The Weather Thursday: Cloudy Details page two THE PONTIAC PRESS Pe i on — Home kik * JPONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE 111th YEAR ark a May Demand Check on Deans Are Together Again SEPTEMBER 23, 1953—48 PAGES Nixon Upholds lke ~ in Durkin Dispute Says President Didn t Back Out on I-H Promise Eisenhower AFL to Send Revisions to Congress in Jgnuary ST, LOUIS (AP) — Vice President; Nixon told the AFL eonvention today there may chaye been a “mis- understanding” regarding administration plans _ for amending the Taft-Hartley Law, but President Eisen- hower: “hever broke his word.” Former Secretary of Labor ‘Martin Durkin, AFL Plumbers Union president, told the convention yester- day he quit his Cabinet post two weeks ago because Eisenhower broke an agree- ment with him on T-H Law changes to be submitted to Congress. Nixon read the AFL con- vention ,a message from Eisenhower which, while not referring specifically to the controversy raised by Durkin, promised that the administration will offer T-H amendments to Con- gress next January. Eisenhower's message also de- scribed the six-year-old T-H Act as essentially sound and a_ statute which has! made ‘‘a_ substantial contribution to the quest for sounder | labor-management rela- tions.” i ie | Nixon pretaced his reading of | Eisenhower's message with some remarks of his own, received with polite applause by the con- vention delegates. He said that labor uniong mighgt differ with the administration’s methods but that ultimately President Etsen- hower’s: policies would be suc- cessful. Speaking of the Durkin situa- tion, Nixon said that in 40 years of public service Eisenhower ‘‘has never been guilty of breaking his solemnly given word.”’ The delegates burst into pro- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2). Trial Date Is Set for Donald O'Brian First degree murder trial for Donald /. O’Brian, 27, confessed rape-slayér of Mrs. Hallie O. Per- kins, 55, of Pontiac, has been set for Oct. 19 by Frederick C. Ziem, Oakland County prosecutor. O'Brian, whose attempted attack on Mrs. Mary Forgette of °° Oriole Rd. on Sept. 9 led to his arrest, has admitted the fatal, rape-attack of Mrs. Perkins early in August and the rape of a 16-year-old girl on Aug. 15, according to Ziem. He stood mute at arrangement Friday, and a plea of not guilty was eritéred for him by the court. Promises. + | Futile Appeal ORLY _ | | AP Wirepheto ON WAY OUT — The exit sign over the head of Joseph P. Ryan, | president of International Long- ,$horemen's Association, was an iomen in the decision of the AFL |in St» Louis yesterday. Despite ia |last minute appeal by Ryan the AFL decided to boot out the Long- shoremen and organize a new | union in its place. | | Wife, Spaniel | Rout Assailant Scare Off Masked Man Attacking E. H. Hoyt of Waterford | A candlestick-wielding house+ wife and a pet Cocker Spaniel helped rout a masked intrude | who attacked a Waterford Town- ship man early today when he answered a knock on the door, Earnest H. Hoyt, 48, GMC Truck and Coach Division servi¢e department supervisor, suffered |a | black eye in the melee at his home at 2437 Silver Circle Dr. | Hoyt said a young man with a handkerchief covering part of his facé was standing on the porch when he went to the door, | | “He said, ‘I got 4 gun and I’m | going to count to three,’ but I didn’t know what he was talking about,’’ said Hoyt. After counting three, the intruder socked Hoyt in the eye. , Hoyt said he tussled: with the masked man for about three min- utes and the commotion attracted his wife, Marion, and their pet dog, Radar. Mrs. Hoyt started to beat the man over the head with a candle- stick and Radar started barking and snapping at the intruder’s legs. The assailant broke away and fled. | Hoyt said he had no explanation for the unprevoked attack. Two Koreans Charged SEOUL (®—Two, South Koreans accused of betraying U, S. Maj. | Gen. William F. Dean to the Com- munists for $5 each were indicted | today by the Seoul Distri¢t Court. Western World, U.S. Not Ready for Atom Attack Civil Defense Head European Tour LONDON (AP) — U.S. civil defense chief Val Peterson said today, after a European tour, that he has | failed to find a single coun- itry in the western world which is ready to meet an atomic attack. “Except for the scientists and a handful of other peo- ple, the whole world is hid- ing from the terrible impli- cations of atomic weapons,” the former Nebraska gov- ernor said in an interview. That goes for the Russians, too, he added. Peterson, who will report to President Zisenhower on his survey ‘of civil defense preparations in Western Europe, desctibed American precautions, against an atomic blow as “inade- quate.” “Our civil defense is quite good in some places and not in other places,” Peterson explained. ‘From the overall point of view it is inadequate and to the extent that as a nation we simply haven't faced up to the problem. We don’t have an adequate radar screen around the U. 8. as yet to give our population time enough to disperse in case of an atomic raid.” As for civil defense in the Séviet Union, Peterson said there were indications the Russian. people ‘don’t know what is going on in | the field of atomic weapons. | The 50-year-old Nebraskan who | lis a Reserve Air Force colonel left New York Aug. 26, flying first to | Sweden and Norway, and then to Denmark, Belgium, Western Ger- many and Britain. Chivas fo Be Paroled; Was in Pontiac Case LANSING (#—An echo of the sen- sational Hooper murder case was heard today as the State Parole Board ordered the parole Thursday of 38-year-old) Sammy Chivas. Chivas obtained notoriety be- cause he was|sentenced for armed robbery in company with the men who were convicted of conspiracy to slay the late State Sen. Warren G. Hooper in 1945. Chivas was not charged with complicity in the slaying. | He and the Hooper conspirators were convicted of robbing the Aris- tocrat Club of Pontiac. ‘Vord of the crime leaked out during the Hoop- er trial at Battle Creek. Chivas was sentenced Dec. 8, 1945, to serve 20 to 40 years. The parole board said he had a - Reports After 6-Nation | gives his wife a helping hand as hero’s welcome at the base, the Berkeley. Red captivity etched in his —I’m not. like a million dollars. AP Wirephote HERO AND WIFE LEAVE PLANE—Maj. Gen. William F. Dean, Medal of Honor winner and a Communist prisoner for three years, they leave the plane that brought the general to Travis Air Force Base, Calif., last night. Mrs. Dean had gone aboard the big craft into the general's waiting arms. After a couple motored home to nearby Gen! eae Mane) ih 'U Prsy Amidst Hero’s Welcome TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP)—Maj. Gen. William F. Dean came home last night, three years of tired face and declared: “IT want you to get it out of your heads that I’m a hero I’m just a dog-faced soldier,” and “I feel I almost sent Rocky Marciano,” heavyweight’ boxing ‘champion. challenge to Ike’s Recognition of Ripon, Wis., Annoys Jackson JACKSON (UP)—Civic boosters who jnsist the Republican Party was born here have a bone to pick with President Eisenhower. The President gave Ripon, Wis.., credit for being the birthplace of the Republican Party in his speech at Boston Monday. ‘‘He is right as far as he goes,’’ said David W. Kendall, Michigan's Republican national committee- man. ‘There is no question that meetings on the formation of a new party were held in Ripon in February and March of 1854—but the first Republican convention was held here, so the party was born at Jackson.”’ Jackson is planning a centennial celebration in 1954 of the party's founding. The first official con- vention was held in Morgan's Grove July 6, 1854, at which time candidates were named for office. Three ‘A-Bombs’ Dropped During NATO Maneuvers DELMENHORST, Germany #— Three imaginery ato mic bombs were dropped on north Germany during the four-nation NATO ma- neuvers which ended today. Gen. Sir Richard Gale, com- mander in chief of the northern army group, said offensive and de- fensive atomic warfare was 00d prison record and would be paroled “‘to the Detroit area.” studied during the five day ex- ~ The tall, erect Medal of Honor winner was given a hero’s welcome as his plane landed at this huge air base 40 miles northeast of San Francisco under a brilliant moon. Dean's part in the Korean War lasted a month in the harrowing summer of 1950 before he was captured, He was awarded the na- tion's highest military decoration for his valiant, last-ditch defense of Taejon—in which he battled per- sonally with a bazooka. An Air Force 097 Stratocruiser brought Dean, and seven other camera lights and the tenderness of re- union with his family. The general had been out of the |country six years, in Japan and Korea. | His wife, Mildred, climbed into |the plane and into the general's tight embrace. Then Dean, smiling self - con- sciously, led her down the ramp. The 54-year-old general wore no medals or ribbons, only the shoulder patch of his old 24th division. Near the plane Dean and his wife were joined by his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Dean. He held both women tightly. A few feet further on, the gen- eral’s daughter, Mrs. June Wil- liams, flew into his open arms. | Then came others—19 relatives in Dean’s son-inlaw, Army Capt. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) 400,000 Now, 850,000 by 1970? Oakland County’s 1970 census: $50,000 people. That's. the forecast in a booklet explaining the ‘‘whys’’ and possible “thow’s’”’’ of ‘the new courthouse planned for Michigan’s second larg- tors, 1 Lafayette St., after Oct. 1. E a Qakland County Board of Super- visors’ special courthouse commit- tee, confirms that the new court- house will be built for 1970's The new building, to be located at the county service center along “We want it built so that ad- West Boulevard, will be highly: Only recently did concrete plan- ning begin. | In 1951, county officials and Pon- tiac City Commission talked of planning a single building to house offices of .. They abandoned the idea failing to agree on a site. The county resolved to go on alone, called for a survey of space needs, saw it completed In Today’s Press seedaeerecesesecceeees 2 Bob Considine ercise ‘‘'Grand Repulse.” + and is now ready to hire an architect to design a building. The booklet points out that ‘‘jet Sdecereesecteewescer 2 Diy Bese. |... .cdeccccvcesy weeeseee = County News. .......-.ccceeseees 4, 43 David Lawremed........sseeceee-s 6 George Crane.......- peocccese ‘ Pamh. ccccdoccccccccpoccccece 2e tah Bere weeeee eeeeeeeere peeeee woke Markets ......- deccceowece boeceedes 41 PROMS fcccccdcccccccccpeccnccce 1s fa odocle eeccdeocccic 37, 38, 39, 40 ROB) deccce Pecteeecrsletecaviar Mu TV & Racle Programs............ il OO BEB. leccccoce 43, 44, 45, 44, 47 "s Pages......18, 19, 9, 21, 23 = - Booklet Forecasts County Population Jump, Plans for Courthouse Planners think the new building would cost about $4,500,000, The booklet said county officials i. ¢ as Explosions Destroy Plant through a small chemical 4 Known Dead N. Y. Chemical Factory Blasts May Have Taken 2 Other Lives TONAWANDA, N.Y. (AP) —- At least four and possibly six men were killed and eight or more were in- jured today when four tre- mendous explosions ripped plant. Flames shot skyward, threatening nearby resi-; dences for a time, and 4 huge mushrodming cloud | of dark: smoke spread over | the area. Windows in nearby buildings were shat- | tered. Police said the explosions were in two hydrogen stor; age tanks at the Lucidol Division of Novadel-Agene Corp. | Society Honors Pontiac Doctor Dr. Robert H. Baker to Be Michigan Medical Group Head in ‘54-’55 As dozens of fire trucks and rescuers converged on the scene, police moved spectators and residents of neighboring homes away, from the scene. It was feared for a time that | another hydrogen tank at the plant might blow up. | Police and Buffalo Fire Depart- ment officials said four were dead. An unidentified man at the scene told a newsman he had counted six bodies, but this could not be confirmed, The vietims were not imme- diately identified. Th building, a two-story ma- sonry structure was left in smoldering ruins. It was on Military road, a main traffic artery connecting Buffalo and Tonawanda. The first explosion tore through the building at 10:18 a.m. (EST). The others followed at intervals over 25 minutes. An area of sev- eral square miles was shaken. Debris fell on homes and yards hundreds of yards away. Kenmore Mercy Hospital re- ported that six injured were re- ceived there. Columbus Hospital and Sisters Hospital in Buffalo also received victims. Non-Dealer Car Sales Taxable Private Auto Deals After Oct. 1 Are Subject to 3 Per Cent State Levy Anyone buying a motor vehicle from an individual who is not an authorized dealer will be required to pay a 3 per cent state use tax on the purchase price after Oct. 1. Roy Annett, manager of Pontiac branch of the Michigan Secretary of State’s Office, said this tax must be paid when the purchaser ap- plies for a title transfer at the branch office. He pointed out that the tax is computed on the full purchase price of the motor vehicle with no deduction for the trade-in, and must be paid within 10 days after the vehicle is purchased. This new tax setup also applies to persons living in Michigan who buy motor vehicles in other states, said Annett. Every title transfer after Oct. 1 must be accompanied by a filled out Form UT-7A (statement of Michigan use tax paid). In case of an exemption, the form must be completed and an additional entry made on Line 3, stating the reason for the exemption, Annett ex- and | plained. Exemptions may be claimed when a motor vehicle is received as a gift, purchased from a public official at a public auction, inher- ited or repossessed. Forgetful Parishioners Throw Birthday Party ROMULUS, N. Y. @—Members of the Presbterian Church in this GRAND RAPIDS #—Dr. Robert |H. Baker, a Pontiac physician and | surgeon for 23 years, and an au- thority on tumors and some types |of cancer, is | the new president- |elect of the Michigan Medical So- ciety. Dr. Baker, 61, was elected at the society’s convention last night. He will take office in September 1954. Dr. L. W. | Howell of Detroit will be installed tonight as the group’s new president, succeed- ing Dr. R. J, Hubbell of Kala- mazoo. Dr. Howell was elected a year ago. The new president-elect, a native of Bay City, received his medical degree from |the University of Michigan in 1916 and served for a time as a member of the Univer- sity Hospital staff and the Michi- gan medical faculty before begin- ning his practice at Pontiac. He served in World War 1. Dr. Baker is on the staff of Pontiac General Hospital and an associate staff member at St. Joseph Hospital in Pontiac. He is the son of a former presi- dent of the society, the late Dr. Charles Baker of Bay City who held the office in 1919. The Pontiac |physician had been speaker of the {House of Delegates until his election Tuesday night. Taking office with Dr. Baker a year from now will be Dr. J. E. Lizesay of Flint, who was named speaker of the House of Delegates. Selected as members of the so- ciety’s council were Dr. William Montgomery of Sault Ste. Marie, Dr. W. F. Jones of Menominee and Dr. W. B. Harm of Detroit. Hillsdale Enrolls 502 HILLSDALE ® — Hillsdale Col- lege announced an enrollment of 502 for the new school year today, an increase of 16 per cent over Lefeve of Muskegon, Dr. B. C. | ruce Violation To Head Medics Moving of MiGs South Over Yalu Worries Allies Action Is Against Rules; Commander to Debate Neutral Inspection SEOUL,, Korea (UP) — Lt. Gen. Samuel E. Ander-' son, Fifth Air Force com- mander, charged today the Reds moved planes into North Korea after Armis- tice Day. Gen. Mark W. Clark quickly called a conference with his staff to discuss re- ports of the truce violation. Anderson, highest rank- ing United Nations Air Force officer in Korea, said he knew a week ago of the Communist plané move- ments. A _ fugitive ‘from communism confirmed the reports Tuesday. Clark, supreme U. N. comman- der in the Far East,| summoned staff officers to his headquarters and it was learned t he may break his silence on the alleged Communist air buildup’ Thursday. Clark was expected |to demand a thorough investiga by neu- tral inspectors of No Korean airfields to determ whether the Reds had violated the truce. Anderson said radar s-re-. vealed that Communist planes, which had remaihed| near the Yalu River’ during the Korean War, had ventured farther south since the armistice than they had dared to go while Sabrejets -were in the air to challenge them. Young North Korean’ Air Force Lt. Noh Keun Suk backed up An- derson's charge by giving an eye- witness account of the) Communist treachery, after turning over his Russian-made MIG to U.S. au- thorities. Noh said the Communists be- lieved fighting would break out in Korea again and were preparing for resumption of hostilities. The MIG surrendered by the 22-year-old runaway North Korean, who will receive $100,000, tax-free, for his action, wag the |‘‘first com- plete MIG"’ to falf into U.S. hands.! It was dismantled and put aboard a giant C124 transport plane which will take it to the United States for study. (An Air Force spokesman at Dayton, Ohio, said the MIG would be tested at nearby Wright-Pat- terson Air Force Base, It will be examined and then reassembled for flight tests). Anderson said expert engineers will determine the ‘‘spin” of the MIG. , “The pilot (Noh) claimed spin- | ning is a defensive measure, but | we asked him how come se many of them crashed,’’ Ander- son said. “He merely shrugged, | and said the planes just went out of control, “We also could ledrn quite a} lot about their armament, commu- nications, gunsights and the im- provements in the engines the Rus- last year. sians have made.” Heralded by last night’s ‘ weather. Fall begins, astronomers e Light Frost, Brisk Weather Herald Arrival of Autumn Autumn came to Pontiac today. ‘harvest moon,” fall stepped: into the city at 3:07 a. m. today, bringing a morning low! of 41 degrees in Pontiac and a day of brisk, bright’ Heavy dew glistened over rural areas where ther- mometers sank to 39 degrees this morning, and a spot-! check indicated that light frost hit some low areas. xplain, when the sun crosses the equator on its way south. The sun today will rise and set at exactly the east and west compass points, and hours of. ylight and darkness will about equal. Today officially shuts the door on the summer which embraced Mercury May Climb Into 70s Here Thursday crops, brought bans on lawn) sprinkling, and fed grass fires, throughout the county until rain; came Sept. 4. | But storm damage, for the most, part, was light. Time after time, thunderheads | +} Skipped harmlessly over Pontiac | to slam into Detroit to the south. | But one severe storm, which blew | in with a mid-day darkness June 30, put out the lights for 10 min-| utes everywhere in Pontiac south | of Mt. Clemens street and the Saginaw-Oakland intersection. This storm left 1,000 nearby rural fam- | ilies without electricity for two hours, threw 488 telephones out of service, and shorted out Pontiac (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) | Pegs nae “- othe eens | a 88" . med Jerome 0 é-3390, 260 S. Saginaw | Yar rT TWO ' } ah a Ce Birmingham Plan Board (lass Crowding Favors Closing Stub Ends of Rugby and Cambridge |May Ease Up From Our Birmingham Bureau pale Church will-hold its first fall | BIRMINGHAM — Plan Board! meeting at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at | members last hight favored closing the church, with the Rev, Paul | the stub endsof Rugby and Cam- | Shippert presiding. 5 . | * * bridge roads and will pass the | _ recommendatibn on to‘ the City| Invitations have been sent to 82 | Commission, which has: scheduled mothers new to the Quarton| | School area and to the faculty, for hear 9. | ’ a hearing on the matter for Oct 19. | tho | annual he tes. which Wil A developer: plans immediate con- struction on the Troy Township tri- | angle to the /North, bounded by Adams road, the Grand Trunk] ' be held from 2:30 to 5 p.m. to- morrow at the home of Mrs. Wil- liam Martin, on Puritan. Co-chair- | men Mrs. Horton Allen and Mrs. Western Railrgad and the city of Kirmingham. -} Martin will be assisted. as is tradi- tional, by members of the executive board and committee members | elected for the 1953-54 season. i ‘Ike Terms.1-H Act ropertys ey oe Essentially Sound their understanding that the de- | (Continued From Page One) veloper had stated he will not sell | longed laughter when Nixon added: any mote preperty to the Board “There may have been, and there of “Education ‘or Troy Township. | i apparently was, a misunderstand- Property owners in the area said a petition asking vacating of the streets had. been turned in more than aiyear ago, but was held up because the Board of Education was negotiating with the developer for playground property. : They said he Had already graded | Cambridge and ‘part of Windemere, which would $end’ through bealie | OnE from his develépment through their residential areas Possibility off annexation of the area was brought out by City Manager Donald C. Egbert, who thought that wds the solution. The city then could control | develop- mept of the area, he “said. j | | “We would ‘lace expenditures | for storm, dtrdinage along the southeastern portion and .. share in widening Adams, but the alter- nates are evefi. greater.” ing between the President and Mr. Nixon added that Eisenhower ‘never broke his word’’ to Durkin. ‘‘And I don’t believe that any implication that the President broke his word should be left, in the record of this convention,”’ Nixon said. Durkin, sitting among the dele- gates’ only a few feet from the} platform on which Nixon. spoke, | listened intently to his remarks. | Afterward Durkin said only: or! Expect School Additions to Relieve Situation. in Birmingham). BIRMINGHAM—The current Bir- . mingham school building program will provide some relief for |fall School rodms swollen by, an ever- increasing student population, Sup- erintendent of Schools Dr. Dwight B. Ireland said yesterday. “Class size is not too bad at the beginning of the year,” he re- vealed, ‘‘but if the growth that took place last year continues throughout the current year, class }enroliments will be unreasonably large.” “Same relief will be sought before the end of the current year,’”’ he added. (‘The building program will provide some, in spite of. unanticipated delays which have been experienced.” Ireland reported that the Quar- ton School addition will probably open after Christmas holidays,’ re- storing a normal program of ac- tivities there. THE PONTI | WE +4 lo ? oro _ Wongew POA ONT Oi ee . ss Ais allied “* ; ~ 4 , oe » ate Hort a eee “s -. Gls 5 ? “>, 5 DS Tiga; i ESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953, 4 Side a “ * } how EE rrr 1 ree . wr oee lls Mice Mia. ‘ y Pw i A iy st , 4 a dan-ror Light Frost Marks Coming of Autumn (Continued From Page One) other storm July 18 caused lighter damage. | The summer began quietly enough with a high of|89 degrees June 21 after the mercury had hit 97 the day before. Tornado jitters born of (twisters that whirled through Port Huron, | Flint and) Milford during the spring eased in Trial Is Oct. 12 Man and Wife Charged With Killing Caruso on Aug. 2 Oakland County Prosecutor Fred C. Ziem today announced Oct. 12 at the date for the first degree Gilleo Murder - continued quiet weather. murder trial of Mr. and Mrs, Six 90-or-over days were scat- tered through the first month, including | June 28 with 91 de- grees; June 30, 90; July 5, 92; duly 15, (91; duly 16, 92; and duly 26, 96. None broke records for the dates. Heat never stayed long. So. when local thermometers went to 96 degrees Aug. 26, Oak- land County folks mopped their brows and mused that “‘it prob- ably won't last long.” They were wrong. As weather forecasters and sweltering citizens watched in wonder, the thermometer stayed The kindergarten room at Torry School, will soon be} occupied, but the remainder of new construction | will not be ready before March or | April. Modified plans designed to bring the addition to Bloomfield Hills School within the budget are com- | plete, Ireland reports, but because of the difference in ¢ost, the Board of Education has been legally ‘ad- vised to re-advertisé for bids. Within approximately two weeks, | Road, Sylvan Lake, for the expectant parents class SIGN UP FOR CLASS—Mrs. Hazel Ellicott, Oak-| Office Building, 1 Lafayette St. land County Health Department public health nurse, left, signs'up Mr. and Mrs. Earl Steiner, 1784 Beverly meeting Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. at Oakland County sored free of charge by Pontiac and Oakland County Health Departments and Oakland County Medical Society, deals with preparations for ja baby’s arrival and care of the new baby after birth. over 90 jonger than | any other time’ in Michigan history. Aug. 27 went by with) a 95-degree high. So did Aug. 28. By Aug. 29, the heat was on to stay. The mercury climbed to % de- grees, outdoing a record for the date of 94) set in 1872. It stayed at 96 Aug. 30, beating a record 94 Pontiac Press Photo The course, spon- Teenage Club, He was a student at Pontiac High School. Besides’ his parents; he is sur- | vived by a brother and a sister, | Karen and Kelly, at home. Pontiac Deaths Robert C. Kinney degrees set in 1932; and soared to 9% again Aug. 31. Ice| dealers, soft-drink salesmen /and ice | cream manufacturers’ | watched sales rise with the mer- | cury. And Pontiac City officials { Gen. Dean Arrives in United States ‘Eugene Gilleo of Ferndale, A warrant issued Aug. 18 charged Eugene Gilleo, 27, and his wife, Roberta, 22, with the murder of Detroit restaurateur, John Ca- ruso, 58, on a dead-end Oak Park street on Aug. 2. The couple pleaded innocent at their arraignment Sept. 11. Ziem also tentatively set the trial of Alfred A. Kahner, 21, Detroit hotel manager, for Oct. 14. Kahner was charged with invok untary manslaughter and negli- gent homicide in the déath of George Hackett, 23, of Detroit, who was killed by a motorboat |July 15 while swimming in Cass Lake. Kahner stood mute when ar- raigned Aug. 21 and a plea of not guilty was entered for him. Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty will preside at both trials. For a carefree weekend in Detroit | —STAY STATLER! will make no comment except to! this project should be under way Say My answer was in my speech | Modified plans for Franklin School Rosary service will be Thursday | lat 9 p.|m. at ‘the Brace Funeral | (Continued From Page One) | | viewed with alarm the soaring use As it standsi:how, Egbert said, of city water. he understands the developer plans After an illness of four months, > ry * ® * yesterday.’ That was the speech in which Durkin claimed he had a face-to- | face agreement with Eisenhower on | }19 specific changes in the T-H to- | Act to be recommended to Con- | | $ 7 | gether parents’ and teachers at a, 8™@SS. but that Eisenhower later get-acquainted‘tea at 3:30 pm. to- said he could not go along with morrow at tha’ &chool, Mrs, Ron- |} ald W. RounsvVille, mother vice president, is. chairman of/|\the tea. | * e ‘* on using septic: tanks, gravel streets, and ig';making No provi- sion for storm: drainage, which would flow into; the city |anyway. Poppleton PTA will bring When Nixon finished his | speech, Durkin met him at the | back of the speaker’s rostrum Executive Cdminiittee and Board! and they shook hands. of the Sister Kenny Anniversary | Club will meet’ af 8 tonight at the | home of Walter ‘Wakeman Jr, of Scuth Bates, at which time it will be decided whén} the entire club's first, fall meeting The vice president said that if it| were true,| as some claim, that} the administration is dominafed by | the ‘‘greedy few,’’ then it would, lose the next election, for the season! But he said the administration is | are in the Same planning stage. Canada’s Stand on Korea Told Nation Will Fight Only in U. N. Action, Pearson Informs Assembly UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. A — Foreign Secretary Lester B. Pear- son of Canada told the U.N. General Assembly today Canadian | Robert C. Kinney, 69, of 40 Dewey | Ct., Oxbow Lake, died in Pontiac Genera! Hospital at 5:15 p.m. Tues- day. | Born in Pontiac Aug. 25, 1884, he | Was the-son of William A. and | Jane C. Conroy Kinney, He mar- | | ried Eva A. Richardson here Sept. | | 18, 1906. He had been employed in | plant protection at Fisher Body | Division for 23 years. | Mr. Kinney was a member of the | Congregational Church, Commerce | 13 Volunteers Included | The General went into the, | Lodge 121, F & AM, the OES and | Royal Arch Lodge at.Milford. | Besides his widow, he is survived 'by a son, George W. of Williams Lake, and a grandson. Also sur- will be held. Those interested in working for the good of all the|troops would fight in Korea only| viving are four brothers and three joining the néwi club may COn-| people and will ultimately deliver | tact Charles VJ. Sdlinas | more security and prosperity by | ~ ieee __|the country as a whole. Gra-Y Clubs have started this| The White House yesterday de-| week,, with most 'Y’ groups npldgiig | lied that’ Kisenhowen had «made | organizational, | ain d — enrollment | any decision on changes in the law meetings. Barnum HI-Y Clubs will | or any commitment. | meet on Tuesday evenings at 7,| Eisenhower said in today’s mes- Pierce and Baldwin on Wednes- sage that deliberations on modify- | days from 7-9 p.m., and Adams on | ing the law are still going on and Thursdays at the game hour, Other |*'I shall send my own suggestions groups, will begin/next week when |t the Congress at the opening of time and location! are decided. | its session in January.”’ Club work at the Baptist Chil- | He expressed the view, however, dren’s Home has, started and the | that the enactment of the law by Indian Guide tribes are meeting | the Republican 80th Congress;“was regularly. The $aturday morn- |a substantial contribution to ‘the ing craft and sports groups are | quest for _ Sounder labor-manage- looking for new ¢nrollees. Lead- | ™ent relations,” and he declared: ers assisting YMCA Seerctary “I believe that the experience Edwin Kirbert are Dick Miller, under the act has confirmed its George Forestér,, Shirley Powers | essential soundness.” and Doris Harris. Others will be | added as the program develops. * *; * Eisenhower said too that Dur ;kin’s participation in the talks on ; ead .. | revision of| the law had been of | The Rev.. Edmuhd Schwager has | creat valua and that the secre- been named new assistant at Holy ‘tary’s resignation was “‘unfortu- Name parish. Some of his duties | ,ato.# will include supe?vising athletics | AFL President George Meany, and altar boys: at Holy Name) whose 10-million-member federa- School, and the Newman and Spot-!tion was stirred by the whole lighters Clubs at the church. | thing, said he sided with Durkin. Father Schwagér was ordained | Meany said: Jast June, graduating from St “I’ve known Durkin for 30 years Mary’s in Royal Oak, where he and I don’t believe he would dis- makes his home. ! | tort the tacts. I believe what he 7 8, * , said is true.” Annual teachers’ tea was given’ ‘The convention yesterday adopt- | this afternoon by the ‘executive ed a resolution expelling the Inter- board of the Franklin School PTA, | national Longshoremen’s Assn. at the home of Mrs. Wendell Smith, | (11,4) from the AFL for harboring | president. Mrs.| Thomas Cauley, | ¢riminal elements along the New| past president and Mrs. C. Gavic. york-New Jersey waterfront. The teachers representative, presided AF, said it would establish a rival at the tea tables. union for the dock workers. Great Books cofirse at Baldwin | Library :will begin its sixth year | After angouncement of the ILA as it opens at! 8. tonight at the} costar. a New York industry liteary, Homer's {The Hliad” is; "eurce whe declined to'be quotell to ‘be diacuneed | | said the ouster would not affect .- current negotiations on a new The group mieets every other contract between the ILA ,and Wednesday unfjl June, and the the New York Shipping Assn. public is. invitéd to register at ; ' There is not time before the con- | | i sh yg tract expiration date to establish . oa ; | tract expiration e Ss Altar Guild af Ascension Luth-| . new bargaining agent, the source | , } said. ; | Arthur J. Connell, national com- The Weather |'mander of the American Legion, PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly fair; said in an address prepared for dines temerrew and. slightly warmer. | the convention that the AFL, which Low tonight near 5@ high on Thursday traditionally has opposed universal military training, should support it. 74 te 78. Southeast winds 10 te 12 becoming south te southwest 12 te 18 miles ‘Thursday. ——T eday \in Pontiac (erat acai preceding 8 «= Group Would Ban At tam: Wind welicity 2 mph.: direc- | tion southeast. ' Sun bits Wetnentad! ot $8 ne | Gifts to Athletes Moon rises Wednesday at 6:27 p.m. Moon sets Thursday at 3:16 a.m. | MACKINAC ISLAND ®—Mich- ‘igan school administrators today oS Dewntown Temperate res Pal moss? f2m. clit ie: Supported superintendent of pub- ie genes oe) te ot tone -»--@ | lic instruction Clare L. Taylor's ban ome . | against prep athletes who accept aps merchandise ‘‘rewards.” a he. Tecorded owareee) a, |, The educators supported Tay- ighest tempera ure. »: U Sea eee ene lor’s plan for an overhauling at Mean temperatures. -0.s0..00L0 $18! rules and policies governing high reesee: school athletes. cnaks One Year Age ts Pentioe Taylor said that a special com Lowest temperatupe::s.fc.sccecosss a2 | | mittee — a argh tackle OMAPOTACUPS) .. 6b. scrcccccccee . , Weather—Cool. ee years The committee will be composed high school administrators, coaches and others concerned with Highest and Lowest Temperatures This | of Date in 81 Years 89 in 1936 33 in 1896 nae . school athletics. Alpena. nha "38 7Loe Anges. 12 s5| The schoolmen, attending the Barta 30a Minmapous $3 38] Michigan Association of School Ad- Cadillac “3m Now Orleans $1 6s ministrators annual .meeting here, Cincinaat! 68 4 Omaha $2 8° ‘supported Taylor in the controversy pas nm ix, 191 8t| over nine prep athletes who have Ga. Ra €3 i Prisco 8 83 beca eo accepted = aekern year use mer- J Rs Kansas City 73 $7 Washington es q|Chandise “rewards. } 2 Sa “< 4 —- oe in ‘‘a United Nations dction.’’ He specifically excepted military uni- fication of Korea as aU. N. aim for which Canada, would battle. Pearson’s warning was consid- ered here to be directed at South Korean President Syngman Rhee who has demanded that the U.N. | Allies help him drive the Commu- nists from North Korea by mnili- tary means. The Canadian diplomat, mak- ing his first U. N. speech since | sisters, Daniel, Wallace and James of Pontiac, Edwin of Kansas City, Mrs. Eller Allen, Mrs, Hazel Gra- j ham of Pontiac and Mrs. Elizabeth Reiser in California. Funeral will be Friday at) 1:30 p.m. from the Hyntoon Funer | Home. The Rev. Malcolm K. Bur- }ton, his pastor, will officiate and burial will follow in the Drayton | Plains Cemétery. | Hallie Pace { Home. Funeral will be Friday at | Robert Williams, stepped up with 9:30 a.m. in St. Vincent de Paul | his son, Robert Dean Williams, 2%, Church. Burial will follow in Pine a grandson the general never had Grove Cemetery at Freeland, | 38 Men Leave for U.S. Forces seen. Dean took the tow-headed boy in his arms, hugged him and kissed him. Mrs. Dean was almost overcome. “You can't talk about a thing like this,’’ she said, tears stream- ing down her fade. ‘‘There just aren't words.”’ The thirsty city drew off 20,- 000,000 gallons in one day of the heat wave. Perspiring Pontiac, clinging to forecast of rain and coolér, saw hope go a-glimmering Sept. 1 when the mercury went up to 98, nosing out the all-time Sepf. 1 rec- ord of 96) set in 15943. On Sept. 2, |the thermometer braced itself and | soared to 101 degrees, topping a former record of 95 set in 1913. | | Among Inductees From ! | | Local Draft Boards Thirty-eight men, 14 from Mich- igan Selective Service Board 65 | and 24 from Board 67 left Pontiac | today for induction into the armed | forces at Ft. Wayne, Detroit. | The list included four volunteers | |from Board 65, which covers the | | Pontiac area. Three are 19 years | old. Board 67's group included nine volunteers, three of them 19. | | Léader of the Board 65 group | | was Norman Barkeley, a volunteer, | | By Sept. 3, however, the mer- cury’s stamina was weakening. It only made 98 degrees—still enough to break a record of 95 set in 1888. It was not until Fri- day, Sept. 4, that the promised cooler weather reached Pontiac. Thus the thermometer strung together 10 consecutive days of over-90 temperatures — two days more than any other heat siege on Michigan (records. Longest strings of 9%-and-over I'm sure. . . . They told me | days recorded before were eight- about the real heroes, day sieges July 19-26, 1940; July jammed terminal |lobby. “T am overwhelmed by this wel- come. It makes me feel very hum- ble and unworthy,'’ he spoke firm- | ly into a microphone. “IT want everyone to understand that I’m not a hero. I was un- fortunately a prisoner of war and that is nothing to be proud of. It was an unfortunate circum- stance. ‘Other prisoners of war had it much tougher than me, ” eee There's ne time like now to take that weekend vacation! Detroit's just the place to take it (there's so much to see and do). And Statler’s just the — place to stay, You'tl love the comfort and luxury’ of the Statler rooms—the friendly,’ efficient service and delicious food.’ Sure, come into Detroit for a care free|weekend—and stay Statler! HOTEL STATLER Facing Grand Cirevs Park DETROIT Dean named man after man, foot | 24-31, 1941; and Aug. 9-16, 1944. soldiers and fliers. He praised! , them highly for their unceasing | ¢ resistance to Communist pressure. yw we ee ee oe ~ eee ow of 554 Lenox Ave. Others leaving; «7 eoyig go on and on,” he add- 4 he retired as president of the Assembly, said the | projected After an illness of several months, Hallie Pace, 63, of 506 Korean political conference could California Ave. died at 5 a.m. to settle the problem “if there is | day. good faith and good will on both | Born in Lapeer County Sept. 16, sides.”’ | 1890, he was the son of Clarence Ha adid tm ate at the bonfer- | 2nd Ethel Pace. He came t~) Pon- | included the following men, the! first three of whom are volunteers: | Dan Hoffman, Milford Robert Edwards, 437 Bartlett Charles Fick, 580 Second Robert Daniels, 863 Woodland Neal Cook, 2089 8. Edith Wayne McGuire, 62 Wenonah Benjamins Bennett, 60 N. East Blvd, Louis Tillman, 192 W. Wilson Calvin Reynolds, 418 Howland ence should be ‘‘a free |and united |Korea, with a government resting |on the will of the Korean people ‘freely expressed through elections tiac 33 years ago and married Leone McCann here in 1919. He was an automobile mechanic. A veteran of World War I, he! Ceci! Dodd, 5919 Dwight Daniel Platt, 424 Highland Curtis Webb, 312 Hughes Arvie Porter. 343 Irwin Barry T. Parsons of 2964 Or- ed. ‘They didn’t break down.” | Applause thundered in .the hot crowded lobby. Aswering newsmen’s questions, he said his plans were indefinite. In Tokyo he sald he planned to retire from the Army, in which he has served 30 years, to keep a promise to his family. About the chances for lasting peace in Korea. . THE EASIEST-WRITING back to schoo OYAL PORTABLE EVER BUILT} vwvvvTVvTy wv held under United Nations super- was) 8 member of VFW 1590, vision. All foreign forces should, of by five sans a five daughters course, be withdrawn and Korea's Jack L.. er a Reva and security might be provided for un-| Joyge Pace, Mts. Avid Vaniecer der an international and supervised | and Mrs. | Donna Beatty, all of guarantee.” | Pontiac; Mrs. Loraine Burris of Pearson threw his country's sup- Birmingham, Donald Pace 0? Man- port to British and American ef-| celona and Pvt. Dale Pace in the forts to throttle further! U. §. Air Force. Also surviving discussion in the U. Besides his wigow, he is survived | | chard Lake Rd. was leader for the |Board 67 group. First nine men listed were volunteers: Richard B. Murray, Birmingham Lawrence F. Thompson, Birmingham Raymond P. Fohey Jr.. Birmingham James 8. Holcomb, Birmingham Ronald E. Draheim, Walled Lake James D. Lees, Rochester Karl D. Pollington, Milford John W. Green, Walled Lake Philip M. White, Milford Edward H. Laird, Detroit of who | are a brother, Arthur of Detroit; Lowell B. Page, Cincinnat!. Ohio should attend the conference. a sister, Mrs. Claude Mallory of| Evan 8, Williams, Rochester | : P Edgar L. Trocke, Milford Flint and|12 grandchildren. Philip FP. Savage, Birmingham Funeral |will be Saturday at 11] Robert L. Earle. Birmingham 5 Martin 8. H , Birmingh Mrs. Dan A. McGaffey a. m. from the Sparks - Griffin Donald Prew, Penton. ° . ohn r : Bterli to Be Buried Thursday Chapel. James §. Courtney Jr., Milford _ oger P. ummel, Birmingham Funeral for Mrs. Annabelle Bell . es tee en P. Waters, South Lyon McGaffey, 80, widow lof former Charles) L. Quinn Harold J. House, Ortonville | Judge of Probate Dan A McGalt. | fey will be Thursday at 1 p.m.! Charles Larry Quinn, 14-year-old from the Bell Chapel of the Wil- son of Charles L. and Joy Wagg liam R.-Hamilton Co. in Birming-! Quinn of 91 Bloomfield Tr., di ham. Burial will be in Roselawn | in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Tues- Park Cemetery at Royal Oak. day morning. He had a brain Mrs. McGaffey, who resided at | tumor. 1810 Birwood in Southfield Town-| Born in Pontiac Oct. 14, 1938, he ship, died Monday in St. Joseph' was a member of St. Vincent de Mercy Hospital here, Monday after | Paul Catholic Church, the Boy After anjiliness of three months, ! Man Falls Off iaddee BIRMINGHAM—John Mayer, 65, of 160 Judson St., Pontiac, was taken to St. Joseph Mercy Hos- pital yesterday with a broken left hip when he fell 20 feet from a ladder while working on an addi- tion for the Michigan Bell Tele- ‘I'm in a poor pésition to say— all I know is, what I've read in the past few weeks.”’ About the war potential of the Chinese... . “All I saw of their troops were peeks through cracks in a paper window.’ Dean said there) was_one thing he would like to do. “I'd like to get acquainted with my family. For 30 years I've ne- |glected them. Now I’ve promised to make amends.”’ | Nab Jackson Escapee After Traffic Accident CHICAGO \#—Police said a mo- torist arrested after a minor traf- fic accident on the northwest side Tuesday was identified by finger- prints as an escaped convict from Southern Michigan} Prison at Jack- son. Sgt. Joseph Rudnick said the man is Joseph May, who escaped from the Michigan’ prison Aug. 19, | = $4 rwvruvuwwvwewvevevwvueVvVvVVwVYrYVTYTYVTY?* Now in Stock 4 > > 4 4 > 4 Q > 4 \@ > > > > > > , > > > > > > > > > EASY si eB alveNceed eeeeer- - fee ee eee —t (HE NEW ROYAL PORTABLE Also Underwood, Remingten, Typewriters Smith-Corona | Portable a brief illness. | Scouts and Woodward Estates phone Co. 1951, after serving 16 months of a ite ae an ge THREE-FOLD PROGRAM — Hard at work with | Episcopal Church, preparations for tomorrow’s 1 p.m. dessert luncheon, |B. R. MacDonald, Mrs. L. C. . fashion show and bridge, to be given at the Com-|Goodman. A new women’s apparel shop presenting two to 15-year term on a charge of breaking and entering. Rudnick said May gave the name John Woodwich and said he is 46 years old. 4 > > > > > > > > 4 > 4 > > > » > > > > 4 4 > > 4 > 4 > > > > > 4 > > > > > > 2 > > DAAAAAAAAA A Abe be be bbb bb bh hh lh hh hn nh hone F avik¥ss 123 NORTH SAGINAW ST. $ E 2-4831 2 zmzcn4Hz— ? rai | {> Ue}, Ub) | 3) Ub) | Lh) || SHSNSH US fe WE naw S “GETI oar) menions BAND hie + N THE BAND with INSTRUMENTS | Cornets—Trombones *139 Clarinets ..........%120 Complete with PLUSH CASES! Available on Convenient Terms! of Musical Instruments $s x Our 90-Day Purchase Rental Plan! “CALBE MUSIC CO. Pontiad’s Locally Owned Home of Conn Instruments + end Baldwin Pianos and Organs Wie fe | Phone FE 5-8222 — ‘ : There are 156 major fires out of control in inactive coal deposits throughout the United States. Rabe eS MEAR BETTER OR PAY NOTHING! WO-O0T WONTT:DACK OOARANTEC! REARING AIDS Fred N. Pauli Co. 28: West Huron FE 2-7257 THE PON'TIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 ‘Mari juana Plot: Let Jewish Holiday Everyone Grow Starts at Sunset OKLAHOMA CITY «#—The elite | of the city’s marijuana trade, tired | Sukos, Hebrew Festival of Harvest, Celebrated | of spending so much time jin the local pokey, put their collective | in Synagogues, Home The Jewish |holiday, Sukos, or | an ingenious plan. | The problem was this: The,heat | was on. An honest pusher couldn't The plan was this: Let everyone | to Biblical days, begins at sunset else in town grow the stuff for us! | today. Narcotics othieers theorized in| OFiginally associated with the | of seed, the traffickers drove from |“ | garden to garden spririkling the | their wandering through the des- | seeds on the lawns of unsuspecting | ert, the holiday later became an carefully all summer, the pushers Sukos is the madel which the | slip in and harvest it. Pilgrims used in establishing ——+- | the American festival of Thanks- | (Advertisement) O-JIB-WA BITTERS — THE BEST BUY | | heads together and came up with make a dishonest buck anymdre by - | growing the stuff. Tabernacles, which dates back | | the dead of night, armed with jars | sukos, or booths, in which the ancient Israelites camped during | citizenry. | occasion for expressing | gratitude After the victim cultivates it | the Lord for the autumn harvest, (Advertisement) | | giving. In the Book of Deuter- | onomy, of the Bible, Sukos is described as the ‘festival of the ingathering,”’ In modern times; Sukos is cele- ; brated with special hymns and | prayers of thanks. Worship serv- EVER MAD ’ SAYS 81 YEAR OLD MAN | ices are held in homes and gery . | gogues, which are decorated with Mr. Z. S: Norton, 23 College Street, Battle Creek, recent- ly had this to say about O-JIB-WA BITTERS. “Arthritis | was drawing my fingers out of shape and shooting pains in | my legs made sleeping impossible before using your wonder- fal medicine.” | “Rheumatism and arthritis first hit me about 15 years ago, but didn’t become: severe until the pital, but I was just as bad off | when I left, and wondered what | in the world I Was going to do. . ie past four years.|T had tried about all the remedies | Bae My kneesS,|I heard of; even those you rub | neck, shoulders/on, but with no relief, and was | and fingers got|about ready to give up when I | stiff and ached’ read about O-JIB-WA BITTERS. | terribly. I did-|The first bottle made me feel | could be such/pains ,and stiffness left me, and pains. My knees|T could sleep like a babe, I can / and ankleSidress myself again and get: were so puffed) around good for a man 81 years up that I hadiold. I don’t need aspirin for to use crutches|pain anymore or soda for, my | Mr. Z. Norton to get arcund./stomach either, as O-JIB-WA | I had to be helped in and out of| helped me in so many ways. I} cars as I couldn’t lift my legs.|firmly believe that the bést mon- My fingers were drawing out of/ey I spent in my whole life was shape and shooting pains through|for O.JIB-WA BITTERS.” my legs képt me awake at night. I spent several weeks in the hos-| AT ALL DRUG STORES { n’t khow there;much better and soon all of ne] autumn fruits and flowers. The first service tonight an- nounced by Jewish congregations will be at B'nai Israel at 6 o'clock | Others there are scheduled for 7: 30 | a.m, and 6 p.m. tomorrow and at | 7:30 a.m. and 9:15 p.m. Friday. | At Temple Beth Jacob a fam- ily night service is scheduled for 7:30 tonight. | } | The children of the religious school will participate in the ser- vice by bringing aJtar baskets of | food and 4ruit. symbolic of the ancient -harvest offering. These | baskets will be distributed ‘to wel- | fare institutions im the community. A service also is :s¢cheduled at the | temple for 10 a.m. tomorrow, | There were 82,500 seamen em- ployed on U. S. ocean-going ships | in early 1953—about 25 per cent fewer than the same period in| 1952. é SEE a circus every Sat. on Sealtest Big Top 1) a.m. WIBK-TV a (Channel 2) ; ow a anne xX, 3 uild strong bodies ‘LOOK FOR THE SEALTEST TRADEMARK AND THE RED TILE PATTERN | corporation charter of May Jew- | County justice of the peace whom. | the attorney general charged had | Goldmann, chairman of the Jewish | homes, businesses and savings. MOTHER MEETS MEDAL WINNER—The first man to disembark from the USNS General Brewster, after it docked in San Francisco with | 301 repatriated POW's aboard, was Lt. James Stone who stepped right | into the arms of his mother, Mrs. Idell Walker. The Hot Springs, Ark., officer has been awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for leading | his platoon in ‘‘a brave and hopeless last-ditch stand’’ near Sokkogae, Korea, Nov. 21-22, 1951. Jewelers Face Suit by Millard © Seeks Cancellation § of Charter for May Firm of Detroit, New Haven : LANSING (#—Atty; Gen. Frank G. Millard. struck another blow yesterday at what he called a ‘racket’? in Macomb County Jus- tice Court garnishment suits. “Powertul Pete’ He filed suit in the Macomb | KEY CHAIN County Circuit Court to cancel the G Pocket SCREWDRIVER 15¢/ Have a screw-driver always han- dy whenever you need it. Bead chain holds all your keys, too SIMAS.'¢. 98 N. Saginaw . The U. S. mint coined the first copper one-cent pieces on April 2, 1792. A one-half-cent copper coin was issued on the same date. Handy Pocket Tool Is Inexpensive at Simms elers, Inc., of Detroit and New Haven. At Millard’s request, Gov. Wile | liams previously had ordered an | ouster hearing against a Macomb Exactly As Pictared conspired with a jewelry firm to start improper garnishment suits. Millard charged the May firm formally transferred its corpora- tion address from 15211 Houston, Detroit, on March 3, 1953, to 58657 Main St., New Haven. He charged that the New Haven address was ‘‘false or fraudulent” and that the address was actually an election precinct booth in Which a telephone had been installed by the firm. This, he asserted, was a ‘‘ficti- tious address to discourage debtors from appearing in court and de- fending themselves against claims.’’ The penalty, he ‘said, for filing false information with the State | Corporations and Securities Com- mission is cancellation of the cor- poration’s charter or a $10,000 fine. | —Main Floor ‘> Me , é Potties quick os @ wink. Hong as @ wotl ploqve when idle. Mode of | select Oregon Alder in lovety noteral Qoiden finish. Delighttwl roosters in red, green, yellow, ond black. Exactly as Pictured $249 cock BSIMAS.&.. | —2nd Floor Austria to Settle Claims of Jews Against Nazis NEW YORK (® — Claims against Austria for material losses suf- $8 N. Saginaw : | Man Released on Bond ‘on Assault Charge Jacob H. Gould, 48, of 44 Prall St. demanded examination yester- | day when arraigned fote Pon- tiac Judge Maurice E. Finnegan | on a felonious) assault charge. Examination was set for Oct. 7 and Gould wag released after post- | ing a $500 bond. Gould's wife, Dorothy, claims he attacked her with a knife $ept. 19, according to | Pontiac police, | | 4 Ukrainians in Concert Displaced persons from behind | the Iron Curtain comprise the { Ukranian Bandurists Chorus which | will appear jin a concert of folk songs and dahces at 8:30 p.m. Sat- | urday in the Detroit Masonic Tem- ple. The chorus sings, its members | playing their accompaniment on | the bandura, 1 Now! f paint yourown B GREETING CARDS! “51.69 Fer 36 Cards Beoutiful Hand-Painted Christmas Cords eo \ColarfulEvervday Cards SIMMS“. With Envetepes, Plus Paints And Brush | AHR SIMMS THURS. HOURS—9 a. m. to 6 p. m. strewn summa Famous Make Shears & Scissors Because of minor finishing flaws, this famous cutlery manufacturer gave us a special discount |. Simms pass the.savings on to you inthe greatest scissor bargains we ever c*tfered. 3 Sizes SEWING SCISSORS Irregulars of 4 INCH ME | 5 INCH $400 | 6 INCH $405 $1.90 $2.00 ~ | $2.10 ~T Value. . Value... Value. . 'p $1.90 Embroidery Scissors—3¥/2-inch....:..... 95¢ $1.80 Pocket Scissors—4-inch ............... 90c 3 Sizes STRAIGHT TRIMMERS Nickle Plated Enamel Handles 6 in. $2.50 value. .$1.25 | 6 im. $2.70 value . $1.35 7 in. $2.75 value ..$1.38 | 7 in. $2.75 value . $1.38 8 in. $3.00 value ..$1.50 | 8 in. $2.75 value . $1.38 $3.00 Nickel Bent Trimmer—7 /2-inch...,....$1.50 $2.75 Barber Shears—7-inch.............. $1.38 Try SIMMS for Your BEST Possible PICTURES Bigger—Better—Brighter SUPER-SIZE Prints All Standard Rolls One Low Price Bring your films to Simms. for 1% faster service ... AZ sharper prints... greater savings. 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor REDUCED PRICE Nationally Advertised “KLEEN-CUT” Brand Ist Quolity . S$ on 95 VALUE Pinks as it cuts... ravel- proof edge. Solid cast blades stay sharp longer. Specially reduced—this week only. All Purpose—Heavy Duty Kitchen Shears Our $1.00 aie PQs Serrated blade cuts bones, wire, etc. Bottle opener, nut crack- er, etc Main Floor fered by Jews under Nazi rule | are expected to be settled shortly for something between 50 and 100 | The Best COSTS LESS at Simms! million douars, says Dr. Nahum | Agency for Palestine. Goldmann, who returned here yesterday from a meeting with Austrian Chancellor Julius Raab, said most of the claims — totaling more than $1,200,000,000 — in- volved individuals who lost their | ‘Tremendous | . On Spinet Pianos |} DELUXE QUALITY Folding Clothes Driers 25 Feet Drying Space $ 3 19 45 Foot Size.. $4.49 * Select Crain Hardwood * Sanded and Waxed *& Rigid Spring Locked * %-Inch Dowels * Folds Compactly Best we've ever seen. Pro- vides ample drying space in minimum) room area. Ideal in bathroom, utility room or basement, Staggered bars Holds laundry “’free-hang- ing’’~without overlapping. 98 N, Saginaw —2nd Floor j Regular $3.50 Value Hunter & Scout Knife Set Displayed at the Michigan State Fair In Leather $ 95 Belt Shecth . Gall h Exactly as pictured. SHEATH | er knife has 5” hollow-ground 4 blade, double rivet stag handle x = . | . . . SCOUT knife has 4 blades with many uses | . . leather Music Co || SHEATH js stitched and we riveted with snap loops. Buy |] for gifts, too. 18 E. Huron St. FE 4.0566 SIMMS ov | 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor Attention! SCOUTS—CAMPERS—HUNTERS, etc. ) ~ | $2.20 Saving on These Guaranteed Ist Quality 100% Wool Blankets Worth $ 88 $8.98 4 we ZZ Full Bed—70x80-Inch Size 6 Now— oi 'Warm-as-toast’ 100% wool blankets in wine, navy and reen cciors. Whipped edge. ft nap. Greatly under- priced. —Basement 9nd FLOOR SPECIALS Heavy Duty-—-Blue-S peck ENAMELW ARE Federal’’ COLD PACK ga, Canners Holds 7 ar ae | A $1.85 Value Complete with 7- jar wire lift-out rack .and_ cover, Guaranteed first quality. 98 North Saginaw St. —Pontiac’s Bargain Store — a). Sh aeln...aieiaasiaamed ES ce en ee oo _—s _ FOUR | First fire: insurance com- pany on record was organized | in 1736, | BOBBIE’S 4315 W, Walten 7 OR 3-292) Barbdare Baker ~ Owner 4 Operator DONT FORGET INSURANCE CALL Claude A. Carter Insurance Agency . 4400 Dixie Hwy. Drayton OR 3-722 _ j ° THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 ne naeneeeeena Co Ue Goodfellows Plan for. Yule WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — More} than 100 boys and girls are taking part in the Saturday morn- ing fun program sponsored by the Waterford Township Recreation Board, according to Tom Belton, board director. The, program is being held each Saturday morning this fall at the CAI Building on Williams Lake road.| Children 5 to 15 years old are invited. Included in the program are ? CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CAN MEET YOUR: NEEDS Come to a Free Lecture Entitled “How Christian Science Over 100 Youngsters Enroll in Fun Program gymnasium games such as bas- ketball and volleyball, arts and crafts, library periods and quiet games such as checkers, darts, table tennis and shuffle board. Saturday afternoon football ¢lin- ;ics on the fall recreation program | were scheduled to begin last Sat- urday but were rained out. Weath- Gift Campaign Elect Officers; Name Mrs. Ruby Mackinder Distribution Chairman WATERFORD TOWNSHIP “4}— Christmas plans were drafted ‘|Monday by Waterford Township Goodfellows at a meeting in Town- ship Hall. er permitting, the clinic will be held this Saturday starting at 1) p.m. on the high school football | field. | Al. boys 7 to 17 are invited to | take part in the clinics which in-| clude professionally taught funda: | mentals of the game and special | games wil] be: held folowing the | clinics. Also beginning Saturday will be | ballet classes for girls 5 to 18) at the CAI Building. Classes will | be held at.9 a.m. and 2 p.m. with Mrs. Carol Wolfe as instructor. Ballet classes for women will begin Oct. 1. 'of Williams Lake announce the | Joanne Delories, | 4 The Goodfellows plan to make oe: 4 Christmas a merrier one for needy families in the township. Baskets, | clothing and ‘toys will be distribut- ed to the families. Mrs. Ruby Mackinder of Drayton Plains was appointed chairman again this year for toys and dis- tributions. Names of needy families will be turned in to Mrs. Mackinder by Dec. 19. Delivery of baskets and toys is scheduled to be made | by Dec. 23. MISS JOANNE D. PARKER Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth B. Parker of their daughter, to Norman J. Neff, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert |. F. Neff of Clawson. The |couple are planning a Feb. 13 wedding. engagement Anyone wishing to contribute 2 aE TES aril on ne exten & Julia A. MRS. FRED G. Wood of Drayton Waterford Gets t a ai asa Sea teas oe oe "commu tak bee , | Waterford Has Project | | ad “i Map Waterford Authorized to Borrow $50,000 Against Future State Aid Payments WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — The township school district has 'been authorized to borrow $50,000 | against future state aid payments. | The authority was approved to- day by the State Public Municipal Finance Commission. Other Oakland County school districts authorized to borrow against future state aid pay- ments were Royal Oak Town- ship District 8, $45,000 and Inde- * , pendence Township District &, | fractional, $40,000, |\Lapeer County districts given the authority were Lapeer, $40,000, and North Branch Township Rural Agricultural District, $45,000. Royal Oak Township School Dis- trict 8 was also authorized to *. | borrow $130,000 in capital improve- ‘=. ; Ment tax notes: for part of the = | ¢ost of additions ta Ford, Webster, | Hoover and Martin road schools. County Births HENRY North Branch | sae St ee ee pees Mr. ahd’ Mrs. Clarence’ Schlaud of BI h I di id | | UJ eme ourt phone Mrs. Mackinder, OR 3-7655, i or ig ergo e the recent birth i ofa son, e urt. esses the Individua | Df or take contributions to any of the \, . . | : ily” Injured i Aecidont | twee tre tals intve oman. | | Married in Pontiac Church Gack xeheft and the Family Is Injured in Accident : ‘ hekiating Mrel|| Mackinder wi ) | ick Relief for ! Pontiac Patrolman John C.| ominee IC e | be Mrs. Wayfe Springer, OR 3-1985,| _ DRAYTON PLAINS — First Bap- | Folk of Pontiac and Howard MUSCUL 5 R a ds ges Bs Pg Nee ot rere eat Lyons, 21, of 66 Lincoln Ave was | Ed Staley, OR 3-2270, and Clayton | tist Church of Pontiac was the set-| Wood, brother of the bride. ACHES : ad a i. . ai i j a | . J . | 5 ls paige Cy rng lan a ee treated at Pontiaic General Hos- | P | . At | Soncrainte, OR 3-1318. bi ae oie which | Fpllowing a reception at the| ke AC! j m t Shienti ch, TI rs C i , ennsyivania orneys oodf | Arner , . | ANB sa a a fn an accident while riding his mo-| J YS} _Goodfellows officers also were | Wood of Drayton Plains and Fred| tr eon, Hall in Auburn | | is or powders , |, egainel any Friday, Sept. 25th at 8:00 P. M. First Church of Christ, Scientist | Cor, Williams and W. Lawrence Sts. Pontiac, Mich. our appointment as a dealer to the complete line of DU-BERRY COSMETICS i eo __ aan lane ... |Justi¢e Horace Stern and Justice attention to\ work in this field, ‘Lower in ’ 0 | be 3 p.m. tomorrow at Sehnacken- “| KEEGO HARBOR — WSCS cir-|T, McKeen Chidsey of the state accrding to Rev. Teeuwissen Jr. | pwe ps by ac ‘berg Funeral Home with burial in y FOOSE RON Insure Your Home, Auto and cles of ep Ageing Church | Supreme Court, former U. S. Sen. | | LANSING (UP)—The State Lakeview Cemetery. | $ | are\ meeting week for 1 p.m. | George Wharton Pepper and Atty. “ |Health Department said today Jennie A. Mana ? 5 9 5 | Personal Property . | luncheons. Gen. 'Robert E. Woodside, of Har- Trial of Royal Oak Youth 1,508 persons have _ been | ROYAL OAK-[Service | tor Mrs | * WATERFORD INSURANCE AGENCY Clara Marshall meets today. with | risburg. | Dela ed in Sarnia, Ont stricken by |polio so far this Jernie A. Mann. 88, of n2 Bal rt, eon whrrs sad areha om eanes Mrs, po Duna away, a Beech- The Inquirer said a number of 7 u * | year compared to 2,288 at the win Ave., wil be at 3:30 pm.|1 McGREGOR Sh Shirts mont St., d with ; ARN ~ ial | . . ; 1 5660 Dixie Hwy. Woterteed OR 3-1872 ina Harold cana, : bop a Philadelphia attorneys also have S IA, Ont, (UP)—The trial | same time a year ago ort ‘LUXURY NOW Is the Time to Select Your Lay One Away for Christmas! ROCKER torcycle last night. elected Monday. They are Elmer Suggest State Jurist as Flaughener, présideat: Carles Vinson Successor Lyons’ motorcycle collided with | P oume ee oe by Sr pr| PHILADELPHIA uw + Pennsy)- Rd. Waterford Township, as both | Vania Supreme Court Justice John Vehicles were making a left turn | ©: Bell Jr. has been recommend ; ed to President Eisenhower by a from North Paddock street onto | group of prominent attorneys and ; the U.S. Supreme Court, the Phila- Richardson, vice-president; Clay- ton Soncrainte, secretary; and Ed Staley, treasurer. ° “Members of the board of direc- tors are Mrs. Mackinder, Mrs. (Springer, . Richardson, Ed Smith, | truck, said Head failed to signal. Denver’s ‘Doc’ Stork only one of his long-stemmed spe- cies at Denver's City Park zoo, is going to get a mate. Fittingly enough, she will be | paid for by the owner of a ma- | ternity clothing shop, Stanley A. | Levy. A female stork will be im- | ported from Europe next spring | a8 “Doc's” spouse. dean, of the University of Pennsyl- pastor of the Drayton Plains! brother was Keith Henry. Ush- | Vest Berlin | | vania law school, was reported by | church. | ers were Guy White and Gene Noah E. Sickles . | the Inquirer to be heading the’ The parsonage will be used as. HOWELL — Service for Noah E, | Keego WSCS Circles | movement to recommend Bell for a residence for a full-time pastor Sickles, 60, who died ih Dearborn Are Holding Luncheons St., tomorrow, Oil Heater Starts Fire at: Home in Brooklands ROCHESTER — An overheated oil heater was blamed for a fire | which early this morning caused | | an} estimated $125 damage at the | 'home of Ernest Temple of 3359) | Longview, Brooklands Subdivision. ‘Presbyterian Board |delphia Inquirer said today. The Inquirer said Bell, a Phil- Pennsylvania's two Republican | American Missions of the United senators, Elward Martin and | presbyterian Church of North Am- James H. Duff and Gov. John ‘erica has announced the purchase S. Fine, |of a parsonage here. Bell could not be’ reach imme-| The board has been actively in- diately for comment. \jterested in the development of the Former U. S. Supreme Court Pontiac Lake Community Church, Justice Owen J. Roberts, retired | according to W. J. Teeuwissen Jr.. | ' the high court, along with Chief who will arrive soon to devote full forwarded recommendations to _of a Royal Ogk, Mich., youth the President on behalf of Bell. | charged with careless and reckless The 60-year-old jurist has long driving was postponed Tuesday been active in civic and political | when Canadian authorities learned affairs and was active in ama-|he still was in serious condition as teur athletics|for many years. j|a result of a traffic accident which | killed his wife School Chief Identified The trial of Grant M. White, William J. |Emerson, Oakland |19, was re-set for next Jan. 22. He was charged after his car crashed County school superintendent, was s incorrectly identified in a Pontiac into a parked truck here Aug. 16. His 20-year-old wife suffered fatal GIGANTIC menter will be host Friday even- ing to the Cheery Chum group for the quarterly party which will be in the form of a “kid party.”’ | Each guest will come dressed as a child and bring a box lunch to exchange. Co-hostesses will be Mrs. Thomas (OTT {will be assisted by Mrs. Isaac Shook, Mrs. Lawrence Giddings, G. Henry of Auburn Heights. | Julia Anne|'is the daughter of |Mr. and Mrs.| Howard Wood of 88 | North Winding Dr., Drayton Plains. Fred's parents are Glenn Henry of Coleman and|/Mrs. John Bowman burn Heights, Detroit and Stur- gis. he carried a white | prayer book with a white orchid. | Maid of honor for the bride was ‘lusion veil. Mary Lou Martin of Pontiac. Mari- | Ivn Bonham and Bonnie Greer of Pontiac and} Shirley Jellison of | Sturgis were |the bridesmaids. Serving as best man for his Polio Count for State | | The department said 142 new cases were reported last week compared to 147 the previous | week and 315. during the same ‘week In 1952. Jail 12 College Students, ‘Seize Arms in Havana | HAVANA, Ciba w—Military in- telligence agents and police arrest- | dividuals. | of federation headquarters fired on police. Bright Flash Was Only Meteor, Viewers Told of Carinthia street, Auburn Heights. | Y U ° ° , The bride wore a gown of satin’ Dayid (Clara A.) Howe, 75. who ; O Will Be Given a Mate oat chteese Sun Ua tee ‘Purchases Parsonage and lace with a full skirt, a died yesterday after ajlong illness, b) . re ae i y al tr: i j]-| will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Bendle We are pleased to announce DENVER (®~"Doc'' Stork, the) state, had the endorsement of | PONTIAC LAKE — Board of cathedral train and a fingertip funeral Home with burial in Lake- McGREGOR WATERFORD — Mrs, Roy Pam- ‘had planned attacks on certain in-| The raid was made! Brooks, 80..of 125. Washington St, after occupants of a car in front| will be 2 |day \at the home of Mrs Alice Mrs. Nettie , Corbin and Mrs, Rudy Boss who}. MONROE (UP) — State Police Nettie A. Woods, 85. of 481 East said today they received numer- Cambourne Ave.. will be at 1 p.m: ous telephone calls from persons Thursday from Spaulding and Son | Heights, the new Mr. and Mrs. Fred G. Henry left for a honey- | — yee es ee moon trip in eastern Mlinois. After \their return they will reside on , Tempkin road, Pontiar. | | The bride is a graduate of Wa:-| terford Township High School. | Mount Clemens Street. Lyons,|? .j |Fangboner, Soncrainte and Staley.| Attending |the wedding cere. — 4 who was riding to the left of the | Ori°f* sustice, Fred M. Vinson of | sare **) mony: “were! 200, guests from County Deaths cast . Drayton Plains, Coleman, Au- Snap Bock on FIT INAL Mrs. Clara A. Howe HOLLY — Servi¢e for Mrs, Suede Jackets side Cemetery. Mrs. Mary C. Rice ALMONT-—Service for Mrs. Roy (Mary C.) Rice, 77, who died at | her home in Washington today, will be |3 p.m. Friday at Muir Broth: ers) Funeral Home with burial in SEVERAL COLORS to | Veterans Hospital yesterday, will | Wednesday at Algo-Gundry Funeral | Home, Flint, with burial in Or- | tonyille. She died Monday at Flint. | | | ° William Casebier | | ROYAL OAK—Service for Wil- | ‘liam Casebier, 73, of 1044 North | ‘Wilson Ave., will be at 2:30 p.m. | Thursday at Sullivan and Son Fwu- | neral Home with burial in Oak- | view Cemetery. He died Tuesday at Highland Park General Hospi- tal. $3.95 up f Green’s Ven's Wear—Shoes Next to Bank, Drayton Plains OXFORD — Service for Mary Genera] Insurance 4509 Dixie Hwy; OR 3-2476 p.m. tomorrow from Mabley Chapel with burial lin North | Oxford Cemetery. She died Mon- —_—, —_ Nationally Recommended O'Dell| at Thomas. A. Woods FERNDALE — Service for Mrs. 3 Q*> | Press photo Monday. He was iden- jh i rie ed 12 students and seized a large; Surviving are a daughter, Mrs,|7— 3 | Ode sire from Brooklands and| tified as standing at the left of 7 "'°S quantity of arms in a pre-dawn | Car| Edington of Royal Oak; a son, | Call or See i } hester answered the call at| the picture, while he actually was . | raid today at | the University of Newman of Port Sanilac: one | i - ! | about 3 a.m. | at the right. Waterford Cheery Chums’ Havana's student federation head- brother; one sister and five grand: | A . RB. B oO 7, i ’ uarters. ? Hold Quarterly Meeting Police ai children. ! A | j olice said aj group of students Mary Brooks lor 6” thick from exclusive LUXURY melds 'S-YEAR WARRANTY BOND Oh SR ORE eRe 4479 DIXIE HIGHWAY OR 3-2300' s The Largest Selection of Covers That You Will Find Anywhere! | AFew at $79.50 | | You Will Enjoy Shopping at DRAYTON Open Friday Eve ‘til 9:00 HOME i | DRAYTON PLAINS MODEL 870-B--Heats 4 to 5 rooms. Less tank, $69.95. Also + Di nair HARDWARE frpm $34.95. | } with a COLEMAN — america's teader in home heating Keego Hardware Warehouse 1° Osmun St. _ FE 2-6506 | EW LOW OPERATING COST Exclusive Coleman Fuel-Air Control saves up to 25% on fuel. Directionair Blewer blankets floors with warmth, increases warm air circulation. with cock beater FREE 2-12. Crystal Glassware set worth $1400 4 sizes, 8 glasses to 2 size. Stunning Western pettern, Get your set free with Coleman heater—today! ‘ John Bowman 4528 Dixie Highway Drayton Floor Fashions Drapes Slip Covers Accessories Banquet Room County Calendar quet Room Auburn Heights — Auburn ge ee eg | ancl — | hold 8 e clu { | Thursday. at aa The public is in- Phone: | ted. | Ortenville =} Women's Club will meet tomorrow at | @ OR 3-1907 OR 3-9303 12:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Nace . | | Smith gn Grange Hall road. Ldebdedeebebebetlted Ltt) oaieisiiimaiiaaiiaaiaeaatent DRESS-UP + White and Colors Custom Work On E. 'C. Whiteker f | Flulty Nylon |. ANKLETS |= Navy, oie Red, ' $439 | $5395 Up Phone OR 3-2552 siiteleiaiiioiott tit ttt ttititiliiiiliiiritttil it ff |Mrs. Marshall White, and Mrs. who thought a brilliant meteor Funeral Home with burial in ft ‘if | Claude Hoadley. which flashed across the south-| White | Chapel Memorial Park Ware, 4 oon mt : 4 { > , | . eastern Michigan skies was an air-| ¢ . She died Tuesday at ORD micHK O Coleman automatic cd heater-3 bonuses Guaranteed plane crashing in flames. ome AAA BECOMMENDEL A Troopers said the meteor, trailed; sufvyjvi i daughter, Miss | ie ee §6=6Makes heat, moves heat DRAYTON by a fiery tail,| appeared shortly fend Wilson of Ferndale. *| F & = ) through 4 to 5 rooms. Assures JEW EI ERS 9 ater 10 p.m. Tuesday and was @ Fresh Sea Foods you warmer floors, better health ° ‘ae The flesh tenetted ween ens: Bible School Staff Plans |™ @ Prime Steaks for the family. Get your heater A. . concen Prop rctt fend” Bar Gy aisepecerea Potluck D | hile special ison! 8 Moors North of the Bank lover Ohio. me of ve ane ‘ml @ Chicken and Turkey | + | DRAYTON PLAINS — Quarterly’ Dinners \ EW ir en a eee staff; meeting of the Bible school | { , e of Community United Presbyterian } @ Delicious ialti NONE GENUINE! LOW PRICE | Cha nge a Window }\ Church, Drayton Plains, will fea- ome Fopetenttes WITHOUT THE PRODELS PRICED AS LOW AS | | ture 'a potluck supper Friday at | 6 Be iful m ree = Styled for beauty. ¢ 95 Ch R one Rev Harvey Luce of South- LUNCH - D ERS LUXURY F Exclusive fk ensinosted for eff we | oe ange aq Koom |field | United Presbyterian Church, 0 E p , A cient performance. | | also chairman of Christian Educa- en) Lve ay: f ountryside Tapestry ‘ Economical. De- 1 oe Yeas - | tion of the Detroit Presbytery, will ? bd | f GOOD/YEAR y Cushion FE pendable. Others |address the group, +S ll OO ee eee eee ee 2. ee See The famous Leaning Tower of| In 1953, Americans were eating Pisa was started in 1174 A.D. It| butter at the rate of nine pounds started to list long before it was| per year per capita compared with finished in 1350 A. D. '17 potnds in 1940. ; WE’RE OPEN AGAIN! FREE of Extra Cost! | 1 Ib. of COFFEE with Every $5 Purchase Gift Baskets a Specialty/ | Pedi | | Jim : afere Necarate at 14 Pike Street... around the corner from Saginaw Street j WCTU Delegates Eye Signs for Prohibition DENVER (#—Delegates to the 73rd annual convention of the Colo- rado W.C.T.U., yesterday were told by national and state officials that prohibition may return to the nation sooner than anyone expects. Said Mrs. Fred J. Tooze, Evan- ston, Dl., national recording sec- retary: “The huge advertising cam- paigns by liquor interests are be- ginning to boomerang. Many peo- ple are becoming terribly con- cerned about the effect on young people, who have liquor presented to them as desirable through both ear and eye. “They're protesting.’’ The NEWS is ALL ‘OVER TOWN ! > tp about your | NEW / DEALER! a (X Chrysler-Plymouth - There’s a terrific GET-ACQUAINTED OFFER for ONE WEEK ONLY at Keller-Koch, Inc. Buy a new Chrysler V-8 at Regular Price and : for $1295 more, A BRAND NEW 1953 Ply- > mouth four door sedan. Stop.in for details! *. Ar F a: P KELLER-KOCH, Inc. | 479 S, Woodward Phone MI 6-1200 Birmingham 6,000 Bankers Conclude Meet Voting Today in Favor of Ike’s Policies; Liked Humphrey’s Speech WASHINGTON im—Some 6,000 bankers met today apparently in a mood to plump for freer trade and endorse key fiscal policies of the Eisenhower administration. The American Bankers Assn. held the final meeting of its 79th annual! convention. Resolutions cleared to the floor, and by tradi- tion almost certain of adoption, | would favor: ¢* * *« 1.\ The United States ‘“‘continu- | ing to open its markets increasing- ly to foreign goods.’’ { * * * 2. Federal reserve-treasury ac- | tions under a ‘‘flexible monetary policy—including flexibility of bond | prices and interest rates.” | 3. Balancing the federal budget jas a step ‘‘essential to the main- | tenance of a strong and stable economy.”’ The bankers also scheduled a talk by W. Randolph Burgess, deputy to Secretary of the Treas- | ury Humphrey, on management of | the 272 billion dollar federal debt. * * * Humphrey yesterday categori- cally promised the convention that tax cuts scheduled for Jan. 1—10 per cent in personal income tax | and abolition of the excess profits tax on corporations, would not be postponed despite ‘‘the real possi- | bility of an atomic Pearl Harbor hanging directly over our heads.” * s * | Additionally, Humphrey de- |clared that the recent stock mar- | ket decline does not look to him | like a disaster and that there is | ‘nothing to shiver about’? in the | prospect of somewhat iower busi- | ness activity, in some lines. | The bankers’ proposed resolution on foreign trade said in part: “We believe that the) United | States should live up to its inter- | national responsibilities ‘as the | world’s greatest creditor and pro- ducing nation by continuing to open its markets increasingly to foreign | goods."’ | Uneasiness was caused in many | banks in recent months as the new | administration supported and abet- ted the Federal Reserve policy of letting interest rates and govern- ment securities find their own | market levels.| This resulted in the | market value of billions of dollars | worth of government issues held by | banks falling somewhat, causing /paper losses on bank books al- | though the value of the securities at maturity remained unchanged. fo SR eg aera atest encnemee fe For deep piled texture see how ow nw Pn ed will give your rooms the air of casual spacious- ness which is so popular with home decorators in today’s trend toward comfortable living. 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WINDOW SHADE CLOTH "Tontine Looks Better Longer {YOt OOD o-zessine” io Du Pent’stagiotered wredes | Memphis, Tenn. ® 2 Schedules Daily © One-way Fare Only 15.45 | 'Army Escapee to Be Sent Back to Korea Group CAMP KILMER, N. J. WA young Army private, who escaped from a Korean stockade and said he reached the United States by boarding a troop transport, will be | sent back to Korea. Army authorities said the GI, | Pvt. John Galasso of Plainfield, would be taken today to Philadel- | phia, where he is to leave by plane | for the Far East. | Galasso, 21, surrendered here | Sept. 8 and told Army officials a story of, how he broke out of the stockade rather than face a court | martial, hitchhiked to the Korean | port of Inchon, and got aboard an | Army transport by paying $250 to a South Korean mobster, : > . At first, Army authorities were | But Capt. Louis E, Allendorf, act- ing public information officer at Camp Kilmer, said yesterday the 45th Infantry Division has con- firmed that Galasso had been miss- ing from the stockade since Aug. pb 1 * *¢ ® Galasso told of being taken from the Korean battlefront July 10 on a charge of deserting a machine gun under enemy fire. Galasso | said he left the gun to get more ammunition, Stevenson to Lunch ‘With lke Next Week venson will have lunch with Presi- dent Eisenhower at the White | House a week from tomorrow, to | summarize his observations on the |trip around the world which he | recently completed. The two, rivals for the presi- 'dency last year, met in Washing- |; ton shortly after Eisenhower took |office and the President asked | Stevenson then to make a personal report when he returned. White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty said yesterday that Eisenhower,) while vacation- ing in Colorado, had written to the former | Illinois vernor and re- newed the_invitation. Stevenson ted, Hagerty said, and yesterdpy fixed the date | by telephone. ‘Accidents Worst Enemy of Children SING ®—WMore children die of accidents in Michigan than from | all the infectious piseases of child- | hood) put together, | The State Heplth Department | warned today that accidents, not | diseaSe, are the greatest threat to |the lives of youngsters between | five and 14 year@ of age. Last year, the 276 youngsters The greatest motor car which 69 pedestrian cl five others were killed. ed in accidents. hazard was the took the lives of ildren. Twenty- passéngers when | lives, 19 died while riding bicycles | and tricycles and [14 were killed by accidental gunfire. : Apprex. Running Time 20 Hrs. 4@ Min. “Washington, D.C. ® 2 Schedules Daily ® One-way Fare Only 15.80 | Approx. Running Time 16 Hrs. 10 Min. - Jacksonville, Fla. © 2 Schedules Daily ® One-way Fare Only 20.95 inclined to doubt the soldier's tale. | WASHINGTON Adlai E. Ste- | department said, | .| Drownings claimed 38 lives, fires |and explosions in thé homes 29 Apprex. Running Time $2 Hrs. 45 Min. | Muskegon Man, 22, Killed in Collision GRAND HAVEN (UP) — Jack | Johnson, 22, Muskegon, was killed early today and two others were injured seriously in a ‘car-truck collision on US 31 two miles north of here. State Police said Johnson made a U-turn in front of a restaurant and his car was rammed broadside by a truck carrying a load of cherries from Traverse City to Jonesboro, Ark.) Taken to Hackley Hospita] at Muskegon were John- son's two passengers, Kenneth | Spira, 41, Muskegon and Miss Je- non Bisard, 19, Muskegon Heights. Truck driver ‘William Wilkerson, Jonesboro, was not injured. State Police said the truck carried the death car 165 feet down the high- | way before both vehicles skidded to a halt. Starts Campaign to Buy Gift Car for McCarthy HOUSTON (®—The head of a Houton printing firm has started a campaign to raise money for purchase of an automobile as a wedding gift to U.S. Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis). E. M. Biggers said he hopes to present the automobile to the sen- ator in time for the Sept. 29 wed- ding in Washington. McCarthy is to marry Miss Jean Kerr, former | member of his staff. | Biggers said contributions of from $1 to $100 are being accepted from Texans ‘‘who approve and appreciate the fine work being done by Sen. McCarthy.”’ | | ‘ FIVE Baby Hamsters Get the Better of Hobbyist PITTSBURGH @® Seymour N. Seltman was shopping around for a hobby last January and finally decided he would like to raise hamsters. { Yesterday, about nine months and severa hundred hamsters later he ¢alled the Animal Rescue Leagtie and asked for help. He ex- plained: “It was a nice hobby while it lasted. I built. some pens in the cellar and enjoyed! watchihg the little| animals. Pretty soon there were| 16 baby hamsters. Then they grew up and—oh, it’s a long story.” Seltman said he has given away or sold at least 1,000 hamsters since January and he wanted the Animal League to pick up 300 still at home because—‘‘this could go on forever.”’ About one-half the in- habitants of Kentucky are en- gaged in agriculture. Ugly (Advertisement) Eczema No Joke The itching torment of eczema is enough to make anyone wretch- ed and anxious. for relief. Suffer- ers from itching eczema, pimples, angry red blotches) or other irri- tating blemishes, get Peterson's Ointment, 45c all druggists. One application must delight you or money refunded. Also for itching feet, cracks between toes. (Advertisement) EAT ANYTHING WITH FALSE TEETH! If you have trogble with pieces thar slip aad and cause sore gums—try Brimms Plasti-Liner. One applics- tion makes places fic snugly aod tay that way. because Brimms Plasti-Lines is a permanem reliner. 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Cuuacis Hoaace P. Broors Rovssert Bassett Editor ' Advertising Manager Nat'l Adv. Mgr. Entered at Post Office, Pontiac, Mich. &s.second class matter MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The nebcutla Press is entitled exclusively to the us¢ for republigatiog of all local news printed in this news: Paper. as Well as all AP news dispatches. Tm Pontiac (Press is delivered by carrier for 40 cents & week; where ¢arrier service is not available. by mail tn Oakland afd adjoining counties it is $1200 a year: else- Te in —— and al) other places tn the United es $20 ri advance. year All matl subscriptions are payable Plone Pontiac FE 2-8181. MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23. 1933 == Eisenhower at Boston ' It was alsober and thoughtful rather than a fighting President EISENHOWER who spoke at Boston Garden. In this first of five speeches with which he {s to spearhead the 1954 Re- publican campaign the President obvi- ously intended to keep aloof from pure partisanship. He dwelt at length on his party’s past accomplishments, its present jdedication to the welfare of all and its) determination to preserve for today’s youth the promise of tomor- row. ° | x * * Only obliquely did he refer to recent opposition; criticism at Chicago when he, said: “Weiaspire to proving ourselyes more gifted in civics than) in theatrics. We are more concerned with today’s cares than tomor- row’s Headlines. We believe there is no cleverness of phrase that can ‘cover shallowness. of thought.” (ok kk At another point the President hit at those vahd accuse the GOP of stand- patism. Referring-to the party’s 100-’ year record he called it.the ‘clearest answer to the feeble but persistent myth that the Republican Party is sim- ply a conspiracy against change.” The | President was unusually solemn: in referring to the peril- ous times in which we live., Re- minding the Nation that our enemies are equipped with the most terrible weapons of destruc- tion, he said there is no labor, no tax, mo- service too hard for’ us to bear, to defend our freedom. In a cigar thrust at those who charge that Big’ Business has taken over the Administration, E1sgNHowER denied that the GOP is a captive party. Insist- ing that;the party is free he said that “each group in our Nation has special problems; None has special rights. Each’ haS peculiar needs. None has peculiar privileges.” } * * * { There may be those who feel the speech dealt too much with generalities and not enough with specific issues.. It is certain to irk those who insist that the GOP was born under the oaks at Jackson.’ But if it-lacked anything in inspiration for party workers, that was more than made up for by its wealth of sincerity, high purpose and political idealism: Injshort, it was a speech one would want the President of all the people to make by a leader who ¢an, has and no doubt later will Heal at length with specific issues. —__ Japan’s Aero Revival There are sound reasons for State Department approval of the recently ‘revealed interest being taken: by U. S. plane makers in révival of the Japanese aircraft industry. One Washington source says Air Force officials see such a revival as the only hope of ever being able to pull our forces out of Japan for use at other danger spots around the world. a ee, ee They also are reported believing that a strong aircraft industry in the Far East, with close ties to the American in- dustry afid integrated with it, has great strategic value. Despite heavy World War II bombing suffered by Japan, at the end of the occupation 314 usable aircraft plants were turned back to the Tokyo govern- ment. ‘Today the four largest Nip- ponese ‘plane companies’ plants are practically intact. The Korean War showed how valuable Japan's aircraft poten- | A | ; va 5 ‘ ¢ ; ? semana nee eat ste a we om tial could be to us. Our Air Force gave out numerous maintenance contracts and found that the Japanese were excellent workers and learned quickly. Most of the present activity of Amer- ican firms interested in moving into Japan has been confined to the sale of right to produce their models or parts. Included are Beech Aviation Co., Fletcher Aviation Co., Bell Aircraft'and Pratt & Whitney engines. _ wil wk ok | . Becayse aircraft design has pro- gressed rapidly in the last few years, Japanese industry needs technical help. Our Air Force is moving to provide that by bringing many Japanese engineers and production men to the U. S. Under study also are other means of speeding the attempts of the Japanese plane makers to get back into. business in Ja big way. All this is being done with the approval of the State De- partment and our own aircraft industry. A WoRCESTER, Mass., man who ¢ol- lapsed during the recent heat wave was wearing five coats, a vest, a heavy work shirt, heavy trousers and woolen under- wear. It is invariably a mistake to try to bluff a heat wave. Tue Government reports that it is two billion dollars better off than it had been thinking it was. This is somewhat comparable to old Gus Taxpayer find- ing some loose | change under a sofa cushion. THREE-DIMENSIONAL television _ pic- tures were recently shown in England. Perhaps before long we'll be ‘crouching behind the sofa to view. TV, so that we can dodge the stuff thrown Jat) us. The Man About Town. From a Wide Area ~Local Plant Employes Live in-133 Cities and Towns Daftynition Dollar: What doesn’t do as much as it “id— but neither does anybody else. Living in Pontiac or getting thelr! Er through this postoffice are 10,883 of the’ employes ot Pontiac Motor Division who work here. Algo coming here daily for their work at the same plant are men and women from 133 other cities and towns. Principal among these, with the number from each, are: Detroit, 622: Drayton Plains, 524; Lake Orion, 469; | Clarkston. 392; Rochester, 380; Oxford, 236; Milford, 229; Keego |Harbor, 228; Ortonville, 182; Auburn Heights, 169; Walled Lake, 161; Ferndale, 159: Birmingham, 153; Mt. Clemens, 133; Royal Oak, 128; Holly; 104; Romeo, 100; Flint, 99; North Branch 95; Lapeer, 94; Waterford, 91; Davisburg, 72; Brown City, 65; Imlay City, 59; Metamora, 4; Port Huron, 52; |Utica, 51; Berkley, 45: Capac, 40; Farmington, 39; Dryden, 36; Mayville, 36; Attica, 34; Washington, 34; Almont, 33; Fenton, 32; Leonard, 29; Columbiaville, 28; Clawson, 24; Kingston, 23; Silverwood, 22; Marlette, 21. * Then there are 91 other cities and towns with from one to 19 employes coming here. While not winning a majority of their 1953 games, : Clare W. Seery feels that the Detroit Tigers have usually given the spectators their; money’s worth. ee A eter just received from Harry W. -iann, professor of zoology at the University of Michi- gan, warns against building bird houses of metal. The birds’may be fooled into using them, aiid the results often are fatal. The aviati.n industry now claims that it is - safer to travel in the air than on the ground. In the year ending Aug. 31 the combined passenger fatality rate for domestic and inter- national carriers was one death for every 300 million passenger miles. ; Taking no chances on Michigan weather, a flock teen ee ee bay near the home of ; Arnold Creevy, | coming from the north ‘and taking oft for the south ;the next morning. ‘ Recent double production reports come from Lawrence J. Williams jot 2706 Livernois Road, who has a second crop of ‘blossoms on his pear trees, and Mrs. 0. C. Kingsbury of Lake Orion, wao has pears and blossoms on the same tree. After spending part of the summer in Texas, a Pontiac man who signs himself as “Baked, Fried, Reasted, Broiled, Dusted and Gassed,”’ writes that he favors statehood for Alaska, as that would make Texas the second largest state. And now the census figures show that three-fifths of the aute owners in the United States never sought a new car. Around Pon- tiac most of them look new. You May Be Interested to know that the early records of our county give the official name of Walnut Lake as ‘Black Walnut Lake.” EEE Verbal Orchids to— Mr. and Mrs. Harry O. Whitfield of 28 Oriole Road; fifty-fifth wedding anniversary. Mr. and. Mrs, Bert Frank 1 of Rochester; fifty-third wedding anniversary. gJigh) | “You Can’t Afford Not to. be ‘Able to Voice of the People Afford it’ W:; Downes Praises Schoo! Management but Warns City Needs New High School (Letters will be condensed when neces- sary because of lack of space. Full name, address and telephone number o/% the writer must accdmpanhy letters but these will not be published if the writer so requests, unless the letter is critica) ip its mature). 4 Our school board and our super- intendent of schools, Mr. Frank DuFrain deserve/a lot of credit for the added class rooms they have provided and the addition to our high school. They have been able to get the teaching personnel at a time when most schools are yelling their heads off to get a competent teaching staff. Ever hear that remark ’’our PHS is a mad house?’’ It is be- cause you, the citizens, are still asking your school board to cram them in. Go around to any other city of comparable size, look at their high school) facilities and you will come heme ashamed. Pontiac has talked of a new high school for over 20 years. Why don't we start a drive |now and give the school board some help. and stick to the pay ak you go plan. Give the school board 242 more —— —--__- +} ————— THOUGHTS FOR TODAY —— If thou shalt keep all these commandments to do_ them, which I command |thee this day, to love the Lord thy God, and to walk ever in hig ways; then , shalt thou add thrpe cities more” for thee, beside these three. — Deut. 19:9. * «* |e If we make religign our business. God will make it our blessedness. —H. G. J. Adam. mills and let them have the proper plant to do the job of educating your sons and daughters. Do you want to wait until some children have to go to school for a half day? It takes almost two years to get a high school built from the time the architect is se- lected, plans drawn and the con- tracts let, W. S. Downes 1801 “Opdyke After You He had just bought a toothbrush. “How about two of them?” asked the druggist. ‘‘One for your wife?"’ “No thanks! When I buy a new one, I always give her the old one,’ said the customer casually. Then, as the druggist and several others in the shop gasped, he added: ‘‘She uses) it to clean her shoes!"’ Soviet and West Spar Biggest Game of Bluf By DAVID LAWRENCE WASHINGTON — Is the biggest game of bluff in world history go- ing on between Soviet Russia and the United States? The maneuvers look like it — and so do the speeches emanating from Moscow .and Washington through official spokesmen. Thus Andrei Vishinsky demands not only the prohibition of atom and hydrogen bombs but the de- molition of all U. 8S. bases abroad — which would, of course, leave the Red Army, with its vast reserve of manpower, unaffected for use In convention- al warfare. Secretary of the Navy Robert | Anderson makes a speech saying he thinks the use of atom and hy- drogen bombs will be neutralized | just as was chemical warfare and that, if war comes, fought with conventional weapons. President Eisenhower makes a speech which, anced budget and tax reduction, sounds like he is trying to offset any impression abroad that civil- ian pressure for economy would be allowed to reduce the program for atomic armament and the means of carrying the new yreapons to their targets. He says “No tax, no labor and no service’ would be too hard to bear “to support a necessary and logical defense of our freedom.” What is the meaning of these public exchanges of viewpoint — this warfare by headlines? The game isn’t being carried on just by official spokesmen, either. There is a demand from scientists here and abroad that everything be published now — how to make atom and hydrogen bombs and the Aunt Het it will be | in the face of de- mands inside America for a bal- | data on how many America has made already. This crusade against further secrecy has been {taken up by a school of thought) which thinks that if the Russians really knew how far ahead we) are today on bombs — both quantitatively and ‘qualitatively — t wouldn't try to start any wars. * | There's anothe school of thought, however, | which thinks Soviet Russia is| trying _ hard, through every device of propa- ganda and infiltration into scien- tifie circles, to get America to disclose what her atomic program | really has been and will be in or- der that the Soviet campaign for disarmament and equalization of )} strength may be carried on even more effectively by the Soviets. * * * { Meanwhile, the Communists have succeeded in scaring some of the political parties in Europe, if not jall the governments. The mere mention by the Rus- } slans of how easy it is to drop ; an atom bomb on any European | capital if America launches an ; atomic war of defense is enough | to cause the Allied governments to beg for a peaceful course, even | if it savors of appeasement. ') The demand for admission of Red China into the U. N. is wide- spread in Europe because of a be- lief that this’ will immediately cause Soviet Russia to become peaceful or ‘‘reduce tension.” | But, as the Vishinsky speech has already indicated, Soviet Russia isn’t going to ‘be satisfied by a settlement of Far Eastern ques- tions. She demands also the dis- solution of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the scrap- ping of the European Defense Army iflea. * * * , Looking at the other side of the picture, there is no doubt that Mos- cow knows of the power of the American air forces — both those ring by Speeches f in World History these become, merely ‘‘calculated risks,”" America’s program of a quick retaliation by airplanes and missiles is still the most power- ful threat ever conceived by the mind of man against an enemy power — and thp Soviets know it. This threat of retaliation, more- over, can be maintained now by a reasonable expenditure annually without breaking up the Amefiran economy. The budget can ‘be balanced at the same time that the game of bluff and counter-bluff goes on for years with no actual war, for the simple reason that no people any- where will sanction’ an offensive war. That's why the Soviets figure they can infiltrate America as they have Italy, France and Britain. They think they can get concessions from governments and cabinets that are bluffed by a Russian threat. Complacency on the ‘‘infiltration front” is growing in America and in many countries also where the “cold war’’ is spreading through exploitation of local issues. That's the bloodless way by which the Soviets mean to achieve dom- ination of the governments of the ‘free world’? — and along with it, America’s disarmament, which is their real objective. (Copyright 1953) Case Records be a Psychologist | Says Limerick Contests Financially Worth Prize contesting is a dandy hobby for everybody. But it is especially fine for invalids and folks who have, retired after passing the age of 65. This:hobby helps weld husband and \wife together. It offers millions in cash prizes, and is mentally quite educational. But watch for the pitfalls! By DR, GEORGE W, CRANE Case H-393: Louise F., aged 28 is a young housewife who has_re- cently become a prize contest fan. “‘Dr. Crane, after reading your column about contesting a few months ago, I made the plunge,” she said, with a smile. “And I won an electric ate washer on my 9th entry, so it was well worth the effort. Besides, my husband works with me, and we find that contesting serves as an ideal mutual hobby. “It is mentally stimulating, too, for we must consult encyclopedi- as for information. “But here's a new problem I haven't met before. A New York writer offers to furnish the | box tops and write the contest entry for anybody, all for a $10 fee. “In; other words, he'll send’ me everything and all I must do is sign my name to the contest let- ter, Di seas he has written it. But an Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE I do not love you for myself . Or what I want to do... There simply |is no other one : .|As wonderful as you... I love you for ‘yourself, my sweet|, . . With all the heart in me .}... And wish you all the happiness ... That there could ever be ...I want to be of service, dear ... In every way I cam... And that includes the mop and broom ,.. And every) frying pan... Yes, I will -help. you keep our house . Our lawn and flower-beds - And I will kiss your lips each | | time The pansies raise} their heads .. . Of course, my dear, I do expect ..-. A little jin return . But after we are wed, there will... Be time for you to learn. (Copyright 1953) Baering Down By ARTHUR (BUGS) BAER ' \Internattonal News Service Putting your finger on the Euro- ——_——— pean jsore spot is playing tiddly- winks) with moon beams. It's jumped from Berlin to Trieste like thread follows a needle. Which gums up the cards worse than moistening your dealing thumb with raspberry jam. Trieste was Italian before the Venetians grabbed it around 1272. Along about 1384 the Austrians caught the Venetians with their tides; down. Some people think the Venetians got a shade the worse of it. Trieste was Austrian over five centuries until Italy hooked up with the Allies in World War One. Then jshe got Trieste back as a reward for immobilizing the Alps. The screwball poet D’Annunzio invested his two cents by flying over the disputed. territory on . alternate Tuesdays. He dropped enough pamphlets to paper via Appian the long way. Itally got a testimonial mandate over Trieste, 1919. Which was a vintage year for Woodrow Wilson's international gripes. Woodrow di- vided all Europe with mathemati- cal impracticability. Along about 1946-Marshal Tito ° put in a claim for Trieste but was blocked by Pemier De Gasperi. The lads had a looking, duel |with daggers. When Tito broke away from Stalin and put in another bid, we that Tito broke away from the main body. But so did the chunk of. iceberg that sank the Titanic. The joint is under Anglo- American protection and things touchier than fingerprint powder. ‘ over, he wants his $10 ghost writing fee in advance. Should! I do s0?” No, this sort of ithing not only Violates the spirit of the usual con- test, but even if you were to spend $10 to have a N Yorker , write your entry, you §$till have no guarantee that you, will win any- thing thereon. i Moreover, you | stimulation of digging: out. the facts from an encyclopedia.| And there is no longeg any mutual hobby for yourself jand your hus- the mental band or wife, if have been working contests to- gether. i Besides, if a professional ghost writer could be sure of winning the | big prizes, he would submit his entries in his pwn ‘name or that of his relatives. f For in many national contests nowadays, the top prize may be $10,000 in cash or even more. So many talented) writers enter prize contests, since that is big money in any man’§ language for just a 100-word letter. | Previously I have told you that Mrs. Crane and devoted al- most the entire first year of our marriage to prize pareeine: We won dozens of prizes, ranging from: $1 up to a cauple of $1,000 first prizes. But “h our best, I doubt if we won more than once out of eight times. We were bush leagners compared to many contestantg. I have met men who spend ther entire time as professional confestants. They have elaborate suites of offices, filled with the ad ncyclopedias, etc. And they have tw or three sec- retari¢s who do ndthing but dig up material for their contest en- tries. |For contesting is financial. ly worth while, | But Mrs. reel and T soon learned to stay away from any type of contest which requires you to qualify your entry with anything more t a boxtop or soap wrapper, etc. Beware of contests which offer in this class. They endlessly. And their purpose jis often to at. tract ‘‘sucker lists’} of names, which can later be gold for direct mail advertising lists. Stick to limerick tests or those that ask for 25- to 100-word letters, or that want you to name products. Read the rules with double care, Prepare neat entries with a little color for extra eye-ap- peal, And proofread your entry with diligence! | For further specific edvine on prize contesting, send for my btle letin on “How to Write Salable Copy,”’ enclosing a stamped return envelope plus a dime, Many of you have won automo: biles and big cash prizes by fol- lowing the advice therein. Copyright, Hopkins Syni#icate, Ine. From Our Files 15 Years Ago 250 DIE IN New England hurri- cane; property damage totals mil- lions. MAJ. GENERAL (Oscar West- Chief of the U. S. Air Corps is killed in plane crash. PREMIER CHAMBERLAIN again meets Hitler in last des- perate effort to save peace. 20 Years Ago “ FIVE. BANDITS kill | policeman after U. S. Bank holdup; lopt is worthless. ECONOMISTS SEEK steadier dollar; administration oh ia to end fluctuations, ADM. RICHARD EL | «BYRD’S second great Antarctic expedition gets under way. | Dr. Brady Quits Fighting but Prefers Tincture of lodine at Seven Per Cent By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. There seems to be a concerted effort to stop me recommending plain old boric acid in the family medicine cupboard. Frankly I don’t feel particularly concerned about discarding boric acid. But the alleged discovery that this familiar old standby of hospital and domestic medicine is too ‘‘poi- sonous” to keep in the family trived when contr with the extraordinary silence of medical and health authorities and the druggist regarding the lethal ef- fects of acetanilid, container to learn what you are taking . Through two decennial revisions of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia on the strength or form of iodin I tried earnesly to conform with these frequent and unaccountable changes. Then the physicians, pharmacist chemists, manufacturers, profes- sor and therapeutists revising the Pharmacopoeia abruptly threw out Mild Tincture of Iodine (delete the final e if you have no idle time to kill), a 2 per cent strength liquid introduced expressly to supply the They substituted a preparation of similar strength, I believe, called weak solution or something of the sort. That | tore it. The heck with it, I said, I shall) no longer junk printings of pamphlets and book- lets and answer hundreds of let- ters from people confused by these periodic changes of fashion, For Tenia ele as ma genous iodin—that is, iodin from the sea, mother source of all the iodin or iodide in the world — and this is the only iodin I recom. . mend for internal use, as de scribed in the pamphlet the Iodin Ration. Iodine in the United States or vir- tually the same thing, called Weak Tincture or Surgical Tinc- ture of lodine Canada. | This liquid is approximately 2 per cent, whereas the Tincture of Iodine which was standard 30 years ago contained 7 per cent of iodin, - Signed letters, not mo ning words i diagnosis or treatment, "wen be; by Dr. Brady “ a eomees. i . dressed envelope ts . (Copyright 1953) 0 Fe The THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 Sale! Non-allergic rubber 21x27 Feather aay Bed pillows itt et olen |i2™'S Soft buoyant non-allergic foam 3 o © one “surkey, 73% a i . 2p 70 Y, (2°0 rubber pillow. Percale cover. 4 chicken feather filled! JUMBO SIZE (Sec.) ....6.44 Linen-finish tick. tm QM Double plaid 50% wool Pepperell blankets comforters blankets { Easy Terms Easy Terms Warm, yet ‘light weight 50% wool, 50% rayon’ Famous Pepperell quality tor sleeping comfort. filled! Feelthe luxurious rayon-nylon blankets! 72x Many assorted plaids.5% comfort of these rayon 90 size, 41% lb. blankets. wool. 95° cotton. Rayon satin reversible comfort- Wide satin. binding. Sec- sheen bound, 70x80. ers. Buy now and save! onds. Rich pastel colors! TTR I I Le i eine te ed lalla snatch aude nia Naat ana ae a EE BET te ta 20x26 Pillows stripe ticking 5.44 Easy Terms 20x26 Down 27x54 Cotton 27x50 cotton 22x36 bath 20x36 Woven 22x36 cotton Bed Pillows Loop Rugs oval sheen rug Mat Set Yarn Rugs oval braid rugs 844 297 266 369 23 166 Easy Terms 90% white duck, 10% All white down for Sensational low price. Thickly tufted cotton . Gay assortment of col- Cotton yarn throw rugs Multi-color weave pat- down filled bed pil- comfortable sleeping. Long cotton loops, non- rugs, border and cen; ors in CHENILLE, in plaid patterns, fring- tern. Reversible for lows! Striped ticking. Linen finish tieking. skid backs. ter oval. 8 colors. |. matching lid coyer. ed ends. Reversible! double wear! White sheet blankets 2.22 Extra-large 80x99 size in soft, fleecy cotton! Oh-so- warm for winter sleeping comfort! Soft nap on both sides. Irregulars. Hurry! 25% wool blankets 3.99 Large 72x84 size, light and fluffy 25% wool, 25% rayon, 50% cotton! Bright wash-wonder col- ors! Warm, luxurious! Mahogany-finish glass top tables 6.88 Over 100,000 loops for luxury, longer wear “Easy Terms 9x12-ft. R: A luxurious low pile looptwist rug that will transform any room into a decorator’s dream. Over 100,000 thick twisted cotton loops firmly anchored in a plast- icized non-skid back . . . won’t ever pull out! The pile stays clean, retains the beauty and color that you find only in cotton... and it feels wonderful underfoot. Many decorator colors to choose from! You must come in and see these to appreciate the unusual price! FEDERAL dept. stores Leave Qos) esarenee ae Si Pee Ln | PURE pers VO OL Se NN | PS OPEN) UR Ye: La pee 2) reat merece (02 Ura EC Nu eM ee | Imagine! 22 karat gold decorated glass tops except step tables in exclus- om ive period styling at such a price! End, lamp, cocktail or step tables. 2.50 down 5.00 month . 7, . \ You can afford to stock up now! $1108 SHEETS 188 Abhh, Mrs.. Homemaker, this is a value that you can’t Hurry, they'll sell out fast! Extra large, sturdy 81x108 double or 72x108 twin. High count white muslin, wide hems. Permanent size tabs. Matching Pillow Cases ........... erry me | SAGINAW AT WARREN PONTIAC OPEN MON FRI. SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 Won’t wrinkle! Needs no ironing! FITTED SHEETS «in 177 size Using fitted sheets now? If not, try them AND take advantage of Federal savings! They fit snugly over mattress, won't wrinkle! No guy 88 ironing, Sanforized, long-wearing muslin. size 42x36 Franklin Percale Pillow Cases, 39¢ MTT it ETT Mahogany veneer Limed-oak veneer period pieces modern styling 10.99 10.99 Beautiful period styling in extra- Match these values if you ¢an! Hand- LARGE SIZES, hand-rubbed finishes. some modern styling in hand-rubbed Step, cocktail, lamp and end tables all finish limed-oak veneer. End, lamp, at this phenomenal 10.99 price! step, cocktail styles. SAVE! Modern or traditional CHINA LAMPS ssa 810 iron. Select these now for gifts as well as for your home! Complete with Shede ‘ Easy Terms afford to pass up... not a thrift-smartie like you! - ~Qede oe THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 sat ted Seaceeees : - 2 “ ite Sele pate “Sheep . yee Pa a os t9 a $e * t. ‘ of 4 <> . po a ¥ 4 v % 4 = e Huge special purchase " DRESS = SALE See P : * ‘ x ew ~ . os ‘ i : t x > { y } ™ . a } x 4 ¢ > ws \ ~~ * o * $ © . ~ 4 » | : : . " z . : 3 é ; ‘ @Casual, dressy, coat, 1 & 2-pc. styles for a price smashing Super orlon SWEATERS 2°99 499 slipons cardigans NYLONS |. % ¥ ‘ whit Pe ee Fa a eo Ps 5 £4 we a PAR ') “First quality | ‘ @ Newest fabrics, most-wanted colors : : Soft 100% orlon higher prio- aS 3 pairs $2 : @Sizes 9-15, 10-20, 1612-2412, 46-52 i pe ig crag lt ) ‘ “4 | | lar. snspe raining | jiffy- ; mi ou a drying cardigans, slip-ons, “es * dopen ae a hag hi 1 Federal’s combed the markets to obtain this collection White pastels. 