rae The , 42 IC 
ith YEAR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1954—40 PAGES 
Immunity Bill Goes 
to Ike for Final OK Godmother , Will Keep Reds | 
From Abusing 
Sth Amendment | 
Cooperative Witnesses 
Can Be Spared From 
Prosecution , 
WASHINGTON (1N 8) 
, The Senate passed and 
sent to the White House 
today the administration’s 
bill to give immunity from 
prosecution to witnesses 
who cooperate in anti-Com- 
munist probes. 
The bill, approved by 
voice vote, is the first major 
Measure in Attorney Gen- 
| eral Herbert Brownell Jr.’s 
~~Communist —contrel——_pro- 
gram to win congressional 
approval. 
It is aimed at halting the prac- 
tice of witnesses before congres- 
sional committees who invoke the 
Fifth Amendment and refuse to tes- 
tify on grounds of possible self-in- 
crimina 
; the bill which goes to the 
White House, a con i 
xpte could apply for a court order 
to grand immunity, but first would 
have to notify the attorney gen- 
  
  Courthouse Proposal County Beauties to Assume _Queenly 
  
  Near Petoskey 2° Michigan Physicians 
Die in Tragic Climax 
to Forewell Dinner 
The victims were Dr. Donald 
Beaver, 59, of Women's Hospital, 
Detroit, and Dr: Harris Lilga, 44; 
In the excitement, officers said, 
. Dr. Beaver apparently sullered .a 4 
heart attack. He was revived but GM to Expand 
Proving Ground 
Office Facilities 
sion program which will 
add nearly 70,000 square 
feet of floor space to present 
facilities is under way at 
the 3,863-acre General 
Motors Proving Ground at 
Milford, it was announced 
today by Charles A. Chayne, 
GM vice president in charge 
of engineering staff. 
trative and general offices 
will start in September. Its 
‘main section will have two 
existing gatehouse which will be 
and access roads to all garages 
which converge at this location. 
Anew, -400-car- parking lot for 
employes will be constructed north 
of the administration building. Pe- 
destrian traffic between the admin- 
istration . building, main entrance 
gate, parking lot, and the yarages 
will be through a tunnel under the 
traffic control circle. 
A new entrance gatehouse, to 
serve both the military and com- 
errected north of the intersection   
immunity order for witnesses ap- 
pearing before grand juries or in 
court trials. 
The bill would limit the immun- 
ity, however, to witnesses at pro- 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) 
Cool Weather Set 
for Few More Days The Pontiac area can count on a 
few more days of cool weather, 
the U, 8S, Weather Bureau says.   
  Philippines Await Rain, 
Want to Plant Rice 
  
Contenders Weigh In 
NEW YORK @# — Archié Moore, 
world light heavyweight boxing a few minutes later stood up in 
the boat and fell overboard. 
Dr. Lilga drowned while attempt- 
ing to reach shore. His wife, a 
strong swimmer, succeeded in 
reaching safety and summoned 
. A cottager put out in a boat Ba 
zh Eka Se 
oF é & ;| construction near the test track. Ridge Rds. All ‘traffic to and 
from the proving ground will 
clear at this gate. 
A group of three special fuels 
laboratories and storage and dis- 
pensing buildings now is under 
They will have a total of 12,24 
square feet of floor space. 
The floor space of the administra- 
tio: building and fuels laboratories 
will bring total square feet of 
floor space at the Milford ground, 
Desert Proving Ground, Arizona, 
and Pike’s Peak Engineering Test 
  Garage, Parking Lof,| ere 
-+—Construction~ of a” hew 
building to house adminis- 
of General Motors and Hickory | oe : ' 
      ! t 
       
A major building expan-\ | P 
  
lke Is Against 
Split With Reds | Severing of Diplomatic 
Ties Would Not Benefit 
U.S., Gen. Clark Told 
WASHINGTON « — President 
Eisenhower said today the United 
States could not possibly serve its 
interests by severing diplomatic 
relations with Russia, 
The President also told a news 
conference the free world is build- 
ing up —a—structure which he be- 
lieves will be impervious to—any 
Communist assault. 
As for waging a preventive 
war against the Communist 
world, as some people have 
urged, Eisenhower said there is 
no such thing as a preventive 
take such a pfoject. 
Eisenhower's remarks came in | 
connection with a request for com- | 
ments or views expressed by Gen. | 
Mark W. Clark. 
Clark, retired former U.S. ‘tom- | 
mander in the Far East, told the 
Senate Internal Security subcom- 
mittee yesterday that he favored 
breaking relations with Russia and 
reorganizing the United Nations to 
exclude the Soviet Union. 
Elsenhower said he feels that, 
_in_ general, many world tensions 
have eased in the last couple of 
years and the free world now   
    ad : Headquarters, Colorado, to 509,147.   (Continued on Page 2,°Col. 6) 
  
—The ultimate consumer of print 
surprised to learn that very com- 
modity is in a top place in Canada 
industry. 
   
   United States 
comes from. 
In that part of 
our nation where     from. 
This paper's supply comes from 
mills in the Quebec area, but the 
greater volume of the Dominion’s 
production -has a. further west 
source of supply in-its raw ma- 
mile trip on a railroad that crosses 
the continent farther north than of the willow famity are found 
everywhere. 
The maples, elms, ash and nut | 
bearing trees are scarce, also that 
sturdy tree for which OAKland 
County was named. It seems that | 
\Canada's forests were made to) 
produce newsprint. : 
Large trees are very scarce. 
The logs going to the paper milts /   
In Today’s Press Baw 
    any other means of land transpor- 
tation is through a forest of trees 
of varieties that make good news- 
print. 
In this area, firs, spruce, cedar 
  . = 
8 
+. 
6 
w 
3 
" 
a 
| 
| named Miss Pontiac last month, 
Festival Sept. 46. Miss Johnson will 
4H Fair which continues through Saturday. 
Queen story on page 26.) 
      
eo 
   
     
           
          
        
           
   
Press Duties - se i ot Cae ~     
      
  s   
270% S. East Bivd., 
night, while N 
George Rd., Rochester, was 
air here, Miss Hoff, who was 
will reign over the Romeo Peach 
preside as queen over the 
(See Romeo Peach 
15-Year-Old Rochester Gir Will Reign Over 4-H Fair By HAZEL A. TRUMBLE 
A 15-year-old, green-eyed queen will reign over this 
year’s 4-H Fair which opened last night before the larg- 
est first-night fair crowd in Oakland County 4-H history. 
The fair continues through Saturday afternoon. 
Nancy Kathleen Johnson, Rochester High School soph- 
omore, a tall brunette who entered the contest because 
no one else from her 4-H club was eligible, was selected 
by the judges from a bevy of 4-H beauties. _ a4 
Hoover Willing 
| to Assist GOP | Ex-President, 80, Says 
He'll Be Glad to Stump 
for Republicans 
Former President Hoover says—he. 
will be “glad to help in any way 
|I can” in Republican political 
campaigning between now and the 
! November elections, 
He was completing a round of   
They began yesterday in his 
birthplace at the nearby village of 
West Branch, where more than 
10,000 people gathered to honor 
him on his 80th birthday. After 
Mason City and was scheduled to 
dedicate a school there and an- 
  
| Eaech-entrant, in- order to 
qualify for the queen’s role, 
must be 15 years old, wear 
|a cotton dress and have a/| 
summer project on exhibit 
at the fair. Each 4-H club 
is entitled to one candidate.. 
Queen Nancy has a food project | solved political parties, Commu- | other in Cedar Rapids before fly- |Board to Mee Aug. 23, Study 
__ Resubmission 
  the “birthday party,”’ he flew to/| 
Flight to Reds Special Committee to 
Ask for Second Ballot 
on Bond Issue 
A special committee de- 
cided today to ask Oakland 
County: supervisors to re- 
submit a tax plan for financ- 
ing a new county court- 
‘house to voters Nov. 2. 
The 10-member body also 
indicated that a legal ques- 
tion may require another 
vote on the proposed $4,- 
500,000 bond issue that ap- 
parently was passed in the 
Aug. 3 primary election. 
The tax proposal for a 
half mill tax increase to 
guarantee retirement of the 
bonds was defeated in the 
primary. Construction of 
the combination courthouse 
and office building hinged 
  
| business is too big for present fa- 
| cilities and we've got to provide 
more room. 
“If we start right now to ac- 
quaint county residents with the 
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa uw —_/ eed for new facilities to carry on 
vot. [functions vital to their welfare. I ke ‘the proposals” will pass.” 
Clawson appointed a _ steering 
committee for the project com- 
posed of Harold: K. Schone of .Oak 
Park, Harry W. Horton- of -Royak’“:-- 
Oak, David Levinson of Birming- visits in his native Iowa today. ‘ham and Clare R. Cummings of 
  
John Explains          
     
  — Ge 
      
‘Guatemala Crushing 
All Red Front Groups 
i new blow at supporters of deposed 
| President Jacobo Arbenz Guzman, 
Guatemala’s ruling junta has dis- GUATEMALA (®—In a sweeping | > areerrwet, 
The nature of his speech at 
West Branch aroused consider- 
able speculation as to whether it 
was an opening gun in the GOP 
political cannonading. He blasted 
the Democrats for presidential 
“misuse of power” in beth do- 
mestic and foreign policies dur- 
ing the 20 years they were in   on display and has entered a 4-H | nist-dominated labor unions and/| office. 
club girl exhibit. 
A sports enthusiast, Nancy is 
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Philip Johnson of 3270 Lake 
George Rd., north of Rochester. 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) 
mostly ranging from three 
inches to a foot in diameter. 
Most of the larger ones long 
since have gone into lumber. 
the region 200 iles | athe bingy trae there in e208 give way to the wheat and | above Lake S 
single branch lroad line that 
hauls out 200 carloads of news- 
print every day. Another branch 
line. brings out 100 carloads every 
‘day, and there are several other 
mills making from 25 to 75 car- 
loads daily. 
In addition to having these great 
forests, Canada also has a water 
| supply to provide ample means 
jor the Making of paper. Water 
|plays a prominent part in the 
manufacturing process., At the 
mills they say that a thousand 
jtens of water is required to pro- and tri 
}duce one ton of paper. |Red front organizations which 
| backed the ousted regime. 
Representatives of the CIO and 
| AFL already are working to es- 
| tablish new unions on an anti- 
}Communist basis. | Before he left his hometown, a 
|reporter asked him if he intends 
'to make any campaign speeches | 
| this fall. 
‘T have no specific plans,” he 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) 
      
floated down to the paper mills, 
so water thes fills a double pur- 
pose. Log rafts 10 to 20 acres 
in extent are a common sight. 
While the forests of Eastern Can- 
other grain fields in the provinces 
ot Manitoba, Saskatchewan and 
Alberta, they resume with much 
vigor here in British Columbia, 
and newsprint again becomes a 
Mills on the coast of British 
western states:—   men are employed in Canada’s 
paper industry, in its various 
phases “between the tree cutters | 
mmers and the finished | 
product. Columbia make most of the paper 
used by the newspapers of our 
| Jt is claimed that over 100,000 ‘Newsprint Country’ has passed out. He no longer 
swings an axe or pulls a cross- 
eut saw. 
That work is done by gasoline 
power, often faraway from aay other means of power. The woods- 
man is not the tough customer of 
bygone days. The men now trim 
off the limbs with power trim- 
mers, much on the same principle 
as the barber trims your hair, 
cuts the tree into convenient 
lengths. A winch on the truck 
lifts the logs aboard. Even the 
old fashioned canthook is used 
  The same portable power saw | Ex-Bonn Security Chief 
Tells Press He Wants 
to Warn Against U.S. 
BERLIN W—Dr. Otto John de- 
clared today he went over volun- 
tarily to the Communists in order 
to warn: the world against what 
‘he called U.S. plans for a new ‘war which would destroy Ger- 
jmany. He said he is now going to 
| work for peace. 
| John told a new ference in 
the Soviet sector lin he de- 
serted as West Germany's security   
  +p te? for wther war which 
| would destroy Germany. 
| In Bonn, Allied and West Ger- 
man officials-plunged into special 
conferences to consider the impact 
      very little. Ba Be dresoed, serves we 6 
Log rolling in the water is rarely - inally , 
| practiced, as most of the logs are |"ead @ long, prepared statement 
too small to support a man. They —o — 
are assembled by men using pike | , a question 
poles and working from a boat.) He answered them alll, in his 
Outside logs are chained together | way, quietly and firmly, with one (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) | exception, 
\ . ceo Sennen 
ot John's own statement he had — 
       
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“wo. — | ! es THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11; 1954 
bg Acting Postmaster Bids 
\ for Permanent Position 
at Oftice in Birmingham : From Our Birmingham Bureau | applicants are rated on a com- 
petitive basis, on evaluation of ann = ERMINGHAM — Acting _ Post- 
| master Roland W. Reese said 
yesterday he will be one of those 
eee 
meee making application to the U. S. 
~ Civil Service Commission for the 
“fo held his position for at teast a 
year. 
' Announcement came from the 
commission yesterday that appli- 
cations for the $6,370 a year 
position will be accepted until 
Aug. 31. 
~£x-President ‘Glad’ 
fo Help Republicans ~ (Continued From Page One) 
said, ‘‘but I'll be glad to help in 
any way I can.” ‘ 
Hoover's appearance, on his 80th 
birthday, deeply surprised people 
who had not seen him in some 
years. He was full of vigor. He 
marched through a warm sun, de- 
livered a lengthy speech without 
a falter, rode dusty miles to dedi- 
cate schools in Iowa 
West, Branch — and was stil! in 
a joking mood at the end of a 
long day. 
“Some people have to endow a 
school to have it named after 
them,” he told a crowd at a new 
elementary school. “I am more 
fortunate.” 
The force with which he attacked 
the actions of the Democrais, and 
the applause he evoked, showed 
that he is still capable of taking | tions of Eton and Graefield roads. 
part in a political affray. Among the major points he made | Eton between Derby road and the 
were: 
1. “Unrestrained presidential ac- 
lids have resulted in a shrinking’ 
of human freedom over the whole 
world, From these actions came 
the jeopardies of the cold war. As “YY. 
a_by product, these actions have 
shrunk our freedoms by crushing 
taxes, huge defense costs, inflation 
and compulsory military service.” 
2. “Our tacit alliance with Soviet 
Russia spread communism over 
the earth." 
3. “More terrible were such 
agreements as our recognition of 
Russia which opened the headgates 
for a torrent of traitors.” 
4. American “acquiescence” in 
Soviet annexationist policy ‘‘extin- 
guished the liberties of tens of mil- 
lions of people” in Poland, the Bal- 
tic states, Mongolia, North Korea 
and China, 
-— 
5. These actions were a “misuse | fore and over July of 1953. Acci- 
of power.” 
6. 
headway in the United States, and 
eigewhere in the world; the 'Social*| cent of ‘ait the accidents this year 
ist’ “furnished the boarding lad- | to date have been caused by right- ders by which the Communists of-way violations,” said Moxley. 
captured the ship of state.” 
7, Individual _ initiative. 
Socialist doctrine and practice. 
8. “Spies and traitors, when ex- 
posed, sought sanctuary for their 
infamies in the Fifth Amendment. City and | 
      list doctrines had gained | 
enter- | caution at all times: when pulling | 
prise and courage are stultified by into streams of traffic.” several years of experience indi- 
cating the ability to direct, man- 
age and efficiently operate a large 
A one-year residency is required 
and those applying must be be- Persons competing must have 
  tween the ages of 30 and 63. 
Reese was named acting post- | 
master two months ago, 
Bernard E. Fowler was relieved | 
of his duties. Fowler had been | 
in charge of the office for almost 
SIX years. s 
* 
One of the biggest affairs of the 
Lions Club, the annual family pic- 
nic, is being held tonight at 
Springdale Park, Wives and chil- 
dren of the members start gather- 
ing at the park at 5°p. m. and a 
6:30 dinner will be prepared and 
served by the Lions only. 
Games, rides and other enter- 
tainment are planned for the eve- 
ning. } 
t 
oo * 
  ; 
= . LJ 
The only overnight trip included | 
in this portion of the YMCA Da-Y 
program got under way this morn- 
|ing when youngsters, carrying 
sleeping bags, swim suits and the 
other necessities of outdoor life, 
headed for Kensington Park. They 
wil] be back home by 5 p. m. to- 
morrow. . 
* s s 
Much wrangling transpired at 
thig week's City Commission meet- 
ing, when commissioners and resi- 
dents differed over the necessity 
for pavement and sidewalks on por-   Sidewalks on the west side of 
north line of the Graefield sub- 
division, and sidewalks on the east 
line of the subdivision to Derby, 
were eventually declared a neces- 
Despite the fact that residents 
on Graefield road had petitioned two 
years ago for paving from the sub- 
division line to Derby, they op-| 
posed the plan. But because of the 
anticipated added traffic flow when 
Pembroke School 1s opened this 
fall, the commission approved the 
construction and will have a special 
Following closely on the heels of 
the city’s first 1954 traffic fatality, 
comes the July accident report 
with a second fatality listed. 
Police Chief Ralph W, Moxley 
said the July report indicated some 
improvement over the month be-   
dents totaled 30, 11 of them caused 
by right-of-way violations. 
“Fifty-five accidents or 29 per) 
“The driver must use care and 
}   
Senate Sends lke   i 
when a 
   ¥ 
a“ 
. 
_* 
-_* 
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oe 
3) 
AP Wirephete 
A MOTHER'S GRIEF—Mrs. Madeline Maurice | Neighbors look on in horror, above, as the mother 
w the 
Angeles to struck three-year-old 
parking and 
lot yesterday. daughter, | holds her little girl while awaiting an ambulance. 
killed by | Janine was dead on arrival at the emergency 
hospital. The driver of the car was not held.   
Rochester Girl, 15, 
Named 4-H Queen (Continued From Page One) 
She has been an active 4-H mem- 
ber four years, 
Over 2,200 4-H members from | the. _are_exhibiti os. 
livestock, handcraft, conservation 
  
Stork Visits Cows 
  
equipment and home furnishings. |N. Byers of the Ann Arbor News | 49 vearoid mother of four children | 
Tonight at 7:30 the annual pa- 
rade of clubs with their colorful   
  
    
Such a plea of immynity is ap ad- 
mission of guilt. 
9. What the nation needs now is 
——“to—restore the checks and bal- 
ances of power, to reinvigorate 
state and local governments, and 
to tteflate bureaucratic empires.” SS 
; Hoover charged that during the 
20 years immediately after his ad- 
ministration the White House ‘‘en- 
croached” On both the legislative 
and judicial branches of govern- 
ment. 
The whole speech was one of the 
strongest attacks on the Democrats 
since the 1952 presidential cam- 
paign. ,   
= Pe a   Immunity Measure (Continued From Page One) 
ceedings involving the national 
security such as treason, sabotage, 
espionage, sedition, or conspiracy 
to overthrow the government: 
Still pending in the Senate 
are other House-passed measures 
requested by Brownell in his 
drive to tighten controls on Com- 
munis¢ activities, 
These include legislation to legal- 
ize use of wire-tapping evidence in 
court trials, strip citizenship from 
convicted Reds, and provide the 
death penalty for peacetime spying. | 
    | floats will take place on the fair- . 32, died suddenly in Univer-} 
sity Hospital, Ann Arbor late yes | 
Michigan ior 
Succumbs at 52 | | Ralph N. Byers of the 
Ann Arbor News Dies 
With Heart Attack | 
ANN ARBOR w — Editor Ralph | 
died suddenly yesterday in Univer- | 
sity Hospital after suffering a heart 
attack at his home. 
  | grounds, followed by a recreation 
| program including the pig scram-| 
ble. 
Thursday's program includes hog, 
sheep and beef judging, and beef 
showmanship. -The review, | 
with girls modeling their own de- 
signs, will be staged Thursday 
night at 8. 
On Friday, the tractor field day | 
program is scheduled, with the 
machinery parade and 4-H ama- 
teur program during the evening. 
An all-day horse show on Satur- 
day climaxes the annual event. 
  
- “Tue nuedaanina ts ed 0 F. Lloyd Woodside _ 
    
     
   
    
   
   
    
       
     
     
  Valued at 85 Dollars 
BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Two breaking and enterings on | 
Monday were followed by a theft of material from a new home last 
night. 
Police Chief Clark Green said 
someone entered the home. which 
is under construction at 4740 W. 
Maple, through an open basement 
window’ and removed paint, 
brushes and rollers valued at about 
$85. The home is owned by Mr. 
and Mrs. K. F. Werder. 4720 W 
Maple. but the Senate is expected to ap- 
| prove the other two measures be- 
fore Congress adjourns, 
15-Year-Old Shoots 
Youth in Revenge DETROIT (UP)—Police said to- 
day a 15-year-old boy has admitted 
shooting an 18-year-old youth be- 
cause he “knocked down one of my 
buddi¢s.”’ 
The youth, Kevin Martin, was   
  PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mestiy fat 
and cool tonight, lew 54 te 54. Thersaes 
increasing cloudiness with thewers late 
ae * agen night High 
74 te WR. Neorthwester! raed lh ~ y winds 
Teday im Pontiae ——+~Lowest temperature preceding 8 «# m 
‘At @ am: Wind velocity 23. m 
Direction: Northwest , ae 
: Sun sets Wednesday at 739 pm 
Moon rises Wednesday at 5:56 pm 
Moon sets Thursday at 3:26 am 
Dewntown Temperateres 
Lu) Oo M.. ce eeeee ifaom 
T&M. vesceeee 51 12m .. 65 
8B. M.... 5005. 34 Ipm........ 66 
9 A. ™ ..ceeee: 58 2pm 67 
16 8. m 62 
Teesday int Pontiac 
{As recorded downtown) 
Mighest temperature... cosnseee 
Lowest temperature. . 
Mean temperature... . . 
Weather—Partiy tloudy. 
One Year Age in Pentise eres re 
eeeaeeee 
Highest temperature........ TTT TE a 
Lowest temperature.......... eerescses | 
Mean temperature - & 
  
  50 in. 1882-1064 
Tuesday's T to 
eae rquette 61 92 
3 66 M is 76° 82 
6? “44 New Orisens @0 7) 
, 2.59 New York 68 
- §1 3 Omahe 8? 6% 
M@ Phoenix 97 8 
$3 Pittsburgh 80 ow Traverse City ii 
8 74 \ Washington 6s 
Rumen Bt 7 62 Tampa on 
ee) ‘4 
g. PES Sees . Thereday in Receiving Hospital with a hip 
wound. His condition was listed 
‘as “temporarily serious.” 
Park Station said he picked up the 
T5-year-old on 4 “hunch” and the 
boy admitted the shooting under 
questioning. Sterla said the boy 
told him he went to his home and 
got a .22-caliber pistol Tuesday 
night when his friend complained 
| Sterla said juvenile authorities 
  in the case. He said eight other 
| persons believed to have seen the 
| Shooting were being held as police 
| witnesses 
  Picked Up in Lansing, 
Believed to Be Arsonist 
LANSING ()—Police are hol4- 
ing John Muir, 29, of Windsor, 
Ont., for possible extradition to 
Canada. He was arrested in 
Lansing Tuesday charged with 
arson and larceny. 
Muir was accused of setting a 
small fire in the- Wentworth Hotel 
earlier in the day and was caught 
| rifling the room of a hotel pation 
during the excitement, Police 
said he had admitted his guilt 
| and also disclésed he had set eight   
| fires recently in the vicinity of 
London, Ont Inay.be asked to .waive_jurisdiction | Rite on Thursday BIRMINGHAM—Service will be. 
held for F. Lloyd Woodside, 58. 
1097 Pilgrim Rd. at 1 p. m. 
Thursday at Bell Chapel of the 
William R. Hamilton Co. with 
burial in Acacia Park Cemetery. Byers, 52, was stricken at 1 p.m. 
. He was rushed to the hospital 
where he died at 3:30 p.m, 
Byers, who graduated from 
| the University of Michigan in 
1924, was named editor of the | 
| News Feb, 1, 1950, The appoint. — 
| ment culminated 15 years of | 
service as news editor, 
Following graduation from col- | 
lege, Byers went to work for the | 
Detroit News for a few months be- 
fore joining the Booth Newspapers, 
Inc. 
He then moved to the Flint Jour- 
na} where he served 10 years-as} 
| assistant sports editor automotive 
editor and Surcay Salter” Tie came: to the News in June, 1934. 
Byers was born Aug. 22, 1901, 
at Newcastle, Pa. He was a | 
member of the American Seciety | 
ot Newspaper Editors and the | 
Rotary Club. | 
He is survived by his widow, |   
  Mr. Woodside died in Henry 
Ford Hospital Monday following 
| a short illness. 
| Surviving are his widow, Cas- | 
sandra M.; a son, Donald S.; one 
| daughter   Mrs. Jafnes Domke; 
two grandchildren and one brother. 
| ‘Mr. Woodside was president of | 
, the Park Chemical Co. of Detroit, 
'@ member of the Detroit Gorf | 
Ashley Lodge in Detroit. { Ruth; his father, D. W. Byers, | 
and a brother, Frank of Youngs- 
town, Ohio, | 
Service will be conducted at 3 
}p.m. Friday from the Muehlig 
_ Chapel with burial to follow in 
Ann Arbor.   
Mayor Is 67 Years Old 
CHICAGO u—Chicago’s mayor, | 
Lt. William Sterla of the Palmer | Cjyb, Resource Club, Masons and Martin H, Kennelly, was 67 years 
old today. \ 
  
Sale of the lavish. 245-acre Angus 
Smith Estate in Addiso. Township 
ito a Detroit family was annow 
| today by Roy Annett, Inc., Pontiac 
realtors. 
Purchaser of the estate—which 
includes* a private lake, a main 
home and four other houses—was 
Dr. and Mrs. Allen Collins of De- 
troit. The purchase price was not 
revealed. 
The seller is Mrs. Caroline N. 
Smith, widow of Angus Smith, a 
wealthy Detroit investment broker. 
Although. no estimate of the 
actual value of the estate is avail- 
‘able, it is known that Mr. Smith 
spent more than $600,000 on the 
| property in the late 1920s. 
' The estate lies north of Lake- 
| ville-Lake in northeast Oakland 
County. One part of the property 
borders that~lake, 
Beventy-acre Shadow Lake is | 
iy monies on the property. The es- 
/     Detroit Doctor, Wife Buy 
245-Acre Smith Estate +that Martin attacked him —— 4 
tate also boasts a 75-foot-long 
swimming pool. 
Buildings include a main English 
Manor home which has hand-hewn 
window casings and lead windows. | 
The 23 x 48-foot living room has a | 
plank pegged oak floor, a natural | 
log-burning fireplace and a ceil-| 
ing of heavy hand-hewn oak | 
beams. Cc 
Its 18 x 20-foot dining room, | 
floored with flagstone, overlooks 
the lake and pool, Servant quar- 
ters are located in the main home. 
Other buildings include a two- 
bedroom guest house, and a four® 
ear garage near the entrance to 
the property. 
There are three farm houses. 
Barns - and other out-buildings | 
are about a quarter of a mile 
from the main home. 
The sale was handled by Clar- 
ence Knechtel of the Pontiac real 
estate firm. | | ~ Toledd in 1928. For the last 19 Joe Haas Tours 
‘Newsprint Country’ (Continued From Page One) 
to keep the raft from breaking 
up. 
Through the majer part of 
Canada's paper pulp country 
“there —is—no—other—industry;—no ; ~ . | 
farming, no clearings and no | Paign organization, finances, speak- | the 
population for hundreds of miles, 
except the habitations of the 
railroad maintenance workers. 
We have no area in the United 
States to come near matching 
it. 
Perhaps the Canadians learned 
/a lesson from their neighbors to | 
|the south. We devastated our for- | 
ests, with apparently little concern 
paper pulp material threatened. 
In most of Canada's provinces | 
|they now have laws that compel | 
anybody who destroys a tree to 
pliant at least one seedling in its 
place. In some areas these young 
trees already have a good start 
at replenishing the virgin forest. | 
The writer thinks the Canadians 
are smart. 
Woman Found Dead 
South of Flat Rock FLAT ROCK #—The body of a   
was found early today in an alley | 
near her home in Newport, six 
miles south of. Flat Rock. 
State Police identified the wom- Dem Strategy 
'Confab Ends - Map Senate Campaign 
at Williams’ Home - 
LANSING # — Michigan Demo- 
cratic leaders came out of a two- 
‘day strategy conference last night 
exuding fight, confidence and 
plans ‘ 
Party big-wigs met in the home 
of Gov. Williams so that details | 
of their plafis would not leak to | 
enemy Republicans. 
It was the first top party strat- | 
egy conference attended by Pat- 
rick V. MeNamara of Detroit since 
he won the Democt atic nomination 
for U.S. Senator. 
McNamara said. “Events of the 
past few days and these thoroughly 
constructive meetings with party 
leaders mean, in my opinion, that 
| the Democratic Party has served | 
| notice on the Republicans that they , 
had better run for cover in No 
| vember. 
“it becomes -mere apparent 
daily,” he said, “that the Demo- 
cratic Party is dedicated to a | 
complete victory this fall. The   
  Tt 
the moment they took 
anciers and corporations. The 
lence, “We had a very satisfactory | 
discussion of campaign issues and | 
how best to bring them to the 
people. Pat McNamara and I have 
very much the same views of the |     | issues @ 
| organization for a thoroughly inte- | | | 
grated campaign. FI am sure the | 
Democratic Party is going to pre- | 
sent the best coordinated campaign 
we have ever waged in Michigan. * | 
ing schedules and issues. 
Detroiter Charged 
With Molesting Girl A 30-year-old Detroit man, shot   
| 
y 
Township Justice Court on an 
indecent liberties charge. 
Ralph A. Cook of 1350 E. Grand 
Blvd. was arrested at the girl's 
Troy Township home after he was , ; 
| shot. 
| ‘Troy Township Patrolman wil. | 
| liam Schwandt said the girl | 
| identified Cook as the man who 
| camie°to«the home Monday and | 
| molested her after requesting a drink of water. The man, ac-| 
| cording to the girl, said he 
would return Tuesday. 
The girl's mother, a widow, told 
ice she remained home from | 
work yesterday and confronted | 
Cook at the locked screen door | | During. 2-Day Meeting | 
nd we are working out the | 
The conferees discussed cam- | Rumor Stevens 
Going to Lisbon 
as New Envoy 
WASHINGTON  — Resignation | 
factor of health” 
accepted the resignation with 
“ernest wishes for your full and 
speedy return to health and vigor.” 
James C. Hagerty, White House 
press secretary said Guggenheim's 
successor hasn't been chosen yet. 
a Y 
Farm Plan Sure 
f Being Law.. 
by 62-28 Margin ote Passed New Bill Fuorine Natural in 55 Localities Several Oakland Water 
ns Contain Some   System 
_ Anti-Decay. Chemical 
Several public water systems in 
Oakland County ere among 55 in 
Michigan which naturally have 
from 50 to 150 per cent of the 
amount of fluorine necessary to 
prevent tooth decay, the State 
| Health Department announced to- 
amounts in the water supplies of 
most Michigan communities, but 
in many it is not enough to give 
protection against tooth Wecay. 
-s Dr.. Fred Wertheimer, chief of 
the public health dentistry see- 
tion, said 2% localities have al- 
  WASHINGTON w—An adminis- 
Republicans have shown, since ‘tration plan for farm price sup- Five communities, 
éffice, that ports which would move up or | known to have more 
they represent only the giant fin- down as stocks on hand vary was” 
certain of enactment into law to- 
day following 62-28 Senate passage 
last night of a big new farm bill. 
the 
which must be ironed 
ceptance of the Senate version of 
supports on dairy products,” said 
Sen. Aiken -(B-¥t};- 
Senate Agriculture Commit- 
tee and head of its conferees. 
port 
milk. The order took effect last 
  
Solons Hike Stipend 
for Disabled Vets 
House today a bill providing a five 
per cent increase in compensation 
for two million veterans with serv- 
ice-connected disabilities. 
The measure also would increase 
compensation for 68,700 childless 
widows of veterans from $75 to $87 
a month and increase from $60 to 
$75 a month the payment to a de- 
pendent mother or father of dis- 
abled veterans. 
The fegisiation will cost the 
after her daughter identified nm | government 
as the Monday intruder. an estimated 110 mil- 
mother said she shot Cook in the) 
right hee! after he refused to wait | lion dollars in the first year of its 
would become effective two months 
an as Mrs. Margaret Cousino. Po-| for police being summoned by the ‘after enactment of the bill. 
lice said they have detained Leo | 
R. Jondro, 28, of Newport, for 
questioning. . 
Officers quoted Jondro as saying 
Mrs. Cousino died in his car after 
the two had left a bar to take a 
ride. 
No marks of violence were 
found, police said. An autopsy 
Police quoted Jondro as saying | 
the woman became faint and a/| 
moment later he realized she wa$, 
dead. Jondro said he became | 
an alley behind a Newport bar. but | 
  
Pontiac Deaths © 
Mrs. Dave Hogan 
Mrs. Dave (Evelyn) Hogan, 30 
of 54 Crawford St., died last Sun- 
day in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital 
after an illness of three months. 
She was the daughter of Joe and 
Carrie Gafford Monroe and was 
born in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1904. 
Mrs. Hogan was married in 
years she has lived in Pontiac and 
she was a member of the Newman 
AME Church. 
Besides her husband, she is sur- | 
vived by two sisters, Edna Byrd | 
and Ruth Monroe of Cincinnati; 
four brothers, Daniel of Chicago, 
Iit., William of Irenton, Ohio, 
‘James of Detroit and Edward of 
' Pontiac. 
The funeral will be held at Trin- 
ity Baptist Church —at--2—p.-m: 
Phursday..The Rev_J.Allen Park- 
er of the Newman AME Church 
will officiate with burial in Oak 
Hill Cemetery. ia 
The body will be at the William 
F. Davis Funeral Home this after- 
noon at 3 p.m. 
  
Kelvinator of Canada 
Strike May End Soon LONDON, Ont. u — An end of a 44-day walkout was in sight today 
at the Kelvinator of Canada in 
London. 
Some 450 workers, members of 
Local 27, CIO United Auto Workers, 
were to meet today to consider 
terms tentatively reached in To- 
ronto Monday. And union officials 
said yesterday they would urge the 
strikers to accept the terms, de- 
tails of the settlement plan were 
not disclosd. daughter. 
Cook denied the charge. 
Eisenhower Vetoes 
Break With Russia (Continued From Page One) 
was scheduled today in Monroe. | has a better chance than before 
to obtain a solid peace. ,   
Owosso Sergeant Dies; 
to Have Honor Guard 
OWOSSO (AP)—An honor guard 
from his own outfit will serve 
Thursday at the military funeral 
of Sgt. 1.C. James Killinger, 22. 
| of Owosso, who died in Memorial 
| Hospital Tuesday of injuries suf- 
| fered last Saturday in an auto 
The conference also touched on accident. 
these other matters: 
ATOMIC-LABOR — The Presi- | Company Killinger was a member of 
1, Third Regiment, 
dent said he favors using all possi- Michigan National Guard now in - —tegat “devices —to-—avert aft “Traine “at “Camp Grayling. ~~ “DETROIT ti ¥=Federat- “Judge —— 
reatened strike at atomic plants th   
/an hour later reported it to police. in Oak Ridge, -Tenn., and Paducah, 
| Ky. This was in reply to a question | 
las to whether he plans to ask! 
| strike-blocking injunction under 
the Taft-Hartley law. 
Paducah production wor kers 
| voted last night to go out on strike 
| tomorrow and the situation at Oak 
| Ridge also is toUch-and-go. 
FARM—The President congratu- 
lated Senate leaders on pushing to | 
  approval a farm bill based on the GG SSS SSS SS REE SEER SESS 
FARMERS CO-OP MARKET administration's call for a shift 
from the present rigid price-sup- | 
port program to flexible supports. 
He said he wanted to make one | 
| thing very clear—that the admin- | 
istration victories reflected in the 
‘bills passed by the Senate and 
House were in no sense political | 
victories. 
Eisenhower called them steps 
toward a_ stable economy and 
| therefore measures which will ben- 
|efit everyone. 
Oakland. Republicans 
Oakland County Republicans will 
meet for their county convention | 
| tomorrow at 8 p.m, in room one   
+ 
1 
inaw and Huron streets. 
Delegates to the state convention, | 
to be held Aug. 21 in Grand Rapids, 
will be chosen. 
‘Takes On New Chief 
GRAND RAPIDS # — Burdette | 
{B. Ashley, Grand Rapids corre- 
spondent of the Associated Press. 
has resigned to become bureau 
chief at Lansing for Federated | 
Publications, Inc. 
Ashley will succeed Willard | 
Baird, who recently was named 
| managing editor of the Grand Rap- 
| ids Herald. ‘The ‘move is effective 
Aug. 23.   
  QU 
SRSSSSSISSSRRRSRe 
ees 
  | study with 
| 
+ 
of the County Courthouse at -Sag-+ 
    Velkoff Completes Study 
BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Stephen 
tiac, a_teacher—in_the—Bloomfield 
Hills High School, has recently 
completed a special program of 
the Massachusetts 
Institute of Technology under the 
auspices of Westinghouse Educa- 
tional Foundation. per million and probably should 
remove some of 
Twenty-nine communities, 
gaid, have 0.5 to 0.7 parts 
million. 
Following is the list: 
More than 1.5 parts_per_million: 
Fowler, Centerline, Garden and 
Bridgeport Township of Saginaw 
County. oe. 
  
actly one part per million), Ep- 
worth Heights, Fraser, Memphis, 
Port Austin, Richmond, Rogers 
| City and Ypsilanti State Hos- 
pital. 
Birmingham, Bloomfield 
Village, Carsonville, Cass City, 
Clawson, Elizabeth Lakes Estates, in the foot Tuesday by the motier | Apri] 1, and the House voted to lift . : ; ; i ° Elsie, Fowlerville, Huron Gardens, , 
| of a 14-year-old girl he is accused dairy supports to 80 per cent of sone Ithaca, Jackson, Mariette, 
Editor of the Ann Arbor News for future generations. As a result, | of molesting, is scheduled to be parity on Sept. 1. : 
past four years, Ralph N. | our timber is mostly gone and our 4fraigned this afternoon in Tro | Mayville, Montrose, Mt. Pleasant, 
|Qvid, Owendale, Pigeon, Pontiac 
State Hospital, Pittsfield Village, 
Romeo, Royal Oak, Sandusky, Wil- 
liamston, White Pigeon and Wa- 
terford Township of Oakland 
County. 
ia . . 
Injunction Restrains | . Ld 
‘Strikers at.Baldwin |» Baldwin Rubber Co, strikers of 
Loca} 1235, URW-CIO, .were re- 
strained by a Circuit Court injunc- 
tion yesterday frgm committing 
any acts of violence or blocking 
entrances to the plant. 
Attorney Harold Howlett ob- 
H. Russel Holland when pickets 
blocked the plant's delivery en-   
  
| operation. The increase payments | trance with cars and prevented en- 
try to the building by milling 
about the sidewalks. 
The court order does not ban 
the striking workers from main- 
| taining picket lines, but requires 
| the pickets to refrain from inter- 
fering with operation of the 
plant, 
Almost 1,000 employes went on 
| Strike there Saturday demanding a 
| general wage increase and other 
| benefits. t 
Sentence Father, Son 
in Counterfeit Charge 
    
Arthur A. Koscinski Tuesday sen - 
_tenced Raymond Looker Sr., 59, 
Detroit tool and die maker, and 
| his son Raymond Jr., 29, after 
Atty. Gen. Brownell to seek a | M. Velkoff, 1445 Glenwood, Pon- they pleaded guilty to a counter- 
feiting charge. 
The father was given a 4year 
| term; the son, three years. They 
| were arrested by secret service 
agents April 16. The agents also 
| discovered plates for making 
counterfeit $10 bills. 
  
      
a 
AT THE 
4H 
Grounds 
  
' 
|       
      
      ‘The Market will resume its regular schedule in 
the building after the 4-H Fair. | 
blebelelebbebehslebeletebetbebetelsitebeblebebelebbelet> 4 i> ‘ | MARKET HOURS 
FAIR WEEK 
THURSDAY 
7A.M.-1 P.M.&5-9 
SATURDAY | 
7 A.M. - 7 P. M.}   
     ae ait   
    a Pr ‘coud ep Ye Tae ik, EI 9 ay Rafe 
fey 
  
  
    
Weiss Y WebE bbak Mi the pluke we both watind 
for Ziegfeld, I recall that nothing ever hoth- 
ered her. She had no worries—no nerves. 
Did you ever hear the famous story about 
the opening night of the Follies in Atlantic 
City when she was almost late for her first 
entrance? 
The assistant stage manager kept yelling— 
“Miss Brice, you're on!” Where was Fanny? 
Selling one of her hats to a show girl in a 
dressing room. 
A few years ago, when Fanny had a heart 
attack, very methodically, she telephoned the 
doctor and then sent for an ambulance. When 
I heard she was at the Cedars of Lébanon 
Hospital in Los Angeles, I hurried to visit my 
old Ziegfeld playmate. 
Imagine my surprise when I walked into her 
room to see Fanny in an oxygen tent, with a 
racing form and phone, placing bets all over 
the courttry. 
I would have bawled her out, but how can Fanny Would Give Kaiy Her Child 
Betore She’ d Throw an Ace in Gin.   Sod Sch WW ciudics Us UN once 
winner! 
Fanny loved cards, too, but she. was the most 
piayer-to-ever-shuffie a-deck:—H —aggravating- 
played Gin’ Rummy with her three or four 
nights a week. 
a card, you could lie down, take a nap, have a 
massage, get up and. shave, and Fanny would 
still be muttering, “What shall I give this man? 
What does he need? He picked up a ten of 
spades.” 
And for her to part with an ace! She'd rather 
have given away her children! 
‘build-up for what's to follow: 
waiting in front of the house to take me to 
the station. Fanny dropped in and said, 
“Eddie, what about one game?” I agreed. 
As usual, Fanny took forever on one of her 
decisions. I said, “Excuse me, for just a min- 
ute.” - 
I jumped into the car, was driven to the sta- 
tion, got a train to take me to Chicago and 
[then to New York, where I sent, Fanny .a tele- 
gram with one word: “Well?” 
  (Copyright, 1954)   
Gl Seeks U.S. Entry est of world's Jimmy Wilde, one of the clever- ing of fighters. He looked anemic 
but he was one af the hardest 
hitters in modern times, flyweight cham- 
  Before che made tp her tind to thaw aban | 
This is a big 
| 
One day, I had my bags packed, with a car 
  
for Czech Warbride INTERNATIONAL FALLS, Minn. 
(‘®*—Pfc. William G., White, 24, 
Kelliher, Minn., and his Czecho- 
slovakian bride of 24 hours were 
en route today to Winnipeg, Man., 
to seek her entry into the United | 
States. 
White and Erny Pinsker, 27, 
were married yesterday in a cere- 
mony on the...Jsternational Bridge 
connecting this city with Ft. Fran- 
ces, Ont, | 
Erny, who is in Canada on a 
nonquota visa, cannot join her hus- 
band in the United States until 
she obtains the proper papers, The 
Whites hope the -U.-S> consul int 
Winnipeg will solve their problem. 
The couple's wedding climaxed a 
two-year romance that began in 
Frankfurt, Germany, where White 
was stationed and Erny worked in 
a home. left Czechoslovakia 
in 194 with her mother and five 
brothers and sisters. 98 Nerth 
Saginaw 
  pions was one of the most deceiv- 
eat   CROSS women CiIGARETTE CASE 
Regular Size 
$494 Plus 6c Tax 
  
King-Size 
Plus 6c Tax 
{{@ BROTHERS   
  
  
SUFFERERS New Mino tablets to be taken internally offer 
fast relief from the 
miseries of sinus block- 
age and sinus drainage. |) 
100 $ | ine V4 98 ! 
| 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor   
  
    
Try SIMMS tor Your 
BEST Possible PICTURES 
    
       openg AND 
relly PRINTIN 
Bigger—Better—Brighter   
    SUPER-SIZE 
Prints All Standard Rolls 
One Low Price 
Bring your films 
to Simm s—tor-Hi 
taster service... Ff) 
sharper prints... 
greater savings. 
98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor           
  
  
ed) ee oe ee 
Pe em ead 
TIONS 
STYLED. 
OUR OWN 
CUSTOMER 
PARKING LOT 
; \A Few Steps From 
oer Store, Turn Right 
  From thousands and thousands of combinations, 
design, choose from a wonderful array of new fabrics . 
able NYLON in the entire weaving range. 
own upholstering .. . select your cushion content from foam rubber, 
SPRINGDOWN,” or spring and cotton. 
In an unbelievably short time your furniture will be “Tailor Made” to your | 
taste by Tomlinson, famed over half a century for exacting craftsmanship | 
and—skilled—tailoring.__A—private—label_with_your.own-name_will be affixed , 
each piece specially ordered by you. 
Large Selection of Styles - 
Shewart-Glenn Co ~~’ 
  COME ‘IN. ‘TODAY AND FASHION YOUR OWN 
FURNITURE .,. . SELECT YOUR OWN SPECIFICA- 
.. . CHOOSE YOUR OWN FABRICS ... 
HAVE YOUR OWN PRIVATE LABEL TO 
IDENTIFY THE SOFA OR CHAIR YOU HAVE 
Imagine! Here you can actuaily dictate your own specifications .. . 
your furniture “Tailor Made” to fit your own decorating scheme. 
“Naturally, you 
TAILOR MADE SOFAS from $219.50--TAILOR MADE CHAIRS from $119. 50 
Hundreds of Covers to Pick From you select 
.. inel       
  
have 
our own 
ing wash- 
specify your | 
| 
          On Sasteine Our Own 
Private Lighted Lot for = 86 to 96 S. Saginaw St. Opposite Auburn Avenue 
¥ 4 
a eae ee ae eee eee ee SS Se ee ee eS eee ee ee oe 18 eer ee eS ae Oe eee OALM.TGP. M.... Thursday Only              
   
     
When you look over this adv.-full of super specials re- 
-pnember that this isnot an ordinary sale. We are now 
SALE-brating our 20th birthday the ‘only way we know 
aos _ with B-A-R-G-A-I-N-S-! 
‘Hundreds of Bargains Not Advertised — 
Shop Every Department on All 3 Floors! 
We can’t possibly list each and every item that we've 
slashed in prite . . . you simply have to come and see for 
yourself. Toke our word for it —a counter-by-counter 
shopping trip through Simms tomorrow will pay off in the 
biggest savings wai the ‘year. 
       
         
       
    Brae Blade 
Wall Scraper tO} Prices Slashed ta-Lessi Than Cost of Material! 
Ladies’ Tea-Aprons Knit Brief Style 
Boys’ Swim Trunks 
20° 59c Value 
59e—and—79e Cc As Pictured i od han- 
$1.00 Value } ‘alues die mith 2MeiBe> 
Boys’ brief style i 
Limit 2 trunks with belt 
maroon all tana 
mixtures. 
BIRTHDAY BARGAIN 
Men's Ankle Length — Limit 2 to Each Customer 
Ladies’ colorful half aprons in bright 
color prints. Tie at waist. 
    
  
  ii Walla uslin Pillow Cases—42x36 inch... .4 for $1.20 
one fry Ne SOx og5 Chenille Bodspreads—67x105 inch..... $2.20 
$1.55 Ladies’ Short Gowns—cotton plisse...... $1.20 
SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS 
Famaus ‘DUTCH’ Brand—Tested Formula 
White House Paint 
$4 Value! 
me ‘Popular TEA POT Style 
‘SESSIONS’ ELECTRIC 
$4.95 Wall Clock 
re tQe 
     Longer wea sox for men in all 
tees I6 te 13 Choice of colors. 
BIRTHDAY BARGAIN 
25¢ Can of Ronson Gneiee” of co ooter ors 
Limit 1 te & cus 
tomer 
Lighter Fluid 
  Just 100 Gallons at This Price 
Ideal for any wood surface outdoors 
  
  BIRTHDAY BARGAIN) BARGAIN 
Sew lti—Pleat li—Paste It 
      
  . 20° I Conran —ttne Sch Saal Se 2 Plastic Covering "elve 49c Garden & Lawn Sprinkler—a!! metal. . .. .20¢ P overing | Limit 5 Cans 39c Cellulose Sponge Mitt—tits over hand. Lee .20¢ per Yard 
2 $10. r fan—‘skimo @inch.........99.20 . —Ferry~ Cloth—Seersicker S BARGAIN ™ Ladies’ ‘fT’ Shirts | | M S i) | RT | DAY S Use ter covering 
walls, shelves 
              a 
ssscnsssccoapecsesneseconsseccstasetonseescnnescsuestecsavescpuoeapbenseeen 
       
  Bars a 
are 
ee $1.95 Values First Quality—Blue-Speck Enamel Sp cen ne 
For 20 ZY S e sat. ! 
2s" Y2- it. auce es Sizes S-M-L a 19¢ 18-Inch Stainless Steel 
ye Ay Knits, Ys 4 Value Towel CRE | terry cloths and =% ,' ery seersuckers. In : 
assorted color s. Limit 2-to Each Customer 
     
    
    
          
  —l S0c Value : 
BIRTHDAY BARGAIN ; Durable and easy to clean blue — | 
Sleeveless Seersucker - “x 4 speck qnemaleace. 22 =n? fin + Gi ’ ee ser. « ? as pacity. «, . | 
irls $2 2.95 Ladies Cation Broadcloth Pajamas... $2.20 § stamens steeth  e 
Blouses = §1.89 Girls’ Skirts—summer cotton, sizes 4-10 2-81.20 a : 97¢ Values 29¢ Coin Purse— Kwik-See at a glance’ 
SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS 
For Boys -and- Girls—Size 2 to 8 
Boxer Jeans With Full Elastic Waist 
Regular 
97¢ “2? Pair $1 20 
2 to 8 
Limit 4 pair to each BIRTHDAY BARGAIN, BARGAIN 
Firm Plastic Bristles 
Upholstery 2 For $129 20 
Brush y Bleeveless blouses 
in aseorted 
— & satrigee. 
3 
       
       
  Me Pietered | 
49 
Values 
Tough. durable bris- 
tles really cleans off 
dirt, grit out of the 
wphoistery Brush 
shape makes it easy 
to get at bard 
places. 
BIRTHDAY BARGAIN] BARGAIN 
48 Sheets in Pack 
Paper : 2 . 
Boys’ and girls’ boxer jeans in sizes 
Elastic waist, 2 pockets 
customer 
29c Midget Butternut Chocolate Candy—7 oz. box 20¢ 
eR ee aE ee 
  
    7 
       
  Se Sic Se Cai all Candy Suckers. Tor 20e > —Na0Kins fq — c Cal-Tail Candy Suckers............... Le | 
Hit and Miss Rugs eee “Si Value 0 (OED BIRTHDAY BARGAINS For 901) 
stitched. Wash- 3 fer $420 Ist Quality ‘CANNON’ _ able fringe Limit 4 Packs edges. Soft doeskin lunch- 
4, Bath Towels 
    
  BIRTHDAY BARGAIN com naphine packed 
In 20x40-Inch Size Vaniehay idl. 
Regul ia 4 for a Full Size ‘Islander’ Each 
vhoce of ha cts waa 2 Ukulele 4 to eich customer $4.95 Value 
‘Cannon’ Solid Colors $ 20 
Hand Towels 
Cnoice of splid 20: More's the uke eolors. Limit 4 arthur 
to each cus- net a toy but « 
tomer full size ukulele 
—_ > 59c Linx Auto Pelisk—Iull pint............... 20 2 Zieh, iPetrections Ist Quality—81x99 a —— 39c All Metal Waste pasmet~—dacoraiod eae 20¢ s GLICTAY TI) White Muslin Sheet $1.79 Value 4 ie 20 
Durable muslin 
BIRTHDAY BARGAIN) BARGAIN eve we with Phanid 
hem. Limit     
      Sand Pail 
~& Shovel 
Filled L ith 
  Heavy Gatvanized—Satfety 
fit Rubbish Burner Top 
  
  
    vO eee +7 20 } 
  
  gauge wire construction with 
    A 
AE 
el 
U8 
@ 
7 
        dl Heavy 
Adjustable W zipper top, safety style. Limit | te-each 
Chrome Plated 4) | a” Customer. 
Hol-Plate Holder 
are 2O' Protect table tops from any size 
hot dishes. Extends 8 to 12 inch- 
es as pictured § All metal, can't 
tarnish, Just 48. BROTHERS 
98 N. SAGINAW ST. . —3 Floors of Bargains 
, 7 \ ~~ 
ea ee   = Sa ee oe oe EE 7). |     
      
  
anlin @ OWEk 
LAWN MOWERS 
Now SAVE 
| ho 
on that Power Lawn Mower 
you have wanted all Sum- 
mer... these ere démonstrators and are just like new.   
    
SUMMER HOURS: Menday, Thurs., Friday, 8 to 8 
Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday, 8 to 6 
FREE Off Street Parking 
Jest érive right ep te cur frent deer and 
perk in cur big let and take alli the time 
you want te leek areund. 
KEEGO HARDWARE WAREHOUSE 20 Osmun St. - FE 2-6506 — a 
(Advertisement)   
A 
STORE 
=. 
        
  
(Advertisement) 
| ESCAPED FROM THE TERRIBLE PAINS OF 
ARTHRITIS “After suffering dreadful pains for 10 years, I tried 
0-JIB-WA BITTERS. Now, I no longer suffer from rheu- 
matism or arthritis,” says Mrs. B. C. Bassett, 349 N. Grinnell 
Street, Jackson, Michigan. | a 
“I had an awful time with arth- Let me tell you, the pains were 
ritis and rheumatism, and during awful. One night I noticed in 
thé long years that I -|6UF newspaper, a write-up about 
} I tried about O.JIB-WA BITTERS. It seunded 
every remedy good, so figured I would try It, 
, I heard about./as I had tried evrything else 
but without re-|through the years. When I tell 
sults. My knees you that O-JIB-WA was different, 
and ankteS that’s putting it mild. Just in a 
were mighty | week, mind ‘you, I saw good re- 
sore and swell-| suits, and in several weeks was 
ed so that it aj) better. Before, I could do 
was dreadfully practically nothing, and now can 
painful to even do most anything. I am so.thank- 
~y get up or down. ' fy) that I can get around so good 
. 4 My legs nearly| without suffering. I have full Mrs. Bassett gave out when confidence in OJIBWA BIT.| 
going up the stairs, so I had to TERS, so highly recommend it| walk sideways; slowly a step atito others. Be sure to give O- 
a time; holding on to the railing! 1}1—;.WA BITTERS a month's fair | od elbows and fingers too, were trial, and you won't go wrong.” 
stiff and very painful, so you) 
can see I was in pretty bad shape.) AT ALL DRUG STORES   
   ' 
5 | 
| restored him to public life; was Bob Considine Save;   
‘Memory: of Mrs. - 
Pervades Birthday Party | WEST BRANCH, Iowa (INS) —| sentiments. -She said, “We don't |The person the old fellow must}care about your politics, dear.'”* 
j have missed the most during the | 
big birthday celebration was Mrs. 
Hoover. 
Strong, brave, handsome Lou 
stant companion for half a cen- 
tury. Her death a few years ago, 
just when President Truman had 
almost too much to bear. Char- 
acteristically, he took on added 
work to make him forget. 
  The Hoovers had much in com- 
mon: A love of books, the hun- 
ger for far places, quiet courage, 
their Quaker teachings (she was | 
a convert) and a refusal to take 
politics seriously, 
On a recent trip to the White 
House Hoover chuckled as he told 
Mrs. Eisenhower about “the! 
Hoovers’ first day in the White | 
| House. The Irish cook asked to| 
see the first couple and was quick 
ly ushered in. 
‘She told us she felt duty bound 
to resign because she had voted 
for A) Smith,"’ Hoover related. 
'“But Lou and I had tasted her 
cooking on a couple of occasions 
when Coolidge invited us to the 
White House. Lou expressed our, 
  
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  4 
_. THE PONTIAC PRE ' ee 
Hoover 
* The Hoovers met when Leu 
Henry entered Stanford in 1894, 
She wanted to become a geolo- 
‘Henry Hoover was his almost con-| cist and tewrh the subject} Heover, a senior at the time, 
was working about the lab and 
Was, detailed to show the fresh- 
man the ropes. 
To his astonishment he  dis-| 
covered that she, too, had been | 
born in Iowa, and that she was | 
just as handy with a gun or a/ 
{ishing red or a camping pack as |   | he. 
In 1898, the year of her gradu- 
ation, “Hoover was working in 
China for a European-owned coal 
mine and cement-makers combine. 
On the day he was given a job 
that was to pay him $20,000 a year 
he proposed to Lou Henry by cable. 
She accepted and set the date. | 
He sped to California and. dis- 
covered that his bride-to-be had | 
become a Quaker, But there was | 
no Quaker meeting in Monterey, | 
nor could a Protestant minister 
be located. 
Se they were married by a | 
Catholic priest, and sailed to 
China to hegin » life of work and | 
service that carried them all 
| over the world and to the White 
House. 
There's not much question but 
that Mrs, Hoover was the best 
educated First Lady. But she wore | 
her learning lightly, and among 
friends was far from the cold and 
aloof woman that some of her pic- | 
tures made her out to be. 
Hoover speaks fondly of her | 
“whimsical mind, her blue eyes) 
and a broad grinnish smile that 
came from an Irish ancestor."’ 
She was at his side, and making | 
a home for him, in wild engipeer- | 
ing.-and mining camps in China, | 
India, Australia, New Zealand, | 
Russia, and everywhere else his 
work took him. 
She set off for Burma with her 
five-week-old son Allan (now an 
._ official of the Rockefeller Foun. 
dation) in a basket. 
She was with him the day the 
bonus marchers threatened’. to 
| storm the White House, and the 
day he was booed as he left Wash- 
ington, aftet turning the White) 
House keys over to F.D.R. | 
One suspects she was with him 
today, too. 
  
Fido to the Rescue 
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Bubbles, ran to an adjoining bed- 
room. and pawed at the covers of 
a bed until Glineur’s son awaken- 
ed and went to his father’s aid. 
  
  
  
    
   
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  - Caught President Eisenhower with « 
Total 40 Million 
~ told the World. Anglican Congress 
         ‘ x ‘ ? had ' 4 t \ 
4 & \ f pe 
  
“HOWZZAT?” —.News camera 
this quizzical expression as he con- 
versed with a White House visitor 
recently. 
Says Anglicans   
Archbishop Disputes 
Lower Figure Cited in. | 
Reference Books 
MINNEAPOLIS w — Anglicans 
have a membership of over 40 mil- 
lion parishioners, some five per 
cent of the global chureh popula- 
tion, the Archibishop of Canterbury 
here today. #, 
The Rt. Hon. Geolfrey Fisher, in 
a statement, estimated total world 
  church membership at about 800 
million and said that reference | 
books setting the Anglican total) at | 
about 30 milion are incorrect. 
7 * 
His report came as the 600 
church and lay delegates continued 
discussions on ‘Our Message,” | 
ome of four general -topies under + 
review and to be reported on at, 
Friday's closing sessions. 
Archbishop Fisher said that | 
Roman Catholics estimate their ad- 
herents over the world at 423 mil- 
lion, with the Orthodox Church 
population set at 160 million. Of 
other churches, he said Lutherans 
claim 68,500,000, Presbyterians and | 
Reformed 41,100,000, Baptists 40 | 
million, Methodists ‘30 million and 
Congregationalists 5 million. 
“The Anglican total is given in| 
some reference books as 30 mil- 
lions,"’ the archbishop went on. | 
“But this is a serious understate- | 
ment as a probable figure would 
be over 40 million °e | 
- * J 
“On the basis of these figures, 
it can be said as rough guide that, | 
of the whole Christian population, 
some 52 per cent are Roman’ 
Catholies, 23 per cent belong to 
the various Protestant bodies, 20 
per cent are Orthodox, and 5 per 
cent Anglican. 
The archbishop said the figures 
were not open to any reliable check 
because calculations were based on } 
the number of children baptized or 
presumed to belong to the various 
churches on. general grounds of 
geographical boundaries. 
Burying the Blues | 
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP! — Joe 
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cireus band, Simon, now a theater 
manager, said that when he de- 
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the clarinet a “burial” in the sea. 
He just couldn't bear the idea of 
selling..it-”   
    
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MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS 
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1954 
    
  
  
    
Ike Defends Marshall 
A welcome reaction to another Mc- 
CartHy attack on Gen. Gerorce C. 
MARSHALL is an immediate chorus in de- 
fense of our wartime chief of staff led by 
President EISENHOWER. a 
The attack is a by-product of 
the Senate’s discussion of the pro- 
posal to censure the Wisconsin 
Senator. Undoubtedly in reaction 
to criticism of his June 14, 1951 
attack on MARSHALL, the Senator 
read into the record a letter by 
former Secretary of War Woop- 
RING. 
Addressed to Ropert M. Harriss, a 
McCarthy supporter, it said among 
other things that MARSHALL “would sell 
‘out his own grandmother for personal 
advantage.” ; 
* * * 
When asked at his press conference 
| , about this letter, President EiseENHOWER 
E spoke out in strong defense of his for- 
mer chief. Going to the unusual length 
—-_-- of-authorizing direct. quotations of his 
remarks, he said in part: 
“7 think it is a sorry reward at 
Z the end of at least 50 years of 
service to this country to say that 
| he (Gen. Marshall) is not a loyal, 
i fine American and that he served 
' only to advance his own personal 
ambition. I can’t imagine anyone 
that I have known in my career 
of whom this is less so than it is 
in his case.” 
* * * 
That the outstanding Republican 
Henry L. Strmson who succeeded Woop- 
RING as Secretary of War in the Admin- 
istration of FDR, held Gen. MARSHALL 
in highest regard is a matter of record. 
Ina farewell interview published by the 
Washington Post on September 20, 1945, 
Mr. Strmson was quoted as saying of 
Gen. MARSHALL: 
“.... His dévotion to the Na- 
tion he serves is a vital quality 
which infuses everything he does 
... Gen. MARSHALL has given me 
a new gauge of what such service 
should be. The destiny of Amer- 
ica at the most critica] time of its 
national existence has been in 
the hands of a great and good 
citizen. Let no man forget that.” 
| We not only share these views but be- 
; lieve that attacks on a man who has 
| 
  earned such praise hurt those who make 
them. 
  For two distinct but equally sound 
reasons this newspaper joins in com- 
mending MSC’s returned president, Dr. 
JOHN HANNAH. 
First, we like the alacrity with 
which he asked the House Un- 
American Activities Committee to 
_._.. Investigate whether there are any 
traces of Communism in the col- 
lege. 
        
     
       
        
         
        
     Sy * * 
Second, we are convinced he deserved 
E1senHower for his noteworthy 18 
month contribution to solution of 
Defense Department manpower prob- 
lems. 
which may have prompted his re- 
quest for an inquiry referred to 
—-@ Red cell 15-years ago in no way 
modified Dr. Hannah's attitude. 
He seems to have acted on a desire 
“not only to co-operate in combat- 
ting Communism, but on the belief 
that if any of it exists at East 
Lansing, he should know it. 
x © * © 
While some other educators have 
been equally co-operative, his is report- 
ed to be the first request for an investi- 
gation of a college received by the House 
. “ SS 
‘You have reached old age when hav- 
ing birthdays doesn’t agree with you. en onine a 
“the thanks expressed by President a en es 
‘Unnecessary Deaths | 
Though the exact cause isn’t known, 
there’s a lesson for all moterists in the 
__Rochester Road crash which gost five 
lives. , 
There is reason to suspect thatthe ~ 
three young women and two of their 
three escorts may have lost their lives 
because the driver went to sleep. Indis- 
putable evidence indicated, however, 
that the car was driven at very high 
speed, estimated at 75 miles an hour. 
This tragedy brings to four the num- 
per of Oakland County highway crashes 
which have killed five 6r more persons 
each in the last four years. 
The moral in the loss of these 
precious young lives is that driv- 
ers must be ceaselessly alert and 
that the wages of excessive speed 
too often is death. 
rt 
Smith Act Curbing Reds Recent arrest by FBI officers of seven 
more Communist leaders emphasizes the 
value of the Smith Act of 1940 in com- 
batting our homefront enemies. 
Taken into custody were chairmen 
and organizers of the Communist party 
in Colorado and Utah. Another is held 
as a contact with*underground party     
members and two others, a husband . 
and wife, worked in the subversive Civil 
Rights Congress and the Communist 
Political Association respectively. 
All face charges under the 
Smith Act of conspiring to teach 
or advocate forcible overthrow of 
the Government. This brings to 
117 the number of persons ar- 
rested on this charge. 
As further evidence of thé act’s use- 
fulness as an anti-Communist weapon, 
up to January 1 last 66 of those arrest- 
ed had been conyicte¢ and many other 
cases are pending. 
  The Man About Town 
Still Does 18 Holes 
But Dean of Attorneys 
Misses Former Partners 
Daffynition 
Optimist: A woman who starts putting on 
her shoes when the preacher says, “Now, in 
conclusion.”   
  
