean Up the Mess in Unlike many previous $100-a Washington,"’ was thrown back at) plate dinners by the Democrats in Washington, last night's glittering affair was generously attended by They sat Jefferson-Jackson Democratic din ner that brought out an estimated | Southerners alongside 1,500 diners at $100 a head—or old “New Dealers’’ and ‘Fair Dealers’ in at least an outward show of unity Former President Truman, who AY 72 Why the WEW with his family, was a featured guest told the diners n a brief informal talk: “As leaders of the ») TA free world we must have the| friendship of our allies and we can't have that if we insult them. « . - Sen. Lyndon B Senate Democratic floor leader, de- | clared the Eisenhower administra tion has been “caught bluffing by GUN-TYPE FLOOR FURNACE Johnson of Texas e ’ a our enemies’ and this country now fo the best / stands in danger of being ‘‘left |naked and alone in a_ hostile world.”’ | Rep. Sam Rayburn of Texas | House minority leader, said ;the | people heard a lot about a ‘mess iin 1952 ‘“‘and you are hearing a | great deal more now.’ He said |Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis) is the | “problem” of the Republicans, not | the Democrats, and declared that | if the principals in the McCarthy-| Army scrap were Democrats, all | Republicans and a majority of the | newspapers would be saying “This is the biggest. mess that | Washington has ever witnessed.” * . > ‘Adlai E. Stevenson, the Demo- cratic presidential candidate in | 1952, sent a message predicting | | that the Republicans will have “considerable experience as a} ‘s — minority after November of 1954." | preset = Geen Reaper “¥. | He himself was not able to attend | So | the banquet because of a’ kidney | operation. = Sosa nding. e de Ha | Truman and Dean Acheson, his} titer will pump of trem onder | secretary of state, were given) qresed tanb | standing ovations when introduced ort Tas bce swnmacs of ter furees = Sen. Johnson said Democrats | have opposed Republicans in Con- vous as ae oe eee gress ‘in order to save’’ much of | ithe President's domestic program. | Come in today ead me ter roursell | Hence, he said, they become con- | | fused when they hear Eisenhower | WRIGHT |say he needs a Republican Con- Sheet Metet Co. | gress to Lead that Siincsiaene across | m0 Bini Mes. wotertert | Hecht or Meyers Quiz | Mr. Hecht, Mr. Meyers CRYSTAL LAKE, Ill. W—State policemen Wilbert Hecht and Jack | Meyers, ” (Advertisement) Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH Do false teeth mig im $4 wobble when you talk, est, ae of sneene? Don't be annoyed and em such handicaps, FASTEETH, an aline (non-acid) to sprin- kie on your plates, Keeps false teeth more oo eet. Gives confident feel- ing of security and added com fort. investigating an automo | bile collision, found that the motor- | ists involved were William Hecht | and Henry Meyers. William Hecht was a brother of | Wilbert. Henry Meyers was not re- lated to Jack Meyers. No one was hurt No ocummy, taste or feel- | —_— ing Fr today at any Gloversville, N. Y., has about 200 anus eon mter. glove factories. Featured at ENGGASS! | N MOTHER'S DAY GIFTS (Mother's Day is This Sunday) Sunbeam AUTOMATIC FRYPAN $2495 50¢ DOWN 50c A WEEK Does away with cooking failures, because it provides controlled heat for cooking on top of the stove. Set the dial for correct heat for bacon, eggs, pancakes and ‘other foods . . . they Il be cooked to perfec- tion automatically! A useful gift for Mother! 50¢ DOWN ¢ 50c A WEEK & Makes coffee the way Mother likes it . . mild, medium or strong .. . auto- matically. Redi-lite tell when coffee is ready. Universal Coffeematic is chosen Meil end Phone by more people than any other auto- Orders Filled matic coffeemaker. FE 2-2501 itwtiey Co = Open Friday Nights 25 N. SAGINAW ST. ee See Y. #®—Police | “carnival” conces- took over a cement in the rear of a_ building house and took turns at Mexico ‘world in the manufacture of storage bat- teries, processing. | riding inside the barrel and crank- | ing. The makeshift | modated two customers at a time. “ride’’ accom- | and Bolivia lead the antimony, important In chemical and also other Bigger TV Audience Now Watches Hearing NEW YORK (®—The American Broadéasting Co. and Du Mont television networks report slow but steady increases in viewing of their telecasts of the McCarthy- Army hearings. They are the only | THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1954 |networks putting on live casts, Red Reform Troops HONG KONG ®—The Kwantung radio at Canton has confirmed that red Army troops had been used in completeing the Communist land The radio reform in | South China. form.” reform” the South China coast. broad- | called upon the people to donate ‘}money and useful articles to the | troops for their ‘‘great accomplish-.