34 to 40 in | ses with ankle-flattering is a of higher pricéd dresses and snapped them up to bring : eel line} dark seams. Cos- . ‘iim them to you at the astounding low price of just 5.95! ~ + tume-keyed shades. 814-11. H f " Be first in line to make your choice from casual rayon os + deninis, tweeds, gabs, flannel, menswear; party-bound | ] | dressy rayons. All colors and sizes in group! | ae ; |} ~ a4 i) & & : . : ’ yo FLANNEL-LINED MATCH-'EM-UP SETS | | : : | e Lined poplin 3 4. 4 : JACKETS — . e i Sturdy Sanforized poplin jackets lined with cozy f i L plaid cotton flannel. Zipper closing. Snug cuffed . : Nylon tricot 3 sleeves. Red, navy, green. Sizes 10-20. Save now! Top success 1 | SLIPS |. Plaid flannel 2 44 SUITS i : i _ | i Tailored tops to match your flannel-lined jeans! Soft S$ 4 at cotton flannel in gaily colored plaid. Long sleeves. | ly e | Sanforized. Match your set now! Sizes 10 to 20. | a | iz Flannel-lined New bo les! slimly fit Layishly oe rt iy ae | | : JEANS 3 44 ted, Stone. isabeooa f ae ti t wash an Ina |: ? : : ¢ flash aiid tequire no ironing. | e CREDIT SHOP — Fea et ee USE FEDERAL’S ewer ) Some tailored styles, too. | |) | Zip-closed and Sanforized 8-o0z. twill or denim jeans : 20. 164-24 | White or pink. 32 to 40. oj lined in cozy cotton plaid flannel, to complete your PURCHASE fp. 9-15, 19-20, 167-24 3 outfit. Navy, black, red. Save on these. Sizes 10-20. COUPONS A i t | emmmanera- boa meron ten = 7} \ , Women’s novelty style fall dress shoes Women’s playshoes and casuals SALE —~ se Thrift value! Popular go-everywhere roam- ers, sturdy leather saddle shoes. Sizes 4-9. Heavy duty rubber zipper style boots. Sizes 7 to 3, Women’s, girls’ sports style 3 5 G rind ree 3 88 ru r Save on better play shoes * > Dainty strap style sandals, hi-lo, and casuals! High - style $4 and cuban heel pumps to name but long-wearing norzon and ‘ ae a few of the lovely new shoe fash- fabrilite in low heeled styles Boys’ four- 3 SS Boys re 3 88 Class- me 288 ions waiting for your selection now and dramatic ‘California’s’. . buckle boots style oxfords at F I’s. Black velvet-touch nor- Red, black, brown. 4 to 9, four- Sturdy brown leather with Boys’ U-wing oxford. Brown, Big savings on zon. Sizes 4 to 9. Come early! backie ¢ arctics. 11-2, 214-6. heavy duty soles. Sizes 10-3. wine. Sizes 84/2-12, 1244-3, as FENERAL SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC TI dept. storeS OPEN MON. FRI. SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 = - 7 - - EE Ne ae ATTIRE PRICE OPEN FRI, NIGHTS TO ) F SMASHING as well as Saturday and Monday . . | | ) Sensational pre-Christmas toy values! Terrific savings Sorry ... no phone orders, no mail orders, None sold to dealers! i Exciting variety! Mary Hartline Baton. 29” Complete Cleaning Set. Howdy Doody Hand Pup- Skor Ball. Bagatelle game of | Walking Doll. Just wind — Spanish Darts. Metal back Water Tower. Complete | Charmart Jewelry. Educa- baton for big brother or sister. | Carpet sweeper, broom, dust pets. Moving eyes. Howdy skill. Playing area enclosed in cute little boy or girl walks board with 6 throwing darts. your young engineer's train tional, useful for boys, girls, 22" for small pros, Safe! 88¢ —_ pan for wee housekeepers. 88¢ Doody and his friends. 88c unbreakable plastic. 88c = and plays. 91,” tall. 88c Safe and interesting. 88c° set with this tower! 88c Makesreal jewelry. § 88¢ * , 2 ’ r= See tee) of Modeling Clay Set. 2 metal Doctors Kit. Microscope, Ring TossGame. Indoor, Croquet Set. 4 big mallets, Carbine type cork gun. Nurse Kit. Wrist watch, Poster Paint Set. 26 paint & 4 plastic molds, clay roller, slate, box of chalk, crayons, | eye-and-ear tester, thermomet- _ outdoor play. 2 wood baards, 4 balls, 9 wickets, 2 posts. 2314” long. Walnut stock. blood pressure gauge, hot wat- _—tablets, pan, palette, brush, clay ‘and instructions. 88¢ eraser, cutouts, pictures! 88¢ er, reflector, and others. 88¢ = 4 dowels, 3 rings. 88 Play on lawn orrug! 88¢ Lever action. Scorks. 88¢ er bottle, other supplies. 88¢ 4 pictures. 88c Liceage me cae | Pasty Set. Rolling pin. pota- = Wall Blackboard. Larg¢ Transportation Set. 7 toys to masher, egg heater, pie 24x18 inch composition black | . in colorful box. Garage, cycle, ° pans, other utensils, 88c beard, wood chalk tray! 88¢ auto, ship, plane. 88c i ” ¥ 7 , ; * / &: No £ iz io po a 2 Rocket Space Ship. Friction Plastic Tea Set. Service for type motor. Shoots sparks as _— two. 14 life size! pcs. Cups, it speeds. 9x4x214, 88c knives, spoons, ete. ARS ws rete Friction Hot Rod, Plastic + = Telephone with bell. Dial—| Pantry Set. 4 cannisters, Caliope Clown. Jolly pull- Doll Cradle. Heavy lumber hot rod runs on friction mot- and the bell rings. Realistic!; | measuring spoon, cookie cut- p> toy plays real music. Clown construction. Large 12x20x or, rubber wheels. 88¢ Black plastic. 88c ters, cake box, ete. 88c on wagon bounces along 88¢ = 101 size holds big dolly. 88¢ nee cinccenrnes Cece he ae # - a? ; ; tai. hii ty Sins ; pte. é Musical Travel Kit. Magnus Texan Jr. Cap Pistol. » Mechanicol Racer. Fashion. Climbing Tank. Styled on Bingo. Bingo cards, wood Fast Freight Set. Metaltone Super Highway Set. Car, harmonica ,and keymonica in Shoots smoke with standard — ed after famous racers. Metal army tank. Steel mechanism, counters, tally sheet, embossed _ train set complete with 4 cars, Fascinating set for entire fam- —_ bus and truck on super high- colorful travel bag. 88¢ caps. Engraved barrel. 88¢ __ tites, driver in seat! 88c —s_ gun turret, brake. 88c _ plastic numbers! 88c —s engine, caboose! 88c __ily. Many scenes. 88c way. Authentic detail! 88¢ » wieoveaesnibedb tienen 2 > » Metaltone Tableware. 4 Leather Craft. Boys’—girls’ ‘Spoce People. Space family, Peg Chest. Wood chest with Front Loader Dump Truck. sets. Materials, wood tool and = S men, 3 women, 3 boys, dress- = metal handle. Blackboard, Heavy gauge steel body, plas- _— chest! 18 pieces of flatware in _—zellophone with metal keys. must! Sturdy board, 8 color- colors, overall decor, Turn instructions. 88c — ed as space people. 88 _— punch board, tools. 88< tic cab. Front scoop. 88¢ unusual chest. 88¢ Educational, fun! 88c _— ful pegs, mallet. 88¢ crank and it plays tunes. 88¢: sp es ad Ba 8 Pound A Peg. Pre-school Cowboy Ge-Ter. Striking 4 Bat Zellophone. Colorful plastic Sf MS 57% Mama and Electric Games. Rea} action Tunnel. Collapsible metal _ Torpeda Shooting Subme- Conestoga Schooner. Repli- ametof electric football. Skill- —_ tunnel with landscape design. _ rine. Authentic sub with two a of covered wagon, Canvas 3 ducklings quack and waddle ___ sailor actually rows boat as carded bow and arrow sets. 3 _ tic junior size basketball and l yet\ easy to play. 88c Complete the train set. 88¢ plastic torpedo tubes. 88¢ cover, steel carriage. 88< = when pulled along! 88c¢ child pulls it along! 88c safe suction arrows. 88c _easy-to-erect net. 88e = as. ow Boot. Archery Set. Little Beaver | Jr. Besketbell Set. Authen: Quacky Family. Racing Jolly SACINAW AT WARREN. PONTIAC EDERAL dept. stores OPEN MON. FRI. SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 a } ¢ { | . ee qe - gar ere ge ogg > ee ee ee ee = oy eee) eee eee oe iain , eee Oe ee ewe ee eee eee ee ae A i« Ee en ee ee ee Caen ene i a 4 rf ee ae | Fe Ae At a ee TEN GOOD-BYE CORKS THE PONTIAC PRESS, Coronation Cake | WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 Airliner Makes It's a good idea once in a while | to scrub zippers with a/ well-sudsed | 1953 Knights Think Night Time to Joust (Advertibement) Now Many Wear ay fates the ‘lain as fast as he could after the landing. Told | that several small | chil ily remove roe tooth brush before laundering the min Es ates Some es erg | Amie c ereeeel NOt fo Geltaten., | goeaby Suzed Heer eed at] FALSE TEETH pada. Cost Gut « trifle. Ge imbedded particles that prevent) | the Biltmore Forest Country Club's | the ir saf identified f | golf course, deputies sheriff trailed} APPOMATTOX, Va. It was their safety, hanes par With Little Worry | Crash Landing Ss. the zipper pull from| sliding, D! Scholls ss pad jthe hoof marks of horses. Upon | quite an operation — getting this | smoothly along the prongs, the greens they found the turf “They must oe prayed awful | | kat, talk, laugh or sneege without fear i ot i false teeth d ing, atogies | te, by iron shoes, From a nearby | Piece of cake to Mrs. John a All On Board Escape ‘ast. as we got around pretty |G wopbling. PASTEETH bods plate : quick.’! firmer and more comfprtably. This : | pond they fished up the bridles. In| Moore. But eat jit? Not on your ; shrubbery they discovered hidden | life. | shddles. The tracks led back to the! The 4 by Injury After One Engine * | | Sensors, powder bee no (meee Geer, | I ] F k Bursts Into Flames The gibbon is the most oxi | ate cdot’ i@patie breath), * Get reath) OO SS SC —e5 — . es a ”~ a , al ~ > SPECIALS Wood. Comb. Basement Storm Sash . $2.50 Wood Comb. Doors, any size ......$16.95. Wood Comb. Storm Sash, 24x24 size $11.20 Aluminum Comb. Self Storing Storm Sash WWI} Hit Free Estimates C. WEEDON HOME EQUIPMENT CO. 1661 'S. Telegraph Rood FEderal 4-2597 A } 1 Ask own doctor about it. : | ber, 1806, and 31 men were in the | in their seats until the plane came | = S|, 1 Block South of Orchard Lake Road F Sappository ru of in tubes with per- | NEURITIC - | Official party, The entire trip was to a complete stop, then make a Rms. 2 & 3 FE 2-2895 — See Yellow Pages 103, 130 or 194 in Phone Book ve on yroe Sor cosy eppliessine | SIS ele | made on a budget of $2,500, ac-| break for the escape hatches. 15 W. Lawrence = ae Seg F cording to the National Geographic | Stewardess Jan Minnick, Wabash "til 9 mill a NG fei es = | : Fe ane ee | 6 inch slice; of F is| | unencumbered by warriors’ mail, | Annie Truman of| Beckléy, W. Va., plumes or swords, had swiped the | whose daughter) married Mrs. animals, charged across the course | Moore's son. Mrs. Truman has a/| and jousted in the starlight, using | sister who lives in London and flagstaffs of the green markers as her son is a member of the guard | their lances. 'at Buckingham Palace. | And the cake is a slice of the | one baked egpecially for the coron- ation of Queen Elizabeth. Each | guardsman was given a slice, and | this particular guardsman’s, mother ; sent it to Mrs. Truman who sent it to Mrs. Moore. (Advertisement) AMATING NEW PAIZO ACTS TO REDUCE SWELLING or smrtt PILES... RELIEVE AGONY INSTANTLY! etter than ever! | Paso acts to relieve pain, itch- instantly. Soothes inflamed) tissues 4 —- lubricates dry, hardened parts— helps ’ prevent cracking, soreness, reduces swelling, You get real comforting help. New Paso won't cause Dept ASPIRIN Jf RELIEVES | new stainless, ‘AZO ' t bine and dong paaktaai Get fast | *Paae Oiniment and Supposierses® belly landing here yesterday said | 37 homeward bound Korean vet- erans should be congratulated on | their calmness. ; | The passenger, who refused to be identified, told the Associated | Press there was no panic. None was injured. Seven crew members, aboard also escaped harm, BACKED FOR U.N. JOB—Lt.- Gen, Raymon A. Wheeler seems | likely to be named head of the * * * The’ C46 twin-engine Caribbean- | American Airlines plane was car- rying the soldiers from Seattle, | Wheeler was chief of engineers of | ‘the U.S. Army until his retirement in 1949. sas City. The plane was airborne before it was noticed that the right en- gine was\afire. As it circled the city, crew members opened- three | escape hatc em * * Passenglrs were told to remain / The Lewis and Clark expedition | from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Coast and back again lasted from May, 1804 to Septem- Society. | Ind., a small blonde, said everyone BIFOCALS ALL FIRST QUALITY == | Biltmore Forest Stables, where cake topped with lemon icing is | i all the monkey family. | H at any drug store. doors stood ajar. something special. Here's how Mrs. MILES/ CITY, Mont. u}—A pas- Deputies finally ferreted the! Moore happened tto get it: senger in the non-scheduled air- | | facts: two young knights of 1953,, She received the cake from Mrs. | plane that caught fire and made a | CHOICE OF MANY STYLES e { a = 9 LENSES and FRAMES ONLY 4 360 © SAVE THE MIDDLEMAN’S PROFIT * FAST, COURTEOUS SERVICE * FULLY GUARANTEED * FINEST QUALITY—-LOWEST PRICE * SENSATIONAL OFFER NU -VISION Open 9-5:30—Fri, OPTICAL COMPANY Admiral combination RADIO-PHONO ~Y - ~~ o J Sonat 4 SE oe Oa Enjoy football on this big 17-in. ADMIRAL , z ‘ oe ages | ec oe a OCC N © reson | ADMIRAL 54 Costs no more than most small screen sets! 21° TABLE MODEL TV Now! The all-new Admiral 21” table model: TV that costs no more than most smaller screens of other makes! So pow- erful it sets a new performance standard . . . even in fringe areas. Acro-Matic self-focusing picture tube presents the image just as the camera sees it . .. in striking blacks and whites! New one-dial tuning for both WHF and VHF sta- tions. Mahogany plastic cabinet. 19 95 Easy Terms PAY NO MONEY DOWN AT FEDERAL’S! PAY LATER! PRICES INCLUDE DELIVERY AND WARRANTY ON PARTS Beautifully-styled Admiral 2i"" PONSOL? TV FEDERAL dept. stores OPEN MON. FRI. AND PICTURE TUBE 21” screen on this Admiral 3-WAY CONSOLE Plays all records with Biggest 17” table TV New styling plus 21” eonsole TV with | 95 buy anywhere! 17” Ac- 95 code chassis ee nek built-in 3-way phono- 95 A ro-Matic picture tube Bosy performance, Sil ph and AM radio. r gives brightest pio- Terms dial UHF-VHF Sssloomaly styled. Rosy come tures. Ebony cabinet. . Mabogeny fiat finish. Mahogany cabinet. Terms SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 | ing relief | ——— U.N. Relief and Works Agency for j Size 24x24 5... 1... .. $15.95 ret |S ee cen coe pa aaggli et. | Wash., | Boston and Baltimore _ COMPLETE | STAINLESS! | pie piles with new | ae aril comekens dwith inores | It had landed in this eastern Mon- rer ; Misc, Aluminum Comb. Doors .... $37.50 =) Toate! bela Spl ae | is primarily concerned with improv- | tana town of 10,000 to refyel. The ONE : | | ing Arab-Israeli problems. General | ,.,+ stop) was to have been Kan- Py ted 3 i THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1953 Danny Thomas Turns Platter Cash O Bra Today’ s Television Programs -- Channel 2—WJBE-TV Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:30 — (7) Fun with the: Foster family. (4) he j -” Popular bal- lads. (2)-‘‘News.” Dong Ed- wards. 6:45—(4)—"‘News Caravan.’’ John Cameron Swayze.” (2) Como.” Perry sings “Crying in the Chapel,’’: 7:00—(7)—‘‘White Camellia,” en Marshall in ’‘Invisible Enemy.” Feature film. (4)—‘I Married Joan.‘ Joan Davis’ tardiness al- most wrecks husband's career. (2)—“‘Godfrey and His Friends.” Arthur Godfrey troupe in va- riety show, |, 7:30—(4)—""My Little Margie.” Margie takes bets to save Vern from a widow in “My Little Margie.” ; 8:00— (7) —‘!Double Exposure.” Film. (4)—“Television Theater.” Kathleen Comegys, Margaret Phillips in ‘Corinth House,” ex- teacher faces wrath of former student. (2)—‘'Strike It Rich.” Audience pafticipation quiz with Warren Hull: 8:30—. (7) —"'Club Cosmopolitan.”’ Music and dance from Scotland, England and Wales with Detroit Highland Dancers, Bessie Belle. (2)—"“I’ve Got a Secret.’’ Panel show with Garry Moore. 9:00—(7)—"‘Story Theater,”’ John | Archer in |/"The Real Thing.” | (4)—‘‘This Is Your Life.'’ Ralph Edwards hélps re-create life of surprise gest. (2)—‘Boxing.” Middleweight bout: Willie Troy vs. Lee -Sala. 9:30—(7)—“‘Célebrity Playhouse.” Alan Reed in ‘‘Treasure of Franchard." film drama. “Gold Seal Theater.” Saunders in “Midnight.” 9:45 — (2) — “Greatest Fights.” Film of famous boxing bout. 10:00—(7)—‘‘Wrestling from Rain- bo.’ Midget wrestling. (7)—‘‘Big Picture.” .Public service film. (2)—‘‘News' Roundup.” Jack Le- Goft. (4)— Gloria 10:15—(2)—'‘Sports.’’ Ed Hayes. 10:30—(4)—"‘Man About Town.” ~— “Date With Judy.” | Bob Maxwell with talk, music. (2)—'Pathe Highlights."’ Selec- tion of newsreels. 10: 46—(4)—‘‘Time off for Sparts.”’ Bill Flemming. (2)—'’Sports for All.” Sports news. 11:00—(7)—‘‘Say There Neighbor.” Betty Clooney visits Mammoth Cave. (4)—‘‘News.” Paul Wil- liams. (2) — “Telenews Ace.” Ken Cline. 11:15 — (7) — “Feature Film,” Gloria Jean in “Old Fashioned Girl.” (4)—'‘Weathercast.”” (2)— “Foreign Correspondent.” 11:20 — (4) — “Premiere Play- house.” ‘‘Mozart Story.” Feature film. , THURSDAY MORNING 7:00—(4) _ Today. (NW. M. Kelly 8:45—(7)—News. (2)—News 9:00—(4)—Playschool. (7)—Coffee ’n’ Cakes. (2)—Arthur Godfrey 10:00—(4)—Hawkins Falls. (7)— Playhouse 10:15—(4)—The Bennetts. (2) — Baird Puppets 10: 30—(4)—Three Steps to Heaven. ()—Strike It Rich 10: 45—(4)—Follow Your Heart 11:00—(4)—Glamor Girl. ()— Charm Kitchen. (2)—Bride and | Groom i 11:15—(2)—Love of Life | 11:30—(4)—Movie Quiz. morrow’s Search 11:45—(4)—News. (2) — Guiding Light 12:00—(4)—Ding Dong School. (7) —Cartoons. (2)—Murphy Calling 12:30—(4)—Cinderella. (7)—Lank- er Show. (2)—Garry Moore 12:45—(7)—News THURSDAY AFTERNOON 1:00—(4)—Jean McBride. (7)— Playhouse. (2)—I’ll Buy That 1:30—-(4) — Sallye Show. (2) — Houseparty 1:45-—-(4)—Travel Unlimited 2:00—(4)—Kate Smith. (2)—Big Payoff , 2:15—(7)—Strictly Female 2:30—(2)—Bob Crosby “The Madmen.” Joel McCrea in | 2:45—-(7)—News | $:00—(4)—Welcome Traveler. Hoédown. (2)—Ladies Day 3:15—(7)—Tune Parade 3:30—(4)—On Your Account $:45—(7)—Songs and Sonnets 4:00—(4)—Atom Squad. (7)—Cow- boy Colt. (2)—Theater 4:15-+(4)—Gabby Hayes (7) 4:38—+-(4)—Howdy Doody 4:45—-(7)—News 5:00—-(4)—Willie Wonderful. (7)— Auntie Dee 5:15—(4)—Scotti Show. (2)—Kar- toons 5:30—(4)—Adventure Patrol. (7)— Dick Tracy. (2)—Lady Dooit 5:45—2)—Sports THURSDAY EVENING 6:00—(4)—Music Time. (7)—Det. Deadline. (2)—Capt. Video 6:15—(4)—News. (7)—News 6:30—(4)—Eddy Arnold. (7)—Lone Ranger. (2)—News 6:45—(4)—News. (2)—Jane Fro- man 7:00—(4)—Bet Your Life. (7)— Cisco Kid. (2)—Meet Mr. Mc Nutley 7:15—(2)—Movie Preview 7:30—(4)—T-Men in Action. (7)— Danger Doorway. (2)—Four Star Playhouse | 8:00—(4)—Dragnet. (7) — China | Smith. (2)—Video Theater | 8:30—(4)—Theater Hour, | Wrestling. (2)—Big Town 9:00 — (4) — Martin Kane. Fights. (2)—Pentagon USA 9:30—(4)—Orient Express. TV Theater 10:00—(4)—Mich. Outdoors. Black Spider. (2)—News 10:30—(4)—Living Adventures. (2) Place the Face 10:45—(4)—Time off for Sports 11:00—(4)—News. (7)—Say There (2)—Telenews 11:15—(4)—Weather. (7) — Motion Picture. (2)—‘‘The Hangman’”’ 11:30—(4)—Wrestling (1)— (h— (2)— (1)— -- Todays Radio Programs -- Programs, furnished by stations listed im this colums are subject to change without notice. CKLW (90@ WW, (850) — WCAB (1130) WXYZ (1270) WJBK (1490) WIR (760) ‘= TONIGHT WCAR, Farmer's Alm. CKLW, Austin Grant CKLW, Cecfl Brown 6:00—WJR, Negs 6:30—WJR, Fatm Forum WCAR. N'Day Caller WJBK, Bob Murphy WWJ, News | WWJ, Bob Maxwell === WXYZ, Wattrick, McKenz. CKLW,. News, \Sports WJBK, Horsemen WCAR, News, Ballads 6:15—WJR, Clark Quartet WWJ, Budd Lynch WXYZ, Lee Smits CKLW, Eddie -Chase WCAR, Talk Sports 6: ea ey Bob Reynolds 8:45—WXYZ, VWandercook *wwo Bet Your Lit J WXYZ, Mr. President CKLW, Hanry, Music 9:15+-CKLW, Mem. Music 9:30—W Rogers of Gasz’te ww), Bt CKLW, Soundjag Board WXYZ, Fred Wolfe WJBK, News, Lenhardt WCAR, Coffee With Ciem CKLW, News €:45—WXYZ, News WCAR, Coffees With Clem 7:00—WJIR, Dick Burris WWJ, News, Maxwell WXYZ, News, Wolfe CKLW, News WJBK, News, Lenhardt WCAR, News, Clem 7:15—WJR, Music Hall 71:30—WWJ, Listen, Live WXYZ, Fred Wolfe CKLW, Austin Grant WXYZ, Osgood, Wolfe WJBK, Gentile & Binge WCAR, Coffee With Clem 71:45—WWJ, News CKLW, Toby David 8:00—WJR, Jack White WCAR, News 8: are Bren Bud Guest wxyYz, Wolfe WCAR, Cofiee With Clem $:30—WJR, Music Hall WJBK, Gentile, Binge $:45—WCAR, Radio Rev. §:00—WJR, News, Wwwi, News, ‘ast Club pi ale Neighbor WCAR, News. Music , Pidneers gp ——tig oe Rv ww, Max CKLW, Kitchen Club 9:45—WJR, Pete and Joe WCAR, Temple Acad. 10:00—WJIR, A. Godfrey J, Welcome Traveler True Story | 12:36—WJR, Helen Trent Ww4J, Cinderella WxyYzZ, Pasa CKLW, Your Boy Bud WJBE, Don McLe WCAR, Club 1130 12 WJIR, J. White Ware rk THURSDAY AFTERNOON 1:00—WJR, Road of Life WWJ, News, Music WXYZ, Charm Time CKLW, Austin Grant WJBK, Don McLeod WCAR, News, Club 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins CKLW, 8. C. Johnson 1:30—WJR, Dr. Malone WXYZ, News, McBride CKLW, Your Boy Bud 1:45—WIR, Guiding Light CKLW, Your Boy Bud 2:00—WJR, Mrs. Burton WWJ, News WXYZ, Paul Winter CKLW, News, Boy Bud WCAR, ews, Club 2:15—WJH. Perry Mason CKLW, News 2:30—WJR, Nora Drake WWJ, Dial Dave CKLW, Your Boy Bud WXYZ, Crocker, Winter WCAR, Sports &: ate Brighter Day R, Mulholland WCAR, Club 1130 3:00—WJR, Hilltop House WWJ, |Life Beautiful CKLW,, Wonderful City WCAR, News, Rhythm 3:15—WJR, House Party WWJ, 'Road of Life CKLW,' Holland Furnace 3}30—WWJ, Pepper Young Z, Paul Winter BK; Don McLeod Foes i Gal Sunday THURSDAY EVENING 6:00—WJR, News WwW, News WXYZ, Wattrick, McKens. CKLW, News WJBK, Horsemen WCAR, News, Ballads 6:15—WJR, pail Quartet 6:30—WJR, Reynolds WWJ, Harness Racing WXYZ, Ed. McKenzie WJBK, Horsemen WCAR, Ballads 6:45—WJR, L. Thomas WWJ, Fran Pettay 7:00—WJR. Guest House WWJ, 3 Star WXYZ, Bill Stern CKLW, Fulton Lewis '7:15—WWJ, Alex Drier WXYZ, Show World CKLW, Guy Nunn 7:30—WJR, Family Skeleton WW4J, Morgan Beatty WXYZ, Starr of Space CKLW, Gabriel Heatter WJBK, Bob Murphy 7:45—WJR, Ed. R. Murrow WWJ, 1 Man's Family CKLW, Three 8 Suns 8:00—WJR, Meet Millie ww, ss —" $:15—WXYZ, Sammy Kaye 3:30—WJR, Playhouse WWJ, Pather Knows WXYZ, CKLW, John Steele 8:45—WXYZ, Vandercook 9:00—WJR, Meet McNutley Wwxvz, Mike Maloy CKLW, Rod & Gun Club 9:30—WJR, Melody ww 10:00—WIR, CKLW, Be WWJ, ‘Right to Happiness ware, “Time te, ww) — el wee, mee McLeod rig News wit CKLW, On, Off ord WXYZ, Prantl (Reward ckstage e 90 Gates House Party 19:15—WCAR, Temple ware aoe -MeK. i rag og way 10:15_—-WXYR, iS ef Town | 18:38—WW4, Bob Hope cig | CAR) News, Ballads Ga ov wares CEL Pran e' : . , j CKLW. 4:15—WJR, Jim Deland ' ; 10:9 WIR, Wizerd of Odds wcaR, iene WWJ, Btella Dallas MOELW. ee anristie ™ Wath eae ee | 16:08—ww, Pays | 4:30—WJR, Bandstand 10:30—WIR, Wisard CELW. News — : Girt Marrits WWJ, Winder Brows WWJ, Musler, Piekens f CKLW, Clinic wxy cKenzie , . EE Sop ah Orch. WCAR, Hall WJBK,, McLeod CKLW ewe -— i Tews 00—WwWJ, Strike 4:45—WJR, Happens Daily =— it xy, Curtain Calls” | ‘Ww. Woman in House RYE hen te vee 110 w mE. News CKLW, Ladies Pair CKLW, News Ace CKLW, Quiet ‘Banctuary WWJ, News — Ww Ken Cline : q Rows |WCAR, News, Harmony 4:50—WIR, R. Q Levis 11:00—WJR, News te all 14:30—-WIR, Make Op sind | *Ww3" Pras ‘pill WXY2, Pred Weiss "EES | SE sees | Gat ae woot | Wise: Boe ws CKLW, Mantattan” Muste Ms WiR Rewemary WIBK; McLeod a “Tig -~ Bae A fae ‘WWJ, Second Chance ww, ;/WIBK, L. Gentile 5:15—WJR, Music Hall ‘arrell WWJ,| 1st Page P :00— eady Warren Own aoe va WwJB Bop Murphy 11:30—WJR, Japan Societ Turn te Priend woe! tan taitteuste WXYZ, Top of Town WJBK. Chapel) CKLW, curt 5 W. Sky King CKLW. Phil McKellar CW IR A 1s WIR, aati 3 , ane Gee 11:45—WJR, Midnight Music ww. Parm i u lenny 45— Curt Massey WJBK, Symphony Hall WXYZ, News! |WWJ, Pran Harris WWJ, Doctor's Wile WXYZ, Top of Town Handsome Prince Really Works Hard ‘ANG PRABANG, free school of political sciences im Paris, the crown prince was mamed president of the council for the kingdom of Laos on November 17, 1941. During the occupation of Laos by the Japanese and Chinese in and after World War II, the crown | 120s prince steadfastly remairied at his father’s side in the royal palace here and refused to have anything to do with the occupants. He did likewise when the Communist-led Viet-Minh threatened to attack Luang Prabang im April and May 1953, remaining with the king at Luang Prabang until the enemy pny suddenly withdrew from An average farmer drives his car 5,750 miles a year. - Electric Clothes D Famous name brand; Slightly crate scratched. Terrific Values! MICHIGAN FLOURESCENT Dryer — a. ‘Daddy’ Show Starts Sept. 29 But Does Arabic Love Song Etching, ‘Ataba’ for Hospital By EVE STARR NEW YORK—Danny Thomas, whose new TV series, ‘Room for Daddy,” premieres Sept. 29, is learning Arabic strictly for laughs. vg He’s preparing an independent etching of ‘‘Ata- p of lyrics can do!) “Backed by a EVE STARR six-piece combo using Arabic instruments, bene- fits of the platter will go to the St. Jude Foundation Hospital in Memphis, his pet charity. * ¢ @ Pint-size Mickey Rooney will get six-foot Regis Toomey to play his dad in Mickey’s TV film series... Look for a big platter soon to be released on the wonderful simple theme on the “Mr. Peep- ers Show.” Eleven-year-old Donna Corcoran | draws the leading role in ‘‘Death | Valley Days.”’ First time a femme | has taken the lead away from a | guy ... Donald O’Connor must | be all well again because he plans to take his troupe to the New York Palace—and soon . Herb Shriner says a mater- nity hospital is now called an “heirport.’’ Last Sunday, Toots Shor threw a big party for Ezio Pinza and his 7 or 8 kids from his teleseries “Bonino.” Pinza was the only one who. ordered spaghetti .. . Bob Hope says you don’t get away from it all,on your vacation —it gets away from you. * * * CRITIC’S CORNER: Since this department’s recent comments on the CBS show, )|‘‘Meet Mr. Mc- Nutley,’’ which did not favorably impress me, I have learned some additional and pertinent facts, which should be relayed to read- ers. film had been made a year and a half ago—but since then the | show has been yastly improved. There is less contrived slapstick, the laugh track has been toned down, and Mr. McNutley, as played by Ray Milland, is getting more convincing lines and situa- tions. And he no longer will play a befuddled college professor. Best of all—boys—Phyllis Avery, who plays Mrs. McNutley, has de- veloped a ‘‘Marilyn Monroe’’ walk. And that’s something to see—as you will see! ‘POW for 33 Months | Asks ‘What Is TV Set’ | CHARLOTTE, N. C. Ww—"Now what is this?’’ inquired Capt. Mil- lard Butler of his wife as they walked into their home here. | “It’s our television set,’’ the wife explained. | “It's all new to me,” ‘the cap- | tain said. “i've never seen a TV set before,” He wag just home from 33 months in a Chinese Red. prison. ELEVEN ver to Pet Charity DARK HORSE — Packing his | Wyoming is Federal Chief accepted a last-minute Eisenhower at Pine, Colo. for an antelope-hunting trip in t Judge Orie L. Phillips, whose |; court sits in Denver, Colo. Phillips, who has been mentioned as possible successor to the late Fred M. Vinson as Chief Justice of the United States, had planned to leave on the hunting trip but invitation to go fishing with President Passenger Boat Takes to the Air Winged German Vessel Built to Fly More Than 22 Miles an Hour BONN, Germany (UP) — A Gert man firm has produced a passen- ger boat which leaves the water and starts to fly above a speed of 22 miles an hour. . AU. S. High Commission report said the first model, christened the ‘‘Brisk,’”’ was made last year for a Norwegian who hoped to use it-to compete with more traditional type water-buses in Olso Fjord. The flying boat is made of ply- jwood, is driven like an automo- bile, and carries eight passen- gers. An eight-cylinder, 165 - horse- power, Chrysler engine drives it at a top speed of 70 kilometers (about 44 miles) per hour. About 10 seconds after starting, the boat can achieve a speed of 35 kilometers (about 22 miles) per hour, at which point, says the High Commission report, ‘‘the boat be- gins to emerge from the water to ride on wings only.”’ The boat corners well, claimed that at a speed ometers (about 35 miles) (TG) SOFT PLASTIC GIVES TIGHT FIT TO OLD PLATES soft — to — tering, deetores ro bri Tents = es ate cee een sales. cent. ool bother with adhesives. One re-tiner can last from ze pices Be like new. Got Beacere today and do with uneomfortabie false dll ol et on hn. Denture Cashions today! DAVE’S “Men's and Boys’ Store Now Have A Complete Stock of BIRD and SMALL GAME HUNTING CLOTHES Hunting Coats and shell pockets. $f75 Water repellent with roomy seed poet Sizes 36-46... Hunting Pants $ 95 Straight Bottom — Britches — Knit Bottoms Sizes 30 to 42........ ayalelers ever eeeee Game Ba .3.69 Rubber Patks .5.95 tT : ’ r= Tit ’ r SSW SHEH SH SH Sis SNE Shell Vest .. 2.95 Rubber Packs . 7.45 MEN’S BOOTS Insulated—Selection of Styles HUNTING Complete Line — Wool Plaid Red Stag Men's -- Boys’ — Ladies’ Styles Don’t be disappointed. Use Our Layaway Plan. CLOTHES New Shipment of Levis Men’s, Boys’, Ladies’ USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN gvctiry Coestee We Have a Fine 158 N. SAGINAW ST. We Give Holden‘s — Trading Stamps! (Next to Sears) i Even Stork Has Trouble Getting to Polecat Hollow POLECAT HOLLOW, Md. w— There's only one way into Polecat Hollow, even for the stork. That’s said his crews had to rebuild the! span was unsafe and ordered re bridge after a physician com-| pairs. plained he couldn't drive across; The expectant mother is a mem- it to attend an expectant mother.| ber of one of two families living Geary investigated, agreed the) in Polecat Hollow. GO DIRECT TO CHICAGO - FROM PONTIAC OVERNIGHT ON THE LA SALLE, LEAVE PONTIAC —12:25 A. M. (E.S.T.) ARRIVE, RESTED, IN CHICACO — 7:00 A. M.:(C.$.T.) Private rooms, restful berths, reclining seat tooches, Air Conditioned. BY DAYLIGHT LEAVE PONTIAC —2:30 P.M. (E.S.T.) \ ARRIVE CHICAGO —8:20 P.M. (C.S.T.) Comfort controfied electronically in emazing new cooches, LOLS ELBILPM (PLE ERLE ALIEN Se IL Soy NEW FAMILY PLAN—stretches family travel budget TTRAREA, er ow PLAN—Seves 25% en groepe tak ede og POR RESERVATIONS CALL Huron ond Coss Streets e Phone Federal 5-8131 | across.a smal] wooden bridge. County Road Supt. Eugene Geary CANADIAN NATIONAL Nothing in all TV lke j¢/ CROSLEY ULTRA-FIDELITY TV ri EXCLUSIVE. 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We think you'll agree that the real news is the truez, to-life picture you get on the new Picture-Sentry ‘ BIRMINGHAM CLARKSTON LADD'S TV & APPLIANCE SOLLEY REFRIGERATION. | 2026 Coa i. 3821 M-15 ORION | OXFORD q H. M. PATTON SALES iio. 7+ e THE PONTIAC PRESS i i as PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953) Polio in County Claims 3 Lives 17, New Cases This Week Brings Oakland Total to J 45 Polio claiméd the lives of three persons. in south Oakland County last week, Oakland County Health. Department reports showed today. The deaths: boost the county’s polio toll for the year to five. County Health Department report, released by Dr. John D. Monroe, director, covérs all cdunty areas ‘except Pontiac. Seventeen new cases of polio I his were reported last week, a slight increase over the dozen cases listed the week befare. Polio total for thé year is now 145 cases with five deaths, about the same as in 1962. The departinent’s report also shows a jump in pneumonia, which climbed to 12 new cases last week as against only two the week be- fore. if No cases of ¢hicken pox and only one case of mumps, against 77 new mumps cases the week before, were shown dn the report which reads as follows: Week Ending Past Sept. Sept. Week 12, '53 20, 52 Chicken fox ..¢4.0.-}- 0 4 1 Measies....... eee 6 3 5 Pneumonia ‘all forms} 12 2 0 Poliomyelitis ..J.....). 17 12 25 Scarlet fever .......4. 1 2 4 Tuberculosis ‘all formg) 4 2 3 Whooping cough) ...... 77 10 5 MEUMPS . bec nccdicceede 1 27 3 nh mt, Merl Peers foe 4 0 0 Pe ag eee oe 2 6 5 Bacillary dysentézy ..., 41 0 0 Hepatitis ‘jaundice) ., 3 1 0 Few cases of most|communicable ; tigation was under way today | diseases are li$ted dn Pontiac City |into charges Health Department report for last | taking the Michigan - Basie | week, also released by Dr. Monroe. No new cas#s of) chicken pox, measles ;’mumps, $caflet fever, examinations were offered test | Rubella “German measles), and only two cases of pdliojare shown | on the report which follgws in full: | Week Ending Past | Sept. Sept. Week/12, '53 20, 52 Chicken pox ...i.... «| 0 0 Gonorrhea, ..... ode 147 6 5 Meas'es gaisleh dessee-s 0 0 2 MUMPE Geb veace§ lees ce 0 1 1 Poliomyelitis ..jisticcess 2 2 § 2) Scariet fever ...hiseees 0 0 2 2 LV Orage Y ange 4] 3 3 uberculosie ...dd...0. 0 0 3 Whooping ¢ough ;4:...../4 2 0 Rabies (im, animals) .. 0 e 2 a oy Foreign Students Tour. Fisher Body plant was visited Tuesday ‘by a select group of engineering stu- dents from all:over the world. These students have gpent three and a half months in study at. Massachusetts | Institute of Tech- Board and assistant chemistry | _ : nology in Boston. Now they are professor at Wayne University, | speaking, don’t strike twice in the on a two-week tour of American industrial, plarits. The} group in- CLINTON CLEANS UP—A Pontiac Parks and Recreation Depart- ment crew begins cleaning banks of Clinton River from Beaudette Park to Telegraph Rd. According to David R. Ewalt, department TEAM 2 8 APNE Fo ges Pee Sat gee © al ‘ ee ee + a OE ge Se director, the six-man crew is expected to be on the job about 10 days. Starting early Monday at the Mil) Pond, seven dump loads of rubbish and trash were removed from the banks the first day. rae |past eight years. + Pontiac Press Pheote { Sale of Exams Being Probed Student Allegedly Offered Test Questions for Price DETROIT (AP)—An_ inves- that students Science Board’s chiropractic questions for a price. Clair O'Dell, Wyandotte chiropractor and president of the Michigan Chiropractic ; Academy, said several students were offered a list of the questions for $600 and $700. In most of the cases, O’Dell added, the name of a Hamtramck chiropractor was mentioned. He did not name | him. O’Dell said one student, | asked to pay $700 for the test | | questions, refused to pay the) ‘Fisher Body Division's Pontiac Money .and didn’t take the) examination, but signed an affidavit in June against the doctor for Wayne County | Prosecutor Gerald K. O’Brien.