Dean of the Oakland County Bar Associa- 
tion, 
J. A. Tillson, 
who is in his eighty-first year, has been 
keeping up his summer golf schedule in good 
shape. He formerly often made the links 
every month in the year. Now he does 18 
holes at least a couple of times a week most 
of the year, regardless of what the mercury 
says. However, Jay says his golf program 
has developed a sad note—he finds it neces- 
sary to sometimes knock off to attend the 
funeral of somebody who has been teeing off 
with him for a great many years. 
  Thirty-six employes received suggestion 
awards at the Pontiac Fisher Body Division 
during July. The highest award went to 
David J. Smith 
of 58% Gladstone Place, Pontiac, who won 
$2210.36 for an outstanding idea which re- 
duced stock handling. . 
  That confirmed globe trotter, 
«' -W. Walter Smith, 
_Who_has_seen much of the wotid steamship, automobile and 
everybody to s 
“See America First,” 
as it has more to offer than any combina- 
tion of other nations. 
  
Always writing her Santa Claus letter to 
this column in midsummer, 
“Connie Marie” 
this time asks only for “a gun like brother's.” 
  Home grown peanuts are a new product in 
this area, and 
Johnson Webster 
of Drayton Plains is the latest grower to 
have a few rows of them in his garden. 
  
After announcing his candidacy for Presi- 
dent in 1952, 
George (Herb) Thurber, 
Publisher of the South Lyon Herald, with- 
drew when Ike was nominated. He now 
says he may tackle it again if Ike doesn’t 
ne ne enn Ph --faet-- that the--testimeny———Ssarit in 1956. — 
  One item in a recent scavenger 
ter was “The Man About Town col-     
       
                 
     
          
&D wees 
Just What the Doctor Ordered   
Voice of the People   
of space. 
ress and telephone number of the 
writer must secom letters but these 
wil notte" “tf the writer so requests, unless the lettef is critical tp its sature.) 
I am writing this because I would 
like to know why there are so 
many restrictions against the park- 
ing of mobile homes. Are even the 
outlying areas restricted? 
Why is it that the general public 
opinion is that the owners or oc- 
cupants of mobile homes are of a 
lower.-elass? Aren't these people 
well-mannered, educated, and good 
neighbors? They are generally 
good citizens. 
In the past decade, many peo- 
pie have become conscious of the 
comfort and livability of house- 
trailers. Their desire to avoid 
congestion and high rent are two 
of the reasons for their popularity. 
Yet they must abide .by the dic- 
tates of obsolete restrictions as 
to where they may live. 
Shouldn't the various restrictions 
governing the mobile homes be re- 
vised inasmuch as they have they are more modern and sanitary 
~than-many-of the homes situated 
in the same area? 
CMB 
‘Agnostica’ Almost Right 
Believes Lydia N. Smith 
I fearfully believe that ‘Agnos- 
tica’ is almost correct in saying 
that Atheism or -Agnosticism will 
win out over Godliness. 
When I was a kid, Santa Claus 
and Halloween confused Christian- 
ity for me. I told a: minister I 
would not become a Christian un- 
til I read the Bible from the be- 
ginning and judged it. I°am a 
Christian 
I believe every person has the 
God given ability to become a 
Christian if he sincerely starts 
reading the Bible from the be- 
ginning to make a true analysis 
ot whether it is the God inspired 
book for our personal instruction 
or a book of man-made fables. 
Case Records of a Psychologist   this country today is the Halloween 
mockery of the resurrection. We 
are reaping the reward by Ameri- 
can skeletons all over the world 
with almost certain possibility of 
millions more to come. 
We are wise to take ‘Agnostica’s’ 
warning seriously. 
Lydia N. Smith Drayton Plains, Mich. 
Looking Back 
, 15 Years Ago 
ENGLAND PRACTICES defense 
blackout in case of air raid. 
FIVE WOMEN have applied for 
the job of executioner at Sing Sing. 
20 Years Ago 
UNEMPLOYMENT FIGURE 
listed at 7 million for the nation. 
NEW YORK'S Women's Metro- 
politan Golf Association rules that 
no woman may wear shorts in any 
tournament held under its direc- 
tion. 
  
Use ‘Active Method’ in Textbook Study 
by Making Up Questions on Paragraphs 
Peter is going to college and 
wants to know how to study 
most effectively. The advice 
below is helpful to everybody. 
It shows how to get the most 
out of just a single reading of 
your textbook. For active 
learning is far superior to 
passive learning. Paste this in 
your scrapbook. It may keep 
you teen-agers from flunking 
out of eollege. 
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE 
“Dr. Crane, I was a ‘B’ student 
in high school,”” he began, ‘‘but I 
hear that college work is much 
harder. 
“So I'd like to know how to 
keep up to’a good average, for I 
also play football,’ and I don't 
want to become ineligible. 
“Are there any shortcuts for 
studying more efficiently?" 
Yes, we psychologists can of- 
fer several methods that -- will - 
help you maintain a higher schol- 
astie average. 
First, never cut classes if you 
can avoid it. For it is almost as 
necessary to understand our 
—_—————teacher-#s—to-read-the—textbooks.— 
And you can generally find out 
what a professor deems important 
by watching the things he stresses 
in his lectures. 
This regular attendance at class 
thus helps guide your reading. For 
it shows you what to stress.   
Aunt Het _ 
    
everybody in the hunt found one. 
  
Sailing recently on the same boat from 
Vancouver for Alaska are, 
Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Klingler, 
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Haas, 
well known citizens from Pontiac and Oak- 
land County. 
-__ 
Verbal Orchids to— Mrs. Mate Bogart — 
of 60 Edison St.; ninety-third birthday.   
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Butts | 
of Rochester; sixty-third wedding anniver- 
sary. 
y) 
é i / f é } ‘ 
  Case L381: Peter R., aged 18, Second, keep good notes. Don’t slavishly try to write out his 
lectures in longharid, for then you 
get so far behind you miss a lot 
        
                 
          and your attention is diverted 
from his essential points, 
But hit the high spots in your 
notes, primarily so you can em- 
ploy them for directing your in- 
tensive reading of the textbook 
assignments, 
Third, use the active instead of a ese anda 
the passive method in your read- 
ing. 
Don't passively turn the pages 
and mouth the words. Instead keep 
_pen_and pad at hand and make a _ 
true-false or 4answer quiz on the 
text. 
This will then waken you from 
Indeed, many 
they peruse the pages, yet have 
their minds on a dance or athletic 
event, and not even be conscious lar phrase —ot-having-turned-the-pages;— That one was phrased as true- 
false, You can cover an entire 
chapter in % te 50 of such state- 
  i} 5 
! 
i 
| 63 
     
Baering Down 
THUR “BUGS” BAER (internatiowat News Seruice) 
There were no chronological fili- 
endorse- 
' — ' 
cus, In that time Herbert has 
seen places and been things. 
  Al Smith in 1928 
done Al a favor. 
was on as sure as hay he beat 
he had 
Wall Street had been on a bull 
romp in the old play-pen. It start- 
ed with European war moola in 
1914 and Jasted fifteen fiscal 
semesters, Harding's administra- 
tion was as crooked as a moun- 
tain fence. Coolidge did the neat- 
est job of nursing in the world 
when he carried the soap bubble 
four years by the handle 
  Mr. Hoover drove up to take the 
rap. By the time he arrived the 
  Senator Gillette of lowa says 
Mr, Hoover was no more re- 
sponsible for the blow-off than 
you are for thick wrists on ele- 
phants. But he was in the White 
House when the bottom fell 
through the top. 
Mr. Gillette is a mid-western   
  
bitter with the sweet in politics it’s all. chocolate, 
     
      
  wonders. 
As a fourth bit 
ploy a typewriter 
and themes, for professors get 
ate trying to decipher poor hand- 
writing. 
An irate prof is thus more likely 
to_give you a “B-’ when he is Party them indoors from 
score of pay- 
: 
“arty -man's-abe-— 
“Tri thie [ — 
and -everything else he touches I okay il if i 
     and the: discovery would become 
a patent holder shall 
have exclusive rights to his dis- 
covery. — 
Since the House and Senate bills 
* . s 7 
It knocked out the Senate's 
“compulsory licensing’’ provision © 
and kept the House provision: that 
AEC could reject any patent 
“an invention—-resulting from 
work for the government. 
Then the compromise bill added 
this: 
Since any firm holding an atomic 
patent and wanting to build a pow- 
er plant would have to get AEC 
sory 
tion against monopoly and want 
that to become part of the new 
law. The House passed the com- 
promise bill with hardly a murmur - 
Monday. The Senate may tackle 
the compromise tomorrow or Fri- 
day. . 
Portraits   
. Waning weeks 
. . . As love and 
out on trips . . . By motor or 
canoe . . = To lake or mountain, 
.. . For some adven- 
. .« The fall is drawing 
. . « And soon it will be hard 
. . . The sunshine in the sky 
. .. Aligtist is upon us and... 
Is well upon its way .. . So let 
us make the most of it. . .Each 
moment’ of each day. 
(Copyright 1954) 
Just A Smile An Expert 
“And what is   
Visitor: little 
Willie going to be when he grows 
Mother: “I'm not. ‘sure, . but 
ook atthe 
    
> Aha Pern 
. 
think he'll become a finger-print 
expert.” oe 
  
THOUGHTS FOR TODAY 
For he wist not what to say; 
  
(Copyright Hopkins Syndicate Inc.)   
Nervous Tension Is Nothing but 
of Body for Action to Blow Off Steam 
goes.     Demand 
  a8 » i fairl . i i % 
5 « 
= eS 
       
       
  
E 
F 
  ancient fountainhead of the Chris- 
tian religion in the Indian sub- 
The action, they say, is s in de-| 
fense of the shrine of St. Francis 
Xavier.— the Portuguese mission- 
ary who led the Catholic march to 
Goa and died more than 400 years 
go. 
In .New Delhi, Prime Minister 
imply supporting “legitimate at- You can’t do better — if you want the best buy. : ‘ 
tempts of the Goans ‘cme WHILE foe your new-ear money - then to look into the 3. More dollars when you ‘trade wi freedo. ial su . ° ° r. Ly ‘ 
= LAST soaring success that is Buick today. You'll find Becavee Bvick’s breed peneremic wind- seves toc anmede pyar teh etelfaaran 
when you trade it in loter on. = - 
The Portuguese, and many Goan 
leaders here, dispute this argu- 
ment. India, they say, is attempt- 
ing t6 foment a movement both 
within and without the Portuguese 
territory to throw Portugal out of 
the subcontinent.   
    
  Federal’s does it again! We’ve made another big 
purchase of strong tubular steel chairs with color- 
ful canvas seats and-backs at giant savings ;.. and 
the savings are passed along to you! Lots of sum- 
mer weather ahead, so buy now, while they last! vAG wi ae ibe. a 3 j oS be fy ; VA: . ha Atte | «i “ a 
7 i PONTIAC PRESS. _WEDNESDAY, aveust 12, 1954 aed cr gn 
military governor of the colony ‘old daughter to Court judge's desk and esked: ei, a 
P ortuguese Goa Is Ready pn areca Me No ce ae ef ini ony St Sow Na net oe Sees ah — a - 
.to Defend Its Holy. Shrine amon atearsec i Yn Clerk Byrd Sims took his 10-year-'city’s ordinance code on the |in school zones? coe Sy Sep Saetons ets won tangs eS 
“NOVA GOA, Portuguese India @ for but for the whale of| “hich bad been preserved asa)” oe anaeahe e i 
invaders by &| the = ; saved Goa | ted back before reaching Goa. 
ago, is de- arene a The staff stilt’ is handed over to . 
rar posh md peri St Francis | °8ch ew governor general to give a y . ; 
- 15. Xavier, whose body in, great sil-|™™ strength to defend Goa team of ob-|‘ver casket is the most 
—          
  
Is year Buick has done what no other car 
has done in more than a generation. 
This year Buick has moved into the Tofty Circle 
of America’s three top sales leaders — a circle 
once dominated only by the so-called “low-price 
three.” For today, Buick is outselling all other 
cars in the nation except two of these “low-price ~ 
three.” And each new month’s sales figures 
strengthen Buick’s new sales leadership. 
this glamorous new-day beauty puts you way 
ahead in three important ways—that’s for sure. 
So drop in on us—tomorrow at the latest—and 
see for yourself that Buick is the buy of the year, 
hands down. | a few dollars above those of the traditional   
t 
Buick prices start close to the lowest—just 
“low-price three.” But those few more 
dollars for a Buick get you @ let more avto- styling that has taken the country by storm. 
  
2. More money for your present car 
sell, the better deal we can make with you. 
Se you get the benefit of ovr great success 
in the form of a higher trade-in allowance.   - new Buick. After all, the more new cars we 
  
    
  
    
* *¢ * 
The Indian government has re- 
peatedly asserted that it intends 
when and if it wins possession of 
Portuguese I to retain and 
defend both the religious and cul- 
tural developments there. 
Since 1510, when the Portuguese 
entered what is now Goa to help 
drive the Mogul armies from this 
territory, it has been the center of 
Catholic religious activity not only FEDERA   
      
dept. 
stores OLIVER 210 Orchard Lake Ave. Phone FE 2-9101 
      MOTOR SALES 
  Pontiac, Michigan 
      
AIR-CONDITIONED FOR COOL COMFORT 
    Sensational values! Cotton plisse 
SLIP SALE SC 
WHILE. THEY LAST! — 
  Frosty-white no-iron | cotton plisse slips . . . priced 
to pamper your pocketbook! Trim-fitting, loinguns 
style, many with full shadow panels: In cool white, 
frosted with delicate nylon embroidery. Sizes 32-40. 
Ideal for warm weather! Save now at Federal’s! 
    
  
  Cool and colorful! 
Playtog 
SALE 
137 
Just when you need them! Smart, 
cool shorts, pedal pushers, plav- 
suits, T- toppers, halters, bras and 
midriffs in your_favorite fabrics 
and colors.” 10-18 in the group. Summertime favorites! 
Cotton 
SALE 
179 
Quality, style, workmanship .. . 
all'at a tow Federat price! Percales, 
seersuckers, Kriskays in sleeveless 
styles and boleros. Sun colors, 
prints. 12-20, 38-44, 1614-2444. Shop now and save! 
Dress 
SALE 333 
_Choose from no-iron nylons, Dac- rons", crisp cottons, frosty sheers, 
linen-look rayons . . . in white, 
pastels, dark shades! Bolero, stole 
and petticoat styles! All sizes. 
*Reg. DuPont trademark ATTRA)... OPEN 3 NIGHTS to 9 a 
pr 
ue 
  az 
4 1 
j 
. aan 
od 
Apel 
Sl: 
ct 
cial 
cate: 
ist 
Et 
Sly 
A 
cI 
SB 
RF Sots 
ba 
in 
CRE 
ae 
Re 
Ot 
Go 
sa 
| ot 
  MONDAY, FRIDAY 
AND SATURDAY 
    | Terrific savings on women’s 
and girls’ sport shoes by 
-FRISKIES 
ay hide 
Handsome. styling combined-with quality .workman- 
ship in sport shoes for all occasions! You've seen them 
advertised in “Seventeen.” See them now at Federal’s 
at this low price! Saddle shoes in brown or black with 
white. Other styles in brown or red leather. Sizes 4 | 
to 9. Widths AA-B-C. Hurry for this gigantic value! ®Oxfords 
sean 
  SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC 
OPEN MON. FRI. 
  SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 
‘ 
ea ee            
oe 
te 
“e = % Sart a el ” By. - — a * sis 4 | 8 v * i ; St ait Se - 
Re a | \ Nf , ‘ | 1 SARIN? | ' 
" \ i eo, } \ \ ' = \ ' f f ‘ye i ‘ \ Sagas: { 
: i : \ f “ ch i aoa us i dpinepdipenpeniatestenke 
“THE PONTIAC rae paar ae a aR a. 
PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1956 ° , “* e = j ¥ ae oF « ( A? . ie x 
: oo Serre en piiisnsipaiisinienll 
  
  
  
[ — =| Atom Workers 
BLACKTOP {Ready fo Strike on 
PAVING 930 af Paducah Plant| E.'F. Hitchcock, federal media-|® 248¥ sentence for making 
to Walk Out Thursday; 
. Oak Ridge May Follow Get Our Summer Prices pened the . 
PADUCAH, - Ky..®—Production} scheduled for tomorrow. It’s diffi- an él fan into’ 
workers at one of the nations two| cult to predict beyond that.” — ectric 
  
  on Driveways, Parking Lots, etc. The Oak Ridge local of the CIO . ’ dete ’ big atomic installations will strike | 10 nos asked » Paise of 71 cents shisasiheonaas 
; tomorrow for higher wages. an hour. 
FREE Estimate—— TERMS _ || , eos. % ote = a: PILES SHRUNK Oak Ridge, Tenn. — are believed; The salary range at the plants vitho / 
: : near the breaking point. at present is $1.58 and $240 an| Wl ut surgery! 
The 930 CIO workers at the Pa-| hour, AFL workers at the Oak; i CASS AFTER CASE PAIN STOPPED! 
ASPHALT ducah atom bomb factory voted} Ridge plant, also involved in the PL For amazing re- 
yesterday and last night to wait no| demands for more money, have! | aewzpy ruar-s | “et from mis- 
longer for their demand for a| asked 19 cents an hour and have Y nS ee 
, p WN = || ‘substantial and justified” raise| refused 6 cents. STAINLESS Pazo.       
  
  in pay. 
A strike vote was called after! Co. operates both the Padtcah and 
Barney Sanders, president of the | the Oak Ridge plants. 
Paducah CIO United Gas, Coke| Sanders and his delegation left 
and Chemical Workers, pulled| the Oak Ridge talks yesterday and 
out of the Oak Ridge talks. | ates the strike vote im- 
Sanders declined to give figures! mediately. ‘ 
Sealy Once-A-Year SALE 
ey Liiant Ticking Purchase 
L ASAE Mattress Costs 2010 Dixie Hwy. 
FE 2-2227 
    positories or Ointment, at drug- 
gista, Regular Paso® available too,   
    
                  MEALTMPULLY CORMECT SUPP 
FRIGIDAIRE Fully Automatic 
Thiitty 30 
Eleciric Range - 5 
tte,, ~n ‘ ' te, eneee tl 
ror” s$ouvuno RE i 
  © Compact—only 30” wide 
© Full-Width Oven 
Cook-Master Oven Control 
Cooking-Top Lamp 
Divided Cooking-Top 
Full-Width Storage Drawer 
® Porcelain finish a gg” 
with your old range 
August Clearance 
      
Floor Model 
Sealy Siesta Sofa... °99” 
Your Choice—Floor Samples 
Occasional Chairs... 29” 
$9900 
room Suite... *129" 
Breakfast Sets..... 999” 
Living Room Suite °199°° 2-Piece, up to REG. $325   
yours for *20° LESS! 
@ SAME HIGH COM COUNT! 
@ SAME FIRM BALANCE 
INNERSPRING CON- 
STRUCTION! 
@ SAME SAG-PROOF PRE- 
BUILT BORDERS FOR YEARS 
OF EXTRA WEAR! 
ee Ss 
DECORATOR-DESIGNED 
GOLDEN-GLOW COVERS!     
   
    
   
     
     
    
Special—Sealy 
Nylon Mattress.....    Thank Sealy 
y foresight and 
_ Sealy planning for   
Blond, 2-Piece 
     
    
     
     
     Poe RG GORGE ONG LOVERS, 
~~“event! Monihs ago, at one of 
America's most famous textile 
mills, Sealy placed the largest order 
ij ever made by a mattress manufacturer 
s for a single selling event! Naturally, thrs 
giant purchase reduced manufacturing Costs... 
and Sealy passes the savings on to YOU! They're 
$59.95-quality Sealy innereprieg mattresses at this 
once-e-year $39.95! Stake YOUR ctaim to that $20 a Tae 
Saving NOW! re a   
LE 
       
end ask fo see 
the mattress that helps relieve “morning back-ache!” 
Sealy eR POSTUREPEDIC cao CAR 20 
Registered   
Complete 
Hollywood Beds.....°4"° Includes Mattress, Box Spring, Headboard, Legs. 
Everything Must Go! 
Summer Furniture . 4/3 0FF 
DON’T WAIT-BUY NOW and SAVE MATTRESS 
  
  See 
in the world! ...the finer, firmer mattress 
that forever ends “mattress sag,” gives 
such amazing relief from miserable 
bas i Back-Ache"’! It’s Sealy exclu- 
sive design that does it...for superb 50 $ support, famous firmness, see the ‘world’s > 
largest selling mattress designed in coop- 
eration with leading Orthopedic surgeons” Matching Cost tor Lor!   
  
    
          — m FURNITURE - 
sete C LAYTO N Ss | 1A nH YN wi | | APPLIANCES Pn neve oor om" ‘ | 
comnts serine PHONES: FE 5-8811 and FE 5-8874 TERM u 
ie 3065 Orchard Lake Rd. KEEGO HARBOR .   > , , oy | A hel prevent cracking, reduce | - 
ithout ! Por fast | © 
           
        
          
        
  cs bi 
LATIN ~ & as i 
  
  FE cir of thine vrat Kate Greenaway fen 
| Miracle wiastband that       
       
      
            
    
   
     
  Back-To-School at the LION STORE 
_ | Parade of Famous Names 
smartest switch-about » 
fashion for school — 
thot can be worn so many ways. It’s o jumper-dress 
when the jocket is worn in. It’s o suit-dress when the 
jocket is worn out ond tied ot the wolst. For more — 
° switch-obouts, she'll weor the jumper with her own 
Wrinkl-Shed gingham is teamed with crease-resistant 
: Present is Kate Greenaway’s beloved secret pocket; 
in the jumper skirt seam. Sizes 3-6x,. 
sie $498 
$598 Sizes 
7 to 14    
ees tT) 
—s =e 
~ 
  
      
        Also Featuring: | 4 
@ Youngiand 4 
@ Jack Borgenicht < 
@ Medallion 4 
@ Little Star ih 
@ Chubbette ht 
3 to 6z; 7 to 14 
and Pre-Teens 
Fall Favorite © all Favorite | Pigl 
a a 
  Colorful 
"GD < Corduroys ‘ 
&. Billy the Kid’s Thickset Corduroy is in the gpot-light this season. £, 
-——__. _:__Here’s value, styling and-fabric—richness you've--rarelyseen.— —- 
3 before. Entire ensemble is washable. -- 
Thickset Corduroy 
Miracle Brand Slacks Flannel Lined 
Corduroy Billy Jac 4 
Rugged enough to take ze more than its share of es 
“To up.” Cotton- os 
nylon flannel lining aay 
  gives many times its 
weight in warmth. 
Brown, oxford, navy. . 
4 to “13. Pe ford, navy. Sizes 4 to 12. allows precious inches 
for growth, adjusts to a 
better fit. Brown, ox- - 
  
. All Remaining Children’s 3 
Summer Clothes and Shoes ’/2 lf) 
PARK FREE REAR of STORE 
WHILE SHOPPING     
           
        
     Charge It 
No Extra 
Cost 
             
: _ uni oil Sass anthaaciiinereueaitscaipesnsteal sowdet ag 2 ‘ % 2 
v oan Coe Wy ge a ee ey ee ‘ Rie igi mE : ee See ae ees Tee + ee apa. ’ " : ‘ : PNG: eee Ey eo oe : s 6 
F; é #9 ig $ i ' &% ; j i patie ee 4 , Ae - bee Oe ites eae a’ ; ie ae Ge 2 Ree aes 2 Jig eee | i Sete 
rf y red ' y ; ' t * ; . 7 ee men j | Ja’ ak : § f ‘ iy rt 3 \ 
sy oe + lp x : 3 , ; ‘ ‘ ; j : / ‘ ¥ ] ‘ 1 
t A } F oY aS i \ fe, nA * J wee = 
aoe Ee A ; ral atte ol f ™ s : [J f os 
      
  <THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1956 
  
        
  
Consistent a | : ewes ALWAYS THE BEST FOR LESS at 7 — 
ee ga 1( ea ~ on Famous Quali 
FOODS” Sn eae 0 § AT ‘WORTHWOOD THE YEARS no | OD MARKETS excitine P SRARSEMAK (OTLEY ot aoe | 508 | = : , : 4; 
CER JACK FROST | 888 EVENT- 
GRANULATED ORCHARD LAKE ROAD WNT 
2 01°4 ON i { BLOCK EAST OF TELEGRAPH io : 
‘SUGAR DALY 9 _— 9 PM. ts LIBBY’S Alaska Chinook — 
5 : A5: 7 Qin 5 ou s | RED SALMON TALL ONE POUND CAN 
303 c PHILLIPS PHILLIPS KRAFT'S Famous Creamy Smooth GRAPEFRUIT Sections CANS 33 BREAST-O-CHICKEN 
Small Whole White] New Pack ; 
POTATOES| “oO M 5 R A C L E TOMATO CATSUP = 33: TUNA F ISH 
B if A N $ ‘ ae L. & S. KOSHER STYLE COMBINATION or. 9Q< a“ sea . 
% 10° —— WHIP SLICED DILL PICKLES = ae cu 29° | 
2 03, 25° eae WHOLE SWEET PICKLES 3 5X 
ee * a | W E | Tar 
SWIFT'S MONARCH ya, SALAD DRESSING OR QUICK EASY MEALS HOMOGENIZED 
Whole Kernel : 
PARD| <x. ARMOUR’S TREET =‘ 45° PET 
boc FOOD | CORN POTATO CHIPS = 32 99 || Gagy| MILI 
2 its 25°12 cs: 29° MARSHMALLOWS © e*19¢ [PREZ ES 29° 
| Tender « Flavor - Rich MEATS! | CHASE & SANBORN 
- Ready to Eat | | IMPERIAL BRAND Mellow Smoked - Ready to Es | re 0 FFE : F 
| SMOKED HAMS I PRESSURE PACKED ... DRIP OR REG. GRIND             
     
    
          
     
      
    
          
            FARM FRESH PRODUCE 
Sweet Calif. Seedless 
GRAI ES* " od 
\ 
Six * 
2« 30: U.S. No. 1 Washed Fancy 
MICHIGAN COBBLER HOME GROWN 
POTATOES | CUCUMBERS   
      
       
        
                
       
        
    Famous for finer flavor and tenderness! 
. SHANK | HALE . . ; 
TOM’'S SPECIAL BLEND DRIP OR 
REGULAR 
\sucen acon ee 49h OFFEE   
      
         
          T EESTONE 
  LARGE 
  
FOR DELICIOUS _ CHOCOLATE DRINKS sun 43° woopsuRY’S $1.00 49 
: 1 LB. CA . 
CREST DRESSED | NESTLE'S QUIK NEW SHAMPOO SIZE 
U.S. CHOICE QUALITY FRYE R S$ | | BABY FOODS 4 ms 39 
Tender Juicy Beef + -Whele Chickens | =~ TILDEN’S Sweet Cream 
CLEANED b. | aeggee > “ JUMBO" 4 « 
= AKS & DRAWN a U T T E * 12 OZ. CAN ae 
FINE QUALITY—GRADE1 — | " LEMONADE... sor. cans 4 With a flavor everyone loves! ; ee Amro pM € | 
| @ Skinless FRANKS | 2 65 LIBBY’S FROZEN SLICED 4 10-0. 7 
| “NEW YORK STATE Strawberries PKGS. 
Real Tangy 69: a | : 
| Flavor b.| SEALTEST        
          
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ORANGE JUICE 
  
    
    
  
  
BIRDS EYE 
FISH STICKS       
         
  
            
   
     TLY FRESH LEAN * mi ee PKG Cc 
Sa BEEF i NOP | ALLSWEET | CHEES! ma 7 | | GR Chin c | CHEESE STOKELY’S 
|i ate Dy, $900 b. | MARGARINE | _P=nerrmene | FROZEN PIES 4 3,2: 99° 2 LBS. 69 
      Hi bs, canton De 2: 8 69% CHICKEN © TURKEY © BEEF © TUNA   | PEACHES on waves ll u.. PICNIC PLATES rio 3% 
      
  
SNOW CROP Frozen | 
 THE PONTIAC Wanse, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1954 
  
  
Farmer Seized FBINabs Man Canvassing Board Releases \n ma tarteg, |S ert Sos At LOS ANGELES @—Barbers df 
California closed their convention Lists of Precinct Delegates 
    q Dosaves Good 
Workmanship 
and Materials 
When You 
Reupholster 
  Re-Upholstered 
$7 500 As Low 
As 
Call Today and Save 
on Manufacturer- 
to-You Prices! 
william wright 
Furniture Mokers 
and Upholsterers 
“all work guaranteed § yrs.” 
270 Orchard Loke Ave. 
FE 4-0558 
  
  
| SHOE = FAMILY Orthepedic sw Specialisis 
TURPIN-HALL 
FAMILY SHOE STORES 
1500-Daten Tube Ren Dasse Lako ! 
  
‘cident three years ago- 
  as Opium Seller Kansan Claims Drought !- 
Drove Him to Peddling | 
Narcotic 
KANSAS CITY w—wU. S. narcot- 
ics agents said a one-armed Kan- 
sas farmer told them he tried to 
sell opium because the drought 
ruined his 160-acre pasture. 
Officers who arrested Lawrence 
H. Bowman, 41, said they found a 
pound of opium worth $60,000 in 
his possession. Bowman, of Bur- 
lingteh, Kan., was being held in 
jail today in default of $2,500 bond.   The agents said Bowman's al- 
leged accomplice, Elwyn Earl) 
Slane, 24, a printer, was arrested 
in Burlington with 30 grains of 
opium in his possession. The two 
men will have a hearing in federal 
court Friday. | | 
~ * - f 
The agents quoted Bowman as 
telling this story 
In 1946 he smuggled opium into) 
the United States from Japan, 
where he was stationed as a Mar- | : 
ine. He kept the drug at home. | is 
‘He dost his right arm below the; “ATONEMENT”. —. Through the 
elbow in a threshing machine ac- | streets of Great Barrington, Mass., 
“Hollis” Wyman, Jr-,— walks ~ in 
This summer his 80 head of He-! .. atonement” for his “sin” of 
reford cattle ran out of pasture bin 
and he had no money to buy feed, Participating tn the “New ar , Pa 
patna ag » ot oo werorn | 1945. Wyman is a former naval 
Slane, the farmer came to Kansas officer. 
City and tried to sell two ounces 
of opium to a man, who turned out More Than a Parent 
- t to be a federal undercover agen LEBANON, Ind.  — Mr. and 
* * . 
Neither Slane nor Bowman {s an- Mrs. Harold Commons of nearby 
adict or has a record of selling 'Hortonville became grandparents 
narcotics, the agents said. |and parents on the same “Way. 
| Their daughter, Mrs. Herbert Hol- | 
Newly ‘developed materials now | | liday, gave birth to a daughter on 
make it possible to do sky writing | the same day“@ son was born to) 
tin color. | Mrs. Commons.     
  
      ry for Bank Holdup - Former -Auto Dealer 
Netting $190,000 
JACKSONVILLE, Fia. 
ney, 27, who went broke operating 
a premium car agency here un- 
der another name, is under arrest 
$190,000 a year ago. 
  | est amounts ever obtained by a 
|lone bandit in a bank robbery,” 
|said Edward J. Powers, special 
iagent in charge of the FBI in 
| Florida. 
| The FBI arrested McKinney yes- , 
terday a few minutes after he re- 
| ported for duty on a new job, ag 
Medical entern at the Duval Med- 
‘ical Center. 
. ” 
He had lived here over 10 
months as Wade Patrick Johnson, 
apparently an and coming 
businessman unti{ his car busi- 
ness folded 
A rogue’s gallery picture that+p 
had been posted only 24‘ hours—in       connection with a burglary in Cal- | 
| ifornia — led to his capture. A 
| woman. noticed the picture in the 
post office at nearby Arlington, 
Fla., and called the FBI which 
linked him with the bank robbery 
through fingerprints. The FBI de- 
| clined to identify the woman. 
| McKinney, a mild-mannered, tall 
brunet type with closely cropped 
| wavy hair, at first insisted his real 
name was Johnson but later ad- 
| mitted his identity. He denied both 
the bank robbery and the bur- 
glary. * * * 
No money was found on him and 
he claimed he had none, an agent 
  
The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC   
  Big 17-Inch 
ADMIRAL 
TELEVISION 
SAVE NOW! 
price. It’s big! 
Reg. $179.95 
REDUCED TO 
4 29” 
Long Easy Terms 
Take advantage of this new price re- 
. trade-in your old set! duction . 
  
      This big, clear picture 
Admiral has been reduced to a new low 
It’s powerful! Famous Brands at Lowest Prices! 
‘50 
TL] 
Bbeny er mahegany coler. Shown 
with base which gives consele ap- 
pearance... base extra said. Powers said an investigation 
is under way to determine what 
the robbery of the Floral Park of- 
| fice of the Franklin National Bank 
/on Aug. 18, 1953, and McKinney's 
activities since. 
US. Commissioner T. V. Casehn | 
“set a temporary bond 6f $200,000. | 
A hearing will be held when wit- 
nesses are brought here from New 
| York. Powers said victims of the | 
bank robbery examined McKin- | 
identified him as the bandit. 
trace after the robbery but agents 
said he left good fingerprints in a 
car used in the job. 
‘Car Apparatus 
Allows Wounded 
Vet to Drive 
LOS ANGELES \®—An ex-Ma- 
| rine who can't sit down now has an   
The car was delivered yesterday 
to Kenneth Porter, 35, a Phoenix, 
| Ariz., tax consultant. As a result 
}meck to knees, and does his wark 
iat an elbow-height desk. He eats 
| standing up, and gets into bed with 
ithe aid of a hoist. 
| Porter bought a parcel delivery 
| chassis some months ago, and or- 
dered an air-conditioned body with 
special rear-view mirrors, a driv- 
  
    
  THE CONSOLE “LOOK”   
at table model PRICE! 
&     
  
      New 1955 _21" Console 
ADMIRAL 
NEW LOW   
   
     
      PRICE 
LOOK AT THIS NEW LOW PRICE 
for a big, handsome console! Admiral 
brings you the newest for 1955 .. . 
more ‘er, more tone, more beauty §f)/ 
and A NEW LOW PRICE. | 
  
  
T4000 HOUSEKEEPING’ 7, 
51 W. Huron St.   of PONTIAC 
Order by Phone Phone FE 4-1555_ 
ans ' 
; ye ing platform and a built-in bed. 
The vehicle has automatic shift. 
power steering and power brakes. 
All controls are hand opérated. 
The Aluminum Body Corp., 
builders of the body, made Porter 
him in and out of his auto. A 
radio for the car was presented by | 
the AFL United Auto Workers. 
  
About 4,000 persons in the U. S. 
die each year from malaria. Denies' Lone Robbery | 
w—Natti- | 
ly dressed George Patrick McKin- | 
for single-handedly robbing a Flor- | >: 
al Park, N.Y. bank of more than J 
The haul was “one of the larg- | 
happened to the fortune seized in, 
ney’s photograph and positively | 
McKinney disappeared without a 
auto he can operate standing up. 
of a war wound he is rigid ‘from | 
a present of an elevator that gets | Oakland og Board of Can- 
| vassers today released the names 
2 coasiait Spliapits to the Demo- 
\cratic and Republican County con 
| ventions. The Democrats are: 
CITIgESs 
~~ Berkley. . 
Lieyd D Utter, precinct 2; Clayton E. 
Johnson, 3; William A. Demick, 4; Mae 
Burnett, 5. 
Bir m 
Anthony Ripley, precinct 1; Elsie V 
. ae 1 W. Thursten, 3 
Harold P. Cornell, 4; Donald J. 
Clark J. Eallock, 6; i F 
Feighan, 7; Harry J. McGowan Jr. & 
ane H. Loud, 6; Anthony J. Terbeck, 
10; John E. Dolan, 11 
Bieemfield Milis 
Dominick Vettraino, precinct 1. 
Clawsen 
Salvatore J. Elie, precinct 1; Armond | 
Auger, 2 | 
Farmingten 
George B. Heliker, precinct 1 
Ferndale 
Loule E FPields, precinct 1; Frank 
Sierawski, 4. Robert J. Mills, 8 Hugh 
Charteris. 9: Edward J 
George W. Danuk, 11 
mond, 12 Gallagher 10, 
Claire V. Ham- 
Hazel Park 
". Arnold, precinet 1: Law- 
rence H. Best, 2 Waem T. Dennis, 2 
Warren Sturr, 5; Lieyd B. Furiow, 
James FP. Hartley, 7; Willem Husband 
8: Paul G. Paquette, 8; Margaret Kroes- 
ing, 10; Conrad P. Beaubien, 11. 
Huntingten Weeds 
Earl Wolfman, proctnes .% — 8 
Zackheim, 3; Sate 4. 
tethrep ¥ 
Herman Luhrs, precinct 1. 
Oak Park 
Faye Moskowitz, precinct 1; Morris 
| Arnowits, 2; Asher N. Tilehin, 3 Howard | 
. Kraus, 4; Delphine Travis, 5 
Pleasant Ridge 
| J. Whitfield Jones, precinct 2. 
=] Penatiace 
Gerald Roberts. precinct 1 
Bowens, 2; Linwood L. Piack, 3 
Smart, 4; Willis M. Brewer, 5: David 
Utley. 6; Otto J. Adler, 7; Leaun Harrel- 
son, 8; Geo. Hicks, 8;. Lorin 8. McCray 
10: Donald A. Tews, 11; Charles E 
Yeager, 12; Arthur 
J. Heaton, Charies 
T 
Robert 
Isaac 
14; 
Eugene P Sutherland, 16; Albert A 
Orr,. 17; Cecil C. Mullinix, 18; Glen J 
Donahue, 19; Elmer F. Luebke, 20 
Harry; D. Randall, 
22; Floyd Yeaman, 
24; Stephen Bone Jr. 
Barrett, 26; John~ Kent, 
Grant, 32: Agnes 21: Patrick Glynn 
23; Theo. O. Carison 
25: Donald £ 
27; Robert P 
kes 
Simmons, 3%; Deloyd Brown, 37, GC 
Holland, 38; Odin Johnson, #0; Norman 
R. Bolton, 42; Della Souriall, 43, Alen 
B. Greene Jr, 4. 
Reyal Oak 
Devid B. Hill, Teresinet 1; James 8 
Pooler, 2; E. Thomas, 6; Rex Eames, 17;- 
Laura Althouse, 8; John W. Oliphant. 
12; John Tracey, 13; Fred Hanscom 
14: Harry A McAfee. 15: Howard M 
Arnold, 20; Seymour Beitner, 21 
Seuth Lyon 
Leonard D Bonet precinct 1 
ake 
TOWNSHIPS 
~ Addisen 
Thom Flood, precinct 1! 
Aven 
! Betty ~Dtanics 
Crowe, precinct 4 
precinct 5. precinct 3: Net? PR 
Phernam T. Smith 
Bleemfield j 
Benjamin Goldstein, Precinct 2,L¢ 
| Burch Jr.. precinct 
Bran 4on 
precinct 1. 
Commerce 
Leonard H. Pield, precinct 1; 
Reimer, precinct 2 
Farmingten 
Donald Lee, precinct | 
Greveland 
John Auten, precinct t 
Highland 
Helly 
* Independence 
Ardie Gru bough, Precinct 1 
Lyen 
Milferd 
James 8. Courtney 
Ne | George Scott, 
Verne 
precinct 1 
Oakland 
Harry Garling. precinct 1. 
Orien 
Waldo C. Leipprandt, 
M. Boberg, precinct 2 
Oxford Precinct 1; A 
Pontiac 
Mitchell, precinct 1; Emery L Dono- 
van G. Gillmore, precinct 2 
Rese 
Esther R. Downing. precinct 1. 
Reyal k 
Clare Dennis, ecinct 1; Ann M. Ed 
wards, precinct 2; James Allen, precinct 
3; Mattie B. Green, precinct 4. Mattie 
| L. Baker, precinct 5; Anne Bell Ethridge 
precinct 6; Jessie Byam, precinct 7 
John Archambeult, precinct 8. 
Southfield 
Witem H. Ovink. precinct | 
M. Pickford, precinct 2; John I. Lampi 
precinct 4: Anthony Grindatti, precinct 
6; John McOinnies, precinct 8 - 
mond A. Ryerson, precin¢t 9 
Ross, precinct 11; Stanley W. Habeow- 
ski, precinct 13 
  aah 
216-Year-Old House Has 
No Takers at One Dollar 
NEWPORT, R. I. W—A 216-year 
old colonial house was scheduled 
for destruction today. No one 
would buy it for $1. 
The People's Credit Union, own- 
er of the house, had offered the 
| 6ld home for sale for $1 provided 
'{t was moved off land needed by 
the firm. Moving costs were re- 
ported to be prohibitive. Jease 
ue Low. presings i: Saeete je L. Weather- | and Beauticians of California yes- 
. Selon tan woe pre- terday. He is serving his 26th term 
* | cin 7. as secretary-treneurer. here on a note of discretion: the 
“do not discuss”’ list. | 
“McCarthyism is so controver- D bal 5. Adams precinct 3; How- rd M. Somerville, net 2; Marve ck 4 jh son. inet 4; 
5; inaoes H. Stump, ppecines 4; J, Rob- 
ert eet = Big tee 
Blommfieid 
Winfred s yt procinst 1; 
White Lake   
  
Walks Through Window Find Buddha's Bones 
at Detroit Police Station LONDON, (INS) — Two small 
  
33; Otts baw: 
rencé, 34; Hayward Whitlock, 35; David | 
Verne - 
  
  a tes age Ja 
gain 4 ways:       Be sure of thrifty terms and consider- 
ate treatment! When your dealer uses 
this GMAC Thrift-Guard Plan, you 
1; Your dealer gives you the greatest 
financing value at low cost. 
2. Your dealer gives you complete 
financing in one flexible plan, at one 
—The Plan That Has Helped Millions Buy Cars “On Time” LOOK AHEAD ON FINANCING WHERE YOU BUY YOUR CAR 
able time. 
reach ownership. 
4. 
United States and 
  Dealer IN CHEVROLET: PONTIAC ~OLDSMOBILE- BUICK — CADILLAC time, at one place—saving your valu- 
3. If financial problems arise, you gét 
considerate treatment to help you 
Emergency assistance is available 
through over'250'GMAC offices in the 
gain national credit standing. DETROIT #—‘It was so nice 
and clean I didn’t know it was 
there,” Edward Kubasiewicz said. 
He was explaining how he hap- 
pened to walk right through a 20- 
by-70 inch plate glass window in 
ja front deer at police headquar- pieces of Buddha's bones, believed 
to be nearly 2.500 years old, have | 
‘been brought to London from Cey- | 
}lon, Along with two images and 
some sacred books they repose to- 
-day in a new Buddhist temple re- 
cently opened in London's Coving- | Kubasiewicz, on his way to get 
len Gardens by the London's Bud-| 4 driver’s license, wsan't even 
dhist Vihara society. | scratched.   
  
  
! addition of Sen. McCarthy to the 
      
     
             
      
  
  
  JFORTH IN 
—=—_—_=2 
FLEET~AIR ° SHOES FOR CHILDREN 
The attractive, new Fleet-Air line of childrens   
  
  shoes, in all styles, sizes and colors, is now avail- 
able at our store. Bring your boy or girl in right 
‘away while the selection is still complete. Ina 
VICTOR 
TREASURE 
CHEST! This chest is sturdily built, heav- 
ily insulated and furnace tested: 
It is certified by the Safe Manu- 
facturers “National Assoctation to 
protect paper contents from se- 
vere heat reaching 1700° F 
Protect BEFORE Fire Strikes! 
TREASURE CHEST 
$2725 
Other Chests $17.95 Up 
General Printing 
and 
Office Supply 
17 W. Lewrence, Pontiac 
  
  
  
    Sizes 815 to 12 $645          apes as 
Sizes 1215 to 3 $745 
TODD'S Shoe Store 20 W. Huron 
      
  
    
  
  
  
  
TIME PAYMENT 
PLAN Canada. And you     
  
    
      
  Otered only by dealers in CHEVROLET + PONTIAC + OLDSMOBILE + BUICK « CADILLAC new cara, 
. used care of all makes; aloo FRIGIDAIRE * DELCO APPLIANCES + ‘GM DIESELS 
GENERAL Motors ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION .     
    
|. Office Supply 
        “The National “live” key- | 
Company, saves up to 
50% hand motion. 
Every amount key is 
“alive’’ to the operator's COST! 
board Adding Machine, 
made by the world-famous 
National Cash Register 
touch becouse every key 
is electrified. You can 
amazing speed, without 
depressing a motor bar! 
See how much the “‘live”’ 
keyboard will help you! 
Try it for afew days in 
your office — on your 
work! Phone today for 
more information on our 
freetrial offer. 
General Printing 
          - 7 W. Lewrence, Pontiac 
     
           aes THE PONTIAC PRESS, “WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 11, 1954 
"TF YOU UKE TO SAVE MONEY ON THE MARY 00s 10 NEED, 
lo s | | W i ices s 
INDIANA RED RIPE, 24-POUND AVG. 
RS - 79 Benunes . .. 2 » 29¢ 
CALMORNIA 265TH 3 roe 5Se 
Fresh Corn "tm to stom tans 45¢ 
Fresh Peaches 24NCH AND UP 4 us. 49 
Cultivated Blueberries = crown tox 29¢ 
us. 25¢   
  
  
  
      
      
STOKELY’S FINEST 
Frozen Pies CHOICE OF CHICKEN, TURKEY, BEEF, TUNA 
SULTANA TART - swext | siNaLt y hy: , A ras 99. 
Salad Dressing « 35: |           
  
  : Bisquick srry croom =... = Beef Stew omy moom .. . ‘8% 39¢ - 
SUNNYBROOK SMALL ORADE “A” Angel Food Mix rusur, 'x2" 53¢ Luncheon Meat ors... . 3 vat 1.09  TREESWEET PURE CALIFORNIA 
Fresh Eggs i, 37! Grape Jelly were, 1202 19¢ Chili Con Carne yMOMSAS . , “SOE 95— NE FOR MAVORING OR MAKING LEMONADE 
Sibverbrook Butter % om... ply 5c Maine Sardines sents . . 3888 25¢° Boned Chicken worse... 22: 29 Lemon Juice 2 x 25¢ 
Kraft’s Velveeta reocess HERE “os, “a roi Van Camp's Tuna om . .. , Cin 23¢ © Corm Flakes "tiooos, me 27¢ mm 
Pinconning Cheese i 49% Coldstream Salmon "™«..... eat 4% Granulated Sugar & . 5 tk. 49e 
ca Hawaiian Punch aveizx it. . “$8? 39¢ Longhorn Cheddar wisconsm . . , 4% PILLSBURY, SWANSDOWN OR BETTY CROCKER 
  bee Chen wom es " 9% Cake Mixes cticct%o .. 3. ng 1 95 Wesson Oi sna .. . c 39e Muenster Cheese .:...... u 
Mel-O-Bit Slices process curse 2 ros 49¢ Apple Sauce # rancr, . .. 2 Sir 39¢ | ARP P "oteno'ceuarver™ 3 tans 1.00 Crisco Shortening. . cs 35¢ is 93¢ 
Phila. Cream Cheese .... 2 mes. 29¢ ona Apricots “isives... . tax 29¢ «Grape Juice “sh man> , fan 29 
lee Cream CMEMONT.VANMA OAL 796 Fruit Cocktail surana .. . . 3 85 1.00 White House Milk rouno = 4 cin, A7c Orange Base ““Cortnmuns”” 2 ti 33¢ 
Grapefruit Sections Pp PANCY 16-2. Solids 1601, 
JANE PARKER—YOUR CHOICE | * ra Sic Ory eS Seg 2% ASSORTED FRUITS AND VEGETABLES 
LEMON OR SUGAR Sliced Pineapple DOLE, ww cans ‘oe Medium Shrimp SULTANA , gw 8 8 CAN 3% 
Boece iat Baby Foods Cookies * 2-39 Sse witin "He Pf waar men 0 A a ee , , , AZ An wor 3% | 
~ Cookies a” As 7 torent “mt suce..... = 2 3% - Tans 4 -_ 
Lipton’s Frostee wee we 2 mot 29 PLAIN, SUGARED cor 12 19¢   
  
     
    
  
haga Fed Tool Bar Cake. UI nap com SRLS... 2AM 250 Pla Crust Mix SRS 2 $8 27e dart sow tnt "St et 
Blueberry Pie “iuscious‘seenes . “ze 49¢ ep Page _— sees 3 wor. on a Shortening _ sees $ = a Karo Syrup CU rar 4 | ; 
White Bread wetoesarvaun « « » War Te Spinac eee eee eo © D CANS y Beans eevee 
Cut Wax Beans om... . 2'Cktr 29¢ ARP Coffee mo" Enel ot wo .. ae 1.19 Kidney Beans 2 oc, . 2 Ut 23¢ 
~ Colon Cale —cnnastnon wm nt ANCE RG ~ 
Modess vee Phe LAT 2%, 37e Potato ‘on Re ee pox 5% 
Hot Dey Pols on nanmurost tous” mre. ose TP OMMITO Juice «or 19¢   
  
    
  
  
    “Popcorn ‘Attn’tsr’ ss ee eo, 1Se Rite Crackers #8 ee nox-33¢ Argo Starch Sa. BE 13, 
Dinner Rolls ino see... ort2 15¢ Facial Tissues ““wune Dor sons 200 39C | 
| Dog Foe SPAM MaQUUAR 48. 49 ‘Surf... 1.» er 30 Het 59 
; TT ror taste... Bright Sail Bleach sees st 39 Fab eeeeee#e¢® car 72¢ or 306 
j P Waxed Paper orem 2... ~ rou 25¢ 
VENI TY von {hvlt....\ : Ivory Flakes... . SS" 72c 82 300 <<< BLEACHES AND DISINFECTS 7 tux Soa 3 cues 2% VIGOROUS REGULAR SIZE CAKES 
33¢ |ssecense:| wrmscorn | -   Oe lorox..... ‘ss A bony cing oa oes 7 OC Cc - | fevoctss snds0 whole: | 4 29: Joy oimomr. » » » » vor T2C ter. 30e 
cOOND Age Wory Soap smo sm soo 3 carts 26¢ 
LESS THAN a A MLasS Cheer cee ee me  72¢ Me PKO. 30c Egg Noodles nw race , , ‘S97 29¢ 
Grape Jam Ayn race, 2 39 
Lux Soap sor sari sar, , , 2 carts 23¢ pe Jam 4” ¢ ay a Markets   
All prices in this ad effective thru Set., Aug. Las 
            
  
             
  f 4 
* 3% ' 
me 
= 
TO THE 
4-H FAIR ‘AUG. 10th Thru AUG. 14th 
  IT’S WONDERFUL! 
Visit Our Booth 
at the Fair! 
F. J. POOLE CO. 151 OAKLAND Hal Boyle ‘Says:   
as Good as By HAL BOYLE 
NEW YORK ,(»— “It takes a 
damn good man to owe a million 
| dollars.” said Eugene T. Barwick. 
‘ Tt takes a pretty good fellow to 
go on from there and earn a mil- 
lion dollars, too. On both counts 
Gene Barwick is quite a guy. 
Now only 40, Barwick in five 
years has parlayed $4,500 cash 
into a 30-million-dollar yearly busi- 
ness in tufted carpets. This has 
given him a reputation of being 
one of the top boy wonders of in- 
dustry.   were using their product to deaden | 
the sound of thei own falling tears, 
Gene has built his carpeting firm 
to a point where it is now the 
fifth largest in the world 
* 7 * 
“But we believe there is room 
‘for a  100-million-dollars-a-year 
business in tufted rugs and car- 
peting,”’ he said, ‘‘and we are will- 
ing to be the first.” 
Barwick figures he can do this if 
he can make wall-to-wall carpet- 
ing customary in the American 
home,and_if he can mass produce 
carpets cheaply enough so that a 
housewife will feel she can afford 
|to change them every time she 
changes her draperies. 
i ” ” *   
| during the war period, but many 
| wool was more plentiful. 
| * * 
| “and they were wrong.” 
tians during the war 
| with a Chicago mail order firm. 
but durable. * 
$70,000," he said. ‘“‘And I taught 
him how to make tufted Fotton | 
} carpets. * * 
“T had only $4,500. I invested 
$2,500 in a latex-coating machine 
that would keep the carpets from 
skidding. Then I took to the road 
and the other $2,000 went into sell- 
ing expenses, Did it work? It had 
to work.” 
| It worked so well that in mid- 
| 1950 the firm was doing a three- 
| million-dollar business. The part- 
i ner, deciding no. good thing lasts 
forever, sold out to Barwick. 
” Ld] . 
  Gene kept right on expanding. 
| went into debt developing new and   
(more efficient machinery. Now he 
  
     
  te pip ° © —_— Df a 
>." di my baby Is orqtOl, NY / — 
/ e      
  
  
“I HAD LEFT LITTLE CHUCKIE STRAPPED IN 
HIS HIGH CHAIR. TO STEP NEXT DOOR. 
‘FOR A“ MOMENT. * “WHILE I WAS GONE THE STRAP BROKE. 
CHUCKIE SLIPPED DOWN AND CHOKED ON 
THE EDGE OF THE TRAY."     
  
  * FINDING HIM UNCONSCIOUS I SCREAMED    WITH FRIGHT.”   
  
  
A NEIGHBOR, MAS. MARY JEAN NANCE, 
HEARD MY SCREAMS AND RUSHED OVER * 
        
  
2 Se ie - ian ‘er eso 
  
QUICKLY DID SO. “WITHIN A FEW MINUTES FIREMEN 
    
     
       AND A DOCTOR ARRIVED AND _ REVIVED HIM." 
ae, ,   
  
  
    
  
  
      
  ¢ WHILE MRE. NANCE 
\F cor cHucKieTo —- START BREATHING. WHAT A WELCOME GOUND WHEN 
"SHE TOOK CHUCKIE, | RUSHED TO THE ‘PHONE. CHUCKIE BEGAN To CRY ! 
"AFTER TWO DAYS IN THE HOSPITAL HE WAS AS 
WALL AS OVER. SJMINK WHAT THE TELEPHONE 
    MEANT TO MRS. STEWART 
DEPENDABLE, AROUND-THE-CLOCK 
IN TIMES OF EMERGENCY, WHEN YOU 
TURN TO IT FIRST, THE VALUE OF 
YOUR TELEPHONE IS HARD To 
MEASURE. {TS SURELY WORTH A 
LOT MORE THAN IT COSTS. 
MICHIGAN BELL 
TELEPHONE CO. THAT DAY...AND WHAT A 
GUARDIAN IT 1S FOR YOU. 
    Owing a Million ‘Dollan! 
While some rug manufacturers | 
Small tufted cotton rugs boomed | 
| manufactarers thought housewives | 
\no longer would buy them when 
1 
“They liquidated,”’ said Barwick, 
In 1948 Gene, who had served 
| as a naval lieutenant in the Aleu- 
, quit his job 
He had been buying its carpeting | 
for years and felt he knew the 
|kind women wanted—inexpensive 
“I met a bedspread manufac- | 
turer who had gone broke for 
     
    THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘WEDNESDAY, AUGUST jl. 1954 
Earning It has five plants in Georgia, ma- 
chines that can turn out a 9-by-10- 
foot tufted cotton, nylon or rayon 
carpet every 29 seconds, Weavers 
from Scotland and England come 
to study his new techniques. 
se * * 
“The worst thing a fellow can do 
'is to worry about being exposed,” 
| said Barwick. “Why watch a pa- 
rade if you can be in it? And & 
you get in it, you might as well 
try to lead it, But you have to re- 
member—it takes a damn good 
man to owe a million dollars.” 
Gene has an honest enjoyment | 
in his success, his fine home in| 
| Atlanta, his three children. He 
likes to golf, too, but last year he 
traveled 140,000 miles hifself sell- 
| ing his carpeting—although he has 
30 salesmen on the job 
* . . 
“I believe I talked to four times 
as many rug buyers and dealer's   
      @s any other mill executive in the 
country,”” he said. . 
” - * ; 
“Any man ought to work hard ‘if 
he owns his own business. That's 
what is wrong with too many busi- 
nesses today—they are run by pro- 
fessional managers who don't 
own stock in their own concerns.” 
Barwick, who once played end at 
the University of North Carolina 
and still looks like he could get 
down the field under a long pass, 
fliés about in his own plane. 
“Riding in a plushed-up airplane 
gives me the same kick some men 
uggd.to get out of having a private 
railroad car,” he said, smiling. 
“T call my plane “The Remnant” 
—because any good carpet man 
| knows his profits are tied up in 
remnants."’ 
  
For Office 
SP NGL G4. ha EO} 2 Supplic s See 
BOOK STORE 
      
Cucurbit Seeds. 
Control Found GENEVA, N. Y. (UP—Limits:of 
hot water use on cucurbit seeds, 
i long a problem for seedsmen, have 
been set by Cornell University sci- 
entists after much testing. 
| Hot water, hot.air, or icals 
which penetrate the are the 
only means of controlling certain 
disease organisms, that 
deeply imbedded in seeds. 
Dr. Willard Crosier says that 
cucurbit seeds, yeoanoes Si cucum-   
bers, muskmelion, 
(Advertisement) 
‘Hchy Skin Rash | 
| Zemo, a doctor's formula, promptly   
  
relieves itching of surface skin rashes, | 
| eczema, prickly heat, athlete's foot. 
| Zemo stops scratching and so aids 
faster healing and clearing. Buy Extre 
Strength Zemo for stubborn cases.     
    
Modern, Complete Drug Store 
OPEN SOON 
SAM’S SELF 
SERV WALGREEN 
AGENCY 
DRUGS SAVE TIME and MONEY 
Park Easily—Get Downtown Prices 
Save Gas—Save Money 
Seve Your Nerves! 
. . Auburn Road 
posite Pontiac State Bank 
    
  
      LEMON 
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for 
toe 
CR I LINNEA IERIE MO ES AS Sa EY PERL ARE So   
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locks in the sweet, sweet flovor of 
BREAK O' DAY CORN . . . no moter 
when it is picked! Every bi of jwicy, 
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buy #.. . there when you serve it 
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Now .. . by Stericooler, the tempero- 
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cool... eek fe prsere st picked       
        i a Bares aaa . . " ‘ ” « Fa> a i RAABEES SHEERS aca ng EAE RE ee es eS a ede fa dagheata es & dt geal a ee ee ee ee See 8 Se ee ae eee eee ee Fe! oe ee ae > 
ROS SS ee fe ee ie BST OS dy ee ee 2 Ge i gS ee ee es Sr pe 5 ee ee Vine x 4 P ate # = ees & oy = fy a f/'.i Bae Deeice LT SO seeks Te Pee eet Alte ge ie € bats 2 in 
three A Se ae eee sss Etec Ba 2 > Seat a ee ER gee ee ee a See Ee s ROME Ser ES Re tad ae eg ee nT a a ee See Bakes 2 ie AP peor gee di oie es PS Be te eee fae PEER es Bee Fe ae, sgh < 
PSA le Cae Te ee Ae aha eg ee at Fo OES See Ae Ce ee ede oe OF Se ese Bs Site: ieee Gee B fo ee rid % pede ds Be ) ' hie sae AN RG ae + gy qa Soe S a5 me ha ee 
ay # a b oe ‘ : es 3 s Pt = is ee zoe 3 sat fae at oh es : : ye Pea ie) se ee pl: aie) ? ie 
ee ES) 4 Ros! ; $ Cay ‘“ ‘| i fs : , oe 
her aye mt } EPR ee SS Was Seay ae 
Hk Ogee ‘ 3 5 : : Pon : oo ere . aes . : i . ey 
es aS i i Z = oe a eet o ‘ ee. 4 : 
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. AvGUST. u, 1964 
Genuine 1954 Spri 
Table Trimmed cia 
OVEN READY 
Small Size FIRST 7 RIB CUT PORK 
LOIN ROAST FRESHLY GROUND 
GROUND BEEF MEDIUM SIZE 
SHRIMP and Cocktail 
  Lb. $07 wn 
4 
HI-C ORANGE DRINK 2.59 
POTATO CHIPS wa tuec ra” top 69 - Pure Vegetable Shortening 
¢ | ¢ : = -_ with “Megic Pek” tes 
GULF-KIST SMALL SHRIMP ** 25 
WATER MAID RICE “meas 1% 155 
    F.A.G. RICE = Tone ceame cae 33° 
MAZOLA OIL ‘toners “Con 2.29   
Seve 10¢ on Crisco 
with coupon in Tide 
  SPECIAL 
TIDE DETERGENT covron rack Sam" 72° 
DOMINO Pure Cane 3% - —— * Pa «Sy Poe « & % it 
2 sp ae sm 7 i ae hy mye 4 a 2 
4 : 
oo. * IF 
' > ge ¥, 
‘ed Ms 
os « , nt Pa 
= pe ’ 
w Bes __ -" of 
- 2 
rae A @ XXXX tacngcetey 7 @ YELLOW   
     BH reaanys 
   
          i. 
& 
  DIAMOND CRYSTAL SALT ‘sic 2, 21° 
SWANSDOWN vias 8 Sime 1" 
BURNETT’S PURE VANILLA beets 3 
SPAGHETTI & MEAT BALLS povatcer “coe 25° 
_ MAXWELL INSTANT COFFEE ‘%: ‘Sx ‘1.84 
DIXIE SALAD DRESSING ‘omocmzw %" 39° 
FROSTEE SHERBET MIX = ures © 2 ,,,, 33° 
FROSTEE ICE CREAM MIX urtows 2... 29° 
NABISCO COOKIE ASSORTMENT ca, 49° 
SUNSHINE HI-HO CRACKERS - 35° 
ARMOUR CORNED BEEF HASH coo 2 
ARMOUR SLICED DRIED BEEF ‘33° 
ARMOUR VIENNA SAUSAGE can (19° 
L & S Pure 
Strawberry 
Preserves   DEMINGS "SOcKEYE SALMON 
WELCH’S GRAPE JUICE 3; 
_ SWIFT'S PREM.» teins 7 
SUNSWEET PRUNE JUICE NATURAL 24-Ox. mad Bottles 
12-Ox. er 39 
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT 
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES, 
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS PURE 
CONCORD 
    
Quart 
A pci 
  
      
) 1. Lb. Print 
Double Wrapped - HOLLYBROOK BUTTER 50. 
   PULLET EGGS or CD 
WRIGLEY’S BUTTER “2 inten” 65° Piece 
or Sliced BRICK or MUENSTER u. 45° CREST 
AMERICAN cues "Slices, Melts & Spreads SWISS CHEESE fz. o's. 65° 
2 Ib. MOZZARELLA CHEESE 71 4. 69° Loaf DANISH BLUE‘! iu. ue 79 
       
           eeP ds PEPPERMINT LOZENGES 10 oz. 
Reusable 
Tumblers 
  3 69: WRIGLEY’S Delicious Summer Candies 
~-BRACH’S ORANGE SLICES. 
ASSORTED GUM DROPS = 39° 
FARLEY’S JU-JU TOY CANDIES ‘é=* 25° 
» ZIPZ LICORICE CHIPS Sour 19: 
@ DUNHILL LICORICE ALLSORTS ‘= 19:             
WRIGLEY’S CREAMED » 394 = 
wnaex’s, 29° 
CIRCUS PEANUTS —— 20022. i, 29" —— 
  
AT ALL 4 PONTIAC STORES 
MEL-O-CRUST - Sliced - Enriched - White 
BREAD = 59 S0.SAGINAW © 398 AUBURN OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY, ee TILL 9 P.M. 
@ 536 NO. PERRY «open Thur-Fri. ‘til 9 PM. 
~. @ 45 SO. TELEGRAPH , 
  This Week's Large _ fe Bakery Special irs 4 y | : 
  
  eee seen. segae tnd 
            
        
   
 Peek i res . ' Bg 5) wees 4 4 y) : so) \ 4 Bion vi ace | x eo ‘| X M ey le genus 2 C4 dig i ae . ‘ ssh i 4 Ae : es : ‘ <= Pee? \ ; ‘ (ey hh op 3 i re ees ; j 5) \ . ‘ XG a ° if i \ M J ie ? ie 
Pan | 7 j 
. ' ' i 
meet “THE ek PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1934" ciliata ki Ni Bk 
           t 
io Side Vacations and Visitors Keep Social Calendar F led } CALLIE'S BEAUTY SHOP “ . 1 N. Perry St. Phone FE 2-6361. Opposite Hotel Roosevelt Rite Unites e 
Pee es Pontiac Girl, sum m er JW. Stoops | Barbara Carlene McCall became 
| the bride of Jack W. Stoops Satur-| J 
| day evening in First General Bap- 
| tist Church. 
| The bride is daughter of Henry sienting thursday 9:30 a. m. sane aide Sa Ganaher of Memey 
Mrs. Lioyd Tessman of West 
Princeton avenue. His parents are 
the M. A. Stoops of Dotham, Ala. 
SUMMER A floor-length gown of Chan- 
tilly-type lace over slipper satin 
| was worn by the bride for the 
D rc S | 6:30 ceremony. The bodice fea- 
tured a sweetheart neckline and   
  2 Fomnilies Travel North 
for Week of Trout F ishing | 
~Sapelaks Will Entertain 200 Friends at- 
Reception for Son-in-Law, Daughter 
The Keith Crissmans and children, Gail and Chuck, 
and the Harold oe and children, Carol and Jimmy, 
all of Rochester, leave Friday for a week of trout fish- 
ing at Beaver Basin near Munising. . * 
Mrs. Earl Martin of Mohawk road is entertaining her 
daughter; Mrs. Daniel Driscolt-and children, David and 
John, of Philadelphia, who arrived recently for a month's 
visit. Much of their time is being spent salling and fish- 
ing at Elizabeth Lake. 
Mr. Driscoll returned to Philadelphia Tuesday after- 
noon after a short visit wan his family. » — 
Mr. _ Mrs. Michael Lakeland avenue and-the Harold 
Sapelak of Wolfe street will} Bensons of L’Anse.   
    