| | meft in carrying out the land re-| It said that 100,000 troops were so used. another 10,000 troops | Ses were used in énforcing-‘‘democratic among fishermen along Itchy Skin Rash Lightning Fost Relief Mop sul anna, ing itehy skin L- pim pies. other Then apply aig em Salve Destroys mor joven as it heals WON st afl druggists. Money back guarantee OPEN TOMORROW NIGHT “til 9 P.M.--- TERRIFIC ROEBUCK AND CO. Tomorrow Night Only... Limited Quantities! Sorry, No Phone Orders or C.0.D.'s SHOUR SALE! 6 to9 P.M. | Sale! Junior Size / GIRDLES Reg. 3.98 2” tic sides! S. M and L Corsets—2nd Floor 4 Sale! Double Knee Blue Jeans Reg. 1.89 1* 4 Denims with vulcanized double knee Zin fl bar tacred peckets S zes 4 to 2 6 to 9 or Boys’ Clothing—Mein Floor 2-Cell Flashlight Complete with 2 Batteries Reg. 1.59 87 ¢ Sensational low price! Bright nickel on brass, adjustable focus, flasher button Save from 6 to 9 only! Electrical—Basement Measuring Tapes Flex-Rigid Steel Tapes Reg. 1.29 88< Has gh-Readability jet black markings on white baked enamel. 10-it length. save! Hardware—Basement See it—, eee By, i tee Yocy mw. - L asia _—~ Deck Chair Coven Lawn Furniture Replacement Reg. 59¢ 47< canvas deck om 6 to save! Strong, siriped chor cover on saie Ir 9 Saturday night! Buy Drapery Dept—Neia Floor re 4 Foam Pillows Buy from 6 to $. Save $2 Reg. 6.95 4.88 . Scientifically proportioned, al- lergy tree. ordorless, self air conditioned, washable core! Buy 6 to 9—save Furniture Dept.—2nd Floor Women’s Canvas Oxfords Shoe Dept.—Main Floor Harmony House Panel Sale! Assorted Nylon, Rayon or Chromspun Values from Cc 79c to 1.19 ; Es. Here's almost every fabric you'd want in this special purchase of tailored panels. Choose from nylon, rayon or chromspun some even in_ colors. Lengths are 45, 54, 63 and 72-inch. On sale from 6 to 9 tomorrow night only! Drapery Dept.—Main Floor Favorit tyles in Gresses at - J savings Reg. 1.98 House Dresses os sorted patter ned r 2 Ladies Ready-to-Wear—ind Floor Italian hand woven bags priced for savings Reg. 98¢ Carry-All Bags shopping trom 6 Accessories—Main Floor and carry to 9 TT Batiste ree zr 38S hort sleeve gowns in c Sizes 34 to 44 Lingerie—Main Floor Gesigns Summer Gowns of hoice of hand embroidered Porto Rican Raisinont Organdy Permanent Crisp Finish Rez. 9% = 33S Ya. New Fairloom organdy fabric in an exciting collection of col- ors in solids! 37, 39-in. wide! Save! Yard Goods—Main Floor Save on Towels Extra Large Bath Towel Reg. 59c 42¢ Choose from many rich Har- mony House colors Save Sat. night 39¢ Hand towel 25<¢ Cloth 10¢ Domestic .Dept——Main Floor Sale! Place Mats 7 Harmony House Colors Reg. 58 25% Fashionable trend in classic dining Beautiful embossed vinyl! plastic place mats. Wheat, rose or daisy patterns. Notions—Main Floor a s. 0 ae “ Wood Hangers Polished. Curved Wood Res. 28° 4 for 8B¢ Smeothiy sanded wood suit hanger with pant bar! Strong metal hook. Buy 4 Saturday night from 6 to Notions Dept.—Main Floor M. Only These Specials on Sale Saturday --6 to 9 P. Plain Cuff Anklet Sizes for Women and Misses Reg. 19c 10¢ Pair Versatile anklet of fine mercer- ized cotton has plain knit foot with nylon reinforced heels, toes. White, colors. Hosiery Bar—Main Floor Self-Polishing Wax Easy-to-Apply Maid of Honor Reg. 0¢ |= HE Oe Tough, long-wearing coating for wood, linoleum and tile sur- faces. Spreads evenly, dries without streaking. — Men’s Pajamas Cool Cotton Crinkle Crepe Reg. 3490 sD} AT Soft, absorbent, cool, never needs ironing. Stripes, allover atterns at. night! Men's Wear—Main Floor Sizes A,B,C,D. Buy Vacuum Bottles _ 1. &. Higgins 1-Pint Size Reg. 1.39 $] For school, work or camping. Liquids stay hot or cold 24 hours. Attractive blue and red case. Plastic cup! Sporting Goods—Basement Basement