| occur in a given area there only Dr. Orin E. Madison, chair- man of the Basic Science asked that the state attorney general’s office conduct the probe. cluded 58 men; aand five women. Too High Hat; Blue-Blooded Briton Asks Rabble Not to Use ‘Mister’ LONDON (UP)—One. of Britain's | most blue-bldoded noblemen called | on the common people to drop | their only claim to a title—the low- ly “mister.” | He said it was “arrant snob- bery” to go around calling your- self mister unless’ you have the right to call yourself one. And you haven’t got} that right unless you dre, a other things, a university graduate, he said. : The call came from Capt. Iain Moncreiffe, husband of the lord knights and certain judges, law- yers and law officers. | But the “Esq.” is being freel 3 Pontiag Guardsmen Receive Medal Awards entitled to it or be éliminated entirely. From his Scottish retreat at the Bridge of Earn, Moncreiffe ruled that the problem of esquire is not as acute as that of mister. You can be born an esquire, he held, ‘‘but nobody can |be born a mister.” For the adjutant general's office) | purports to show that today’s sol-| | dier (A) is satisfied with his job, | (B) Thinks he is doing the work| | for which he was trained, and (C) | | Believes his chores are necessary. The survey was gerd be 4,000 | enlisted men leaving the ‘service. | And the answers may surprise | | those who may have feit the Army could be divided Into two | Tornado Towns Can Expect 2nd Twister in 6953 MILTON, Mass (UP)—An area leveled by a tornado isn’t apt to for at least 5,000 years . | And that figure for New Eng-| | land, where tornadoes are|rare, is | 20,000 years, a noted meteorolgist said today, |. Dr. Charles F. Brooks, director | of Harvard’s Blue Hill Meteoro- | logical Observatory, said |the 5,- 000 years applies to the tornado- | belt in the midwest. | Statistics show, Brooks said, | that death-dealing twisters will | once in 5,000 years and, |in a few cases, once in every 10,000 years He said that tornadoes, generally same place, at least with the same fury. But there are exceptions, he | said, like the three tornadoes that struck Codell, Kans., three succes- sive years on or about the same day. Boat Renter Is Fined | Under New State Law MT CLEMENS (UP) — Donald Hampton, a boat livery attendant, awaited a court hearing today on charges of violating a new state law limiting the capacity af rented boats. Hampton was charged after a rented boat carrying five | persons was swamped in Lake $t Ciair Labor Day. Police said the boat had a capacity of three persons. Happy Warriors Content With Jobs, Army Claims WASHINGTON ® — My, my,), classes: The eager few who are how the Army must have changed!|| anxious to get ahead at all costs, | and the majority who like to Chiropractors has come up with a survey which| drag their heels at all costs. But the adjutant general’s ques- tioners asked: How satisfied your army job? The draftees answered: Very satisfied, 18 per cent; satisfied, 57 per cent; dissatisfied, 16 per cent, and very dissatisfied, 7 per cent. The Regular Army boys voted the same, only more so. Twenty- four per cent said they were very satisfied. And so it went. Do you feel your job was neces- sary to the Army? Yes, almost all of it was necessary, said 66 per cent. Did you spend most of your time working on the job for which you were you with |; get hit by another devastating one|| were trained? Yes, most of the time, said 61 per cent. Speedway Driving OK, but Not on City Streets DETROIT W — For the next six months, race driver Eugene W. Krulock may drive at the Motor City Speedway but not on Detroit streets. Traffic Judge John D. Watts slapped the no-driving probation order and a $50 fine against Kru- lock yesterday after the driver had been arrested for speeding for the fourth time. Police said Krulock was driving 65 miles an hour in a 35-mile zone during busy traffic. He was convicted of reckless driving. Reds Building 3 Transmitters Complete 300,000 Watt Dresden Radio Station for Propaganda Use | BERLIN (®—The Russian zone | has completed a powerful new transmitter and is building two} more to carry radio propaganda | farther West, the West Berlin news- paper Der Abend reported today. The newspaper said a 300,000. watt transmitter recently began | operating at Dresden. Another | transmitter of the same power is to be inaugurated Oct. 1 at Schwer- | in, while a 500,000 watt trans- | mitter will be completed in No-| vember at Burg. | Both Schwerin and Burg are | less than 40 miles east of the | western border. The new 500,000 watt station would be the strongest in Europe | after Radio Moscow. The West's | most powrful station in Germany, the American-sponsored Rias in West Berlin, operates at 300,000 watts. Propose Speed Area DETROIT (AP) — The Detroit City Parks and Recreation Com- mission suggested Tuesday that the city set aside a spot where hot-| rodders and motorcyclists could | speed as much as they wish. The | commission proposed either a sec- tion of Rouge Park or the State Fairgrounds track. Akihito to See Ford Plant | DETROIT (UP) — Crown Prince Akihito of Japan will visit the | Pacific T | Greenfield Village museum and Ford Motor Company’s River Rouge | plant today before boarding a train for Chicago on another leg of his month-long tour of the United. States, The 19-year-old prince, a freshman at Gakushuin University in Tokyo, | bureau said visited the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor Tuesday and met President Harlan H. Hatcher and numerous faculty members. Hatcher presented Akihito with leather-bound volume of etchings of | slacken ear! campus scenes. The prince also inspected the school’s center for | storm heads . Doctor's Rise ls State Saga ‘Last Advancement Caps All-Michigan Career of U-M Hospital Head ;ANN ARBOR Ww — The recent election of Dr. Albert C. Kerli- kowske to the |head of the Ameri- can College of Hospital Adminis- trators complétes an all-Michigan success story to rival the best. The personable 53-year-old di- rector of University of Michigan Hospital, started as an intern 21 years ago in the big sprawling in- stitution he has headed for the = DR. KERLIKOWSKE With his assumption of the presidency of the ACHA next September, he becomes the man for the nation’s hos- pital administrators and an in- fluential figure in national hos- pital legislation. The St. Joseph-born physician is the first. native Michigander ever to assume the office. He was named president-elect, and as such’ a member of the ad- ministrator’s executive committee Sept. 2 at the annual meeting of the ACHA in San Francisco. The 2,000:member organization has no automatic!) membership. After three years of active work in hospital administration, a man may be, recommended for mem- bership. After| two years of mem- bership and! strict examination, a member may) become a. fellow. Dr. Kerlikowske has served as a member of the organization's board of regents as a fellow since 1947, He was born Jan. 7, 1900 in St. Joseph,| where his father and | mother and five brothers still reside, engaged in farming and business enterprises. His wife, Aline, is a native of Lake Linden. [Both are University of Michigan) graduates. After graduating from St. Jo- seph High in /1917, Dr. Kerlikow- ske attended ithe Michigan Medi- cal! School jand received his di- ploma in 1924, when he became an intern at the hospital here. After a steady climb through the ranks, he became director in 1945. State Seafarers Vote AFL Union DETROIT ®—The AFL Seafar- ers| International Union reported today it beat out a_ rival CIQ group in| an election to de- termine which! would represent 300 unlicensed seamen on the Ann Ar- bor Railroad |carferries. SIU International representative David Lees said his group had 126 | votes in a balloting taken by the; National (Railway) Mediation Board, to 114 for the CIO National Maritime Uni The seamén |have been members of the CIO union. They operate five carferries out|of Frankfort. The NMB nouncemen . hoon Winds Expected to Slacken MANILA (AP) — The weather night the 110 mph winds of a Pacific typhoon 400 miles southeast of Okinawa would tomorrow as the toward the Ryu- Japanese studies and received two volumes outlining the functions of; kyu Islands. | the center. After a reception during which the prince chatted with a students and faculty members, he and his party embarked on an auto- mobile tour of the campus. The typhoon may hit the Ryukyus late tomorrow, The big American base of Okinawa is near the south- ern end of the Ryukyu chain. Pitching Horseshoes ... by Billy Rose. Mr. Tod Bentzer 2117 Front Street Providence, R. I. My dear Tod: This is in answer to your nine- page letter in which you tell me (a) how much you love the the- ater, (b) how anxious you are to break into it, and (c) how grate- ful you'd be if I gave you some ad- vice on how to get started. Well, Tod, there’s only one way for a fellow without ex- perience to break into the the- ater fast — and that is to start j i : 1 i i i i rs x8 i ~ ° t | Fs _& Successful Producer Talks New York classified telephone di- rectory.) . right. The way to do this is to send 4 B gee seeé z | I a Good Show but Never Puts One On graphed list of names and ad- | The rext thing is to assemble these angels in small groups and defeather them. This is usually one is that a show can’t fail if producing producer by telling. BF a Fi g af 4 i 5 HE luctantly abapdon the produc- in one of the|dimmer joints on .. Eighth Avenue.|‘‘I don’t get it,”’ he said. ‘Fellows who bought me va iilt : FE rH : att Ex-Red Reveals Why He Turned MSC Professor Tells of Futility of Communist Goals, Organization. Dr. Arnold Williams, associate pro- fessor of English at Michigan tSat¢e Col- lege @nd formerr Communist party member, here tells in his own words why he renounced Red ideology and reaf- firmed hig belief in Amrican dmocratic procss¢s. : By DR. ARNOLD WILLIAMS Associate English Professor, Michigan State College EAST LANSING (UP)—My brief association with the Communist Party in 1936 and 1937 served to convince me of the superiority of our American system. Looking back, I am impressed by the complete futility and inept- ness of the Communist Party, both as to its organization and goals. I am sure that our democratic system, while it may sometimes respond slowly to the will of its citizens, still affords the most effective means of achieving the better way of life we all are seeking. With its bulwarks of free speech and free press, our American sys- tem is better able ito, preserve the values of a free society than any other yet devised. I can only hope that my experience has helped me interpret these values to my stu- dents. ; The Communist Party never was close to the American way of look- ing at things. I entered the Communist Party on somewhat philosophical grounds, thinking that it repre- sented ideals leading toward a better life for humanity. I guess that in the 1930s I was overly impatient with our democratic processes in achieving those goals. I was fortunate in discovering fairly early what the Communist Party really was. I am thankful I realized that its materialistic philosophy left the individual com- pletely out of consideration and was only concerned with advancing its own aims. ! _ Children to Show Pet Pooches at Oakland Park Saturday 25 Doas to Get Contest Awards: No Pedigree Needed to Win in Any of ° Four Class Groupings The fourth annual ‘‘Pooch Party” sponsored by the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department has been set for 2 p.m. Saturday at Oakland Park. This annual city-wide affair put There are four classes of com- petition and twenty-five prizes will be awarded in all. The Pontiac Kennel Club will furnish judges, trophies and- prizes. Ribbons will be presented in both divisions for first, second and third place winners in each class. ‘Contest classes are: best groomed dog, best trick dog, best informed ‘owner, and best pet combination, The dog must be owned by someone in the immediate family of the participant. Competition for the best groom dog award will be based on the condition of the animal's hair, skin, toenails, eyes, ears and teeth. In the best trick dog category, the number and execution of tricks will be the basis of appraisal. To win the contest as best informed owner, participant must be able to answer successfully a number of questions related to feeding, grooming, general characteristics, first aid and gen- eral information about dogs. For the best pet combination group there must be evidence of companionship, good _ fellowship and understanding between the dog and his master. In order to participate in the best pet combination category, en- trants in the senior division must also participate in the best in- formed owner contest. A prize also will be given for the animal judged the best all-around dog. Contest entry blanks are avail- able at schools throughout the city and entrants are urged to get their applications in as soon as possible. Chinese Arrest 8 Priests HONG KONG (AP) — The Communist Peoples Daily of Peiping which arrived today said eight Catholic priests have been arrested in Red China's Hopei Province on charges of conducting “secret subversive activities of imperialist ele- ments under cover of the ‘' church.” CAS _FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 Bats are not attracted to lights {catch the insects whan are thus , becatise of the illumination. They attracted. (vernment Seeks ‘to Hang Mossadegh TEHRAN, Iran (#—An informed army source said today that Iran's government would ask a military 'court to sentence ex-Premier Mo- hammed Mossadegh to hang on | charges to be announced probably /in “three or four days.”’ a You Really Geta Wonderful | the Iranian capital to the London | Daily Express today that the ex- premier had been sentenced on Tuesday to hang at the conclusion of a three-week secret trial. There was no immediate comment from Tehran on the Express report.) Buy Your New ! | (This report from Tehran ap- Deal When You | peared to discount a dispatch from | rency Money in Chickeyard. |U. N. Concludes ANGELES (#—Eleven years that the U.N. has had “two re-| . cent indications’’| that the Reds | Report Earthquake Hit |ed the shocks were felt 5,100 miles moved jet warplanes into Korea|Peninsula of Kamchatka | .inwest of Cleveland, placing after the July 27 signing in direct ; violation of a iste nil CLEVELAND ® — Earthquake | them at the Russian Peninsula. Allied radar has tracked arriv- | shocks hit Kamchatka, a Russian | ago, when Constance Mertens’ un- POW Turnover cle was on his deathbed, he told her there was money buried in the Truce Is Now in New Phase; 90-Day Coaxing chickenyard, Yesterday, a bulldozer grading Period to Start the site for an automobile sales yard, turned up three glass jars containing $1,000 in silver and cur- Miss Mertens was watching when the money was uncovered. She said she and relatives had dug “all | dian troops the last of some 22,600 over that chickenyard without find- | Brmsonery who renounced commu- ing the money.” She gave each of the eight work- | empty of captives for the first time men one of the silver dollars as | in three years. The army source said the gov- | ernment still had not detided | |! whether Mossadegh's trial would | be held secretly or in public. 1953 FORD : | From — ‘CRAWFORD SALES & SERVICE Associate Ford Dealer 2705 Orchard Lake Road Birmingham » TRAVEL SERVICE Phone MI 4-5711 Tickets, Reservations to’. Anywhere! Grace Plummer Reilly 379 Hamilton, Birmingham | a FE 2-8549 We'll Plan Your Tour Free! EAT MORE MEAT at these LOW PRICES! ‘PURE, LEAN, GROUND BEEF! | HAM- 29 BURGER "YOUNG, TENDER BEEF STEAKS. Young Tender SIRLOIN STEAKS : POT ROAST "(Blade Cut) 39: of chairman of the presidium. Lean Tender Quality Beef! Rib Steaks === a memento. With the final delivery came a, | surprise annoucement that the, ° Allies will not send observers to! Moscow Radio Reveals | watch the arrival at the neutral Death of Mongolian Chief | zone Thursday of 359 Allied soldiers | ; . | the Reds say don't want to go! LONDON (#—Moscow Radio an-| home. They include 23 Americans, nounced the death today of Gon |) Briton and 335 South Koreans, chigin Bumatsende, titular chief | scording to a Communist news- of state of the Communist-ruled man. | Mongolian People’s Republic. * ¢ « The broadcast, heard in London,| Req observers watched the two- did not give Bumatsende’s age, but | week transfer to the demilitarized Said he was the oldest leader of | zone of Allied-held POWs refusing the Mongolian People’s Revolu-| repatriation. But the U.N. Com- tionary Party. He held the post| mand said “‘we do not feel that the presence of, UNC observers is | necessary to ingure a fair and suc- cessful handling of the turnover from the Communists.”’ s An average human body is covered with about 20 square feet of skin. e le | ‘‘we have confidence in the ability | dia) to carry out its mission.’’ | Simultaneously, India ordered 600 reinforcements |for the 5,000-man force which will guard the: un- | repatriated POWs. The additional Indians will be airlifted by the U.S. Air Force via Japan and are expected this weekend. | Final delivery of prisoners to the buffer zone brings the armi- | | Stice to a new phase. Starting Fri- day or Saturday, Allied and Com- | munist interviewers have 90 days to try to coax their former soldiers to come home, | * * * A new source of tension in the | eight-week-old truce was a state- ment by Lt. Gen. S. E. Anderson, SEOUL w—The U.N. Command | Bogart, Warners End today turned over to neutral In-| Association of 17 Years nism, leaving Allied stéckades | Bogart and Warner Brothers Stu- The Allied announcement added | '; of the CFI (Cystodial Force, In-| = |U.S. 5th Air Force commander. ing Red planes, Anderson said. Siberian peninsula extending into | A North Korean pilot who fled ' the Bering se a4 gee to South Korea Monday reported | g sea, at 10: as jet and propeller planes were , ght, according to John Carroll | moved into North| Korea after the | University’s seismograph. ce. | Rev. Henry F. Birkenhauer, di- | {rector of the school's seismograph- | ,ical studies, said today the earth- | WHY PAY Get a Good USED TV $10-15 Dewn-——$5 per Week et HAMPIOUN [Vv 286 State: St 4 HOLLYWOOD « — Humphrey VALUE CHART PROVES RIVAL DOG FOOD will feed your dog better dio have reached an amicable parting of the ways after an asso- ciation of 17 years. ; Bogart asked for release from a 15-year contract signed in 1946, calling for one picture a year, and the studio acceded, The actor has his own film com- | pany, Santana Productions, and leaves) Sunday to make a picture for Paramount in New York. MORE | =22"== eae al + dog food against any othe os this RIVAL WALUE CHART RIVAL H ast LE alias A nourishine other essential foods. AS ITI An imporiet” ded tor greater 00 ting flavor. The first cows| in the United States were brought here by the Pilgrims in 1624. RIVAL # *extra,'’ ad ishment and temP RIVAL CO the essentia teins than mo Note analys!s tcanned do . on Rival label. RIVAL HAS PLENTY a oe heir natural form, vita th and vigor. Arich, naturel, VALHAS It Mi dulterated flavor do9$ love t oS weg ance ival hes 6 |e. 2 GRADE pea of cooked meats. . C FURNACE PER GALLON Oil AKES THEMI—Daily ts and laboratory COM” ur assurance th RIVAL ™ trol are yo Rival’s quality is co experience has per- FE 5-6159 OAKLAND sales in city atter city. Over Fuel and Paint Co. iss) | rene smieiidansaha million cans already sold at MANY CHANGE TO RIVAL—BUT FEW EVER CHANGE AGAIN 22 YEARS’ 436 Orchard Lake Ave. THE EX King Nut OLEO : White Lily CHEESE 69 ONIONS 2 Ib. LOAF Sunshine CRACKERS 25. Burnett Farms Tomato Juice 19 46-0z. Can SUPER MARKET andor. EN SUNDAY —. FREE PARKI Spadafore & Sons 197 OAKLAND AVE. We Reserve. the Right to Limit Quantities!’ These Prices Good Wednesday thru Saturday! Pure Bleck PEPPER ff 17 Can Jell-o | 4 Pkgs. your ONE SURE GUIDE bi the best buy | Botany... 500° cn 10 PONTIAC™ INEST STORE FOR MEN & WOMEN en SMUN presents in men’s clothes CLUSIVE 3-DIMENSIONAL WALUES OF Worsteds TraAiLorED BY DAROFF 1. The fabric 1s the soul of the sust/ 2. The tailoring is master=crafted by Daroff/ 3. The price is unbelievably low! ° o.+ ne Re) os *. OP Pr ye § Pad .* ¢ «+ a" o The quality choice, because there’s a fresh vitality in the 2-ply, 100% virgin worsted fabrics... craftsmanship in every line and stitch of the inimitable Daroff tailoring. Sensationally low prices nake them your economy choice, toa, direct result of close.coordination between the famous weaving mill and tailoring organization. And the many seasons of wear these clothes give, without losing their smart appearance, prove they’re your wisest choice. Select yours now, while our range of colors and patterns in your size is complete. #65 Charge It! Pay in 30—60—90 Days! | PARK FREE at Any Outdoor Parking Lot or Garage .** “7. ter one oe BOO SS a a aa | | quake-detecting apparatus indicat- _ — a i EE ———————— a ———P> a ee aa EE ———————— ee SS eee eee ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY; SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 _ According to Coast Guard records, seyeral of ‘the early light- houses built in the! American col- | onies were financéd through lot- teries, among them New London and Sandy Hook. Upkeep was paid by imposition of a tax on vessels entering and leaving port. FOR HOME OR BUSINESS NEEDS THE - ,oo* = | Employment of the and Cebu have the principal Ike Will Hold | Stag Dinner Drought Blamed at White House lon Empty Talk Figenhower will hold another of his stag dinners at the Matar House tonight. Twenty-three businespren and government officials haye been in- vited to the affair, primarily to discuss the campaign of the Am- 1 I betcan Heritage Foundation for|inces of Southwest China. i ‘the “Crusade for Freedom.” The Peiping Peoples Daily | | The Foundation describes itself | says so. | a8 a non-profit group working for} J+ Jooks ‘as though local greater citizen-participation in gov- | Communist cadres were too ernment affairs. It also endeavors | busy leading “the struggle | | to spread American ideals abroad bureacratism, com-| | : be : ,, | against operating “‘Radio Free Europe’! mandism and breaching of law and ‘‘Radio Free Asia. The President, on his second full | Suwn ‘anti-droaght steps | day back in the White House after | . | a six weeks’ vacation in Colorado, The Peoples Daily accuses | | Peiping Daily Says Red Speechmakers Slow-up Relief Action in China HONG KONK (UP)—There’s a bad drought in four prov- arranged to meet this morning] them of “failing to con- with the National Committee for! cretely lead the work except | United Nations Day, and to attend| uttering empty speeches and a session of his Committee on| issuing directives.” Physically! But it is hard to tell just x. what is happening, at least from reading the Peoples Daily. Here is a sample of the | | account. “The drought this year has Handicapped, He had a luncheon date with Secretary of State Dulles. The President passed up a news conference, usually held Wednes- days when he is in Washington. autumn crops. ‘Upon occurence of the drought, party administrative | leadership organs at the vari- The nurse tending Genevieve is Mrs. TINY VICTIM—Two-year-old Genevieve Hastings lies in Chester Hospital, Chester, Pa., with a fractured leg, an injured right leg and body bruises after being run over by a fleeing bandit. The seriously affected the yield of ehducted the child and her father, Alfred, in Hastings’ dar in downtown Chester. Hastings later jumped from the car but dropped his daughter Bandit seized the wheel and ran over the child.as he made his getawy y. * ;| at the White Hpuse yesterday. Barbara Hendrickson. Report U. S. to Try for Jet Speed Mark oss pisses nate ssoptes emer. turned | | LOS ANGELES (P—The United energetically led the masses in | States is going after Britain's! new | fighting against the drought. " | world jet speed record of m6 | “Following the issuance of Lawyer Wins | miles am hour. |the ‘urgent directive concern | The Times says the Navy tenta-| ing anti-drought and a eout. | E4iS First Case tively plans an assault on the mark | preserving’ to various party| ST. LOUIS W~—A mail carrier next Tuesday with the Douglas|committees by the southwest | who practices law on the side won F4D Skyray, interceptor at the| bureau of the Central Com-_|his first criminal case by proving Salton Sea of Edwards Air Force | mittee of the CCP, leadership | his client was tn jail at the time Base, both in Southern California, | organs in various places have | the crime he was accused of was But, said the Times today, Lt. | definitely prescribed that the | committed. Col.. Pete Everest of Edwards AFB | ‘anti-drought and sprout pre- | Richard J. Brown, the lawyer, flight test center is making test | serving work’ should now be had offered to represent clients | ‘runs over the Salton Sea ina North | taken as the pivotal task over- | without pay just for the experience | | American F100 super Sabre and | riding all other work. after he was licensed to practice | “if his speeds top the English} “‘Anti-drought amd sprout | a year ago. ‘record they will be announced as | preserving’ headquarters have The circuit attorney's office dis- | | unofficial marks just prior to the | been set up in many hsien missed the case yesterday against Navy’s forthcoming: assault.” | (counties) under the leader-_| his client, charged under the ha- | The British record was, set by | ship of secretaries of the hsien | bitual criminal act, after Brown | RAF squadron leader Neville Duke | committees and magistrates Proved the man was in jail for | Sept. 7. to| strengthen the leadership | Toutine investigation when he was | /work in the fight against [pena of snatching a woman? | | The islands of Luzon, Panay drought. | fD the | Brown went to night school at rail’ communication routes in arlti-dtought ‘nd sorouts| a pan a eight years |the Philippines. | preserving work carried out in polar Mel F pd | time as a = | various places, the erroneous | pporuing mother Without ONE HOUR ' ‘he 44 . 28 E. Huron | ONE HOUR Quality Dry Cleaning at no extra charge ' Monday thru Saturday PONTIAC VALET CLEANERS cadres and the masses were Korean Envoy Home | firstly subjected to criticism, | SEOUL w-—South Korea's am- patriotic education was linked | hassador to the United States. Dr. | up, the masses were mobilized | you Chan Yang, arrived today | for active action, the measure | from Washington to confer with \ | of on-the-spot looking for | President Syngman Rhee. | water sources was adopted, the | — : mentality on the part of! | Waiting Korean Police Capture| 10 Commies, Slay 16 SEOUL W—National police spid today they killed| 16 Communist guerrillas and captured 10 the Past week. They, included tap man of rilla forces in South Korea, | Hyun Sang along with five of his lieutenants, police reported. Buying: — SR Sars cm etme eee pe ere ee oe Se A ees 8 os ew PS ees FIFTEEN May Delay Naming New Labor Chief WASHINGTON @—Sen. H. Alex- ander Smith (R-NJ) ‘said today the appointment of a new secretary of labor might be delayed several / : weeks. Smith, chairman of the Senate Labor Committee which will con- sider the appointment and report it to the full Senate for confirma- tion or rejection, discussed the matter with President Eisenhower He said in an interview it was his idea the choice could well be put off until close to the time for Congress to return in January. “If the new secretary is chosen now, he couldn’t.be confirmed un- til after Congress comes back,” would be out in thé open for every- the Palle, © theee-lip heree rece body to shoot at—labor or other around the square of Siena, Italy, the senator said. ‘‘Meanwhile, he Optometrist FE 2-2629 EYE EXAMINATIONS en Dr. E. F. DENNE 914 West Huron Street ACROSS From HURON THEATRE | ETROIT JEW GAS SCRAP IRON: and | METAL Selling: Structural Steel I-Beams -- Channels Angles -- Etc. S. Allen & Son, Inc. 22 Congress St. FE 5-8142 | problems in assessing and igrading anti-drought work | and in the rational utilization | of water were tackled and the |anti-drought campaign was un- | ARMY CLEANING NAVY JOE'S SURPLUS | folded.” . Both Guilty, Both Given | Own Divorce Decree lm the Heart of Pontiac | FRESNO, Calif. (H—A judge de- | cided that both parties had a good | ~ Why We Stake Our ease and granted separate divorce | 32 S. Saginaw YOUR HUNTING HEADQUARTERS Hunting Licenses Issued FE 2-0022 decrees to Genevieve and Antonio Torrez of Calwa. Superior Court Judge Edward J. | Kellas said his decision—believed | to be the first of its kind in Cali- | fornia—was based on a supreme | court decision. The high court ruled | it is permissable to grant separate | decrees when neither party is inrio- cent of charges filed by the other. | The couple had been. married pocket (REPUT | seven years. She sued on charges | of cruelty and he counterfiled on Camouflage Pants Camouflage Overalls ... Duck Coats, rubberized Duck Pants, double seat . Game Bag , $3.95 $5.95 ore ewe eeeeaneee . . ‘ $5.95 desde oe (SaOS| Shell Vest ............92.45 ATION | the same complaint. on Omega In all the'years we have been in business, one name — Omega—has continued to dominate the quality watch field. And every year, more and more Omega watches are sold through carefully selected jewelers the world over, ing its réputation On us. For Omega is the best-known timekeeping instrp- ment in'the world. It is an accepted fact from Calcutta to Cairo... from can pay more for a watch not get better value. Most watches are assembled from mass-produced’ parts bought from other manufacturers and designed to fit nearly every type of watch. Very few are com- pletely produced and assembled under one roof. Even those few manufacturers, however, who do control their entire production, haven’t available to them the magnificent plant and advanced technolog- ical facilities of the self-contained Omega factories in Switzerland, As a result, Omega holds the highest awards for accuracy at the three leading observatories of Geneva, Kew Teddington and Neuchatel. And Omega has beeri unanimously chosen to time the last four + consecutive International in our collection. You can We are proud to be one of the jewelers whom Omeya has chosén to represent it. Actually, Omega is dig When you are ready to buy a really fine watch, we suggest that you make your choice from among the many splendid examples of Omega craftsmanship | Year-Old Fire Truck Makes Its First Run HOPE, Kan. @®—This town: of | ; 300 population bought a new ore truck one year ago. | Yesterday the truck made its | | first run—to a small blaze in a peal at the G. W. 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SAYS FAMOUS EDUCATOR of you ean get ANOTHER VOLUME for the Sto low price of 89c, until the set ie complete. 7% Which 36 now obtsinable & Cum mux The American International Encyclopedia pong saat ada “day nad guage spear chase! ‘They be as anxious to take has been heralded by well-known educa- “The equivalent of a college degree!” NO COUPONS: NO RED \ at STRINGS Sa ia copie ed Sea anaes “inet we Suc ce Sta ea ise . Yes, only 89¢ with any purchase at Our Store! This set was last sold for $50. The binding, color plates and paper used in this set are equal to the ones used in sets selling for over $50.00! Don't miss this outstanding opportunity! Read the simple instructions! See how easy it is to get your set, now! Se oe a ee ee ee, Sa ee: n\n a Ee a Ri i ie | beliy Pe St EN ee a ee ca | Marl iy as —_— eS SS __ Acting Profession Seems to Have Universal Appeal for Young Women | Question ‘Why Did It Happen to Me?’ | Cuts Breakage } and joins together easily with lophane tape. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 — EIGHTEEN You can avoid chipped glassware and dishés by lining shelves with . inexpensive blotting paper pur- chased at| most dime or stationery | stores. Blotting paper gives shelves a bright and colorful appearance Cel- Four-fifths of traffic acei- | dents occur in clear weather. Know Pi Good Way Out of “the Doghouse” wi E ue7twens Garden Gate Greenhouse 140 E, Blvd. S. FE 5-1434 Flawers by Wire Would-Be Stars Forget Hard Facts of Broadway By ANNE HEYWOOD Every time a new Hollywood starlet makes a big hit and gets a huge contract—and every time an unknown actress scores a triumph on Broadway—I shudder to myself. t shudder, because I know it will be only a matter of time before my mail is*—~ flooded with letters from |More or less bitter, or settle for girls who have decided to second-best in a job in some other become actresses | field, feeling most of their lives Second only to writing, it seems that ey to me, acting appeals to all kinds age ; ; ; of young women, with or without! It is almost impossible to dis- any ability. courage these youngsters. , They stream into New York. | YOu can quote the figures on the They pound the ments and | #Vverage income in the acting pro- haunt the) casting offices. fession—which is much lower than a typist makes—and still th : They watch their savings dwin- ott it’s in my blood!” yy my dle, and they usually end up either going My own personal feeling is that ' if you can imagine being happy ae doing anything else, you should | Stay away from acting. really are ‘‘second- A sparkling clean toilet are a few rules for the girl) who insists that she was, born to act: 1. Start in your own = school plays and in your own town’s ljttle theater. Get as much ex- | perience as you can at church | fairs and in any amateur activi- (ses your community may put on. 2. When the time comes to storm New York, come with a de- fininte plan for a paying job that will support you while you are y making the rounds. bowl is no luxury... when you use Sen ask week | “Where a Good Friends Meet | One girl I know took a job as a baby sitter evenings and weekends in exchange for room and board, so she was free in the daytime. i This gave her a couple of years i without the tension of being. broke | } and she eventually landed a bit } part | _ However, because nobody pays | much attention to such advice, here | I know that this will not dis- The knowing touch of flowers makes any occasion a special one, She's placed her beau’s gift in a cluster of curls to complement her hairdo. Who would guess that this sophisticated style is only one of the many possible with today’s home permanents? Inflatable Holder for Baby's Bottle There'll be. entertainment for baby and peace of mind for mother with a plastic bottle holder that | looks. like a rakish pink and blue kitten. It’s inflatable so there’s a cush- ion of air to prevent breakage when Junior drops — or throws— his supper. It should be sudsed off ee ms Easy! Diagram proves how swiftly you can whip up this smart, slim skirt. Thrifty! One yard 54 inch fabric for Misses’ Waist Sizés 24, 25, 26, 28, 30! Have one in basic black or brown wool to team with sweaters and blouses! Make another to match a bright wool jersey blouse — you have the new- est fashion — coordinated sep- arates! Send for Pattern 4728! This pattern easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions. 1 Send thirty-five cents in coins for this pattern — add 5 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pontiac Press Pattern Department, 243 West 17th St., New York 11, New’ York. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. PETUNIA! Forme they simply Never last — They seem to get So hard, so fast / They'd keep longer, Pe- them tunia, if you'd store in a glass jar with the lid screwed on tight. Try it! Bisnor-peacken | GIRLS! 3 courage: any really enthusiastic | @fter every use, of course, just like would-be actresses and so I sug-| al! other mealtime equipment. gest that such girls bear one more Fc Good Groomi: thing in mind. roomina: a Wine LIBERTY For each girl who makes the | qr 2 _ . 9 spectacular success that you read | The daily use of perfume is a ® CHOICE COC KTAIL | about, remember that thousands | 800d grooming habit. But be sure LIQUORS waste their youth, and in many | to use the propér scent for the ® DELICIOUS LOU NGE cases their whole lives, in the} occasion. Light, floral scents are i } unsuccessful attempt to be an ac- | best for daytime, spicy, for sports, ‘: COCR IANS 85 North Saginaw | tress. heavy, for evening. - ) Othes trom your elechic abyer oC. we Ks i, - aH gi. i a §i CS r f, V7 — , : "iy SN ¥\ &e Fg : f- $ : h , S The instant the first load comes out of your electric dryer you'll feel the difference. Blankets, towels, chenilles, diapers—everything has an air-spun feeling. Clothes are so soft and fluffy you'll think you’re folding clouds. Dryer-dried LOOK FOR THIS SYMBOL... clothes look like new—are like new for the sup : The dealer displaying this ‘sunny blue and can’t fade or rot them. Talk to your Electric gold seal is a dryer specialist. ‘He is qualified Dryer |Days” dealer, Find out how an electric >to help | select the dryer that best meets dryer daves time and work | your needs, . Standard installations wired without charge on Detroit- Edison lines. t NO MORE WASHDAY/ pee ; TOR AND TROUBLE | . Swit | No heavy ik dotue, DOES THE WORK +4 carry... no i Put a load of wash into poles or lines to fight . . . your electric dryer and set no weather worries. the controls. In a matter of new minutes your clothes will be ° , freedom. dry. It’s as easy, asithat! _|See your “ELECTRIC DRYER DAYS” DEALER | | | | { | js SKATE FREE WITH THIS COUPON . Doris Roller Rink 861 Doris Rd. FE 2-1084 ’ \ - « t , ¢.