  
  
      < . long sleeves which came to points *. 7. ¢ entertain 200 friends at a ° over the wrists. The Aug. 2 birth of a daugh- reception Saturday in the =s . 
drastically reduced The fingertip veil of nylon tulle UAW-CIO Hall honoring| ** Roperts — ~ es 
was held in place by a tiara of their son-in-law and daugh-| . p hecene ot Berwick drive. 
thinestones and seed pearls. The . we Mr - and Mrs. Norman Roberta's grandparents are Mr. 
. bride wore a single > . aulus. ° 
* warts. he eideoren's citt and| CAROLYN JOY BRILL MARY JEAN WALTON . The couple is spending |°" Mrs. Claude Oven of eat 
= sale - carried a bouquet of carnations,| Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Brill of Royal Oak | Walton of Edgefield drive. Paul and Caro- tint: time i= a - fore | Silverside driver 
| white roses and fern with stream-| announce the engagement of their daughter, | lyn will attend the Missionary Training joining =. Chicern. ee T - t le bo Ge tI 
reat Icebox Gently   ers, Carolyn Joy, to Paul Bersche, son of the | School, Nyack; N.Y., where he will study Paulus skates in review Mrs, Ni Shiel bride’ i , : ? . BNO, fhe Sop SS ee ; Y' Paul e_revie ; 
rs. Norma Shiel was the bride's! po, and Mrs. CG. {. Bersche of Franklin} for the ministry. James is a senior at|and he is music arranger. Don't yank out ice-cube trays : from your refrigerator. Treat them 
formerly °6.95 * $10.95 Bre wore dees ot dent nmi | boulevard. A ing th {| Wheaton College, Wheaton, Ill., where he is| The Pauluses arrived here . ; wore a dress of dusty pi ulevar¢ nnouncing the engagement o on College, eaton, Ili., where he is . tl id | i jolt- 
y | Chantilly lace over satin and car-! their daughter, Mary Jean, to Paul's broth-| studying political science. migra t maar . Thee mere in "the “elicate machen suena. col ‘ried a onial bouquet of roses | Slamming your refrigerator door       
  
    
    
    er, James, are the Rev. and Mrs. Carl A. i“ oe served as best | as __________| married May 24. loosens joints, too, and hastens 
. - Pa |man for Jack. Geo 4 4 Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Arscott and the need for repair bills. ° 
@cottons in prints and stripes | setta-o8 th veerp. | rer ee_W. Smiths Will Be Hosts son, Jimmy, of Rochester will leave this weekend for a two-week 
may can ti tom or St, Dunstan Guild Anticipates Picnic 2 ome ees |g Birmingham . monity Gb, Mra. eoaman wore | Sf n cipates Picnic (nn en as nes @solid color cotton Oily meccunalnn ond a casenge : they will visit Mr. Arscott’s father, VEL ot American Beauty roses. By RUTH SAUNDERS Mr, and Mrs.’ William R. Yaw, , enter the Virginia Theological | Dr. William W. Arscott of Rogers SERVICE 
broadcloths The newlyweds will reside in| BOOOMFIELD HILLS—The an-| are looking forward to a Labor | Seminary in September, City. 
| Pontiac. nual picnic ‘which members of St.| Day visit won Oe Mra. Ree. Mrs. Stuart A. Cogsdill of Orch-| Patsy and David Arscott wit |f Wel Plan Your Tour Free! . : Dunstan Guild hold each summer) ¢- rear ington, D.C. | ard Lake entertained at luncheon | visit their parents and brother . Phone Mi 4-5711 
@some jackets, some Reunion Set Sunday |i! be given, as always, at the | uo ae 1 klnele ty kb fae, Mra enneth Cal | ne “ele siny at me ake. | Tickets, Reservations 
tticoats | _ The reunion of the Pontiac High) wWejjington Smith in ae " e’* pan of Sydney, Australia. Mr. and) Mr. and Mis: Dewi J. Muecke | to Anywhere pe School June and summiér school| j has become a tradition to hold are taking an Alaskan trip this Mrs Culpan are visiting their son-|of Flint, formerly of Pontiac, an- 379 Hamilten, Birmingham 
month, They will return to spend in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. |nounce the birth of a son, Dane, 
| the rest of the summer at their | R. Jamison Williams of Yarmouth | July 28. The infant's grandparents Grace Plummer Reilly 
| “Long Lane Farm" near Marine | 0 are Mrs. Caroline J. Muecke of 
City. 
| and their two children returned New Fall Hair Styles 
|} SHORT and SMART Cutting, Styling by Experts | Tuesday to their home in Marble- 
LANOLIN head, Mass., after a visit with 
ENRICHED 3 | Mr. Sander’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. 
6 No Appointment 
. Necessary! 
+: OPEN THURSDAY | seniors of 1949 will be held Sunday these between-sea- | at Cass-Dodge Park. The reunion, son affairs at the . . . ° ‘ ._ 
@ styles in junior, misses’ sizes’ | cisinally scheduled for Aug. 7, Sith ‘ho m 
in the afternoon 
Tea is an evergreen bush of the || . 
| camellia family. ot | for swimming in . 
\ oy 1 Wieland = | pool, badminton 
and other games, 
Tel-Huron Shopping Center, Pontiac 
OPEN TO 9 P.M. THURS., FRI., SAT.             
  
  
  
and will cook be- 
side the pool for During July the senior Sanders, 
a cooperative sup- with their son-in-law and daugh- 
per. Mrs. Saunders | ter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Frick, 
In charge of anizing the af-| the Frederick Sanders and Jack 
fair are-the newly elected presi-| Sanders, spent most of their time 
dent, Otis Thompson, and mem-| ®t thelr Grand Haven summer 
bers of his board of directors home. ; 
Mrs. J. C. Herbert Bryant ar- Mr. and Mrs, William H. Breech 
rived Monday from her home in have had as their houseguests for 
Alexandria. Va. for a visit at Wa-! 10 days Mr. and Mrs. Lester L 
beek with her mother, Mrs. James Cox of Springfield, Mo. Mr. Cox is 
Couzens , . young Tim Breech’s godfather. 
everybody’ s feverite | —_ sister, | Over the weekend of Aug. 21 Mr. | 
wand “in-law and T+ | and Mrs. Breech have invited Mr. | 
and Mrs. Donnell Matthews to be; 
| their guests at the Old Club, St. 
Clair Flats, 
Cd]                 
          
  | Fred W. Sanders of Epping lane. 
UNTIL 8:00 P. M. © s 
Mr, and Mrs. Edwin J. Ander- 
son have come down from their 
summer home at Bellaire with , 
alee PARISIAN BEAUTY SHOP nell. 
TT are ail planning to attend |! 7 West Lawrence Over Old. Prof's FE 2-4959 cago wriday evening. 
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Nunnelly 
will go up to Leland early next 
| week for the rest of the summer. 
| Mr. and Mrs. George Robert Har- 
greaves of California have come 
|for a visit with Mr. Hargreaves’ 
t mother, Mrs. Robert C. Har- 
| greaves of Woodward Avenue, and 
| his brother and sister-in-law, 
| and Mrs. William B. hana 
| of Pembroke drive. 
They are spending this week 
|   
               
  
  
  
2: 
_*Pepplecord at the Bil) Hargreaves cabin on 
| the Au Sable River. 
— secre tam tet ere aren a — — sania = ae Mr. and Mrs. Otis Thompson are 
eS f ‘ ATO a li = planning a dinner in their honor 
-_— 2 aes —_——— asiisimttetaal snemapemmncgsies nd +.Saturday.evening. oe es 
Mr. and Mrs. John w. Sanders | : 
from LIFE are planning to leave Aug. 21 to | 
and GLAMOUR         
            
spend a week at Old Trail Inn. 
They will be accompanied by Henry | 
S. Booth, who will join Mrs | 
Labor Day. 
Mrs, Edward S. Wellock will give | 
|a tea Monday honoring her house- 
| guests, Mrs. Robert VanHyning and 
Ruth and Kathleen Johnson. 
| Mr. and Mrs. David B. Van 
| Dusen have returned from a 
|| year’s residence in Europe, They 
| are visiting Mr. Van Dusen’s par- 
| ents, Mr. and Mrs, C, Theron 
Van Dusen of Metamora, be- 
tore making their home in Alex- 
andria, Va. Mr. VanDusen wil 
Beauty Clinic Edythe C. McCulloch . 
| AUGUST SLUMP } \§ This is, perhaps, the hardest 
|f time of year to look our best 
The hair is bleached and dry 
and the skin is dark and dry 
+i We often don't realize in August 
how bad we are going to look - 
ALEX COLMAN of California 
curves a jacket ond skirt 
in Pebblecord by 
Crompton. Sizes 8 to 18. 
Colors: Walnut, grape. 
2995 
Jersey Blouse $95 
To Contrast. 5 
* Exciting New Corduroy Weave 4 
    
  
Handsome is as Sacony does! Paris- 
influenced wool jersey tops boast 
smart detailing, the shirts wash! 
Newly shaped skirts pretty you go- 
ing and coming, are made in won- 
derful colorings. Pick them for the 
costume-y way they go together, 
for the versatile way they switch- 
about. And watch whole wardrobes 
grow from little Sacony prices!   
_ WHAT'S LEFT 
Summer Clearance 
Y off   ra ¢       z 
i 
; Ej 
i     
            Sizes 10-18. and a soft permanent will take care of the straggly ends. Sun 
A wool jeriey jacket, rib-knit trim, 14.95 care i most effective. Don’ « B ilien Sine al!-wool flannel skirt, 10.95 |] foreet to use your hair brush }) ® + Park Free 
C back-wrap pure flannel skirt, adjustable By of SPORE , Ngee s 
button-on waistband. 12.95. ae in . meagan lly Ban 0B Ar in Rear 
® ovel-yoked washable wool jersey top. 7.95 SS Sacony ~~ EDYTHE C. McCULLOCH 
tweed knit shit, elasticized waistband, 14.95 4 BEAUTY SHOP Telegraph ot Huron > acca tl a LEA 608 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. | , Phone FE 2-7431 | Open Every Night ‘til 9 — Saturday ‘til 6:30 — Sunday 2 to 5 
. \ 
‘4 } 
! , chat       
    
        
  . x . 
_. THE PONTIAC 
        
  ae ae nS 
Aw if mat 
“a 
  
    
  Dior Denies | 
Waging War}  Weterford 
on Curves. Charl asthe 
Stylist Insists That . Ramrdéy . 
‘H_ Line’ Supports, ‘ ing of Doesn't Flatten | - Janet Jo 
PARIS (INS) — Christian Dior » daughter of indignantly dented that he is trying the E. D. 
On the sunita, ter pahk: he wants : “wae ravings only to “support” it. 
The fashion fnaestro, whose lat- street, and est controversial styles have Dean 
caused a storm of outcries from Grafmiller, 
besomy. women and foundation gar- son of the 
ment manufacturers, defended 
himself in an interview with In- J. G. 
ternational News Service, Grafmillers ] 
“| gmy-not trying to flatien the of LaF orest 
chest,” he insisted, after being ‘ghee avenue. td 
informed of comments by such - tin 2 
movie stars as Mastiye Mensee ae Re = 
ty are, matters ot universe | MR-and MRS. DEAN GRAFMILLER interest, 
Dior said he absolutely does not 
agree that his now-famous H Line 
should be called the “‘flat-chested 
look.”* 
Because of the international fu- 
rore over the of a “flat- 
fropted future,"’ INS put a- series of 
Here are the questions and Dior’s 
replies: 
Q. Why did you flatten the chest- 
line on your new styles? 
A. 1 am not trying to flatten the 
bust. , 
Q. What should a woman with 
bosom do? Can she still wear the 
H Line and look curvy? > 
A, A woman 0, the not-so- 
slim side must always wear foun- 
dations, modeling her body. 
She'll wear the new girdle (cor- 
set) and will feel very well. 
Q. What is your reply to pro- 
tests from brassiere manufactur- 
ers? 
A...This protest is even more 
ridiculous since women will have 
even more need of girdles and | Q. Is this flattening line an ad- 
vantage for womt®n over the age 
of #? 
  tainly would not have made these 
clothes if they had felt 
fortable. 
  
Luncheon Attended 
by Philathea Group 
Mrs. Julia Estabrook and Mrs. | questions to Dior on the subjéct. | 
— = lesson 
usifig “ Door” as her theme. 
  
Test Blouse Color To test a blouse for color fast- ya 
into lukewarm water and let it 
remain in for three minutes. If 
the water shows no more than the 
slightest trace of color, it is safe 
to wash the fabric, otherwise, no. 
  
Patient in’ Hospital 
Gilbert Brown of Barrington | > 
road is a patient in New Grace | ~ 
Hospital, Detroit.   
  Mrs. Harry Newhouse gave the Pe    
     
i 
In ‘a candlelight ceremony per- 
came the bride of Dean Grafmiller. 
Dean is the son of Mr, and Mrs. 
J. Gale Grafmiller of LaForest 
street, Waterford. 
For the 8 o'clock ceremony the 
bride wore a strapless waltz- 
length gown of Chaniilly-type lace 
over satin with a matching 
jacket. Her headpiece fashioned 
like a crown and décorated with 
pearls and sequins held a scal- 
loped fingertip veil. She carried 
a cascade bouquet of white glam- 
ellias with white rosebuds, 
Charlotte A, Johnson, the bride's 
| sister, was maid of honor. She wore 
‘a strapless waltz-length gown of 
+orchid crystaliette-over~ matching 
taffeta with a jacket, and she car- 
ried a bouquet of orchid carna- 
tions. 
Leona Pace as bridesmaid wore 
a similar gown of lime green with 
a matching flowered headpiece and 
carried a cascade bouquet of green 
carnations. 
For her daughter's wedding Mrs. 
Johnson wore a navy and white 
sheer nylon dress with navy ac- 
cessories and corsage of white 
glamellias with pink rosebuds. 
Mrs. Grafmilier wore a squa 
dress of nylon with white acces- 
sorieg* and a corsage of white 
glameliias with pink rosebuds. 
Hand-tailored| by 
   
  
Religious: 
“Recordings” 
—Featuring— 
The Blackwood 
Bros, Quartet 
50 Different. Recordings 
From Which to Choose | 
' 
Vv, 
  ——— 
Blackwood Bros. were 
recently featured on a 
National TV Program. 
Hear Them Today! - 
      
CHRISTIAN ° LITERATURE     SALES 39 Oakiand FE 4-9501 
    
    Janet Johnson Repeats 
Vows in Waterford Rite After a held in the Wa- 
terford CAI the new Mrs. 
Grafmiller changed to‘ a brown 
“j cotton cord suit with white acces- 
* | sories for a trip to northern Michi- 
gan. They will reside in Drayton 
Plains. 
‘Miss Schroeder 
Feted at Shower   
recently at a miscellaneous bridal 
shower given by Mrs. Wayne Shep- 
herd in the Savoy drive home of 
Mrs. Shepherd's aunt, Mrs. Gordon 
Rosebrook. : 
The daughter of Mrs. Mary 
Schroeder of Putnar.. avenue, 
Patricia will speak her vows with 
Thomas on Saturday. He is the |Spats Add” 
Patricia Schroeder, bride-elect of , 
Thomas D. Mackie, was honored | PRESS, 
   
  
a7 5. 
tHE 
é Hit 
cnet 
itl 4 i 
‘ WED! <n mr ; ps a Es     
  + 
    
      j 
} *s bar 
Ty 
  ‘4 A 
. 
MR. and MRS. MICHAEL J. TROTTA   
            
    
    
      
    of Oliver 
street, and. 
_ Michael 
Trotta, son of 
we the ‘Joseph 
4 Trottas of s @ 
“ Glen Cove. 
  
Officers Installed 
ifor-Auxiliary Mrs, Charles Myers was installed 
as- president of Chief Pontiac 
American Legion Auxiliary Satur- 
day evening by Salon 224 team of 
Oakland County 8 and 4. Chief 
Pontiac Post 377 on Lake Oakland 
was the setting for the meeting. 
Installing officer for the event 
was Mrs. Joseph Phillips, chapeau 
of Salon 224 and member of the 
Chief Pontiac Auxiliary. 
Other officers installed were     Mrs. Melvin Ward, first vice presi- 
dent; Mrs; James Height, second 
vice president; Mrs. William Hib- 
ler, chaplain; Mrs. Charles Thomp- 
son, historian, and Jean Aird, sec- 
retary. Mrs, Joseph Charter is 
sergeant at-arms. 
  
Hosts at Dinner   
soft Surmmer’s Day! 
  | fony 5 
Riker 
Ree SO ebby Like the sun and the breeze of @ 
BEAUTAIRE Air-Conditioned Hoir Dryer 
FE. 3-7186 
    
    
  
© jewelry ® Chine (| FLORA-MA latents’ Specialty 
718 West Huron Street nr FE 2-3220 
© Lingerie 
  
  
Mr. and Mrs, Loren McPherson 
and son, Leonard, were hosts in 
their Williams Lake home Satur- 
day at a dinner for the Retirees 
Club of Fisher Body Division of 
General Motors. 
  
  
  son of the Waiter Mackies of Tiden 
avenue. . 
Guests at the shower included 
  
    
ert Sittta ‘sosdagrectes. OPEN TONIGHT ‘til 9 
CHARGE ACCOUNTS. AVAILABLE 
          
               
   
Andre Beauty eC COLD 
—Multi-Curt Mid-Summer Specials! 
$150 Permanents “~ S10 
$1259 Permanents “~ 5 8 
__ MACHINE or MACHINELESS 
New Mobile Cutting 
a ; ” _Heirout 
Shampoo and Set ...... 
Wednesday All Day— 
Friday ‘til 9 P. M. 
NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED! 
IMMEDIATE SERVICE! 
2nd Floae Pontiac State alon Bank Sidg.—Ph. FE 5-4490 WAVE $ 
vt ba   aie oe a) 
$]75 
          
  
A FINER   
Park at Our Front Door 
  
  LaV igna’s exciting 
“American Intrigue” 
VIGUNAIRE 90% finest wool, 10% pure vicune 
Strategic top-level treatment of the intrigue 
classic, wrap-belted or loose, notch collared. 
LaVigna hand tailors it of new 
Vicunaire luxury fabric. 
$110 4 
the Cardigan . ... $8.95 
  loomfield   
  -TASHION SHOP 
o § 
among the better things... oe 
  
woe 
  1662 S. Telegraph Rd. 
         
    
         
  . 
~ - 
4 ; al? r. 
. / - y= ‘ 
(4 a - tf 
CANTERBURY full-fashioned orlon sweaters 
Here are the elite of orlon classics. 
"fer in the noted British-manner, they’re _ 
fully fashioned and superbly handfinished. What’s more 
they’re endowed with a softness that cashmere might 
envy ... wash and dry before you know it... never need reshaping. 
‘. And they’re yours in newest shades of cognac, red, 
green, grey and in white. 
the’Slip-on ..... $6.95 Ee 
      e Plaids “e Stripes © Checks 
The 
or “custom-look knit” 
in new 
' 
         
      
    
      y 
        ks \    
        
    
  “4 
  
    
“Thistle”...a beautiful new 
knit by Lofties, done with 
that precious hand-made 
look of 100% nubby wool 
chenille. The button-front 
top is frosted with a 
collar . . . ribbed skirt is 
gently flared. In charcoal 
grey and red blaze. 12 to 18. 
$39.95 
Advertised in 
MADEMOILSELLE 
in full color 
New Loftie Knits are here 
in sizes 38 to 42. —_—detaechable-white-angora 
 ae 
  
    
Lined With Suede | Rubber gloves need no longer | 
feel clammy on the hand, Now | 
they're being made with soft, | 
suede-like linings. Available in 
three colors, they also have a 
“tread” for easy gripping. 
Don't neglect to keep such work 
gloves shining clean inside as well 
yas outside. It's a simple matter of 
dipping them in and out of soap- report to parents 
suds and rinses, letting them bang children: 
over a towel rack until dry. “The child's struggle to get away | 
—_—_—_—_—~_—=_— ‘from mother is the conflict with | 
his wish to return fo her.” 
I hope readers of this column 
will also jot this sentence down, 
It can set them straight in times 
of strain and foreboding. For it 
takes- that vague phrase—‘‘the   
By MURIEL LAWRENCE 
Some. weeks ago I heard psycho- | 
analyst Erich Fromm express this | 
thought which] jotted dewn _to _ 
of adolescent | 
; 
  A dozen summits of the Owen 
Stanley range in New Guinea are 
more than 10,000 feet in height. |   LUNCH (Advertisement) (Advertisement) 
adolescent's struggle fer inde- 
DRY, SWEET UNDERARMS *25<00==0.75 a 
j;against. It tells us that his. ad- 
| versary in this struggle is not his 
; _ parent, but his own fear of inde- 
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with PERSTOP Daily. Keeps Underarms Dry 
and Odorless—Saves Clothes from Stains pendence. It tells us that when he 
is most violently demanding his in- 
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tection from perspiration and odor—rubbed- | sumed that we were the adversary 
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Get soft, creamy Arrid with PERSTOP today.   
  
      
Liquid Sachet Clings 
If you prefer a perfume that 
| clings with remarkable tenacity, | 
‘experiment with a liquid skin sa- 
chet. This highly concentrated per- 
fume lasts hour upon hour because 
it contains a generous amount of 
perfume oils blended into a unique 
sachet base.   evel No other deodorant gives 
you Arrid’s exclusive rubbed-in 
fmncuet Arnd 1s Americas 
argest selling deodorant. So don't 
be t-sate. Be completely safe— 
Use Arrid with Perstop to be sure 
Nellie 
    
          
Teens Fight Own 
in Independence Struggle 
| attacking us when we refused te Desires tures that we are, we've thought 
that our 16-year-old Jane was fight- 
ing.us when she insists on coming 
home when she pleases from a 
We've believed that Bill was 
enthuse over his new girl. 
The truth is that Jane has really 
been fighting her wish to do ‘as 
mother says; and all the time 
Bill's resentful attack upon our 
opinions has been his desire to ac- 
cept our opinions. 
If Bill and Jane felt no need to 
cling to us, the struggle to get) 
away from us would be as effort-| 
less and unresentful as the fall of 
fruit from its tree. 
Can We see then that the more} 
violent their pulls away from us, | 
the deeper the need to remain 
with us?       
If we can see it, then we are 
grmed agaihst the helpless dis- 
couragement that overwhelms us 
under attack by Jane and Bill, 
No Jonger- their adversary, we 
can remember ‘that Jane and Bill 
are defying, not us, but their own 
wishes to recoil from the respon- 
sibility of making up their own 
minds about the party and the 
girl. 
We can say, ‘But you know what 
is right for you to do just as well 
as I do.” a 
We cannot say this sincerely to a 
child when we are moved by anxi- 
ety about him. But if we are 
moved by compassion for our 
young creature’s uncertainty be- | 
tween the pull to remain our baby | 
and the pull to. trust himself, we 
can say it sincerely. 
lt is compassion that Dr 
Fromm's words should arouse in   | x “i 
‘THE PONTIAC PRE 
se we 
  : } Ae Fe = ‘a es ee ae F FE OE . pe es Se es 2) Zz 
\ aad ate ET gO ee ae ee a — fas Map eo Te ei ‘ es 4 . : = y ; oS $. h 
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f ' 3 aes ye ‘ * whee fel \ es 4 Li dy a ae sean i 
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  EDNESDAY; AUGUST 11, 1954   8s, Ww 
Novel'Cake- 
Sounds Rich 
and Yummy | Mrs. Hornbeck’s’ 
Bisque Tortoni Is 
Different By JANET ODELL 
Pontiac Press Food Editor’ 
Here’s a recipe for Bisque Tor- 
‘| toni that ‘is entirely different from 
any we've seen; this one is a cake, 
It sounds delicious. 
Just be sure to refrigerate it 
-before serving and if there’ are 
In that way the       
    any leftovers 
filling will be. safe 
The Hornbecks are counting the 
' days until their soldier son returns 
‘home from England: -he- may be 
|here by the time this recipe is 
| printed. 
> | Mrs. Hornbeck keeps busy with 
her bridge club and Eastern Star 
‘work. She enjoys her five’ grand- 
sons. 
BISQUE TORTONI 
By Mrs. C.J. Hornbeck 
‘45 cup shortening 
te pyre sugar. 
‘@ teaspoon salt 
‘4 teaspoon vanilla 
3 Well-beaten egg yolks 
l cup aifted cake flour 
1 teaspodh baking powder 
‘% cup milk 
4 egg whites beaten stiff 
*% cup sugar 
‘ey quip chopped nutmeats   ‘Walls have ears,” so.the old saying goes, | the walls act 4s a sounding board to bounce| “ eee ss Cream shortening and one-half 
but they also can make themselves “heard.” the music forward. Rubber feet on storage’ yp sugar. Add salt. vanilla and 
This hi-fi enthusiast has placed her new base and rug combine to cushian vibration egg yolks. Sift flour and baking 
three-speaker phonograph in a corner so that of bass tones. patel together and add alter- 
nately with milk. Spread in two 
layer-cake pans. 
Beat egg whites until stiff. Add 
the three-fourths cup sugar gracd- 
‘ually. Spread over batter and 
sprinkle with nutmeats 
Bake at 375 degrees for 20 min- Take a Lesson in Acoustics 
There’s Music in Air--—Too Much of It!   
3507 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 
1 Block West of Huron 
Pontiec, Michigan 
~ 
       
         Sacony washable wools, from 3.50 
Take home this twosome for under $8! (3-6x) 
Famous Sacony whips wool jersey into a pretty 
shirt shape with colorful rib-knit trimmings. 
Elasticized waistband on flannel skirt simplifies 
self-dressing and growing problems. Colors co- 
ordinate. It’s a wonderful buy! 
shirt: 3.50 (3-6x), 3.95 (7-14) 
shirt: 3.95 (3-6x), 5.86 (7-14) Come in for free Sacony bubble pspe! ( .   
  | us. And enable us fo express it so 
that it quiets our child's self-dis- 
/trust. Then he, too, can believe 
i that he knows what is right for 
na to do 
PETUNIA!   
  
Ive learned that when 
Im finally through, 
Its wise to dust 
My dust-mop too ! 
' 
| 
| 
; 
  Right, Petunia! Vacuum 
your dust-mop, and you 
won't be spreading the same 
old dust around. 
Bi) ~0r- ge       
  
     
      
   
     ; 
wim LO% DISCOUNT ~ e FURNITURE 
e LAMPS 
@ PICTURES 
A bona fide Sale of Quality Merchandise... 
Willett Maple and Cherry, Drexel Pine and 
Walnut, Heywood Wakefield Solid Birch... 
Many upholstered chairs and davenports 
and love seats... Every picture and lamp 
ao.at least 10% off. 
Terms 
Special orders, too... if the piece you want 
isn’t in stock we'll order it for you at 10% 
off ...A bona fide Sale ... Convenient 
terms, too... 15% down... up to 2 years 
to pay the balance. 
Huron 
j   
OPEN 
FRIDAY 
‘TILL 9 P. M. 
  WIGGS 
August Sale 
Fine Quality 
Furniture ot 
We eee re er reece beeen 
| 
  
e = 
Deodorizes! VITAMINS 
Need a table pepper s d: j ) FOR ... 2 Ses Tables U Ss: | upper a = maze CHILDREN’S & ADULTS on Parade... at Wiggs 
this week... Lovely new 
ideas for fall entertain- 
ing. 
    
    By KAY SHERWOOD 
NEA Staff Writer 
Cock your ears, girls, for a les--abserbs high - frequeney notes and 
son in ‘acoustics. cuts down on the distortion and 
You do. if vou've reverberation | graph toward a wall where win- 
Who cares? 
ever” had your head pound -from 
the thumping bass notes of music, nographs should be placed on a ‘dows are draped, Heavy drapery | help the situation very much. 
Drapery or fabric screens do. 
Our staircase_is_open,so-a- drape | 
or screen at-the foot-of the stairs 
isn't practical. But the engineers 
of the stairs would atleast reduce 
the effect. utes. When cool, put filling be- 
tween layers 
FILLING 
Beat one egg yolk Add one- 
fourth cup sugar and 1 tabic- 
High-fideltty three —speakerphe-— assured me that screening the top spoon cornstarch and three-fourths 
cup milk. Cool@ till thick, then 
cool and add 1 tea’poon vanilla 
| ner of the room where walls serve 
large tiving dining reom of mod-. 
es from the apartment overhead. table or, better yet, on a record 
Or if you've tried to get the storage cabinet about 18 inches In the autunin. when we spend| DO NOT LEAVE OUT OF Tit 
from the floor, advise the experts. the evenings indoors, I plan to| REFRIGERATOR IN WARM 
ee to sleep after a music | 1. placement puts Yhe high- | retire the old living-room drapes WEATHER. Fill the cake and 
‘frequency beam of music at ear ‘0 & curtain‘rod at the head of the keep chilled until serving time 
Or if you've loosened the purse jeyel for seated listeners. stairs to test the idea. 
strings for a new phonograph 
The boom in home music cquip-| _ Bass tones ang table vibrations | 4 ih Yominine voices and high ment, from children’s wecords to| ®f¢ carried through wood floors pitched laughter on sleeping be- 
high - fidglity phonographs, has and can be heard amplified bies. too . 
brought its little headaches to ™amy times, tn the room below. t 
homemakers. . The solution to this, according to Small, portable phonographe 
After a go-round with the chil- the experts’ advice. is to put a) ee aan ee . ear ees 
dren on the golden equality of si-—‘‘shock mount’ of rubber feet on} reproduc: nog very a 
lence, I took the cotton plugs out, the table, and a rug underneath tame, say engineers. 
of my ears and discussed the | Wall-to-wall carpeting is even bet- For this reason, it's practical to 
problem with William Brown and | ter, let the children put their portable 
Sam Romano, acoustical engineers. | Just how we get the neighbors UP-Stairs. if you like 
who outlined some tips on how to on the floor above to cooperate, the Cotton loop rugs are sufficient 
increase the pleasure and cut the engineers leave to our ingenuity floor covering. Linoleum or tiled 
headaches | Another phenomenon of sou floors will bounce the sound up 
We'll get better music repre- with which our family is all too fave the room, not through the 
duction, say the engineers, if we | familiar is the way volume mounts 
place the phonograph in the cor- under pressure, and travels up the 
staircase and right into the baby's   
  
Terry Best on Beach   
| ‘ ” . are . 
‘a ‘ hen to beanre sound | care. The summer shirt, now _ indis- 
orward. Youngsters, say my advisers, pensable in most wardrobes, is 
If possible, particularly in the hear higher frequencies than old- done for beach wear in terry 
er_people_and_are disturbed by 
volume, Shutting doors doesn't cloth. Can be used for wear out-_ 
side shorts or knee pants, too ; 
NEW LIQUID 
TOILET BOWL CLEANER 
with THE MIRACLE DETERGENT 
° . 
. 
. . = ee — premier ae ae ri = sacar mh mtn ats te aa ewes — ern ranch homes, face the phono- 
  Combine-the beautiful pineapple 
| crochet stitch with a pastel-color 
| rickrack! It's heirloom worthy! 
Join two or three for a scarf; four 
| for a cloth. 
       
in No. 30 cotton 
| Send 25 cents in coins for this 
pattern — add 5 cents for each 
pattern for l1st-class mailing. Send 
‘to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft 
| Department, P.O. Box 164, Old 
Chelsea Station. New York 11, 
New York. Print plainly pattern 
number, your name, address and The ONLY j liquid Pine-Scented 
Bathroom Cleaner with 
These Features—       
   
   
   
       
y/ CLEANS TOILET BOWLS INSTANTLY 
y/ OPENS DRAINS 
y/ REMOVES RUST SPOTS 
  p/ SAVES HOUSEWORK 
y/ CLEANS GLASS, EARTHENWARE, COPPER AND TILE 
y7 DEODORIZES Many wemen save their sweet- 
est smiles for the traffie cop.   
= 
__ Thompson's | SPECIAL 
WIGH POTENCY 
B-COMPLEX   
p/7SAFE-IN- SEPTIC TANKS 
Cleans! 
100 TABLETS $2.00 
NATURAL 
HEALTH FOODS . 58 Wayne FE 4.4061 
1 GET SNO-BOL TODAY- 
AT ALL LEADING GROCER       4 
.   
        
    
     
     
        
    
      
  
  iH : , 
i] , 
« 
1   
sees Soy . : c} ’ aS 2 ¢ : « at 
AED as OH Va} ee | 
i 
~ 
a ie van 
    
in the Air’ Is Title 
of Exhibit   BS, eal 
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5 | g 
: E 
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Coming Events Oekland Gunty Councli of VFW will 
he YO will be youth activities 
yite Stes Royal Neighbors of America will 
meet in the Orotto Hall on West Pike 
street Thursday et § p.m. 
(A@vertisement) 
Mrs. Ronald Reagan 
WHY DO YOU PREFER 
BLUE BONNET?   
      | 
:| oxford bags” of the 20s or the | wardian clothes and the girl wore | slim, and with the princess line 
  
“Golden BLus Bonnet Mar- 
garine has the table quality I 
like. It is so smooth spreading 
and always tastes sunny-sweet. 
As for nutrition, BLUE BONNET, 
unlike most margarines, fur- 
nishes both vitamins A and D. 
So, naturally, I choose BLUE 
Bonnet on all three counts— 
Flavor, Nutrition, Economy!”          
  ‘ é 
or 
        PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1954 } : cpheee &, Pfs 
  
  
  
  
          
  
  
  ‘i 
Pentiac Press Phetes 
It’s time for Trabajamas members (left to right) Doris | the time for the annual Moonlight Ball. The ballroom of 
Miller of West Chicago avenue, Maurene Edwards of Wolfe | Hotel Pontiac will be the setting for the dance, which is 
street and Joan Richards of LeBaron avenue to wind he scheduled from 9 o'clock until 12. Carol Doyle (above 
poster and decoration activities, for Saturday evening is| right) is general chairman for the event. 
” wwe   
  
         
   
  =e to 
=4|James Dearings bw °. 
“| Honeymooning 
|| Following Rite —_§ Saturday morning in Sacred 
Heart Church of Auburn Heights, 
| Patricia Dombroski became Mrs.~ 
James Dearing. She is the daughter 
of the Chester Dombroskis of Op- 
dyke road and he is the son of 
Mrs. I. M. Womack of East Pike 
street and Dewey Dearing of Union 
street. 
The bride chose a strapless ny- | 
lon gown with a lace jacket for 
| the ceremony. Her fingertip veil 
| was held by a seed pearl tiara and   
    
  | ed fan with white glamellias and 
| roses. 
Madeline Drzewinski was the 
maid of honor. With her biue 
nylon net ballerina-length dress 
she carried a fan of pink glam- 
ellias, 
Guy O’Berry was best man and 
Martin Wrobel, the bride's cousin, 
was another attendant. 
For her daughter's wedding Mrs. 
Dombroski chose a brown nylon 
| dress with a corsage of yellow 
giamellias. Mrs. Womack wore ny- 
lon print with pink glamellias. 
After the reception at the home | 
of the bride’s parents, the Dear- | 
| ings left for a northern Michigan 
7 honeymoon,   
  ‘ , ‘ 
Sie ‘ ‘ oie o2 a. 
sists her with a final fitting. Carot dtso ' ; 
resides on Nelson street. |Fast Indoor Drying 
| On rainy days, when you want ei td 
Martha Varney (left) of Nelson street 
admires Carol Young's ball gown as she as- 
to speed your indoor drying, place 
England's ‘Teddy Boys’ Bold Fall posnions a nonoscillating fan on a table a 
. . all fashions are taking on & few feet from your wash. Let it 
Copy Edwardian Dandies. new look for the girl under blow constantly. This will shorten 
By BARBARA ENGLISH | and bold; evening hues rich but   
    
  
»’ ee + 
    ---she-carried-a-satin-and lace-cover--}. 
  PRECIOUS i, 
“ 
4 
nai Tae 
* =. GLOBE-TROTTING. 
_CASHMERE 
Breathtaking luxury 
from our collection of 
precious fibre coats... 
“our shawl collar, 
Milium-lined, 100% 
pure cashmere, a beauty 
with round-the-world 
aplomb and a new 
———“@qistiptined fatiness: 
Beige, black, navy or 
charcoal blue. 
Sizes 8 to 16. 
$119 
  twenty. Casual colors are brilliant | the drying time of your clothes by 
Lond hours. 
| ; oners look upon them with | subdued. There's no hold on} — ~~ — 
AP Feature Writer | disapproving eyes. | fabric combinations — teather } 
LONDON — Many teenage gen- | I stopped to talk to one couple | loves tweed, satin mixes with 
erations in our country have had vho seemed quite mannerly, al-| Jersey. 
their special garb whether the though the boy wore strange Ed. | Silhouettes are mobile—shaped, 
“zoot suits’ of the 40s. heavy makeup around the eyes, | still in full swing. 
Walking down the crowded | — 
PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL   
  
streets of East End London, I 
found the newest fad to hit some 
  
  
    
  
  
  
     
       
      
                
            
were eeee eee? eee) ENROLL NOW | 
forthe Fall-Term—Day, 
Half-Day, or Evening School va = oan 
INDIVIDUAL ADVANCEMENT 
APPROVED FOR VETERANS’ TRAINING 
Becretarial, Higher Accounting. Business Administration, Bookkeeping, Gregg Shorthand, Machine Shorthand, Type- 
writing, Comptometer, and Calculator Courses. 
These skills lead to good opportunities in business. Advance- 
ment comes to those who are prepared. 
Free Employment Service 
7 West Lawrence Street, Pontiac, Mich. 
Cell, Phone or Return This Advertisement for Information             
      
      
  Cardigan, 
24.95 to 27.95 Phone FE 2-35$1 
Neumode 82 North Saginaw Street Ser 
rT 
Ss 
Se 
Se 
ee 
eee of the English teenagers — the m-m-m ! 
-{ Edwardian. dress.ot Edward Il||___11¥4 & Segingw, Eagle Thester Bldg. Pontice. Mich. JJ : 3901-1910), Its wearers are called. —ERPOMRSATS AVETTEDIS anata renee 
: 7 “Witte; phone or call ter ‘tor Free yo —__— soft. —lu ee 
Pedy Boys.” « PHONE FEDERAL 4.2352 7 TERUHOUS There has been much contro- | 
versy over the dress of the 15-to- | = _ 
Trane nope —“| CASHMERE unusual revival of Edwardian | 
dress from the upper classes: who a 
wore it after the last war. 4 
Since several teenage gangs have p 
been connected with crimes of i ‘ 
some violence in recent months, Lt The treasure of your 
| __t casual wardrobe, the 
From day-time a3 aristocrat of classics . . . Perf 
to . fe 4 precious cashmere 
_date-time.... . sweaters by Hadley, Lyle Noe om a : a 
LJ = . 
in } i G Scott, and Pringle — 
i Ss _ ‘ ~ 
2 4 of Scotland. , White, navy, 
” Pe f a f | natural, grey, red, green, 
f f + Se maize; brown or pink. $ ; 
$ t Sizes 32 to 40. 
| a 3 yd : aa Short Sleeve Slipon, 
4 « 
Strong enough for working days, ° 17.95 to 19.95 
. and sheer enough to flatter you ° ; 
through evenings $109 4 Long Sleeve Slipon, 
of fun. l] “ 21.95 to 23.95 
o eo 
Cs 
Ls 
Cs 
“         PARKING AREA FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE 
  
  
MAPLE ot BATES . Jacobsons | 
USE YOUR CHARGA-PLATE AT JACOBSON’S ee | 
    
te ae ee pee? - Pe ee, Oe ee ee ee fee ae: eae ee see oe ee     
       
         
     
    
      
      
  
    | EIGHTEEN eee | A THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1954, . Cx oe 
‘ ea. = m ‘ ° ‘ ae / | . 1 Ly | Ga Thai Te : be he 
- Wise Woman Faces Retirement With Pleasure, Rather [han lerror- +   
eee , . iw .t After Years of.Careful Prepar ation If you want to give your plast u ation 
Consider Plastic TV | vadio or TV set an extra Taster, 
If you're going to buy a new | i wee - . . 
en ee ee oat ie Nas tater washing. Make swre:] BOOkkeeper Opens Her Own Business wise to consider plastic cabinets. | before washing   
   i 
i i 
r 
ses 
An 
These are increasingly popular By ANNE HEYWOOD groups, I might get customers for, “By the time the big day came, 
my service. I was ararin’ to go, and I must 
; small } 
because they don’t warp, dont; Only about 15 per cent of the; Some women face retirement ; 
show. scratches, and are easy to world’s forests are scientifically | from their jobs with terror and a “I took these courses at night say I have quite a successful 
keep clean with soap and water. | managed. ne , * | business. conviction that there’s nothing they| im a leisurely way through the 
can do about it but live orf| y ; bri "| try to years, It was fun, and at. the day, and it a é 
a pension, and stay onthe shelf| same time it added to my social | 424) of money — to sa 
Other women ‘tan tee it in ad | ——“. pe ped poe —_" —— ~| 4 ful ve, 
vance, take it in their stride, and Honestly, I was the only one I , d 
| he i know at our company who almost “I’m 67 years old now, and the} / 
have a good life for years and ; 
vears ‘looked forward to retirement some | doctor says I have a lot of time) 
day | ahead of me still!’ 
Jane L. is one of these, Her a 
i Siren Look   
    
        
     
      
   at 60. 
Jane began preparing herself on | 
her 30th birthday, She is a book- | / | 
keeper. and a good one. And she O ate S | 
loves it 
“I decided that after I retired, 
I would set up my own little book- 
keeping service,’’ she told me. 
| ‘After all. I knew there were | 
plenty of people who need book- 
| keeping services just a few hours 
| a week. and I could handle a good | 
many part-time customers like 
that. But there was a lot of ground- 
| work I had to do. 
“First,” she said, “I studied 
a course in business manage- 
ment, where I learned how to set 
up a small service business, how 
to get new business, how to keep 
accounts. | Back Again New Heim Revivals 
Include Fox Muffs 
| and Slinky Satins 
PARIS (INS)—The flossy look 
of 1929 sirens will be ee |   
  in the fall of 1954. 
That's the prediction from | 
| Paris, where designer Secees| 
| Heim revived the swathed-hip, |’ 
full-hemmed, small-bosomed sil |7 
houette for the coming season. 
Heim, whe previewed his 
collection during the first day of 
Paris’ long-aywaited ‘fashion 
openings,” featured what he 
called the “tall look.” It con- 
sisted of a slim upper torso, 
hugged hips and skirts flaring 
from just below mid-thigh depth. 
Heim, a_ specialist in novelty | 
fashion furs, showed lemon or | | | 
| “Then I studied advertising in 
a course, because it interested me 
and also because I knew |} Would 
be inserting small ads in our local 
paper to get new business and I 
wanted to know how to do it right. 
| “I also studied publicity and 
In Buying a DIAMOND Paid give litte talks at business 
Color Helps Determine Value | : 
Color, in diamonds, is one of four factors that affects 
price. Those with body color of blue or white are 
», more valuable than those showing yellowish tinges.           stitial inka SR <= s ey 
red or whitedyed rabbit fur lin-, A leader ina newly created line of school | fastens the tab collar which is edged in 
ings in sporty weal oot ry dresses for the kindergarten set is this full-| plaid, and a deep hem is easily adjusted to 
jewels Berets matched the "| skirted style in plaid and plain broadcloth | the needs of a fast-growing lass. 
One white lamb coat was worn | with grownup fabric belt. A fetching tassel | 
over a red satin sheath dress, for | 7 —      
Re ee os 
    ~ Since the untrained eye does not readily detect 
  
    
    
    
          
    
  
    
  
  
    
  
    
      
      
  
      
    
    
  
  
    
      
         
           
   
       
            
  
      
  
  
    
      
    
   
           
       
      
        
    
    
                            
      
   
      
         
     
    
  
        
    
    
  
      these color variations, let us, by means of precision } 
instruments, show you the differences and explain, VIOBIN a startlingly slinky effect. Mail Stork Gifts to Her © 'Essence Foams Bath 
graphically, why price varies with color. WHEAT GERM Oil ne ams Other striking fur details in- = | 
cluded flat white fox hats Ab G Relax m a scented bath high 
F rt little scholar, ched to large fox muffs . . . tee t f H ith bubbles. F th essenc 
it will take only a matter of minutes - is easy to Heart response, phyncal endurance Se . — ° pa collars sen ues O Onor oe Foam seneiaannatd 
lerstand - and Wk “ly wh increased when 200 men, including | this smart little dress. There’s| 1925 - style ox . softens the water in the same 
: yee —oe fraternity, a croup of middleoaged style aplenty in that wing collar, cng over sult cad Grose Would Appreciate Party ee 
| look for in buying a diamond. , mca were given VieBie Wheet Germ | those jaunty pockets. Add interest | 1° omall — or mink : wealth of fragrance as expensive 
+ ce “*Pontiac’s Oldest Jewelry Store” exercise. aplenty with plaid bow, pockets collars on jack By EMILY POST ,, One sees this so often today, and | bath oils do, and it has the psycho- 
: : ~ SD eo St and-bands on-sleeves--Sensible-for |-Heim's—hats were shaped _'o| A reader asks: ‘‘Would jit be | in my opinion it loolss very sloppy | jogical lift of a bubble bath. 
Vein O8 & your | school and play, pretty enough for | clutch the head during the day- proper for me to give a sterk and shows an “I-don'tcare-what- | : i 
: | dress-up! Start now! ; \oe green, pave ot ee eee | shower for a dear friend of mine people-think’’ attitude. Shouldn't | Answer To Previeus Pussie 
| Please Inctude S0c Parce! Postage 8 a 1 aes i ne ses . the hats are large and flutty— | who is now living several hundred | the -hair be combed and fixed be- | | mloly) 
| © 006 9% Wed. Sole Tos 3Sinch: % yard contrast. , made of ostrich plumes. | miles from here. Her husband was | fore appearing in public? a) . 
F RED N Z COMPANY ~ Send 35 cents in coins. for this | transferred several months ago,| Answer: If possible. definitely. ~lOL Le at 
7 i _ ; but prior to that she lived in this yes! 
NATURAL | Pattern — add 5 cents for each Stop Baby Fatigue | city and all of her relatives and Sha 
| HEALTH FOODS Oe for Ast-class met ial Send With Restful Naps | friends are living here. ‘Some are . x ; te 
“ . ; oo. s [_ att Department,|__ When Baby begins to walk about | of the opinion that it would be, Floating Fragrance 
| The Store Where Quality Counts | . tiac Press ern Depa ‘| the house, he'll spend the day in| wrong to give a shower since she} asaxe a tiny ste 
58 Wayne FE 4-4061 243 West 1™%h &.. New Yerk 2. endless activities. It’s up to you to cannot be present; and others have! _ ane 0 tiny stented amenet one ; 
| 28 W. Huron FE 2-7257 | New York. Print plainly name. an guard against his becoming over- | advised me to have the shower attach it to your bobby pin. A STitc 
| dress with zone, size and style | 34 a6 should have his rest at and send the baby things to her. clever little hair ornament, it will | , 
number. |the same time each day even if he Please help me out in my dilemma | “aft Perfume wherever you go. 
| doesn't sleep. as I do not wish to be criticized.” ACROSS 
| e Plisse Gown Cool He can’t let you know that he's ANSWER: Yes, you could give | 1 Hu» — u 92 At 
| Cc 1 @] | SU ME RS POW 3 R Coolest nightgown you can climb tired because he isn't aware of it her a “shower by mail” - collect ; — 
— into this summer ts dress length himself. So watch for the signs of; all the presents, wrap them up in | 1? Incividus! 
COMPANY cotton plisse with nylon trim. fatigue: irritability and restless-| one large package and send them |)? Voirceit | 
— Chech these Necds ne ironing ness. ta. her. L think it would be even | 14 Advice 
ee - ________—_ _— __________ | nige appreciated than if she | Senner 
] OUTSTANDING FEATURES were home. Asante Asia ‘two ‘ 
| STAPP’S Say Dear Mrs. Post: Our new min-| |, yords), 
@ Refrigerator defrosts itself ; eee seers ay sees | ister will arrive next week and| contempt 
| . we would like to know how he | 3? Worship 
| and evaporates the defrost should be spoken to. (1) Shall we; demon 
| water ALL AUTOMATICALLY. address him as Doctor, as Rev- 31 Numbers, erend, or as Mister? 286 Bewildered 
e Separate big kitchen-size (2) Several members of the ™ — of WY 
: | congregration knew him well in| 30 Each 1: ha 
Food Freezer with Frozen | college. May they call him by his | Woman. ; J 
Juice Can Holder. = when meeting Rims 20: | © ioaees y 
. ; cially? . 36 Distant : 
@ Choice of white, pastel ANSWER: (1) If he has a doc-| 37 pois” 
yellow or green outside tor of divinity degree, he is called 3% — saints 
Py . . Doctor. Otherwise, he is usually 49 smoking 
T uM finish with matching called Mister. | aeviee > * . oun 
porcelain interior (2) When in public, no; but | 42 Car parts = a) . egy | 48 Shiny fabrics . . 
ne pe eee __<t a ne ee eee , | alone or within the group that | 49 Lessenin DOWN 11 Existed 23 Pollow - 
re ——_\__ @ And just look at this —+-knew...him.at_college. you could | $1 Arm senoroel) Operate 38 Abandon 
cen scien Shietheemeantnenianmmeeetinaiemian oho ta . ae call bim by -his-given name> a ene seetiueieeiaiiit itis) ‘4/1... Ananda hdl saaaiaial 
| T \ PANTRY DOOR! Dear Mrs, Post: I would like lg ae ‘ ace 4 Dephenaey 2 Forbidden 
fi b ele 
-- : . your opinion as to the good taste | 54 Educational 5 French river - = hese * Grease’ mere 
} ——— = 4 of young women appearing in - roup (ab) 6 Self-respects 26 Fable teller 46 Handle 
public with their hair up in pin | $s,aseruk. iNewly-wed africans. ss 4g Wun” curls, even when covered with a | 57 Soviet a women ort 28 Small portion covering 
| scart. —_—____ oe Republic (ab) _10 Seont ene in Shade of red ” tprettx) 
So Pretty... So °ractical ...   
          
     
    
      
    conversation piece. 
    Sie! 2 | : : 
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~ f I These Crazy Mixed-Up Keds! Every 
Ma bon [panel of the sem ora otter For tha gay touch. for “person a a teatch .”. and the shoes right and ality tables” ...nothing equals 
— left are mixed-up, too! Come in for plaid. Vernon's TAM O'SH 
ad) yours softly pry stripes of rust, char- 
——V | , treuse and green...so “right” in 
—— y GROWING GIRLS’ SCHOOL toy seing...makes your ble 
   
  Vernonware is guaranteed for 
Selected styles in golden $4% ° 1é-plece Starter Set...only $1095 ling. The lovely TAM O'SHANTER 
Also complete open stock pattern is hand-painted under the Get America’s No.1 Refrigerator Shown Ony *38122 browns and tan.s Sizes 4'2 open 
FRIGIDAIRE ue i oor 
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weather for economical trouble-free sérvice. | “ez   
  
        Prices Start Juvenile Bootery—28 E. Lawrence St. 
     
         
    As Low As... ; . 
and. also at | 5281 Dixie Highway . (Near Waterford) Phone OR 3-1894 
Family Shoe Store—928 W. Huron St. ~ : : 
| (This store open Thurs., Fri., Set. evenings to 9) it For Your Convenience Open Daily and Sun. 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. 
| ! ine 
  
t,. 
, 4 /j ; 1 / :y ; , f ? / 
           
  
   
                  
         
        
       
    
  Exercise for Grace 
1, Sit on the floor with your back 
straight, head high, legs wide 
apart. Brace yourself with hands 
on floor behind hips. Point with 
your heel, so you feel the stretch 
all along back of leg. 
Then push dewn with ball af 
feot, arching foot sharply and 
spreading toes as wide as pos- 
sible. Held each position for a - 
slow count of three. Repeat 20 
times. 
2. The second exercise is fun be- 
cause you do it to music. Use 
your favorite records, or the radio, 
and any kind of top and 
shorts that will expose your midriff 
so you can see yourself stretch it 
out. This one is called: 
right foot. Pick your “apple, 
then swing down, and repeat | 
stretch on the left side, keeping | 
time to the music. ‘ 
Work on this until it becomes a 
rhythmic, dancing, lilting thing, al- 
ternating your swoops and stretch- 
es. 
first. “Work up te 20 times. 
Use Your Hair 
Do you know how td use your 
hair? To make it emphasize your 
best points, and play down your 
bad ones? Do you use your part 
as a pointer—aim it at gour best 
feature or side (everyone has a 
better _side)—away from bad fea- 
tures or side? 
For instance, use a diagonal! part 
to point at a good eyebrow or 
cheekline, while skirting a cow- 
lick. Don’t emphasize a long nose 
by extending its line up through a 
center part.   
length of the whole body. Your 
hair can make or destroy the iF | 
lusion of perfect proportion be- 
tween head and body. 
For a Long, Thin Body: Either 
extreme height or extreme length 
emphasizes thinness. Soft full- 
ness fairly low on neck accom- Do it as often as you can at] ANITA 
throw away your oval with a big 
square pompadour. Soft, short, or 
does it. 
Round—Object: Height, and 
distraction from the moon shape. 
Diagonal side part, irregular 
high waves, one side dipping, one 
side higher to break circle. No 
’ ringlets, no mi‘die parts. 
Pear—Object: To create top 
height and counterbalance heavy   
  LOUISE GUELLAC 
Announcing the engaement of 
their daughter, Louise, to Alan Van | 
Loon are Mr. and Mrs. Louis 
Guellec of East Rundell street. He 
is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Bert | 
Van Loon of Ludington. COLBY 
lower face. Part on an angle and 
brush high and wide, but don't ex- 
pose top of ear. Keep hair behind 
ear softly raised. 
Square—Object: Create curves to 
counteract squareness, height to 
lengthen face. Soft high waves, 
roundness on top, even a slight 
pompadour. Don't dress wide 
don't middie-part. | 
Oblong—Object: Shortening and | 
widening effect. Bring softly | 
down from low side part on fore- | 
head, or use a bang. Think how 
Lerette Young's soft. low sides 
cover ears, widen cheeks. 
Heart—Object: the   
For short 
‘Theart, height and breaking of wide +}- 
forehead. Think of Jennifer Jones’ 
hair—oftén part ends over eye 
duct, and hair is done higher on 
one side than the other. Or soft 
little side bangs break the width, 
Soft fullness behind ears fills out 
slight chin. 
Object for the long heart, less 
height (bangs are good) and softer, 
This is Claudette Colbert's type. 
Remember her short high bang, 
rounded, sometimes broken, . or 
separated. Brush up for width 
above and back of ear. 
Marquis—The long diamond: 
Deep bang, and soft width all 
around over ears and onto cheek. 
Your Check List 
Here’é your inventory list again. 
Check yourself—honestly, with ob-     ’| cciver rests on. This will prevent 
    jective fairness. 
Then add your marks into this 
| week's total. See how close you 
  
  plishes best results. 
For a Short, Thick Body: Never | 
a long bushy hairdo, nor a tight | 
curly arrangement. Hair short or | 
piled softly high, with full waves, | 
is indicated. 
I'll never forget the time I had 
convincing Shirley Temple that 
she must cut and thin her hair. 
Once it was closely, softly 
cropped, her whole picture came 
into balance. 
For a Wide-Hipped Body: Hair 
Soriewhat—not} ~ eho be" Dalit’ vars 
too much or it will make shoulders | ; 
look narrow by comparison. 
For a Long Neck: Dress hair 
fairly low, with attention to the 
back, especially behind the ears 
where the long thin look is hardest |: 
on a woman. 
For a Short Neck: Brush hair 
high, leaving ears partly or all un- | © 
covered. Keep back of head neat. 
  
Complete the. Oval- 
Oval—All you want to do is keep a 
You can al- ; the perfect contour. 
ways do a middle part, and show | 
the widow's peak you probably | ¢ 
have. 
Don’t flatten your head with aj; 
low side part—or narrow your fore- 
head by panenate hair back, or 
  
    
  FINAL 
CLEARANCE SUMMER 
HATS 
DOROTHY’S 
HAT SHOP 
11 S. Seginew 
Next to Eagle Theater 
            
              
   
     
   
   
      
    
aaah 25.00 
  4 [| + te 1b? 
é   back it up with a daily 
deep-breathing session? ——— 
6. Can you relax com- 
pletely to relieve ten- 
sion — of mind and 
bedy? 
. Are you breaking your 
bad habits, tidying up 
your mind? 
8. Are you widening the 
horizon of your inter- 
ests, your friends, your 
hobbies and cultural pursuits? 
9. Do you find your view- 
point, your effective- 
ness as a person im- 
with your Sl 
} 
10. 
  
Telephone Tips 
When wiping off the surface of 
your telephone with a well-wrung 
soapy cloth, stretch a rubber band 
over the two prongs that the re- 
its giving a busy signal if anyone 
| calls while you're cleaning it. 
  