* Implies Attitude of Self-Centeredness By MURIEL LAWRENCE I haye finally been asked ‘‘That It’s been asked by the mother of a d boy who left home for his| vacation job one morning and didn’t return. Instead, he telephoned to say that he’s found himself a furnished room and was going to continue to work this fall rather than go back to college, He said he could see no other demand train- ing he doesn’t want and asked their understanding and forgive- ness. From the bed to which she’s retired in nervous collapse, his mother cries out ‘‘That Ques- tion.”’ | “‘Why, did this happen to me?” With fall sympathy, may I sug- gest that it's happened to her be- cause like countless other human beings, |she is subject to disap- pointment? It’s happened because none of us is given special in- surance) policies against the frus- tration of our wishes. We cah no more control the des- tiny of| another person than we can the seasons of growth and decay. So the fact that we can ask such a question is in- timately| related to our suffering. It implies that we are a human being who denies that he has hu- man limitations. It is,| I expect, our refusal to accept these limitations that has put us to bed with nervous col- lapse. | For when we regard ourselves as a special brand of critter above the disappointments lesser mortals suffer, we don't make ourselves likely prospects for trust or con- fidence. Our assumption that we're en- titled to special protection against _| frustration of our wishes tga it impossible for our grown son | to say, ‘!Mother, let's discuss| my desire to go against your | wishes.’’ Rather than face the ex- Let Children Use Plastic Tumblers Try letting your children use plastic tumblers. Small fingers can grip them better—and if they fall, there won't be any cut fingers. These plastic ‘‘glasses’’ are sim- ple to wash. Food and fruit juice stains vanish when soapsuds strike the surface. Keeps Hair Curly You may be able to avoid nightly hair setting if you wear a net to bed. Be sure the net is strong and fastened securely. [THINGS TO COME by Gennwyi | \ "7 plosion, he gives up hope of under-, will continue to separate us from standing—and leaves home. him unless we correct it. It’s been my experience that So long as we insist on regard- self-centeredness is always behind) ing ourselves as a unique victim “That Question.” Since we can't} of disappointment, we cannot accept our boy’s limitatins until) possibly repond to his disappoint- we accept our own, our attitude; ment. How, then, can we expect to help him think through his discouragement over college? So let’s stop raging at life for presuming to deny us a_ wish. We're not the Almighty ordaining the destinies of others. | Let's get out of bed, make our sevies a bowl of hot soup—and ask our son to come over and tell us why his wish seems more important than ours. If we listen with understanding and love, that's all the present moment requires of us. Answer te Previous Purrie MAKE FRIENDS clolw] [olelaimial [elqle aixia Oj: jcleiz 1[OIN Ai.|@ PISiAIL IM Tisic Unless she wants to seem older LlelolAlLialéithiclelsis than she is a woman doesn’t talk PIAISI74' (Re . . A q AIGIALL INE Asinigigimiaio about her age — she ignores it. BIAINIs AlOl@PACIVIAR And there’s another reason for ‘not BILIALANIAIPLOislali ir dragging one’s age into the lime-} LISi¢i “jal ee light. It makes a person see Sloyel@paale lear: oO} self-centered. | Fete] betetetete Rilo 5 ot TIBIN RIA ei OB 2 Just be yourself and forget your atalel faletrioial Istatx a ro oss sen T 2 BS D Miserables” by Victor —— 8 + wrote ig “Elergy in 6@ Country is i Churchyard” 12 Organ of sight 13 Ireland 14 Steals 15 Exist 16 Pleasing 18 Ridiculed 20 Show contempt 21 Abstract being 22 Native of Latvia 24 Cooper's “—— of the Mohicans" ry 26 Withered 27 Rider — Haggard's 30 Depose ’ NT 32 Rasps 34 He wrote { “Tristram } Shandy” } 35 Gaelic poet 36 Possessive : ronoun | i 37 Pastry ’ 39 Far (prefix) | } 40 Iritate iil) 41 Plead | 42 Children like 57 Letter of the 10 Competent 33 Fall flower this kind of alphabet Belgian river 38 Rest book 17 Compound 40 Hemingway's 45 Jeweled 1 Heavy metel ether (pl.) “The Sun 49 Things left out 2 Charlotte 18 Bury Also ——" 51 George Bronte’s 23 Rye fungus 4) Water Gershwin's “Jane ——”" 24 Luxuriant container brother 3 Foretellers 25 Op: 42 Cipher 52 Eat 4 Chiefs 26 Purioin 43 Neglect 53 Italian city 5 Prod 27 Editor and 44 Excavation 54 Dickens’ 6 Belt photographer 46 Within “Tiny ——" 7 Individual (1864-1946) (prefix) 55 French 8 U.8. President 28 Cure 47 Great Lakes summers 9 Flowing Hir 48 Knight's wife 56 Kind of light garment 31 Capers 60 John (Gaelic) 11Y_ S. Saginaw, Eagle Theatre Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. Enrollments Available in Day and Evening Classes. Write, phone or call in for Free pamphiet. PHONE FED L 4-2352 f CONT CHIEFTAIN HALL bape Teeaioge Pontiac Drive, Sylvan Lake WEDDING RECEPTIONS COMPLETE KITCHEN SET-UP LAKGE PARKING LOT BANQUETS CHECK 800M P. & SYSTEM PARTIES can | DANCES FE 5-2474 LODGES GET THE MOST (),0'9 re | in Your Garden Next Spring Eros, Snow Prince, Electra, Orange Nassau, Peach Blossom and Fantasy, Blue Parrot, Red SPECIE TULIPS, RED EMPEROR $1.25 Dox. Hyacinth, crocus, snow drops and 10 varieties of nercissus, Jacobsen’s Flowers 101 N. Saginaw A A A Tall giant Tulips, fragrant Hyacinths, dancing Daffodils, cheery Crocus blend their enchantment in floral beauty from March to June. You will have a wonderful gotden at little cost, long before Select Mixed mest other flowers bloom! € Doz. DARWIN TULIPS 19 25 Bulbs ..........4...$1.59 VARIETIES Standard and novelty tulips to choose from DOUBLE TULIPS, $1.00 Dox. Van Der Hoeff PARROTT TULIPS, $1.25 Dox. Champion, Therese, Orange Favorite Darwins, Breeder, Cottage and Triumphs In all the popular, lovely two-tone shades From 89c to $1.00 Special 100 Lot Prices ¢ Ask for FREE Colorful Booklet filled with ideas fer your garden. Fine Gifts FE 3-7165 » — ee, ee THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 NINETEEN stings on other queen bees. Beauty Clinic By Edythe McCulloch YOUR PERMANENT What should we expect from a riffanent wave? é first consideration is to get the right amount of curl the ‘texture of your hair and to meet, the requirements of your hair style. The right amount of cuntee gives the hair body, re- es a natural jwave and makes the fingerwave . more lasting. But even a good perma- ent: has limitations. Tf you wack your hairdo to remain ag ge from one shampoo to ine some little atten- tion s generally necessary, Your hai ress is mast likely to be ruiried while sleeping, If a wavé or ¢curl is stretched~out || of shape and then wi t on ford houfs it isn’t murpers ng if it doesn’t’ spring back into place the next morning.’ You wouldn’t think ‘of throwing your new dress into corner and finding it fit to; wear the next day. Place bobbies in’ the waves you wish to keep and turn up the aon in a:véry few big pin curls. not wet, just pin. This will double the lasting qualities of your, hairdo. ge It ig: safe'to hold bee { your hand since they only tse their’ M rs. Doc to r ‘With Scouts Leaves Post New Members of Board Introduced at Meeting The resignation of Mrs. Ivan S. Doctor as executive director of the Northern Oakland (County Girl Scout Council was accepted when the board met Tuesday in the Girl Scout office. Mrs. Ivan Wilcox, council presi- dent, opened the first meeting of the season and introduced new board members, Mrs. B. J. Mur- ray, of Rochester, treasurer; Mrs. E, A. Reitmeyer, public relations; Mrs. Frank Brooks and Mrs. A, O. }Hustvedt. Resident camp chairman, Mrs. Russell Kneale, reported the larg- est registration in the history of Camp Sherwood. Camp improve- ment plans have been presented to and approved by the board. Helen Anderson of Kansas, for- mer waterfront director, has been Phone Edythe McCulloch Beauty,»Shop, FE 2-7431, 608 Pontiac Bank Bidg. Hes Scionce Discovered NATURE'S SECRET of BETTER NEALTH, | LONGER LIFE? wight iw longe vid Stn oat It ean two big thin: or you, too; help to prevent ar il that once stumped doctors; build you up mentally and aac rg A all many years of happy. ving! hat’s the ad ood — —that | sure includes PLENTIFUL L DAILY SU PPLY OF “0, ” It’s a fact that doctors now believe “C”’ to be the key to from other natural vi ACTIVATED ENZYMES— Nature’s “spark plugs’ so vital to lide itself! Be ad ects ore ecaute store up a of C-TONE and get named camp director for the 1954 | season. Formative plans for countywide | recruitment of adult help in ithe | scouting program was explanined | by Mrs. Reitmeyer. 5 in the scout office with a region- al staff member as guest speaker. | A noon recess included the show- ing of the. Pontiac United Fund) film by Jerry Shroder from the | United Fund. Says Americans Won't Tolerate Raised Hemline NEW YORK (INS) — Big-name New York couturier Ben Zucker- man Monday offered ‘‘proof posi- tive’ that American women will not tolerate a drastic change) in hem lengths, Zuckerman said women their programs in the air ra | virtually stampeded”’ a mammoth | fashion charity show in St, Louis | when he announced that 14 inches | from the floor is ‘‘short enough for any skirt on any woman.’’ Pointing out that St. Louis Is - square in the middle of the U.S. the high-style manufacturer be- lieved that this was probably a typical reaction of women against the recent abbreviation of skirt lengths by Parisian de- “ LaVON 1 BEALL add DELORES BAKER Thomas, Two area residents %ho were graduated’ ‘from High- | dent; Mrs. Unit Two of MOMS Has Meeting Members Gather at Jackson Home Tuesday The Mount Vernon road home of the Fred J was the meet- ing place y for Unit Two, MOMS of ica, Inc., for a cooperative Juncheon and installa- tion of offi Mrs. Lloyd Alber, state president from Pickney, was the installing of- ficer assisted by Mrs. Felix Mayo of Pontiac, state chaplain. Officers installed were Mrs. Bes- sie Clark, president; Mrs. Edgar vice president; Mrs. , second vice presi- McVean, re- land Park General Hospital School of Nursing Friday eve- | cording secretary; Mrs. Cari Cox, ning were LaVon Beall, daughter of the Thad Bealls of So cure State avenue, and Delores Baker, daughter of Capt. and ea Harp,’ Witorian, =“ Mrs. Douglas S. Baker of Park drive, Orchard Lake. McConnell Meeting Held PTA Officers Introduced and Mrs. John Brewer, directors. Guests for| the evening included Mrs. Charles O’Brien of the Ox- ford unit and Mrs! Alex Gno of Romeo, -| catch fire in a breeze. Sept. 30 at Stevens Hall ing a berefit tea for Ionian earth- quake relief. Tea to Aid Quake Victims Ladies Auxiliary of St. George| The church, through its many Greek Orthodox Church is sponsor- | Committees, is maintaining a drive for old clothing which will last until Oct. 15. Clothing received by Sanctioned by the American Red | the church will be sent directly to Cross, the tea wil feature a fur | Greece and the islands. Harrises Honored Mr. and Mrs. Milton Harris, who are leaving this month to make their home in Mobile, Ala., were honored Saturday evening at a dinner given by the Co-Workers Class of Baldwin Avenue Evangeli- cal United Brethren Church at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kolb on South Genesee Avenue. and accessory fashion show and | will be held Sept. 30 at 7:30 p. m.| in Stevens Hall of All Saints Epis- opal Church. Working on the committee are Mrs. Azaria Savvas, president; Mrs. Frances Garyet, treasurer, and Mrs. Helen Nickols. The re- freshment hour will be high- lighted by the serving of Greek pastries. Forget Curtains A window over the cooking area is dear to the hearts of many homemakers. By all means have one if you want one, but don’t put filmy curtains at this window to ‘*How to Make Your Wedding Go Smoothly’’ come in, write or phone for this booklet. There is no charge. Pearce Floral Company 559 Orchard Lake Ave. Phone FE 2-0127 ANDRE’S PERFECTED = PERMANENTS Start at Mrs. Earl Luchenbach intro-| Johnson, social; Lila Harrington, Board orientation is set for Oct.| duced the new officers of the| publicity; Mrs. Ford Snyder, mem- executive board of McConnell; bership; Mrs. Arthur Herald, School PTA when the group met|health; Mrs. Henry Engholm, hos- Tuesday at the school, Mrs. Edward Sage is vice presi- pitality; and Mrs. Lyndon Davies, junior protection and youth. dent and Mr. Luchenbach is father; Mrs. Glen Hickes has charge of vice president. Teacher vice president ts Helen Voss; recording secretary, Mrs. William Ballard; corres- ponding secretary, Mrs. Gerald Storner; treasurer, Mrs. Cecil Lankford, and historian, Mrs. Harold Boughner. defense stamps, Mrs. Ervin At- well, safety; Mrs. Ada Cox, mag- azine, and Mrs. Philip Rakaja, legislation. Blue Star Mothers to Send Yule Boxes Mrs. Sarkis Schnorkian is coun-} Christmas boxes of clothing and cil delegate, and committee chair men include Mrs. Clarence Cham- ~|hard candy were planned Thurs- beriain, finance; Mrs. Oscar) Ganter Four, which will send * William Kovins them to orphans in Korea. The group, which met at the YMCA, also decided to aid a vet- day evening by Blue Star Mothers. events and the work being done in veterans [hospitals. New units organized the state were re- ported on Mrs. Mayo, and a roundtable ion followed. Mrs. Cl announced that the next busin meeting will be Oct. 6. Mrs. na reported coming - Gelatine Treatment An envelope of the unflavored gelatine must be taken at least 90 consecutive days to grow a new finger nail. |The gelatine can be taken in water, fruit or vegetable juices or bouillon. If used in water or juices, sprin- kle the envelope of gelatine into a glass of the liquid, let liquid absorb the gelatine, then stir and drink. If the liquid thickens, add more liquid and stir again. " $5 $75 $19 = COLD WAVE MACHINE OR MACHINELESS Including the Italian Boy Haircut AND INDIVIDUAL SET by MR. ANDRE Open Wednesday All Doy—Friday ‘til 9 P.M. No Appointment Needed! Immediate Service Andre Beauty CSalon: 2nd Floor Pontiac State ank Bldg.—Ph. FE 5-4490 signer Christian Dior Zuckerman himself is making | clothes with 14-inch |hemlines for | what he considers the “moderate | height woman”’ 5 feet 6. For each | inch under that height, ct course, the proportion from the floor should be narrowed, he explained. your whole fam- ily started on th rieh, pleasant- tasting, natural supplement y! C-TONE Hee eaty satura! Vitemin C tonic ' | Natural Health Food | [BA Wayne St., Pontiac ! Send me at ence “C-TONE.” Ten- ! eclese $5.96 plus 15e pestage and l5e ! ! ‘kindly on clothing budgets and re- He promised that his clothes would remain at this ‘most flatter- ing’ length for at least another year, and said he believed other U. S. designers would also look sist any major changes. Planning Fish Fry Mrs, Arthur Kaphengst, chair- man, has announced that the pub- lic is invited to a fish fry to be | given Friday evening by the Fel- | lowship Group of Grace Lutheran | Church. Dinner will be served between ' 5:30 and 7:30 p. m, at the church. - I 1 1 1 1 Mich. Sales ‘Tax. 1 1 1 1 ' Laura Bowmaster is} cochairman. 718 West Huron Street © Jewelty a MM: FLORA=MAE Infants’ Specialty Shop FE 2-3220 © Linens ® Lingerie 7 - W. Pike St. Entertain Class |" ___ Mr. and Mrs. Williarn ,Kovin of | =r" Knollwood drive were hdsts to the e. Wesleyan Class of First Methodist | =~ Church Saturday evening. The business meeting was con- ducted by Alfred Jackson, Mrs. | s§ Robert Murphy conducted devo-| #7 tions on ‘‘What You Choose” and | #%# John Greisen and Paul Brown had sh charge of the program. “e Mrs. Dudley Colby, class spon-| 7% | sot, presented the visitation pro-| 7 ~ gram stressed at the District Com- | % mission on Education meeting by | # the Rev. Keith Colby. Mrs. Colley | assisted the hostess with refresh- | @ ments. ‘Coming Events Pontiae White Shrine drill team will | | sponsor a card party this evening in Roosevelt Temple, 22 State Ave Ladies Aid of 8t. John Lutheran Church will meet Thursday at 1 p.m. in the church parlors for s dessert lunch- eon. American Gold Star Mothers Chapter Nine will meet Thursday afternoon at Cass-Dodge Park No. 4 for a picnic. For further information, contact Mrs. 11 Presbyterian Church. Child Culture Club wil) meet at the home of Mrs. Ralph Block, 3916 Auburn Rd., Auburn Heights, Thursday at 8 p.m. Camp Nesbitt 11, Ladies National League, will meet Thursday at 1 p.m. ; in the Grotto Hall, 128 W. Pike St. aa Ladies Auxiliary to Eagles Aerie 1230 | will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. in the hall ee on West Montcalm street for initiation. |, . Welcome Rebekah Lodge 246 will meet | « % Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Malta Temple, | ~ > 82 Perkins St. gi Jolly Women’s Club will meet Thursday | at 12:30 for a cooperative luncheon with | i, Mrs. George Morgan, 584 E. Kennett ie Rd. Royal Neighbors of America will meet Thursday at 8 In the Grotto Hall, 138 : 26 | Brown Suede, Benedictine Trim FE 2-7440 for Fall. W. Huron From Our Fall Collection be of JOLENE =| Gain a beautiful foothold ‘on fashion in Jolene. . . the smooth looking casual walkers Black Suede — Calf Trim Brown Suede — Benedictine Trim . $58 What’s new - and - coming in see... in our dmazing collection assembled espe- cially for you who love what's different, stunning looking, and precious-feeling in beautiful shoes! . Sparkle-touched suedes . . . » of new colors, new slim-shaped shoes, narrower |@, higher heels ond “half heels.” . . at modest prices. shoes? You'll variety . Autumn’s newest styles in magnificent variety in fabulously beautiful famous-name shoes... 9.95 to 12.95 bag title 12.95 to 16.95 lacgucliMie 8.95 to 10.95 See glowing aniline calf the excitement Such extraordinary as seen in Vogue, Mademoiselle and Harper’s Bazaar TETRIS NORTE Ie Fall SHOE , SHOWING at Arthur's Shoe Sclon—Second Floor " ee. ee eee PE OR One cake A ; Bog SAE DS Hs ee i“ Pen, 2k Bes Ne REN * ae eR TES AS MY CARI OSS : : Ps ie ame 3 po nha oto we ae — 3 ba i: 3 ¢: be cr & we & eg 9 48 N. Saginaw St. ‘. POE AAPOR ee ET — —_ —_—-_ | TWENTY “Cacecr Gol wmons | $15 Short? Medium? Tall? } duet exactly YOUR size | | : | Neumode : | at NN. ‘Saginaw St. | Hide Ugly Mattress | With Pert ‘Petticoat’ | lout” If the mattress shows and | ' looks unsightly, then cure it with! | some trolicky tinted percale bed | ruffles. j They perk up the aroand-the-edge | look and they tub famously. Such | ruffling can be machine washed, ‘of course, and remains frilly no matter how many times it goes through soapsuds. The Scriptures have been printed ‘in 1,100 languages. of re-covered | Mt Mohairs FE 4.0558. Save on This Special Purchase New Upholstering: Fabrics now you can save on new moanufacturer-to-you furniture 100°, SPECIALLY PURCHASED. | DAVENPORTS, re-covered as low as $90 and up CHAIRS, re-covered as low as $45 and up (L — — WILLIAM WRIGHT 270 Orchard Lake Road | | > ’ oe; “Be oe? ~* Nylons, Tweeds, Established 1933 ”— 8° LP Se Does your bed need a ‘pat’ ZEST Sauce Gives Flavor to Spareribs Miss Faye Donelson Has Original Recipe for Barbecue By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor When the local branch of the American Association of Univer- sity Women met recently for an outdoor dinner, the highlight of the meal was an enormous pan | of barbecued spareribs. The de- licious sauce is an original recipe of Miss Faye Donelson who gladly shared it with the food editor. Miss Donelson enjoys her work as an elementary teacher. She is active in. her church group, in the) AAUW, loves to travel and is an | excellent amateur photog- rapher. Her beautiful garden shows evidence of her skill as a gardener. BARBECUED SPARERIBS By Miss Faye Donelson 5 pounds spareribs 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce 1 cup catsup % cup terragon vinegar 2 tablespoons garlic wine vinegar 2% teaspoons tabasco sauce 1 rounded teaspoon dry mustard 1 teaspoon paprika 1 tablespoon salt % teaspoon red pepper One of the secrets of the de- liciousness of these ribs is the | fact that they are broiled 5 to 6 minutes on each side, before being baked in the sauce. This gets rid of the excess fat that is offensive to many people. After broiling, pour the above sauce over the meat and bake in a slow oven 3% to 4 hours. This recipe will serve 6 to 8 people. Rose for Secrecy i“* “ise oat fo Me ‘ ye a ; . mH he ~S ia ee " Designed to conform with today’s compact mode of living, each piece of this new melamine plastic dinnerware is uniquely functional, serving more than one purpose. It’s } ¢ by t Oe asthe bE Pinter ote S i Se and won't stain. practically unbreakable, can be popped into the dishwasher > “th Saheb 4/ = FROM FRANCB .;: WITH FLAIR! Moordale: shapes this beauty from impotted Montagnac zibelihe suiting— 40% mohair/alpaca, 60% wel and all elegance. The Parisian look you'll love with stand up collar, jeweled tabs And narrow. skirt. Carefully ‘crafted the Moordale way right down to the fared hand-detailing. Yours in-red or blue grey. Sizds 7 to 15. 69.95 i omnd Annual “Autumn Portraits ‘ A PREVIEW SHOWING OF NEW FALL FASHIONS IN LADIES’ SUITS, COATS, SPORTSWEAR TONIGHT, SEPTEMBER 23 — 8:00 P, M, MEZZANINE FLOOR HUSBANDS AND MALE FRIENDS ARE WELCOME ‘THERE WILL BE A SPECIAL SHOWING OF : MEN’S STYLES i idieandamnemnntn ieee cate : Free Door Prizes 1. A $50.00 “ROSENBLUM OF CALIFORNIA” LADY'S SUIT, 2. A $10.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE ACCEPTABLE AS CASH IN ANY OSMUN DEPARTMENT. 3. A BEAUTIFUL LADY’S BLOUSE OR MAN’S SHIRT TO $5.00 VALUE. NOTHING TO BUY—YOU NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN at —_—_~)———— / . NO CHARGE FOR ADMISSION REFRESHMENTS — ENTERTAINMENT j 4 i PONTUACS FINEST STORE FOR MEN & WOMEN SMUN 51 North Seginaw v= ; ewne In 1526 roses were hung over *2 | ¢onfessionals or carved on stone . | or wooden benches as an indication | Today’s téen-agers know all af the confidential and secret na-| the answers—except to the ques- | ture of the act of confession. ‘tions the teachers ask them. dees With This Ad OF EXTRA FREE °c: A Genuine Leather Band $1.00 Value with Every Watch Repair! OFFER GOOD THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY Save More at LOU-MOR 45 South Saginaw Next to Ookland Theater | cuse, ‘f| friends, worked together, went to | the same parties, had a few dates | Several Puzzled Girls Ask the Same Question: ‘To Write or Not to Write?’ By ELIZABETH WOODWARD “Dear Miss Woodward: If a girl moves away, jis it all right for her to write to a boy she used -to go to school with?”’ If going to the same school is | the only tie that binds them to gether, it hardly seems enough ex- But if they were special together and got along well—heave ho. A friendly correspondence will help to keep such a relationship alive. And since the giri’s the one who went away and has lots of new things to write about in addition to asking questions about old familiar places and people, she could write first without feel- ing awkward about it. “Dear Miss Woodward: towns, that I'd like to write to. “T've never gone with either of | them although I had the chance (I didn't feel I knew them well Don’t ask them to write. Make your address clear, sign your full name, then hope they'll be I’m just getting settled down in col-| lege, and am already missing the | ‘guys I left behind me at home.| amusing, gay fashion, then ask There are two boys, from different questions about things you know | | they're doing. sufficiently intrigued to answer your questions on paper. “Dear Miss Woodward: I met Ralph last winter and went with him off and on until June. Since “Do you think I could write | then I haven't seen him and he them short notes giving them my | hasn't called. address and asking them to write | “While I was going with him I to me?” | was sure he liked me and I still If you thought you didn't know like him. Would it be considered them well enough to go out with chasing him if I wrote him and enough). One I'd been with sev- eral times in a group, and I talked with the other only twice after he asked me for a date. might be quite a strain. Of course, hear from him?” | it's fun to have letters from boys; That sort of letter just might while you're away at college, and, get his back hair up. It might a short note to each of them alarm him, make him wonder wouldn't do any harm, really. | what you had on your mind that Since you hope to get better | You wanted to see him about. Might acquainted with them both by mail| make him tear up your letter and make your first letter sound as, let “sleeping dogs lie."’ though they already know you| An invitation from you would pretty well. Recount the ‘‘perils, be a more positive and more of Pauline in a new school” in| pleasant way of reminding him that you’re alive. If getting him on the phone Ex-Fiancee: Must Return All Presents She May Not Keep Any Engagement or Shower Gifts By ‘EMILY POST ~ A letter this morning explains: ° “About a year ago I became en- gaged to a serviceman. It was rather a hurry-up affair and now I realize that ‘it would never work out and have broken off the en- gagement. “The question is this: Just how do I go about returning shower and engagement presents? Should I return both his family’s and mine, or just his? “There were gifts for our prospective home, gifts of mon- ey and personal gifts. Just what is the proper proced the ‘case of a broken eng 3 fi Answer: You should re ev- erything. Dear Mrs, Post: I’ve received word from my ex-husband that his mother has just passed away, I always was very fond of her but have not seen her since my di- vorce. Shall I attend the funeral, and if so, may I:go with my new hus- band? He is willing to go. Or should I go with my children alone? Answer: With your children alone — if you go at all. (To go with her son’s successor would be’ very shocking!) Dear Mrs. Post: I began work- ing a few months ago as private secretary to a man who was trans- ferred here from another city. He has just found a house here and his family is moving in a couple of weeks. Would it be proper’ for me to call on his | family, as they will be new residents’ here? I do not wish to be presumptuous or push- ing but want to do what is right. I would appreciate your help. Answer: When they arrive, ask him if there is anythig you can do for his family and then be guided by what he says as to whether ‘or not you go to call on them. » Dear Mrs; Post: I have a very close girl friend who always is asking to borrow my clothes. I don’t mind ‘lending her things on occasion but this is becoming a habit. Will you please tell me what I can do about this without hurt- ing her feelings? Answer: To refuse. without hurt- ing her feelings will be a hard thing to do. Try having one excuse after an- other for not lending the particu- | ' would involve a lot of strained stays bright through weeks of wear. thoroughly and safely. E. L. Bruce Co., Memphis, Tenm: Pour on Bruce... wipe off dirt... wax stays on! All you do is pour on Bruce Cleaning Wax and even the most stubborn dirt wipes away. Bruce's effective dry-cleaning ingredients make it just that easy..At the same time, your floor gets an extra-heavy coat of finest wax protection that polishes quickly and easily, There’s none finer at any price! Your satisfaction with new Bruce Cleaning Wax is guaranteed by the world’s largest maker of hardwood floors. Either you agree it’s easily the best hardwood floor care ever or your money back. Just look for the Scotch plaid label when you shop today. Pee seb ae eesesbeessweseerivnse Water harms wood floors! You have seen what happens when a damp glass is left on a wood table top. But have you realized that cleaning with water has the same damaging effect on fine wood floors? That's why Bruce Cleaning Wax is completely waterless. It dry-cleans by the makers of famous Bruce Floor Cleaner for linoledm ~ Bruce really ceane floo acitwaxes! It’s the easiest floor care ever... made by the world’s largest maker of hardwood floors *Forget hardwood floor washing of any kind! Because now—in just one easy operation—new, richer Bruce Cleaning Wax will keep your hardwood 4 floors gleaming with that sparkling wax lustre only a really clean floor can have. You actually save half the usual time, too! | and awkward explanations, write | him a note inviting him to a | party at your house|or to one of the girl-ask-boy affairs that will | pop up this fall. A bid from you is safe enough, Let the date-asking | come from him after that. IF out-of-kilter hips— Swit jockets wrap around hips and reveal size but the coorse tweed jecket with companion dress of finer tweed is the way fo minimize hips. Miss K. H.—Fine tweed dresses are worn with coordinated, coarser tweed packets. Sometimes the wool of the dress lines the jacket and | this is what the Parisian woman likes best. Total domestic wodl con- sumption in the U. S. aver- ages approximately 925 million Iar thing she asks to borrow. If this happens often enough, she will ean get out of the habit. Predicting when and where | earthquakes will strike cannot be |done with any accuracy. Parisian or Italian Boy Cut . . . which ever you choose, you'll need a basic Permanent a your short curls in No Appointment Necess IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON 20 E. Pike St. FE 4-2878 ba] Both For $1295 Matching Wedding Bands, aye tailored bands in 14K yellow gold. lewelry Department NEW PORT'S pounds every 12 months. SS SRE It’s Never Too Early to - Order XmasCards! | NOW IN STOCK! (Good Until October 10th!) USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN BACKENSTOSE BOOK STORE 15-17 E. Lawrence St. FE 2.1414 Se ee ee eee | | THE PON pele’ PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 1 oe eee Yo esi TWENTY-ONE Wisner School PTA Outlines Plans for Fall Festival on October 30 Affair Is Being Arranged | by Mrs. Morris Cucksey Members of the executive board ; and hdmeroom mothets of Wisner School? PTA met Thursday after- noon t@ discuss plans for the Fall Festival which will be held Oct. 30 at the school, Mrs.}! Morris Cuckséy was ap- pointed festival chairman by Mrs. Leonas Saari, president. Corpimittees appointed’ by Mrs. Cucksey include Mrs.* Donald North, Mrs. Wilbur Hinsberger, Mrs, Martha Robertson and Mrs. Owen | Wright, fish pond, and Mrs. Walter Messer, Mrs. Louis Hadden, Jane Danton and Joyce Kimball, bakery shop. Tearpom committee’ members are Mrs. ‘Erwin Christie, Mrs. Les- ae eS a Barbecue Is Enjoyed by AAUW Forty | members and) guests of the Pohtiac Branch of American Association of University Women met at:the home of Fave Donelson on Voor rheis road Monday evening for a Barbecue dinner around the outdoor’ fireplace. Mrs. ‘Neil Warren of Pleasant Ridge, ‘state president of the or- ganizatién, was the speaker of the evening.'| Speaking on the rights | and privileges of belonging. to the AAUW, $he emphasized that it is a means of continuing further study. } Each member should be stim- ulated tp contribute both to the group and to the community, she said. (Present also Was Mrs. Paul Armstrong, state secretary. Assisting the hdstess were Mrs. Richgrd Balmer, Mrs. Ray Allen, Marfon Lehner, Margaret Le Cocq and Ora ‘Hallenbeck. Any ‘¢ollege woman desiring to know mére abot AAUW may contact: the president, Mrs. Clar- ence Huemiller of Walnut road. Thomas Lewises Mark: Anniversary were hondred on the dccasion of | their 25th weddifig anniver sary | Saturday ‘evening wheh relatives and friends gathered at their home on South Johnson avenue. A hightt ight of the evening was a mock |wedding. Those participat- ing were ithe Rev. Malcolm Bur- | ton of-First Congregational Church, | Mrs. Russell Gortner, Mrs. Steven Saijers, Janet Lee Gortner, Lewis Russell, Anthony Grimaldi , and Donald Beltz, _ are Mrs. ter Wibur, Mrs. John Sitz, Mrs. | John Peterson, Flaura Owen, | Aileen Reynolds and Mrs. Harold Newstead. White elephants are under the | supervision of Mrs. Stanley Pal- | mer, Mrs. Loy Bennett, Mrs. Paul | | Webster, Mrs. Lester Lyons and | Mrs. Anita Alen. Mrs. Richard Young, Mrs. Ken- neth Carman, Mary Mitchell and Mrs. Grant R. Carlson are in charge of the rummage sale. On the gift shop committee William J. Thomas, Mrs. Fred Froede, Mrs. Roy Woods and Geraldine Gibbs. Canned foods and plants will be handled by Mrs. Thomas Reel- ing, Mrs. J. P. Ryan, Mrs. Ar- thur Price and Mrs. Lillian Paul. Makeup is under the sup- ervision of Mrs. Irving Cocking and Evelyn Pratt. Mrs. Russell C. Bell, Mrs. Carl Coffer, Helen Mercer and Mrs. Ralph Gardner will direct the sweet | bar. Ghost room will be directed by | Mrs. James Fox, Mrs. Lewis Horn- er, Mrs. Charles Johnson and Mrs. Froede. Movies will be shown with Mrs. Scott Bonham and Mrs. Agnes Cox in charge. : Pony rides will be a highlight | of the evening with Mrs. Charles | States are Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Pontius Jr., | Saturday evening in Five Points Community Church jat Pigeon. Johnson and Mr. Saari supervis- ing. Plans Made | for Gamma Party Oct. 17 | Plans for Gamma Gambol, the | dance planned /by Gamma chap ter of Beta Theta Phi, were ie vealed when the group met Tues- | day evening at the William Bra¢e | home on Voorheis road. The dance will be held Oct. at Pontiac Chieftain Hall. 17| rest Garchow as general chairman | and Jerry Barnes on decorations. | E}la Mae Christner wore light blue | Others heading committees are Com-! honor in teal blue with'’a corsage | mittee chairmen include Mrs. For-| of yellow chrysanthemums. ‘ rer MR. and MRS. PHILIP A, PONTIUS SIR. (| , 7a? < Honeymooning in tbe who were married The bride js the daughter of Frank Henne of Pigeon, and the | bridegroom, who resides on Wal- | /nut road. Mrs. | burn, Ark. * is [the son of Mr. and Philip A. Pontius of Pang- parlors, For the ceremony the former Maxine Elaine Henne chose a gown of nylon and lace with a southern gowns chrysanthemums. ing headpieces. and All Carol Haist was flower girl. Stanley Hards was best man, | Mrs. and seating the guests were Bailey and Earl Clark. Navy blue was worn by Mrs. | Pontius for the occasion with a corsage of pink roses. After the reception in the church the bride changed to an aqua suit with black accessories | for the honeymoon ‘trip. On their | return they will reside in Pontiac. Saturday in Pigeon, ‘| Maxine E, Henne became |Township schools, highlighted the | | Monday luncheon meeting of the | | Pontiac Womens Club at the Hotel ly the bride of | Walnut road, Maxine is daughter of | Frank Henne | of Pigeon and the Philip A. Pontiuses of Pangburn, ., are the | $0 bridegroom's | carr ied Frieda Hace Speaks A bathmat that feels as luxurious| bent terrycloth. It” comes im a in visi ers, sen City Women’s Club Meets: A lecture by Frieda Huggett. , ting teacher in the Waterford Philip A. | Waldron. Pontius : Miss Huggett returned recently | Jr. Of} som the “Holy Land’ and India |where she attended the Interna- the tional Conference of Social Work- | She said intimate contact, with | | ie — or eet tee jee and Mrs. Barney McKevitz, | United States Past presidents of the club were | honored at the meeting and pre- | ted with corsages. Chapter Holds parents, Chinese Auction A Chinese auction was the high- Psi sor’ Sla light of the Thursday) meeting of Chapter of Beta) Sigma Phi ority at the home of Mrs. Ray ughter on Saunders drive. Each member brought a souve- Couple Married in Pigeon .: of her travels to be auctioned. Mrs. Robert Shorey and Mrs. yellow Cecil Elshoiz directed the sale. had match-| Mrs. C L. Johnson and Mrs. Mable Roat were cohostesses for the |Wh Cipis | occasion and guests included William Killen, Mrs. itehead, Mrs. Francis and Mrs. Carol Beale) John | Collon | It’s New ... with the Latest Styles Phyllis Lee Shop Cooley Lake Rd. Near Union Lake. Rd as a Persian: carpet is made of| variety of) attractive colors @nd; foam rubber covered with absor- lof course, is completely washable. BALLROOM DANCING CLASS — STARTING — THURSDAY September 24th 8:00 P. M. ~ “JACKIE RAE” STUDIO STUDIO on 8, Telegraph at Voorhees FE 4-7319 The group \voted to hold a card | | party at the ‘Roosevelt Temple) Nov. 2. Mrs, Elmer MacLean was luncheon chairman, assisted by | Mrs. Clifford Steffey, Mrs. Aaron | Fox, Mrs, ‘Daniel Kinney and | Mrs, Charles F. Smith. The program was under the di- |rection of Mrs Maxwell Lucas | with the assistance of Mrs. Arthur G. Nicholie,; Mrs. Harry G. Sto-| Winter-Wise Fabrics in Saucy Silhouettes Here’s attention to line, detail and fit that spotlights a growing girl’s feeling for fashion. Here, too, is the secret of much longer wear ..). Add-A- Year hems hide next season's added inches ’til you’re ready to let them down. | panel of lace tiers and a train | of lace highlighting the skirt. A CaUBUBUMUrT headpiece of nylon lace was trimmed with pearls. E Coleen Patterson was maid of ' Barbara Russell, tickets; Mrs. Rob- Kinzler, location; Janie McGui | clean- -up and Mrs. publicity. Mrs. Harold St. John Jr. take charge of refreshments. will | cooperate on the dance. Mr, South Anderson street will observe | and Mrs. Cherokee road. their 54th wedding anniversary Sat- | urday. They moved to Pontiac | 33 years ago from Elgin, Scotland. | return Oct. 6, after spending a) | week in Denver. Mr. Wilmot is a | aed ee Mrs. ‘Webb to Be Hostess Garden Board Will Meet "Creating Pictures ire the Gar- | den and Home”’ is the current top- ic’ of the Birmingham Branch of‘ the Wometi's National Farm and | Garden Asgociatian. With this theme in mind, the board members will meet Monday | with their) president, Mrs. Frank , D. Webb. |’ Assisting Mrs. Webb will be Mrs. Seth: B. Slawsoa, first vice | president;;| Mrs. Max Tunni- eliffe, (second) Vice) president; Mrs. Mark Kraus, retording sec- retary; Mrs. Robert Home, cor- responding. secretary} and Mrs. Robert W, Chissus, treasurer. Mrs. Lloyd Linton has been named bulletin chairman; Mrs. W, S. Howell, civic improvement; Mrs. W.; L,; Lowrie, ¢onservation; Mrs. Harvey Bushnell, education; Mrs. C.: R. Obermeyer, exhibits; Mrs. Craig Richey, flower show, and Mrs, G. A. Weinhold, finance. | Mrs. Lloyd Southard will head the garden center work; Mrs. William ‘Hyland, horticulture ther- apy; Mrsi: J. Reed Alexander, horticulturé; Mrs, John Maynard, hospitality;) Mrs. L.| A. Hyland. international cooperation; Mrs. Donavan Gray, junior gardening. and Mrs. E. C. Hoeni¢ke, market- ing. +4 Mrs. C.:V. DiPietro is chair- man of membership, Mrs. Car- man Adams, publicity; Mrs. B. —+—H- —- Seaman aa Fa 8 WHERE Malta Groups to Open Temple | Knights pt Malta ahd Dames of| Malta are ‘planning to open their! hew temple, on Perkins street with a banquet ‘and program Saturday | evening | and an open house Sun- day afterndon. The grand commander and his | staff from .Ohio, and the Supreme Grand Commander of the Contin- ent of [Anjerica will be present for the opening. Local talent will participate iri the program. Open House Given for 83td Birthday ‘ Mrs. Mary Johnson was honored Sunday 9n the occasion of her 83rd birthday at open house given by her daughter, Mrs Joel Sandstrom, at the her! home on Michigan avenue, - Guests iri¢luded Mr, and Mrs. Albert Botting, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Place, Mr abd Mrs William Galer, Mr and My William Holeton and son, John, ‘Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Wojtechen ahd children, Diane, Kathy and Barbara, of Royal Oak. Mr and Mrs; Gordon Lorimer and Donna of Détroit and the John Carlsons; of Lansing. F. Magruder, revisions; Mrs. Robert Mason, social; Mrs. Hammond Baker, speakers’ bu- | reau, and Mrs. Ernest Mein- zinger, ways and means. Program Chairman Mrs. Seth B. Slawson announced that Mrs. Wal-|and apply match, | ter D. Byrd will discuss table set- | size of the flame after the match {is blown out. | ; tings at the Oct. 12 meeting. Ralph Behler, Going to Parley Convention Alpha and Beta Chapters: will | Colo., will be attended by Mr. and | Mrs. /quois road. Mr. and Mrs. John Sutter of! Cowe of Illinois avenue and Mr. | state officer of the group, | Cowe is past president of the Ex- change Club of Pontiac and Mr. | Powers is president of, the Pon- | ‘tiae club. | | | | { Light Gas Carefully | stove can be dangerous, so do it) c then turn the gas on all the way The National Exchange Club) in Colorado Springs, | Elbert Wilmot of. East Iro- and Mrs. John Howard Powers of | Bridesmaids Darlene Nichols and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Lewis -ert Mehoke, orchestra; Mrs. asia Three Couples Fy : The group left Tuesday and will Mr. You Can Qualify QUICKLY for a GOOD SALARY, a SECURE FUTURE The right kind of preparations means the differ- ence between a position with real future and “just another job.” Beginning and refresher courses are offered in SHORTHAND, BOOKKEEP- ACCOUNTING, C CALCULATOR under the direction of a compe- tent staff of instructors. NEW STUDENTS EACH WEEK ING, TYPEWRITING, e 7 West Lawrence Street Call in Person or Return This Ad for Bulletin ©0 ©6 O06 He au ate © ee she Oh +04 bums [NO INO) W\O/ rey, OMPTOMETER and Vastly Phone FE 2-3551 ee ee ee) Tia /@\i aXe ene €'\] TODDLERS WITH HAT.. $29.95 Ali] 3 to 6 with Slacks.......... $29.98 Hi/] Matching Hat ......... ... $3.98 Coat, 7to14..... a . $29.98 Matching Hat .............. $38.98 os featured editorially in Werper's Beater Lighting a top burner on a gas | arefully. First light the match, , adjusting the Fall Sets a New Mode in Hair Fashions Permanents CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP 116 N. Perry St. Phone FE 2-6361 $5.00 from THE MARGARET ANN SHOP 55 W. HURON Opposite Hotel Roosevelt = as ¢ “ i A. Cable stitched, turtle neck sweater. 100% virgin wool 6.98 B. Lambswool cardigan glittering with silver and pearls 10.98 C. 100% Orion caretoen with imported French floral , ribbon. . Teese 10.98 a0 ,0 © © «¢ eo 9 @ «= @ BP © 0 6 0 fo (Cardigam 0... cee ee en ee 8.98 E. 100°/, cashmere short cardigan. weil dolman sleeves, : Peter Pan collar. Ribbed trim’..................16.98 F. All wool popcorn stitch, scoop neck slipon G. Orlon set, looks and feels like cashmere. Washes easily, dries quickly. Slipon. . 5.98 All sweaters in gorgeous, exciting fall colors! D. Imported 100°, lamhoweel, full fashioned. Slipen. . .5.98: Lene eT 9B: Cardigan. .7.98 ‘ fSE "TWENTY-TWO 4 7 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 Season Will Open October 6 gE Cranbrook Music Guild Tells Plans By RUTH SAUNDERS _ plans will be made for raising funds ;Mrs. Harvey Luce and Mrs. Ernst BLOOMFIELD. HILLS — Cran-|for the association's scholarship|Kern. They will remain until Sat- brook Music Guild will open its'| season the evening df Oct. 6 at | Cranbrook Housé. Artists for the trio Mischa. Mischakoff,| George Miquelle and Mischa Kottler. Mrs. Walker | A. Williams is chairman of; the program |commit- | tee and is agsistad by Mrs B. Tilton, Dr. Maurice Garabrant and Dr. William’Lloyd Kemp. At a recent meeting Mrs. Ben- Jamin Brewstet was re-elected president of the. guild; Leroy M. | Dahlberg, vice-president;, Henry . S. Booth, secretary, and Wayne Andreae, treasurer. »~» ® Mrs. H. Gray; Muzzy returned | home today: frorh her‘cottage at! Castle Park. where she has spent most of the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Muzzy will wel- come home: next Tuesday their | son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and| Mrs. Edward H. Lerchen, and their four children who have been liv- ing in Switzerland since Decem- ber. Mr. and Mrs. William G. Lerchen Jr. of- Waddimgton road are plan- ning a cocktail jparty Oct. 3 to welcome the: Ed| Lerchen§ home Other guests. will} be close friends of Ed and Jody. : * 7 * Mrs. Edward; FE. Wilson and Mrs. William B.| Hargreaves are | cochairmen. of: the luncheon which Kingswood School alumnae will give next Tuesday at Bloom- field Hills Country Club. New officets will be elected and fund. * * * ; y. Mrs. John G. Wood of Lone Pine Patricia and Katherine Flaherty | road Jeft Monday to spend the week evening will be the popular Detroit 4" settled in school at Ladywood | at Beaumont, Harrodsburg, Ky. in Indianapolis. They left last Tues- day. 1] * * * || Frances Willson, daughter of Mr. Going. up to the C. E. Wilsonjand-Mrs. J. Curtis Willson, re- lodge at. Walloon Lake Monday as|turned recently from a summer Arthur guests of Mrs. Thomas E. Wilson abroad with Mr, and Mrs. Hubert will be Mrs. Glen R, Miller, Mrs.|V. Davis of Cranbrook. She left Robert F. G. Copeland, Mrs. Jack | last week for Dana Hall at Welles- A. Gordon, Mrs. William A. Reid, ley, Mass. a ¢ 4 LOIS MAE LENIGAN Graduated Sept. 10 from Harper Hospital School of |Nursing was Lois Mae Lenigan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lenigan of East Beverly avenue. — Jay Willson has returned to Har- |vard after spending the summer [doing sonar research work at | Woods Hole, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. Willson and Deb- bie will spend the winter at Clear- water Beach, Fila. * * © Mrs. William P. Brown and her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Wil- liam P. Brown Jdr., of ‘Ashland Piantation,’’ Miss., arrived Mon- day from an eastern motor trip to spend a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hinshaw of Pon Valley road. Mrs. Hinshaw will leave with }them for Mississippi Thursday }morning. After a visit’at the Brown \home near Greenwood, she will go on for a visit with daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bruce Hinshaw, at Yazoo | City, Miss. Protects Floors Glass or rubber protectors ap- plied to the legs of furniture will eliminate indentations in resilient | floor coverings, such as asphalt | and linoleum. her son and! Mrs. Dwight Eisenhower, who is said to be “taking it | bonnets. The one at right is in Mamie’s favorite color— easy” on the chief \executive’s bank account in her fall | pink. It is made of long-nap velveteen, with a pink ostrich | arched doorway and‘is small, shape. | shopping this year, couldn’t resist buying these new hats. | feather and ja pink rose perched in the center front of a | The one at left is fashioned along the lines of a miniature | tiny pillbox as are all of the First Lady’s | Birthdavs Marked Women having birthdays during July, August and September were honored with a birthday dinner | when the Ladies Aid Society of Oakland Avenue United Presby- terian Church met Thursday noon. A business meeting followed. and ha wn ELA ELIE EI EEL Eee oose your partner... ve a Coke. Look around. The familiar red, cooler is only steps away, ready to refresh you with the unique flavor of the world’s favorite soft drink... delicious Coca-Cola. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY ey i THE COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF PONTIAC “Coke” is @ registered wode-mork. > ©1933, we coca-cou commer ee { ‘Event Planned Nov. 2 The fall bazaar of MOMS of America Unit, 19 was discussed when the group met Monday eve- ning at the Amefican Legion Hall on Churchill road. Mrs. Francis Gazette is general chairman for the event, which will | be Nov. 2. | Other committeewomen include Mrs. Frank Polasek, kitchen; Mrs. | Robert Mutter, dining room; Mrs. John Fruytier, aprons; Mrs. Mary Meeting Planned by Hills Branch- of Garden Club | Mrs. Karl Richards was hostess | | at a luncheon at her home on Lone | Mary Silkman and Mrs. Ira Har- | | Pine road Monday for the board | | of the Bloomfield Hills Branch of | | the Women’s ‘National Farm and ' Garden Association, | | | Plans were! completed for the | | opening meetihg of the fall, which | will be a fair to be held at 12 o'clock Oct. 5/at the home of Mrs. George Baldwin of Old Orchard trail. A cooperative luncheon will be served. | | Mrs. Josephine Collins will be | in charge ofthe white elephant | | table with Mrs, James Longwell as | chairman of the farm produce ex- | hibit; Mrs. Fred Weed, jam, jelly and pickle table; Mrs. Horace P. Shaw, plants |table; Mrs. Frank Coulson, baked goods; Mrs. James Q. Goudie, special features, and Mrs. John D.' Tebbin, flower ar- rangements. | A special guest at this affair ; will be Karl |Menzel, a scholar- ship student sponsored by the Bloomfield’ Hills Branch at the School of Natural Resources, Uni- | versity of Michigan, MOMS Discuss Bazaar Siekman, baked goods; Mrs. Sadie Horst, fancy work; Mrs. William Burgdorf, white elephants; Mrs. Ralph Milligan, country store, and Mrs. Grace Shearer, tickets. Other events announced for the near future are a _ public breakfast at the liome of Mrs. Horst Sept. 30 and Tag Day Saturday under the chairmanship of Mrs. Mutter. Two Aunts Entertained at Pine Lake Guests Are Invited to Tuesday Event by Mrs. Dickinson Mrs. William Thomas Dickinson of Mohawk road entertained Tues- day at Pine Lake Countr, Club to honor her two aunts, Mrs. Thomas Rogers and Jennie Thomas of Venice, Calif. Among the guests were Mrs, William D. Thomas, Mrs. William D. Thomas Jr., Mrs. Frank Thom- as, Mrs. Robert Reynolds, Mrs, Wilbur Rowston and -Mrs. Allan Denham. Mrs. Elwood Bigler, Mrs. John Walls, Mrs. Ross Walls, Mrs. Henry Lightfoot, Mrs. Henry Miller and Mrs. C. W. Hoen- stine were others. * * « Mrs. Lulu Buckler of Rosshire court returned recently from a motor trip with Mrs. F. T. Clark of Detroit and Mrs. J. F. Paddock of Royal Oak. Quebec, the Gaspe Peninsula, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and the New England states were in- cluded in their trip, and on their return they visited Niagara Falls 'and Sarnia, Ont. * * * The Carmi Qdells of Oxbow Lake road will be hosts to Mr. Odell’s father, George Odell of Penn, who will arrive today. * * * The ‘Stand-Up’, first social event of the season at Olivet Col- lege, offered an opportunity for Charles Twitter of Bloomfield ter- race to entertain the guests with several songs and Negro spirituals as part of the program. : * * * Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Long of Dearborn, formerly. of Pontiac, are announcing the birth of a son, David Calvin, on Sept. 21. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ulrich of Birmingham and Mrs. Sue Long of Williams street are the in- fant’s grandparents. * * * The William H. Sargents of New committee chairmen were appointed by Mrs. Herschell Gibbs, president of the unit. Included are Mrs. Burgdorf; ways and means; Mrs. Leatus Wright, birthday and Bible; Mrs. Shearer, men in service birthdays; Mrs. Bailey Arnold, hospital; Mrs. | den, social -service; .Mrs. Gazette, membership, and Mrs. Malcolm Scantland, program. and publicity. Toastmistress Officers liastalled Officers were installed when Pontiac Toastmistress Club met Tuesday evening at the Hotel Wal- dron. Helen Lapisch is the new presi- dent, Mrs. Clayton Rule, vice president; Mrs. A. E. Atwood, sec- retary, and Mrs. Emil Mailahn, treasurer. Helen Turek, Gertrude Nether- cott and Mrs. Robert Bunce are the new club representatives. New oficers were installed by Jean Gardener, council chairman and member of the Mid-Century Club of Detroit. Other guests were Helen Groves, Freda Simpson, Gladys Rubright and Viola Sowin, all of the Mid- Century Club. Fine Imported China Here’s the china} value of the at an exceptional low price. plate, 6-inch saucer. 53-Piece Sets Service for 8 $2995 5281 Dixie Hwy. SPECIALLY PRICED imported china with 22K gold band trim, yours violet pattern china is available in open stock. 5-Pc. Place Setting $y9° Includes: 10-inch dinner plate, 8-inch salad CHOICE OF MANY OTHER PATTERNS Dixre Porrery | (Near Waterford) For Your Convenience Open Daily & Sun. 10 a. m.-9 P. M. season! Fine This beautiful bread and butter, cup and 93 and 101-Piece Sets Service for 12 $4995 + | OR 3-1894 0 South boulevard, Birmingham, are | announcing the arrival of a son, | Leonard Marshall, on Sept. 16. | Mr. and Mrs. Marshall G. Scott | of Fort Myers, Fla., and the |Leonard N. Sargents of South | boulevard, Birmingham, are the infant’s grandparents. / * * * b A daughter, Anne Marie, was born Sept. 7 in Ann Arbor to Mr. and Mrs. William Uhlen- dorf of Ann Arbor. Mrs. Uhlen- dorf is the former Carol Jean Peruchi of Pontiac. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. ‘Peruchi of Franklin boulevard, and the pa- ternal grandparents are Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Uhlendorf of Ann Arbor. T iPontiac Music Guild 'Meets on Tuesday Ray Gerkowski of Flint, presi- dent of Michigan Music Teachers | Association, was guest speaker |when Pontiac Music Guild met 'Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Martin Wager in Drayton Plains. Mr, Gerkowski outlined the pro- gram for the MMTA Convention to be held in Detroit Oct. 25 to 27. Mrs. Carl Clifford reported on her tour of European music festi- vals, and Mrs. Ray Gerkowski was a guest at the meeting. Mrs. Keith L. Leak Hostess at Meeting Mrs. Keith L. Leak was hostess at her home on Middle Lake road, Clarkston, Tuesday afternoon to members of Child Study Club | Three for a cooperative luncheon, Assisting the hostess were Mrs, Charles Janter, Mrs. Lester Wray, |Mrs. George Petroff and Mrs. |Ward Ross. | Mrs. Bruce Hubbard, Mrs. Thomas Humphries and Mrs. ‘L. V. Kline were guests. Feted at Shower Mrs. Orley W. Peterson of High- land drive was hostess recently’ at a pink and blue shower honor- ing Mrs. George Chakroff of Eliza- beth Lake road. PERMANENTS ] | i? Complete sii Beauty 7. Service! e FIGURES } Made to Order! } by Gyro Reducing The _ effortless oy No tiring — no — te) tion diet. md let the purring Gyro- nigger ae ala, tll ae Riker Bldg., Main Floor | FE 3-7186 ee Es 4 Dollar at TOM’S! x Gueeze of Value bt 1” ce KBMBMEKEKR Get BIG 6 DAY SALE ‘%¢ PLAN YOUR MEALS AROUND TOM'S saaliion (Ne Wed., Sept. 23 thru Tues., Sept. 29 6) TENDER + FLAVOR-RICH MEATS! 7 PILLSBURY’ S “Best” M4 LEAN © TENDER © DELICIOUS 7\ FRESH HAM -. cant me j . f ~ z Sy | a ie ROAST | rms % Cut from Selected Young Pork — Shank Half FRYE RS Y, SRY ALWAYS THE BEST FOR LESS at TOM “ WN NYY >) CLEANED DG A DRAWN 4G; , . READY NORTHWOOD MARKETS | Ji tA hee ) | YX FRESH SLICED WS 900. | HYGRADE’S HONEY BRAND BABY STEER ZN 888 Orchard Lake «. Fancy Sugar Cured Z SLICED BACON BEEF LIVER Gh @ 39; MICHIGAN SNOW WHITE | i al oa : WY p LEGOFVEAL ASE | sisters | Skinless Franks AD\, | stents 55: |Z { BLOCK EAST OF TELEGRAPH OPEN DAILY 9am. ‘tu 9 pow. OPEN SUN. 9am. ‘Tn 5 p.m. FERNBROOK TENDER SWEET my DRIED, ., { BEEF BURNETTE FARMS Fancy Double-Rich NN BM ‘3s S NN =f S = P af ad Ce = > rr KS Py! U is 7, “ae 23° ee | oe AX? Uy PA’ aes 3): p EAS 1 0: US Guvaeaaine ‘gi PESCHKE’S GRADE 1 LARGE OR ¢ |Po 4s sus 65: = Sez” TALL 303 CAN BABY FOODS 3 ws 29e NZ RING BOLOGNA 39: — Cr | = N QUET 4 STAR-KIST CHUNK STYLE hy NG : \ TUNA FISH 3 CANS a 00 U. $. GRADED CHOICE QUALITY SWIFT’S PREMIUM U, NEW ENGLAND BONELESS e CANNED PANCAKE sypup':3* 23: $x Beef Chuck Roast | picnics |, x FOR COOKING AND SALADS 3G a ae All Solid Meat $ 4a Yj (s a ; ib Ready to Eat 2 ry %, FRIGASSEE of CHICKEN WINGS 4 GIANT rd WESSON OIL por. 35: — “CAN 5 2 % selon ue 1 Le 2 5 ay. —— . iy . Cc a SS (AI WH Sy art tomtom GHILICOR CARNE CAN ——— TF pmscms RK3BK3BS x SAVE ON FROZEN FOODS! een FN 1 Wile). SNOW-CROP SALE! CFs OR PET PEAS © LEAF SPINACH ee MTT TREE SQUASH © CUT CORN DICED POTATOES Choice 5 ‘an 95 iaw'sae 2 ez: 3Qe i, PRUNE _QUART BOTTLE yh TASTY TOMATO LU x ‘CATSUP TOILET SOAP foot ee furt| rau eset oo 28825. HLS BROS. or MAXWELL HOUSE | \H) BEECH-NUT 2X PEANUT BUTTER "x 3d: TILDEN'S Sweet Gream ) ‘Goxen | gpaWaE € O = . e = DOG FO0 D 1 bs 15: BUTTER: PIE JUICE Dre Grind { G: GX KL E EN : X 3 i 6 9. | | ust es T iy PKG. 3 9: 2 CANS 39¢ vas, Gan GIP rec sorr coo BALLARD BISCUITS . . 2 ~~ 25° | __SUPER FRESH Pnopuce1 HOME GROWN SNOW WHITE % TOILET TISSUE Qiu D5 || Ss eontan CUT-RITE 3 OZ. PACKAGE p WAXED PAPER ‘i 23: | cheese 2 27: CAULIFLOWER _ 10 OZ. REUSABLE GLASS TUMBLER DERAN’S Chocolate Covered | mores ? 5° KRAFT’S FAMOUS : | 23 © T H H N A. 3 qg C PARKAY Margarine RED FLAME 9 sae 250. PINEAPPLE MINTS | Tokay Grapes 1 LB. i. ain Sy S YQ SS “MONARCH FANCY PURE PRESERVES & — ae | CARTONS 5 5° MICHIGAN GIANT SIZE 1 a ~~ 4 j ' _ TWENTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRE SS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 Teenage Thieves Devour Most of Loot, Police Say OKLAHOMA CITY wu —Squab anyone? , Oklahoma City police went pig- eon hunting fivé days, and came up-with gix pigeons and five teen- age boys: | The officers were looking for 20 pigeons reported stolen from a pen in a back yard |last Friday. What happened |to the other 14? They asked the: boys. ° “‘Delicious,’’ Was the answer. BEST BUY USED Ranges $192 Terms Available | The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC ; 51 West Huron Street REDE BLACK PLAID HUNTING JACKET «aa ve oor BA y. _ ag oe | Drybak 95 Jackets 518% :We Sell DUCK STAMPS Hunting Licenses Shells . Cases FAY Hdw. & Sporting Gds. W, Hurop at Telegraph Bob Considine Says: NEW YORK (INS)—This spin- ning globe and some of its in- mates: Col. Pete Amoss, the former Air Force officer |and OSS cloak and dagger man who was the first to spring the story that Lavrenti Beria is seeking political asylum here, rates about two degrees be; |low zero with the Pentagon’s Air | Force intelligence boys. |: “The Air Force has no associa: | tion with Col. Amogs,” a spokes- } man said after Amoss appeared to | have been partly instrumental in | the delivery of Lt. Jarecki’s MIG15 jfrom the Polish Air Force, ‘And | besides,’ the spokesman said, ‘‘the | machine is obsolete,’’ } If Beria is loose, it would seem | that he'd make contact with the | FBI, rather than with Sen. Mc- | Carthy’s committee, or Amoss. ‘ The FBI is especially interested in such matters. It has not been too many year ago that J. Edgar Hoover left a dinner in Wash; ington to take a look at a man who had been brought to this country from Agrentina under the impression of several agents that he was Hitler. Al Weill, manager of-Rocky 4 Marciano, expressed. himself as pleased the other day with the way interest in quickening the Marciano - LaStarza heavyweight fight at the polo grounds Thurs- day night. “The fight is picking up a lot of momentum,” asserted Al. Two men about town rolled into Shor's bar not long ago after a formal party elsewhere. Since the proprietor of Shor’s frowns on drinking, they must have com with their load. already affixed, :| for they had a couple of beauts. | After a bit one mumbled some- . Advocated Admitting Red China fo U. N. DENVER ™ — Sen. Edwin C. Johnson (D-Colo) declared here yesterday that war wouldn't have broken out in Korea if Red China had been invited to join the Uni- ted Nations. Johnson told the Denver City Club there was a time when he favored admission of the Chinese Communists into the U. N. That time, he said, was just aft- er the rebels had kicked out the Nationalist government. The Chi- nese Reds are ‘‘just as good as Russia and a lot of other nations that belong to the U. N.,” he said. But that was before the Korean War. Johnson said he now opposes entry of the Chinese Reds into the world organization — ‘‘because we can’t let them Shoot their way into the U, N.” New, Mexico to Check Liquor-for-Indians Vote SANTA FE, N. M, ®—An attor- ney for the State Liquor Division says he believes ‘liquor sales to In- dians in New Mexico will be legal after Sept. 28. That is the day the state can- vassing board goes over the re- sults of the Sept. 15 special elec- tion in which New Mexicans ap- amendment letting the. bars down on such sales. é Chester Hunker, attorney for ‘the liquor division, said he expected no legal snarls, but his opinion was Strictly ‘‘off the cuff.” People who have had cataracts removed from their eyes can see Wednesday Is Donble-Stamp Day » t . | ultraviolet light, which cannot be seen by those with ordinary vision. de A Good DEAL For Your Savings Current 2% Rate Put your dollars whete they will earn a higher rate of .retutn for you with safety insured (up to $10,000) by the Federal Savings and Loan Association. Open A Savings Account Here Today! PONTIAC FEDERAL - 16 £, ‘LAWRENCE ‘ Pontiac 407 MAIN ST. Rochester proved a state constitutional | If Russia’s Beria Is Loose, He Should Contact FBI thing that the other took offense to, and the second mumbler in- vited the first one to step out- side and settle the whole argu- ment. They helped each other out. Outside, it was raining cats and dogs. After a few minutes, Toots went, out to see how things were doing. Not a blow had been landed. But the two stews were assuming classic boxing poses, a la John L. Sullivan and Jem Mace. And Shor’s doorman was impas- sively holding an umbrella over their heads! U.N.\hopes to get around to in- vestigating the Russian and Rus- sian satellite slave camps, during the current session of the Assem- bly. Some estimates place the aum- ber of slaves at 15,000,000—sent there through phony trials, or after “‘confessions,”’ or through no trial at all. Suggestion: Why not ask Vishin- sky about this matter? Russia’s N 1 U.N. spokesman was one of the architects of the purge trial, ‘ Hé was the chief prosecutor of the great trials of the 1930s, when Stalin systematically murdered many of his closets associates af- ter subjecting them to long periods of torture and trials marked by the flamboyance of the prosecutor —Vishinsky. “You've got to give him his due; he’s darn clever, this Vi- shinsky,” a fellow said the other day after reading the text of the man’s U.N. speech. “Of course, he's clever,”’ agreed another, ‘‘How do you think he’s lived this long?’’ None. of the New York critics gave Myron C. Fagan’s play, ‘‘Red Rainbow’’ much of tumble. Matter of fact, most of them said it was dreadful. But Robert A. Vogeler has a good word for it. He writes. “ ‘Red Rainbow’ is not just a good play. It combines an exciting ! mystery, and a timely message that at least should be heard by Americans in order that they may judge, how easily totalitarianism could |,triumph in this free coun- try of ours. As with all contro- versial themes, efforts are being made|.to discredit the author and thus destroy the play.”’ MIGHT BE A RED—Joseph Mc- Namara, above, of Cincinnati, ‘Ohio, a former U.S. labor mediator told a House committee in Wash- ington, he ‘‘supposed’”” he could be called a Communist because he attended meetings and probably paid dues. But, said McNamara, ideologically he was not a Red because he was not interested in the party but only attended meet- ings because of a union he was interested in forming. Only one airline passenger in 1,000 suffers from air sick- néss, surveys show. Say WN O° To Acid Stomach say it with fast-acting Don’t let acid indi- gestion get the best of you. Don’t suffer néedlessly with heartburn and gassy pressure pains. Eat 1 or 2 Tums for top- speed relief whenever distress occurs. Tums cannot overalkalize. Can’t cause acid rebound. Require no water, no mixing, no waiting. Get a handy |roll of Tums to carry in pocket or purse today! There are 58, all women, still to be tried. Convict 30 in Sect of Nude Parading enter pleas, since they do not recognize the government’s right to try them. of nude parading yesterday in| Magistrate Graham Ladner -has trials that lasted three mi not announted any sentences on each. |the parading charges. The maxi- This brought to 79 men and mum under the law is thrée years women the number convicted un- in the penitentiary. der a Canadian law aimed specif t T ically -at the religious sect whase| It is against the law, to use por- The Army's 32nd Infantry Di- vision generally is credited with more combat time than any other World War II division. In action in the Pacific theater, the division ae up more than 600 combat GAUKLER STORAGE CO. 9 Orchard Loke St.Joseph ASPIRIN members parade unclad as a-pro-| traits of liv persons on U. §. test against government authority. eek oS GOLD SEAL. VINYL-TILE Ge 9”x9” The wonder floor tile. Needs no waxing. ' PLASTIC ° WALL TILE (BO. Im all colors of the rainbow. Easy to install. ¢ UC 9"x9"'x14" 6"36"x 14" colors that are | Slight tirregulars of perfect guaranteed stock. Each Marbleized built for lasting beauty. OVER 500 STANDING ROLLS OF LINOLEUM IN STOCK TI L ~ LINOLEUM INLAID WALL TILE ‘| LINOLEUM BY, | ST” Yd. | Weight All colors available. Cut from In famous makes: Armstrong. full rolls. Gold Seal, others. BONNY MAID TRIPLE SEALED VINYL INLAID Look! We Loan you the tools and furnish ¢ instructions, It’s simple and you save. Stop in today and save! 9”x9” ‘Each The Floor Shop 99 S. SAGINAW NEAR AUBURN AVE. FREE PARKING IN BEAR OF STORE New word for GETAWAY vain. cent oN Wi get right to the point: The comments we’ve been getting from new Buick owners about the new Twin-Turbine Dynafiow are terrific. / And the reason is—this fully automatic trans- mission is, in itself, terrific. It has a new, firm, solid “take-hold” — gives you instant getaway response. It has new quiet — you can barely hear the acceleration build-up. It has unique and utter simplicity of operation. You just move your Selector into Drive range, | press the pedal, and go. That’s all. | But the sweetest thing ‘of all’ about this TT Dynaflow is its smoothness. *Standard on Roadmaster, optional at extra cost on other Series. * * Available at additional cost on Roadmaster and Super models only. tO ptional at extra cost in Super and Roadmaster Sedan and Riviera f { LE EEE GLEE LE LE LE LLLELIBLE BL ILL LILLE LES. BLE. LELOWES, LEBEL LO RR You move from standstill to your legal speed in one progressive build-up of power delivery. You feel a constant “carry” of forward motion, unbroken in any way—because here no gear- shifting takes place, either manually or automatically. Even your deceleration is infinitely smooth and gradual, with the cushioned control of flowing oil slowing down. Wouldn’t you like to sample this wonderful new getaway and pleasant quiet and immacu- late smoothness? | We'll be glad to seat you at the wheel of a new 1953 Buick with Twin-Turbine Dynaflow—and let the thrills come where they may. Drop in soon, won't youP. TT DYNAFLOW ! “The 1953 Buick Super Riviera. Wire wheel covers, illestrated, aptional at extra gost. World's only car with all these features: V8 VERTICAL-VALVE FIREBALL ENGINE ) Roodmaster DYNAMIC FLOW MUFFLER ond Super TWIN-TURBINE DYNAFLOW® © POWER STEERING® POWER BRAKES**® © BALANCED MILLION DOLLAR RIDE COMPLETELY NEW SWEEPSPEAR STYLING TILT-AWAY) SLIDE-AWAY FRONT SEATS (2-door modelab CUSTOM-RICH INTERIORS PANORAMIC ONE-PIECE WINDOWS FRONT ANO REAR DOUBLE-RAH. FRONT BUMPER ©! AIRCONDITIONERT i MILTON BERLE stors for BUICK —in the BUICK-BERLE SHOW on TV Tuesday evenings. Also, every Satur- day, tune in the TV Football Game of the Week—a “GM” Key Event Mes WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM THE GREATEST BUICK = > = — ~—aew en OLIVER MOTOR SALES 210 Orchard Lake Ave. ; Phone FE 2-9101 Pontiac, Mich. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 19538 TWENTY-FIVE Your Choice eDON-DE e White House e Chase & Sanborn COFFEE 1-lb, Vacuum Can Your choice of grinds Ay Colorful, Striped Cannon Dish Cloth and Pot Holder inside Special 25-Ib. Bag, * | @t no extra cost. ee eae 5 Ib. Bag...45¢ DEL MONTE Early Garden SUGAR PEAS 2-35 DEL MONTE Golden Bantam CREAM CORN Zan — GREENFIELD Ready-to-Eat or BESTMAID BRAND SUGAR CURED HICKORY he AVERAGE yrs PICNICS ib. % Tasty! Tangy! MEDIUM SHARP MICHIGAN ey, . y, -_ S j a ee : , S F New Pack is In! Silver Floss SAUER KRAUT 22.29 of 3 4 ¥ A ile, j , i’ i aa id , Misign-pnigpinsniesiclenea- res adhertdn tie pabhasdieaaaman LE AE MOS BN AE. 0 Bi COI Pow eam ee ee ee ee ee Annem oo cieniatin atin in eh aden Dion dthedone ee eee ee gh diese Me hee i ttt me mm _~ — | x ee Sh edd’s wae Ses aver 39° , MAGLA SILICONE—Scorch-Resistant f 49 Makes ROSENTHAL'S 1) ALL PURPOSE CLEANER dor rugs, upheistery, weoedwerk, ile, windews zt 69 BOTTLE DOGGIE DINNER DOG FOOD Contains Rich Red Horse Meat 6 2 49: CHLOROPHYLLIN ADDED \ \ \ IRONING BOARD COVER 33 ‘Euastic starch “sax” 24° HUNT, CLUB PLASTIC CLOTHESLINE x:x2 49° , oe FOOD SPOTLESS—in Decorative Colors Wesbiit $415 $2. 67° PLASTIC BROOM =u, HARD-GLOSS GLO-coaT <= *2°? STORE HOURS: SAVE 100 L6E. GIANT Your Mail iz i, Fabulous FAB + “s Redeem Your Mailed P&G Coupons At WRIGLEY’S Malled Coupons s « . PERRY ©125 W. HURON CHEER <2 ae eee “OY 3 ood ms “P on THUR. and FRI. mus inn ° CHIFFON Soap Flakes 2c xe. 39° | i, | © 59 SO. SAGINAW © 398 AUBURN Sa = te OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ‘TIL 9 P.M. LUX TOILET SOAP 3 BARS 23° f\ | | : '\ f ( \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 TWENTY-SEVEN. oe Another muee of BARREL of BARGAINS Values: ee ta ie rv ES CHKE Of GUENIDALE: se | es Gh GREENFIELD Ready-to-Eat or BESTMAID: Sugar Cured Hickory SMOKED. PICNICS Rigor; eee: eS Rich in B Vitamins Protein 5 to 7 Ibs, end Iron Average 7 af PORK LOIN ROAST iat, 413 First 7-Rib Cut Ne IC —— ™ ‘es , eel Pea’. GROUND BEEF Az 3 us. $423 » ue" : 7 . hae il sailed a sil Fine for Hamburgers, Meat Loafs, and Meat Balls . : ; Swift's Premium ‘ So ee , | tN CORNED BEEF en ee SPARERIBS Yop tent ree >On. Ny ST se a $f 89] Mees lk m ge MRA SLICED BACON “SES 7Qeu | Pala han oc a §=YELLOW PICKEREL stot! 47 -te @ Table Trimmed © Ready to Cook sitet ¢ Serve Hot or Cold Esa. . Makes Fine Boiled Dinner ne @ Serve with Vegetables LB. ‘ © Completely Cleaned © Cut Up Jesse Jewel Fresh Frozen a Frying || , SHICKENS @ No Bother @ Pan Ready F = ck. oe Wey ty U.S. No. 1 Michigan aes = ye ’ r " / ; S L WELCH’S [i _ an 0 Fresh Frozen. Nain vie SB68S Oe es | Frdth Frozen GRAND DUCHESS BEEF TOKAY GRAPES cmos 2 ws. 29 STEA K S - MacINTOSH APPLES *“3.2.58"' —-33 as, 39 . S ¢ PEPPER SQUASH Lea Sn tor Selieg Zor 19° ——— Selected U.S. No. 1 Michigan 11-02. PKG. | : SOUTH emda’ bE is mr 0§ PRUNE PLUMS Rich! Smooth! Creamy! WA F IF L E S Fantail 4 Ibs 39¢ TOP FROST | = 2 y g. ICECREAM | ne rh ) GREEN PEAS *:* crt. mes. 30° oat 89° m 12-0Z. 00 RED RASPBERRIES owt ir", nes” | Delteles \Flavors Plus CUT CORN New cttet 2 mer 45° Paver ef the Most: age Pineopple FRENCH FRIED POTATOES. '". mes oh “4 ALL WRIGLEY r EVERY THURS. temas OPEN ‘TIL 9 P.M. teams Seen “THE CISCO KID" “225” ~ "LADY of CHARM’ “=3232" —_—- . _— 4 _—~_. a Ire 4 TWENTY-EIGHT PAN APRN IR Reape SED ds tacit dais Donald Duck Grapefruit , Sections Choose from a Complete Selection of SEALTEST PRODUCTS at Most Wrigley Markets ‘HOLLYBROOK PURE CREAMERY c BUTTER | +69 ; WISCONSIN LONGHORN , c MILD CHEESE 7. 55 BALLARD OR PUFFIN BISCUITS ':" 2x. 29° CHEESE Links ‘®:.. 2.9 ® Garlic © Bacon @ Nippy @ Smokey 1c Sale! Blu-White Flakes 4 2° Prevent Diaper Rash with New Sanitizing STERI-DIPE DIAPER WASHING MIRACLE Enough for 200 Diapers 16 Oz, Cc Whiter: Fluffier . Pkg. ........4 VEGETABLE ouP LONDON LODGE SALADA TEA BAGS i 58° Feacy y= planes eenee SAVE 20c ON INSTANT COFFEE | CANDIED PICKLES | CHASE and Sinpons 2 2 88" jini Pets «= 25 @ Mixed § ¢ Stix ; © Chips C @ Sliced Watermelon HY GRADE Honey Brand B-in-B MUSHROOMS “Broiled in Butter” | Chopped Sliced | 27°| 2 32° PA TY LOAF . ® breakfast @ Lunch 12-0z. SSeeks | 7 ‘Bove a Set of Party Glasses Numbered 1 to 8 VELVET BRAND PEANUT BUTTER ‘Smooth’ of 11-Ox. C Kranehy" Jar HYGRADE SLICED *% C DRIED BEEF ie oe 2/2-Ox. Jar FOR PERFECT GRIDDLE CAKES, WAFFLES C GOLDEN MIX a Pkg. AND TOP THEM WITH VERMONT MAID SYRUP: 20° BE SURE AND WATCH “"'THE CISCO KID" F.A.G. RICE AMERICA'S “ [Every Thursday at 7 P.M. } | | } | | | } : Michigan Pinconning Medium Sharp ; | ! CHEESE 5 a Ib.” + Cc LMONT'S CREAMED | TTAGE CHEESE “: c : Y SUPER WHIP DISPENSER 43° TOPPING 26° _ MARGARINE 3 99° Get Oneida Silverware at '/2 Price i i ma SEALTEST AMERICAN 2-LB. Cc CHEESE SP Ca A | LOAF : MAZOLA OIL ‘5208. st $2.25 I 7 60 al 1-LB. PKG. 19° THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, '1953 TWENTY-NINE Mailbox to Become Vocal tages of sending letters by air During Air Mail Month | The stunt is part of air mail ETR |month. It was proposed by the | 2 OFT] ww — Detroit letter Post Office Department here and writers were warned not to think | approved by the Common Council. they were hearing things if a cer- tain downtown mailbox talks back Sword Swallower Gets next - mont ext month ‘Treated for Sore Throat The mailbox willtbe wired for } sound from Oct. 5 to 10. When a} NASHVILLE. Tenn. W—A mid-} way sword swallower at the Ten- . letter is deposited a! voice will re- mind the writer qt the ieee than he could chew yester- day. Bobby Deran of Owensboro, Ky., turned up at a hospital with a) sore throat. A new sword, he said, went | down crooked or got stuck or some- | thing before he could cough it up. | He was treated and released. | Cotton thread was used by U. S. Indians in the Southwest before | | the coming of the white man. | Parasite Flies Imported BLUE EARTH, Minn, (# — To combat an infestation of corn bor- ers, which attack and destroy the | corn crop, farmers here have im- ported parasite flies from New Jersey. The flies are natural ene- mies| of the borers, but do not} | harm human beings nor! animals. | Australia’s population; density. is | 2.6 persons per square mile. | 3 Children in 3 States in Twenty-one Months | LOS ANGELES @®—Three ¢hil- dren in three states in 21 months— that’s the record of Mrs. Lufille Green, 22. Her first child, Dianne, at akg Dec. 14, 1951, in Greenley lo | Her second, Donna, was born Oct. 23, 1952, in Wichita, Kan. Yepter- | day she gave birth to Willjam, who like Dianne was a sé«ven- month baa _| the fish and wildlife service—big | Booklet Gives Out Facts on Alaska: (Big Cabbages) WASHINGTON «®—Take it from | game is by no means as plentiful in Alaska as, people have been led to believe.