  
  This girl dons a light- 
weight plastic cover to pro- 
tect her hat during a shower. ~ SEATING a 
  | Hood folds into a tiny case.     Masterpieces 1N MODERN 
CARPET and FURNITURE 
~ |HOME OF LUXURIOUS 
QUALITY 
SERVICE: 
  featuring a new development in seating comfort 
Trendtex, tuxari- 
ous modern 
looped pile in ex- 
clusive Mohwave 
texture. All wool 
in green, beige, 
rose, grey. 
$995 Square Yard 
STORE HOURS: . 
Monday—Tuesday—W ednesday—9:30 Until 6 P. M. 
Thursday—Friday—Saturday—9:30 Until 9 P. M. 
  Mode ral CARPET & FURNITURE Co 
Phone 
  
| Sarg yt ~ pny ; 
‘ att 
peewee: Der 
sg 
a    Sry mety Se So 
i eited PLP Si kay. SL 
Special Purchase 
  
  
Lees a4 
ae 
5 f ‘gees en aoe 2th gad ew" 
ee SF : ee eRe owes st 
  . Fur-Trimmed 
COATS Osmun’ s presents—a beautiful coat for   
  
      
———“g wonderful buy! Richly styled with 
a grey Persian collar and cuffs. Softly 
flared and very flattering in all the 
newest shades. Same style available 
with white mink, blond or grey 
muskrat. 
s, 
At Same Low 
Price of 
  Other Styles to $135.00 
{vailable At Our Downtown Store Only 
Charge and Lay-Away Offered 
  51 North Saginaw Street 
Park FREE At Any Parking Lot While Shopping At Osmun’s 
if 
FE 4-4551 
Pe aber hy ” 
MPTP ots 8 See 2) ee 
eats Bled ’ i Ce 
a 
eam 
     
      
Ret od i #5) 
he ALLO I ot 
pon wer Wyn haf ier bi t 
ipwiats st 
ad 
gk 
ais 
ae 
hteab 
se 
te! 
  1 
         
      
   
     
    
  
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‘ e: 4 4 i \ ‘i bs ‘ ‘ea 8 t : 
  var a 
1954       
       
   
    a 
JOE’ ARMY By Herman Wouk 
NAVY   
   SURPLUS | FE 2-0022      
             
CHAPTER 37 | He was gripping his spilling 
The table was crowded with glass tightly, “Well,” here goes, 
flowers, and candles, and silver, | I'll try not to maunder too much.    = Tarpaulins Watecproot 
           
      ~— : ~ + and bottles. of cham . Shreds | Somebody flap a napkin at me if| 
5x7... --$3.50 Sxl2-- -$10.00 of gold and silver foil trom the [I get iicéherent. Can't stay~ for 
6x7 .... .$4.2 10x12. . $12.00 .B wine botties were scattered on the | dinner so I'm glad you called on 
' white cloth, It was seven o'clock, | me to make a toast so I can get it = <= 6x9 eee . $5.40 12x15. . .$18.00 | the h i at the head of the table | over with. I can't stay because 
es 6x9 2... .$7.20 | 12x18... $21.60 BF was stilt vacant, and no food had | I'm not hungry. Not for this din- 8x10 $8 00 15x20 $30 00 yet been served. ner. It would in fact undoubtedly 
    The officers were already bois-| disagree with me.” 
terously drunk. The exec sat at the} -He turned to Maryk. 
| right of Greenwald's empty chair,| ‘‘Steve, the thing is, this dinner 
with his parents beside him, Op-|is a phony. You're guilty. I told 
posite them were Keefer and, you at the start that you were. 
Keith, side by side, sparking the Course you're only half guilty. 
merriment with a running fire of; F’ that matter, you've only been 
shouted jokes about Old Ycellow- | half acquitted. 
stain “You're a dead duck. You 
have no more chance now of 
transferring to the regular Navy 
than of running fer President. 
The reviewing authorities’ll call 
it a miscarriage of justice, which 
it is, and a nice fat letter of 
reprimand will show up in your 
promition jacket — and maybe 
in mine. 
“I got you off by phony legal 
tricks — by making clowns out of 
Queeg and a Freudian psychia- 
trist — which was like shooting 
two tuna fish in a barrel — and 
by ‘pealing very _unethically and   
  
    COLEMAN GASOLINE 
STOVES and LANTERNS      
      ee ee ee wee 
$11.95 2 Mantle Lantern $13.95 
CANVAS FOLDIN 
      In this happy ‘Vein the party 
was proceeding when Keefer 
jumped up, yelling, “Here he 
comes! Fill your glasses! A toast 
te the conquering hero! Green- 
| wald the Magnificent!" 
The lawyer's blues were rumpled 
| and baggy, and his walk was not of 
| the steadfest, but nobody at the 
| table was in a condition to notice. | 
| He came to the head of the table 
and stood stupidly; resting a hand | 
on the empty chair, looking around | 
slack-mouthed. 
“Party's pretty far along. hey?” | 
jhe said, as wine splashed in a 
| dozen glasses and al! the officers | Navy. Did everything but whistle 
shouted greetings. Keefer made his | Anchors Aweigh. 
| glass ring with a knife. “Only time it looked tough was 
| “All right, quiet, you drunken’ when the Caine’s favorite author         
G COTS       
    
          
      COT PADS. ............... $3.95 
AIR MATTRESSES ........ $4.95 »       
         
      
          
        WE RENT TENTS ‘ +7 Ane we * | mutineers — A toast, I say!” He | testified. Nearly sunk you, boy. I 
PER WEEK | lifted his glass high. ‘‘To Lt.| don't quite understand him, since 
: | Barney Gpeenwald —.” jen course he was the author of the 
b | ARMY | They all cheered; they all a mutiny among his other 
| drank they sang For He's a We Setes to me he'd of gotten up 
| . 8 
NAVY | dolly Good Fellow in bellowing on the line with you and Willie, 
,..fliscords. The lawyer stood, pal- 
lid and skinny, his mouth foolish- 
ly twitching in momentary grins. 
“Speech! Speech!" said Keefer, | 
clapping his hands and dropping | 
into his chair, and everybody took) you know all about that, so as 
up the cry and the applause. | jong as he wanted to run out on 
girs | No, no, Greenwald mumbled, | you all I could do was let him 
| but ina moment he was a 
| alone, and all the faces at the table 
; were turned to him. The party | “Just a minute —’’ Keefer made 
settled xpectant 
| ttled into e? quiet. _| @ move to get up. 
“I'm drunker'n any of you,” he) “ 'Scuse me, I’m all finished, 
bis $20 to $500 on signature, car or furniture and said straight out that he al- 
ways insisted Queeg was a danger- 
ous paranoiac. 
“See, it would only have made 
things worse te drag Keefer in — 82 S. Saginaw St. FE 2-0022     
  
144] 
said. “I’ve been out drinking with |.Mr. Keefer. I'm up to the toast. 
the judge advocate — trying to Here's to you. You bowled a per- 
get him to take back some of the fect score. You went after Queeg dirty names he called me — final- and got him. You kept your own 
   Easy-to-meet requirements ° Fast, one-day service ly got him to shake hands on the skits all haged and paged but 
Sensible ment plans in toda ninth whisky sour — maybe the  ‘‘Steve is finished for good, 
. resay-4 : wink vempeinedneemndian y for tenth—."’ you'll be the next captain of the @ quick loan for any good reason. - 
HOUSEHOLD FINANCE om of Pontiae—— “That's good,” Maryk said. Caine You'lt retire-old—and—full 
“Challee’s a decent guy—.”” of fat fitness reports. No letter of 
. reprimand for you, just royalties 
Had to talk loud ‘n’ fast, Steve |on your novel, So you won't mind 
— I played pretty dirty pool, you |. 1\"1 verbal reprimand from me, know, in court — poor Jack, what does it mean? 
  3% South Saginaw St: ae oP panos cogunent “I defended Steve because 1 
The Kay Bidg., 2nd Fleer | — Greenwald weav grab- | found out the wrong guy was on 
PHONE: 4-0535 bed at the chair. “I told you I'm | trial. Only- way I could defend him FEderal pretty far along — I'll get to my | was to sink Queeg for you. I'm 
speech, dont worry.” sore that I was pushed into that | The Caine Mutiny 
irrelevantly to the pridé~ of” the? 
_Runs Coffee Test 
‘cate. For a week he gave away Pipelayer Drowns — 
Practicing Trade f 
i — 
ak — 
a oe a4, a ae Copyright 
  =" my, . vp 
Be | set. and ashamed of 
and thass why I'm 
| deserved better at my pipelaying. 
The youth, wearing a heavy div-| 
ing helmet, was in 20 feet of water   
        
your wine, but simply make my | tion company relayed diving aiid]~ 
teast and go. Here’s to you, Mr. | pipe laying techniques from the 
Caine’s favorite author, and ; 
  emergency signals, the instructor, 
Keefer’s face. | Tom Broome, and two other stu- 
A little splashed on Willie. It dents went down arid pulled Dar- 
happened so fast that the officers | nell up. 
at the other end of the table| Broome-said wafer rushed into 
didn't w what he had done. | the helmet. 
| Maryk Started to get up. “For 
Ch—t's sake, Barney—"’ 
| The lawyer shoved him back into opened 
lhis chair with a shaking hand. 
Keefer automatically pulled—out a - 
handkerchief and dabed at his 
face, staring dumfounded at Green- 
_ a] One Full Year Guerantee 
reenwald said, “If you want to 
do anything about it, Keefer, I'l | From Houses, Apartments, Room- wait in the lobby for you. We can |] '"8 Houses. Remain out only go someplace quiet. We're tt three hours. No signs used. 
drunk, so it’s a fair fight, You'll 
probably lick me. I'm a_ lousy Rox Ex Company ’ 
er.” | 1014 Pent, St. Bk. Bidg. FE 4-0462 fighter. 
Greenwald strode out of the | 
room, stumbling a little near the | (Advertisement) 
door. Keefer glanced around and) Now Many Wear 
uttered a laugh. No eye met me FALSE TEETH 
He dropped back in his chair.’   GREATEST “TRADES: In Our History! 
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       “The hell with it, Peor guy is | 
Just crasy @resk, Fm hungry. | . With Little Werry PRODUCTS OF AmERICAN MoTors 
| " around to apologize ' . aug sneeze " _ 
the morning. Willie, tell them to | ‘Sot,cf imsscure cats iott) sotpeTit | b bring on the chow.” 
    
  The meal was eaten rapidly in sn't cause ponses, Se —] 
| a clinking quiet, broken by an *| {Gencure breath}, Get F at | frequent low remark. The party | any drug counter. 
} broke .up immediately after the | <Abveett :   | coffee. There were five unopened 
| bottis of champagne still stand- 
| ing on the littered table, 
| Willie curiously scanned the lob- 
by when he came out of the 
private dining room, but the pilot 
was gone. 
(Te be continued) Happy Is The Day 
When Backache 
Goes Away... . Negging backache, loss of pep and energy, | 
headaches and dizziness may be due to slow- | 
down of kidwey function. Doctors say good | 
kidney function is very important to good 
health. When some everyday 
as stress and strain, causes this important 
| function toslow down, many folks suffer nag- 
ging backache—feel miserable. Minor biad- 
der irritations due to cold or wrogg diet may 
cause getting up nights or frequent passages, 
Don't neglect your kidneys if these condi. 
tions bother you. Try Doan‘s Pills—a mild 
diuretic. Used successfully by millions for 
over 50 years, It's amazing how many times 
Doan's give happy relief from these discom- 
forta—help the 15 milesof kidney tubes and fil. | 
| ters flush out waste, Get Doan’s Pills today! |      
        HUDSON'S _ Big Trade-in Jamboree at 
your dealer’s now! 
Standard trim and other specifications and 
esessories subject te change Without mulice   
          ATLANTA @& — Restarifrateur | 
Ralph Hand wonders if coffee real- 
ly is as popular as the recent hul- 
laballoo over its price would indi-        
      coffee at his restaurant, found 
many drank tea or milk even 
though coffee was free and passed 
out only about 500 cups.          
     
         
* 
ITS PERFORMANCE THAT COUNTS! 
      
  
      4 Admiral Brand New. .BEAUTIFULLY STYLED 
LIST PRICE #199%     
procera 
  - MODEL 12212 
RY ne ome geen eo sei oe. 4 BIG 21-INCH 
PICTURE!   
  
        Fe TS PL 
oe): og eer " @ Brand-new 1954 Model 
@ Big 21-nch screen at a price you 
would ordinarily pay for a t7- 
inch set 
@ Acromatic self-focusing picture 
tube 
@ Single dial UHF-VHF all-channel 
tuning 
@ Rich mahogany-color cabinet 
           
  DON’T LET OUR REMODELING BARRI- 
CADE STOP YOU—WALK 50 EXTRA FT, 
TO OUR NORTH ENTRANCE AND SAVE 
UP TO 50%. 
      
  3-SPEED 
A{DIO-PHONO 
             
   FOR YOUR CAR 
The only gasoline with the added super aviation 
fuel component Di-isopropyl. A Phillips exclusive. 
Phillips was the first to make Di-isopropyl and also HF 
Alkylate. These two components are so valuable to smooth 
motor performance that, until recently, their use was 
restricted by the U.S. Government to high performance 
Sas and these ~aviation- components can be. - 
blended into Phillips 66 Firre-Fuew for your car. 
New Phillips 66 Firre-Fuet provides increased power, 
higher anti-knock and greater fuel economy. And you 
benefit from famous Phillips 66 controlléd volatility. In 
addition, Phillips 66 FLrre-FUEL gives you the clean burning 
qualities that result from use of natural and aviation gasoline 
components. 
Only Phillips 66 Firre-Fuet contains added Di-isopropyl. 
Get it at stations where you see the Phillips 66 Shield. 
Revoluli New Oil 
double the life of your car’s motor! And it 
extends gas mileage by reducing friction. 
Trop-Artic is a superior all-weather oil 
... S.A.E. 1OW—30. It can be chilled to a 
temperature below zero, and still flow easily 
for quick-starting. Yet at 180° it retains the 
film strength needed for protection at high 
temperatures. Trop-Artic and Firre-Fuet      
   
                  
     WORLD'S FIRST! The toughest standard 
ever set up for automobile motor oil is the 
Mil-0-2104 Supplement 1 test. And the firsr 
all-weather motor oil to meet the severe 
requirements of this test is new Phillips 66 
Trop-Artic. 
Compared to ordinary motor oils, new 
Trop-Artic can reduce wear 40% or more / 
It cuts oil consumption 15% to 45%. It are worthy companion products. They go 
keeps pistons cleaner. This new oil caneven together for better engine performance, 
Prius PeTroteum COMPANY - THEALL WEATHER © MOTOR OIL 
— 
  Reg. $89.95 
*69”° 
Powerful radio plus su 
per ‘600’ automatic 3- 
. ee Sa speed phonograph. Phone 
FEderal 
3-7114 
108 NORTH SAGINAW 
     Phillips 66 Products Are Distributed in Pontiac and Vicinity by: 
ECONOMY OIL CO. 3389 Dixie Highway, Pontiac, Mich. 
FUEL OIL FILL-UP TIME IS HERE! 
it will pay you to check our summer fill prices — Phone OR 3-1281. A budget system and treated fuel oils   
        for your Convenience. Holdens Red Troding Stamps given with cash soles. 
7. J 
     
   
  
  THE PONTIAC. PRESS 
    
aah einen 
2 ale 
    
FINAL INTERIOR _WEDN ESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1954 
  “STRIPAWAY™ coniplete the full “‘stripaway,” the mechanic lifts | the 
each floorboard by its convenient ring and slides FT 
ee MICHIGAN — 
  ales TWENTY-ONE |   
EXTERIOR OF GMC “STRIPAWAY”—Only nine | front of the engine for service and repairs. Total 
seconds are required to lift the hood and swing | “‘stripaway” time for both exterior and interior 
open the side doors of the truck exposing the entire | is only 31 seconds. 
_ * 
* 
   
  “service and repairs. mechanic only wishes to service a single part 
| of the engine, the six different access areas allow 2 Se Eatag yom 
is exposed for STEP — fo | 
the hinged floorboards smoothly back along grooved | him to strip only the desired portion without un- 
tracks. Thus the entire back portion of the engine covering the entire engine. 
  
New Rule Applying to Annuity Income 
Raises Average Amount Before Tax Hit By CHARLES F. BARRETT 
WASHINGTON (®—More than a! 
million taxpayers will get q tax) 
cut under new rules for taxing | 
income from annuities or life in- 
surance included in the giant tax| 
revision act just passed by Con-| 
gress. 
The fiew rules apply to imcome 
received after last Dec, 31. 
In annuities, you generally pay 
Marines Recruit 18 
From County in July The U.S. Marine Recruiting Sta- tion in the Pontiac Post Office 
Building enlisted 18 men during | ¥°" 
July. 
Five who enlisted from the city 
were George B. Cox Jr. of 24 S.   
Floyd D. Thompson Jr., of 102 
Waterly St., and Augustine Ortez 
of 265 Rockwell Ave. 
Outcounty enlistees included: 
Daniel James Graves Jr. Pontiac Tep 
Bast] Owen Bisbee, Milford 
Richard Clair Mcintesh, Birmingham 
Prederick Harry Smith. Birmingham 
Donald Allen 
gore John Thompson, Utica 
Jacques Jr., Utica 
Brewer, Metamora   || come each year. The other $873 a so much a year to an insurance;fore. Then you figure your re- 
company, Then at a fixed age or| Maining years of life expectancy, 
year, you get back so much .a/or the fixed number of years, over 
| year for the rest of your life, or) Which you are to receive repay- 
for a fixed number of years | ments. Then you divide your cost 
* * | by this number of years. That is 
mane tig question, taxwise, is how | the amount of income you can re- 
uch of the money paid to you is| ceive tax-free, and the rest is tax- 
spl a return of the money you | able. 
paid in—and how much is interest | * *, 8 
or profit and therefore taxable. | In the example above, say you 
Under the old law, you first| had a-life expectancy of 10.years, 
figured the total amount you paid| ot a fixed 10 years in which the 
in—the total cost of the policy to| policy says you are to receive 
you. Then you were taxed each} | $1,200 a year. Your total cost of 
year on 3 per cent of that cost. | $10,900, divided by 10, amounts to 
The remaining annuity income was | $1.090—and that amount of annual 
tax-free. | income is considered tax free. You 
| would pay taxes on the remain 
For example, sa icy cost | ing $110 each year, you’ $10, pony at FeO yonwere| Thesé. amounts would remain the 
to get back $1,200 each year for|##™me throughout—even after you 
the rest of your tife. Under the old | bad recovered the full cost of your law, 3 per cent of $10,900, or $327, policy, and even if you actually 
would be considered taxable in- lived longer than your life expec- 
tancy 
Woman Steps on Gas, 
Hits ‘Police Department 
CHARLOTTE, N.C. ®—A wom- s}an driver was charged with reck- 
less driving here after her car 
  year would not be counted as in- 
come for tax purposes. 
Lo would continue until the 
$873 of ~ -free 
added up 
or 310.900. 
example from the Ith year on— 
you. would be taxed on the full/ crashed into the police headquar 
$1,200 a year jters building. 
This sudden increase in taxes! Police said Mrs. Ruth B. Smith 
was considered a hardship in many;{ of Hickory told them her foot’ 
cases. 
Under the new law, 
\ figure your total cost just as be-   
  you first| celerator as she turned a corner. 
Mrs. Smith was not hurt. GM Trucks Offer Q 
    
     
an i 8 “Rowe i . 
+   INTERIOR “STRIPAWAY" BEGINS — First interior step in the new “stripaway” 
cab now standard on all GMC cab-over-engine trucks five tons and up is lifting the seats | the same thing with the other seat 
1p out of the mechanic's way. 
I). ee Disengaging the seat lock, he swings the counterbalanced 
NEXT INTERIOR STEP — Removing the rubber mats, the mechanic turns ee en. insulated engine cover by its handles, 
four quick-release bolts securing the floorboards and engine cover. 
  
  
  Early Human 
Palikao Man 
taw-Dug Up ALGIERS, Algeria « — French 
scientists, who have been digging 
in. this part of Africa for raed 
than 80 years, have been rewarded 
by two jawbones which may be-| 
long to the earliest tool-wielding | 
humans yet unearthed, 
This ape-like creature has been 
named ‘Palikao man” after a 
village near the diggings. He ap- 
pears to have roamed the south | 
ern shores of the Mediterranean 
as many as 600,000 years ago 
Prof. Camifle Aranbourg of the 
Paris Natura} _ History 
heads the expddition Scientists | 
working with him say this is the | 
first time remains and tools have | 
been found in the company of fos- | 
sil animals which can be dated so 
early. They belong to what scien- 
tists call the Acheulean and Chel- 
lean or Abbevillean periods. 
Robinsons Share More 
Than Dented Fenders Muse um | 
  HORSEHEADS, N. Y. «®—Three 
cars collided at an intersection 
yesterday and the drivers found 
they had more in common than 
dented fenders. 
Police identified the motorists as 
| slipped from the brake to the ac-| Mrs, Margaret Robinson, Ralph L. | 
Robinson and Clifton G, Robinson. | 
They were not related. | round out GM's line of COE trucks Introduction of a “‘stripaway™) 
system for cab-over-engine trucks, | 
that allows a mechanic to lay| 
bare every vital above-frame part 
of the engine in 31 seconds was 
announced today by GMC Truck | 
and Coach Division. 
  P. J. Monaghan, vice president | 
of General Motors and division 
general manager, said the new | 
stripaway cab combines complete | 
engine accessibility with the safety 
of a rigidly fixed cab. He said 
the new accessibility system is 
being made standard immediately 
at no extra cost on all GM cab-; 
over-engine ~tCOE} models five? 
tons and up. 
Monaghan also announced the 
addition of six new high-horse- 
power models with lightweight 
features to the GM heavy duty 
“Our new COE accessibility fea- 
tures and the additional models to 
answer requests of operators who, 
réstricted by state length laws but 
| anxidus for maximum payloads, 
| are turning in increasing numbers 
lof the COE unit,” Monaghan said. 
‘Sales ty og for the industry 
show tha’   He then lifts out the | 
two and one-half tons has tripled | Strip away all access points fo the 
| Since 1948. 5 | engine is only 31 seconds. 
“Biggest single growth is in the ‘We feel we have solved one of | 
heavy duty field of 26,000 pounds | the biggest COE problemis—engine | 
GVW_and up (five.tons and over) | accessibility — without sacrificing 
where the percentage of COEs | safety,” Monaghan said. “The 
grew from 6.9 pe® cent of the (driver has maximum protection | 
industry's sales in 1948 to 20.3 | when the cab is bolted solidly *! 
per cent of the industry's sales the frame. 
in the first quarter of this year.” “Also, because time means big | 
Monaghan said that the heart of ,™Oney to operators, the new strip- | 
the stripaway cab is a system of 4¥4y features are economical be- 
cause the mechanic can quickly 
strip any section of the engine he 
wishes to check or service. It is as 
senseless to waste time and money counter-balancing the seats so they 
can be slid up out of the me- 
chanic’s way until] the seat back is 
|paralle! with the ceiling. This al- 
lows him to remove the ehgifie |‘? @*pose— the —entire “engine tan | hood, fold back the two hinged reach an oil filter, as it is for a 
| floorboards and have complete ac- | ™4n to rip off the front of a house 
leess to the rear of the engine, | Just to move out a chair.” 
Both engine cover and floor. | _ The stripaway cab is now stan- beards are held in place by four dard on all COE models F-430 
quick-release bolts, Besides being | 994 up. hinged, the floorboards are Five of the six new models of- 
mounted on 9 track so they fold (fered by GM are in its largest 
back quickly, Tests show ft takes | size, the 900 series. All five have 
a mechanic familiar with the | the six-cylinder GM diesel engine system only 22 seconds te fold | which develops 225 horsepower and | up the seats, remove the engine | offer such weight-saving features | cover and fold back the floor- (45 aluminum axle housing, heat-     boards. treated frames and lightweight | Government recently ordered 
Quick access to the front of the | wheels strict quarartine regulations on ° 
engine is provided by opening the Both COE. models have a shorter, | forced along the country’s north 
hdod top. The two side doors fold ; 72 inch bumper-to-back-of-cab 
open like cupboard doors afd the | measurement which allows them to | seat easily up and back until its back is parallel to the ceiling of the cab uick, Easy Access to Enatile 
He then doeg 
  uncovering the entire top of the 
Sales Taking Big Jump on ‘Stripaway’ Models having 6é-foot 
length limits. These two COE’s are “western ‘Slates. 
|models DF920-67, rated at 31,000 
pounds GVW and 65,000 pounds 
sew: and DFW950-47, a tandem 
axte modet -rated-at-42,000 peunds 
GVW and 70,000 pounds GCW. 
The new conventional models 
are seven inches shorter from 
bumper-to-back-of-cab than pre- 
vious 900 series GM models, per- 
mitting greater payloads. 
They are 0930-67, with GVW of 
30,000 pounds-and 65,000 pounds 
GCW, model DW950-67, a tandem 
axle unit with 42,000 pounds GVW 
10,000 pounds GCW: and 
57,000 pounds GVW and 90,000 
pounds GCW. 
The other new modet-——is-- 
FW630-50, a light weight, COE tan- 
dem-axie unit with #,000 pounds 
GVW and 70,000 pounds GCW. It 
is powered by. the GM 303 cubic 
inch gasoline engine developing 200 
horsepower. 
  
Quarantine Border 
ATHENS (INS) — The Greek 
ern border as a precautionaty 
measure against unconfirmed re- 
t the percentage of COEs | total front opening takes only nine | haul two 24foot trailers or a 22- | ports of a cholera epidemic in 
sold annually among trucks over | seconds, Hence the total time to! foot body and a 28-foot trailer in/ satellite Bulgaria. 
    70-67, a tandem axle init with 
       
Per yeweed   
  
    sound end vibration. Plus cleaning fectvres you can't dismiss. 
Se Easy te Use! So Light te Lift! $88 IT 
DEMONSTRATED — YOU WILL BE 
       
     THAN OTHER CLEANERS OF THIS TYPE 
me 5 | 
\ wrou 
AND 
NO OUST BAO move 
pe : Simp! i row pope imply plece the 
= yd yon cleaner in the conter 
qneralys tev ow: of the rooms wen- iit pplet 
CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY 
  
  
NOTICE of TAXES 
CITY OF PONTIAC 1954 City and School taxes will be due and payable at the office 
of the City Treasurer August 16, 1954 through September 18, 
1954 without fees. 
Payments made by mait must be postmarked net later than-Sep- 
tember 18, 1954 to avoid penalty. 
September 19, 1954 @ collection charge of one per cent (1%) 
will be added and one per cent (1%) additional each month 
thereafter on any unpaid City and School taxes. 
All 1954 City and School Taxes remaining unpaid as of March |, 
1955 will be payable at the County Treasurer's Office, subject to 
additional penalties as provided by State Law. 
M, M, ASHBAUGH 
City Treasurer 
      Electric 
an electrical voltage. 
  “SHOCKING” DESIGN—An electrical engineer in the General 
laboratories at Pittsfield, Mass., “grew’’ 
“sunfiower"’ while measuring electrical voltages. ‘‘Petals’’ of the 
flower are electrical discharges around two terminals charged with this unusual 
    
By LAURA Z. HOBSON ! 
MAYBELL, Colo. (INS)—Public 
phone 766F2 isa side-winder on the | 
wall of an “open 24 hours” cafe, 
a one-story white stucco building 
that goes with a gas station in this | 
town of 107 population in western | 
“To call the operator,” says the | 
legend on the black, double-bar- 
reled box, “turn crank briskly 
with receiver on hook. When 
crank again.” 
The three hamburgers we or- 
dered were served on three 
squares of waxed papers: my 
with no saucer. But the four 
beoths at one side of the 
place were freshly painted in 
green with yellow trim; and the 
eight round stools at the counter 
looked like eight plump yellow 
flowers on green stéel stalks. ‘Cows Just Went Down’ 
Sums Up Ranching Woes 
|in LA many times.” 
through talking hang up and turn | + 
s | 
Westerners do, and when I took the | 
lead, she sounded a bit shy. 
“Rosemary Hertzog,” she told | 
me and watched me write it down. 
Was she born out here? ‘‘No, Chi- 
| cago, but I was raised in Califor- 
tnia. Glendale, that's near——" 
“I know,” I said. 
She was pleased and began to 
talk more easily. Yes, married. 
“I have five children. My hus- 
band Paul is a cowpoke—you 
know, a cowboy. We used to 
have our own stock, 70, 80 head.” 
Had they sold their ranch? 
“Cows went to nothing,”’ she said. | 
*‘We had to sel] the calves. Our   
  Behind us a giant juke box of- 
fered 100 choices of the latest dit- | 
ties, ballads, cowboy songs or / 
torches. 
“‘Hayburners—Hoss Race” was 
the name of one pinball machine | 
and “Double Action’ the other | 
Each bore a sign, ‘““This Game for 
Amusement Only — No Gambling | 
Permitted.” 
The wall you faced at the counter 
was plastered with humor. “Yes, 
we serve crabs, but we'd rather 
serve pleasant people,” is a sam- 
‘ple “Attention, patrons: Knives, | 
forks, spoons, ashtrays and salt) 
shakers not a medicine, so please 
| don't take them after eating.”’ 
In other words, it was a cafe 
;you can find a thousand times | 
over in a thousand small American | 
towns on the great American high- | 
ways. 
The “different” thing in this 
ene at Maybell was the thin- 
faced, dark-haired young woman 
who was so busy behind that | 
counter. 
It was a tense tace, somber, in- 
telligent. Somehow .I felt she | 
wasn't a “career waitress,”’ that   
    this was a fill-in job, or an emer- | 
| gency one. 
| Though she kept darting glances 
;at my notebook, she didn’t “just 
| get talking,” the way so many) 
  
  
     Wanted Men and 
To Help Stop This in Oakland County 
  Automobile Safety Belts are the ONLY thing tt that will save you, if you ore 
in an accident. 
If you love your wife or sweetheart, don’t let her die in the “DEATH SEAT” 
“of ory autormobilé, ike the Mother “did above: 
Protect yourself, too. 80% of highway deaths are caused by doors spring- 
ing open, and people falling out. 
Wear your car like a suit of armor—fasten yourself to it—ond you will 
live through a smash-up. 
Belts fasten to the frame, easy to install. 
AND THE COST IS ONLY $12.95. 
Send check or money order to The Suicide Club, Inc., 
Your SAFETY BELTS will be sent out the 
some day order is received. Belts come in Grey, Green and Maroon. 
DEALERS AND A DISTRIBUTOR ARE NEEDED FOR OAKLAND COUNTY. 
1F YOU ARE INTERESTED IN BEING A DEALER OR DISTRIBUTOR “Ave., Royal Oak, Michigan. 
WRITE FOR DETAILS. 
it you have a teen age son or daughter in 
carelessly, you shouldagive them a copy of 
of some of the worst automobile accidents of 1953. 
send 25c in x77 or stamps, to the address above. Will hold 2,000 pound jolt. 
your family. of if y« 
“DEATH ON THE HIGHWAY.” 
There is a life-saving story on every 
page. Any person who sees this booklet, cannot help but be a better driver Women 
  
1414 N. Woodward 
mr hawe a friend that drives 
Twenty pages 
For your copy, 
    | girls,” she said. “9'4, 7, 6, 5, 2. 
Pant wood to be im the Air Corps.” about the kids and Paul. 
“I have three boys and two 
She smiled and looked younger. 
“It took an act of Congress toe 
make him a Pfc.” 
“The Draft Act?” I said and 
she smiled again, but it wiped off 
| fast. 
“Anyway,” she went on, “I fin- | 
ally got this job. It's $35 & week, 
and a dollar a day, about, in my 
tips . 
“Just a dollar?” but I glanced 
down at the vacated places on the 
; counter, and I saw one nickel, one 
dime, and then nothing. I said 
I'd been reading a lot about ranch- 
ing income and farm income. 
“I don’t blame the govern- | 
ment,"’ said. “Some 
folks do blame it, bat I don’t. 
Cows just went down—that’s all.” 
“I love to travel,” I said at last. 
“You run into the most wonderful     » ‘IN AMERICA'S LOWEST PRICED      
WILLS" 
    GOES WHERE OTHER 
TRUCKS CAN’T GO—MADE BY THE WORLD'S 
LARGEST MAKER OF 4-WHEEL DRIVE VEHICLES   
   
   
   
   
      
NEW 6-Cylinder, 115 HP, Super | Hurricane Engitie . .. L-Head 
vss 7.3 Compression Ratio: 
sponse efficien 
pay = sg 
Stainless Steel Exhaust Valves for greater Efficiency 
and Longer Engine Life. 
Extra Heavy Duty Clutch for Heavy Loads and smooth, 
Trouble-Pree Performan 7 ion. At every gives low fuel consum 
truck shows th full load, the Wi 
Larger Carburetor Capacity built for 
1W climbing grades as steep as 60 %. | 
3-Valve 2 Sreree Fuel Pump 3 T 
NEW 2x2 under extreme tions of 
aluimde — temperature. 
    
Kaiser-Willys Sales Division, 
Willys Motors, Inc. 
COME, SEE THE MOST ECONOMICAL, GREATEST PERFORMING TRUCK IN ITS FIELD 
Willys Sales & Service 695 Auburn Ave. 
Pontiec, Michigan Masters K-W Sales & Service 7675 Highlend Reed 
Pontiac, Michigan 
  
PO 
  50 Ib. Bag 
  Mich. U. S. No. 1B 
ATOES NORTHERN 
TISSUE 
  sae | en omen Dee 
    
2 Lg. Pkgs. 
  oS Snow Crop Frozen 
STRAWBERRIES 
  10 oz. Pkg. 
    Tender Beef 
CLUB STEAK 
  Borden’s 
Canned Biscuits 
; oe 10° = 
      
Young Tender Beef 
Round Steak 
T- Bone Steak 
09: Pure Ground Beef 
Hamburger “Young Tender Beef 
Pot Roast 
BLADE CUT 
(35: 
  4 wu». $1.10     Sliced Bacon Tra-Pac Young Tender Beef 
SIRLOIN 
STEAK 
      
Hormel flolled 
Pork Sausage 
35} LOUIS 
197 OAKLAND AVE.   
  OPEN SUNDAY SPADAFORE We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities   
FREE PARKING 
Sale Good Wed. Thru Sat. 
         TOP QUALITY Only the finest frames ang top 
quality lenses are used in Nu- 
Vision's BIFOCAL GLASSES— 
assuring you of the finest 
glasses money can buy!   ello App t Necessary @Your Filled 
@ Satisfaction Guaranteed 
of you are not satisfied 
os of strength of lens 
  
      
Ex POW Goes or Ambossodor to US. 
—SAN- ANTONIO, Tex. .-_Cpl_| Felix —de—Lequerica,..   , 
OnTriat AN. SR ee when : who. was y bk 
* industrial Air Force 
Batchelor Accused of kin wen ral eager, | thet bo ir Poet died 
Aiding Enemy While in| "Cosccaecn poe 1 Sh ae Generalissimo Francisco Fran- ——— 
Commie Hands co's government announced last i 
night De Areiza will replace Jose || THERE'S THR, PONTIAC C PRESS, WRDSEIDAY, AveusT ii, a 
week earlier, police reported yes- 
terday. 
They took a wrist watch and 
costume jewelry. 
tie 1 bar at Sn tera 0 hae about one-thousandth that of ait. do on igre th   
     
    
Good landscaping is said to add sane dt tawe a Gey ey san tee 
  
ong 
  
  
  
  
Claude Batchelor, who chose to | envoy for the past four years. 
stay with his Communist captors | "€W ambassador, 45, was previ in Korea and then changed his | US!Y ambassador to Argentina. 
mind, is t trial bef ese plat tele “whe posed ‘» burglars Enter Home 
on charges of aiding the enemy | Of Dying Crash Victim 
while a war prisoner. 
The eourt martial had been ; broke—inte—the-home-of_Frank J.         
"The Army said the new date was 
set after consultation with Bat- 
  =) LEVIS 
WANTAGH, N.Y. @-—Burglars 
scheduled to start in mid-August. | Snyder Monday while he lay in 
Meadowbrook Hospital, fatally 
burned from a jet, plane crash 8   
  By the Score at 
MILLER'S DEPT. STORE     
chelor’s attorney, Joel Westbrook, 
| but Westbrook told reporters it was | { 
| ridiculous to expect him to on 
+ pare a defense -in--one month wo 
charges he said it took the Army | 
five months to prepare. 
Twenty-two U.S. prisoners orig: | 
inally decided to stay with the} 
Communists. Later, Batchelor and | 
Cpl. Edward Dickenson of Crack- | 
er’s Neck, Va., returned to the| 
U.N side, Dickenson was convict- 
ed by a court martial on _—— 
charges and sentenced to 0) 
years... A | LEVIS 
      i" to Size 16 |Motorist Loses Diamond 
‘Making Left-Hand Turn | 
    
                            
     
   | INGLEWOOD, €aiif. «—Mrs.’ fff | Peggy Huston complied with traf- \DER AN 
fic laws yesterday but she told 
police it cost her a $2,500 “iamont 
ring. “Best for Children” 
The woman reported that as acl 
gave the arm signal for a left turn | TEL- HURON 
the ring apparently fell off her) PIN ENTER 
finger. She discovered her loss | SHOPPING C moments later, returned to the in- Open Thurs., Fri. and Sat. 
«ct tersection but couldn't find the | Until 9 P. M. 
  
» Tae 
nT Fis F) 
hui: WN ONDERLAND Yor 
Boys and Girls} 
9 and 12 Foot Broadloom M-59 at 
Williams Lake Rd. 
3-2502 omens 
  
  
  
BUY YOUR 
Levi's       | Ramsey's 
DRY GOODS | 
121_N. 
Walled Lake ‘Pentiac Rd. 
MA 4-136! 
          
THE WESTERN CUT of LEVI'S Overalls will 
  j THE LONG WEAR you'll get from LEVI'S will give you a broad-shouldered, slim-waisted out- 
door look you can't get in any other blue jeans! AMERICAS FINEST OVERALL 
— Ss amaze you. They're cut from the world’s heaviest 
denim, reinforced with Copper Rivets—then stitched 
so strongly you get a new pair free if they rip! 
THE BEST BUY you can make inoveralls today is 
LEVI’S—the original Western blue jeans. @ rec sane LEVIS ie euersvence ce tee ©. 8, PATER 
OFFiCe ANS DENOTES OVERALLS AND OTHER COOmERTS Bane 
encr or Lew! sTeeees © CO. Gare OF ree, G2 PRARCISCe 
      
  
  
At Joe’s Army-Navy 
Surplus Store _ G 
Thow LE WE S$ Just North of State Theater 
—_—_—_——— 
| B uy Your Levi’s at... 
GOODMAN'S DEPT. STORE 520 S. Saginaw, Block North of Wilson 
MEN’S Get Your LEVI'S at BOYS’ 
Better Clothes 10 A V E" b} 
for Less!   
    
| Goes Luggage 
at Lower Prices! 
        
158 N. SAGINAW ST. (NEXT TO SEARS) 
    
Sane SE tr Re OL ome   WAS NOW 
Beige Floral Axminster ...... 12’x23'2” $259.15 $194.36 
Beige Sculptured Wilton .....12’x23’ $489.14 $366.85 
Grey Round Wire Wilton ..... 12’x28'9” $588.04 $441.03 
Green Scu!ptured Axminster ..12’x24’4” $489.90 $355.90 
Grey Sculptured Wilton ..... .12’x24’ $489.14 $366.85 
Grey Leaf Axminster ........ 12’x17’7” $185.50 $139.13 
Rose Leaf Axminster ...12’x1411” $176.02 $132.00 
Grey and Cinnamon Leaf 
Axminster . . 9x10’ $109.50 $ 82.12 
High Pile Champagne ....... . 9x 64” = §$ 94.68 $ 71.00 
Grey and Cinnamon Leaf ....12’x10’6” —- $153.30 $114.96 
Green Sculptured Wilton ..... 15’x14’6” $385.45 $289.10 
Beige Round Wire Wilton ....12’x32’2” $496.40 $372.30 
Green Twist .............-. 12’x16’9” $333.90 $244.20 
Beige Leaf Tone ...... ..12’x16 $318.95 $231.95 
Green High Pile Twist ... 12°x13°3” $220.15 $144.90 
Rose .... 0.0.0. awe ee eee eee 9’x38” $ 29.85 $ 20.89 
Green ........eeeee eee eee ee 1ZX 8’ $ 39.80 $ 19.90 
Rust Floral ..............+55 12’x 3°10” $ 62.50 $ 25.00 
Rose .... 00.00 ce eee ee eee eens 6’x 9°5” $ 95.70 $ 71.78 
Rose ........ce cee cee cece eeee 6x 66” $ 59.80 $ 29.90 
Green .... 0... 0c cece eee ees 9x & $ 95.70 $ 47.85 
Many Green... 00. ccccecececceeeees 9x 6’ $61.50  $ 28.50 
hha, Rwe ra -}2'x-6'9°—-$120.55 $ 58.2541 
Other Green ........0.-0 cece ences 6 x 66” $ 60.00 $ 25.00 
Remnants Beige ...........05. 2c eee 7’x 810” $ 98.00 $ 54.95 
and Roll Throw Rugs 
¥ Green .....6...- cece eee ween 36x36” $ 14.95 $ 6.95 
Ends Rose... 2... ceseveeeeseceeees 4x27” $10.60 ~ $ 5.30 
That are Cocoa Cotton .........0..08- 3x 29” = $ 7.95 $ 3.00 
Rose ........0: eee eee eeeees 4’x41” $ 13.27 $ 6.64 
Not Rose ......ccceeeceeeeeebaees 72”x29” $21.00 ~—$ 10.50 
_Listed! __— Green Carved ...........-+--- 72”x29” $ 59.95 $ 28.50 
Basted! Green Carved. —5'x-5'3" $18.39 $9.20 
Rose Candy Stripe .......... 8'11"x28” $ 21.00 $ 9.50 
Candy Stripe ..........-++--- T2”x27T” = $:11.95 $ 5.95 
Mc Candless c Candle Pontiac’s Oldest Locally. Owned Floor Covering Firm! 
11.N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 
‘     
3507 Elizabeth Lake Rd. GIR 
1 Block West of Huron LEVI S 
           
   in. Pontiac 
at... BROTHERS 98 N. Saginaw St. 
LEVI’S FOR MEN, WOMEN,    
  BOYS AND GIRLS 
  Ye SSS 
BOYS” ——     
    
  
    for the 
entire family 
ot... 51 S. Saginaw St. 
    Buy Your LEVY’ at Pontiac’s Largest Exclusive Men’s Store! 
HUB CLOTHIERS 
          18-20 North Saginaw St.   
   . al 7 7 Fy | Lg 
i : }\ i ie Fs } 4 : f : ay esi 3 5 |: 3 - aro rt et \ = a, 7 F: 1 
\ ; ; ‘ ’ por gels UE Some sate * 
\ / } , f atl é ee ey r) rey ) ook | | f i Eg ee \ ; ’ 
} 7 | nis | oe : oe os 
“THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1954   
Fresh ian. wee Se 
Green esis sear 
Red Radishes.. “=== 
aCucumbers..... “== 
Green Onions.. ===* 
Instant Coffee = = *1.49 
Frozen Strawberries = 27° 
Tomato Juice “===" 2:27° 
Cigarettes... ===..~°1.99) “.VO4 
|Del Monte Catsup 2:39° = a37 Baby Foods .. “mam . . 439° Cormed Beef... .=0, . . = = 43 
Canned Milk. . we ; hn AT —Can-a-Pop . _ inate, . » 6 te 59° 
ol Sliced Bread... 15° Kosher Dills ... daw. . 225° 
Velvet Flour 2". . 5. hbo 59 ie A iPork: Beans <‘ 
Hi Ho Crackers == +.» 37° a hep to 
Chicken Pot Pie =". 2s. 79° I note ato Juice | %: | 0: 
Cracker Jack == ..6+-29° = rw ak ny         
    
    
        
      
        
      
  
  
                    —_— Drop. COOKICS crrecareroorret— Hb se 43 bs a Oe Weg To 
Instant Desserts 1% 2 19° jo) | GZ ‘Swift Ss Pre 
Creme Sandwich "wa." "39° Vienna Sausag eo — lS 
Frozen Tuna Pie ~~ 33 ‘1 5 — Qype ~ Corned Beef. ‘Hash ene ie 29: 
Star Kist Tuna chant Peek YH. a 35 Mee oe Oe to wie te ; ) 
| Buster Brend “Tidy Howse =| Liquid Suds For Dirty Hends t Size For Greasy Hands In Plastic Bag 
wxeo nurs | LuNcH BAGS |~SPRITE | BORAYO | BAB-O- | WHIZ SOAP |WRISLEY SOAP] AiR wick | —— 
Con 49€ cr. 10¢ ‘het, 29C 2 con 35¢ 2 con 35¢ 2 cass 27¢ 8 rer 59 “pet. 59C 
a Giant Pockage Regular Size Bors Both Size Bars Reguler Size Bers Beth Size Bers For Easier Washing 5 Banded Bars Glent Stee 
a ; SILVER DUST LUX SOAP LUX SOAP ‘LIFEBUOY LIFEBUOY LIQUID LUX | SWAN SOAP | AJAX Cleanser 
|g | Bw Be | 2m Be | Su 2 | Pu Bee | B39 | abe | Pe BEY Doggie Dinner Spot Miller's Dry Shortening Large Package Large Peckage Large Package Large Package 
DOG FOOD | DOG FOOD DOG MEAL _ SPRY RINSO SURF LUX FLAKES | BREEZE-- 
2 cone 19¢ 3 "Com 25¢ 5 tes 69¢ mi tia i 30¢ 30 31¢ 
Kroger Helps You Buy More 7” Your Money! 
      
     
  
      _THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY,-AUGUST 11, 1954 . 
  Two U.S. Govt. Grades... Commercial or Choice 
U.S. GRADED “COMMERCIAL” 
       
     
     
  Good nourishing beef at a money-saving Kroger price ‘4 
IDENTIFIED WITH THE YELLOW AND BLACK LABEL — - 2 
cc J, Mien 7 it Is U. S. “Commercial” — THIS STORE ONLY... a Cd GS, | _ sae é —~ 
containing all the feed : , ' {2 Pres J | 
values ef higher grade beef. 
Has less marbling ef. fat. 178 NORTH 
  ae, 
ROUND, SIRLOIN, T-BONE, } 
PORTERHOUSE, BONELESS RIB STEAK U. S. GOVT. GRADED “COMMERCIAL” 
Chuck Roast i. » 
Rib Roast .c ame ..<53' Boneless Stew ~:~ «59° Hamburger “ws 3. 39°      y ib. 
Kroger-Cut Tenderay gives you more meot, less 
bone—less waste, The Kroger Tenderay method U. S. GOVT. GRADED “CHOICE” KROGER-CUT makes U.S. Choice Grade Beef tender without . 
ageing . . . without loss of flavor and juices. 
            Tender (0 Times out of [0 IDENTIFIED WITH THE BLUE AND WHITE LABEL 
  
  
  
    
   
  TENDERAY 
         
  Excess fat ond bone 
removed before roast 
is weighed and priced. 
No stringy neck beef. 
U.S. GRADED “CHOICE” TENDERAY U.S. GRADED “CHOICE” TENDERAY 
Chuck Roast ». Sirloin Steak u. b. 
Veal Roast .. =r... 49° Sliced Bacon =:"..+63' Ground Beef =... 3-1. 
   ? 
ry Poy te Baye ts if : 
a ‘ #4 
j a? 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1954 * { : * my | 
a 
    
  ‘Karen Hoff Picked a   ah 
May Be Slowed 
  “Certainly the extensive damage 
to the corn crop this year is a Hog Production-| i 
  erly Jeanette, to Edward Arthur 
Gesell. The prospective bridegroom 
is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Arthur 
Edward Gesell of Rochester, N. Y. 
The couple has set an Oct. 22 
wedding date, ‘ 
  
  mately 200 children who have taken will Reign Over 
Labor Day Event I 
  
a Davison High School senior, 
and Patricia Taack of Imlay City, 
a 20-year-old Michigan State Col- 
lege junior. s Romeo.Peach   
    Dies at Lake Orion LAKE ORION — Fred N. Alien, 
preminent civic leader and funeral 
director in Lake Orion for the past | j 
38 years, died suddenly at his 
se erst = Day at Walled Lake |= ay j * Acting as master of ceremonies home, : nt St., . 
te the national ay at q ake was Romeo attorney Gerald Mc-| Born in Pontiac June 27, 1885,|S7uP of seven explorer oo NOW € Halt 
Agriculture Undersecretary True | . Lean who kept the 10 contestants’ | he was the son of Charles and | ‘om here will start ov hit Calton 
D. Morse added that tarmers may Planned by Children identities secret untit the winners | Atice Allen. He attended the Roch- | °° pack trip peed A ers 
be forced to “slow down their in- | “| were announced. lester elementary schools, graduat- anor age snd a att ane scouts 
crease in livestock production. AVON TOWNSHIP — Approxi-| 7), girls, representing five coun-|ed from the Pontiac High School y   ee es ton 
| Benson Sees Livestock Miss Pontiac, 18, Wins leent Lake ~ tealey Cs Park airy 
| Cut Due to ‘54 Decline Romeo Peach Crown nS ae ee ee 4 
in Corn Crop. in Annual Competition The exsoctation, which is 8 7350 Highland Rd. 
es prised of residents living on 
WASHINGTON CIN Agricw- By LEE WINBORN north side of Elizabeth Lake road 
ture Secretary Ezra Taft Benson Press Romeo Correspondent on Crescent Lake, also heard -re- 
said today America’s farmers may ROMEO — Lovely Karen Hoff, ports on the receiving of 350 loads 
be forced to slow down livestock 18, of Pontiac won the title of of fill dirt for beach improvement 
production because of a 15 per Romeo Peach Queen in a highly and a revision of by-laws, 
cent reduction in the 1954 corn competitive contest staged in the Mrs. Stanford Sterans was ap- 
crop. Romeo School auditorium last pointed membership chairman, and € welt 
The secretary made his state- night... a $3 fee was levied on all mem- NOW ; 
ment following Tuesday's report { The brown - haired, nazel - eyed | bers for special projects and im- Gallon 
iby the Agriculture Department *| Karen will reign over the annual : , provements. 
* |showing that drought conditions 4 a three-day Peach Festival, Sept, 4-6. | at RS Other officers elected were Stan- 
|caused an overall five per cent : - The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl) “FRED N. ALLEN ford Sterans,: vice-president; Wae 
-*. |decline in crop production esti-| BEVERY JEANETTE HAVENS | Hoff of 270'2 East Blvd. S., she . ter Nelson, recording secretary; HOMOGENIZED 
“ ;|mates during July. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Havens of| wag chosea Miss Pontiac July 31. . Robert Ollila, treasurer, and Lewis 
= i! ssid: “The tow este $660 Highland Rd. announce the en-| She is 5’ 8” tall and her measure- Funeral Director Long, Wiliam Thomgecs, aad Wal 
as ae ae aa ia gagement of their daughter, Bev-| ments are 34-24-35, ter Nelson,   
    
PASTEURIZED 
    
  now Of) cm 
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    Cattle numbers hit a record ties, carried placards bearing the | and later graduated from the De-| “Hartley Thornton, Explorer Scout 
high st the beginning of this set secrestion peugrans, wil Jour.| mmmes, of peaches. The sour judges troit Business College. Lerten Tih accompany Bal A Good Used Car? 
and 1954 program jour- | inte each one ually , yout hog production ney to Walled Lake tomorrow for | wefore making their final selection. Mr. Allen was a life member Barry Beals, Dennis Be eee Lu | 
Lawrence Scharer, director of | contestants were introduced. as well as the OES and the Ox- Catan onte Rochester 
fri Benson said that the indicated the program, has scheduled a day ford RAM Chapter No. 4. He was | blazed by Kit ; 
FS | record of oats this tun wind wesiies ho foes stan Oakland | In treking these pathways the and SAVE = > iS ej production year | of for all involved. to UP | other representatives were Pa- aso a member of the boys will view wildlife and some on = ath, St am. tr) —more than 1,500,000,000 bushels— this years recreation program. tricia Poljan, 18, of Romeo; County Sportsmen's Club. of the natural wonders of South- 
= SBrrn offsets ‘‘to a considerable extent Four buses will pick the children Maybelle Krause 18, of Algonac; . wife, Ione, and America. 
iz Onited- Press Pbete} the reduction in the corn crop.”’| up at —9-:30--and each—child will » ae, ‘ Survivors are his ; » west 
Patricia Ann Kelley, 18, of Fre- | ¢4% sons, Ronald M. of Lake Qrion| En route to Cimarron, the group 
. FEATURE ATTRACTIONS—Pretty Lorna Pettis, 16, of Victor- | He added that barley also will be| have one dollar to spend as he ser; Suann Smith, 19, of Utica; rn Lansing. One | will over in Chicago to visit 
ville, Calif, poses in a cactus bed as she gets acquainted with plentiful. har | eaees Shirley Booth, 18, of Pontiac; and Robert Ft anne allen |the Adler Planetarium, the "Field - 
“Hopper,” desert crow tamed by a Future Farmer of America. Lorna | ,, The Teport showed. Howsuer, Rise " Dawn Hafer, 19, of Utica, and | °+ 1 ake Orion, also survives. Museum, andthe Shed Aquari- 
has been named “Sweetheart of the Victor Valléy FFA” and along aw Southfield Park | Denna Behnke, 19, of Mount um. The train will take the boys . this month were only 59 per cent utane ar Service will be from the Alles 
with Hopper will be feature attraction at the San Bernardino County, | of normal, the lowest for the date . . Clemens, Funeral Home on Friday at 11/0 Ratn_ Pass, where they will niire 
» Fair in Cabin Dedicated | , 7 13 Peach Queen, Nancy a.m. with interment in the East |“ 5 
7 ; Karen on her victory and present-| Lawn Cemetery. ° E ummer 
by Kiwanis Club ed her with @ large bouquet of F ive at ncampment 
SOUTHFIELD TOWN SHIP — . ° 
Local Kiwanians and their wives |" John S, Coppin, well-known Mich- Cass City Pair , 
gathered Sunday afternoon to dedi- : David of station 
cate the $6,000 Log Cabin Youth ea er ioren Sangean, Si tereal | xchange Vows 
Shelter in Southfield-Dodge Park. Merchandise 
33 V3 OFF EXTRA SPECIAL! 
Every Pair of 
Ladies’ Summer 
Shoes of 139th Army Band | SOUTHFIELD TOWN SHIP —| 
; artist and member of the Scar-| 5 . : 
This cabin, built eathay tough |, srust and member of aer, |i Evening Rites | Five toca youns sre suendes oe 
the efforts of the Southfield Ki- | sreeiance illustrator and cartoon- Barba: Cam / | free- CASS CITY — ra Jean campment at Pp Grayling. 
-|wanis Club, will be open for use | ist, judged the contest. Howarth and Jack R. Bird exchang-| Dick Cameron, who plays French | 
of adult-supervised groups of local : ed. marriage vows in First Metho-| horn; Bob Lange, trombone: Emil 
Railroad Refuses 3 
Royal Oak Request On hand for the dedication were Saturday evening. 
ROYAL OAK—The Grand Trunk   
    
, | representatives of the Boy and Girl The bride is the daughter of Mr. 
Scouts and their leaders, Township and Mrs. Carroll Howarth and the 
Board members and William groom is the son of Mrs. Ethel 
Roeser, township supervisor, who Bird 
accepted the dedication and prom- thel, clarinet, are the Southfield 
players in the band. 
The quintet left the Detroit 46th | 
Artillery Division armory on Eight- | 
Mile road early Saturday morning, |   Carol Howarth was her sister's   ised maintenance of the 30x60-foot 
building Western Railway turned down & to start the summer training. 
Director of the 139th Army Band 50% Off 
  
  
         
          
  
  
  
          1 ; muter stop at Normandy road Mon. | maids were Nancy Heron of Mil 
Michigan Kiwanis; Frank Staiger, |4ay evening |ersburgh and Beverly Bird, a sis-|is Robert Moots, who had been the 09. New 99 
state secretary, and Marion Case,| 5: J. Massey, general manager ter of the groom. ner tear ietiery me Reg. 3.99, ... .Now 
lieutenant governor of District | of the railroad informed City Man’ | __Dougias Bird performed the dv: — Reg. 4.99, ... .Now 2.49 
‘Five akers ager . Shafter neW | ties of best for his brother, 
day. were guest speakers of the TOY O° 14 involve an expenditure | while Lee Wiltee of Lake Orion |Annual Smorgasbord GREEN'S 
of $13,000 and would delay and| ang Robert McEachern served as ocrat 
| impair the present commuter serv-| ushers. Ferris Ware and James Held by Com vated 
Batty Intruders _|)'- tine schedule. Schad of Care were groomsmen. |, LEQUARD TMs emocratic Club Dixie Highway, 
j e the need for the Following a northern Michigan! held their annual Founders Day Drayton Plains 
. eign upr eme mphastoed new | wedding trip, Mr. and Mrs. Bird) smorgasbord dinner Saturday at 
MAKE THOSE PLANS | cceteivg tere of the dean iT stop, pointing out the reat growth | win’ make their home in Alma.. | Rowand Hall — | been here of the death || OS Family Goes |} the northwest area ot the city Highlight of the evening was the 
+ Saag -t- n, $5 a resident of | ROYAL OAK — Mr. and Mrs.| final, the Cite Commissioner re | Seek Sleepy Rifleman | showing of color slides taken in DRAYTON 
COME T RU E cee He died Sunday and funeral a he Day ake te ferred the matter to the transpor-| TRAVERSE CITY W# — Forrest | ens ‘Mates Oo Ped af quate JEWELERS 
service and burial were today. | \were invaded by bets, said today (enn mutter for further action.’ Robinson surprised a stranger | was Adelaide Hart, state vice-chair- Watch Repair 
Come in today and let us help you with a The Jenkins family moved ‘out |Otterman Elected Head [on nearby Green Lake. And BO | Committee. 8 Deore North of the Bank   
    
  
  
       
   
   
                     
    
    
                    
    
          
    
  
    
     home loan — long term mortgage and land || Mrs. Robert Jackson of Roseville; | ordered an exterminator to rid the of County Civic Group | seit when the stranger picked up 
, five sons; Leonard C.., Basil C.,| house of the eerie intruders. SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP — Ar-|& deer rifle, cocked it and said, W School 
contracts available to fit your needs. and Arthur D., all of Auburn| However, Mrs. Jenkins said they| ‘hur C. Otterman was recently | “I'm leaving.” He left and police e Keep 
Heights, Harmon G. of Pontiac and | have decided to give up the home |¢lected president of the Oakland | @re looking for hint. Togs Like N oe woes ae a weer, because the exterminator would not County oe Assn. at a meeting ogs ew 
— ur “sy ise her that other bats would in Otterman’s home on Somo. ‘ 
MORTGAGES — LAND CONTRACTS two asters, Mr wil Oost et the hone when the |set Trail. County Calendar Longer 
— = — ; ean _ al D etroit rs ur present horde is gone. Themas - 
: SS es oo jnneppearnr Surette super -ty- Sivtene verity tet . od — held AR-..3-7362- : 
PO N arte 4): R AL | reat-grandchildren "Mrs. Jenkins’ mother in Ferndale. treasurer. . . Agency at 10 am. Priday. FE 46171 TT . 
- . 2 Want to stand out in class — dazzle your fellow students? Let us 
wosso Farm~- Grows Everything | “isc oils A Mutual Savings & Home Loan Association 4525 
16 E. LAWRENCE y By BURDETTE B, ASHLEY answer is four if you do it the|some things many family shoppers | gets the corn to market garden- REX CLEANERS Dixie Hwy. 
Associated Press Farm Writer ‘| way the Morels operate near Owos-| may never have heard of such as | fresh. win, amenuene _. 
- . How many families can a 300-| so. Eleven members of the families cha aeeunee” ate celery. Hydro-cooling simply means OWNER 388 Nelson 277 Baldwin 
acre Michigan farm support? The | are at work daily. scklnwe, tamaieen beets, ponchos. puting the freshly picked corn — } 
. : . Besides Sam Morel and his wife, | Socies’ ‘raspberries, strawberries, | i" 3?-degree water to reduce the 
PUNNNAQNSANNO0OOALOUOUUAAASQNNN0000000000000001 OAUOUUOUOGANGANOOONENENOOOGONOOOOOOTOOGOOOOONOOOONOGENNENUOOULUOOTOOVUNAOOOOONATNLLES | they inciude three sons, Calvene,|timnips, peas, rhubarb, sweet corn | ld heat which — somethnes 
. ve . sit inigies TAS Ae eh stg] Sooners | AUGUST SALE ; ® > D tt thrée daughters, Mrs. Elaine Pear} ‘The Morel products have been| 11". sor and B —£ ; wk a sms | 
Beautiful Formica ‘Dinettes 228 fo" ee Spt es Sal OS Dena oF 
         
     
              
   
     Available in Chrome or Wrought Iron ecrme, ler More cote | tee ne ee itete spare time | store managers co - operating || . [Ne | > 
i he ok Sak Se. Ale RR ; ; head of catle, and fields de- | sideline. They use some of the with the Bishops display the corn Tne urniture 
: Tables made to order, any size Or shape, including voted to Wheat, beans, corn and | fruit to make jelly from thelr under refrigerated conditions as|] 
round, square and oval. 26 colors and patterns {0 =| pasture crops. But it ls the truck | mother’s old-fashioned recipes | Pi ofall the fuss and bother to 10% 50% Our Enti : ec rom. es ar wit -stor - 
|. leat. Chairs are upholstered ‘in Comark rmaterial—-84 gardening that keeps the 11 fami- | for a select group of customers cot the corn? o to o on ur Entire Stock 
ly “hands” and a cotple of 
grandchildren busy at this time for the 
The Morefs grow ‘‘everything in | dition to the cattle there's oo 
to 
dressed colors and patterns — 16 different styles. All 
_ chrome is friple-plated, including copper, nickel and   WILLETT — WHITNEY — LOWELL 
MICHIGAN FURNITURE SHOPS 
  
  
  
  
         Made to Order | ‘Be catalogue except lettuce,” and afte, and the eggs and Gar way form ot retriee oee, | No item has been marked up to give the 
ANY Sze. iery te - if impression of greater reductions .. . 
STYLE No so-called Special Purctiases. ack 
All reductions from our regular st 
$4,995 of fine furniture and from our regular 
Odd Chairs 
$6.95 oe eto LOW PRICES | 
z pone UP ee al ee x. | at You will positively eave during our August Sale 
= Open Nites ’til 8:30 _ ove unt Matching Wedding Bands, | ing corn on sit Ateghe County planning to plant more com next You Will Enjoy Shopping at 
“ a panies nee bane farm near Martin. They say it/year to meet the demand . 
Co eos [Pend caeyzint ya DRAYTON HOME FURNISHINGS e ‘ : ; Metalmasters Mfe. 
4436 North Woodward Near 14 Mile Road 
‘Daily 10 A. M. to 8:30 P. M. “The Friendly Store” 
OR 3-2300 . Drayton Plains_ 
Open Fri. Eve. Till 9:00 Plenty of Free Parking GEORGE'S 
NEWPORT'S                                    
  
        
a se) = et as Baa oe ee sey ee ke ei Sy anes ee aT ey eee 5 gt se, ing sculls ees ae bios a i si py 4 ee aH BS ae a a BSA 3 \ ea Le ri Leese ‘i A 5 * eS ae a Sais: ; ee 
n oe ee , ice. iS at es eek: ie ia kone Pie a ae Ns ; , as Mee : age as Fo | VK } : ae Oe fy i \ ' oe “4 i a . ya es my euk A 
_._, THE PONTIAC PRESS, "WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1954. . ae 
= 
a 
5 as 
    
  
  
    
    
    
   
       
   
    
       
       
            "aie Silica il ~ on w| suggesting immediate creation of : ‘a 49% Baldwin Ave. Both Tiny Portuguese Colony) SSxt0mncemes= |5 Minors‘Appear ime. . : +e: ‘eS z} @ Bevestigatc the crisis in Gow | oe git Ein, 2. of 18 Leet 
Becomes Indian ‘Hot Spot" | ss" “= =~ |in Municipal Court 2.24224 ace, JOHN HLAVACEK on the occasion “in a peactul | ‘India did not reply immediately to the disorderly charge 
sien Oe hale GS = ay'aiedebet” manele Gib ome to the Portuguese note, but in a| yg ae ni ney, Narng., (ordered to appear for eration” as their goal. sharp reply to a British memoran- during ly Sunday /19. Both were released on personal 
tiny parcel of Portuguese property dum which appealed against use|™0rning drinking were | bond 
about the size of Rhode Island on| Portugal has warned that any of force, the New Delhi govern- | hailed info Pontiac Court mass movement into Goa will be i There are about 24 living the vast subcontinent of India has) iaered an “invasion.” F ment said it was in full symathy | Monday 
becomd a “hot spot.’ [Minister Paulo Cunha naid Pert | "ith the “desire of the people of Appearing before Judge Maurice | f the crocodile. 
The parcel of land is Goa, a set- guese troops in Goa “stand ready |" Portuguese possessions for | E. Finnegan, John W. Davis, 20, of (Advertisement) Doz. 
tlement of the famed Malabar |i, defend” the tarvitery, Porte- their inalienable right to freedom.” | 723 E, Tennyson St., pleaded guilty Itchy Pim 
Coast about 200 miles south of | 21. export bese for ecera, cnn |..At the same time India told the | to furnishing beer to minors and ; ag 
Ronhey_ hie Git, oe ome spices and poultry. mines eNom Lome approach" aaa Sy en adh onenaghes stony shill, Romance sU tere eeers cesses sessssssesesuesss 
eae .000 Portuguese troops apes This Valuable Coupon 
Gea ls i ith | 
in India 
it, But 
Gea, as 
French enclaves 
and Karaikal,   
  
    
THE SMALLEST, called them “foreign LIGHTEST HEARING AID IN ZENITH’S HISTORY!       
  As poner es come bering lt negate : Convenience! Operates for just| A showdown between India, a | 
18c week on ope $ ‘land of non-violence, and Portu- 
only 100 |gal, a neutal in both world wars, 
  
  Bene conducti et moderate | # expected to come next Sunday if | 
extra cost. not before then. 
Easy time-payment pian available. Sunday is India’s independence 
day and a spokesman for forces oe, 
FRED WN. PAULI CO. | favoring union of Goa with India | 28 West Huron has announcéd that thousands | 
FE 2-7257 will march into the settlement | 
  
  
BACK-TO-SCHOOL 
IN STYLE! 
      
   
   Boys’ 26-inch Schwinn Corvette 
ety Te         
    HOME GROWN 
SWEET CORN 
43: LARGE PASCAL 
CELERY 
21: 
LETTUCE ..2° 29        
     
  
    
GRADE A SMALL 
; DOZ.    
           
    \   
  
     
       
             
                   
      
         
    
   
      
       
         
   wee tees neers i CUBE | HILLCREST POTATOES 
BOYS’ AND GIRLS’ SCHWINN TIGER STEAK : c Ch 
—H BIC VEER > DEE we ee caps lb. eese ©. 10 LBS. re 0 hex rs Te itt ——SS—— || —2- TE LOAF "aes ——    
  Chain Drive 
Spring Fork 
26” 
Attachments 
Available   : VELVET C 
LARGE SIZE CAKE FLOUR 53      
         
       
    BANQUET WHOLE 
> BIRDS-EYE | CHICKEN _ 
FROZEN 3V% Lb. $4 19 FOODS CAN 
| 3 JUST SPREAD ON RINSE OFF! 
GREEN PEAS... ‘19 
3 9-02. c 
SWEETHEART Soap , BLU-WHITE Flake: FRENCH FRIES... Fig. 19 
amar aed | 4s ar || SQUASH........ 8 19 ( 
SCARIETT’S | RZNSURGZN ME Lele MEG LTTE   
       
        
   
   
             
    
        
    FRANK’S FULKERSON WEST FELICE -JOHNSON’S FRANK  TENUTA'S 
   MARKET GROCERY ACRES QUALITY MARKET RIZZUTO’S SUPER TRADING MARKET 
BICYCLE SHOP 2701 Elizabeth 8990 Pontiac STORE MARKET _. MARKET $$ MARKET post - MARKET MARKET 
| Lake Road Leke Road 7321 Commerce 220 S. Telegraph 113 - Sth Se. 3515 Sashabaw 3405 Ormond Rd. 3286 Auburn Ave, 319 Wilcox 1012 Main St. 20 E. LAWRENCE ST. ,."=,"%,,  2-7221 Pontiac Pontiac Lake Road Read Rochester 856 Oakland Drayton Plaine White Lake Auburn Meights Rochester Rochester 
              
      eS hg ee ee Be 
i A 
ear ' '    ee t 
“TWENTY-EIGHT 
  / ca 
‘ { 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WE   % oe 
6 % 
4 f° 
‘ 
° Lions at   
Mel Parnell 
Hangs Shutout 
on Washington ‘New Lease’ on Life 
for Injured Hurling Ace 
Produces Ist Win 
i 
Eye! i 
SeREE 4 Efag g! 
fey te it A g SUH aaill : 
rfl 
oe. g HANPEApTE Tes bree! i 4, - > Disadvanta 
STARS OF 2 ERAS COMPARE STYLES — Ed 
Walsh (left), 73-year-old all-time great pitcher for | met Thursday night as an all-star team of White 
the Chicago White Sox and a member of baseball's | Sox old-timers gathered to play a 3-inning exhibition 
Hall of Fame compares pitching styles with Billy| with the present team prior to the Sox-Orioles 
Pierce, an ace hurler of the present Chisox. They | game. Old Timers won, 2-0.   
    
- AP Wirephoto 
  
By MURRAY ROSE 
NEW YORK @—Light heavy- 
weight champion Archie Moore, 
    
4 Sports Pages in 
Pontiac Press Today   still a great fighter as he nears | 
    
peers ee       Johnson's 10-round triumph on} 
Dec. 10, 1951, was the last defeat | 
suffered by Archie, The strong-| 
armed Moore edged ‘the Philadl- 
phian on Jan. 29, 1952, and went! 
on to sweep 17 other fights inciud- 
ing three title contests with Joey 
Maxim. 
In building up a 12-fight victory 
streak of his own, Johnson, son 
  leading Cleveland Indi- | 
gf? "ag 
a e former heavyweight boxer, 
defeated, among others, Ezzard 
Charles and Nino Valdes, the two 
  
Avondale Squad Ousted 
in Girls’ League Playoffs ———nupndale joined. -Gionelivile on| finals by beating GMC, 10-4. ne. —— —_ "Y!- Katy Boykins set General Mo- the sidelines last ni 
Girls’ Softball League playoff field | 
~ was narrowed to three teams. 
Suburban nine was eliminated 
by Shaws’ girls, 7-6. Shaw's over- 
came a 6-4 deficit by scoring 
three runs in the last inning. 
Giles Realty, undefeated in regu- 
lar-season play, advanced to the 
  
~~ AMERICAN LEAGUE “ Woo Lest Pct. Behind 7 7 
    “- 3 97 
wo. 4 FF 7 3 
eeee TL 4 628 7 
we 5 59 459 
tenes 6 «661 430 
.... & 82 4212 
a @ 72 351 
.. 7 7 30 
TODAY'S GAM 
Cleveland a. Cares, 2 p.m.—Garcia (13-5) 
Gromek ( . 
nila at New yet. 1 p.m—Oray 
4) ve Byre . 
a at 1: p.m.—Turley 
eo or Kusave (1-3) vs 
te! or Trucks (165). 
=! <2), 1 p.m. and 
: 1 .—Marrero (3-4) ‘ ie Brewer (74) anc Clevenger 
) o be aa RESULTS 
Detroit 4, Creveland & 
few York 5. 2 
  Baltimore 3 Chicago Boston 4, Washington © (night game) 
FHURSDAY'S SCHEDULE ee @). 12.9 
   
a> Major League Results’ AVONGBIO ....eeeceeee: 130 000 26 8 2 
“Toes MOTTIYELIE OF +=t -F 
McCaslin and Goudei; Sories, Jones 
and Pollina. 
eee 000 405 1—10 6 1 
GMC a... cee cceeenee 000 Oo—444 
Boykins and Mathes; Bender and 
Liddy 
FOMC oo eee eens 000 100— 1 2 56 
Baws 20.6... cece eee 410 Gax—14 10 2) 
comveers | It’s Time Out! 
Washingten at Reston (nay game). ppd. | |     
tors down with four hits, struck 
out four and walked three. . 
Shaw's Jewelers swept a pair of 
men's exhibition games from 
Men’s League regular-season cham- 
pion GMC. Clell ‘Mutt’ Morse 
twirled a 2-hitter, struck out six 
and walked one as the Jewelers 
took a 141 victory in the opener. 
Chuck Mason homered to spark 
Shaw's 3-1 triumph in the nightcap. 
  Gheidon, Hensen, Wheeler, Grant and 
Pocchiola; Motse and Hagan 
GMC nee eee COL 000 O—1 
Shaw's ..... -.ee-- 010 101 x—3 6 0 
Grant and Reed; Johnson and White 
  
              jmuch of a stir hereabouts, Even ArchieMoore Favored 
Over Harold Johnson two leading light-heavies hag been 
long awaited, it hasn't created 
  Johnson is down for 20 per 
If Johnson wins, he'll have 
a return fight with- 
90 days at a 30-30 split of the 
  
¢ 
  
Facts, Figures 
on Title Fight 
MOORE searaen 
178 Lan oy 174 
6 ft. t 6-11 
4 in. Chest ‘nor.) 30% in. 
42 in. Chest (exp.) 42 in. 
78 in. R 6 in. 
17 tn. Neck 17 in. 
16% in. Biceps 15% in. 
12% in. Porearm 12 in. 
32 tn. Waist 31 in. 
12 in. Pist 11 is. 
21 in. Thigh 20 tn. 
13 in. Call 13 in, 
Wrist 7 in. 72 in. 
“Exact Weights will be announced at 
official weigh-in at noon, ( 
Pacts and figures on fight: 
DATE—Tonight. ; 
SITE—Madison Square Garden 
TIME—(9 p.m. EST) 
DISTANCE—15 rounds or less 
AT STAKE—Moore’s light heavyweight 
championship 
RETURN BOUT—Within 80 days if 
Johnson wins 
Moore favored, 5 to 8. 
ISION—Coast to coast ‘by 6 Star Pacers 
casting at Wotverine.—— in Feature Race Most of Brown Jug 
Entries Race Tonight 
at Wolverine Track 
DETROIT  — Six of ten horses 
nominated for the $65,000 Little 
The race is the ‘feature event on 
the 2nd night of Grand Circuit rac- 
———+ 
  with methropoliten New York biacked 
out. 
  
Castellani fo Spar 
With Mickey Walker > cmember? SAN RAFAEL, Calif. —The old 
time “Toy Bulldog,” Mickey | 
Walker, wil] spar with Rocky Cas- | 
tellani Sunday and show the mid-| 
dleweight challenger how he used | 
to throw the famous “overhand | 
right’ punch that won him the 
middle and welterweight crowns 
in the '20s and ‘30s. 
The two will meet at the camp 
here where Castellani is in train- 
sting for his tround titte bout-withy 
Carl (Bobo) Olson Aug. 20, in San 
Francisco. 
Walker, 54, will step into the 
ring for‘ the first time since he 
retired almost 20 years ago. 
  
  
Club Golfers Play 
Against Middlecoff 
Sherwin Ross of Knollwood Coun- 
_4 try. Club, Milton Elson of Tam O’-| | 
Shanter Country Club and Harvy 
Hubar of Franklin Hills Country 
Club, all within the Detroit area, 
have been selected to compete with 
| Dr. Cary Middlecoff, past National | rs 
Open Champion, in an 18-hole golf 
exhibition at Knollwood Tuesday, 
Aug. 17> it was announced bythe 
Knollwood-Israel Bénd Exhibition 
Committee. 
Liston Wins Decision 
Over Detroit Fighter 
DETROIT {UP) — Sonny Liston, 
an up-and-coming heavyweight 
his 7th straight professional ‘fi 
Tuesday night with a split decision 
victory over Johnny Summerlin of 
Detroit at the Motor City Arena. 
The two judges gave che fight to 
the St. Louis puncher by a wide 
margin but referee Herman Spin- 
elli cast a dissenting ballot in favor 
of Summerlin,   
  Noah Hanover and Liliali divided 
the $5,000 Scottish Pense Purse 
Tuesday night. Noah Hanover won 
the Ist heat in 2:07.4. Liliali took 
the 2nd in 2-083. : —= 
  
  ® the Big 10 Most 
award, and still identified with 
football. His idertity.is found on 
today’s final sport page. 
TIGER LEADERS   ” \last year’s 1 
regulations, requiring players to 
:| Mark Opening 
pace |, children’s spray pool, located 
} 
PCIE = eee i Oe } bay é NS: 
‘ 
    { i f 
'     
        
e, Claims Anderson Will Go Into 
Game With °24 
Tired Old Men Expects Pros to Have || 
Difficulty in Matching 
Collegians 
CHICAGO ( AP ) — The|t 
Detroit Lions’ top executive, 
President Edwin Anderson,}# 
claims his team will be at a 
“terrific” disadvantage in 
their game with the College 
All-Stars Friday night at 
Soldier Field. 
Anderson said at a lunch- 
eon honoring the collegians 
yesterday that the pros are 
going to find it extremely 
difficult to match the col- 
legians because of rules 
governing the game. 
Under the game rules, consented 
to reluctantly by Coach Buddy 
Parker of the Lions, the so-called 
“two-platoon” system is outlawed. 
The game will be played under 
college substitution 
play both on offense and defense 
most of the tiie ~ 
Anderson said the Lions will be 
“going into the game with 24 tired 
old men.” 
Jim Tatum of Maryland, guiding 
the All-Stars, seemed slightly more 
optimistic. ‘‘Maybe the All-Stars 
will win,”” he declared. 
Parker is expected to play some | 
of his stars only briefly. Among | 
these is his ace quarterback, por 
Layne, who may appear only 
= minutes on offense because   NCAA discarded two-platoon foot- 
ball, will feature such standouts 
as Zeke Bratkowski of Georgia, 
Bobby Garrett of Stanford, Cotton 
Davidson of Baylor, Lamar Mc- 
Han of Arkansas and Vince Dooley 
of Auburn in passing roles. 
Big Program to   
of Club’s Pool 
An extensive and interesting pro- 
gram has been arranged for the 
formal opening of the Forest Lake 
Country Club's swimming pool. The 
pool has been completed, with a 
new filtration and pumping system, 
and a terrace has been constructed 
about it. It will be opened Sunday 
at 4 p.m. Club prexy Blaine Eynon 
will make the dedication. 
A water ballet, diving and swim- 
ming exhibitions have been planned 
with groups of college girls and 
Birmingham high athletes taking 
part. Tom MacDonald and Roger 
Hood will do the fancy diving. 
At the same time the pool is 
opened, ground will be broken for 
in a playground area just below 
the pool. 
A reception and buffet super 
will follow the events. 
Top-Seeded Miss Fry 
Leads Way in Net Test 
MANCHESTER, Mass. (®—Shir- 
ley Fry of Akron, Ohio, seeded 
‘9:-1, teads-a fietd of 32 into the 
s round of the 27th annual 
Essex County Club Womens In- 
vitational tennis tournament today. 
Rain forced postponement of the 
start_of the second round play yer   
‘were held on the slippery. Fali- | soaked courts. | 
In those matches the favorites 
all advanced in straight sets. 
Yesterday’s Stars 
BATTING—Hank Aaron, Milwau- 
kee Braves, drove in five runs 
with a home run and a bases- 
loaded double in an 114 triumph 
over St. Louis. 
PITCHING—Jim Wilson, Milwau- 
gies in winning his eighth game 
without a loss and his fourth shut- 
out, 11-0 over St. Louis.   
  DNESDAY, AUGUST 1 
when only three matches | " i MANCHESTER Mass, -— Mrs 1, 1954, 5 | 
Weyand and Reynolds qualified 
state Jaycee meet last month along with Arnold 
Lansing and Bob Zimmerman of Jackson. Reynolds will accompany 
Zimmerman by automobile, with Mr. and Mrs. William Pautke of 
Jackson. Weyand and Nedelman plan to fly to Albuquerque.   Nedel 
  
_ ‘No Baseball God’   
in Regime By JOE BRADIS 
PITTSBURGH #—Cagey Branch 
Rickey, the guy with the busy eye- 
brows and the big cigars, built pen- 
nant winners at St.Louis and 
Brooklyn. 
Can he do it in Pittsburgh? 
The fourth year under the 72- 
year-old baseball wizard finds the 
Season Ends 
on Upset Note Hill Spills D& W Nine, 
2-1, as Regular Softball 
Campaign Closes wetetea © Township Softball   
  
inning game. 
Don Hill hurled a 3-hitter to rack 
up his 10th win and push Recrea- 
tion over the .500 hump for the 
season. The loss was only Dick & 
Wes’ 3rd in 2 games. 
night with Drayton Drug playing 
Gidley Electric at 8:30. Finals were 
set up in the Junior League as 
Drayton Drug eliminated Day's 
Service, 12-7, as Dick Gilchrist col- 
lected a homer and 2 singles. 
Drug Juniors meet White Broth- 
ers, but need 2 straight wins for 
the championship. 
  
Aussie Leader 
Sets Goals for 
Female Netters 
Nell Hopman, wife of Australia's 
Davis Cup team captain, is de- 
termined to lead the women of 
her country to the top of the tennis 
world as her husband has done 
with the men. 
“I want our women to have the 
same opportunity as the men to 
compete in foreign tournaments 
and prove their ability,” says Mrs. Pirates Faring Poorly 
-_+—_ S¥ RACUSE,_-N,—¥,,-UA—National   of Rickey Pittsburgh Pirates in the National 
League cellar, The turnstiles aren't 
clicking and the current debt now 
is néar a staggering $1,409,000. 
s e * 
Back in 1948, the Pirates under 
new Manager Bill Meyer finished 
Rickey, then general manager of 
the Brooklyn Dodgers, pocketed a 
good portion of it in player deals 
with the Bucs. 
000 and signed a five-year 
But what have four years under 
Rickey produced? The Pirates firi- 
ished seventh in 195!1—by a hair 
over the Chicago Cubs, last in 
1952-53 and are mired in the cellar 
again this year. 
° . * 
Rickey offers no excuses or 
“Cicero had his Catiline, Abra- 
ham Lincoln had his Valandigham, 
and even ordinary individuals like 
myself have detractors who have 
tangent motivations, Let the rec- 
ords of the future take care of 
themselves—and without any addi- 
tional comment from me now or 
later. r 
“I must not change my plans. I 
ean not. I know of no other wav 
to do the job. My successor will 
~o it differently and I hope much 
er.’ 
Tomorrow—Rickey’s mistakes. 
NBA Officials Like 
|New 24-Second Ruling     
, Basketball Assn_ officials say. they ; 
are Well satistied with the newly 
adopted 24-second rule and will 
leave it in the books this year. 
League officials attending their 
summer meeting here watched the 
rule in action yesterday during a 
brief scrimmage of pickup teams. 
| The regulation provides a loss 
  
    
Eddie Stanky’s Chances of Sticking as Manager 
of Cardinals ls Growing Slimmer Day by Day 
|The source—of_Stanky's present 
his mound 
in an 11-0 trouncing by the “il- 
    
it 
FE , Hf i ? 
Z F iby : ale ss eis i | 
tenqneteaders————— tel > 
wv Ft S 
i g 5 
> RoR 
esq 252538 [ 
tee SEEEEE 33 ath cpt riick 
att 8 zs 
their stock. 
3. Two million to renovate the 
stadium, build decent parking fa- 
Both Greenfield and Syik have 
said the syndicate does not intend 
to engage im a bidding contest 
with Johnson, who has hinted he 
might raise his offer if necessary. 
  
-\‘Bobo’ Olson 
Makes Light of 
Rocky’s Ability NICE, Calif. @ — Middleweight 
champion Cari (Bobo) Olson la- 
bled challenger Rocky Castellani 
a “pretty boy who looks good in 
@ gym but can't fight much.” 
Olson, who usually lets his man- 
ager do the talking, made the 
remark at his training camp here 
yesterday to the Lake County Bee 
editor, Dana McGaugh, and add- 
ed: 
“‘He’ll need more than good looks 
and a left jab when we get to 
gether for the fight in 10 days.” 
Hig manager, Sid Flaherty, said 
Olson was ready for the fight now 
to keep him that way.” 
Olson’s only workout was a run 
in the 90 degree heat. 
  
AMERICAN LEAGUE 
pettres aren. new York, 342: 
inoso, 5 ; . Chicago, 322; Bente. New York. 34; Avila, Cleveland. 
RUNS — Mantle, New Y 3; M 
Pox, Ch -~ 6: Avie. 
Vernon, W hi 3 Minoso, Chic : 
is Tuttle ‘Deira ena Mantle, New Yor. 
RUNS — 
Rivera, Chicago, 14; Chicago, 13; 
Michaels, Busby. Washington, i iinoee, 
  
    -     and “my problem is going to be. 
    
      
       
    
    
      
    
as athletic director and head 
basketball coach. Freeman is the 
3rd coach in the 7-year history of 
football at Waterford. 
Sam Orits was the Skippers’ Ist 
grid mentor, handling the reins 
from 1947-50. Varsity schedules 
were played, however, only in 
1949 ahd 50. Ashley, who previ- 
ously coached at Pontiac High, 
Keege Harbor and Orchard Lake 
St. Mary's, took over in 1951. 
Skipper teams won 7 games, lost 
15, and tied 2 during his 3-year 
tenure. Their 1953 record was 
3-41. In their’ 18t season as an 
active member of the Inter-Lakes 
Conference last fall, the Ashley-led 
eleven wound up in a 2nd place 
tie behind champion Van Dyke. 
The youthful Freeman moves to 
the Head coaching spot after serv- 
ing as backfield tutor for Ashley 
a year: ago. He spent the 1952 
season coaching at the Oakland 
County Children's Home.         
Landy Admits Foot Injury, 
Fears Implications of “Alibi -VENCOUVER- BC. wan 
Landy admitted yesterday he acci- 
dentally cut his left foot the day 
before he and Dr. Roger Bannister 
ran the “‘Miracle Mile” and said 
he tried to keep the injury secret 
so it could not be construed as an 
alibi. 
After a day of denying published 
reports, the Australian miler re- 
luctantly acknowledge the stories 
were true. He told reporters he 
stepped on a photographer's dis- 
carded flash bulb, inflicting a cut 
that required four stitches. 
But he said he didn’t want news 
~+ot-the injury to get out because   
  
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  “Tt probably eventuality ~~ wilt-be- 
used as an alibi and I don't want 
that.” 
The accident occurred at 3 a.m. 
Friday. The next day Landy and 
England's Bannister, the only two 
menjever to crack the four-minute 
barrier,.did it again in the Mir- 
acle Mile,” 
Empire Games. 
in 3:39.46. 
‘didn't bother me in the slightest.” 
said he couldn't sleep. 
“When I got back inside there 
| was blood all over,” he said. ‘I 
| got the stitches put in about an 
| hour afterwards.” 
Despite the injury, Landy paced 
the field in the mile until the clos- 
| ing yards when Bannister spurted 
| past him. 
| Andy O’Brien of the Montreal 
| Star first broke the story of the 
j injury Monday and it later was 
| confirmed by two Vancouver doc- 
| tors. 
| Avcknoéwiedging the story yester- 
| day, the Adssie told reporters:   finale of the British 
A closing spurt put Bannister 
over the finish line in front of 
Landy in 3:58.8. Landy was clocked 
Landy said yesterday the cut 
He said it happened when he got 
up to “‘walk around outside.’’ He   
  
  
Ponder Question 
of Leadership DETROIT w — A question was 
bothering entrants today following 
the Ist round play in the State 
Senior Golf tournament: ‘‘Who is 
in Ist place?’’ 
There are two-pace-setters-and 
it’s hard to tell which one is in the 
lead. 
The question developed yester- 
day when George Hausch, 57, of 
Dearborn Country Club fired a 
72 om the south course of the 
Detroit glof club. At the same 
time, Chris Brinke, 52, a mem- 
ber of the host club, was touring 
the north course in 74. 
Some golfers claim Hausch is 
the leader while others are just 
as firm in their opinion that Brinke 
heads the pack. 
It seems there is a three-stroke 
difference in par on the two courses 
—68 for the south and Tl for the 
north course. 
But the argument was to have 
been settled today. All players 
switched courses for the 2nd round 
in the 36-hole medal play tourney. 
Pat Devany Cards   
  WDGA’s Top Mark Pat Devany of Grosse Ile Coun- 
try Club turned in the best round |   “The quicker that it's dismissed | the Women’s Oistrict Golf As- | 
| the better.” 
Lightning Bolt 
Hits Racetrack   
Thoroughbreds Aren't 
Touched as Man, Work 
- Horses Are Hit 
CHARLES TOWN, W.Va. ®—A 
bolt of lightning knocked down one 
fore the start of the sixth race | 
here yesterday but did no serious | 
oughbreds and their riders un-| 
touched. 
Starter Harold Holland and John 
Bradford, driving the work horses | 
pulling the starting gates, suffered | 
from mild shock, and the get- 
away was delayed about 10 min- 
utes. 
The race horses were only about 
|20 yards away, waiting for the | 
| work horses to drag the gate into 
position for the feature race of |       
Gavilan, Saxton Sign 
challenger Johnny Saxton signed 
contracts for their Sept. 1 title fight 
yesterday. 
The fight will be televised frorn 
Connie Mack stadium with the 
Philadelphia area blacked out.   man and two work horses just be-| 
harm and left seven nearby thor- | 
NAT REF DOA ERASE RS cas corr ge eran 
PHILADELPHIA #® — Welter- | 
weight champion Kid Gavilan and | | sociation season, a 76, to win | 
| honors in the organization's week- 
lly tourney Tuesday at Bloomfield 
Hills Country Club. 
romp Devany did the trick de- 
spite a 7 on the easy 297-yard par- 
14 15th. hole. She booked nines of 
37-39 for her 76, which was 5 
strokes better than runnerup Mrs. 
G. Israel of Knollwood. 
Best previous scores in the 
WDGA this season were Miss 
Devany's 78 at Meadowbrook and 
a 78 at Knollwood by Irene Bretz- 
laff. Pat carded 4 birdies and an 
eagle in the round. 
Sally Sharpe Winner 
‘in Pine Lake Event 
In yesterday’ s final round of the 
| women's handicap tourney at Pine 
Lake Country Club, Sally Sharpe 
| and Betsy Arnoldi went down to 
|the final green before the match 
= decided. Sally finally won, one     
  wi Sally fired a pair of 39's for a 
| very fine 78 ovér the tree-bordered   
  | Pine Lake fairways, Betsy’s effort 
| was little less brilliant. Her 46-49 | 
for 95 was exceptional for a 14| 
year old. Women's par is 3837=+} 
ewer tvate ct ge oor 
  
ST. LOUIS W—Veteran Jim Wil- 
son of the Milwaukee Braves has 
won eight games in a row without 
a defeat this season and half of his 
victories have been shutouts. The 
32-year-old righthander shut out 
the St. Louis Cardinals 11-0 on 
three hits last night for his fourth 
whitewash job. — 
  
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; ee te = PONTIAC. PRESS, WEDNESDAY, sueet IL, 1954 ‘ 
| Air Academy ‘Might Seek fir Pores / on 
DENVER «Is the Air Force |Gen, Hubert R. Harmon, and its | trying to land Felix (Doc) Bian-/| first oe oe bee 6 on ee ee Washington. : 
By JOE FALLS league's one-two |the Yanks. Many of these are tnt his creamy white uniform. the Tiger catcher stid in safely | chard, Army's great fullback of a) in September 1955. }- But he did say in an interview pavitet wis tera ahi wee and Cleveland. | the September sstretch| Alll this helped Garver to his 10th | again by an eyelash. . Gecete tap, 20 Retek Gee Ae * * * __' |that he hopes eventually to se display, the Detroit Tigers shut out aos 5 nr cay yor? win (against seven losses) and Garver hit back to the box and| ‘he new Air Academy The Post story said “It un-| West Point and Annapolis play the 
_the--Cleveland Indians 4-0 last | tw .  . Se atc. his 3rd shutout. He reduced his} House looked like a sure out at O- By | doubtedly would be up to Air Sec-| Air Academy elevens in Colorado 
night and, wate, She them- The_Tigers not only upset tin | gitttoring--corned -rum average a be ecg tiem ne gr rae cr ted Post ger Br retary Harold Talbott to get Blan-/ at least once every four years. 
Ves a feared team Ameri- Indians night — dazzled . itcher, momentarily quest today, pointing _—_— a 
can League. me, leas wns © coutty cnet | ikem Detroit's chisivied bese rus-| But, 8s umual, Garver hed to| ball, Instead of throwing home, he Btenchard is an Air Perce officer | (acer ital eagting Ned Garver, flashing an over-| safe league lead to three games ning left the Indians dizzy, Tigers | S‘Tuezle most of the way Wayne | tried for a force out at 2nd but bavie re | dir . 
powering fast ball, blanked .the| ever the Yankees, who bounced | bunted safely on two straight oc- | Delardi gave him a 1-0 lead in| Avila wasn't on the bag. Jette | Sold ene of Went Palate WHEEL ALIGNMENT 
Inians ‘on ely five singles olor | back to bet Fuasiphin ate |casong td Fight Hilder Al Kaine |e 4 by iling Is 2th howe edo throw cut Garver at Tat Se ‘ N TTS ‘ , for a r run- 
mien Seno a - _—— <8 jeg ge omg to a ns = coeent Cleveland's ap poser ner was safe by an eyelash. it aan selena wey. a AND novos ile Two % 
s4 “ et, Garver checked ans anchard ‘‘is stationed a _It was Detroit's 3rd straight vie-' play with the Indians; five with' runner while sitting on the seat) 0 sen a cmtoe TTT bee TTT i he is sal RON HEELS— N 
him three more . Al Kaline ' : a to coac Army team this / ; 
U. P. Man Advances ~ chased home the ‘st run with a Deby cf 43 4 seven’ 21 3 0) fall Getting him transferred from $12.00 Value—Work Guaranteed 
triple Beas {PE PEER} ]f |/me pants ot the Hudson to the| $=795 % . * . 3 @cBertoian @ 6 6 6 of onument ( 
Freeman Succeeds Ashley as Coach? =i mt sas, rram meme |S, 111 2Sc% £41 4] Odors apperenty, wil require | 7 \ 
-of-Football-at-Waterford-High-School_| swirvms wt core See | [/]s time mer . 00 ateriora_fign-— =P tape Bert opener mee | Ra aA ae meat eee GOOD ALL THISWEEK! — Non By JACK SAYLOR A native of Iron Mountain, Free-|terford coaching staff have. been old in by on eyelash. e—hen for Belarc! m Oh. | elose to the mountains IN 
Naming of Dave Freeman as |™an was a quarterback in his col-| retained, Don Beedle and Then Frank Bolling sent a 2nd | Seren" is S| of Colorado Springs and won aK NE S ORE head football ‘coach at Waterford | slate days at Northern Michigan. | Al Cuthrell, varsity assistants, and bunt down the 3rd base line. Rosen | , R—! RBt~seard” Hutine’ Hoses, Ger-|"C@@Y for about three years. 1 | \ 
High has been In addition to playing football, he | Jack Hackett, 9th grade coach. fired this one over the Ist base- i i. SB—Kuenn.| ever, the academy's first class will | 
by herr ictale thin ee also is an accomplished ski jumper.| Varsity and-reserve practice at | man's head. Bobby Avila, backing | 55 “Wynn 2°so—wyne $ Garver 6 Ren | be opened at Denver's Lowry Air | ‘ 146 Ww. Huren St. FE 2-9251 + He was an alternate on the United | Waterford will begin Monday, Aug.|up the play, caught the ball and E—Wrnn, (is). Ue Beroy Faherty We: ion ot ite first superintendent, Li. 3 
Freeman a graduate of Northern States Olympic ski jumping team | 30, with uniforms and eequipment | tried to catch House at 3rd. But| chick McKmiey. T—-2-23 A—S377. (tion of its first superintendent, WOOOIIIIITITTT eres 
ee 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., |= 7 ae Michigan College, replaces Waldo in 19632. being iamued from ‘ . Ashley, who will continue at WHS Three other members of the Wa- Aug. 27-28. State Seniors 
  
   | {PHIRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY; AUGUST 11; 1954 | 
  
Settle Waterfowl Sexton Regulations | By W. JOYNES MACFARLAN’ 
‘WASHINGTON (®— The 1954-55 
seasons -for hunting wild ducks 
__and geese will be as long or long- 
er than. those allowed last year 
except in states which permit hunt- 
ing as late as next Jan. 20. 
Undersecretary of the Interior 
Ralph A. Tudor has just made ‘San. 1 10 for all states choosing | public the basic regulations to gov- | 
ern taking of migratory waterfowl 
during the 1954-55 season. j 
He announced that the basic 
hunting season for ducks, geese and 
eoots will extend from Oct. 1. 
Jan. 10, with state game sdrain | 
istrators permitted to fix the sea- 
_sons for their states within that 
framework. Specifie-_dates—a-n-d- 
hours will be announced sometime | 
after Aug. 25 following action by | 
state administrators, | 
States will be allowed to have 
seasons running for q consecu- 
five number of days, or two 
split seasons totalling somewhat 
  tension, but this is permissible 
only when a consecutive - days 
season is chosen, Season will erid   
split seasons. 
States also are given a new 
option of selecting shooting ‘hours. 
They may extend from one-half 
| hour before sunrise to one hour 
| before sunset, or until sunset. Hunt- 
ing of woodcock and jacksnipe, 
however, will be allowed until sun- 
set-in the seasons specified for-tak-+ 
ing them. 
On the opening day of each sea- | 
son, including each half of a split | 
season, hunting will begin at noon. 
The Pacific Fiyway season for 
ducks, geese and coots has been 
extended to 80 straight days this 
  
  
    5319 Wp Midd ome Oe |     
See the VICTOR Air Conditioner TODAY 20 by giving up two days of allow- 
able hunting for each day of ex- year, instead of 75, or two split 
Seasons of 36 days each: 
seasons; Mississippi, 
or two 25-day splits; and Central, 
    of two splits. 
Fish and Wildlife Service listed 
the amended regulations for the 
Mississippi flyway as follows: 
Ducks (except wood ducks) Permissible seasons in the three 
other flyways, the same length as 
jiast year, -will be: Atlantic; -60- 
consecutive days or split 27-day 
except for 
wood ducks, 55 days consecutive 
60 days straight or 27 days in each | geese, and coot, Alabama, Arkan- 
sas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Ken- 
tucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minne- 
gota, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, 
Tennessee, and Wisconsin will have | 
the same length of season as last 
| split auurene of 30 fave caee 
and possession limits for 
ducks and geese will be the same 
as last year — 4 and 8 for ducks | 
and 5 and 5 for geese. 
Woodcock season will be 4 
days (beginning on or after Oct.   year — 55 consecutive days or two} 1 and closing not tater than the 
close of the duck seasdn which 
each state may select;, Bag and 
Season on wood ducks will be 
closed in this flyway because the 
population of this species appears 
to be declining. 
Coot bag and possession limits 
remain unchanged — 10 and 10. 
The 15-day jacksnipe season will 
continue, with bag and possession 
‘ limits of 8 birds.     
  
| 
By JACK PATTERSON 
When the late Sam Colt in-| 
troduced his Frontier Model re- 
nicknamed the ‘‘equalizer’’ be- 
cause in that era of much per- 
sonal combat it ironed out the dif- 
ference between the physically 
these 
~more reputedly 
civilized 
with     
vice was designed to put the most 
hapless bungler on a more or less volver to the West it was quickly | 
inept and the husky bruiser. In | | equal footing with the expert, the | 
spinning outfit is that. And it is| 
| that for two reasons. 
First, it is impossible for any- 
'one but the most hopelessly in- 
competent, (and these types 
shouldn't be allowed near water 
anyway) to achieve a line back- 
lash in a cast from a spinning 
reel. Oh, it can be done under 
some circumstances, but like the 
guy said when asked how he could 
be so stupid, it ain't easy. 
for the clumsy,- 
heavy-handed and the excitable. 
With the drag set below the 
breaking point of the line, it 
takes a real lummox to bust off 
a fish or straighten out a barb. 
Equipped with such amiable 
equipment it would seem that the     
Michigan Outdoors   
  State Host 
  By MORT NEFF 
Michigan is playing host to an 
unusual group of enthusiasts this | Muzzle-Loaders’ Shoot to Unusual 
  range ... and the “military,” 
with rifles and pistols or revolvers 
during the Civil War period. 
Each year a “North-South” re- New Spinning Gear 
Is Modern ‘Equalizer’ | spin-fisherman’s lot would be a 
bed of roses. But just ask the 
next one you see and you'll hear 
different. Much different. For in 
common with men in other pur- 
| suits who rely heavily on ma- 
chinery to gain their ends, the 
spin fisherman is prey to many 
troubles. In fairness to the me- 
chanical perfection of his equip- 
ment, it should be noted that most 4 ET EERE 
TE main unchanged. 
| 90-pound Newfoundland, 
"OCSC’s Kjell Danielson 
Top Man in MUCC Test   
  DOG FOR A PRESIDENT—An Oakland County dog, raised and 
trained at Woodland Shores Kennels, near Pontiac, yesterday set 
off on a long air trip to Haiti. Above, ‘“Whitie.” 9 months old 
trained by Rudy Buchmann of Woodland 
Shéres, is flanked on the left by Betty Williams, pretty stewardess 
of the Delta C & S plane-in which ‘‘Whitie” travels, and at right by 
James Herrington, owner of the—Lapeer Mfg. Co. when sent the 
big puppy as a gift to President, Gen. Paul E. Magloire, of Haiti 
Republic. During a recent trip to Haiti, Herrington met the 
president and discovered his interest in dogs. Buchmann trained the 
youngster, Little Bear's White Comber, a son of CH. Gander who 
recently won his championship status for Buchmann. 
  
Cash Bond won the .22-caliber 
any-sight match using iron sights. 
His 191x200 was the high score 
for the tournament. He placed 3rd 
on the OCSC team. Twenty-five competitors braved 
last weekend's rain in the Michi- 
rifle matches and was 4th-place 
man on the OCSC team. 
Forest Products 
pais Hit Peak   
  1 Frank Brusha placed 2nd in the Approval Seen ’ 
for“ Any-Deer’ 
oe Special Season in North 
born Peninsula Will 
Justify Action 
LANSING (UP)—The conserva 
ETE w 
2€33 j : : oH aa8 
Hel | 
  
Fishing Licenses Down 
LANSING (UP)—Sale of rest 
  
  
  uf summer—The Muzzle-Loaders of union and contest is held, involving EAMES and BROWN America. Scattered _ throughout | « ’ from above and below “71 55 East Pike St. - Phone FE 3-7195 the nation are many thousands of | the Mason-Dixon line. All fire au-| 
— individuals — in- = * ges Ae >| i           
    
   
    
      No Money Down 
  
Service Co. 
  } cluding women— 
| whose sport re-- 
         
| shoot the weapons after acquiring 
  
  
  
     
  BRAKE RELINE SPECIAL! 
: 5% 
Drive In for FREE Inspection ond Check Up |   
speed, loading, aiming and firing | 
seconds the nearest menace to navigation. 
Easy Pay! aieieg ocean a Necaera Company int te | _ Another oversight that results | : LANSING RA record $474,199 , Z . ‘ ation m t of forest products | 
— — — OR OTHER accuracy shooting military group stationed at Port : nat whe heavy “nylon State's Fox Popul | trom state lands was turned into || 8¢ss — 
old - time rifles. Huron, were hosts for the an Shows No Sign of Rabies tne state treasury in the past fiscal 95 
pol ot which Spectators stand in awe as the| ® Sussish imagination can com- | LANSING (UP)—Michigan foxes eouis eam department of- — 
Now... with the cooperation Of 1) were originally old weapons are loaded and fired ill Miceli ee naa sad are a healthy bunch. | This was 56 per cent above the | SHOES 
Your Local Independent used to defend on a target range at Uistances up tooth sawing aga a 2-pound Conservation officials said no- $303,000 realized in the previous 
Carageman | American soil. ‘ | to 100 yards. Four inch bulls-eyes monofilament f cases of rabies have ever been re- year. i 
| “Muzzle - Load- NEFF are peppered with holes, In rapid-| Perhaps the grandfather, or ported among the state's fox popu- ~ iF BADMINTON 
Pontiac Piston fries ime city | Ste events the participants wield great uncle, anyway. of | the oct" 2 "Minmesnia, Wisconsin, | beard tect of donber was harvest. | ¥> the old-tim with great Ps. in isconsin, | was yest. 
" threadliner's woes, the twisted | ; Illinois, Indiana and Ohio. | ed from state forests and other | SETS 
line, is the most easily avoided. | 
  | them. . the “civilians,” whose | every 20 Swivels — chea plentiful and | But game workers still warn | lands in the yesr, compared to 45 
02 $. Seginew St "weapons date back as much as 200 All black powder is used in the awily available gill do the trick, |'D&t, bites from any wild animal | million the previous year—a 57 | 
1 9 ° | years, and are in perfect firing | charge, and the bullets are usually ya th heads * | should call for immediate medical | per cent increase. ucli 
Pans PARES © O8AS condition and used regularly on the | molded by hand. The black powder | AS i¢ the case wi » two | attention. tor. Quality 
burns with considerable smoke, |*Wivels are apt to be better than Maturing forests, improved hand 
adding to the spectacular quality |. Ball bearing jobs are best. estry practices and an improved || Merchandise . . . 
— or the choot Only remedy we know for a line | Donates Shuffle Board | market for pulpwood all contribut- ‘Alw ot a 
Get Your Car Set for --- |), Avtentic uniforms of the Con-| wich as ieee ete. trail the |cqhantiae Eagles 1200 re: | Soers repored. ns Teor HOF “vs federate and Northern Armies are| Without swivels is to trail the|cently donated a 22-foot long shuf-/“"PEr i rt, forest products Savings! worn, with the colorful blue and| whole length-behind the boat until | fle board table to the Pontiac Boys’|, "eccjis fom, lorest Procua : 
grey combinations adding to the |it regains some measure of its | Club, 530 E. Pike St., William V. wd ban aaa the | 1 total 
| attraction of this outstanding an-| manufacturer's idea of straight-|Coulacos, executive director of the oe fie ntl . a 0 
nual event. | ness. chu, saad woay. Half of the total volume of cut | | with an outstanding 190x200. Boss 
| WEEJUNS $72 
LOAFERS | 22 caliber match | Resources 
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
    
    
werac 8] 795 
  
$ 
  
  Add new beauty to your car with these tailored seat covers of 
woven plastic or fibre. Durable, smart-appearing, water-repelient. 
Choice of colors. Available for most cors_     
U.S. Tire Distri 
  $70 South Saginaw St. butor for 31 Years! 
“It Pays to Know Your Tire Dealer’ 
Don R. MacDonald, Inc. 
FE 5-6136 or FE 5-6137 Across from 
Economy Furniture 
i.   
TIRES   
        WHEN YOU KNOW YOUR BEER 
..- it's bound to be Bud 
What a perfect way to cool off! A 
refreshing swim...and then... 
Budweiser! The distinctive taste of 
Budweiser created by the costliest | 
brewing process on Earth has made it ; 
the most popular beer the world has 
ever known. 
Enjoy 
_. Budweiser Leeds All Beefs Ia Sales Teday 
oe And Through The Yeers! 
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. © ST. LOUIS » NEWARK © LOS ANGELES 
            
      
     
      
           
   timber in the year ended last June 
30 was asken (popple) and Jack 
* jpine. A fourth was spruce and 
7 |balsam. Most of this wood was Sports Shop Formerly Mac Rogers 
16 S. Cass FE 2-7621 
      
  
mare omen aon wily 
    
    a ees eee 
ee am Te aes Sameera 
YF Eis 5 jul comnton 
PRUDENCE Year alter year prodeat mea and women 
have received from this Insurance Exchange 
at the Automobile Club of Michigan millions 
of dollars as savings on their car insurance. 
been returned, over $3,000,000 in just the 
last twelve months. It is but good business 
practice for every good driver to at least 
inquire how he ean participate in these sav- 
ings when they are made. 
Just phone any Club office and a representa- 
tive of this Exchange will be sent to you with 
full information. It is just common prudence 
to do so.   
                                
     
      
     Detroit Automobile 
Inter-Insurance Exehange 
      \ Toe <9 ee re | v4 Fak x ie 
evi a ge. ay we 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, 1 AUGUST 11, 1954   
  Pros Lead 3- | — Hits Peaches 63 
decisions 
and Von Nida-Faulkner duos. ; i vs 
> Mario Gonzalez.of Brazil; and Skee| Tam was reported in excellent 
down between All-American cham-| Riegel vs. Alfonso Angelini of | condition by the International 
. match contenders who are getting     
Baltimore's Defensive 
in Intrasquad Tilt 
in Memorial . 
Proceeds from the- game went 
to the Baltimore Police Boys’ Club 
Coach Weeb Ewbank said future 
cuts in-his squad would be based 
on play in last night's game and 
that the present 40-man roster 
would be trimmed sharply for the 
first exhibition tilt Saturday 
aginst the Philadelphia Eagles in 
Hershey, Pa. 
A red-shirted crew including 10 
rookies and labeled Ewbank’s de- 
of a 
; 
3 i 
;   Sandlotters’ Finale   
  
REP 
| BY EXPERTS INSURANCE CLAIMS HONORED 
SPECIAL! FREE of extra cost 
1 Ib. COFFEE _ National Brand 
with a Door Glass or Windshield 
Glass fer Beat Windshields 
AUTO GLASS CO. 122 Oakland Ave. FE 4-7066   
      eens   
  ——— 
  =—T Nichols and Jim Wilson all excel- ' — 
Jehnson Outboard Motors 
Teenee Boat Treilers 
Everything for the Boat 
OWEN’S 
MARINE SUPPLIES 
096 Orchard Loko Aven = FE 9-0090| 1 en leader with a 7-1 record. | | a 
GUMMOUMT ee, 
  
  lsigns of coming to life with the for 3 Divisions 
By JACK SAYLOR 6th, but Griff’ the contest otit | ted bases-em 
Gritt's Grill, Rosebud Market | of reach with two mote tallies in| ‘th to wrap i nh Rea, sig. fardaubedl SHI RTS 
maid ad oa as ft Fentrions Dick Ayling, sandwiched | ¢ hits o tiple ant ong MEN’‘S . Rosebud goes directly to the} MID-SEASON $ wes Ted Wharry worked 4 2/3 in- Sucteow tame week. bot Fosiae’s| 194 
€| nings to get the victory, but when | 
coer tree campers mat rae JACKETS Market mine had taken the Midgs* | nis control faltered in the Sth, he 
the regular season title this | yielded to Bob Johnston: who fin- 
D Tuesday Contests Determine Champions. 
in City Junior Loops 
in E however, upset the regular | 1 ytell’s Chuck Gillis hooked 4p (this morning here. the Class 
day, while Rosebud handed Ly- Maywont was soe Gochding tocter. Johnston and 
The new champs picked up : Lotet-Cotasore eocees * g, 610 o—1 
  CLASS 
"Third baseman Don | Reeves’ single, then Hayward bias-| poys Club.......0000. 000 000 0-0 7 journeys to Flinf for a 2 p.m. game | 
pony while Lunsford in Class F | 
and Boys Club Midgets met Rose- | 
ville teams in district competition | shot | paid for what actually amounts to| last week because his sons— 
practice rounds for the “World.” | Jackie, 10, and Terry, 2—under- 
* 6* *¢ rie went eye operations in Washing- 
Probably more significant t D.C, I it, tod, 
any particular play in the Inter-|that Sammy showed an caow| samen   
  Snead. That matched the competi- among the large number Of pros; famous “Galloping 
national matches was a 32-31-63, ; 's 96-96-72 per.) ein about his own| Milineis, Harold (Red) Grange.   
  
shot in practice yesterday by Sam/ U.S, Open champion Ed Furgol, Club Holds Picnic 
tive course record, an identical} gwaiting the “World” kickoff, pre-| Members of the Southern Michi- 
32-31 by Mangrum in the final dicted 275 or 276 would win the | gan Obedience Training Cub will 
round orid’’ tourney. | event. Barber took the All-Ameri-| enjoy an outing, Sunday, at the/ 
Snead missed the All-American—can—with—277,-11--under-par. |Rudy Buchmann home at Wood-| "     
  
  BOYS’ BOYS’ | mack Bp as BACK-TO-SCHOOL 
| 13, TS LONG SLEEVE 
  
  $795 Up Reg. $2.49 
Blue, Rust, Yellow, Checks 
    8-16 
158 N. SAGINAW ST. 
  BOYS’ 
PANTS 
*395 
Values to $4.95 
Checks and colors. 8-16. 
MEN’S p AVE’S BOYS’ 
(Next to Seers) _MR_ Ra ROLL _ 
$295 Blue, Grog, a Grey. 
  
  LEVIS ALL SIZES 
$365   
Lay-A-Way Now - 
for School! 
    
  
Durocher Said 
to Fear Braves 
Over Dodgers 
Better Pitching Makes 
Hot Milwaukee Club 
Real NL Threat 
By PAT ROBINSON 
NEW YORK (INS)—Come a little 
oe 
    ae 3 
e.: Seer 
fil nif 
iif sigbhs 
Ees 
Gene Conley, Warren Spahn, Chet 
and Dave’ Jolly a lot better than 
fair. 
And the rest of the club shows 
Stick. 
  
Dean Stone of Washington was the 
  
  
  
Plymouth . 
w9s5 Fone 95 Value! 
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size PRicE Alewance 
| 6.40 x15 | $25.85 | $21.55*| $4.30 
EF SLAREIALA 21.95*| 5.15]1 7.10x15 "34.75" | 5.30, 
60x15 26.90" | 6.00 
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ALIGNMENT, $7.95 VALUE 
$695 . . , 
nw" Your old tires will make the down payment — as low as $125 a week for TWO tires! 
$e ee 
Pay as Little as $1.25 a Week Py tgr olny aie 25 Pine na a 42505 150 outs aie 4-4572 onus gohan Are a-ses? poe Seats tate Bt, 
} ; JEROME MOTOR SALES COOK'S SHELL SERVICE MANSFIELD SERVICE OWIN'S SERVICE 
eens FE 4-3566 2955 Highland MU 4-5085 wenttne eh ete Os ones ns (es oe om 
y HOUGHTEN SONS STURDEVANT SERVICE SPORTSMEN’S SERVICE LES © BYERS SERVICE 
SERVICE STORE a 528. N. Main: —, OL 1-9761 250 North Perry FE 3-9547 910 Joslyn Ave. i} Mate oe 
30 South Coss FES-6123 | 7 [Beogdlh fies Mich "pe s-24en Rochester 
ee VORD SEVIS 7 net SO _ edge © sevice meme 
Kooge arson “PE 2.8549 Sasine rating Keer a jake Orie’ Michigan 
         
  
  
  
    
  rs epg _ cod PAT ds si ' " i ; rs \ \ ‘ J } 8: \ | ret : . fi > ; oe \ y ’ i i ra Poe ed ‘ ‘i 
g3 } y 4 ‘ F / r p 1 ban I \ - ; [ ‘ a r ‘| : \ 
b gf PRE cas : , | THE PONTIAC ERESS, WEDS ESDAY, AUGUST. 11, 1954 or 
| Vatican State created x. discovered “Ger to Hollywood, the scene of her si-| ing in Kansas. Where he was pre-| talked to Xavier Cugat. in N 
ES by Fay oy, ‘in Ger- ‘Pontiag Amvets to Sell New Film Role {ent day triumphs. pared to-ask for the boy six weeks | about playing the insultin’ sultan 
‘Clovers on Aug. 13-14 | “Duel in the Sun’? and “Portralt of the year, he'll now go all out |in “Ten Nights in & Harem, 
& ake | lof Jenny” were Miss Gish's for three months. __ Cugie's wife, * 
[NEW LAKE THEATRE |] er costs | (0 Be Played | or sindy meio | at erg Coc nt i Bey ; Walled Lake ‘on’ Aug. 13 and 14 to raise funds | | by LillianGish | Soon a es a ag =, - eee | en tee taeee 
A CONDITIONED Sc ence ear di mere tn [RS nae eo So | atk lr ee ae      : and Cy Howard , iss Nevada be con MON.—TUES.—WED. Jimmy-Dey Post 12, commanded | For Louella Parsons —— Ss cy ' Bet Pearl, as expected, killed ‘em. ‘the Miss Nev auty 
      
        
            
     
  
  : | by. ©. T, Baxter, and Bemis-Olsen| HOLLYWOOD (INS) — Lillian Married bile wattent” | StS I, | What wasn't expected is that she's Raeaboth Tayler’s cen, Mie, Nes tos | Post 113, under Cmdr. Douglas A. | Gish arrives Friday to play the) ooo in art leday and 30 pounds thinner. 
ROBERT MARILYN | Logan, have appealed to Pontiac | | role of Rachael in “Night of, the | she te net_due word on. the  pie- The pretty girl with Gary t af fis ais Be . 
citizens for full support in order | Hunter.” When Lillian arrives, | wee $06 severed weeks. Crosby at the captain's table was 
MITCHUM ' MONROE that the posts may carry on their | Charles Laughton, the—director of ee. Havis Davenport who has a good ‘ ! 
| work of helping needy families. the thriller, will welcome her back - Louella writes from London: | rele in “Rear Window.” 
p INEMASCOP “Deborah Kerr and Van Johnson| gam Katzman , transatlantic: ree eer mn emenenonan 
AIR CONDITIONED , J] came, to the cocktail party Bebe.   
Daniels and Ben Lyon gave in my 
EAT MORE LUNCH | honor. They are both working bard| —_AJR.CONDITIONED | on ‘End of the Affair.’ BIG JAM 
    
    921 W. Huren Se. Next to Huron Theatre | “Olivia de Havilland came with 
Pity & Chi EVERY DAY Low PRICES | Sy Bartlett who is producing her 
Sh ps, Salad, . ¢ ‘ork Chops, Salad, ¢ §| movie, ‘That Iady.’ She was wear- — Bread & Butter..... ‘50 Bread & Butter... . 80 ling Pierre Galante’s big diamond 
\ Half Fried Chicken 1-10 inet cnnemment feger but MANN Y ‘'S   
  Salad, Bread and Butter...... e | surprised me by saying she is in . 
: ; ; ~~) no hurry to get married. Ske's the WED & THURS 
—o ~ ; ~| old Livvy, full of fun and gay as e a 
a lark. 
NEW SWINGS! SLIDES! TEETER TOTTERS! uy weighbore ta Beverly | | Hills, Robert Young, Betty, and 
- | their daughters Carol Ann and 
. | Barbara, also came te the party 
It's Betty’s first trip abroad — 
| and is she thrilled!”   
  Ringside Bar 
Cor. Eliz. Lk. Rd. 
and Huron St. 
     
      
    
       
            
         
   
     
              
     
    
  
          
  DRIVE-IN TH . | * * *® 
THE FAMILY OR E ATE R | LOP’s letter continues: ‘Now 
| that he's settled his feud with his et lie. 
COMING , } PONTIAC . Cor. Williams Lake-Airport Roads — Box Office Open 7:00 P. M. | landlady who sued him, Errol Todey Thru Thursdey 
* T cneniniet Flynn is in another legal hassle 
with John Mills, owner of Les Am- 
FRIDAY DRIVE-IN SHOWING P§]  =§=WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY with Joke Mis, owene ot Lee Aw ON OUR GIANT SCREEN!   
  IN MICHIGAN! him for a bill ever $300 which | Sian fame an OAT o ames 
‘ pc | Flynn is refusing to pay. 10:00 
| “Except for these little matters 
     that brought 
AUDREY HEPBURN the Best Actress Award for 
“ROMAN HOLIDAY“ the picture that was 
also honored with 
the awards for 
cum ni 
mG or or rut 
a, wie " YEAR 
PicTURE 
PECK HEPBURN of unpaid bills, Flynn is very pop- 
ular in London. He is on his best 
behavior socially and has more in- 
vitations than he can accept.” 
7 * * 
Dan Dailey is really burning 
over not reaching a custody agree- 
| ment about Dan III, with his ex- 
| wife, Liz, now remarried and liv- 
Keego Theater Wott Disney $ 
The   
    
    
  (ale amide AIR CONDITIONED » William Wy let's pc « 
On Our Wide Miracle Screen 
V/4 bea a pap por gach OTHER” ROMAN HOLIDAY | With Chariton Heston we EDDIE ALBERT and Lizabeth Scett Produced and Owected by WILLIAM WYLER 
—ALso— o 
MICKEY SPILLANE’S Geb ites - A Poeun ee 
“THE LONG WAIT” | 
       
      
                
    SEE THE AWARD-   
  Ae LANCASTER 
      
                
  
  
  
    
  WALLED LAKE} WINNING SHOW! rare At 77 WILLIAMS: 
JEAN PETERS PARK : 7:00 - 10:20 § JORY - NIGH 
"FUteTHURS. = _ 
aDuut — ——_—— COMFORTABLY COOLED! 
Kibove iO: : * __Deors Open 10:45 A. M. 
: FREE PARKING Ty 
Sie gute, OY. THURSDAY NIGHT TODAY THRU FRIDAY 
IN_AND_ AROUND PONTIAC SOeaaae. AT 9.00 Pm. ||| emeeeaee area       
WHERE 
\ GOOD 
\ FRIENDS 
\ MEET 
        Henry's Bloomfield Inn * Only Spot & Gottent County that 
Has —-. a Week 
* Dancing and 
s-goco «= ® Fine Foods, Cocktails, Wines, Beer 
nae 6. na. * Open 4 p. m. to 2 a. m. Daily except 
Rd. Sunday. A THRILLING EVENT! 
~ SNEAK °: 
- PREVIEW .       
   
    
         
            
         
    
    
               
    Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. N. of Telegraph FE 5-4500 
[e ¢ TONIGHT—THURSDAY ® e} 
SES EN He a a 
They re no am on v Our 
big Screen / Bigger laughs... 
Bigger blushes... 
Bigger everything!   
   
                   
  
  
  
          
       
          
  Y 
Catering to Banquets and Private Parties 
PURE FOOD “itike" 
= » Some paeend Seles ~~ 
Open 5:30 
BEER — WINE — me = LIQUOR” 
DELICIOUS FOODS CHOICE "WINES AND LIQUORS 
—FAMILY STYLE DINNERS— 
SPORTSMAN INN On U-10—<At Waterford, Mich. 
Phone OR 3-9325 
‘he TOMAHAWK” Roadhouse Style Dinners . . 
FEATURING: Chicken — Spore Ribs — Shrimp 
Our Specialty: FILET MIGNON ... $2.90 jprmpirte                       A 
         
  
    
   ) © BEER 
% ® WINE 
+ ®@ CHOICE 
LIQUORS 
®@ DELICIOUS 
COCKTAILS    
      
           
  
     LUE SK B DRIVE-IN THEATER Y 
WED. é THURS.   
      
    
Mm 
: 
5 
' 
4 
i OM A   
    
  
  
LIBERTY 
COCKTAIL    
  Fade 
ded Dinners 
Monday Reservations Available for Parties or Banquets 
Auburn Road (Under New Management) FE 3-9119 LOUNGE   
  
85 North Saginaw 
  RAEL'S nestadityr esas oiitita Litt! p RESTAURANT 6225 Higkiond Road 
Serving Dinners and Snacks in Our Dining Room or in Your Car 
. * ITALIAN SPAGHETTI 
*Featuring* = * Fish ‘n’ Chips * 1% Fried Chicken * Fried Shrimp * Pork Choplettes 
Home Cooking Like Mother Used to Make! 
Home Made Bread and Pastries 
FRANK & ESTHER’S Open 5 AM. to 
nz nea, LOG CABIN Ss 87%2.4."™ 
Scrib's Cy Masts FRI. - SAT. - SUN. 
     
       
  
    
   
      Marie Wilson 8 Robert Cummings 
MARRY ME AGAIN AND 
ONE AGAINST THE KILLERS!     
    
  
         
     
            
       
    
  
    
      
     
      
      
               
     
  DRIVE-IN Chief = aon and 
130 S. Telegraph to ie 
  
  
JACK, SADIE and JACK JR. 
Still Serving Those 
WONDERFUL MEALS 
JACK O’ HEARTS BAR ‘N GRILL 2528 Dixie Hwy. 
“HOME OF FAMOUS SALADS” 
Ele 
MALONE'S scstavsarr «2. Super- Thick Malts, 30c Pork Bar-B- Que, 35¢   
  
  Open Beery Day!     
  Banquet Room   
  
  - i 
  
   
                        Hot Dogs. 20c _s Features - 12:28 - 9:15 - 6.05 - 8:58 
@pen 7 Deys « Week! New Management 11 A. M.-12:20 A.M 0 tect top a Phone: ———" SATURDAY 
—* a oe REET ERE CEES « Comey em OR 3-1907 OR 3-9303 J “TRAMCHS Jowts TwE Wacy” 
. w= BESSSEREEES sae Coen 
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: _. THE PON /PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST! 11, 1954 
Here or Hereafter Riddle meh oores co nnn gh er a 
Still Per plexes Churches the present in order. |_| whole word lies under cen 
By GEORGE W, CORNELL _, this world, or whether those ican thinking,” said Dr. Samuel 
EVANSTON, Il, ®—One of hu- coe downed ebtehuinie hs McCrea Cavert, the council's Amer- Maca Funds 
riddles—whether . Now Being Drained 
ony 
  
    
  
  'o dent kingdom of God-to-come, ican secretary. “and a lot has 
man’s first duty is to the here| The-scriptures‘abound with hints| happened to European thinking} cincaco (UP) — Mrs. George or the poses a| Of the mys They bave cross-lertilized each + onlin Shaw, president of the Na- sharpened question for churches “For now we see as through a | ther.” tional Travelers Aid 
around the globe. glass " 4 retettis unemployment and tightened 
It ig being preached on, studied,| “But when that which is perfect} Three years of conferences iD) public aid budgets are draining the argued over, read about, analyzed | is come, then that which is in part | Preparation for the world assem-| Greanization’s finances and interpreted, ~~ | shall be- done away,” bly -have contributed to # growing | — yrs Shaw told the group's re |~ It ig being discussed in Sunday ° @e accord about the ultimate Chris-| ont biennial convention that re 
schools and meetings and dealt! “There aré principles and stan-| {4% hopes—and worldly aims. | strictive state and local public with in scholarly papers and mil-| dards for human society, rooted in “Out hope is anchored in a kin&- relief policies which take “only a 
lions of words in the religious|God’s everlasting will, for which | 2% ‘at both has come and is com-| minute to enact, may take months 
press. men can work,” said Dr, G, K.| 28" Said a 32member council and years to undo * ¢ « A. Bell, Britain's Bishop of Chi-| *4visory commission, including) She urged Travelers Aid So- 
“If the churches can speak on| chester and chairman of the coun- | °h famed scholars and theolo | cieties to “join with other social 
this with one mind, it is possible | cil’s Central Committee gians as Neibuhr, Europe's Karl) agencies and community forces in for them to bring guidance—and| “But behond man's greatest | Barth and post T. S. Eto, pressing for an enlightened and grave beperty a benlitaned ent achievements or even his dreams | 1, eifiomont, ond i earthly | Ore ee rere policy 
    
    
      
    
      said the Rev, Robert S. Bilheimer, over it, there have been wide fore- : - % . 
the council's assotiate general sec-| bodings that t might deal the of ee 
retary : churches a sharp setback in their THE BERRYS 
  
is| Until recently, churches seemed 
whether Christians can hopefully | split geographically about the crux 
in| of Christian hope—with trouble-     
      
    
  
    
                  
    
    
                
“If we told them it flew out of the television set do you | “I'll bet this is why they invite guests out for weekends—just to 
gee do the housework! ~ 
  
                  
    
     NANCY . FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS 
OH, DEAR---MY|| GOOUTIN | [205-00 Cha aswenn 
PULLING STUFF/|| AND PLAY 
OFF THE LINE 
      
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  by Edgar Martin 
ALL WST ONE 
|. WAPON ar)   
  
    
  
  
  
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DIXIE DUGAN   
by McEvoy and Strieber 
  
      
      
   
         
            
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  BOARDING HOUSE ° ”. GRANDMA by Charles Kuhn 
THE EASY WAY || m= , a a Ate [SO TH MOTOR WiLL GENTLY 
To ) ee OVE Tor Mim NEAR Us vert | HOOK WHILE 1 SNOOZE, AN".   
  
          
  
  DAILY PRESS 
WANT AD 
| Ask_for-the Want Ad Dept}! | 
DIAL FE 2-8181 ~~   
    
          
    
      
                
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+8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNE Y, AUGUST 11,'1954 |! 
QETmOIT, 0Py_Whoei Cast Tomorrow | Bsc ‘| Dale Swanson and Bill Allew. 
Gimarnets reported. by. the 3 neral will be hed Thursday, Au- Re ‘bu; es 2 spr . Ww. . 12, at 2 p. m. trom the Voor- 
fancy 4 00- orkers Have Second James W. officiating. . 
duced corn crop estimate by the | 430 bu: No 1. 300-350 bu: ‘30 bu: Hl. ferment, St Otters, Pare 
Department of Agriculture w a s| BMG, fener, $50 be: ey isoats bu: Chance to Help Pull). tery. 'atr ‘Anes wii ue tn 
“Iafgely ‘responsible for soaring | No, 1, 3.00-4.00 bu.’ Cantaloupes. fancy, Studebaker Out of Red io Abd ead LiL. 7 Tr 5.00 bu; No. 1, 3.50-4.50 bu, Currants, er GARLING, A 
prices es oh major commodities | 1s Wo. 1, '5.00-5.80 | 16, gt. | case. Ham 1, $3 Bveiye Court, eae 08: 
on the board of trade today. jem — + 4.00-5.00 bu. SOUTH BEND, Ind. # — CIO and Agnes Hall: 
May corn opened eight cents! Pears. . No. 1, 3.00-450 bu. Water- United Auto Workers get a chance ter of Mrs. Cora Judson. Pu 
higher than the previous close, the melons, No. 1, 3.00" ba ante tomorrow to reconsider the question 3D me. from the Bowel C. 
limit permitted in any one day.| , SSS CS: <050% "Seen, "Kentucky of taking a voluntary pay cut to| Punerst Home with Rev. 
Soybean contracts jumped 10 cents, | Wonder, No. ws 395 S38: | beans, try to pull Studebaker Corp., out Oak Hit” Cemetery 
Senn ny ceed cer mare ae Set aeie te bee of the red Eset otra mens 90 doz. behs: . No. 1 came| HOGAN, Prices backed away as trading | ‘oc 1'35-1-19 wu. Broceolt, fancy. 2.86 Petiians far 0 socend Vote ira, 84-Growiord- Ot; teri however, with sotne| ‘% bushel; "Not" 136-17 bushel, Cub- ceiegelbcengeni At daroviey loved wife of Dave ‘Hosen: 
profit-taking in evidence on the Mer § 15% f ; 'ecabbage,. after a company Monroe, Edward Monroe, 
. re ata ie. iste we: eurly, a wages and working with Monroe, Menroe, 
Toward the end of the first | SO. NS te we ein tn Coal. UAW would be canceled in 60 days. : tow — 
hour wheat was Ye to 1% cents) tows, Me cater celery No. 1, H-138 Top UAW officials had pro- | with Rev. J higher, September $2.09%; corn| +,,* a, sweet. No. 125-180 § dos. .posed a 20 per cent pay cut in fietating. Baterment et Osh Wil 
BaP; outa were My toe higher, (eecemmers meer et $5030 So re ey rua | gas aa Renters! : i. “35. s. behs. Eggplant. | s 4 Stud ~September--72%,-and-rye_was_s SD oe dos. be ; eas. | bigger sales of Studebaker's anto. : Wzan. ri ._ ~ OOD- : . 
to 1% up, September $1-13%2. Soy- | No. 1. 90-125 pk. Kohlrept, Not. Jie ot| mobiles. ae ae wae tae ree Cult_er_phone_¥ 9-906. co 
beans were 6% to 7% cents higher, | 1:25, by, Leeks of WANTED: 5 MEN AQCORDIONS +! Okra, No. 1, 2.00-2.50 pk. Onions, green. 35; beloved husband Mrs NSED: “4 beginners. Also 8 FREE lessons 
September $2.99, and lard was 18 | No. 1, .65-90 doz. behs. Onions, dry, No. Ana The vote last Thursday night was Pearl A. Mead: beloved son of staff our Pontiac Paetory at your nome, OR 3-046. 
to 25 cents a hundred 1, 8609.50 00m. hee. Cater, Be. t. : announced as 3-2 against the pay| Wakefield, Mead:: dear father of Branch, must be willing to work, Enron ‘now for fall -- a pounds bet-| 1° '2.50-3.00 bu. Parsley, curly, No. 1. ver to the |Will discuss future plans and Diane, | Gregory end Cynthia adaptable to learnine and healthy. ter, September $15.60. 70-80 dos. behs. Parsley , No. 1.| tops or dropped over © | prospects for the Pontiac cut, with less than half of Stude- Mead: dear of Mrs. Doro- Exp not ¥. This Work Wanted Male 10 
190-3. | be. rogers. ae. — i. losing side, Club with t Dr Retery baker's 11,000 workers voting Mead "Punes icorvice ite a ene . 80-1 oz. 3; pep 5 . » 9, ul Presiden . Harold , . 
Grain Prices 2.00-2.50 ba; | peppers. sweet 1 i.%:| Steels were favored and held to} Furiong and Sec. W. Walter Smith.| Estimates of the attendance at Dem at the aparte-critfin Commtaston wCaee worse Apoly — ideo _ weiy men eround 5 ean . . . . re f " . . Huron ie. 
CHICAGO (AP) Opening grain: ion t Gag: Hadisien, rea. fancy 00 aon | their anh ment Ais yg tany : that <c aa0n ranged from 5,000 ‘Auchard Sificiating Interment in _of 10 a.m. and oon mM CARPENTRY. | PLASTIO S 7 
2.07% Mar ....... 119% | Dens. Mo 1. 6075 dos. hehe: Sadie cosines chutnicals. rub- Sa T bel T ~ in state at the Sparks-Griffin , - = as Sian 
212) Soybeans = 73 don ens. Rhubere,.outdoer Re. 1 ters “and utilities together with a ys u ess re Louis J. Horvath, president a Puncrel_ Home. WATCHMAKER Seok FE CI ax 7 
veces _ as tier ; udebaker local said Com SOY 1 WANTS WORK OF ANY 
eRe 2ee%y | 288-300 bu. squash. butternut, Not long list of individual issues. — f Be ' 5 t Oe are mean ‘esnotien bane In Memoriam. —-2,_—«|_"Groartment in ertabiishad Jewelry | _ Kind, PRE S-1704, BOO JOD ....006 2.70 | 139 t4-bu.. squash. hubbard, No. i, 3.00) Higher stocks included American 0 an ar bg — Store at new Tel - a. Boy is WANTS 
183% Mey ae 23 bu; squash. Italian, fancy, | 128-150 Telephone, Youngstown Sheet 9 agreed unanimously yesterday to IN LOVING MEMORY WILLIAM ten, Call Gersea. .WOor- -. wet ero rd 
1s% Lard sate eee 135.1 68 bu: gaan | Tube, General Motors, Southern Bnet gts pie new sae call for another gg - —_ teas on a evey Aug. 31, VACUUM AND SEWING MACHINE oa. Only 40 Cre of exp. FE 
T1% Oct 22.000 13.95 | Summer, fancy, 125-160 pk beaket To Railway, Kennecott Copper, Texas | rolling ©: assembly line will| and-file members. He said eac' 1 Reve lost my _coule ! salesmen wanted. A. est com- aT _ 
» Tae Nov Ve 13208 | BC tomatoes.” eutdeor, fancy, ‘135: | Co., Goodrich, Grumman, Fairchild | be equipped with tubeless tires by | of six petitions carried 15 to 100 | And day. by ger Limist him mare susars” Phone Peles ioe'es- | CARPENTER NORE Wane 
LULL "a" soybean ‘Ott 130 241 eke Tumi opped, No. it, | Engine, Lockheed, Mengel, and {sometime next year, Goodyear | ames of members asking of @ | Wire Rutn "Help Wanted Female 7 CEMENT RK - Rye... ws Sooo seme | 150-1.75 bu greens: Celery ean. | American Cyanamid. Rubber Co. spokesmen predicted | reconsideration. nn Poundatinns basement 1} 1s. 
N | bage, No. 1. 300-328 bu, Endive, Ne. 1 | York Stocks today. + the The meeting is called for 1 p.m. Flowers 3 driveway, sidewalks 
Business Notes: | 333 Bscarole, No 1, 100-125 bu; | New York Stoc And one of the spokesmen fur-| (EST) on a high school football SCHAPER'S 
gacarole, blesched. No 1 oso bu: let. | Adams Ex ... 372 Johns Man ... 773 ther predicted that the day is ap- | field 123 AUBURN or 3.3173 
— : , . ‘3. . crate; | Admiral sess 24.3 Jones & Ll... 26.5| proaching when the tires on new i 60-d 
sae ice mead, No'1, 1 00-1 80 bu; dettuce, | ar mee we 3h, Kemer may -- 2%) cars will last for the lifetime of a in the con Funeral Directors 4 
leuat: No 1. 3-1.00 bu Romaine, No. 1, | Ansty ch.’ ou8 Kimo Cit ©-. T3lcar~ eliminating the old problem orompmensebor papenasiy poy ~ 
on) 88 .... 30 , baker reported a loss 405, No. 1. 68-1.00 bu. Col- Alum Ltd 0 Lobe P 2. 113 ( of replacements. i Donelson-Johns . ¢ lard, No. 1, 1.00-150 bu. Kale No. 1, 1.25-|4:05 am ° || 97.4 LOP Glass... 392 in the first half of this year. It 
1.50 bu. Mustard, No.1. 1 ee ee | (Am Airlin <°. 165 Lib MeN&t... 114) “It's hard to tell how soon. But | said it couldn't continue to operate ee 1. 
in 0 ion 1.50-2.25 bul Swiss chard, + 1, 1.00-1.25 — pad anes cos ae y-::: ea we're catching up,” he said. unless w I ee peti 
4 bu. Turnip, No. 1, 1.00-1.25 bu. Am Gas &E} 37 Loews ...... 17 Z tive.” Voorhees-Sivle 
, Jam sie, 3 tees oes | Te wren been, tee FUNERAL HOME ‘to. , - DETROIT BUGS m y - unvetied its tubeless tire, y Contracts in First Five DETROIT (AP) — Regs, {0b Detroit, |A™ Motors .. 108° Meck Tre 7. 94 ag) a. . ® Acsbubence Senvien. Pine oo tacts 
Months of ‘54 Were Up | *inearen itive 85-85. wes Am Rad .... 195 Martin Gl .... 32 °e : ews in brie PE +0378 
P oN: ate-tt, wed ove. 80%, mer | A= Seating . 314 May D Str... 381 a heavy liner acting as an inner ; 
75 Per Cent oo sok en Ne avg 30,’ grade am TeleTel 172 saeee & pel: = tube. The new tire has especially | waroid O. Taylor, 25, of Detroit, Box Ree y 
: | ‘Browns—Grade 3. 46-80 wid ove {Am Woon 323 a Sd Ps... we treated cords which themselves | 5,\4 a $50 fine and $5 costs Tues- a.m. toda 
The Midwest "is pacing the na- | qty" mesium 41-4i wil ave «i's small Am Zine"... iat qentWoru':. gr| Set as the “immer tube” to hold |day after he pleaded guilty to there were replies at : n . 28; - - ; —- 
oa ee ae oe ar Peewees 17. MT {asst wac 2 sre Meter Ed... 24) the compressed alr. driving under the — influence of the Press office in 
- . Armeo Stl .. 49.7 Motorola ..... 43.4 conference liquor before Milford Township the following boxes: 
Reserve Bank of Chicago reported Armour & Co 104 Mueller Br... 28 During a news a it 2 
as | (MECAGO BUTTER AND Buus Assd Dry G 254 Murray Cp ... 283| spokesmen for the company flatly | Justice Bartlett Smith. 3, 4, 6, 7, 9 15, 16, CHIC. (AP) — Butter ; ve-| Atchison ....1142 Wat Bise...... a . 
In its monthly review, Business | ceipts 1.073.417. wholesale buying prices | Atl Refin .. 342 wat Cash R. 86.¢/ Predicted all cars would have tube-| Cisrence Prince, 51, of Holly,, 18, 22, 26, 27, 30, 33, 34, 
“03 unchanged; 93 score AA 56.75: 92 A 56.5; | Aveo Mfg ...: 65 Nat Dairy .... 623) Jess tires as standard equipment 38, 40, 42, 51, 55, 64, 
Conditions, it said the biggest UP- | 99°p 5425: a9 C $25: cars: 00 B 54.75: Bald Lime ... 96 Nat Gyps -... 386 leaded innocent to a driving under . 
surge is in commercial building. | # Cc 83 (Balt @ Oh .. 712 Nat Lead .”..: §3.4| Sometime during the 1955 model the influence of liquor charge Tues- 72, 78, 78, 88, 82, 96, 8, j firm; receipts 10.437, wholesale | ut .. Nat Steel .... 52.3 ar 96, 101, 103, 104, 108, 
Contract awards from January |e prices un to 1% higher, | Bendix Av .. 872 Nat Thee - 84/5° day before Holly Township Justice . 
through May for commercial con- | Ss oantasae 3 W rca wreonione Fo ‘Beth Steel .. 785 NY on: me Aubrey Butler. Prince was ordered p Fino > 
struction in the Midwest were 75 | “irties 215. checks 20 Rohe faim tee SiMe Pw 215 First Woman Constable —‘ appear Se a ee > * t ahead —_—_—_——— Bond 8t 147 ' . i S iting a $100 bond. 
tod last year ™ ved DETROIT pr reid oh pound Borden. . ss Nor Pac 2 Appoin After rch ~ “e The Pontiac Press Py 
° (AP) —Prices paid per pou Nor Sta Pw .. 156 | Pleading guilty to reckless driv- . Press . : - |B ft ..% , piy Box, Pontiac eran eenmenammaranants 
wins ates emo Cr a ie OER EGE HD west ones, Rw oe and ag sites an ore| | FOR WANT ADS | | stoerteourestgey raxr | Toy 37y neuer get one ban mote | Se oF re hed Gs | emia eS Quek i | ths town's first lady constable to- 18" se Livonia was sentenced toa DIAL FE 2-8181 RPERIENCED.| ION? WAT | } The bank said awards for | 23. gray crosses “=; Bar oe ic 7 Owens Ill Gi. 89.2 . la W 0 ress. Heidelbere Rertaurant, | male 11 
ee | Barred and crossed cockereis 26-27,|Campb Wy .. 24 day—because of a recent dispute - ; 8 Telegraph 3-888 Work Wtd. Fe 
ernization and construction of) i4-¢ Ws) 33-36. /Can Dry 12¢@ Packard ...... 3 | ‘ total of 105 days in Oakland Coun- From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m _8_tet ~ 
stores and restaurants scored the | | om oe : aa Penh SFL. | potiee two women in a . ity Jail. He chose the jail sentence . shed a ta pleat wo bears. Good pay. BABY SITTING, DAY. EVE. OR 
It is now nearly | CHICAGO POULTRY ‘Carrier Cp... 556 Param Pict 347| Police Chief James . Albro said i, jjeu of paying a $3 fine and All errors should re Arteraft ster wk. Middiesged lady, Good ref- 
sharpest gain. YY CHICAGO (AP)—Live poultry steady | Case JI 163 Parke Da... 32.7) ‘ hassle of the es ported immediately. The WORK FOR SALES OF erences. PE 43843. 
2% times its early 1953 volume. | on young stock; steady to firm on S:.| Cater Tree .. 63 Penney JC ... % | that in the cafe one ; $10 costs for reckless driving and ‘3 assumes no fee Tel-Huron rea Light t GOLORED GIRL DESIRES DAY 
: . | receipts 992 coops (yesterday 101.018 Ib) Celanese ..... 206 Pa RR ....... 167| women accused the other of hav- 5 fi li sibility for errors other ing Hours 1 to 9 PM. 5 day work or 5 da-> @ week. FE 
Besides leading the nation in| fo» paying prices ‘> lower to “4 high- Cen UJ! PS 23.3 Pepsi Cola .. 144), ife concealed her \a $15 fine for having no license. than to cancel the week, Good telephons voice and 5-0610. 
commercial building, the Midwest ox: heavy mene 4¥-32.8 Nght pry 14.5- | Ches & Oh %6 ws D..... as ing * unite deputi Me i He appeared before Farmington for that portion Z me experience necessary. A ° 2 x, GOLORED GIRL 2 WANTS WORK 
also is ahead in residential, in-| ers 133-14: caponettes 29-22 ” | Ghtytier ° Sa? Philip. Mor...” 3a Cruden i male soarch + Township Justice Allan C. Ingle. vertisement which has been sant Foe SMALL BI OF. exten anCen LADY WITH BEF. NEN REF. 
dustrial and public construction Clark ‘Bquip 40. Pilleby Milis.”'. an didn't find a knife. but gained al Burgilars took a jewel box the “error. "When eancelle- fee, aaowering rea end erences. vant: dav work. FB 
; . da) : _some ty = 1374, _ 
work. : Livestock Climax Mo .. 54) Biuct & O-... ss '| Constable's job to carry out similar | containing a $10 bill and two sets tone are mote be owe & Gin. TO CARE FOR, | YEAR con TM Dae GEFFEN. 
The appointment of J. C Chees- | SSERSTE LIVESTOCE Geek Cote ..1183 + moe i 865 dutiés when needed. | of cufflinks from an apartment at Se Remnants wl be aiven work. Live in, Morey’s Golf and _E X_N, 
a | gp OSTROST (AP)—The Detrem livestock Col’ Gas... 3 Radio Cp... 3 | 59 | 82 Murphy St., Tuesday night, time tor advert! of Commerce a bane Be. OVicinty of liz, Li. Estates. PE 
< Se 8 3 tars... 367, Dr. Foster Dies at according to Pontiac Police. The me vertioe. . Mey salable 300. No early sales, ask- | Con GE ..... 306 Reo Motors... 26.7 r. Foster Vies ments ¢ type sizes — 
. : Repub Stl... resident, Frank Spadafore, said larger agate GIRL FOR OFFICE WORK. PER- GiRL DESIRES BABY siTTING. 
Cattle salable 300. Fully $0 per cent | Cont Ray * ts Reyn Met... m8 DETROIT (®)—Dr. Linus J. : . type fs 12 o'clock noon the manent Cate quae OR 30189. 
fresh receipts cows: cow market active, | Cont Can 756 Rey Tob B... 36.7 the lock on the door was broken cations, erence, age iRONINGS, 3. BU. FE 7363 On 
sree stare Mate Mame Matt en {Sat at HY settwar Be. | pepchistriee, died. Tuseday im a|°7 © STE 27 Posie” Frees Bows SY | 8 Mate en —ViCIn : eee ne . ent tee - psychiatrist, be canceled up to 9:30 the Pa : 
Sod Jame ofegiute vo nel wpwarda’ very | Coe” Pat... are 8 ire Pap... 307 | Detroit hospital. He had retired! If your friend's in fall.and needs| | dav‘or bf GIRL FOR OFFICE WORK. WHO Gaby Gesines won” BY Dat 
a commercial | Cruc St! .'. 27.8 Seovill Mf. 28 | three years ago after 25 years as bail. Ph. PE 5-201. CA. Mitchell. CASH WANT AD RATES enjoys detail work. Tpine re- or week grassers 12.00-16.00; early sales utility Curtiss Wr .. 13 bes Reb... 83 ‘Ww | Lines 1 Dav 3 Dave @ Dave Pa Reply Pontiac Boz RA a 
Soa mecerreigcer gaa eee won |B ohng' Hy Sat st: et a member of he Mealy of Wevee| Diamond Bing. 20% oft i Marat are ea Bott 0 rome, Nghtweight canners 8.80 | Doug Airc a 0 Simmons... 383 | University’s School of Medicine. | Georges - Newports, Jewelry Dept. 2 12 He eS HOUSEWIFE INCREASE YOUR PRACTICA’ NURSE “AVAILABLE. 
—— good wr around | | ~ Secon on —— ; 20) «360 | «6840- rties in spare time. +7148. _re = 5 Soe, 
ee ee |Bagie P M$ Sou Bec.) aes, * * * $ 30 43 ou SEWIVES PART TIME. RELI 
canes dalable 100, Very small supply | Bast'air Ls.) aaa sou Ry... 373/ Pontiac City Affairs i im fe Tse Ear’ up to 60 = week for three sires work be day or week. City 
ket not fully established: few sales about | East Kod ... 60.2 Sparks W...., m3 $ Yeo ee en ane, as @ Sarah Coventry Saoey OATES 
steadp: late Tuesday, bulk choice vealers EI Auto L -. 384 Spe wo is a es rojec e : collecting or delivery. For appoint- enced. day shift, day work. FB 
dea 1100 BOO with tee up te 3100 | Emer Rad ... 127 Std Oil Ind... 704 ] m K Pp t Birmingham Office ment. write Box 30. Pontiac Press. Cas NT TRONINGS WIFE 
heep salable 175. N les. End John ... 38.1 Std Of! NJ..... 8s , EXPERIENCED BEA NS. 1 ASHINGS A 
Tuvaday." good, and f ce" patie ering Ex-Cell-0 Hi Stevens JP... 303 . / Ph. Midwest 4-0844 Part, time and 1 full time. PE ed, PE 67100 
= wing BA Bae: te O Protest , prt PE San oe : CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Preept gal... ae Studevaker By Despi e wneIs ro e Ss 379 Hamilton Courtry home located near Mete- We GARE POR CONVALES: 
For the second consecutive | CHICAGO (AP) —Seiabie hogs 6500; Gen Bak... 95 Swift & Co... 483/ Pontiac City Commission last| In other action Willman was more." Permanent maiarr expected cent man er woman tm my home. 
month, North Central Airlines in | moderately active and uneven: burchers Gen Elec... 48 SEEPS": 223) night decided to proceed with con-| instructed to contact the Public Bor No, MAN i” . h iriines strong to 2% or more higher: sows 250-50 Gen Pds 76.6 oe G Bui.||.104 j INSURANCE CLERK 18 yrs i ee July established new records in | up: most choice 200-270 Ib butchers 23.00. Gen Mills 692 Thomp Pd... a3 | Struction of curb, gutter and drain-| Housing Administration on possi- N: NE work, switch 
passenger business. A total of om tntter “orses Sreuty iat chsioe ie Gen Ry Sig. 336 Timk R Bear.. 467/age on James K from Voorheis ble ways for the city to provide She: Ag heme py board. tyning eredit Sort. oat 
: b Ls some personnel experienc ® 
30,671. revenue passengers  flew_ | lb 23.65. 180.200 lb 22.25-23.00: sales 180- a yee ae ~ 383+ to the city limits over the protests quarters for families facing evic- Swell Recipe ence Sutin. J panel wired. 45. Write box 85 Press. 
forth Central Jast month. 1.91) | 272, ™wmaerwetents 20 50-27 99: burehers | 3) TWent C Pox 23! of James K residents. tion from the Parkview and Crys- for, Folks in. a Stew... | Ae Gilder Apply Personal office. ASHINOS AND TRONINGS OF 
  
  than..in..Jdune aidan Debbetshh Ha bh Ride wht   
  
  
  
  
  
  
choice, sows 130.400 0   
  crease of 27 per cent over July 
a year ago, reports H. N. Carr, 
president. 4 
School Buildings 
Needed in Owosso 
OWOSSO (P) — The.. Owosso | 
Union School District Board of | 
Education was informed Tuesday | 
by L. P. Cushman, school super-   
intendent, that a half million) Saisbie sheep 1560: active; slaughter | Interiak Ir ... —--dollar_ building expansion program | will be necessary gp the next two 
years if enrollment continues to 
swell. A million dollar expansion 
program was completed only four 
years ago. @ 
Wanderer Is Identified   
STANTON —Montcaim County | 
sheriff's men turned up with a 
possible amnesia victim Tuesday. 
They found a man walking along 
was later identified as R. E. Phil- 
lips, a Grand Rapids rental library | valued at nearly five million. 
dollars. operator missing since Aug. 5. | weights 2060-21 00 larger lots 
| steady to 26 higher 
| steady to 25 higher: vealers fully steady 
  15 50-17 50 
Salable cattle 14.000: calves 400: choice 
and prime steers and heifers active: 
strong to fully 50 higher. lower grades 
cows and bulls 
about ', dozen loads prime 1165-1325 Ib 
steers 26.50 and 26.75, bulk choice and | 
| prime 23.25-26.00;- few loads 26.25: most | 
‘average good to low choice grades 20 50- 
23.00; good to low prime heifers 18 §0- 
24.00: a load of prime heavy heifers held 
above 2540; utility and commercial cows 
1050-13 50; canners and cutters 8.50-10 50; 
utility and commercial bulls 1250-1500, Il 
good and choice vealers 18.00-21.00: most 
cull to commercial grades 12.00-17.00 
lambs 50-166 higher: yeartings and sheep 
x1 ee as Beis 00-22 00: most cull to low lambs 
grades 1300-1900, decks and load iots 
good to prime 96-103 Ib yearlings 15 00- 
1650 with a part deck mostly prime 
105 Ib averages 17 50 
commetcial slaughter ewes eull to mostly 
3 50-4 25 
Car Sales Drop in July 
DETROIT (#)—Ward's Automo- 
tive Reports said today domestic 
new car sales in July dropped 20 
per cent below the 47-month high | : 
the road near Six Lakes who|'™“‘* Set in June. couldn't provide his identity. He. with   
The 4,192 cars produced in 
the United States in 1900 were 
  
  
    Crawford-Dawe-Grove Insurance of All Kinds 
716 Pontiac Statc Bank Bldg. The Safest Way 
PROTECT 
INVESTMENT Is to 
_ INSURE with. 
Ph. FE 2-8357     
es 
Bw? Fad dy { r4 I fe fad. wsied 
    yf 
‘4 
iF i                  
      
  
      
    
    
  
  
    
      
    
Pac. 
  Gillette e44 ° Unit Air Lin 25.5 
Goon! Br. 74 unit Aire..... 675/ rich . 994 United Cp ry 
Goodyear 70.2 Unit ” $9 
Grah Paige 13 Un Gas Im 375 
| Gt No Ry .... 322 us Lines 16.5 Gt West 8 ... 196 US Rubd...... 3 
Greyhound ... 125 Ug gmelt..... 49.2 Gulf Oi) .... 555 Us steel... M 
| Hayes Mf... 47 Ug’ Steel pf. 155.4 | Hollend P 172 UB Tob...... 17.8 | Homestk ..... 436 van Raal..... 2 | Hooker El .... 80 Walgreen... 25.5 
| Houd Her .... 147 w B Pic. 18.1 
Cent ...... 507 W Va Pulp.... 35.4 | Inland St! .... 644 West Un Tel.. 53.4 
Inspir Cop 31.6 Westg A Bk... 24.7 
154 Westg El..... 69.7 
Int Harv .. 321 White Mot 35.2 Int Nick ... 443 Wilson & Co.. 87 nt re r et? 
Int Tel & Tel 224 Yale & Tow 45 
Is] Crk Coal 162 Yngst Bh & T 614 
Jacobs .. . 7 Zenith Rad... 73.5 
STOCK AVERAGES } 
NEW YORK -— Compiled by the Asso- 
ciated Press 
30 15 15 60 
Indust Ratis Util Stocks 
Net change » 9 +3 +.2 5 
Noon Wed ,.... 1790 986 646 1328 Prev. day ...... 1781 S883 G4 1323 
Week ago 118 88 63 142 
Month ago .... 1763 980 624 1306 
Year ago ... 141.7 868 6542 1005 
1934 high ,,.... 1820 1002 646 1344 
954 low ,..... 143.9 78 564 1086.0 
1963 high 1618 983.6 5858 1163 
1953 low 35 80S 995 
| DETROIT or 
} (Hern & Weeks) 
Figures after decimal points are hths 
,,, High Low Noon 
Baldwin Rubber® sevveeee 44 146 
‘D & C Navigation® .......... 132 14 
Gertty-Michigan* - 
| Kingston Products* 
| Masco Screw* eee ee oe 
eee been 
(om ae been 
— & & he he 
wHatva -—2awuw wen . 
rere 
  
AFL Membership High 
NEW YORK (®—Membership of 
the AFL reached a record total of 
10,200,000 in June, president George 
Meany said yesterday.     
LE 
| le, Motor No. R 38 
Delux 68 fordor. le to be held 1:30 
t- August 13. at 275 Woodward, | 
irmingham, Michigan. 
Aug. 11, 12, "54 PUBLIC 
1953 Oldsmobdt 
    
  
  
  
  "of 
135 | curb would be followed by paving ing projects here, 
next summer. They expressed fear | 
6/ the street would be turned into a! 
“speedway” if paved. 
City Engineer Lewis M. Wrenn 
said James K was an important 
artery in the city’s traffic scheme 
and should be paved, 
said he thought the problem was 
one of policing after the street 
was paved, Commissioners agreed re 
City Manager Walter K. Willman   
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
      
  
    
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
Public hearings were set for Aug. 
17 on special assessment rolls for 
construction of: 
Combined sewer in Second from Ivy to 
Laurel, Laurel from Second to Third and 
Third from Joslyn to Highwood. 
eon en te. evolneee, and reese‘ 
Prancis from As 
A request was referred back to 
the City Plan Commission for re- 
W, Wilson “between       _Was_increasing. 
everywhere and said they planned 
to give the matter careful study. 
A resolution was passed setting 
a public hearing on the special 
assessment roll for the planned 
  
Plane Crash Victims 
Reported Improving 
  j ; ¢é sedan. North 
|W ieinn, Orton an ae a8 — Aug. 11, 12, 4 Bagley. 
Action was deferred one week 
on a request from Max A, Max- 
im that approval be given trans- 
fer of a tavern license from 65'2 
N. Saginaw St, to 922 Highwood 
  If everyday problems keep you. 
in a stew, Classified Ads are 8 
recipe sure to agree with you. 
Say you're trying to find a 
buyer for something. Real es- 
tate, car, furniture, whatever. 
All you do is dial PE 2-8181 for 
an ed-writer, and your buyer's 
Practically on the way! 
ST assist im care 
iB id 43311. a ae = 
LADY TO DO help with 
work 
  
  
Help Wanted Male 6 
ACCOUNTANT FOR COST WORK, 
$ 
      | 3 wee LADY TO DO HOUSEWORK AND 
eral days a week Must have own 
trans: tion 
HOUSEWOR: 
+ ae Phone 
Laby. care of child. OR 3-9404. ; 
NURSEMAID, LIGHT HOUSE- 
white Formeaen. Oo. 
Private room and bath 
MI 45762. 
FFICE GIRL rienced with m oF 
po} a must have ad- a of children sev- 
Located east of 
of Square Lake 
Wachtler, Trinity 
K AND OR 
Joa: 
  
  ALE 
    RESPONSIBLE LADY TO TAKE of good 
Must like children 
Press, Bo 
OFFICE GIRLS 
Tishea Tewelry store, at, Felffuron 
Jewelry ais home & 3 school 
L *, in. Write 
at 
Arg Myer's 
8 Washineton. 
Gerson. 
     
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
& . 
end _debver, Bus WASHINGS AND IRONINGS 
  
  
     
         
         
            
   
  
    
   
--PHONE FE4- Walter’ s BLOOMFIELD WALL C 
Wails and Windows cleaned, 
ALL_ MAKES OF 
REFRIGERATORS 
WASHING MACHINES IRONERS )                
F250 51_N. Parke 
APPLIANCE SERVICE an makes of seirigess- 
nove sad all ypee of small epplianens 32-4031 
LEB TRENCHING 
react tee field tile, 
ALL 
by apey S trained mee 
at store General Printing & 
Strice, Cot cake W. Law- 
ee WORK 
W Call ws foot, soteen ae! cleaning 
& of boilers, 
fi Also we specialize in 
' e reb 
and chimneys and 
re 
_$-6903_or PE 4-7604. EXCAVATE A £ 
FE 4-2012. PA 
CN WANT WALL WASHIN ~ OR 3 
  
  
  , _COPTED 
and re Swdio, 12 
E. Pike, FE 4-391. 
1 
eee et =| re MASSAGE. 
2 Elm Bt. E4285 
Television Service 22 
FE, +120 FE 
ARA TV REP make PE ¢072¢, ANDY CON- 
io puny CALLS 
422 W. Huror St FE +1133. 
Typewriter Service 22A   
  
TYPEWRITERS RENTED Mitchell's 123 N. Saginaw St. 
TYPEWRITERS AND ADDING MA- chine a work. General 
_piy Co, 1 W, Lawrence.   
  
  
    
  
Te ~ 
You BU Towel INSURE IT - 
-MAHAN pra 8 CO. REALTORS 
Rea) Est. Exch., Inc. 
FE 2 E 2-0263 Open Eves ‘tt) 8—Sun, 104 
NEXT DOOR BRANCH 
~ 4 (POsT. OPFICE 
  
CASH FOR EQUITIES   
  
  
PAAAAAALDRLLLE OO AOA OE OL 
can N TAKE 3 AGED OR Con. 
| after 5-p. 
COLES Resi iis HAS Via- OA_8-3362. 
  heme Re red, uree, on duty. 
precene 3. OL 23-5405 
  cancies. 
Hotel Rooms |   
  
E HOTEL AUBURIN 
         
  
  
    
with bat and 
ences. 4-5158. or ney MElrose 17-7052. 
WANT RIDE TO PH 1x, 
around 15th of month. Will help furnish 
  
Wtd. Contracts: Mtgs, 32   
GET THE M 
Oe ia rans on S* svquans FOR your 
nh to see 43 W. Huton 
5% M RTGAGES 
ft. frontage, no 
sere D. O CHERIES PAUSE 4081; Eve, 1717 8. a + aimee N, from 
  
for buying land 
courteous 
results call MR J 
Jott $ Unlimited $ 
A. JOHNSON, Realtor ts. Fast 
  
    
  
  
20% 
  DISCOUNT ON ALUMINUM AND FIBERGLAS AWNINGS PE 4-6089 
“Pe ae AND ares wee 
arestoed. Reason. 
  etal PLASTERING ] D. Meyers —--EM 3-8830 FE 4-1938 
FE 5-0626 eee tae Lastie   ROBERT H CHAPIN PLU and . FE 5-34 
SPECIA 
—_™a_end saws M a . FE 40967 eee 
BURBA _cleaners. Lak» Orion MY 26431. 
al, Free estimate FE 
3-0638, 
N Footings. field tile, +2008, FE 
i 
= tt See   
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
    Lost & Found RO RE OR RRR MH RAR REESE 
:, GREEN Bata bil. 
  ow 
the ¥ 
6300 ry non. ‘ian 
ward. M 
LosT. BLUE : PARAKEET. 250 6. 
Shirley, FE 2-7967. land contrae or equity 
home 
  LOST: $36, THU AY. 
PE 2-6604 evenings. 
_REWA . Tyezier, name “Tiny” 
46438. 
Lost: may in Kresges it. er please 
call FE 5-2876. 
_ Notices & Personals _ 2 
ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING 
ofan Ne. Fn Me Mrs. 
Conf 
_ dential, The etiee Are? 
DAINTY eS wae 
Burnes FE paste ae cp Mart. 
Sam wonded. er 56-6808.   
  
  
IT’S HERE—-A w method le vene- 
  machine. 1 DAY SERVICE. OR- 
AND AFTER THIS DATE. & 
1 wil not be responsible 
lor any debts contracted by any 
er than i ~} Tom Reitano. 
iy ——- Lake Rd. Pontiac, 
  
  
  
  
  9| than 36_in. DAY CARE. Pr an OF DODGE 
Park No. 
er OAT os —_— = FOR 
Mentlaren Neensed re   
1 Cane Day. CARE. LICENSED 
home FE 5-05 
Wid. Household Goods 27 
LET Us ae Tron AUCTION IT 
for 6NE TF PONTIAC'S LARGEST ee   
  
FURNITURE NEEDED 
WANTED FURNITU you have anything for aa and want. prompt cour- 
  
  
borrow OF Fent, if reksonsbte, 
5 at trailer for trip out west, 
hus. 30 Call PE 2-0839. 
  
A good used electric 
range. Cannot be latger|_ 
FE 2-110. 
      a ta eo oie Rage mer BILLFOLD | _OR 
lando 3-0428. 
ENAPP SHOES. SIZES 5 TO 1.) 
Widths AAA to 60 North | 
Por Shirley FE +088. oo ’ 
LEAVE NO SOIL AB LBA neat OT. 
a ed carpet mh wal] wit 
oop wa © 4 SCHOLLS. . ~LARGER....... 
“puyers cash ~~ waiting. > 
- WANT _ meat * K. L. 
  
(oom. FOR 19 Joslyn © to 8 om. Daily: sun to 
IMMEDIATE C FOR 
Templeton, Realtor 
fost: | BLACK. WHITE -& B BROWN | 2 Ore Lake Rad. FE 44563 
R LAND CONTR Vanwelt 4540 Dixie Hwy. 
Ty s33s Upholstering 23 FE 4-2533 
CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. 
Large se wt Tabres seat onan ee your land ee, a ei? ome We have plenty of 
te, te Pree ecimete | we oe epetrens cnt lead om- DAVENPORT. ¢ $54.96; CHAIR, | . CA H. —— ares 
Be ee Pe wctimates OR | 362.W. Huron PE +6402 | 
3-6076 5 
eae =| ~=CASH - ait he FE sin | ¢ | 
sinew soas| Settlement, you want a fast deal on wens 
Tcontract?. Bet discount in 
in reer 
ome f STONE Mgeatry mus 2-0340 
1 to 5, 
YOUR | 
in your | 
  
WE HAVE 
. 
At our disporal to 
our clients. See 
fell, ASK FOR BOB 
MAH   Hurou 
DRIVING LESSONS” Ens” FOR SEASONED LAND contracts on mod ern 
DRIV-RITE TRAINING SCHOOL CAPITOL SAVINGS & ‘ToAx ©. 
| 13 W. Hure   purchase new 
or seasoned — contracts 
MAHAN 
YOU BUY IT-WE‘LL INSURE IT 
AN REALTY CO REALTORS 
Evenings apd Ope Sundays for 
2-0263 
  CONTRACT OREEERT -F Ol FOR. 
y te see 
e Ra Oenie 1058 model 40% housetrailer | [NAPP SHOE REPRESENTATIVE te at 3300 El j 
  — ——— 
  
  
Open 6:30 — 
nw ‘Huron St.     
    
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
HAVE BUYERS FOR aL TS | 2 bed home. Close in. 8750 . | 
sae tne ete fone   
  
  
  
    oS al oki SS ing the golf course. $2,900 down. 
  
A DREAM ee bedroom 
  
Hi 
a i a ' veil if R 
g   Biizabeth Lake Estates overlook~ | 
“BUD” NICHOLIE REAL ESTATE   
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
home & business, immediate pos- 
session. Call J. R. Hilts, Realtor 
$-6181   
  
  AND 4 ROOMS IN TOWN, ADULTS FE 
3 bedrooms with activities room | —Tound. No children. OR_ 3-0178. | _ 4-6268. 
and extra livin, quarters around 3 ROOMS ND BATH WEST | { ROOMS. OxBow a PART- 
Rochester $10,600 do nee Saas N rar |; , furnished. 
. A ¥ A bedroom home on west side. vate private. launfiry ee | PY és. SHARE Bani ar 
brick preferred, $4,000 down. ties, chi Mya Beck it k Lake, Milford 
te MODERN, UPPER 3 3 bedrooms with basement for Newman at Variety Store, $13 OOM. 
colored. $1,000 down, —Orchard Lake Ave. | we — on noe es eee room, —. 
7 ROOMS CLOSE TO TOWN, N, FE a e north west si teatden- 
2 bedroom home for colored. $630" 45268 | (ial section’ Jarage Available down Rent References 
private entrance. FE 4-2 
# ROOMS AND D BATH. BATH. MODERN. | Call J. A Taylor. Realtor, FE 
42044, 
  
  «7 ROOMS AND BATH. W. wipe, | “sk FE 42604     |®#ROOM ‘4ODERN LARGE PLAY- 
  
    
  | round, must have references. | | Adults only. $66 month on | 
7 - > | 7 monthly. P. A. Secord, P.O 
LISTINGS WANTED | eo prey -FIoOR a Pg. | Bom | Russet. A. NOTT. Reale | vate entrance adults 2. (a ® ROOM HOUSE IN LAKE © ORION | 
170 W, 2-0803 Ruth | _for rent or lease rE j 
| min NEW iu amine MO ets 
“Toom rivate bath, idea nished © 
i ays es Paddock | for couple F 61ST. 
ipoLte 3 none, a onIVATE | HOUSES | FOR iat “? MILES w. Payee FE 2-7200. of Pontiac, 2 bedrooms. gas heat, 
SE LPTER LABOW Dav. | FE 2-7759 after 6:30 p.m 
Ir aca “small ait modern Bitcnenstie, apart LAKEFRONT. 2 BEDROOMS pe © - 
over eg Fatal | , Riithed “ow ED tars He's, Pontiac Trl | BEAUTIFULLY R e end are seeneratery _ need of | and D tnd _ eee 
pe ut types of property to rty to A | leree rooms wd —_ and oe OE ROOM HOUSE. 26% 
Office Open 9-8 
A. JOHNSON Kealtor FE 4-2533 /~ - 
1704 S. Telegraph Rd. vue 
| FURNISHED oak teaeeee Pri. | 
entrance. Couple 
_saly, rE gist. 
FURNISHED APARTMENT 
43378   
  
  
Listings W anted | 
Immediate Service | 
20258 | FU 
| 
| 
ee t   FURNISHED et ON MAIN | 
fleor, ") oe rooms ond bath, desir- 
REISZ RE AL, ESTATE able location. No children. 
oe retire me FURNISHED APARTMENTS FROM 
rative dive eal. Estate Pachense ee 
LISTINGS WANTED Rag tong are Wa Waiting For rienced ad- eee call rE 23-0181.   
H.C. ~ Newingham, Broker |* ve sean or Lt hoes CAKEFRONT APAP 
vate entrance. Stove, refrigerator.   4 
‘ ir OR TOUR LAE | utilities furn Te couples w 
eee Le on tist 1 wait 8 days. Lautngton Scott . 
R. F McKIN ‘NEY . 
Office 3800 Commerce Rd. Perr 
Ph. Pontiae EM 3-331 or 4 UNiv. 1-5706 FarvatE APARTMENT CLbeE IN Private bath. FE 4583@"or FE 
_5-5754 after 4:30 
SMALL CLEAN FURNISHED 
ploy le   
  
    
  P. WwW. ee AN apartm to em ed ‘ 
nm s before noon, or at 
WANTED 700 pm, 414 W Bivd., 
Good Cue ton @ room Sg hina or tn ; : 
theatre rkin, prefe 
oe PAUL “TONES _ ted. $20, week. PE S3hal_after 4 REAt STATE WATERFORD. 2? . BATH 
FE 4-3505 SS ravens entrance. Call OR 
  
  Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34)   
WANTED 2 ROOMS. KITCHENETTE AND 
LISTINGS — | Eirtfeatinee! Aguiar ta rta Apartments, 290 N. Paddock. 
anted good west suburban lake | 2 a Roce APT BABY WELCOME. property. We Rove clieste, vaiting | <2 0 Wesbroor   
  bh room * te purchase 3 and 2 be | 7 Roe pBATH PRIVATE EN 
service, if the price and terms | Rooms ROOMS AND P. OOMS AND ATH. PRIVATE 
F. C. W Co. 31 Rooms. Ms UNFVRNISMED OTIC gh 
ood 7 Re Totes 3. STOVE. REFRIGERA- REALTOR | Ss aeee. 0 ‘per month. 101 
| Cor. of Williams Lake Rd. & M50 at ROOM APAR PRIVATE | OR 3-1235 Office Open #7 | rence and bach Prigijaire was poten ee ats and heat furnished 
Want Money? | BS" watte iy line Adults only 
      
    
  
  | Semis Bes See | 
  
your real 
", 26%4 W. Huron st 
5-T741 FE Eve. LISTINGS WANTED 
suburban and 
qualified buyers 
PAUL D_ HA MOND_4i- jake 
rE sani 5-4714   
CASH 
IN 
24 HOURS 
= Fe DW. MM. STOUT > Savinaw St 
Open Eves mas   
r conscience! 
28181.   TO FIND THE LOSER) gaan 
of that article you found. is 
place a Found Ad in Pon- | 
tiac Press. Wonderful for 
Dial 7 'J ROOMS “PRIVATE ENTRANCE Let us list your property       
       
  cal G3 
bedroom homes - | mear 
preferabis on the west side. | _3-1943 
ree nh re | @ ROOMS. VALE UTILITIES. $80. airport. Couple ‘only. OR 
  
  
    
  
    
        
  __monthly, F1 FE 4 
BUSINESS |, Leslie R. Tripp. Realtor. |* Be ig ge W. Lawrence Street ter furn . Indian Village, 
. Open re _adults, $65. FE 58-1456 
IS TERRIFIC 5-8161. [ROOM UPPER. HEAT >, onTs. 
ca yee ry 3 hot water, 343 Irwin 
So’ ziur home ¢ a breran Rent Apts. Furnished 33 ROOM: AND BA BEAT AND 
ROOM FOR hos| 79 Lincoln. No children. z ’ couple. yma py ted See caretaker $65 per month. 
Very reasonable rent 8. Peddcck. - 3736 ROOM AND BATH 3 BEDR 
by RN ART- oor . month Le Ye vee for year i 
you @ mech faster, Ment. Private entrance® Washin uire 77 N. ar Pad Street. sale Feel tree to call our ce | _privileges Close in. zest quire 
tn -t- oo - eee NT Tae 2 APT A: 4 ROOMS AND BATH on i'ng of var real es-| men. FE (T after 0p ._ 162 -and 164 Baldwin ave aye ___ | 
tate. Cal ts sous 2 ROOMS, ALL UTIITIES FUR- Gran 3‘ races uli Set RIVATE | ath & entrance es, stove 
WHITE | Kime adults only, 31 W. Hop retrig FE_2-48+ rs as Pe — DESIRABLE 3 ROOMS PARTLY 3 cet & $12 s te an fu ——, i eo Lag 
- couple. ~etwe e _ 
BR S 2 a ogee! PURNSMED, RO 38 hn E_ Wilson “e , only. _ OOMS. | _316 E | 
OS. rnees Fonsmieo aware. DEL-RIO-APTS t hil * 
Phone OR 3-1872 or OR 2170 | come. 2894 8 Edith "| 2 rooms and bath. Utilities and Open 9 to § — Sun. 1 to & 7 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH AND | —Stove furnished. Couple only.   entrance. Adults. 62 Wisner, 1 
2 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH AND 
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
    
  month. entrance. Stove and refrigerator AST DE | 
Adults only FF 20566. 8 State Kk. “Cr Hempstead, Realtor | pogo ere ee pete Pe 2 bedroom home newly decorated | st } 10. E. a ; Btreet . | Near bus school. Basement, 
2 ROOM, SMAL!. CHILD WEL- _ _FE¢s «sd SLEASANT SLEEPING Room FoR) “ "** UGronten _ceme. 142 8. Jobnson. UNION CT APTS { _gentlemanm, FE 5-0570. West na Spacious 3 vedroom home. Ex- 
2 ROOMS CHRISTIAN COUPLE.| 3 rooms and ba‘h Adults only. pi,taSANTLY LOCATED. 5 MIN- | ceilent condition Lots of closets _Private entrance 116 E. Howard | , $50 per month | utes walk uptown Sieeping room Puli basement. Hurry on this one 
-K.-G-Hempstead, Realtor —tor-retinedtedyonis— - a king cowie Large kiteh- 199 E. Huron __ PB 6006 | goom With RiTGHEN  Fatvi. mas uburn Ave FE 43303 
tines 3 Pleas ae *8 | MODERN APTI HEAT Fur leges. Working counle Private ALL ohowe* <1 Fa rat te . A i 
= ROOMS tain Fi FLOOR. ar | _MY 30a beat’ Near Tele-Murcn ‘and bus | 
ROOM KITCHENETTE. BATH, | "eet gf. Tormabea Pri ae On oEneinnn wa Pik BRICK . ‘ . vate ROOM FOR GENTLEMAN. #5 PER Chiid--okay_431_-N Perry. _ entrance lAautie voly After 5 week. 169 Judson . $2,000 D 
. room i at Tights. elec- e.3 z GTROLE RO 40004 VATE | This neat 2? aieeom tart home | s. ie 
trie retrigerator private entrance, Rent Houses Furnished 35, ahaeine Sone + Guw.| With unfinished attic is Jpcated | ul Bear Pontiae Munic: ir. 
ROOME ~~ CHT 2 BEROOMS. BRAND —— Tw bets, FS sg | Patt Just 2, vlocks from. paved 
Private entrance. FR 6-603 | OAS | ght rookie aH... Eo living room, specious titcben. wes : re 
7 ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE: +5 2 rar Aen pd HEAT. PE saos “ bath. full “Basement. ehiid_wele_ne_ 7) Clark. | June. 4686 Lakeview ALEEPING ROOW FOR BU BUSINESS pa pa ne ig BEng + tes 2 ROOMS On TIxE, iat. | Sune ; Pe rood “Or protexsions? ws ae oe Sa vole, cami jults only. 296 8. a eee hosnital ane bue “ine SE cine Ceo the fine home at = 
le ste_ St, +0219 SLEEPING ROOM LADY. 163 amazing low price of $11,000 with | 
7 ROOM APA A CHARMING 7 BEDROOM FE 2-861. $2,000 down Hurry on this one! Adults only 10 WN. furnished lake front home | _ 
|e elena pwevare-enerecwen | Sestakee et Teil - WHITE .| able une. HURON ff EAN 
Adults only 100 Mechanie } _ 40450 mot rooms by day or wk. 
f ROCMS AN) BATH PRIVATE RENTALS ALY KINDS FEE G10 6 Ww. rE entrance, Couple onl Ro drink Family Renta! . FE 42583. 23-1266, ets, Near Aubu: guar | 
3 te 1, couple only.) — 
"Ease, vane” Orion. | 167 2 rooms, furnished Prone QM MD o> OR 208 5 Fine WEES Fa OR 3-8004 | ba NEEDS FAST, seg ee 
La 
“ONE ABARTMENT T AVAT ABLE | Hotel Roosevelt, 125 
| ean rg 
August can “OR * 1410     
| bo 4 ROOM PLAT. 2)   
Woodhull Lak ear sound | rental heat furni $80. month © 
Adults only. must furnish refer- | 
ences. OR 3-1022   | 
| sient HOUSE, } ROOMS AND. 
bath Commerce Lake Hot sane. j 
t | _EM 3-258 
'SAM WARWICK HAS 2 NEW 7 bedroom houses lease at $100. FE | 
| 46080. 1784 Warwick. Sylvan Lake.   FE | 3% TREOENT STREET. 6 AND, PE 27425 | bath References 
WALLED LAKE ALL L MODERN | 
conveniences. 2 bedrooms, show. , 
er, only 2 blocks from village. | 
| $15 weekly. 656 EB. Lake Dr 
caretaker at 136 Walled Lake | 
Court or MA4-2063 
| Rent Lake Property 36a | 
2 AND 3 ROOMS, Tonnes | 
ape rtrents Private entrance. 130 
_Hulbert. Oxbow Lake 4 ROOM MODEPN COTTAGE ON | 
ar ta, 6308. Lake. Aug 21 to 28   
  
  
  PreK ON LAKE ORION af 
oay, week of month MY 
after 6 p. m aed 
COFTAOs FOR RENT a Tw. 8. 
miles north Oscoda   
  } win 
FOR* RENT BY WEEK, cae | 
front rnished cottage. kiebes. | 4 
. vin 
poreh. 
ishing 
FOR RENT IN BAYPORT| ON | 
ad on week Avail | 
rough Sept. In- | into Drive. Oxbow | 
  rot 69 
  
| FoRwiaRED SHED MODERN SORTE Pleasart Lake FE 2-3536. | 
| FURNISHED CABIN ON BEAUTT- Good beach. Lake Avail | 
| bles “hug 14-21. i) 
oe ’ MODERN CABINS ON T FOR. | 
Lake. 840. per week RR.” 
| and K. Cabin Day OR 3-0389. 
UARE LAKE ? BEOROOW ALS © 
_bedroom apt. FE   
  
       'nw Seren 8 OWN 
West Suburban 
A fime brick home. built by a 
builder himself. [wo bed 
vestibule, large living — 
fireplace, ai etsa 
screened terrace. 
jot. Many many eaters | 
bout this wonderful property that | 
oun definitely please you. 
Auburn Heights An excellent 7 room frame hom 
wen basement. garage, 502145 fe 
oll] FA beat. comb storm * 
wasn Early possession. $11,500, 
erms 
North Side 
nearly yew = bedroom eat 
re er terms. { 
vy ~3 
What You've Waited For | 
Huron Gardens 
Just west of town-a 2 bedroom | unfinished 
Garege “Right mt door to St. ° ne . 
5 iets. price and $1500 
vn 
Low Terms ° 
Por 22240 shell house. in town. 
east side — lowest terms 38 ms modern, east side in 
WE BUY AND SELL 
LAND CONTRACTS 
NICHOLIE: AND HARGER CO. 6:30 ‘tl 8.30 
  
| ANNETT | OFFERS 
Summer Cottage Big Fish Lake. new i 
“plock, large living 
| Privileges on Two Lakes| Beautiful two level ranch 
6 room modern home in 
excellent full 
basement, stoker siding 
roof all new, 1% car. 
€ e, corner lot. Only $7,- | 
50, . 
Watkins Lake 5 rooms glassed porch, 
living room, dinette, large 
Oakland Lake—4 Lots whe eatle orating terms down + for ¢*: room at 
bow $500 down —- for 3. 
Ph_PE $-0163 
| visit ‘our office and any Photo 
        We have tivestors e+ al Vor ¥ Room Spertesents 
foie pM Rae Re —he ee Pe 34030 
OY KNAUF, Realtor basement, Whit frame. Beauth 
7 OA #3339 = be er force Beem 
TRADES 125 Nogth_pecry  Sizeet steal at $5,500. $3300 
~ proseri tor suburban or” term | ‘2 g. _____ Rent Stores 40 THELMA M. ELWOOD ELDERLY LADY WISHES TO| homes for homes. targe as New dtearenes | eee Lake | 
with another reais ecarce. ‘Trade Gost - 2OAS HEAT) PE 5-124 FE 43844 Open # to 7 
woman on N _ : ~ g— concerned. Call us, no “What do you expect for 59c?”’ F Facad month. 333 s Pike. * | Roecd cation “Sh Badr ' 
SHARE 5 ROOM HOME | BY OWNER. 6 RESALE. 2 BED. | 
EA “MEMBERS urnished n veatins. | Wtd. Transportation 31 RE ee CO-OP MEX erst | pts. Rent Houses Unfurn. Me Fe “al tertore townshig Ful pre (esse 
. 3-ROOMS, PRIVATE _BATH_AND or Rent — OR 3-7866 
OTE ue canpotation tem| GREEN LAKE OFFICE | entrance, utilities furn, 262 nae ‘ROOM AND FULL BATH ong | BY OWNER INCOME 8 ROOMS. 
Scott Lake Rd. into town must (ON GREEN LAKE) | ooo mastered, walls, Close 1@ 1 PT. MOUSETRAILER TO BE | —— oe be to work at 8:30, Call FE FOR ALL LAKES” |) woul AND 2 Roow ADULTS | wotown. Couple only inquire used for trips, $40 week $10) 24078. 4-4228 after 6 p.m. Cottages, Homes, Lots. abd Estates. way. Els Cleane 285 Oabland | TT N. Saginaw St _ deposit. FE ?-0e67. BL OOMFIELD 
TIAC" PRESS_EMPLOVE pil | Since 10m" wens 8 For Sale Houses OOMEIE Pures ride from, Holly, to, Pontiac “NORMAN F_ RICE ROOMS 1 CHILD WELCOME. 3) ROOMS, & BATH GARAGE is s dailv. Working hours: €.30 to 8:20 .. EM 34412) FE - rae Se soKED HAMMOND Please cel! 48461 before 5 WOodward 5- Rings 3 ROOMS AND BATH. BASEM MENT ROOM BUNGALOW, | ZONED | . . . ; 
ih commercial excellent location for A HOME OF YOUR 
LAKE 
HOUSEMAN- 
SPITZLEY 
WO 3-4816, 
Bateman 
« Woodw ard Estates 
I 2d   
  
3 Bedroom Ranch 
Located 1 we West. 
tod harm, Jow've, ve dreamed 
tt “Ow yeh $0 ta £ 
Suburban West 
Kampsen 
FE 4-0528 Realtors 
377 8S Telegraph oon 
Co-operative Rea! Estate 
“BROWN |i ‘¢1 a DOWN   
+ 
  
= § i and look le fo embe operative Listing Exchange 
we 
Ji. BROWN. Realtor 
  
         
2 BEDROOM MODERN Loo, 
WITH LARGE PORCH, NISHED. WILL RENT Som 4 100 | 
PER MONTH ON YEAR-ROUND | LEASE. LOCATED ON SYLVAN 
SHORE INFORMATION PHONE 
FE 4-3390   
WALLED LAKE FRONT. 2 ROOM 
|. ear oe $11 8. Lake 
  
For Rent Rooms 3) 
1 poces FOR EMPLOYED LADY. | 
and refrigerator. Private 
_ $10 week FE 40713. 
LARGE, NICELY FURNISHED sleeping room 86 8. Tasmania 
| _FE +2780.   
  ROOM IN MODERN RN LAKESIDE 
home Few miles ffom Pontiac 
Lovely surroundings, Good fish- 
ing, For particular gentteman. ~ 
_Reference. OR 3-0834, 
LARGE ROOM FOR L ADDY KITCH- 
em privileges 172 W. Pike after 
—§_p-m__ — = 
LARGE ROOM FOR 2 
Twin beds. Large closet 
if desired. FE 5-4785 
LiGHT HOUSEKE. PING AND 
sleeping room FE 5 
LARGE SLEEPING | tat ~ 7 GEN- tlemen. Twin beds. Indian Village 
__Write Pontiac Press Box 113. | 
LARGE SLEEPING ~ ROOM -FOR Kitchen 
  
  
  
  
  metres 
“MEN rein in 1984. wulity room 
     
Roy Annet Inc.| REALTOR 
aE uron Federal +7193 
__Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 
Attention Handyman 
New house near Crescent Lake. 
Le ae og well, 4 piece 
side finished little to | on inside. $1350 down 
, Near Baldwin Rubber 
very neat 
and ciean $1730 down 
CARROLL G. ee aL. 
26', Wer. Huron me 2710 
Eve” Fre 
3 BEDROOM Rance HL oIYrE 
home. On lot — 
Berger Son w Huree Pinal: 
~ ADAMS | JOSLYN 
Immaculace 2 2 bedroom home Oil 
heat, nice basement, tile bath 
fonend back yard. Must be seen 
te Easy terms 
—— + Nice lawn 
and fenced s 
arage. chicken 
ix miles from Pontiac. Will trade Loop. 
inal prope sp a Pontiac, Clark. | 
f appointment call 
oR > ioe. 
é ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE BY   
    FE 8-1331 2 w | Huros 
or rorming hom 
BY a WiLL ama Saree eres trad “a Pour bedrooms. fireplace. 
» e heater included. 
Senlap fect. “Ateal bay. 
sian nome sn ton PULL Puatii 
East suburban location Modern 
bungalow fu oi! 
foreed sir heat ™ = 
You'll tke tt it 
ON H. CLARK 
+6402 
es # a 
£ 
s 
nas beisk : 
fy reo ee, the Lake af 
in 
i atte: 
  
BL. 
HO! 
Eneciiont esotien for fargo Danty        
   
   
           
   
         
    
        
      
   
    
       
            
       
      
        
   
    
  
      
FIVE FAMILY 
ONLY. $13 5008 
Eacepent rental location just off 
Perry &t and 
Ree ‘month 12: wine over aio per month in- 
  
  owner Vestibule entrance and) 
3 rooms down Large bath. } 
rooms and Ts to Ird r BEAUTIFU:. LAKE FRONT 
up 1] basement Almost new $1500 DOWN 
furnace and roof Nice lot, Ga- Dandy § room modern low 
rage. On paved street. Bus line with fireplace. select oak rs, 
| Close to 3 main oenatesies. Call tered walls full Dasement 
_FE 4-3498 Priced to sell new off A C heat Total price 
Cy TRMNGIOGE Resement ale me - em | BEAUTIFUL BRICK inum storm. and screens. Un-) 31 00MFIELD HIOHLANDS finished attic GI Detense. 3 years A home We are proud shew 
old, Owner MI 40107. to today’s most onrucciar’ buyer. Six spaciou lovely rooms: two 
full baths: Timken off fired hot par mater a kiteh tnas..de ere ot enna 
this world in As Bagge 
space: and 2 
Let is 100220) wu sel = + trees 
for home north of Pontia     
DOCTOR HAs MOVED If vou want his large luxurious brick 
Svivan Lake home with nearly 
all rooms carpeted. you 
call for an eppointment. Awninged | TWO FAMILY BRICK 
WEST HURON 8ST 
Tn this potential business loca- 
tion We are eee this six and 
rick founda 
  
  
      porch overlooks lake: 2 ear 9 sanity Cavened. for for business. 
rage Compionely ‘enced jot ft Huron St In my can- 
ft. lon low at $24 500 did opinion this is dest 
Reasonable financing vestment on the market today. 
“THE WIDOW MUST MOVE and | WE SELL - WE TRADE wes 
Sy Seow "homme end cnley out | features es 15224 livin room DORRIS & SON 
with briarstove fireplace big airy REALTORS P MEMBERS bedroom odern sunny kitchen. 523 W. Huren PE ¢156 
j radiant heat attached garage 
and long. with tons 
of black are Bn sec price $11. Cy aa 
Brick 3 ranch type 
DOLL MOUSF in Huron Oardens homes Lot« 155144 ip excel- 
| has onlv 3%) room. but it's Ws pat location. All ovlas' wails, 
ee picture veaved it etal | & r oul auto awn single peson wateT . 
or childless couple $6230 with | floors Just $1. down chadine - 
$1550 down ~ ‘ mortasce coxta, : 
; #1900 DOWN, buys two, bia shaded’ West Suburban house has only rr rooms but can| Attractive bome on large P| 
be enlarred using the roofed ‘wy of 4 rms 
screened ian? Only $5050. U . floors. 
Don't delay on this. CB. crm 
_B. D. CHARLES, Realtor Bi osteo dove. ae. 
FE 4-0521 I 
| Cowberative Estate Eachange i frooms and 2 baths sear at, i j ents paved street. Ss OR 
. | = mm ome and wed FOLKS READY TO ACT btath im other 2 car garage, 
read Classified Ads! To 
sell ‘em, rent ‘em, hire 
"em — dial FE 2-8181 for 
an ad-writer, 
  tiie FE'Sioos 
     
       
  
  
  
    
  
      
  
  
        
      
    
      
  
  
    i pine wes 2 lakes y 
Payment is only $2,500 kitchen with lots of cupybards. 3| and take owner's contract. Write 
_ Ms show you this home piece bath, “$1600 Pontiac Press Box 43. 
gone ore eee! | PIONEER THGHLANDS’ LAKE- 
$3,000 Down ee ee a tenn No Money Dn. (ON edroom ranch brick home. Snterested tn, gztting the fin- venient kitchen } piece bath, Oy | GI's. 3 bedroom ranch home. on -_ carpeted living room. | ne- value on today's market? furnace. Well. landscaped lot. | 42 #cre tot with lake frontage./ tural - fireplace, fast room, 
room home wits Gudeon downto paved Ce to $2600 | R. VALUET, Realtor pg 4 i , By wan 
" Caen ce aitae Tass: (LT HERE. Start’ Patkina |Seperttng Nee! Retale Fachengs | Lake, "iie knot pie, ue From at gas fu eat- “CORT M. IMBLE R n Eves ba 8 voation A... brad s ireple ce, 
ed glassed-in porch, “7 1111 Joslyn E 4.054 | NEW, LARGE 3 E BEDROOM COON. mahog: ber, plus com ~~ Tange garage cement “arive. Daily ‘til 8~Sunday Pi to 6 try héme. Cut stone, ‘Approx, 3 kitchen, powder room and ed full price ts only Co-operative Resi Estate Exchange acres. Pull ment. se. er room, sc pagoda, * 
— 1 NOW WE HAVE ment Sreskucier, A. Sem, WE NEED LISTINOS! T ] That 2 bedroom home for $10,750) Fn es ee 2. 1 and sa0c% A 
; . ramtic ti} rath, mlined This home ts ideal for small |} 
GILES REALTY oe JUL il ToUl if kitchen, new gas termnste, Per family,” Consists “of large living 
4 2 OW. 03 Ww. Mas pen 8 ®t are ee - ments | oe a mag, ‘heluding room, 1220, aitehon and dinote taxes avioday comh 
GATEWAYS 10, wor monroe CRE aceite dar | HURRY! HURAY! HURRY! M% ACR $1100. down, hurry. pe bets wit be proud - — you Two bedroom house with tui | 03168. down, Surry on this ene. 
is @ modern ip-to-the-minute bath Nicely ' decorated, extra 
HAPPINESS 2 bedroom home on W_ Iroquois! puild 2x14. “This is priced | | eee ee ee ee. 
with room for 2 more bedrooms! right with $1400 down. Call!  ¢5 ft . but in 1949, corner a" upstairs. Wonderfully large base- FE 48544 or step at 136 East let 120x1 as manv 
BRICK RAMBLER ment with gas heat. Aluminum! Pike 8t ing ioouaees 14x25 ft. living DESIGN — ee os eo Pd ooures We nese many with fireplace auto. gas very 
ing city @ must sell. i mes in e rice losets. 
Individual = 9 == ment only. = ranges Call or stop of our on oe appetntanenh 4 “ee - ¥. © Meg UB Pat on, - 
fn 1982, of 5's rooms and at- office and loox at the pic- NOW Cope. 1954 by MEA Service, ten 
in THIs 18 NOT tures and listings we have . . 
  a tached garage. with 3 spacious 
bedrooms, featuring a carpets 
23 t% living room and L 
with picture windo~ a delight- 
step-sav kitchen with For- 
mica cover drainboards and 
went fan, tile bath, drapes and 
cornice boards. closet 
. approximately $95.00 
@ year Offered - $18,500, $5000 
down. ICED TO SELL NOW. 
IT’S NEAT AND TIDY 
dining space, spacious 
ie nt living room, 2 master. bed 
rooms, oak floors, plastered walls 
venetian blinds heat, storms 
and sc ful) ulated, bul 
Lake. 
$1973 down CALL US NOW. 
NORTH 18 MILES WITH 
  this new 4 room, 2 
new furnace 5 Acres sot 
at $7,250, $1,500 down 
- To Sell — To T To Buy rade 
YOU BUY IT—WE'LL INSURE IT 
Cocperativ anes Bas ~MAHAN LREALTORS 
7 
Open Eves. 
1075 “til 9; Sun. 10-4 
W. Huron 
TO BRANCH 
ARMS 
ORiando 3-116) 
  HOMES & COTTAGES WALLED LAKE AREA 
Lake Land Realty Co. 924 Pontiac Trail Waiied Lake   
Humphries nice one! 
--Humphries REALTOR 
3 N Telegra 
Co-Operative FE 2-0474 Open Evenings 
ea) Estate Exchange   
  
32 ROOM MODERN BUNGALOW. 2 
ear garage With breezeway Our ete, i nie FEB. 4-4020 
a Jo-Jo the Dog Fa 
wonderfully constructed 12 Fr 
renting 
a lovely 5 room apart 
for owner. Nice Cotement “Onn 
+ gas heat ard a 2 car garage 
The 2 apartment will more than 
y expenses. A eal investment 
or someone 
STEP RIGHT UP 
Polks. and ‘et’ u* show you the 
Neatest and cleanest little J room 
. home that we have had to offer 
in a long time. “ill price ts only 
$3,750 with a low down payment. 
OFFICE OPEN 0-8 
A alee Kealior 
. KE 4-2 
1704 S. Te eerste. 
KNUDSEN   
«| Neat Birmingham Newer brick ranch. Large liv- 
ing room witn fireplace. dining 
L, den, 2 iarge 
ch. ae 
tached 2 car garage. 
Excellent condition 
  Office FF. 44516, Elizabeth Lake Estates 
Extra landscaped lot with this 
lovely ranch type home 
rooms on Ist floor w rooms up 
Finished recreation room. At- | 
saamee 2 car garage. Lake privi- | 
ees 
WM. H. KNUDSEN 
EAL’CR State Bank Bid, fice FF + E e, 2-375, 5- 
ig PINE GROVE and R 
$10 Pontia- 
Modern 5 rooms bath. Ten 
minutes walk to town. Bedauti- 
fully landscaped yard 60x190 
with large stone barbecue Knotty 
pine sunrm.. extra large kitchen, 
_After 6 ra. cal ‘I! FE 2 
  
  KENT ESTABLISHED 1916 
RECONDITIONED Farm home 
with new bath, of] furnace and       
modern kitchen, quick posses- 
sior On M-«7 Hwy. near Holly 
$8,950. $1.950 down 
AUBURE HEIGHTS AREA. 2-bed- 
home. full bath and utill- 
hoa rm Part basement. 5 acres 
of ¢ . some muck land. 
Chicken coop. $7,950. 
S ACRES. Near t, 1008 A der 
ft hwy frontage actp 
Trout stream 
bidg. site +500. terme. 
FLOYD KENT, Realtor 
“ Ww. Lawrence FE 53-6105 
Open Ex 
Next to Consumers Power 
  
KINZLER Donelson Park 
New brick long and low 
frangh hone with attached 2 
5 extra size 
1% baths. Pic- 
ture windows, corner fire- 
place. Thermador range un- 
its and leather kit@hen seats, 
Park and jake privileges. 
Bungalow—2'4_ Acres 
5’) rooms and tile bath (3 
bedrooms; Full basement — 
oi] heat, recreation room. 
gece garage. Brick @ stone 
All ting in- 
cluded. Wel) located about 
5 miles north of city. Six | 
automatic hot water. gas heat. 2 
car gerage: | with $3000 down. | 
a ___ ced Boy, but a | Begeenanre one. rae Exchange 
for $43 per sees. F econ 
»NEAR DRAYTON. 3 BEDROOMS, 
      
  | @ RM. HOUSE & BATH ON $ LOTS. Russell Young Eat ToR 
St 
‘th 8 : GAYLORD 412 W. Huron 
| Open Eves 
Partridge 1s THE “BIRD” TO SEE 
9 FAMILY INCOME. West side apartment building 
Minimum of maintenance bere 
Just sit back and let the money 
roll in. Good return on investment. 
Takes $20 000 dn. Call for further Sun. ‘till &   
full basement 5 per cent con- 
tract. $2500 down. "OR 3-9758   
  
      
Tonight & Every Nite 
otos 
129 COLEMAN ~-Brand new 
  3-bedroom FHA bungalow details. 
many many outstandin } - aoe as ’ 
features, veut ‘e closet an ' BRICK BUNGALOW 
picture window itn the spa- nN - \n ob so comfortable 6 room cious Hving room with din- home located aporoz. 3 miles | 
ing ell. efficiency kitchen, 
plenty of built.in cupboards, 
beautiful tile bath with col- from Pontiac. Has full basement. 
oil heat, & screens & storms 
00 by 250 ored fixtures, and shower, eo ft. Brice . 
ecioet ook ae) aon. oe 
aint ed s loot wide : 7 °r 
fous paved stret, sdewae, | WARD FE. PARTRIDGE) sewer, water Oil furnace in 
basement Convenient REALTOR, FE 2-8316 to Donelson School, 8t. Ben- | 43 W. Huron St. Open Eve. 7 ta @ 
edict Church and 
a Drive = Huron 8t. 
Donelson turn Hiwvrl) KFCpr paA TL 
right to model. $12,450. RANCH TYPE HOME 
FHA terms. 3 inrge ving’ room. (nearty new), 
> ME arge liv room room, 
RAY O'NEIL, Realtor kitchep, bath Plenty closet 18 W fturo Open 98 space utility room oi! furnace, f ° FE 37103 or OR 3-1648 laundry tubs. large lot. 100x150 
Phon g*rden, ‘ake vileges. Owner 
Co-operative Real Estate meebenge wil sacrifice . with rea- able terms. 
bedroom house. Pull” basement. Nearly new 2 bed ranch 
xtertor complete Lake Williams bath, [ving room, kitchen. breese- 
garden OR 32837 way. garage with extra room 
added. 2 nice (™ health $450 DOWN New 2 Pawetmge home. Near 
school, ocery. restaurant 
_bus tine e- owner FE 2-4855 £7000. with very reasonable terms. 
Dorothy Sayder Lavender 
ALTOR 3140 W. Huron St FR 24411 Garage and basement Berries. 
: OPEN SUNDAY 1 10 TO 4   
| 
| 
    ROCHESTER AREA. RANCH   
  Near White Lake. OR 3-0610 
O NEIL AUBURN HEIGHTS — Mod-   
large lot, water. pear 
_2- 1326 $250 DOWN. NEW ® BY # CE- 
ment block house om M15. In- 
terior not finished = |         
ern Sreom home on 50x 2 acres, 4 room house. Imme- 
250 foot jot Butlt tn ‘41, diate possession $4959 with terms 
vestibule entrance to large $500 down. 28 by 32 basement 
living room dining room. 2- 
bedrooms. kitchen and bath 
down. Also bedroom up. Full 
basement. ofl furnace. Ga- 
rage. Only $2.50. down. 
SPENCE STREET - Popular 
location. Desirable home 6 
lovely rooms. vestibule en- 
trance to ‘spacious living 
room, fireplace family din- 
a room, tile featured kitch- 
bbed pone in Water ord. Cake privile- 
Immediate possetsion 
650 down Large 3 room house on 
road. Waterford. Quick pos- | 
$1,000 down. & odern. 2 
wooded ~~ Watertord. Lake 
EEO. MARBLE Realtor 6261 ANDERSO iVILLE RD. 
SAM WARWICK wr" 2 NEW 2 
ivan Lake. 
  
  
  reoms <ul bath, bedroom 
Fich earpetin: included. _11,700._ 1784 werwtek. Open oor’. complete basement with all - ODERN HOU utilities : ra * 6 ROOM MODERN HOUSE. gas furnsce Super tiene throughout. Aw basement, 2 car garage. FE 
exceptionally well land- 25780 wn garage too. BUY, TO SELL REALTOR Definitely an outstanding ; * home. $12,000 PARTRIDGE IS THE ‘BIRD’ TO 
  
§ ROOM HOUSE AND LOT, IN WEST SIDE BRICK - 
hiss enere. call at 1M First St., 
after best terrace we have ever 
  offered: ‘super’ decorations _ ~in fins 
throughout moder nm 1206 E BUNDY ST. FLINT 3 
tred kitchen master bed- room home. 3 lots, near Buick 
  reom 12216 New Timken Ternsted* Plants. Immediate 
ot] furnace in the full bace- ossession, Phone ~sUnset + 
ment. automatic gas weter Peane , 
heater Yor ca~'t beat this —_——— = 
one tor economy See it 5,45 teday for sure $8.450 4 rooms and ba Stoker fed . e 
INDIAN VILLAGE - 14x24 thady “lot. ¢ a te. school pine i ving room with mstaral stores Term 
irep ace jn Ais room 
how oa cn weil Ieee PER MO. scaned “corner lot with 1, Income on thit well located 
car garage Family size din- pais d ead peteed et only sft.000 
ing room modernired kitch- 
en. 2 extra 
and = full latge bedrooms 
bath; complete 
basement with »° utilities. 
$12,800, terms . 
BLOOMFIELD BRICK - ere is no xX*ra charge 
for the cool comfort eftord- 
ed bit the  abu-tant ere C UCKL ER REALTY FE 4-409 
Eves E7-6143 FE 5-6312 
_ 45 MONTH Includes taxes and insurance 2 
bedrooms. Full bath, plastered _ —_ <i. Liooss elu ri,   — “So help me, I don’t know who you are, but I'm gonna 
shave you anyway!”’ 
  
__For Sale Houses 43 
2 BEDROOMS 3} LOTS. SoLvax 
Lake privileges ee $2250. 
ance Some finishing needed. 
_Iiness forces wale __FE_ 6-0520. 
3} BEDROOM. YEAR ROUND 
bome at Leng. Lake near 
_tiac Only $9,000. EM_ 3-5502.   
STOUTS BEST BUYS. 
“TODAY 
REMODELED 
FARMHOUSE 
10 ACRES ‘Only 5 miles from Pontiac city limite near the million 
dollar Scri Estate. Situ- 
compietely by itself. 
American farm 
Nd od home has 6 rooms, 
2 baths. and powder room 
on the first and 3 rooms 
and bath “. ent with 
oil steam heat. The living 
ural fireplace. 
$19,750 on terms. 
SO COZY AND CUTE You will want it for your 
very own. The white frame 
bungalow with trim has 
and = large 
basement with oi] heat and 
het water. The 110 
x28 jot has oa large oy. 
den aa up 
orereaee Storm and 
wired “tor electric stov 
DORCHESTER ROAD 
All tnsulated 4", room bun- 
alow with breeteway to 
“a car garage. The large 
living room_is al) carpeted 
and has « Yorner fireplace 
with overhead mirror both 
bedrooms are spacious and 
have roomy closets. Large 
ard Taxes only 
Oniy $12.000 
on easy terms 
NEW—CANAL 
$1600 DOWN 
Brand Ld ranch 
home with attached” garage. 
Tiled bath, all la: 
reation space 2 
lots ram tee feet of 
Sylvan lakes. Now vacant. 
9 FAMILY BRICK Close downtown on paved 
street. Completely furnished 
be owner's. coertment, 
car garage. Full basement with oi) heat. $8000 yearly 
tneome. By appointment at 
any time.   
7 RM. BRICK BUNG, Close _to Lake 
Built in 1953 on 120x165 
corner lot 14x25 living 
with fireplace. 3 mas- 
rms. complete insu- 
. Storms and screens. 
Full basement with gas heat. 
2 baths. 1601 feet of living 
area. 
Edw. M. Stout .Realtor 
Tl N. Saginaw St. 
Open Eve. till 
  
This Week’s Specials 
Home & Garden 
Locate’ 1 mi. west of 
3 bed Clyde 
™ with nearly 1°   
~~         
    - _ ig 
wrasse wee Fn fra onde hine bey eof ER Pe PTE —— = . Vite’ stort andvwereens: 
: 2 ET rt I 1 The bast. nausea dient iis 3-bedrgom _family home. ra k  -¢s. Very nice. 
~ ITUIMOOTT LORS lake front home All white vide the nerfect setting 20% $500 down. $2500 frll price. Two frame bungalow custom | 14 living room. 4fning room bedreom. Perry Lake . 
$450 Do n built in ies RP ve kitchen with plenty of cup- Cc PANGUS , 1919 M-1 
W rooms, tile a and a boards and dining space, ' 
| tached 1's car garage Par- tile bath, recreation “pases eo eet — : aE 
Large 3 Loe —en on | titioned basement for rec- ment gas heat 2 fires — ot @ a half. mplete on ex- reation room. Timken oll places 2-car warag We're ; . sler 
terior with cedar shakes and / furnace Storms and screens sure voull like this one. 4 Bedroom Family Home 
brick face Very atractive home = Shaded ict 69x200 Best sand 6.500 Excellent west side location. gen- | n good location. Priced for quick | beach Price $20,000 with erous living end, dining room. 2 
| sale at $5,000 down | RAY O'NEIL, Realtor | preaktast screened reat ° >. . mh WwW fiurea en 9-9 terrace ear arege. Pric 
Maceda Lake 5 Room Bungalow | Phone FE 3.7103 sone 3-1648 right at $15,800 ‘t miss it. 
yY on Josiyn on wesnroee | Co-operative Real Estate Exchange 1 I d 
ts so attractive and neat Side Vv Side 
that you will want it on < 
$395 Down Cet ee wil ere ett Ane 4 FAMILY APT. 2 family, income, lve Ja one. . Two bedroom bungalow complete opal eiaaenc aril Segre 2-4 rooms 2-3 rooms, furnishd cach side new arbectos siding. pe ys oe Price includes | storms Mand aan Price eee ee oes ofl te'metere. | Quiet paved street, good clean we septic tank. s " ace. Separate meters | | $9,500. terms Lot 691200 on paved street, close | condition. | Pun nice ee. 3 
_ ge gt tee SE TPP —— ee 
ee ‘John Kinzler, Realtor |. Delos 
   
     
  F.C: Wood To. REALTOR 
Cor. of Williams a Rd. & Ren 
        
  , 670 W Huron &t FE 4-3525 
If no_ answer. ph FE 2-082 
en “eve tit 8 
, Co-operative Real Estate Exchange | 
  fice 
HOUSES O ALL KINDS ND] 
incomes, 
Pp. Ww oni —_ SON 
W_HURO 
“HAY DEN 
  $550 down. 2 bedrocm in Elizabeth | Lake Estates 2 
a 9708. down. ¢ rooms 
price 
9000. down. 
Poss ediate. 
“Fo percent down: & bath. Extra 
eddition partly § fiished. Lake 
Privileges Ful 
2 bedroom modern on 
large suburban lot Exrelient buy. 
ession imm 
New G.I. Homes. # bedroom brick. 
Hear Fisher Body, § room modern 
basement, garage. Full price 
06.960. Terms. 
$1500 down. & room modern. East 
near public and Catholic 
Depe 6 Decne 8 wear 
with 4 
ment. “Pine 
      LAKE ORI ON 
Foti bedrooms living room. din- 
ing room kitchen, full 
with gas heat cond city 
Full price $9.0°) with terms. 
D. M. TAYLOR 
REAL ESTATE 
| 804 8 Broadway 
LAKE HOME LARGE ROOMS. 
Knotty pine & a Greaghen. 
gee heat. Good ach 
WALTER | GREEN RLTR, MY 2-583) | 
iba | Mid Par ap {NEAR | 
~ MILLER — NORTH 2 bedroom home on paved street 
Large living room with dining a)- 
cove. Full basement with new otl 
furnace and recreation space 
‘Full bath Garage Near ®& 
and Jena. ool pa ar down in- 
to veteran. eluding mort 
WEST SUBURBAN bedroom home in excellent 
leemon, Elizabeth Lake Estates 
area. Fuli pasement Full bath 
Water softener automatic hot 
water Gas furnace. Paneled knot- 
ty pine finished attic. Rooms 
large and wei! planned. An un- 
usually attractive buy 
VETERANS 
STONE REALTY CO. 
hae a Oe Gaily; as i 8 | basement | 
water. | 
____—iLake Orion | | 170 W. Pike ct 
  | Co-operative Real Estate Exchange         NEAR MIDDLE 
STRAITS LAKE 5 rooms. automatic water system, 
sepfic tank. immediate possession. 
$5 730 with $750 down $50 per | - 
AUBURN HEIGHTS _ 6 rooms. m dern livieg yoom. 
dining room, kitchen 
and full bath down. 2? bedrooms 
up. Full basement hot air heat. “BU ye NICHOLIE 
Real Estate and insures 
“49 Mt. Clemens St, 
Eve Mr_ Lazenby FE cas tH 
  » 
LAKE ORION INCOME 750 Total for three spartment’. 
Close to High School Lot 40x160 Priced $6800, terms. 7 ROOM HOME shower 
Russeli A. Nott, Realtor baths. new roof ~ svaing. gas heat, $13,600. Terms. FE_ 4-5905   
Brick Bungalow   
      
  Ly WEST SIDE - Two bedroom pone home, oi] heat, partitioned rec- 
reation room with built In bar, 
weil landscaped yard, back fenced, 
parse Pig lake privileges. 
: °° $12, erm {-—~Fonite-& Every Nite | SUE SST 
oe J. R. HILTZ brad REVERE zone cer- . . aAiniy ¢ surp ‘rs to see 
these brand new shetresm FE 54-6181 REALTOR Eves. 
bungalow loce*i so c 1011 W. Huron ity 
to Scott Lake or only 
$6.95 Picture window, oll 
furnace electric water heat- 
er. large shad- 
Value volus. Only 5 
to choose from Payments SYLV: AN VILLAGE 3 BEDROOM B&B °F vedrosias un 
and bath “own, 2 rooms uD, ith fireplace a Ln lo $44 ver mo ‘clude taxes Fespaney ment with 
one pr] Dey oe _ Forced i heat, tall, sue 
Le Ra. turn ‘eft & Berek. 3 car sarane. Caly S100 sign 
RAY O'NEIL., Realtor 7 W Wuror Oven 
Phone FE 3-7193 or OR SN | EAST SUBURBAN A neat 2 BEDROOM 
a nena 
PERSONALIZED HOMES ,VAN W 
BY_PAtMER — OR 3-0815 
Phen side ma SCHRAM Fast side m dern 6 rooms, ga- ' 
rage, plee fenced yard, screened 
rch, near store, bus and school. 
ulck possession, $7,400. Fair FE 5-5091 or FE 5-2564 2\ Seen seo lights and water system Installed. 
~ constructed, Beautiful scenic sur- 
roundings. Good gravel road. 
$7,000 $2000 down. + 
Huron Riverfront 
Nice lot with small home 
equipped with electric range, 
water er and cabinet sinks 
Good district, Close to 
. ved highway. Full price $3,500 
1,000 down 
Cedar Island Lake 2 bedroom home with lake privi- 
léges, Full e. Oil space heater. 
Convenient to church, — and 
good beach. $8.000, 4. 
New 3 bedroom ranch type home 
with bath an. utility room Close 
to good schools, churches and 
ved highway. $6,750, $1,000 F RONT|   
  | | 
  \ B 
___For Sale Houses 43   
BEDROOM MODERN SOME, 
Posted cette tm smal) balance. 
  
Zz Open 
| Co-operative Real Estate achange: 
_FE 5.0101 
Templeton _: rE . 
STIRLING A real jewel for only $6,500. Five 
room modern bungalow. gas heat, 
garage clos» to school ‘bus. 
At least 61,500 under today's mar- 
ke 
JOSEPIL F. REISZ 53‘, W. Huron &t 
0259 190- » rE 
Oen_ Eves Pree _Parkis 
Cash to t cons] PRA mort | 
—eeae, 1 
For Sale Lake Prop. 44 
  SYLVAN VILLAGE 
Pleasant liveable 5 room home, 
offerea at bargain price. §2.000. 
down. Full basement. gas heat, 
frmmea sunporch double gare, 
mmediate possession. Owne 
| soemaee FOR SALE. E,. BLVD 
$5.400 cash to mortgage at 4 per 
cent, FE 2-7173.   
  
  
        
Lakefront Bu 
Excellen. san beach 
ideal for children — good 
fishin g an. doa -— plus. 
bedroom ‘og “home 
Cory living room with log- 
burning fireplace. Spacious 
sun room kitchen and din- 
ette. tile bath. practical 
utility room. Ot heat. fully 
insulated. Perfect condition. 
A buy &t $11,500 — monthly 
pay ene $55. 4 per cent in- 
est. 
Excellent East Side 
Loc ation 
Ia story frame on 
the most desirable one of 
streets 
oor; . 
latge storage area up. At- 
tractive kitchen with spe- 
cious dining space Plastered 
tefully decorated. 
Pully insu- 
basement, oil 
yard with 
and shade Priced at 
$1 Shown by 
, appointment 
Pp riced to Sell 
Only $2800 down on this / 
hand-picked “Buy of the / 
month.” 
oe beer se “4 
full dining In a choice west’ 
livin 
  Leslie R. Tripp. Realtor 22 W. Lawrence. - Evenings 
FE sti /or FE 2-1396 
    
    
   1 min from Birmine- 
1 down or will, 
MI_ 6-0337.   
Dearcom ranch type featurine tile bath 
mayble window sis. siiding doors . 
f many other desirable fea- 
s. GI sesale to 4 per ceht 
ortgage. Down payment is rea- 
ROSELAWN ST. Exceptionally omrce 3 bedroom 
home with glasseq in front porch 
and 2 car garage. Best of loca- 
tions with in yard. and 
new siding Be sure to call for 
REAL EST/TE 269 Reldwin Avenue 
| FE 28544 FE 2-2161_ 
. NEAR FISHERS 
4 room 2 bedroom modern Ltony 
basement: d% car 
$6,850 terms. SIDE 
3 bedrooms. Lymer modern 
Fully furnished including TV_and 
refrigerator Full Secomenl. 
erage. , terms. 
Templeton, Realtor 
2339 Orenara Lae Rd. FE 44563 
£..Open_ Exes. is 
  
ACRE. 21 
| | | 
and > 
4 LAKE “ORION, 
round   
<* 
i . Beautiful Walters 
tate" Bensibly restricted. . 
one payment. Easy terms. MY 
Lake & Water Frontage Draven me. so tow os 
fe er re BARTRAM ae Dixte Highway OR 3-1950 
nd cot! _2 boats lake front- ase, R F en MYrtle pel,   
  
  
LONG LAKE 
Priced’ e at only “hee 
very easy terms. 
560" RIVER FRONTAGE rood an -9 Pontiac ow tT ‘. The 2 level 
the full basement 
gas Timken air congitiones 
extra beth 
Wita overhead 
Fdw. M. Stout. Realtor 
N Saginaw St Ph. FE 54-6165 
bi Open Eve. till 830 
“SMALL 
boats. YEAR? ; Bate, 
L YEAR 
front-         SIDE—CLOsE Woe ooded led Acreage” 
= get only 3 miles west 
CARL W. BIRD, Realtor $03 yw ~: quanta sama nt Bank 
FE 44311 
WEST SUBURBAN aes Se seem 
vy car gaat, Tepced back 
"™* CITY EAST A ¢dariiny four room ern; 
et beauliful back Yard with Ipt: shrubs. si with 
$1.500 down 
"ACREAGE eity. ave Five acres bs ay 
ree lewn, 
for only 310,500" ‘with 
K. G. Hempstead, Realtor 102 East Huron Street 
FE 46264 Ev. FE 2-1317   
4*4 ACRES—$50 DN. Beautify) building spot 150x 
-@ acres of cedar 
land and 2‘; acres of w 
with excellent buntin 
north of town off 
win. Only 2 parcels left with 
this . low, down payment 
Edw. } M. Stout. Realtor 
TT N. Ph FE 58165 Ete ti 6:30 
  
  
3 bedroom m 
ern home with Desement. stoner 
and other buildings 
by door. $17,000. terms. 
Roy Annett Inc. 
2 ft. Huron eral 3-7183 Open Evenings and Sunday 14 
EXCEPTIONALLY 
iow im truck gar- 
bulbs. Mas ex- 
room home with full 
basement cad ss gas heat, You can 
live like a king bere one oo   2 ACRES 0: 
  2 
age Reasonable MYrtle 24071 
“NEAR PROPOSED, SHOPPING | 
po ft trentese, py c Smmerce Lake | 
+ Oakiev Park nm Oatley F subdivision, 1350. 4 Lower str its rooms . 
Lake rents $100 per mo 
_$1000 down, Levi Buck _FE 42072. 
ORCHARD LAKE Village 
qgom. 2 car. gerece. gas 
heat, wooded ved fF 
te and school. 1 m shppping area 
Open Saturday & Sunday 
and Weekday evenings 
  Go out Orchard Lk. Rd- to Com- 
merce Ra. block west and 
then right to model. 
KINZLER 
CONSTRUCTION CO. 
Phone MI 40908 or MI 6-4811 
+ *sK©PRONT LOTS IN BEAU- 
2 It is sel- i 53° W. Huron       
' For Sale Resort Prop. 444 
; further particulars | 
; ~ ood m3 SO wt wee tee ; 
FE 2-§724 CORT M. IMBLER 
1111 Josiyn rE 
Daily ‘ti unday 2 to 6 
Co-operative Real. Estate Exchange 
43 ACRES 
80 ACRES Near Ortonville. 5-bedrm. home, 
batn and Good 
barn, 
cups, 
other "suthides Sprin: 
ture. $16 400 with $87, 
84 ACRES 
7 tillacle acres in this farm lo- 
cated nerth ef Fontiac Modern | 
@rm. brick home. kitchen, base- 
ment with oil furnace. 5 acres 
of tim 60 6% barn with 
stanchions milk house. 
‘ood outbidgs Quick p “Nn pas- 
down. panne a Ee | 
oe Bag | 
For Sale Farms 48 
50 ACRES ated on paved way 30 
miles from scenic 
rolling 3S with 1660 
feet frontage 
cow 
A. stanchions. drinking 
ry house, 
other   
  
  
  
= AW 
FE $010) FE 26544 FE 2-2161 BECAUSE OF NESS I AM 
ry . e. Small down 
ymest. Write Press, 
CHINCHILLA®S POR SALE. MUST sacrifice Very cheap. FE 5-4906. 
GULF SUPER SERVICE   
For leare. modern. well located. 
This ‘+ 8 roo! to 
f° . business ad self. 
tn Cote pany 
DRY CLEANING A 
route ideal for couple. Apartment 
in rear, Sacriiice §1200 leave 
ing for college. FE 54-3647 
¢ 6:00 pm of 
days. 
days, FE 5-0793 eves. 7 to 9 p.m 
MODERN 2? BAY STATION, HIGH 
volume. easy inventory, located 
on busy highway at main corner. 
close to business area and large 
restdentat ares owner 
moving out uf town. Call FE 
2-101 
NEW MOBIL GAS STATION FOR 
jease in Drayton at Wal- 
ba i fn deptes = al Pe open m 
32-0103 before 5:00 p.m. r 5:00 
_P.m. call PE 2-. 
Partridge 18 THE ‘BIRD”   
. SUPER DRIVE DI 
One of Tes 
Pullding, “fixteres “& equipmont. Best location busy 
pag ae 0.000 iy an Gees 
for only $15. 360 “talk 
CLASS “C” — $12,000 Dn. Excellent location west of Pon- 
| _—e _ fast developing area 
4 fixtu 
business, equipment. 
Terrific peetet w with “Deteasing   
18,950, terms. 
FLOYD KENT, Realtor 
  
       
    
  Pail price Doe tetl Certainiv a wy me" 
$12000 down. nod 
           
    
  
For Sale Lots —— 
A. G. ELLIOTT & SONS 
Northwestern at Middlebelt 
JOrdon 4-6121. MAytfair 6-2503 
BIG _ 100x200. 
Nr, Aubura & Rochester Rd. $295 
to 
| Woodward _ 2-9700. eres 
~ BROWN 
2% acre. +25" town 
Business Lot 
West Wailto., 80 ft. frontage 
TAGE AeA   
  
  Judah . % acre, nicely 
$25 N &acre—lots._Josiva—R4.     
“TMBREE & GREGG 1565 Union Lake Rd. 
3-4393 or EM_ 3-325! 
‘TERRIFIC 
“LAKEFRONT 
BUY e owner 0 fine lakefront 
fing price on 
This home is M mpretely ture. 
“TV set to ash trays 
also includes 
automatic | 
electric 
—stovre,—_ete— r_room is fur- | 
nished completely. This home fea-] tures & ay living room with power washer, refrig¢rator, 
fireplace. master bedroom 
}7x12. Spacious — kitch with 
large dining space. 4 th 
and a bed upstairs. Glassed 
in front rh with aluminum 
storms = windows i" 
mm Recreation space with bar. A 
i% car ‘age. 
on a large lot 145x and the 
landscaping is out of t world, 
fiwe terraces, ' rubs, 
wers 7 
“WHITE 
BROS. Phone 
    Set Ball an el down ayment ROSE MCLARTY 
2-2162 
il 
cod   Opes) to eres. 180 5 | Oped oa Have You 
Seen 
Youngs 
Homes 
LOW AS 
Do9D Down ae 
COMPARE! *Lath & Plaster 
*Aluminum Windows 
*Ranch Roof 
*Fully Insulated 
209 Princeton 
Open 1-6 dee! Come out and compare. 
Others have and now 
they are moving in. - . 
Russell ll Young 
bas. “e% JIM WRIGHT, Realtor Co-operative Real Estate Exc’ e 
345 Oakland Ave FE Sosa 
23 ACRE BE- 6 Cuore Prat mile E, side of 
Telegraph. Call Ellis, MA 6-6396. 
Elizabeth Lake Estates 
“2 ‘putiding lots 952190. $900, with 
$300 down 
LAKE FRONT LOTS Judah lot 75x400_ only $500 down. 
Lake, sandy $1800. total 
$25 DOWN gree om Josiyn and 2% acre 
ey ALUET, Realtor   
  
  
  jainés City 
tors OF ALL KINDS, 
~ SIZES AND 
DESCRIPTIONS 
LAD _Tratt Walled |.ake. 
2 LAKE Ad TS ON SYLVAN LAKE. 
ee ane 22 Auburn Ave., of-   
M USi SA 
  BAAR 5 ACRE. 4 ROOM Lage Ee ON M15. 
CJ 6 Meta 
y Rea Ortonville. 
SMART BUYS IDEAL SMALL FARM 
18 acres of very tillable soll 
ach orchard “rape vines 4 
in out. All 
for $18,000 yun ferme, 
N. ADAMS RD.   
  
  
  (AGENCY) 
83% _W. Huron FE 41549 
Sale Business Property 49 
tes"of" mais, fous Large cone, bide entinuing "tn about 
of garnne. 01 space with 2 
cS eerie? ant 24 W. Lawrence FE 54-6106 , ’ 
Eves. 
.. Next ta Banatnets Power RUSTIC rome URE “ 3 SH 
_ On busiest 
5 ROOMS AND ATTIC. MODERN | £80. Here's a thance e tite: form ben house. e acres garden fms ag meke some gu money. 
. r 
WALTER BREEN, REEN REALTOR ine lar®e living duar. 2-5831 ‘ers. Bides, business, fixture 
M6 Park _Bivd. mM) __Lake Orion | fonipment Can — tayest. 
ood lake farms. P. W. Dinnan| a hit & miss proposition, Shown 
Near “Clarkston, Moder a “. WARD oy tapas name 
5} Sian” sown pevinent, “Sin | oP ORENS CL CLEAR ‘c @ SHOUSE 
20 ACRES —_ COAST- TO-Ce COAST 
7 room modern, full bath, new aD ae ee PE 32-8316 . furnac: base e, ORKING 
cnteten comm op ela pier men? Went, to fo into ‘bus. 
Fa Sanne 10, never hres | Four fNWy Jou, Seta ta 0 ACRES. 6 HOUSE IN Embitious? “Deue  Paeeen, one Metamors. 5 5 acres home. | Wants such @ man for wholesale oye Ortonville, distributor tor its chemical ¢ 
30 ACRES. 2 HOUSES NEAR MIS.) Wayne. Oakland, Macomb Monte | $ acres, 7 room house. Suchy St. Clair, Tusco! | and. 
I dg yg 15, i, . r 
_Reaiiy. Ortonville MY. 4161. d pumber’ tor’ interview. “You will rite 
    
The Greatest Feeling!! ‘o be 
Kerk hittin heats creas, vern, loc 
TEAGUE FINANCE CO, - 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER, MICH. LOAN $800 
     
  
  
    
  
    
  
    
            
  
  
        
          
    
  
    
  
  
    
  
  
  
                
  
  
  
  
  
    
    
    
    
        
  
  
  
        
  
    
    
        
  
    
  
          
    
        
      
  
  
    
      
    
    
      
  
  
    
    
  
  
  
  
          
    
  
  
    
  
    
    
         
         
  
     
                    
        
    
         
     
    
      
   
     
         
           
         
  
  
  
  
  
      
    
  
  
        
          
  
  
  
  
            
  
        
  
        
  
        
  
  
  
      
    m. S 
O = se Sat Pk 
\ LD plete 16 98 eds. | BA BOIL . 
FINANCE [a2 SERS) Eee ah ie pire ene are seem — a romans, S 2 tert 
suits. Size . ported 9x12 $27.85. oxi2| o™ reeces, and hot wa- Supply, 158 West Montcalm. PE : 
ot i PORMALA SEER 161i BLAGE | Delt $229 $5.95. White house, “7 bollers, oll Said ‘Pridny through Wednesday For Sale P LS 
ind 4 Bigg. | Pe 'sseie sal Oathisned chews | =~ HEIGHTS SUPPLY oe eae eet rhureaey, |“ ts? ee 5, 1h DEANE, £7 OPS | 
—— eaVetiton Sense woth mant| Ai FEMS | 7 : “SPECIAL OFFER | AQUATIC GARDENS | petetal*hstatrie Hk 
dnp nh PO. Ri bs e & 
N Sale Household MATTRESSES AND HOLLYWOOD BURMEI - He eae ALL oT Opp aes | — on = , 
ney 57| beds. All new you save. Closed ER N ‘ g-! Qne pure bristle brush 173 ANGOR Se ENS PE _¢2853 OnE MAN CHAIN SAW 
ie as ANTIQUES, LOVE SEAT, MAR- Songs, Nene: SS Wiliams. FB LU > ~ a bch Paint, 496 i 36 |“Nood home. 25, W. New Yo a ys AND USED “ 
quest as your telephone, | bictom semmses gary 4 AR. | GisceELLANEOUS HOUSEHOLD : : “We're waiting for a single!” MYake‘ave Pe rbeigo. OO ARC REO “SpEAOrE PUPPIES. “Ect ea Miter’ as a 
F ©5919] | er arees hme meme Me ER | “Best Buys” | For Sale M Bie Malad Gonts_@t seg Tet tne roan Sage ea 
MO OTL 2 S| REFRIGERATOR, $40, : OPEN § AM. TO a iscellaneous BABY female, 1 year old. Tam set oer 
_— lamps. 8350 S8c UD; noes, $20. ‘platform ies a epayn ta [sT= : 60 For Sale Miscellaneous 60 must jy nae rane. @MOvINO. | | is * ent 33604 “evenings * B® , 
atti financing, refinancing. | $3:50 down up; used lamps! Pe samee.| “nee? Other Meme. txt fir "boards 1.38 | on. p58. SOS, =e iee REGISTERED MALE CH, ley st “Vbiock went ot Crooks 
ee . £  ie FRADE GAS STOVE FOR ELI W. Pine boards! 950.00 "por ‘si | Fr _ {Or FURNACE. 05.000 BTU. 30 | ORINNELL, 31 UPRIGHT | peage. SS Reswased Finee 2 Rd, south of Aubare. 
(gas and elec » AB STO! ELEC- 1 00 per M N gal. water heater. Two 220 storage | __G00d_condition. PIANO. — - == 
Sie uuahe mort leans aro | iSite un: sedien Os ue: Millet tric. Munro Electric, 1000 W x12 W. Pine bowrds $99 per M_ a tanks. $175 complete. PE 27175. | GRINNELL 1 =a Espen Le | ax nat SstUD “auapierry, TRACTORS re 
pias Liberal repay- chrome 9 $49.50: chests. |7 PIECE Bi 254s. No.2? Fir ........ + $0.95 | Maplese $50. 238 aa NT pee le Fid. Ch. Eberie’s rent, 8. co” 
p— ae $5.96 up: bedroom jONEY MAPLE DIN- i gase Der ta | T Scouts want to borrow poomte Ra Buddy Sired by Pid. Ch Nu at Ra ” Miehi- 
H suites, 49 98 ue: ving room | _ room suite; yard gym. OR | W. P. Com door oes | or rent if reasonable, # 1 wheel lywood ano. Ideal for ALOW Fi. | Hellow ts ad A 4K. Pine| an. Ph. MU #7842 
ome & Auto sultan. 618.50 wo. Complete tine 16” CONSOLE TV 0505 ARE PLUMBIN ot | teadles far utp out Wet, Aug, 30. All kinds. plain & decorative. Kitch- _ #0 SR ee a for nals Lonsdale, Bea Beagles, ‘1742 ee come 
color tint paints. | antenna kits $0.95 > Guawers mode 19 mo. Gallaghers. . 
Loan Co Ups our onay laye-way dian. WALTON TV IF YOU ARE BUILDING A HOUSE | FURNACE. 33 © SONTi PLANO GOOD CONDITION, $26. Mo SEM Sem PO BOXER PUPS. 
pany Lad OR TRADE — DRIVE DUT TO BOMMEITOR G | enn te oe es one ONTIAG PLYWOOD, CO no 
7 manny * ational Bank Bidg. SHOP) ACKES OF Pr z re bam FY reWERs | ov MATERIALS.” TS Oe oe Ale re Ce. BR a pean rw One ve 80 } RE CONDI ne Lf | 7 trace. UL oaRay bas DANE sect |-a- h—y Kino ‘walking’ tractors actor tnd’ power 
jours © to 6; Saturday 0 to » PARKING. OPEN ss ED ome up RECONDI- MAKE CURE GAS CONVERSION BURNER FOR | ope Vase terms Oxford. t 1 Pet B, 
Dae Saw 9 TO 5:30 seas up. Gas ranges, IT's _ sale. Like new S| LADDERS, AND — LS Seems. | “fee's Sales & Service 
: NIGHT ‘TIL 8. up Electric water heater. : ‘ isc. 206 First Pt. UPRIGHT PIAN BABY PARAKEETS bl s 
w eed service bm hubure Ra. ned vacum $1088, Used Burmeister Ss. Le agp a ge alt OVERHEAD GARAGE DOOR sCINGERLAR ._. . Eg NEW Oe emaat s 
HEN YOU NEED TE rotor, 970%, °F) = North 31x32 double ‘sinks >--$11.95 | cheap. FE 23-9004, | SLINGERLAND BASs DRUM AND | | COCKER .. PEDIORER 
~~ BIG DISCOUNTS UMP Northern Lumber Co, Irreguiars $10.95 | READY MIX CEMENT $1.20 BAG tom. Cildjian cymbals Will | _Dlack 8 sen cin ase MY SITT | | epaite on 
$25 to $500 ISCOUNTS 68 A PELECIRIC WE DELIVER may - PLUMBING SUPPLY READY MIX MORTAR $1.15 Bas | ose Reasonable. FE COCKER "PUPPIES, REOIS. | | Repairs on ail makes of tractore 
Floor Sample uburn, _ re . ik ._ Sagine CEMENT AND LIME | ered. All colors. +50 : ; __ . - 
$181.65 Appliances or FR cs 5-2100 | § gal can foundation coat.. SMALL ‘pe lSED, ) STEINWA’ | Re Commerce Pontiac F. S 
Relvinaiee SET SarrCLaPEDEAs is Mile . $2.75 AY a | Rd. EM 3-079. I arm 
oave.0s Beads ca ees” 130.05 | play pen FI Dormeyer mixer, _ With 8 Trucks Serving Y ry BLAYLOCK cases vs | PET SKUNK FE ss. so J 
We can yA al | $25. Buffet sf. bigh chair make EM 3-4650 ‘* aC. UN COAL & BUILDING SUPPLY WIOLIN | _ $1782, 2211 Rd. nn 
econ help om “saned 323 sreo.es a. p pitaled) = -...s100.98 | fire proof ek (ironing. board, | ———— EM 3.3096  fumece, St condition Pm tous, | St Ofchard Lake Are. FE aia | | $38. tid, ORINNELL PIANO, |{RISH SETTER PUPPIES “ARC sare vere AN SAWS Ay 5 0 | 
and repay in $260.95 Ke jatic |... $150.08, *.. hoor model ‘lamp’ 8s mel. eo —_ $50 TO $200 AND ROCK HOUNDS 238 8. demte a Se sampion sired Mi =. 24 - 
mente ce walt ot our ee tvinator. 2 oven viniator “electric range, 3 “ovens ac ett ita ROMEX Copechens, mineralites, minera} & * oer wood very Btls, OL Sey [Keres PRERPon 0000 | 3G Se = . 
sephene office. 19 1954 Crosie ‘petrig. .86- $125. We arwis® Orchard uorescent specimens, silver alad- | <.3 aes . OL, 23-7354. 23-4028 with Machinery 7 
v0.08 0. 2! a. $250.98 $0: "SO Taled hitches trae | sg ZOLDING SUPPLIES ‘orca ““TASKER'S Sale Oe Sree 63 Fon VE EE ras acSBeTR |S SP ORTVELY PRICRS = 
TATE ek Tae omen) eR PS Eee ee ep eae SSE * “TASKER'S ve meg tees Miya Giver | SF outcry eae oor 
$260.95 Motorola 21a Se doll degay tt. child's rocks’ 13. | Seine wipweed |. $030 sheet | Se 62 W, Buren = S-4381 | Wormwood top. B45. 3) reception | a Se ee ee PR |e So tes rake. 
re Neat ene ee| Willard. ers $3. Gouin ‘tans Windows wen | CONCRETE sx + » $45; 3 reception KITTENS FREE cuittvetor Cost $57, $575. , 
FINANCE CO. Large selection of good used re-| VACUUM CLEANERS, BRUSHES, | and belancer weathers PETRO a | tA stand ae at cet Raia _~ 
FE 4-1574 WAYNE GABERT'S belts ana 956 | we handle « cot ste tine of buiig t HEAT SERVICE xvas ee eek CTT eet nb ex adding ma-| _!¢#. 1304 Mt. Clemens. yu 0-c0ee Cn 
—CASH PROMPTLY | Bor) S| POE RLORD, AMGOANT OOF | grhgensstcrenectabie pices’ | For inca wipe ka woes | gare wert bo ents | Sapte aetier SYSEWEEEEN £X- FERIRORSE JUS, PONDERFOL Auction Seine 1.2? 
208 ‘Dixie # os ae HC Lirree age SELL UMP.ONE oF | Die & office Tht *. female poo | 
poet set FRC ee Y BOTTLE GAS. | Me sen Ctariston ike ee cutemetio foor,} ta a1 best makes in Fy die. Parakeet breeders, $ ta pair. _ SAT. AUG. “ az 1, 2 : 
ferniture or note, We've, been | complete, | wore wr enn| SPECIALS ON NEW | 8 (DELUXE BLACK WALL) | oH iets. taekt pent duct | perfect. $156 value $96.50. Michi- GSED TAROE DESK tw G00 + PARAKKET 7 ewe $ 
(Baking friendly Jans since 1908 | Dixie Hwy ayon Fuebeas $308) = MERCHANDISE cushion tre with heary duty tube | Roc“{" 2. ori ol So. simple you gan Piuorescent. 303 Orchard Late | jand Ave, between # am, aod wriSy STE ras ear oyu _ 
dems o be teter, Prov | SOX SPRINGS. SIDE BOARD. Innerspring mattresses $205. sell $56, Gand sige fee cst | can instal) ano at you | NOL Spm. een 8 am. and oF } Closed Sun. | *f dairy a: 
vines Gociety. |" kitchen table’ high chair. sec: | Rollaway bed com mas-| Seif. Hundreds in use im this area. ee heat condtin ahehtiy | cae ADDING MACHINE F< wa| ee tis) re aise AL vaste! =< yp ah ‘corn. ee | 
sec- . . . ' 2 ~ 5 . torn. . 
$100 rd lamp. ce Se. Studio Couch complete ret: with Trailer Bx 60 8. Tele os _Pa MU : . anu Wein PARAKEETS ARIES TW MEL Ford equipment, Co-sp Pieces 
ae . ae eaaee a vtoteeceeeenses ae | . - NUT TYPEWRITER _ Tore. FE itk 
24210 OAS? SoS a | Set2 Nestea Lope gortect wren and bun, PM Desk $60.00: $6x36 Walnut Plat PARA 2 ee Ce oe ! 
ee Sun. P.M. Desk, $52.00: Walnut KEETS, . CANARIES CAC CAGES. Grill, factery made Wagon (rub- 
BASSI ; Table Lamps SPE. IA Chait > Side Arm food. Since 1927. 384 ber), also tools. Tim 
Phone FEderal 3-7181 | "matress cise Tinvsrcnrrigs | ssad Turettare "01 TSS en, aad YARD DUM® BODY WYDRAU- C » | SR HESS aime Side Are PARAKE TS, SE et 
_Colson_ tricycle. PE 50046. We buy, sell aut Dots, St _ Coser _& THIS arenes o Auburn Ra FED ' 
¥ CH PE 50008. _ y, sell exchange wall hung tank % LARG a WEEK ONLY le $21.00; Stool Tabe, | +2510 _Sea, Phone OA 6-281 
On Your Name Only Sele end eee tran | Oakland Furniture $9, Kindling ee cone ee mr. we | ELT ave. WTE ah a #500: Tab REGISTERED SPRINGER SPAN. | AUCTIONER WE. mL maaY. 
a re. 10/100 8. Gagtneew PE 2-952" work bemet bie Oreenen sens ea ooo. __ CASH AND CARRY Filo, 01 20; Ox Doshle Pile. $12 6 | cae wear ait females. cid. Also| fee phone suction. anywhere, OF 
CHROME DINETTE | SETS AS- STOVEs BOUGHT. BOLD. & Ex-| *.,°°5,7% 295) of we Roe ‘HOLLINGSHEAD VARIETY, 2x4’s, all lengths, 3c lin. ft tach tt oe Sorter, & Stand. im Kennels ine Dine “Mey | AUC ae 5 
temple these yourself and ene | cos": “poset NY OS™ gr ut | store" T miles out Baldwin, an6'e all leneths, Ze lin, ft diesen, 089 00.7" Pien-O-Line #6120 Dixie Hey AT CTION located 0 miles West 
ee $20 95. “These ladle, 080.99 value: | Son WRING ee was ry« | aTeTUne Vive Foor eee eG tron ce Pe ae | 2x8 aH ngths. ¢ lin. ft. Autome*« Fite leral ph 0833 | ENGLISH SPRINGER PuPS—tn.| 08-23 snd 2 mik mis re 
one — —< models Famous make. Pormice old. eucellent condition. $80. | fomplete with cleaming vatories | KALAMAZOO STOKER AND FUR-| 9,10) cr ne s, % lin. ft.| -Sdems"s3"” OCeter Tress, “et se aRED AKC CHAMPION Caste Rds Heed Moises 1 
al) Seow cones ae ba connteend | Or Wi M eseemns coreme| Se Sree tae ne all lengths Iclin. ft.| S80hie tn'we teers Ofice WEEKS come. FE we or due 
pees < emounts ot are and be convinced | WE WILL AUCTION ALL YOUR ichigan Fluorescent. 383 Oreha: ard REYSTO yivan Lake. in. ft.| seem te ee ecmins, © Seno OLD REASONABLE ee. 
. to $500. in ome day $iichtgen Prorescent, 303 Orenerd | cee eee Tiers MY 24821. sepon FOU 50 INVEST . teats. -. ‘ve mE Rp 22 all lengths 1c lin. ft. | Sete se _ | vicliievehetnenlinin | oo The Hereford aveat, 39 
ie Ave EASY MANGLE. GOOD 7 . /_er 4 pm xd t ore Equipmen SPR PUPS &§ WEEKS ae to Hereford steers . 
GENERAL PUBLIC |cnosixy reirvimion im OseD REPRIGERAT CONDI | water’ softener. lnvestignte the Sal's; 14 FOOT LONG. |8x8 timbers ...40c Tin. ft.) t_ 64 SPRINGER FUPS_S WERKE OL | out soe o"tsh Ie 
4 LOAN CORPORATION | $onscis.Mahowany with full de 12% USED REFRIGERATOR, EXCEL-| No down pormatter, Bell-O-Matie. | some large cok timber. uP Rool | — . “| Pied Boves, Prop. Ba. Gotchall 
) 69 W. Huron Street or picture. Only $40.95 MI a pe a Be FE 3st, MY 2%e2 ~ P-| Boards $5 per 10 sq. ft. | ges a trent ‘and. top. show’ cose: GPRINGER POPPIES BOXER ond Ostes “Auctioneers, Ph. Hew: 
e ee A | : case. | j 
zen ex HUR Sans PReE om Pein Ts. nace DY Fon YOUR Gas FOR. exp MIDSUMMER eats | Doors, plumbing, _ steel, | sitdmg score gad suhebte for on? fae’ Lawler’ tennels, PED ; | |_1010 
Up to $5 Sa enesllegt condition ears | “iraeraion (08 y a stismatie gas toaversion burvet | {nt Shite pine boards OCa0 RFQ hardware. vm a ae aS tay | THORQUONBRED COLLIE. U! i ee 
CAs spo, weed Se : sary part- em] $85; ixl2 : ~ INY ' MEPL kin . mani- = ot 
$500 CASH rosie yi... am = OR yrs chsgpine 8 Shop sl W Huron. _O 17 ater co OL| more yp. root boards #110. yp. | UNION WRECKING | #4 en infant Call PE 2401 | Le wate gg 
CHROME AN pa MICA _ COR ERTION 048 PERWACE ea| cies ufo a ey butt shin. CO. | Shots 817. Phone Plymouth Joai- | %. moulle weed 4 5 
for You Today gite ; ‘Pp Dee. | U SED ) TRADE “IN E $3378. piank & tile Created cee oe wall 31265 West 8 Mile Ra. tu vr DOUBLE DUTY McCRAY witli orn 4 appointment | my from. Ask sbout 
20,000 FAMILIES IN PONT! _PE ner £30 pom call DEPARTMENT CEMENT BLOCKS | insuistson Soo ean” 3430 mies | DA: Middlebelt 2 10 ft. single di Li, GIVE 3 KITTENS TO GOOD! trattere ease paw o@ need 
asi Ostians AC 2311 ME}? Immea s insulation 100 “. Mo k DAILY 8 nee T SUNDAY 10 TO. . counters ity McCray meat home 7003 Sashabaw Ra. Clark- Sales, 2101 
eb County ave. ber Enostey SELVA a cn EE ts 8 mediately delivered 06 Sheffield . 7 2am, Bat doors #1136) ond Pits OPEN ‘TIL §..KEn- 1.6 ft. self contained double duty _ ston CLOSING OUT ALL 
ckners ip « Late ‘ esheP ...-- 2c ennee eeeerres ‘arnityu: 7 Tyter meat case ’ 
. balance at $14 month | Studio couch .........-.--+- $24.50 Russell _Lemon sets 10 per cent off. Pease «7m | §TEEL SEPTIC | 1 set of , vs 
BoCKNE» 18 THE wp |SuIRO = MY Sanit | Gas! ran os coarELiLos CAKE ORION, faa A up. Saq to 2433 Mo, tables ato oe. aoe TARR. 300 Cale | 1s g Daren meat scales. | Dogs Trained Boarded 70: “EX, Map", .Mauaapepe. , 
Sezer’ WHERE Youans | — vl ioe . 3] Davenport and ebatr AG! Sccessories. batt and Tackle. rue-| rock Ith priced eet, Pics | SEASONED LUMBER WILD 1 arnier eens Sat ALL BREEDS OCS EDiIzNcE at ye 
aY® WELL TREATED. EASY SPIN DRYER Refrigerator reese teesccees - $9.80 pp aeanial souvenirs, and arch-{ culverts preet right. Driveway Say. * white and red oak. FE 1-3 pereapewer Enterprise meat! handler et. PaREeueet 3 TRAILER 
Whee ‘feces . seinen Pe ation AND OF NY OTHER ITEMS, steel clothes tS ae, Sewer Ph food -eabinet. | Le -] sites ‘| Nomt¥ OF LAKE ce 
When ‘ines, comes: Whee there | ils YR. OLD CROSLEY TV CON. CONVENIENT TERMS Bis “te saenrptas Lumber oo. frocks & drain tile & SUMMER PRICES ON) bh 6 pole Prigidaire ice cream cabl- BATHING AND | _2aets. 
employmen. you will be glad sole. 19" screen. Guaranteed pic-| THOMAS FCONOMY oie 7082. sq. ft Oak =n ear | COAL NOW IN_ EF 3 ‘walk tn cooler doo ping, 4 N. Perry. PE 2613. NEW AND — 
are dealing with Buckner’s ~ road tube, 30 days. Beautiful Rie | FU RNITU RE ARANCE SALE. POWER stock & ny Hy ., ® rs with hard- | Bods g CATs. PRIVATE iVaATE RONG trailers on rental purchase ’ 
bee you are always sure of _niture. $125. OA 8-2829 s - CO. lawn mowers garden tractors wundowall Plywood. feterior . FECT. GOOD COAL ‘3 mills 5 z fee ec |S Telegranh | Good low priced used a ; 
' ind ab” considerate treatment |? PIECE LIVING | jROOM Sarre | * SAGINAW New and used Evans Equi |  gxterior Get our quantity .| A a down Move tn immediately 4 
BETTER BE SAFF THAN _dark green. FE 2-9570, | UNCLAIMED LINOLEUMS % OFF | _5-1878 607 Dixie Hwy. MA) 1, You'll save prices. ALWAYS ee ee ream cans | Hay, Grain & Feed 71 vey nail oo“ 
sorry |} DOUBLE PRS. OF LinED Trav. 0X!2 LINOLEUMS, $1.98 | cHRroME ____| Paul St. Cyr Lumber | Co. | Several ‘plate coll, and stands for eee cues = EXCHANGE 
You can obts erse ‘draperies with AV) ur E DINETTE SETS. AS- 6120 Bogie Lak NSON Caton Pedder's window. “rres end Sentay 
io ome ra =p te 25 3800 to- hice boards FE h matehing cor. LINOLEUM wide: Pant vis BG) is semble these yourssit cat oats: we 34 ne | so we 1 Seton Fedder's window room air’ path comh o 200 «ACRES. __ Open" Eves and Sunday PM. 
for e shar’ time or take a _James K Blvd 4% FT. WALL TIL 8c $39.95 These are brand gew | LINOLEUM R sTEA Saginaw. a FE ¢2521 1 Youngstown dish washer and sink. | °U%URS For Taformation ‘call. O A 
24 montns to y ,on low 7 PULL size BEDS « SINGLE. j3us Gold Seal Linoleum . $4 Off | 1954 models. famous make. for- | UGS $1.95 AM RADIATORS BOTLERS Al! equipment at bereain prices WILLIS M BREWER xIO Trailer ae 
monty payments, The charge 1 roll away: dining room . set: | $2.°* ptt’ LINOLEUMS 9c EACH | mica tops all popular colors. | Linoleum 28¢ | conversion. units. 3130 W,| Phone Milford. MUtual 45665 or ROOSEVELT . . , 
ts less 7"vou think. vas "ange Jabinet vase: 3 dress. | ie Plastic: Wall ns We sq. ft. | = fopt, compare ead be | Paint asta eae on Huron, Y _Retrigerat see em at the Huff __Eves FE 5-774 or EM : 34808 SALES 
_* other item . be xtraordinary Z : ACE efrigeratiog Co. Highland FO 
BRO cA A mie woanaireeD, aE Eroboes ee ise ‘gal | Sgrtains s culichigen,“Piuoresceat SMITH’S OUTLET” SALVAGE Sale Sporting — a ay R OMe Batpoa RYE. Tae 
NEED AT =| frigerators =... aroid $s, ginaw |~ CASH 257 SB. Bagi Refrigerators, stoves, water heat- joods GATS. HAY. STRAW. COMBINING. | Jlowste winds Se “A 
washers wp | RE 7 ers, chests of @ ws, | 
Seer werner aD PE ee ned! Samp foe, WLBT ripe EETORE— | CagS wy Ping foe rawr | Birch rar ip ron satz. « wconmoon TOR-|~ For Sale Livestock 72 robe aoors, ‘al ae | 
. uckner Roy's 00 Ostinns J * up _Open Friday Nite ‘til 9 PM. es veood lle ot” used i” INCH AND : HUTCHINSON Sine t 4 or 22 ey 7 
SNS BGO 8S 2-402 SUMMER rE Nance “USED | lumber « womens ment Mocks. with blowers and the SHOT GUNS BRO it that will carry 5 nme | 
FINAN ING ROOM _#UTTE LIVING Frot gifsh fv ufis's Wore | Rasengan BRE Sa ok ("ghee | TRAILER SALES | "Eiht stata ate ROEM BANE, NDING HORSE | Abe see tow Omneras 
e s e wn onogaph $5 ; (ITCHEN 8!) 7g 
_ INANCE COMPANY nee et Convenient terms. BD. ¥. Geed-| 200 Donley BM. 1 Diock west of 88 Mg ag lg | S18 Diste ue Open 9 ‘til §| of 15 Wncnoone | trom oar stock ie NOLSTEIN NEIPERS SOME, Memes ong t Styiiees. Tis | 
rn " a TABLES BLOND AND —Tich Stores, 111_N Perry __Crooks Rd south off Auburn _stove. 104 Hendeson we mes ony tt OC . Ci dealer. Layaway and time per | fresh and springers A.D. Buell, trailers ‘sold oo rental Mer 
"8 pM; Saginam and. Huron... £26 50 xi pslenire se gSlEE BOUL AW AY PULL SIZE Darton SHALLOW-WELL Jet MQNOGRAM WALL FURNACE. 2258 DIXIE HWY. PARK PRE PREE. KEL LY’S a _iMien &. Lapeer Bd. Metamers. |~ fre nego we mentae Rew | 
to rreeula reeset save ae <—SePont Hal Wal paIt— sss eRe Rochester 16 Corals THREE-PIECE BATH SETS HARDWARE |” avi-MIcnigaNn Ww . —— . oer cent up te 60 4 
aes. deren oe Post Of- | Michiean Fluorescent. 393 Orch CUBIC FT REPRIGERATOR DrPomtsntenier semi ee _WHITE ‘with fittings) $04 85 3904 Auburn At Adams FE Z-sail | MICHIGAN WOLVERINE — ons + 
Phor 1221. rd Lake. Ave Irch- “eger—medeb- tunes s8ciit OB 7 er eS sion 39 —-OUMS. BUY. TRADE. BU Saturday August 14 at | Parts and ac 
—sSbell u is 1 o'clock cessories. 
ELECTROMASTE! 2? PIECE LIVING ROOM § ride Tlardware “PLU 4 a eiencaphet theWalserine Purebred Live | Mile South 
sche TOR San a cin Ds SEZE | Open Sundays 812 Mge-Qtag Howe tet 8 eu Sc AEF a - . . 7 ——— 
LOANS OR GALE ROUND. OnE RANGE Used Trade-in Dept. | M7 Auburn Ra, iat crooksy | Ubrumnffregs’ “Tl B® 8° put TILT TOP TRAILER 300 LBS fmaw BO Mich is head very_outstanding “ps PE st RICHARDSON FOtE 
and heat water, topper body. Rebuilt guarantees washer . $29 95— * Sapo Se 2-0362 wr Mac-o-lac latex rubber rail. Fire Dept a re escape and | AT ORGS | heifers-fresh or close s a ; 
.- ost Se oven, warming oven |Table top gas rance ; $30.08 GALLON GAS HEATERS. sa satin paint garage 2 sink pproved. 2 car “in EU st UNS AND DEER | for dase milk These he ate 
$25 to $500 $25 to $500 watereet aft, a, vee: | Baan’) po breakfast os. tas o8 . Thompson. 80 nesterg. 60. 1 ee etn aes cg $5.29 gal. _Toom suite FE 200. "|g = "= Leach 10 Bagley | band picked from wome of the | Pp ; 
or. $! } 9-98) GX Tompson. 80 8. Perry. | f8l paint & roller or pan | ow es e ‘ . 
Community Loan Co. |®,S0-.7%_ HER FREEZE i S'pet dining room set). aT sauiPi NT FOR SALE. QUICK- a & rover of pan 88.30) TALBOTT LUMBER — Gravel & Dit 66) ow — Ben Miller Mooteom: | ontlac 
30 E. Lawrence SEVERPORT Lite CHAIR, GOOD Studio Cou te $29.95 h Valve grinder. OOR SHOP - Lumber, doors, window : Farm. EA. Hardy. Leo Dorr. | 
. VENPORT AND CH 2 pe. living room “ with Dlock seating ‘grinder Some | Open ware, plu >» ATTENTION Ba weer carey, tee Deore: | 
FE 2-7131 Sra ne aR OoOD Small down payments ste ee Porting cae rome Pare ane termine | 20 Tat AUTOM Te eee ein. septic oo yg games Prnor TRUCK soe Featuring $ daushters of Por. Mat , 
Friendly Service DAVENPORT AND CHAIR. GOOD WYMAN’S ~PLASHLIGHT BA er. Many other artic AT-| system for wet basements, sheet | “ ideal Adm rel from te Re 1e 
Mort Loa Foaeroae s_ ZeGeente._.. 18 W. Pike Only _ WA BarTERixs We | TOYS: LARGE Tae MA ¢-3900.| [o35"oskiand Phone PE 4 wrses.| te cer evards ‘Cash and cerry Reltere’ heee aceuanel etees’ te 
- ——- . \ 
Mortgage Loans 54 FURNITURE: "DINING ROOM. | pPlumping snd Heating, Sunpiy | telek: tolding table ‘ahd chairs Eland Phone PE +2633 | P\ J"'waidie, Poove FE dtuil.| teneationa LP3e ce s,s) | MOBILE HOMES 
TT teres’ mirsors. lampa, ste” -, FLUORESCENT -4_F = Round rec Reinforced concrete. Installed : SOIL. BLACK DIRT.| te buy. lor ome breeder | 22 ft. to 48. sth. 1 
wn W INTEREST acer amps, etc. 1585 WAREHOUSE fixtures. ideal for use F— CHANNEL| — —Sreasway reasonable, 440 8. | desired. Phone FE 2-6472 cere SE Tet or re end” Conkiin, from NV tede | Pa nad Yor" ta o pay length. Up te 
— dwells te ons single family | PREEZER, UPRIGHT. 12 CUBIC Denghes, meee, rehouses, rec- | USED NORGE FURNACE. i954 FORD © = oon “BEST OU . an cory enmeoies. Ven oe find ecendiuened’ tr Les Hutchinscoe 
age g.caneeled. my ag eegalarty $429.95 now R These are sit 35) — | let plete with lower and ‘centrale | _her_k ig he Witt WAG- ALITY > eanmtne  premere et $100. _down, trailer a9 bw 08 
ane OTT TTTTREON | Bnet: 14a} 8! Woodward, Birmine- EMOVAL | gervetilsttiecten*thowronms | Sion Gi 3-100 Fot ‘ype burner. | USED ELECTRIC TE-MOTORS Wee sone erevel sand” Prompt de- rege Teme Hutchinson's T a 
1310 Pontiac State Bank | eects Lak 393 Orchard —— Dp. Refrigerators, washers, —!'veries, full load - T B&B Tested” An mil utchinson’s Trailer S 
Puone FE 82000 oF PE 5-67 FRIGIDAIRE, APARTMENT SIZE SALE! FuEl On FARE 78 OALIDR 1 “pe ME¥ER'S PUMPS” | prices: he, 85 ranges ates B-4 Trucking Servic Oa a ee ed ee een nes. shane OR Sat se 
Sw ning condition xeellent run- in. legs, gauge, fill eap and vent, | flow well jet pumps, | $1 W. Huron oy ervice | | i iecan Bre ee Flovd Kehri Pen- Corner 8 M 11 
~~ aps L 35 rar Only $30.95. MI delivers ‘complete. $36.50. PE No money p ro-toll cost insulation. 8 aoe © Tikes (UMHEELS a5 Bade Fe barons & gravel. UL. Daron S Bimaath Wienigan #. 20 8 me: ot = 
ee er: , . ented i a “sor, y - Flint 
pitare in "seem fat, FoR L SIZE DOLORES ; AB. Aris USED ECRNET a (EXHAUST FAN With 75ers | Cent mips for mes crm | “WALK- IN COOLERS a eee FILL ‘“Womoanee WILLIAMSTON, Fanemuney TRAnLER couR 
ieet’ ad jousetrailer. MY SALE: AIRE. GAS Pe 8 . NITURE Bru me iattore. 00. % Million | E ie IGA! oe * T. 
3 * in_ good condition KEL LY’S HARDW | bust te oreer tue a . aLt RAY MARE BAY MA SELL M 
Bee ERUGK RERVIGE FOR stove, a bed. coil spring and 3 . WARE days A-1 TOP FILL Din A $2088, 505 - = ¥ EQUITY ON A 
UMP FROCK SERVICE FoR | Metres + bane vote reeee| All Pri Sas Senne Bee tee oe Aen Pm oe ene eee Te | fay AAIOF SO PILL DIRT SAND fang’ tn“ Orsne i_O8 fig a ele Sao 
et ‘ghead ru 19 AXMINGTER, BOME- rices FACTORY aNDS: DOUBLE Sims, 50 DOWN PAYMENT ON WE r FE a ARE ZES™ | ATTENTION: DELIVER rtive | TWILIONT | HOUSTEIN AbeHION “3 FOOT PALACE. ‘LRaN il 
CHANGE YOUR LARD CON. St. — ow MENT Foor CNIC TABLES $24.) 8nd top Also trac e!| sharon Center B | new 2 bedrooms Heat t and, ¢ook 
=e fonere Fen pave o sold id prop- FOR OR | SALE E FUL 5 ete Reduced! 19.95. G oe ee SS ss year to ay, a ons... ge ae ¢ foot folding bench oe i cinttne Fe teste king. "Call | so reeistered. Duiiting. Lesee | Be, sores and wink eedon 
H__J__VenWeit, OR Sisss. sere Eee eee en oe . _kce, 103 8. Sagmaw. ss, _ished. PE 46830 _ pt BLACK THRE. |S veartines 7 bull Clarence Ste: iS Pr ROUSETRAILER GRILEE 
ExGHANOE OR SELL LAR OE yeet7) ambertin rE. G&M A . Penaae” c.f ott | y WOI VERINE | PER. Peewee Se wart Sale Menager he'd Roches. Cruiser Excellent condition. Priced 
eabin trunk. hand vacuum cleap- PoRnrroRe” DINING ROOM, LIV- Used walnut 8 pe dining room | Lawnmoters pretreat aw gas and all kinds bottled gas «1 LUMBER AxD BLACK DIRT DELIV? . ter, Mich. hes-|_to sell. PE 40035 00 
er. washing machine. Wanted 39” ing room dinette. carpet  pic- yon large size, good shape $39.50 filed, joiner knives, plain irons, and electric heaters, stoves and 300 S. Paddock WRECKING | CO yards, $950 Fz LIVERED. 3 YEARL Ino purse “POR 17 FT. HOUSETRAILER. GOOD 
ved. poreuae cook stove, sma) ‘res, mirrors lamps. etc FE ¢- aR... dinette suite excellent ras tts ete ail vork guaranteed sopHaates for housetrailers and No. 3 oak flooring per Pal jt 46523 56-2840 or FE Cheap. MY SALE conten Reasons le. Call after 
_lavatory. davenport. PE 47285. 2338 Opay nol. __ = ; = 
EXCHANGE MEDIUM PRICED —— — | Er o, Suty We set, pina top, 0 ARDEN, TRACTOR w ae wTRATLER EXCHANGE New Toilets = uf ted custom Tegyerne Wanted ‘Livestock ~ 9g, —ae Rhee ee ee Cte 
MB es oe MODEL Le Rectional biond arms ttachments 32 Whitfield, Call a 6. TELBORAPH | Sith fucings gs ELKINS BROTHERS SAND YTD LIVESTOCK OF ALL mine. ’ 
mR ee a Be. © of Each ent ee ite ae as — Sere pM. We carry & full line tn tumber, te Seale fil dirt. OR 3-4197 or, —rotest_Jones. MA_5-5208 t _ l 
did car in trade, OR Stp01. | Phillce Range 9239 Now si99.98 | New 1a10-8" twortm — | Garag :Do Plumbing and builders supplies. PILL DIRT. BLACK DIR _ Tal er 
FLORIDA freever Was twokine areen ge oors free selectiia of door chimes et WANTED: Sion WG Aran. FILL bier, aCAce Di cach OF Sale Poultry. 24. 
.05—now g21.98 New iaxip Wingn $7050, 8 by J No.2 extraordinary values. Mich USED APART- stone, washed a —— 
1 foor duplex. GE Washer carpet, two-tone ee to $70.08. igen, ment size = | concrete gravel, 
x, $5,708 $200.95 now . $239.95 | _ beige, . the new by BE Hu. Fluorescent. 393 Orchard Lak Must piano Not over 44 Toad vel FE . PIGFONS—R 
fe en” giest Dom: Bremer eose 0 new $275.08 | New 1 wool caret. | nce a Detroiter ‘no. i Pes 1 fn. Pe zs *| nese — a Specity | PILL t pares. x Ake “RAISE QIANT SQUABS anige™ ~™ —— 
1 area. VA 65-6081. ac green floral a 3t S. trotter No. 1, b: CUBIC FT _ ' Box Pontiac | son sand . | Crests and White American 
an UNITED TRAILER: roeR UN ink 9 00.80| New mehepany ajnctte . $7. Betecher ge. 1° months cid. Nice | _Press Boz iti | atone. a fet grecel. being | _ Shown egpointaent” | for sale 
fraowe parment on house | “RUMP ELECTRIC | "*™,.90eu" "uving cuales, We give be. 1 3 by 1 810.0, pattery slarm. device. i ~ | waa TRUNK. GOOD aa | Toad re. eravel.— sd ent PE 2.8303. 
a. __ | 65 Auber: ym osta| Bors cold cormacty for lon Dies, | garage front remodeling. Pree de- take over payments, OR sod | ge BAOOR AN Fon Sate BLACK bunt ROT. Sale Farm Equipment 
LAROR @ ROOM MOUSE PLUS |° 52 X12 RUG AND PAD GE. ite “meer fer Cae year |?” Sonn Be re ao |'3,%, » JET $00 power lawn mower SETRATTO | some | * 
ft ‘with take prt wa war | wines ee © enaice for eis%s | BERRY DOOR SALES CO. __ | j= Re eB eee —fheee,_ OR > GARDEN TRACTOR, GEAR pDrrv. 
vileges on beaut Gag ST FOR SALE BARBER CHAIR. ©. a © al | fe, with cultty : 
Cranberry Lake 7 miles north stove (eo “CONDITION. | cee: | cabinet. mirror, ste A. Thompson, _ 90S. Perty sarself eee eee ert rE {oe Rend coer Seon ie 
¢ no Te an even écop ea Fabica a At ST E \W ART-GL ENN C rilizer, light ba ee PIPE ae NO OF “art Dnt oubes vim a oe oa ally i 
payment. PE 5-8755 SO ONE # FEN , S | iS is 8 Reems, ... we Doors at Hall Court Paine PE 7. © AUGER, 
Pron ha Oe hs} sorett ft. | At ti -| 5.2840 - FE  sheller Case sfto 
se mipe cemranigecee oi F AVE PLUMB: _5-2040 or FE +6523 dition filer. 4-1 
ape! sTouT REALTOR | ages on tS oa + CLOCK.» Fr. 6 WEREHOUSE Saginaw oe 62100 “Be i PROCESSED ROAD & DRIVEWAY —'*"™ cost of oe . 
ioe «ate ton and Westminster prawn eth PREE ESTIMATES. ; ——— RCH HS "INC. | graye Pit run 60-40 and cushion) FALL B 
aaa oven Paranes amo | tse fase Poet RE ONLY | SE EATEIAL parses, mies po“i-vouReaes | SE maee game * So" ae rons wrte thom 
i. b AND! at ne 20 F ili pows imum doors. 833 any eo. ine uF PROPESSION- A Sine JOHN DEERE B wiTH 
we alee ene ake eaTon’ a ranklin Road\near RR| TOUR Aitincs cwcmes. PR} sherpene Brey, Wey, Sande weed. | shaves ter ‘owns and "OR ainda’ 
os oa ote | ee Mere Crossing in Geter 8 CRE TEE GT RE, ceases | aGap Saavet PAU ou ater & 
GuErt, | m are es re. sim 4 ‘ StL. " 
tg . . FESO. no snawer, ‘On 1281. ' gets Osean Aner $30.| jobs.) ct Soe various type | soll. Also Sulidoring, and’ back | PLOWS. Discs. NARROWS 
. . . e jobs. For @ free home m ie. deen and . UG HARROWS. 
call FE 6-4622, > Shorty ‘Howe, OF | HOUGHTEN’S 
/ s \* \ . ® N. Main, Rochester OL 1-976) 
ans ® , . ; * , * - . ’ | 
idl 1, a is ce Se iD ay / /_) : | 
OS ae eS eae ‘ S23. = a z Sa bs ‘ , J Ty i 4-—s \ ti . ‘; ~~ ‘ 
——— a ae. * ae i ASR y Bae 4 Serge.) ar Fee ‘ Ss § / j a ; ae f ~ ” ; 
. OL MEP | i eee é ib | f . P* - ; Fa 
4 i 2 ag _ _ ~ f / sy wr 
— lle s+. lll ASD tf hg Se FS eo tt rR Ia oO RO        
     
   
    
¥,. aveusr 1, 1954   
  
WE NEED nid 
  
    
    
      
  
  PAYMENT -__BRAID MOTOR SALES   
  gh UTO GLASS sas 
in safety auto ot ates sae 8 Fe Bee acrae rn So fa f| tm LATE MODEL WRECK 
rE_t ne. | PE 2-2544 or FE 4.3585 
Huba, Huba ‘V0 BAGLEY 87. sal py hy A Soees spin spin For Sale Used Trucks 9% 90 
pers, ripples. 40 per cent off wi 
they last. Hub Auto Glass Co. 122, (Contractors, Attention 
Oakland Ave. FE 47068. | ae Wane eavtar nee ani 
PLYM yi MOTOR $40. —t Pruchout tank trailer 
Auto. s ewis pp gy og 1500 gal. Frue- | 
REP BUMPING & PAINTING tit Ma Cae en 7 T 
FREE ESTIMATE 392_ 8. Santor St. PE 29173 
ALL ES orc cars igo yee tmowor and van, 
_Ures. M 60337. 
PHONE -FE 
30 Years Fair Dealing 
West Pike St 
  
  
  
    
  
  
      
        
    
  
    
    
  
      
    
  
  
    
  
  
    
    
    
    
     
     | HAROLD 
- TURNER 
Sez— 
We Call Them Friendly 
Used Cars 
Every used car we sell 
must make us a future! 
customer and a loyal 
—trpead-   = 
Harold 
Turner 
Ford 
' “Best in Wheels & Deals”    ~ 
  te See c * 3) ved 
     
                     
                  
                   
  
“The pitcher is studying law on the side—so he insists 
on a jury to call balls and strikes!" 
  
For Sale Used Cars 91. SLPvLBLLDB OOOO | For Sale Used Cars 91   
    
    
  
  
  
      
  
  
    
  
  _Fae Sale Used Cars bad | wean   
¥ AND 
PONTIAC 
RETAIL 
STORE 
GOODWILL 
USED CARS “NOT A NAME BUT A POLICY”   
JEROME, “‘Rochestet Ford Dealer 
1953 
FORD   50 STUDE * 
CUSTOMLINE FOUR DOOR LANCRUISER. 
8 CYLINDER _ TOMATIC TRANSMISSION.   
  $i350 Se SOTO aang LARRY | poMATic, 
JEROME NICE INSIDE 
HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANS- MISSION: TEST DRIVE IT — 
YOU'LL LIKE IT. 
Rochester Ford Dealer 
PH. OL 19711 “Good will yon Car’ 
$1,195 
  | . + “Goodwill Useu Car” ~< 
  
  
    
  Za “1 SPORTSMAN, 9100, 5 gos.) > YARD DUMP + — ; “HiMT FORD RADIO AND HEATER. 7 “FOG OOD PLACE TO B a 52-PEY MOUTH 
2SPEED AXLE |" un. " BUYS | j oer * | | Goupe “Waxy ‘THOUSANDS OF ia $495 { Buy These | MILES LEFT. 
: , | i ‘31 Hudson 4 dr....,.$399 Be <Sure of Your Car | “Good will Used Car” 
For § Matorc) = 60 PI ad $30 Cars and Your Dealer | | $825 
ENGLISH MOTORCYCLES, GER- ym. ne Shea 
iN “man scooters. 201 E._Pike Bt | From $00 tom pamoun sien ra rdet OFFERS | $1 KAISER | 
\ Motu Marley Davidson ove Harley LARRY ‘SI Stude. Cl. Cpe. ++ $399 | New now” $1808.00, "$6000" per | FOUR DOOR SEDAN WITH RA- own $69.00 ‘ 
7 idson Sales Co., 372 8. Sagi- ' DIO. HEATER AND HYDRAMT 
hé wee, oe eee JEROME "51 Dodge Sed. ..... $599) 1081 Doage Coupe monte | IC TEST DRIVE IT TODAY! 
2 HARLEY DAVIDSON, 74, NEW | | 194i at : 4 ar. 1953 Willys Hard Top 1953 BUICK fordor sedan. , Solid Valve 
\ - hos - r Bieck r . - 
L “s ten Qi. Or tress. tor fixup, Rochester Ford Dealer \ ‘49 Olds. Sed ....... S344, 98 “ga” Convertible | overdrive. "windshield washers and 1 owner.’ Radio and S645 
truck or car, OL 6-1931. PH. OL 1-9711 1 THs WSW Ures, $399.00 down. $56 00 he: 
"S2 HARLEY (74 “GOOD. FL ace TO. BU years a| 52 Ford 2 dr. $899 ise Dodge rar Coupe per mon eater. | 
: ee a a i a 4 Deke Forder j | SICHEN > 
| YE poze, S461 = | 52 Pontiac he mers 2 “re “Oras Marcon, ew seat covers. | $1795 [oA waa See tee | se in TON «DODGE, 8 BELL | radio, heater wer r | BEDAN RADIO AND HEATER. 
i ae 4 PPE Ee | Deluxe 4 dr.......$999, pee ets of | dhis'ee “dows, ‘seeat" ber” month. 1q°3 HODGE fordor se-, Ay vis LeACATION VALUE: = "For Sale Bicycles | PICKUPs ee ot Fon kiene | pia 1953 Packard Cavalter Fordor | dan. Gunmeta! gray. ] 
? BOYS.26 BICYCLE. makes “and models and they ere | >) Chev. Hardtop +6 $799) Trucks Brakes, WSW. ae a d hea "S050 7. Ardmore. all ie “A-l" condition and ready 3] D to4d | All Shapes & Sizes Transmission $445 00 ~ $63 S1998 ter. $950 
T isH BOY'S BIKE "> esoto Tissees . $699 | per month. 
! orrw eectian pL MIRROR, CY OWENS fo _ _ 
iB . CARIEER, M47 8 Saginaw ___PE $400 50) Ford 2 dr. eee ee $3 Riemenschneider . Bros. | "Tight grav Wa ce coupe mile- 48 NASII 
oe +8 CHEVIE ‘s pM cs LL D ase Radin s. heater. $345.00 | | 1952 PLYMOUTH tordor, RECONDITIONED AND. READY | 
ae oat aT EW, es ae ms O8 fe "30 Packard Conv. ...$SH ge 1952 Dodge Meadowbrook Frdor sedan. Arealnice car.) EATER = —= 1 “ ge eadow \ 
: Only | 15.000 , ONE BO CLE $12.00 Very good shape. See Dick 8 053 Biok < _ Plymouth — Dark Metallic green. Only ! $995 | | pa Pe 
| 34 INCH BOYS BICYCLE. 2, 2% _OR 36 aad ; Hardtop. oe. $1, 890) Phone FF 2.9131 | down, $44.25 per month. ’ see 
eee 7 A ain a on ee eT Packard 4de_., $8007 232 S- Sainaw-Sto—r! pate a gat sane, 1952 OCS MOLID 2 Y 'S3 and '54 __mingham, * Drayton Plains. =| 5] Packar Tivo. $55 down, $27.53 per month. } ‘CPE. This has radio, | os ane Boats & Accessories 835 DODGE PICKUP 1953. WILL 1 SELL PE. ' “TEACS 
& ved or trade. OR 3-902 after 4 Pm. <Q py), at: “48 CHEVROLET 2 DR. $10 DOWN 14 Dodge Fordor. | heater and many! PONTIACS 
- - . ' wv ear ike 
Pon an | Saket DOME Oe ee Wag 9 Woodward, aivmingiam or 110 Ren™™yigite dow’ sta ‘yet other extras. = GEALS CANS wit (tw “tow Yan bests, | WwW, Se nn i agon . N Woodward, Royal Os | | MILEAGE AND A GOOD LOW 
psig bee Beate Ss | Pony Tees POE | 55 Chey, iifetal (EVIE 3 Boge, EVERY: $1595 oe motor. 20 per cent off Faso UTELY LIKE NEW — 1052 rev. Meta ed ND SERVICE| Chevie. 2 ton—12 1M  stake—dual Station Wagon. .$1,499, 1950 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBI. | oc? . a 
22'S. TELEORAPH yoced\axie “Call MY 28062 afer | Quire at aaa “Hatchery Road | | 1952¢ ier ble ah 
CENTURY RUNABOUT AND —" 52 Chev. Dix. 2 dr... .$844 _sfter 50 Pom _ 7 or, yet Diack with 
trailer. Excellent condition. $1175. WILSON’ GMC : W CHEVROLET 2 DR. $10 DOWN Motor Sales radio, heater and 
FE 6-116. AP + . and continue payments. 464 8 DeSoto-Ply mouth 
‘SCARE ORION WILL we GMC: % T Rieke 53 Ford Ranch Wagon Woodward. Birmingham or 110 30 Years fair dealing Powerglide. RETAIL 
not be undersold on new 146i GMC. Panel __N__Woodward, Royal Oak Cass at W Pike St 
tra 809 § WOODWARD 50 Lincoln 4 dr. $799, 1950 BELAIRE CHEVROLET ONE FE 201860 $1095 CASH FOR USED BOATS MO-| FF 4-4531 - cece owner, Loaded with extras, MI HUDSON 50 COMMODORE, ONE | STORE 
trailers nearer ee ywner ec side «a out | : | | 
ee FOR SALE P 600 FORD DUMP ° . Radio, heate rdrive. $475.) yo- Ck 
EVINRUDE MOTORS | "Wasi vin'rtate fesed pon "19 Ford 2 dieses 29 5 We CHEVROLET 2-DRsie BOWN FSM LEMS qgarererr® MP | 1052 BUICK tudor sedan. kits trailers. | _=> ’c - | . 
Sa rp et saat ne | Haare |'53 Pont, Mardtop. $1,609 Saissss Rgurtage or i cowmopore eopupege,+ Nice car and a OME sary Branch FE 80112 2605 Le. Rd.| cessories. Reasonable, FE 54161, | and heater. new tires. Private owner. | 2 \ a : 
MOTORS Norm Hovis. Evenings. FE 5-8070 53 Chev. 2 dr $1 099 | _owner. EM _3- | Mt. Clemens at Mill 
New and used motors. s\jM6 DODGE PICK UP. GOOD) ~ , —_** i | jes) KAISER, NEW TIRES. 3 SEAT. $1395 Phone FF 3-7117 
Hardware, Auburn at Adams, Av | condition & Ber. near | '53 Ford Vi $1 599 | | covers. redie and heater aay | 
burn : . | 53 For IC, eeeee DLO } S00 Cash EM “a ; . ~ cor re _ | S : - 
with ft. Runabout | 903 GNC DIESEL Wire A Jer | oo Chrysler | - 1951 OLDS SUPER 88 tu 
ant u — S . 299, ‘s4 DODOE V-8. RADIO. NEAT. dor. Black finish. TRADE OR SELL $2 PACKARD. | - _ | aratoga ...... $l, | er tranamisaion Loaded | door. Call after 3.30 pm. FE| 
For 47 Willys Sta-W $499| | Sen teas Moo mt MY 2-261, | Really a nice car. ness <—BuRNa— on: 
illys Sta. Wag. $] 195 ‘i vl otherwise or anything | | of val 
H | ee BP Sota a | '49 Lincoln 4 dr......$399) MONE Y O. K. | Ra Roe au ireae in Ww Aubere 
‘ ures. pe nee Le ; 1951 CHEVROLET for-| te Pareaeey oad beater Ver very 
: Phone FE 46158. | 51 Kaiser 2 dr. 1 dor Maroon ]-owner,| ‘lesa H > j . . } 51 Nash Rambler station aes 
: a WORE WARD TOP um | ydramatic .... H Powerglide with 28,-! Very Sere ssendtiuce. Looks ik 
| | ; ee cal ¢ Pp =. 
- sy a ean, a tt | ——— gg he ‘$3. BUICK OR ‘52 CADILLAC. | | ok. Oe citer jel car 
ike ore.” Wik trade fer howe. “Specials” | Our Plan Is Ethical, ( ‘ARS | $895 pietet Tacos S COUPE. RA. 
e FIBERGLAS BUICK 's3 es 2 TONE, «4 Honest and True 51 \ URY ford fer, 811 8 Late Br Ma‘ Sen of | 
| wm{ door Riviera dynafow } +g; ¢199' | 1951 MERCURY fordor) 
. Soni toe "vou Cunrante ss aad ail accessories, ites. PE =O TTudson CI. Cpe... $1% oe Thoroughly sedan. Metallic green. | “heart Meee RG ANP in ; “VR “T i | Pte 6 ao om. tnd | inca BUICK SUPER DYNAFLOW. 48 Dodge 2 dr.......$19 a CiteS ROLE! R di ' d radio, heater, seat ig vy Rah feat | 
| “WANDA B BOAT. Ho, ee cerkete” tae te safety Gleaming black finish. radio econ itlone covers and Merc-o- sr White walls. wire wheel cov. 
’ ; . good s lis . e e 
| snese Rerthuestoran Rey acer WH Tt cise OUneE s2650. 46 Cadillac 4 dr......$244 is epotless, fide wn out “er matic. age ems Call Lincoln erst | 
mi, Road. Phone MA 6-6159 + ORI ae . NEY N _- 
Good NO 16 PT. CHRIS| ‘sell reasonably OL. 62501 or “47 Olds, Sedan ...,,. $9 $345 531 CHEVROL -E T $995 ine PLYMOUTH Low MILEAOE | 
Craft. @ h.p.. $825 complete. FE at 34] E. Avon |. Deluxe ‘ 2 torr, ot ; fully re oon extras rete gaz 
. 2-9908. BUI 1 WN AND ° c equippe nice &@ c eon ery . . UTH 1, VEDER: 
Ei i¢ PT. ROWBOAT. VERY GOOD. ig Boog 3 oe a BOT “wood. 47 Stude. 2 dr. ..... $1 Kell ered. Sets (1950BUICK fordor.| Jooks like new Ouner must sell 
| se 4. Bresdway_ Laks Orton, werd. Birmingham or 18 N.) 445 Oey 2dr $169 el er-Koch—.— ——$799- +—Black,-radio, heater! _ Pine Lake Rd 
JqRNOOR Seaton Be . receees CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER | j 
A Eos tote Seve te Se Y‘all C | 40 Buick Sedans... S44) "TES Mebane BS 953 CHEVROLET and others SAVE MONEY 
| gos Orenard ‘Lake Ave, PE 30020 all Come | hae. | Pe tone” finish. Pine condition $795 \T CLARKSTON . “47 . . ine ¢ Hon | ‘ af . ‘ 
. MERCURY OUTBOARD MOTORS to 17] | 47 Packard 4 dr......$ throughout 3 
Switzer Craft & Yellow Jacket | ; 7 “105 y, $1345 | 50 FORD tudor. Gun- MOTOR SALES 
. easter Cran “rratl ore wariedar ee Saice i 47 Che Vi. £ OT. wee $l $1 DESOTO 2 DR $10 DOWN AND metal gray, radio and | 
SHORTY HOOK'S PLACE Vi) 8. Saginaw  St_ — . ; . continue payments 464 8. Woaod- .. oo . - heater. New ‘54 Piymouth. Plaza Club 
At Pine Lake Phone FE 2-5260 Gy STOM 7s 41 CADILLAC BU 1 47 Pont. Sed. ¢ pe... St44 werd Birmingham or 110 N. ‘3 PC INTTAC Sedan. only $1605, delivered with | 
— we 6S | 
WE KNOW OUR BOATS! FOR THE mere onet emeptere outing verve. ———f— 
| HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS FE 2-8033 
| _in California [*1.     
    
lent condition Must see to ap | 
  
  
    
    Woodward, Royai Oak i Sed. R te. 2. .   all taxes and lecenses 
MOTOR. 
CHRYSL ER-P PLYMOUTH. $595 =   
for the man who _ must have re- 
lable. peter ea Creer   
      
BUICK The following units are on 
display at the 
Fairgrounds Located on N. Perry St. NA 
(M-24). Be sure and drop |? we 
out and pay your re- 
the —speets to 
Tomorrow. 
‘$1295 1954. Chevrolet 
| pickup, teal blue. Only 
Really, 
beauty and a terrific sav- 
ings for the proud new) “miles. 3.060 
owner, 
51495 1953 Dodge Station Wa- 
gon, beautiful inside and 
out. Really a buy — less 
than one year old and 
hardly a mark on it. 
down. 
$995 1951 Buick 4 dr. 
one-owner caf 
. Oliver Buick. A wonder- 
ful buy with a 
guarantee. 
one at 
grounds. 
1950 Ford 4 dr., radio and 
Beautiful beige 
color. This is a very low 
price and we invite com- 
anywhere. heater. 
“parison 
down payment. 
OLIVER | Orchard 
Lake Ave. 
Specials! 
Investigate and buy the 
following 
beautiful cars 
and well-lighted lot at 
210 Orchard Lake Ave. 
The home of those beau- 
one-owner | tiful Baitk 
trade-ins. 
= $2295 1953 Buick Super 4 drs. & 
with radio 
custom in- 
terior, real beauties, fully 
Liberal 
the Rivieras, all 
and heater, 
equipped 
pratsals 
buyer. 
$1995 1951 Cadillac fc or Another 
Check 
the 4-H 
black - -of4 
14 ton 
Ws 
from 
30-day 
this 
Fair- 
No Jacobson 
Hudson Dealer 
Cass at Pike 
  
  
eer ae ‘a, PONTIAC he a tag,,) Boca. 
  
Fvery Word Is True 
1951 FORD V-8 — finish, low mile 
yee sat are 
healer A car you can't pass up et— 
  $745 
Keller-Koch Cun yeLER- PLYMOUTH DEALER 
codward at 13%) Mile Ra. 
Lincoin 68410 
  
at our erhauled motor tres, 
$200 OR _3-9879. 
topped  g sEEP PERFECT CONDITION. a. plow if desired $50 e 24443 between 67   
1951 NASH 
Rambler country “Tub, J tone paint, 
radio and heater 
1952 BUICK 
Mio end 
$1750 
  ap- 
“62” 4 dr. 
Gray finish, immaculate 
throughout. 
on request. 
"til 9 p.m. 
  
_— 1. fine t 
  tTeRT COMES 
EACY AGAIN! 
*. eo tudor, Deluxe 
‘$1 "cherie deluxe Power Glide. One Real 
Jer ome S 
Bright Spot 
Orchard Lake Rd. at Cass 
*E 8-0488 Walter Lucas i« now here to 
meet and eg his man tients 
NORTH PONTIAC AUT ALES 
312 W. Montcalm re 40151 
Y'all Come   
  
  1 +1839 — o< $798 tal Ma ¢ 1085 . 
1899 8. Telegraph GET CASH “CUSTOMERS —- 1950 DODGE 2 c N- 4 “TIEYVR “T 
Oven Evenings and Sunda¥ | “wet To sett + - Trucks yy gr cre ee meme Fe i St CHEVROELI1 
1@ HORSE POWER JOHNSON. | anything. phone FE 28181 for an 3.7542 - > Ton Pickup litle. Bargain. FE 4-2009 -writer . , . a FORD DELUXE. 191 2 DOOR | . 
_Ev s FE 4-2729. _ Cueva ET 41. ALL OR PART. "49°C hev. 1% t. pickup $399, _In fine condition Call OR 3-686 | $695 
“Transportation Offered 87 -°° °° * — ‘30 FORD 2 DR. $10 DOWN AND | (1953 CHEVIE, 210 2 DOOR. Pow $9 Int’ 12 t. panel. $244) ere acer eek - Cd 
ay ran eke poetene Soars | Brox aD waite "Paice see Wsiesvaaron Et DODGE 4 DR ay. ake 3 passengers are w E CE $1450. 45 > , -L aa ow ave | Radio heater good tires, nice 
¢ d exp “JI, 52 Ford 14 t. pickup $699 “@ FORD CUsToM 8 TUDOR RA- ryigen J —. — FE 4-37 | PHONE FE 51 5e7 ¢ P p iit and beater S13 Scots Lake Ra | paint. Inside is spotiess 
TRANSPORTATION PAID TO 108 52 DELUXE CHEVIE 4 DOOR | '5] Ford 2 ton dump, amt LE. RADIO | $695 | < heater. white walls over: | Angeles, California. Drive cars . ates aire $975. “< eat a ve: a ; _drive directional signals. wind- 
FE +4198_ 53% _Union Mreet__ O “HEVROLF rT" 595 Cass Evenings OR 3-0587 ‘Alco a welecti —- CK GOING NOR PART ‘54 Chevrolet oe Air 4 door dem- . : a, : = "Seok _— Para ¥ so a selection of 6) re- 
TNsedeither way. FE 806 onstrator 81 Ford }3 t. pickup $344 47 Ford Convertible $299 -*'°° ‘ me ee S RIDERS SHARE EXPENSES 10 (52 Chevrolet station wagon, Has radio. heater -windehiela! conditioned “O.K.” Used g SHAR ENS ‘93 Chevrolet convertible rom 13 I: - - $744 washers and spotlights. Looks ~ se { Harrsbare I. eave Thurs. Eve .3) Chevrolet deuxe 2. door. 52 bord %4 t. Exp. od cod rune good It's teady to «© Cars to choose trom. 
FE 236s Se ~ “$6 2 -deor 7 $0, 
Wanted Used Cars 88 TAYLOR’S ‘40 Intl. 12" van..... $399 art_auourn MOTORS 2.5031 aT flaca? LAKE 
“Sinc 831"   
      
   
     us, Ask for Mr. Donnell - THE HIGH DOLLAR ! pao high grade used cars. We 
need them Drive the extra mile. | (tion 4+-2870, 9000, OR 
B Wel sar vos well. 900 Dixie a CHEVIE, EDEL AIRE, _ DELUXE. i eater wera e 
i. J. VANWELT 375. FE 50607, — 
OR 3-1355 4 CHEVROLET, CLUB COUPE. 
MV'ST HAVE CARS. _™ enominee 
73 Aubure CHEVIE 48 AERG SEDAN. $100 
Wanted! 985 Oakland Ave — 
|’ 52 Chevrolet . a $1,095 | 
| Here's a nifty—very. clean and) 
° | radio and heat- 
} 
Good, clean, sharp cars. “Glenn's Motor Sales 
Get your bids THEN see 254 5 saginaw FE ¢737f| 
BY OWNER 
194i CHEVROLET SEDAN: 1 EXCEL LENT 8 6 GOOD T BUIL tT CLUTCH AND. as LE ANS- BORTATION, BUT TRODY 
TAKES IT CALL 8 AY (OR 43-1186 
EVENINGS, __ 
1982 CHEVIE ~ DELUXE SPORT 
coupe $1.000 19.000 actual miles | 
__ AL shape. 1 FE § (537 | 
is9 CHEVROLET DELUXE” 2 _ door, clean, $305 FE 3-7542 
~ $145 | 
: '47 Chev. & ‘46 Ford | BOON FOR B USY - other poms bargB™is' $35, up. 
- FOLKS—Classified ads!! cepted and tinence arranged 
To sell or buy, rent or 
swap FAST, use_Want Pore MATEEt _iset 
‘a ae ROLET 
  
  
good 4 door witr 
  
  at— 
Pontiac 
Retail Store Factory Branch 
63 Mt. Clemens at Mill 
FE 3-7117 
  
  
  Economy Market _22 Auburn’ Ave 
"49 Chevrolet ....... $395 | 
‘Ads always! Call FE’ deat ‘seanm, has many good miles 
, 2-8181. $20 down maria ale pester Sales HAROLD 
TURNER : 
464 
LS. Woodward 
Birmingham. 
11 Mile at 
Woodward, 
Royal Oak 
Midwest 4-7500 
Lincoln 3-3557 
JOrdan 4-6266 
Lincoln 3-4436 
  Matthews- [SEE ve rc Us FOR 1954 FORD OFFI- | ~~19i 480.N._ Cacs—_FR2   est cars, 
those who 
best.. Dynaflow 
the extras. 
$1295 1953 Chevrolet Deluxe 210+ Previous 
owner's name furnished] 
We're open 
1952 Buick Roadmaster, 4 
designed for | | 
desire the | 
and all 
tudor. Beautiful two tone 
paint. A very nice car 
with the right price. Be smart | 
| 1949 BUICK 1950 PONTIAC (Catalina Jet biack, white wall tures. 
$995 
Convertible radio and heater, dyna- 
flow, electrie window lifts. 
1954 FORD 
1950 BUICK 4 door, radio and heater 
         
         
   
       
      
      
Super Statesman four door, 2 tone 
arey. radio and heater. 
$495 
1953 DE SOTO 4 ¢@oor Firedome, brakes, 
wer stee and heater, 
actual 
$1,795 
Transportation Specials NO MONEY DOWN JUST 
CREDIT! pews ot MPQAP Ney ffs RE SRN RN ST ~ . o- To, 
  
SPECIALI 20S Ly We have nice clean cars 
that you can afford — 
COME IN   
-$20 Down   
“48 Ve FORD 3 2 DR $10 DOWN AND. 
continue payments 464 8. Wood- 
Hargreaves ward, Birmingham or 110 N. 
ee: Royal Oak 
53 FORD. ( “h ] 
iE i" d, to chuose. ’ re yaevto let 
ea ef, OSE 4 20S Sa einaw St 
Turon Mot = T agra 
952 W Won oror Sie | F E 4-4546   |-49 FORD CUSTOM 2 DR 
down and continue payments. 464 | 
8S Woodward, Birmingham or 110 
N Woodward, Royal Oak 
peter FOR en CASH LB. 2 RE- 
106 —w : 
ORD 49: $399 A clean custom door. Has radio, | 
heater s h & Visor. 
RitcH E MOTORS 
477 Auburn FE 
|cums _—_ ‘$1 FORD. CLUB COUPE. | 
{ treater over drive 663-8 
| _Baginaw | 
FORD 1951 CUSTOM 2 DOOR | with Fordomatic drive. Had 
care. Price $705. 199 Beach St — $10 
-COME IN 
AND SEE 
1951 CHRYSLER   
rs NEW YORKER 1950 FORD ...... - $545 attractive twe tone paint, power A very clear 7 door sedan, Ab- steering. wer brakes, power satateer no rust | window radio and heater 
- $20 DOWN | This is a low mileage one-owner car 
NATIONAL Motor Sales i° i 
__171_ 8, Sagnaw 8t. | $1.195_   
  NEW 1954 FORDS . 100 cars must go ths month 
pat little as $100 down. - 
| os Burns Carl Jobnston | — Keller-Koch CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTR. DEALER 
Woodward at 13* gue. Ra. 
Cy Owens, Inc.’ j FE 4-4101 FE 45-1719. | OP ECIAL! nice . many at only — 
AND SEE — | See Ed Jones At first on this one and you 
will be*very happy. ) 1947 BUICK 
2 door. Radio and heater. 
$195 
3—1947 DODGES 
  
      1951 OLDSMOBILE 8 = TOR SALI and Down ™ - ° Two poo MOT OR SALES We have over 30 cars in 1948 BUICK 
Pehydramatic. transmission, | Ta tradio 171 S. Saginaw St. this price group... 1951 2 door, Radio and heater, | and heater. Chrome 1a.f cel: : Chevrolets, Fords and $395 
3 pieed st that ite 1953 Pontiac Pontiacs — all fully 
, “One ina Thousand” | Two tone dive radio and neater, equipped. 1946 CHEVROLET 
$1,095 | Setacen citeset"tne iar tat | $195 | SCHUTZ MOTORS INC. $495 
a 0 Rees PIV OUT Dealer os : 1949 PACKARD | 
4 mingnam At this price we offer a Sea 
Woodweriacein 63410) OPEN “TIL 9 P ™. choice of 1950 Chev- "3395 —.For_Your Convenience 
PONTIAC ‘83 4 DOOR. WHITE- 
    | Walls, Seat covers, Radio and heater FE oe 
“Sa PONTIAC HYDRAMTIC. + door deluxe bacstions condition. 
Gor'en.,...   
Y'all Come 26 PETERSON 
S . Us | iesd Willys Bedage”” We have nice clean cars 190) Kaleer iiidoor_ sedan 
that you can afford — 1048 Raiser sedan $9 $95 
many at only — nk’ Gait te Fe on 
  
$20 Down ‘ See Ed Jones at 
NATIONAL . 
MOTOR SALES 
171 S. Saginaw St. CARES “QUICK KL y 
peeve Yes, to solve 
problem fast, place a 
Want Ad. Dial FE 2-8181.     
  rolets, Fords, Plymouths 
and Mercurys. All are 
_ready to go. Be sure and 
shop at Oliver’s before 
you buy. 
OPEN "TIL 9 P.M. 
  
1 
= - 
  OLIV     
BUICK iad Orchard Lake Ave. 
  E29 9101 f 
Many others te choose from. 
Community 
Motor~ Sales 
Pontine tnt “Butck Besler 
803 N. Main, Rochester 
“ Open \, MM, 
  1946 PLYMOUTH . 
     
    
-- Today's Television Programs --   
  Channel 2— WIBK-TV tet Channel) 4—~ WWJ-TV 3-3 Channel 7 — WXYZ-TV   
TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 
6:00—-(4) Time for Music. Jane 
6:15—(4) News. Paul Williams. (2) 
Featurette. (7) News Ace. 
6:30—-(4) World of Mr. Sweeney. 
Charles Ruggles as drug store 
6:45—(4) News Caravan. John 
Cameron Swayze. (2) TV's Top. 
Tunes. Ray Anthony and band 
play “Skokiaan,” ‘‘Hernando’s 
Hideaway.” 
7:00—(4) I Married Joan. Jim Ste- 
Joan Davis, Jim Backus. (2) 
Red Skelton Revue, Hosts 
7:30~(4) My Little Margie. Mar- 
gie tries to convince Vern they 
should move to more luxurious 
apartment in “ _” 
stars Gale Storm, Charles Far- 
rell. 
8:00—(4) TV Theater. ‘Charm 
Bracelet," comedy of unin- Pd 
10:00—(4) Harness Racing from 
Michigan Racing Association 
track. (2) News. Jack LeGoff. 
(7) Club Polka. Warren Michael 
Kelly hosts vocalist Alan Dale. 
Ted Gonulka ‘Trio. 
19:15—(2) Weatherman. Dr. Ev- 
erett R. Phelps. 
10:30—(4) Man About Town. Bob 
10:45—(4) Baseball Hall of F’ 
Sports films. 
11:00—-(4) News. Paul Williams. 
(2) Telenews Ace. (7) Soupy’s 
On. Soupy with Nellie Lutcher, 
guest. 
11:15—(4) Adventure Special De- 
livery. “The Shot,” Chekhov's 
tale of 20 year wait to avenge 
an insult. (2) Wrestling. (7) 
Armchair Theater. 
11:30—(4) Moods in the Night. 
Music. - 
THURSDAY MORNING 
7:00—(4) ‘Today. (2) Morning 
Show. 
8:00—(7) Breakfast Club. 
8:30—(2) Morning Show. 
9:00—(4) Playschool. (7) Wixie. 
  hibited widow assertink her in- 
dependence; stars Helen Cotton, 
Joanna Roos. (2) Strike It Rich. | 
Warren Hull host; quiz. (7) Jim- 
mie Wakely Show. ‘Song of the 
Drifters,” film feature. 
8:30—(2) I've Got a Secret. Henry 
Morgan host-pane!l quiz. 
9:00—(4) This Is Your Life. Ral 
Edwards re-creates. life 
Emma Jo Wengert, ‘woman 
(2) IBC Boxing. 
weight boxing bout; Archie 
Moore vs. Harold Johnson. (7) 
Royal Playhouse. “Andy’s Old 
Man,” film drama. 
9:30—(4) Mr. D. A. deals with 
vicious gang of juvenile hood- 
lums. (7) The Hunter. Barry 
Nelson in “Puzzle of Pier 90,” 
film drama. i freed by Court of Last Resort. | (2) Garry Moore. 
\* :30—(2) Arthur Godfrey. 
10:60—(4) Home. (7) Charm Kitch- 
en. 
10:30—(2) D. S. Leonard. 
10:45—(2) Strike It Rich. 
11:00—(4) Bob Smith Show. 
Playhouse. <2) Valiant Lady. 
11:15—(2) Love of Life. 
11:30—(4) Travel Unlimited. 
Tomorrow's Search. 
11:45—(2) Guiding Light. (7) 
(2) 
THURSDAY AFTERNOON 
12:00—(7) 12 o'Clock Comics. 
Ladies Day. 
12:15—(4) Three Steps to Heaven. 
12; 30—(7) News. (4) Ladies First. 
(2) Welcome Travelers. (2) ame. | $:45—(7) Cowboy Colt. (4) Jean McBride. 
2:00—(4) One Man's Family. (7) 
My Life. (2) Cleveland at De- 
troit. 
2:15—(4) Golden Window. 
2:30—(4) First Love. (7) Theater. 
2:45—(4) Miss Marlow. 
$:00—(4) Hawkins Falls. 
3:15—(4) Bride and Groom. 
3:30—(4) Betty White Show. (7) 
Airbase 
4:00—(4) Pinky Lee. 
4:30—(4) Howdy Doody. 
Murphy. . 
4:45—(7) Barnaby Bear. 
6:00—(4) Happy Hollow. (7) Auntie 
Dee. (2) Portia Faces Life. 
5:15—(2) Seeking Heart. 
5:30—(4) Adventure Patrol. (7) 
Terry and Pirates. (2) Sports. 
5: 45—-(2) Featurette. 
THURSDAY EVENING 
6:00—(4) Music Time. (7) Det. 
Deadline. 
6:15—(4) News. (7) News. 
6:30—(4) Mr. Sweeney. (7) 
Ranger. (2) News. 
6: 45-—~(4)" News. 
7:00—(4) You Bet Your Life. (7) 
Cisco Kid. (2) What's in a Word. 
7:30—(4) Justice. (7) Melody 
_Time. (2) Playhouse. (2) Bob 
Lone   
  
  
Bad Programs Come In| 
for Criticism but Mom 
Must Be Selective 
WASHINGTON W—Parents who 
use their TV set as “a sort of 
tric .      
       
     
    
        
      
        
    
        
. It can't influence people 
toward activities for which - 
  month for their observations on a 
Possible link between TV crime 
‘programs and juvenile  delin- 
Hendrickson (R-NJ), 
“While most of the writers de- 
  $:00—(4) Dragnet. (2) TV Golf| 
Pro. (7) So You Want to Lead | 
a Band’? 
8:30—(4) Theater. (7) Theater. (2) 
Big Town. 
9:00—(4) The Marriage. 
tale- Clue. 
9:30—(4) Star Showcase. (7) Hot 
Rods. (2) “I Led Three Lives.” 
10:00—(4) Michigan Outdoors. (2) 
News. 
10:15—(2) Weather. 42)}-Tell- 
Dean. (2) To Be Announced. 
10:45—(4) Baseball Hall of Fame. 
11:00—(4) News. (7) Soupy’s On. 
(2) News. 
      10:38—(4) Traffic Court. (7) Janet | don't think we can consider TV 
exclusively for the urchin and I'm 
not too disturbed about excess 
jerime and violence on TV . 
to stay in business. 
+ 
: “I 
. of a casual re 
ship between extreme TV yong 
garity and deterioration of youth- ie no | have no prior inclination . 
  
| 
‘Wedding Bells 
to Ring Saturday 
for Four Sisters 
day for four sisters. They will be 
married at a single ceremony to 
sweethearts whose occupations 
range from lawyer to newspaper 
  
All eight have been married pre- | 
viously. 
Astel, who met his bride-to-be 
here last November, said the four 
GoUAS Mat through business end) 
social contacts. 
The ceremony will be private 
| and there will be no attendants or 
best men.     
smnemmenmunnaie   
  PONTIAC’S OLDEST 
    
  
  12:45—(7) Stars on Seven. . 
Commentary on fights and fight |1'WP—@) Robert @ Lewis. | Theater. (2) Feature TV SERVICE DEALER! ers. 1:30—(2) Linkletter’s Houseparty. | 11:30—(4) Moods in the Night. e 
~ , 
/ , } j BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE -- lodays Radio Programs -- Authorized Factory Service for 15 Different Manufacturers 
Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice. 3149 W. Huron FE 4-5791 | 
wR, (760) CRLW, (e090) ww, (se) WOAR, (1198) WXYZ, (1270) WIBK, (1490) 
TONIGHT WWJ, News, Lesarow CKLW, Queen for Dey 5:45—WIR, Curt Massey ‘Pitisburgh WXYZ, News 12:06—WJR. Wendy Warren CKLW, Cecil Brown 
ae — ty ened CKLW. Toby David WWJ, Paye Elisabeth xi Wantsteh, Seftene. aoe _ puoel on WEY, Curtain Calls THURSDAY EVENING 
WIBE, MeLeca WCAR. Coffee , CHLW. Mustoate wwi Nee et: nm cmertet ae WIR. Agr ricit Votes WJBK. News, McLeod pL ‘Wattriek. McKens. 
wv 
rare Eve "rr ware, [Mar tet | SE ee | QUSE PAINT on = Se Son WJBK. News: Rise. Ghine WCAR, N'Day Caller 6:15—_WsR Clark Quartet 
bps an, Tele 6:45—WXYZ, News t--~Tigd, ~ A raaae 
mw Bod cas ww. 
on pL i “PP nid 7:06—WsR. Jim Vinal) WXYZ, News, Music 
WXYZ, Bill Stern WWJ, News, Maxwell CKLW, Your Boy WCAR, Magic Muste WXYZ, Osgood, Wolfe WJBK, Don Mc WJBK, Dinner Music sy Guy oa. David WCAR, Harmony ews, ine 
.:o0—W Lowell Themas WCAR, News 12:45—WJIR, J. White 
WXYZ, Musie Ghow WW, Fran Harris 
7:15—WJR, Music Hall WXYZ, Paul Winter wwae Bud Lyne 
WXYZ, Lee Tote 
CKLW, Eddie Chase 
WCAR. Talk Sports 
4 
| @:38—WJR, Reynolds. Racing 
| WWJ, R. Mulholland 
WXYZ, Bill Stern 
WJBK, McLeod 
WCAR, Magic Music Trent 
Mall 
    will guard 
yours home oO       
    
         
     
   Pittsburgh SUN-PROOF House Paint. 
aw fOS8—“Coter Jn Aston” hegkiot Building Report School Superintendent 
Will Give His Results, 
on Outlook Study 
Pontiac Board of Education to | 
night is scheduled to hear a report | 
on new buildings needed to house 
the projected September 1955 school 
; | enrollment. | 
‘Superintendent of Schools Dr. 
Dana P. Whitmer is slater to pre- | 
sent results of a study on next | 
* year’s outlook at the meeting "| 
the board offices, 40 Patterson St., 
at 7:30 p.m. 
Bids are expected from construct. | 
jon firms on a contract to repair | 
the front wall of the school bus | 
garage at 40 Patterson St. | 
A progress report is slated on the | 
present building and repair pro. | 
itects for the 1954-55 building pro- | 
gram. 
Sheep have been known to exist | 
for weeks while buried in snow- 
drifts. en 
  
  
    120. One House WCAR, Coffee CKLW, Ginger Rogers 4:45—WJR, L. Thomas 
Wxv Red Shelton 7:30_WWJ, Listen, Live == WXYZ, Thursday's Must 
CKLW, Pulton Lewts WXYZ, Osgood, Wolfe THURSDAY AFTERNOON | 7:00—WJR. Guest House WJBK, Dinner Music CKLW, Austin MW Ww, 3 Star WCAR. News, Music WJBK, Gentile & Binge 1:08—WJIR, Road of Life WXYZ, Red Skelton 
WCAR, J, Ross Mulhollend CKLW, Pulton Lewis 
1:15—WWJ, Say With Music | 9.45 ww WXYZ, Charm Time WJBK. T CKLW, Guy Nunn WW, News CKLW. News, Bud ae 2d CKLW, Toby David WIBK. MeLeod WCAR, News, Music 
1:20—WIR, I P, & Hayes 8:00—WIR, Jack White CAR, News 1: Wwws. Bay With Music 
WXYZ, Lone Ranger wave, Dt a Osgood — Ma Perkins —. o CKLW. Gabriel Heatter SOL pe, paws ies. De. Mahone 7:30—WIR, Peter L. Hayes WJBK, Tom George WJBK. News, Gentile ware t Paul Winter wd, le — | mee 
1:45—WJR, Collingwood WCAR, News | WCAR, Tiger Tunes coLw Gabriel Heatter 
tr : HUERTA WIR CUTS LIGNE PSB TOO 8 CELW. Ip the Mood 1 RAYE Frog wolte | _CKLW, Dick Powell » | 5-45 ws 
AOR TR PBB oe ete fo sr c = = TB ga pe 
wyve ome o*qreppers 8:30—WJR, Music Hall 2:00—WJR. Mrs. Burton CKLW. Eddie Pisher 
CKLW. Room 
WCAR. Newsy Music 8:45——WCAR, Radio Rev 
9:00—WJR, Wm. Sheehan 
  WWJ, News. Mulholland 8:06—WJIR. Meet Millie 
WWJ, Roy Rogers 
WXYZ, Show Stoppers 
6:30—WJR, Bist. Precinct WWJ, Minute Parade WCAR. Baseball Re cue Deus 
wave, Jone vs be woe wars, greenies Coe | %:15—WJR, Perry Mason WCAR, News, Ballads 
Ww. WJBK. News, Murphy | 2:30—WJR, Nora Drake | 8:36—WJR, ermeneny 
8:45—WEYZ, Just Easy WCAR, News, Rhythm WW4, Lorenso Jones Ww, De. Gs Gus 
9:00—WIR, Crime Photog. 9:18—WJR, Kitchen” Club ppodugodianne CKLW, Crime Fighters 
WWJ, Groucho’s Best Gabriel Heatter 2:48—WJIR, Brighter Day 
wxrZ Sammy Kaye 0: WIR, Mi Mrs. a. WW, Marriage Pays 6:45—WXYZ, Just Easy 
CELW Weve. Wika: Scot wer CKLW. Pegey Lee O50 WWE Scarlet Pimp’nl 
9:15—CELW, Muste saad 3:00—WJR, Hilltop House WXYZ, Sammy Kaye 
%: rat J 7 Carson a a a —. 7 pA. 4 by ag Travelers CKLW, News. oth 
4 . y a » ews, vies 
WCAR, Temple Acad WXYZ. Ed McKenzie 9:30—WJIR, Jack Carson 
warn, Paul Whiteman WWJ, Dick Harkness 
~ or Meets Critic | 19:08 WJR. A. Godfrey $:15-—WJR, House Party WXYZ, } at Pao Concerts 
“WJBK. Gentile ww. Snow T CKLW. Bud Navies W 
ernie WXYZ, My True Story | WJBK. L. Gente 
19:9—WJK leanessee CKLW. Homechat | 3:30—WWJ, Pepper Young 
ww, Fibber WJRK. News, Murphy , bey 06 W IR, — Ernie 
WXYZ, Headline Saition WCAR. News Temple | AMB— WIR Gal Sunday WWJ. Fibber 
baked Prank . WWJ, Right to Happiness pL Teadtine Edition 
_w ‘ i w dwards 
WJBK. Larry Gentile 10:15—WCAR, Temple 4:00—WIR, Music Hall, Mat WJBK, Larry Gentile 
10;15—WJIR, Guest Star 
WW, Heart of News 10: 15— WJ, wa Metropol. | 10:20 WWJ. Here's Answer WWJ, Backstage Wife 
News WXYZ, Whispering Sts WXYZ, Wattrick. McK 
wath Ee Top ot, Town CKLW. Mary Morgan €KLW. Eadie WCAR, Song Parade WJBK, McLeod 
10; wan. aren cant bry. 1 
ww, Save to WXY?, Girl Marries C58 WER. Maple Mell | 10: i rg =m . al 
| os oKLW, Sanctusry 11;00—WJR, Arthur Godfrey . | pt Ray 
WWJ. Strike It Rich 4:30—WWJ, Widder Brown 
a Tg ~~ oaatat : > tot — —+{}—WEY¥Z,MeKenzie__ | 10:45-—-CKLW, peomeily me 
WAYS Sports, Top ~ Bxbw, FS ong oe 443—WJR, Music, News im :00—WIR, Rows 
CKLW, Kuren, Sports WCAR. News. Songs WWJ, Woman in House WJ, New 
WJ8K, yd Seatie a ginee B CKLW, George Wright ware. ‘sports Top’ 
11:15—WIR, M tay Ever ee Eve 5:00_WJIR. News —- ews 
CKLW, News WWJ, News, Deland j WJBK, News ae Bob ineynolds } 
CKLW. Mannetten Musit , 
  45—WWJ, Break the Bank 
11:30—WJR, Make Up ww. WCAR, Carousel 
  WXYZ, Wattrick-McK 
CKLW, Eddie Cha WXYZ. Top of Town 
CKLW, Hollywood Date 
& Elliot 
  
| 11:15—WJR, Bob Reynolds 
  11:30. Wy. Music Phrase That Pays se WWJ, Bruce Mayer 
Top WXYZ, Neighbor's Voice WJIBK, News, McLeod WXYZ, Top of Town 
~~ ORE W-Phil. With Music CKLW, Queen for a Day | WCAR, News CKLW, Music 
THURSDAY MORNIN 11:48—WJR, Rosemary 5:15—WJR, Reynolds. Muale THaeWon 2 CT) 
ar & e \ WWJ, Gecond Chance 5:30—WJR, Music Matinee ‘YZ, News 
6:00—WIR, Vinall,, Melody °; wxrz. City Byline CKLW, Eddie Chase ceLw. Foller, McKeller 
  
Square D to Double 
1953 Land Spending DETROIT4#=The Square D Co. 
of Detroit has announced it will 
double in 1954 the $1,222,000 it 
spent in 1953 for lands, buildings 
and equipment. 
Ina report. to stockholders yes 
terday F. W. Magin, company 
president, said the company’s 
earnings’ during the first six 
months of 1954 were $2.643.000, equal 212,000, compared to ‘sales of $29,- 
977,000 and earnings of $2,075,000 
for the same period last year. 
Square D operates electrical 
equipment manufacturing plants 
in seven United States cities and 
in Toronto and Mexico City. 
The main Detroit plant has been 
closed by a strike since June 15. 
The .company failed to reach an 
agreement ‘on a new contract with 
Workers. 
  
  The Holstein cow was imported Polio in Los Angeles 
Reaches Epidemic High 
Los Angeles, the City Health De- | 
partment says, and this month and | 
next comprise the peak period for | 
the disease. 
Hoot authorities .said 11 new 
were reported yester-   the independent United Electrical day. ses bringing the year’s total to 
300 with 3 deaths. This total, they 
‘said, is the highest since) 1948, 
deaths when 1,314 cases and 53 
to $1.91 a share. Sales were $29,- | into the U. S, in 1857 from Holland. | were recorded for the year. LOS ANGELES (®—Polio has, 
reached epidemic proportions in| 
  q g 39 | Gallon     
White and Most Colors | 
| Pontiae Glass Co. 27 W. Lawrence St.   
   
SINGER= CALL NOW! YOU CAN 
SAVE ‘30 OR MORE! 
      
  WE COME TO YOU 
ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT OBLIGATION 
| CALL NOW t 
FOR FREE HOME 
DEMONSTRATION!       
     FE 29143 
LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCES + CALL NOW FE 5-6441 
PORTABLE. 
  
Written 5 ha 
GUARAWNTE    
       
      
  PONTIAC’S EXCLUSIVE MAC-O-LAC DEALER 
  VAC & SEWING | MACHINE SUPPLY CO. 
379 5. Soginew 30. a Open Tuesday 
            
   
         
    
         
      
     
     
    
          
  a     
       
       TRADE-IN MUST BE NAME BRAND, itt; INCH SCREEN OR LARGER |     
   
    
  
  
        
       
            On Any 1954 
GE or DUMONT CONSOLE W 
FREE HOME TRIAL — TERMS AVAILABLE * 
HAMPTON ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron FE 4-2525      
    
   
     
   
         
   
       
        
   
  A selection is planned of arch. | i 
     
  
         
    
            For Wome FRING Fe.. 
Dott. OAKLAND COUNTY'S LARGEST 
~KENTILE DEALER 9’’x9"'’x y," 
4.= 9-=~ 9. GUARANTEED ALL FIRST QUALITY—ALL FRESH STOCK    
   
    
    
    
NoUse SECOND | 
PAINT CALLON 
$3.98 l¢   we 
free estimates and immediate service. For those prefer professional insta 
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           Quick DRY 
FLAT WALL 
FINISH SUPER RUBBER 
LAYTEX PAINT 
*B3 8? ine 100°, 
  roller or pon with the purchese of « 
gallon of Mac-O-Lec Paint. FREE 
  
      7 1 .. h : - @ | : 
: ~ : 4 . 
= 99 S, SAGINAW ST. OPEN | Free Parking § @ AT AUBURN AVE. 9 -9 - — * Rear of Store : 
Senenccenccnescccaucscescusnsnestenccucecencnueuss’ 
         _ Forty’ 
~ Maletkovo Be Embassy Guest Soviet Premier to Pay 
Unprecedented Visit to 
MOSCOW @ — The British em- {Charged With Polygamy, He Admits Only Bigamy 1949, DETROIT —Oscar Gv. Black, 
charge should be only bigamy. 
  told Mrs, Edna R. Black, who said! ; she hes been Black's wife see(eaven Can Wait 
Pe me rE Black was confronted with three 
yas - charged a polygamy} women in the prosecutor's office. - 4109 
warrant yesterday with, having) Mrs. Lillie G. Black said he mar- Acts, Criticizes 
three wives, but he insist@d the | ried her in 1943, Mrs. Belle Carney 
Black said he married her-last|C, Vern Bowman, rector of Holy 
“T’ve never seen you before,” he | Saturday in Toledo, Ohio, ——e 
as Adept Pastor 
DENNIS, Mass. (#—The Rev. S. 
    Spirit Episcopal Church, has been “THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESD 
. view of the play for the, pews. AY; AUGUST 11, 1954 yo et 
    
| ’ larwdal A , 
\ustin- Norvell Agency 
INSURANCE 
  
    
    
  
  bassy polished up its best china, 
silver and glass today for Soviet | 
Premier Georgi Malenkov. 
The No. 1 Russian makes an 
unprecedented. appearance tonight | 
at an embassy banquet honoring | 
former British Prime Minister | 
Clement Attlee and six other Labor 
party leaders visiting Moscow en | 
route to a three-week. stay in Com- 
munist China. 
Malenkov and other top Soviet! 
leaders set the pace for Attlee's 
top-drawer reception—the biggest 
given a Western delegation since 
World War l—with a four-hour | 
dinner party last night. at the: 
country home of the late -famed 
Russian writer Maxim Gorky. 
The British guests described the 
atmosphere as one of greatest af-| 
fability. After dinner Malenkov 
strolled into the garden with the 
only woman visitor, Dr. Edith | 
Summerskill, and picked her a 
bouquet of phlox and gladioli. 
The Russians whisked the La- 
borites and British Ambassador 
Sir William Hayter off to the Gor-| 
ky villa, 22 miles from Moscow, 
only two hours after they arrived 
in the Soviet capital by Russian | 
military plane, It was the first) 
time in memory the Soviets had | 
entertained high-ranking Western- | 
ers in an informal country house | 
atmosphere. ; 
No Western correspondents were 
invited, but the British guests said 
the Russians talked at length with 
Attlee, left-wing Laborite Aneurin 
Bevan and the others in their par- 
ty. 
= Attlee sat-nexttoMalenkov at | 
dinner, served on a terrate over-| 
looking the gardens and a small | 
stream. ‘Labor Party — Secretary | 
Morgan Phillips told newsmen it | 
' would be ‘‘safe” to conclude that | 
the two men discussed the desira- 
bility of closer relations between 
Britain and the Soviet Union. 
The dinner was accompanied by 
the usual exchange of vodka toasts 
—IT or 18, “‘some of them triple,"’ | 
Dr. Summerskil] said. So many | 
“I can't remember what was 
said,"’ Phillips reported. 
Special Cars Arrive 
for Duke in Canada YELLOWENIFE, Northwest Ter- | — 
    
They will be up for after 
the Duke's takeoff later today for | 
Churchill, Manitoba, 1,000 miles 
permine, 100 miles above the Arc- 
tic Circle. He visited two gold 
mines here. 
Elusive Driver Booked 
on 24 Traffic Charges 
CHARLESTON, W. Va. ®— $ 
motorist gave the Charleston po- 
lice force a workout last night and | 
was booked on 24 separate traffic | 
charges. 
Lt. L. M. Morris said Dan Mar- | 
tin, 48, played a game of automo- | 
bile hide-and-seek with police after | 
patrolman. tried to arrest him for | 
Martin was booked on 14 charges 
of running stop signs, 8 of run- 
ning red lights and 2 of reckless 
driving. He was released on $1,000 | 
bond,   
  
a Oe s 
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tone! Get this Colonial set at Sears! 
USE SEARS EASY 
PAYMENT PLAN ON 
ALL PURCHASES 
TOTALING $20 
OR MORE 
and backs! Red, green, yellow! 3-Pc, Limed Oak Modern Regularly $159 . . . Bed, Chest, Choice of Vanity or Dresser 
Get tomorrow’s styling today at Sears . . 
top modern suite to introduce the contemporary mood into your bed- 
room! Crafted with white oak veneers and select hardwood . . . topped 
with a satin finish! Dovetailed, dustproof drawers with center guides! . Choose this bow front plank 
Sale! 5-Pc. Solid Maple 
_._the wormth ond charm of sotid maple is yours in this 
In new Duxbury 
Sale! Chrome Dinette Here’s a smart styling for your kitchen in ever-popu- 
lar chrome and plastic! Table has 3-in. metal apron, 
double corner chrome tegs. Chairs have plastic seats AM 
SHO 
AND 
    LOW PRICE 
14.50 Down 
P AT SEARS 
SAVE 
  
Prices Do Not 
Include 3% State 
Sales Tax     
    
      
  ¢ Hurry—Don't Miss This Special Buy! 
ad Frieze Covering in Many Colors! 
Whether you prefer modern or. traditional .. . 
you'll find this handsome Harmony House suite 
will exactly meet your needs! Sofa and chair in 
choice of gray, brown, green, beige or red! Long 
wearing frieze covering. Come in now . . 
advantage of this special—ond save more at 
Sears! ; 
ASK ABOUT SEARS EASY PAYMENT PLAN | Hurry in Now ... Get Your Share of Savings at Sears... Today! 
      
r {jhe aaa . as 
        2-Pc. Lawson Living Room a |. + 
‘3177 $18 Down on Sears 
Easy Payment Plan 
   
   
   
     
       
        
  
  
    
      
  
  O06 ©.6 Fer Gre. 
SOLD ONLY BY 
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO, 
     
        
SALE! METAL KITCHEN FURNITURE A. Metal Cabinet Base, 27x22x33-Inches ....... 22.88 
B. Metal Cabinet Base,24x20x36-Inches ........ .28.88 J. Porcelain Top Kitchen Table, 40x25x30-Inches . 12.88 
K. Metal Utility Cabinet, 24x12x63-Inches ..... 22.88 
C. Metal Cabinet Base, 40x25x36-Inches.........34.88 — L. Metal Cabinet Base, 30x25x36-Inches _.... .. 39.88 
D.’ Metal Cabinet Base, 16x20x36-Inches .......18.88 | M. Metal Utility Cabinet, 30x11x63-Inches.......24.88 
E. Metal Cabinet Base, 32x21x36-Inches ........ 39.88 = N.: Steel Wardrobe, 67x30x20-Inches . ..-. —seees 27.88 
F. Metal Utility Cabinet, 24x60x12-Inches ....... 18.88 0. Steel Wardrobe, 66x30x20-Inches .......... .27.88 
G. Metal Utility Cabinet, 18x60x12-Inches ....... 14.88  P. Steel Wardrobe, 66x26x20-Inches .......... 22.88 
H. Chrome Frame Step Stool, Plastic Upholstered. 9.88  . Q. Metal ChinaCabinet......./.......... +» 27.88 
I. Metal Utility Table, 22x16x30-Inches........ 5.55 RB. Metal Utility Cabinet, 24x12x64-Inches....... 19.88 
Plan your own kitchen arrangement . . . then select the roomy, space saving 
cabinet bases, utility cabinets you need . . . all finished in durable gleaming 
white enamel with black trim or chrome. Selection includes china cabinets, 
tables, step stools, too. Get extra storage spoce with metal wardrobes . . . Furniture Dept. 
Second Floor 
all priced lower at Seors! 
  
              
‘ 
    Settifacion 1, geuawanlaed ov yous money back SEARS 154 North Saginaw St. Phone FES4I7 ’