| The service ‘says there is some big game, however, and other orient the soldier, sportsman, tour- | things grow big, too. These statemens are contained | in a new booklet—“Alaska’s Fish and Wildlife’’—written ‘‘to help ist and homesteader upon arrival in Alaska.”’ “Giant strawberries, 50-pound cabbages, delphiniums 9 feet tall grow in parts of the country we bought from the Russians,’’ the booklet says. | “Alaska is not the frigid land} of popular concept, though it does | | have extremely cold weather. Av- erage annua] snowfall in West Vir- ginia is more than that of the arctic lowlands, and greatest sum- mer heat in Central Alaska is about on a par with that of New York City.” The booklet cites a sobering thought: “The temperature fluctuations give the mosquitoes no trouble."’ And a reassuring one: “Alaska does not have snakes of any kind.” _advarr inessee State Fair here bit off | ——+- —- ROBERT HALL OPENS A NEW SUPER-SALESROOM IN DETROIT... SHOP OUR PONTIAC STORE THURSDAY,, FRIDAY and SATURDAY for These and Many Other VALUE SENSATIONS! i 1 ; i —— sa +— — —— and our Pontiac salesroom joins in the great 3-day celebration! ” Money-Saving Values! aw HIGH FASHION FALL SUITS FABULOUS FLEECES (in 10% cashmere, 90% wool. . . or 30% rich mohair, 70% wool) LUXURIOUS POODLES NEW FALL DRESSES Casuals and dress-ups for 4. 99 Misses, Women, Juniors! Usually to 10.95 MISSES’ FALL SKIRTS Fine Fall fabrics in slim, 2.89 Pe i USUALLY swing, pleated styles. Uwely 295 a $35. hater, TRICOT BLOUSE BUYS! Misses’, Jersey and nylon in mary _ lo, oni ener popular styles. 189 ow se ol 100% NYLON CARDIGANS ric e ' Semi-fitted—matching 2.89 P band, buttons. Usvelly 3.96 Usually 19.95, 22.50 & $25 ©BOXY SUITS © DRESSMAKER SUITS © FLANNELS, POODLES, SHARKSKINS © OMBRE PLAIDS, CHECKS, NEW WEAVES NYLON SLIPS, PETTICOATS cor Geese) 2.89 BOYS’ GABARDINE JACKETS cate eae | 5.99 BOYS’ CORDUROY SLACKS corchig seen 3.99 BOYS’ RUBBER RAINCOATS enh motching het S229 GIRLS’ Nylon-Top DRESSES “wee 3.99 GIRLS’ NYLON PULLOVERS Save, save, save on 1954's top fashion coats! All deep-piled luxury woolens expertly styled with newest details! Coats with pleated backs, gored backs, flored backs... coats with yards of sweep ‘neath deep-stitched yokes! Platter buttons, turn-back cuffs, stand-up collars! Every coat tailored with hand piped buttonholes, shimmery rayon iridescent taffeta linings, cozy warm interlinings. Come see, come save up to 55% at Robert Hall! Sizes 10 to 18. More for your fashion dollar at Robert Hall! Luxurious fabrics— curly, clipped poodles, crisp rayon and acetate suitings from famous mills! Check the styles—boxy, curvy, sleek, slim! All tailored with shape-keeping canves reinforcements... handpiped buttonholes ... rayon crepe or satin linings. Now check the rock bottom price again! Not every style in every size and color. Dy i rf T orn mee . mae A oie ¢ Mauve *\Ice Blue Short sleeves, lacy daisies, 1.79 Mavy ° Aqua © Grey ~ rhinestones. * U 2.98 * Berry Red * Champagne © Natura! © 2-Tone Blue ’ “eu . * Cotillion Blue and many more! LADIES’ SUITS [7 | 3-pe. poodle ensembles, $95 worsted flannel suits. Usvolty $35 MEN’S SPORT COATS Pinwale corduroy 3-button model. Fall colors. 8.88 Usually 14.68 HARRIS TWEED TOPCOATS Tweeds, herringbones, 39.9 5 checks—single breasted ner single breast uv teal $50 MEN’S Quilt-Lined JACKETS Rayon gabardi ith NON odded. Felleson, 9295 MEN’S GABARDINE SLACKS All wool worsted or wool 7 88 e and nylon. Many colors. Uevelly 12.9 DIRECT FROM ROBERT HALL TAILORING PLANTS TO YOU! ALL-WOOL SUITS AND TOPCOATS all at one sensational price... USUALLY *45 THE TOPCOATS All-wool cravenetted water-repellent gabordines, all-wool tweeds and THE SUITS All-wool flannels and all-wool tweeds from top woolen mills! Tailored in MEN’S POPLIN RAINCOATS ] - ee ee . : L ig ti our own workrooms with costly all-woo! checks. Single-breasted pend Woves in , » “14 6 gS such as high-count model with fly front, notch lapel and Switzerland. nai rayon linings, hymo canvas slash pockets! Single-breasted BOYS’ CAMPUS COATS we fronts, and other features. Fall shades and patterns in single-breasted 2-button models with patch pockets. Greys, Tans, Blues. 35-44, Regulars, Shorts, Longs.. with bal collar, set-in or raglan sleeves, slash pockets. Button-thru style with leather buttons! Fall shades. COMPLETE ore INCLUDED Requiars, shorts, longs. 34 to 46. OBERT HALL 200 NORTH SAGINAW STREET 32° " 24-oz. GIRLS’ “’Shagora’’ wool fleece Warm Zip-in liners reprocessed wool melton, plaid trim— white buttons. 3.99 Usually $5.95 - $6.95 ZIP-COATS 19.95 Usually $24.95 CLOTHING AMERICA’S LARGEST CHAIN Reg, U.S. Pat. 08. oS» — - ee ee a -— ote ia (i i a a Se I I a ee a I | a rT NE I Te Oe a. , or . | ) zits i | THE PONTIAC “a ici ee p “Lets bo Fontia Friday, Sept. 25-8 p.m. Wuh@). TIAC ‘WISNER STADIUM “Adm. 75 and 51.00 ---Season Tickets “4 , JIM WILLIAMS BILL ROSE a ee eee No. 15 No. 17 | PHS Football Schedule Left Half Back Right Half Back Sept. 18 Pontiac 34 Wyandotte 13 Weight 140 Weight 160 Sept. 25 HAMTRAMCK ....... ... Here Height 5°53” Height 56” Oct. 2 LANSING SEXTON ....:.. Here Grade 12B Grade 12B Oct. 9 Flint Central ............ away Experience 3 Yrs. Experience 3 Yrs, Oct. 16 Bay City Serre. ee bas away Jefferson Jr. High Lincoln Jr. High Oct. 23 ARTHUR HILL ......... . Here —_ Oct. 30 Royal Oak ............ . away EAMES & CC Sr THE UNION Nov. GFLINT NORTHERN ....... Here BROWN STORE H . Pi N. inaw St, J. Edward Graybiel, Head Coach Arnold J. Wilson, Line Coach Nov. 13 Saginaw Eastern ee away aoe. Tike =yeat ; Cs EF aan 3 | disso aasned 5 Sag ; : (Central Michigan College) (Central Michigan College) ALL GAMES START | EDWARD REID TOM METZDORF 8 P.M. tn No. 24 a No. 26 : ss Left Guard oor Left Tackle Weight 168 Weight 220 Height\a_Q/,” Height 6°2” Grade 12B Grade 12A4 Experience 3 Yrs. Experience 3 Yrs. . Lincoln Jr. High Community oe piston’ Palade ip ° ti Ri vo . fF ONTAC Fegera : | Na rp “on te ‘Savings & Loan bee en tee we Tees | of Pontiac — Ass'n o Waen We Gates Pua iversity clFebsuels Tikes of saidhiges! | A MB 7 | 30 N. Saginaw St. ‘ 16 E. Lawrence : oo PONTIAC ‘Chiefs’ Le ROY MOORE SOreY GRACEY || MARV CASWELL ON THE TEAM ~ i" No. 37 No. 40 No. 41 | but Not Pictured Loe ae * Right End Full Back Quarter Back Weight 187 Weight 160 R Weight 170 Height 6’2” Height 5°8” Height 6’]’’ No. 16 WILLIE WILSON Left, Ena Grade 2A Grade 11A Grade 114 Experience 2 Yrs. Washington Jr. High No. 19 THURMAN PAGE Guard No. 20 ROBERT SIGLER ight Tackle No. 23 HAROLD RUSH Full Back Experience! 3 Yrs. Eastern Jr. High CONSUMERS Experience 2 Yrs. Lincoln Jr. High PONTIAC No, 25JOSEPHSINGLETON ight Enc as POWER CO. M Donald, Ine. STATE BANK “No. 27 MARVIN EVANS Right Tockle | ei age DEW. Newpnce Se Pont tty | Onna sogs Bauer Ae et Maren © Spine No. 29 WAYNE PIKE Center No.'31 WILLIS SWENSON Le, Guord KIRK HOBOLTH GENE VAUGHN WALTER POE. No. 36 DAVID BECKLEY right End ibie No. 46 No. 50 a , No. 60 No. * Pee vel Right Halfback a Quarter Back Guard — % Right Half Back Right End Height 5’°8” Height S115” Height 5°10” No. 45 JAMES GREENWOOD _ Grade 12A Grade 124 Grade 11B Right End Experience 2 Yrs. Experience 3 Yrs. Experience 2 Yrs. No. 47 EDWARD STOUT Lincotm Jo. High Weshington Jr. High Washington Jr. High rene ee Pontiac Paint CLOTHIERS “= §S$ © ROGERS “No. 58 RICHARD SLADE : - - __ Half Back hele & Mfg. Co. . “a i HUB \ Sporting Goods | MA GM 'NT-19S. Perry st. 4 . | 18 N Saginaw St. Ml, Li 24 E. Lawrence St. f | 1. Ofhide Vitae | 2. Megal Posi. K 4 y “a e | | free kick formation) || Ss hoe . “a Shift 1. Clppies Roughing 9. Uncen en" | Lf. Hllegal Use of ne -——) Magill f Mal , ‘a ° 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 | | THIRTY-ONE h Mi er oe Pret ¢ il We re All Behind Y BILL McLARTY No. 18 Left Guard Weight 163 Height 5°77 Grade 12B Experience 3 Yrs. Washington Jr. High “™ CLOONAN'S | DRUG STORE COLLE HUNT No. 21 Left Tackle Weight 180 Height 5°10” Grade 114 Experience 2 Yrs. Jefferson Jr. High ~ MAPLE LEAF DAIRY CO. \ ¥ * D EDWARD HOBAN No. 22 Center Weight 160 Height 5°11” Grade 124 Experience 3) Yrs. Eastern Jr. High GILLIES SHOES i 72N. Sesinew St. _* 20 E. Howard St. ieee wc 26 W. Huron St. GEO. TH RASH ER ||Homer HARRISON|| JACK HOPKINS No. 30 No. 33 No. 34 Right Tackle Left Half Back Right Tackle Weight 165 i Be ao Weight 215 Height 61” Grade 12B Height 6'2” Grade 11B Experience 3 Yrs. Grade 12B Experiance 2 Yrs. Eastern Jr. High SHAWS JEWELERS ee i 2 Me 24 N. Saginow St. Lincoln Jr. High MAC. ROGERS Sporting Goods ond Hardware @ George Hawn. Owner 16S. Coss FE 2-7621 : MMM. lll... Experience 3 Yrs. Eastern Jr. High DICKINSON’S Fine Apparel for Gentlemen Saginaw at Lawrence ‘ed j 7. ie EDWARD SHAW No. 42 Right Guard Weight 180 Height 5°11” Grade 12B Experience 3 Yrs. Eastern Jr. High WAITE’S 10 N. Saginaw St. JIM WISCOMBE No. 43 Left End Weight 160 Height 5°11” Grade 12B ” Experience 3 Yrs. Lincoln Jr. High + LION STORE, ING. 51 S. Seginow St. DICK AYLING No. 44 Quarter Back Weight 175 Height 6 Grade 12B Experience 3 Yrs. Eastern Jr. High CONNOLLY’S JEWELERS 16 W. Huron St. BgB WOODHAM No. 62. Right Guard Weight 155 Height 5°7” Grade 11B Experience 2 Yrs. Lincoln Jr. High: SCARLETT’S Bicycle Shop 20 E. Lawrence St. ZACK ATHANAS No. 64 Full Back Weight 160 Height 5°7” Grade 12B Experience 3 Yrs. Lincoln Jr. High JACK HABEL Chevrolet Co. 34 Mill St. DANIEL GRAVES No. 70 Full Back Weight 178 Height 62” Grade 11B Experience 2 Yrs. Lincoln Jr. High FEDERAL Seginaw at Werren Dept. Stores 18. Megliy Passing bie ya Pass or ing Bail Catching Forward. Interference Pe * 4 r 4 ‘ 2 ; * f . a, 1 ‘ GPR ’ od OE eae Ct et gm te or * i Pat < : & w” dS % si BE at sy ee ST. FREDERICK'S H.S. | . 1953 Schedule Sept. 20 St. Fred’s 18 Holy Cross 0 Sept. 27 ST. BENEDICT'S Neng Here Oct. 4 St. Rita’s eee eee away Oct. 18 St. James ......... | away Oct. 25 St. Mary's alee ccecces away Oct. 30 ST. MICHAEL'S beens Here Nov. 1ST. MARY’S Here (Reyal Oak) Nov. 13 Avondale H. away (Aubarn Heights) NOTE: All Home Games Will Be Played at Wisner Stadium—Pontiac ST. MICHAEL'S H. S. 1953 Schedule Sept. 18 St. Mike’s 6 Avondale 12 Sept. 26 Fitzgerald H. S. (Van Dyke Resd) Oct. 4ST. MARY’S......... (Royal Oak) Oct. 11 ST. JAMES .......... (Ferndale) Oct. (8 ST. RITA'S .......... (Detreit) Oct. 25 St. Benedict’s (Highland Park) Oct. 30 ST. FRED’S .. Here (Pontiac) heer Lake) Nov. 13 Oxford H. S. away Se a THIRTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 Diaper Rash Quick retiet follows use of Reamol ‘Ointment. Specially medi- cated. sch om lenolm. i soothes smart skin as it helps to heal. Resinol cleanses gently. Use both. - RESINOL S725 and SOAP National PTA Building Cornerstone to Be Laid side, Teachers will attend cornerstone laying ceremonies for the organ-| morrow. Cost of the building, to be located on the city’s nea north is being met by contribu- . CHICAGO (®—Leaders of the Na- tions of PTA’s throughout the tional) Congress of Parents and | | Country. Mrs. Newton P. Leonard, Providence, R. I., dent, said $562,583 has been raised| New Yrok State Agricultural Ex- ization’s new $750,000 building to-| thus far. national presi- Pea-Growers Advised That Quality Pays GENEVA, N. Y. (UP) — Prof? Charles B. Sayre, head of the can- ning crops investigation at the | periment Station here, says pea- growers stand to make more money this year by marketing their crop on a-quality basis than y waiting to get maximum yields from their fields. ~ Sayre said contract prices for freezing and canning provide a premium for quality and are based on a graduated scale. C hing SALE DAYS THRU SUNDAY. Cunningham s Super Val For Smoother Ironing lroning Board Pad & Cover Standard $119 Board Size Soft, firm pad, heavy muslin cover with elastic Regular $1.49 Chalienge Fountain Syringe $1 09 Durable live red rubber. 2 slip pipes. Guaranteed 4 onli hams STORES Has 7 Bottle I) Sterilizer ues! Bottle’ $998 Allajuminum withclamp- and lift-out rack. Regular $}.20 Wipe-Clean 100.Ft. Plastic a Clothes Line Strong, won't imildew or rot Wipesiclean in a jiffy With Vacuum Bottle Lunch Kit For School $9249 Al metal) flat kit with pint vacuum bottle For Ed ward’ 's Effective Anti-Histamine Cough Syrup 59c relief of coughs due to colds and allergies. It's New! It’s Fun! And GREETING Plus Paints, Brush Imagine! Now eards. Start “Paint Your Own” 36 Cards, Envelopes It's So Easy To Do CARDS you can send beautiful hand-painted now for Christmas or get a box of all-ocassions cards. LEAF RAKE Reg. 59c, Metal Fork, Long Handle ae SF ate « ADHESIVE TAPE 85c White Cross, 4%” Wide, 10 Yards Long a TOILET LANOLIN 29¢ A.P.C. Brand, 1 Ounce Tube _. SACCHARIN Reg. 79c, 1000 of % Grain Tablets €45| ana | oe vee 0 WF ese Edward's Regular 59c Size For ANALGESIC BALM 39e Edwards With Ephedrine, 1 oz. The Best—At A Law Price MARVELS Cigarettes SAVE! BUY THE CARTON! TODAY! ; Smooth ‘amoking blend of fine tobaccos. At a sensiblé price. “Water-Breathing Action” O-CEL-O' SPONGES 2 to 75¢ In reusable Philofilm bag. For easier, faster home cleaning \y \ sett ‘ \ AY) MAS PROVED SO COMPLETELY | GET PURE * 7 6 BAD BREATH! COMPARE POR VALUE White, Safe ‘" COLGATE’ S | TODAY! rae Economy Size *Yes, scientific tests prove that in 7 out stops bad breath that originates in the mouth. of 10 cases, Colgate’s instantly Colgate’s Has The Proof! , V_ IT CLEANS YOUR BREATH | WHILE IT CLEANS YOUR TEETH ° y COLGATE’S Is BEST FOR FLAVOR Vv Brushing Teeth Right After Baling With COLGATE'S STOPS TOOTH Y BEST $2.50 King Size For ws First! In 4 Custom Formulas REVLON’'S Aquamarine Shampoo DIAL Bottle $425 “A Wye) aa Ko) oS 21) a Ke) oS With Wonderful AT-7 For Lovelier Hair Squeeze Cleaner, more beautiful hair at once! AT-? cleans away odor-producing bacteria at once. Easy-to-use bottle. Tablets Fast Headache Relief Shampoo 67¢ ‘HALO Shampoo “ome OFC zregrent soft- water lather, no special rinse. VASELINE Hair Tonic 7a ~49e cuss an sealp for nester heir, healthier scalp. For The Shave Of Your Life PALMOLIVE Rapid Shave Cr W9¢ oti tr ot te! peas a button! Easier, faster. Has Wonder- Weckinig Virato) Vaseline team Hair Tonic ‘ae 59e | That fresh combed, neturat | Success of Jet Pilots Boosted by Special Diet WASHINGTON W — Two Air Force medical officers said today | that digestive gas generated by, combat zone meals apparently | interferred with the flying and | | fighting of Sabre jet pilots in | Korea. A squadron fed a special diet of non-gas-forming foods averaged 4.2 times as many claims of suc- | cess against enemy planes as did | pilots in two other squadrons simi- | * The test was deacttbed by Capt. | | Frederich J. Hinman, a psychia- | | trist, and Capt. Mary C. Horak. a dietician, in the Air University They said the difference in per- publication. | Quarterly Review, | formance records ‘‘can be consid- | ered significant,” although they were unwilling to credit it entirely to the diet. The tests were undertaken be- .cause of ‘‘an increasing number | of complaints from fighter pilots | reporting abdominal cramps of | varying severity during flight.”’ * % * Some pilots, flying at more than 45,000 feet with cabin pressures equivayent to altitudes as high as 35,000 feet, suffered abdominal pains so sharp and cramping they had to discontinue their missions |or descend to lower altitudes. ‘It is conceivable that this type of pain could be of sufficient in- | tensity to induce shock in which | the pilot would be incapable of con- an Air Force | |trolling his aircr: “’ the medical | researchers spid * ~ * They explained that low air | pressure at high altitudes caused |gas enclosed | within the body to expand and give pain. : In the \messhall experiment, one squadron was} given a special high protein diet |free of ‘excessive carbohydrates and fats. high resi- due foods and excessively spicy dishes.”’ The men had milk, fresh frozen vegetables and salads in addition and were served broiled or fried stewed or fresh fruit twice daily. to the regular foods, were fed meats Only in the|evening so that | fly after a fried meal The little ruby - throated | hummingbird summers in the United States but spends its winters around Central Amer- ica and Yucatan. Although his wings measure just over an, inch in length, he can beat) them. about 75 times a second and is able to make a non-stop | | flight of some 500 miles across | lar in all other respects but fed | “Royalty of Sterling” regular messhall fare, the re- searchers dh aoa A new LUNT design for Cw ... LOVELY... DISTINGUISHED.,. C, LUNT | DUEL those whose tastes demand che ultimate in Sterling. Beautifully sculptured with deep, crisp carving .. pierced to add yet anothes dimension to its richly decorated elegance. SIX-PIECE PLACE SETTING $45 Fed. Tax include. Losing Ufood Sast Available! Convenient Terms RED N. PAULI CO. Pontiac's Oldest Jewelry Store— The Store Where Quality Counts! 28 West Huron -Street FE 2-4257 the Gulf of Mexico. 5 Sensational Trade-In Offer BIG 10.8 CU. FT. DOUBLE DOOR | CYCLAMATIC DEFROSTING FRIGIDAIRE Regular less allowance "409" Now, at Clayton's the big- gest trade-in allowance offer in months and months. Famous Frigidaire double door refrigerators at tre- mendous savings. Act today on this limited sensational offer! Pay as little as .. *, Resi Keego Harbor : 100": to Enjoy Clayton's Famous Easy Terms. Even at These Low Prices CLAY ON’S Furniture and Appliances OPEN FRIDAYS ‘TIL 9 P.M. FOR YOUR OLD RANGE OR REFRIGERATOR FRIGIDAIRE DELUXE ‘WONDER’ OVEN ELECTRIC RANGE Here’s your opportunity to own this | Frigidaire masterpiece at a sensationo| | low price. With Clayton’s big allow- | ances you can’t go wrong. But don’t | wait, come in today . . . see how much | more your old range is worth. = © 6| es © ia Less allowance of upto..... . . 100.00 ; $289” Pay as little i} as FE 5-8974 FE 5-8811 ~ Veal Chops inh lu THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY: The low prices listed! here are typical of the hundreds you'll find at A&P every day. Check them with those you've seen or paid elsewhere. Add up the savings on item after item. You'll be amazed to/see how big the total is. That's what counts in the long run, but #’s not the only thing. Quality is equally important ... and A&P’s many money-savers score on that score, too. Come see... come save at A&P! Dees ert ne 2 ee ie SEPTEMBER, 23, 1953 | SA VINGS ON ITEM AFTER ITEM AT AeP ADD UP ~ TOCUT YOUR TOTAL FOOD BILL! Check Prices! Compare Quality! See How Much You Save —— AGP’s “SUPER-RIGHT” MEATS Ever tried to buy meat at an advertised price and been advised to take a better quality at a higher price? That never happens at A&P. For we have only one “Super- Right” quality—high; only one price—as advertised. Result? When you compare what i you get, as well as what you spend, you'll i i that it pays to buy all your meats at A&P. Come see! . When You Buy | COMPLETELY CLEANED, TOP QUALITY aera ga eace rasa Fresh Fryers a9 = | sey Are Are SOM PRICE =PRICE PRICE PRICE sdeaked —_ “sureeniout” us 39¢ [| Lamb Shoulder oeicious roar 49 [_] : Chuck Roast Si"... = 49¢ [7] Lamb Chops stoutoar’ctr «* 59¢ (_] Rib Roast soya .. % 69¢[] Lamb Breast “sureexorr = 19 [| Veal Roust .Smetitiy . . = 59¢(] Leg 0’ Lamb ornare © -79¢ [] | Skinless Franks au’wear . Sandwich Spread . . . 89c [ | uw. 49 [ | 55¢ [_ | 12-072. 33¢ [ ] Corned Beef ‘tux ... “ a Fish Sticks “ “trano'”. . » rxo. 49¢ [] Sliced Bacon itan‘ninoss . . reo. 79¢ [_] [ Ocean Perch carn ‘ots . . rs. 39¢[_] White Bass tan'ttaov .. % 39 [_] White Bass Fillets res . . Halibut Steaks . . .. . Omstead Smelts "imorn” . . xo. 33¢ [_] uw 57¢ [_] | Haddock Fillets “frozen” = rxo. 39 [_] uw. 39¢ [| ; FROZEN | Cheek Prices! Compare Quality! See How Much A&P Saves You On FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES | Fruits and vegetables vary in age, size, quality and freshness. So, obviously they’re not all worth the same price. That's why we say—don't just compare prices! Compare quality, too! When you see how fine and fresh A&P’s fruits and vegetables are you'll FA really appreciate their low prices. ABP’s LOW PRICE rARATIVE LOUISIANA SWEET THE CANDY KIND > 3 > 1a [] : _ it | Ce Ee ma | “Tokay Grapes Guromcs . 2 us 25¢ [] Apples wongasctom™ 4 as 29] | Melons Junie a Size wee CH 49¢ [] Brussels Sprouts “ew ceor, . sox 39¢ [_] | Pascal Celery Ae atoce =" 19¢ [7] Yellow Onions U"s"no. 64 8 15¢ [_] New Cabbage ™icHican onown is. 5c C] I Idaho Potatoes ‘tox taco 10 sao 75¢ [| Broccoli curora . ,. , , , , nunch 35¢ [ | | Lemons 2st, ......6 ' 29% [ | | 10-02. Head: Lettuce sete 2. .2 ' 39 [ | Bananas commer 5... 8 17¢ [| Potatoes wt ee 10 sao 33¢ [] Fresh Spingch ojo cca me 2901 | Prune Plums va e2 ' 29¢[] Frozen Strawberries ums '20r 25¢ ([] Grass Seed na age tao 1.89 [] Frozen Peasusvs, ..... ‘xo 17¢ (_] | { A&P's COM- AP's COM- LOW ~PARATIVE LOW PARATIVE PRICE PRICE PRICE PRICE White House Milk ®varoraten ee ore Ever -Ready Cocoa xemrs a 29¢ Hawaiian Punch . Vanilla Extract ll . 22% 38¢ [ | Mazola Oil forsee; . cas 2.29 Dinner wood Suna oS 29e[ |] M&M Candy 6 33 25¢ 723 25¢ Glass Wax co sa $22 29¢ oi, 59¢ CHICKEN OF THE SEA—WHITE MEAT 7-02. e CAN 37¢ 14-OZ. CANS | Old Dutch Cleanser Fancy Tuna Ania 5e ncaa wh 33e H% 89e [] Jesco Soup rm sume — 3 Jit, 29¢ Bosco ae 1202.3] ¢ «0x. 53> [| Cashmere Bouquet. . 2 a 2Ic Fla-Vor-Aid maser — & rxos. 25¢ [| Fa st me. 29C ny 69 Camay Soap oe. 2284 19¢ [] Lux Soop . . 2 itm 19¢ Camay Soap » oes 38% 19¢ [] Lux Soap . + 3 ote 19 - ~ KETO FR MADE FLAVOR SHEDD'S DISTINCTIVE f Old Style Sauce . . 2% 23¢ Margerne ee °° CAN 29c Shedd's Salad Dressing.......ccvwcenteeses Pt. Bat. 31¢ JIFFY BRAND Biscuit Mix A&P's LOW PRICE: PARATIVE | PRICE | 1YA-LB. 9 COM —s._ ABP ’s PARATIVE LOW PRICE _——PRICE Cake Mixes ruseury ,. , , po Sixes 1.00 [] Gold Medal Flour .... Pancake Flour "serv 2... ne Ann Page Mayonnaise .... Corned Beef Hash sroancasr - | BROADCAST—WITH BEANS Chili Con Carne Igoe lona Peaches st!ceo on Hatvep Pineapple o& mow Grated Tuna van camps , , Perfect Strike Salmon cHum 17e [_] ak 59c [ ] 16-OZ. 29 [] CAN 25¢ 85 49¢ 19e [] | 23¢ [| 16-OZ. 37¢ [ ] e e CAN .5 rxc. 49¢ [_] Green Beans resume, PRICE 4'27- 356 [J PRICE Tomato Soup ANN rack, , 11-OZ. cans O/C [ ] Chicken Broth cousor mm, , 2'S397-33¢ [—] 16-OZ. 10¢ [] Cut Beets LiBBY'S e eee « «© e e CAN Asparagus x sranu—srears CAR" 23¢ [_] A&P GOLDEN WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE | C | 2 16-OZ. 29 | orn ss «= & @ CANS ¢ Kidney Beans oot... "88 10¢ HEINZ OR CAMPBELL’ Soups | IETIES 2 CANS 27¢ a VEGETABLE VARIETIES « « « 16-OZ, 10¢ [ ] Daily Dog Food © 0 © © © © © © CAN 3 or3o0 41¢ [ ] i PKGS. Scotties CLEANSING TISSUES Wheaties | "Ceuc¢favoumr .. AS" Qe [-] Sollax) 1807. exo. ase eae BEE 59 [] Grapefruit Sections ‘«* 69t 33¢ [] Star Kist Tuna Si... “GaN 33¢ [] Prune Juice SUNSWEET | ee ; eee eer. Sparkie Desserts 6 LIVELY FLAVORS 3 pigs. TALL CANS 35¢ [ | 17e [| 4% [| A&P FANCY) GRAPEFRUIT 25: Juice seed BE 19¢ [7] Grape Jelly ANN PAGE|. ole « 0 GLASS Water Maid Rice stort arain Tomato Catsup scon county Prepared Spaghetti av» race Black Pepper ann race)... ti 29 [] Blended Syrup 25¢ [_] Eight O'Clock Coffee . . . . sto 84c [_] e e e BOT. SUNNYBROOK SMALL GRADE “A” Fresh Eggs wen Adc Aged Cheddar ranxenmutn cueese us. Muenster Cheese wisconsm |... 49¢ [7] New York Cheddar Cheese... 69¢ [_] Crestmont Ice Cream oases “ch! 97¢ [] —— a oe 46-OZ. CAN 14-07. sors. 29C [ ] nied 29¢ [_] ANN PAGE CcOm- PARATIVE PRICE 57¢ [_] ALL PURPOSE PURE VEGETABLE dexo Shortening 3¢ CAN 75 For Fries, Cakes and Perfect Pies OCTOBER A 0 LE AS | EE A AE I As | oa - 29¢ CI) it 16-OZ, e BOX 27¢ “lll ODOUR Yj (\} 2 Y, r ' Yy Gy Uy Ve Krispy Crackers sunswine Iii TEA BAGS 69¢ ys) OUR OWN TEA xg. 39€ NECTAR TEABAGS OK®, 3Q¢ A&P ICED TEA proves Fine Teas Needn’t Be Expensive! PSS OC Smee wee WMD HAG, Welcome News for Budget- Watchers Pound Cake 49: furray for this hurry-up special! Especially good for uick ‘n easy desserts — made “fancy” with fruit ot posting — simply delicious without any frills! JANE PARKER Dutch Apple Pie ou ‘Ea, 3% ULAR PRICE 49¢ Rolls snenet s+ «| pt 25¢ ae Bread JANE PARKER =| ||| 20-02. 17¢ [] Cookies ranimas « « « OP t2 190 [] VARIETIES bets of efecto tr elt Sept, 26. ERO bet Swe {|p THIRTY-THREE _ ee ‘wwwwrevrvevevrerrerweowuV¥§ur’iveuesevwu0ueewuewvvvvrvevv"rvv"r~vev—v—vvvvvuvruvyuvuvvuvvuvvuvvwvvvvvvrvevVeVeVeCCCT? » A Ob fe by bb bn be be he bp bo bo bo he ha ha Lo he ha he hi hi hi hi hi ha hi Mn Mn he, hi i Mi hi hi hi Mi hi Mi hi hi i hi hi hi Li hi hi hi hi hi i i hi ha i hi he hh THIRTY-FOUR IIOOOOO HS New Lake Theatre 420: Pontiac Trail j WALLED LAKE | Wednesday Only “Bird of Paradise” in Technicolor ‘with { Jeff Chandler, Debra hia —ALSO—. “Murder Withont Tears” with Yi Craig Stevens, Joyée Heldes iihendende dh ny \ \ \ \ \ \ ’hbhtttét tb INo- Jailbreak, Prisoner Just Wants to Smoke RALEIGH, N. C. B® — A cord | made of strips of cloth —— from a Wake County Jail window | yesterday. Passersby, wont: | whether a jailbreak was planned, found this note attached: ‘Please tie pack of cigarpttes | | to this string. Thank you.’ | A pack about two-thirds full was | | tied on and the prisoner hoisted | happily away. ] Dixie Hwy. __THE PONTIAC: PRESS,. WEDNESDAY, | | | } ] | SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 Actress Ruth Roman Leaves Studio Without Blast! Rita, Dick Haymes By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD — Found: An | actress who has left a _ studio without delivering a blast at her former employers. This gal is Ruth Roman, a shapely brunette from Boston whose career was booming until she left it to marry Mortimer Hall and have a baby. When she returned to Warners, things weren't quite the same. She wanted out and accepted a small (US-10) 1 Block North of Telegraph. Yol\hal.t om _LAST TIMES TO-NIGHT PONY. v4.4 PRESS sy TECHNICOLOR A Peromount Picture itTmeatie r"rvvGvVvuVrVVVeYYVY" wVvVvVVVVVVVVVVVVY “wYYwvTYGVrtrTrTwTVTVTeTTrT TT TTC TTT eT VT ee Blue Sky 2150 Opdyke Road Now Showing RUN rwwwvuwuuwwe* i i i EXCLUSIVE FIRST See it on ours, the Largest and Brightest Drive-In Screen. > ANGELI” BARRYMORE : CARON DOUGLAS \esepeenerr THREE LOVE) STORIES IN ONE! Pier Ange = , mm the arms of thrill-mad Kirk Douglas! Leshe Caron in the jfirst trenzy of young love with = sk % |” Farley Granger! Moira Shearer dancing into > the soul of James Mason! 4 stornng a GRANGER. MASON @ " MOOREHEAD-SHEARER © A. calcutta DARCEL: © KNOWLES | | role (“I have three scenes and | that’s all’’) in ‘‘Blowing Wild” as part of the price for her freedom. | But our ‘girl isn’t bitter. “I'm grateful to the studio,” she commented. “They gave me a buildup I couldn't have gotten if I hadn’t been under contract. I admit I worked hard. I did around eight pic- tures,in one year. I scarcely had time to get married. | ‘If worked up until 7:30 on ‘Strangers On a Train’ the night we were flying to Las Vegas to | get married. That was a Satur- | at work at 9:30 Monday morning. ‘‘But I was lucky to have made | day night, and I had to be back | all those pictures. I got good ex- |. perience. Then |I was ‘off the | screen for two years while rais- ing a family. It was fortunate that I had that backlog of pic- tures.”’ Ruth admitted that the ab- sence was not good for her career, which lost momentum. She aims to get it back with a year and a half of hard work, then taper off. At present she’s getting a good push in | ‘‘The ‘ gseene, I did hear something. This was for real. I looked up and saw the ice above where we were shooting start to crack. Pieces of ice as big as a room started falling at us. They told me I should run un- der it. But all I could think of was that crazy ice cube and I ran in the other direction. “After it was all over, we looked at. our watches. It was 3:05. After that, everybody bowed Far Country’ with James Stewart. She plays a wicked to the guide as though he were a god.” woman in this one and I es it that way. | Also contending! for Jimmy Stewart in the picture is Corinne Calvet, wood. She is made up to be. a 16- year-old girl, which is the neat- “I'm either very sweet or very bad in pictures: there seems to be no in-between,”’ she says. | » Along with a‘ couple of| other | | Hollywood film companies| ‘‘The | Far Country”’ has been shooting a hadhcig werk i ~ heat 45 amid the splendors of western | ° . Oe ee ee } | Sil | Canada. All returned with sad hide my figure,” | pouted Miss | | { tales about the weather they en- pour clad ra “s rdyroy pants countered, but Miss Roman had | *"@ 4 ee r the topper of travails. She was And oh, what she had to say | ¢aught in an avalanche. . about Dr. Kinsey! One of | ‘‘We almost said nothing about Hollywood's most quotable ora- cles on sex, she's against the doctor’s report. “I suppose they need to have fo Marry Tomorrow best sellers in the book busi- LAS VEGAS, Nev. 7 — Dick ness,”’ she argued, ‘‘But I think Haymes, § crooner who has had they could find more suitable | Plenty of trouble with wives and subjects.”’ june Sam, takes out a marriage | license today with Rita Hayworth, 42 Black Eyes Can’t Blot R gal who has had her share of | husband trouble. /Out Love for Husband | Haymes| and the glamorous DETROIT w—Even though Mrs. screen star pick up the wedding Patricia Reeves. ‘30, testified that | | license at 8 p.m. (Pacific daylight France's gift to Holly- | her husband had given! her 42 | black eyes and left home 50 times she still wanted him back. | yesterday where her 33-year-old | | machinist husband, Richard, was | found guilty of assault and battery. | |The charge developed out of the |last black eye. But when she ‘pleaded, that her ident Syngman) Rhee today awarded | husband be kept out of jail be- | cause ‘T want him back,” | judge complied. She got him back | Len a year’s probation. during their 4 years of marriage, | She testified in Recorder's Court | the | Adm. B | time). That is just one hour after he gets a /divorce from Nora Ed- dington Flynn Haymes. The singer and the actress will be married tomorrow at 11 a.m. in Sands Hotel, where both have | been guests for some time. It will be marriage No. 4 for both. Rhee Rewards Admiral SEOUL La—South Korean Pres- all Hanlon, U.N. deputy chief of staff for civil affairs, for |his contributions to Korean relief. the Bi Military Medal to Rear it, because everybody would | + think it was a publicity story,” | she said. ‘“‘But we were working WE BUY AND SELL USED MAGAZINES, TRICKS, JOKES AND NOVELTIES Piper's Magozine Outlet 35 Auburn Ave. FE 3-9869 ~| on a glacier and I had a seene | | | | | in which I was supposed to hear | 4 an avalanche. Our guide men- | tioned that the ice above where we were shooting would fall at three o'clock. We thought he was merely kidding. “When I started to do the ee eee (Soe Ree HELD OVER! Thru Thurs. NOTE: “THE STOOGE” Has Not Been Shown In the City of Pontiac! 1 ‘THOSE MADCAP FUNNYBONERS ARE SETTIN’ NEW LAFF RECORDS! 7 1 aah EDDIE MAYEHOFF + POLLY BERGEN - + MARION MARSHALL PLUS ON THE FUTURAMIC) SCREEN: — ae Cor. Williams WATERFORD ’ Box| Office Opens 10:45 A.M. —— Continuous Shows 11:00 A.M. te Close HEATRE - PHONE FE. 5-6 e. Showbhat Show of Shows! | ==) Once in ;| 30 years... Owen we decided to make the best-seller gre took two years to do the “impossible.” x « * 1 “From Here To Eternity’”’ into a motion picture, there were many in Holly- wood who said, ‘‘Don’t even try! You can’t make a picture out of it!” It was a story of Army life, of illicit loves, of profanity, of brutality. “It’s too tough,”’ they said, “‘you’ll never do it! Impossible!” Parrot Screeches Help and Saves Couple in Fire REDWOOD CITY, Calif. —A green |and red parrot named Waldo is something mare than just a pet to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Zurita today-—he’s a hero. The| frantic screeches of the three-year-old talkative bird roused the sleeping Zuritas at 2:30 a.m. yesterday as smoke and flames shot through the floor of their up- stairs) apartment from the garage below, ‘Help, help, help!'"’ Waldo screamed, ‘‘What’s going on?— what's going on?”’ The! couple grabbed Waldo and a few possessions and groped their way ito safety. A neighbor also | heard the parrot’s screarhs and called the Fire Department. Fire’ Marshal Richard Driv on | said Mr. and Mrs. Zurita would | have been overcome within a short | time. i —f rj 1 . a CORINNE CAMERON A took almost a year to write the script. And what’a script! Page for page, it captures all the color, the spirit, the fire of the book. oe signed Montgomery Clift to play Private Prewitt, lonesome, stubborn, wistful Prewitt. This would have been enough for an ordinary picture, but it was only the beginning for us. We needed a dynamic, virile performance for the vita! part of Sergeant. Warden. We wanted the best. So we went after—and signed—Burt Lancaster. 4 A few days later, Deborah Kerr joined the roster of stars for the role of Karen, the Captain’s wife who falls in love with the Sergeant. Again, our judgment was questioned. “Deborah Kerr plays sweet, nice girls,” they said. “She can’t do ‘that kind of woman’.” Well, they’re in for the surprise of their lives. { j 1 i { | For the part of Lorene, who worked| i in Mrs. Kipfer’s place, we tested many fine actresses. Finally, we ‘ found our Lorene m the person of lovely Donna Reed, And for the! part of Maggio, we signed Frank Sinatra— piece Pour ae of off-beat casting which took Hollywood by : Music Soft And Sweet | gard gwts to match!) ._ In Hollywood, in Hawaii, wherever we had Wilh ree te at to go in. order to get the very best, we went. We were Pe ieee determined to make this the greatest picture in Columbia's A Story That's A Treat history. | (and more girts— netetvt) iM | x & & bow, FROM HERE TO erapent ,. the thirty years I has been completed. It has, we believe, everything that made the book and the characters so great — plus a stirring vitality all its own. have headed pre DRIVE-IN THEATER THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN Lk.-Airport Rds. Box Office Opens 6:30 © WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY © The Roughest Toughest Airmen of Them Ali!! “I STARTING TOMORROW duction at Columbia Studios, we have turned out many noteworthy pictures. To single out just a few: IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT, LOST HORIZON, THE JOLSON STORY and BORN YESTERDAY. In all those years, I have not once come to you, the movie-going pobir and said,| “I urge you to see this picture." . Fae is with no reservations, there- fore, that I now say, “I urge you to see FROM HERE TO ETERNITY.” | | PRESIDENT COLUMBIA PICTURES CORPORATION | | * PHONE FEDERAL 2-485] | STARTING | OAKLAND TOMORROW N RE ANIM LOUIS NG GEOFFREY HOME: "At 11:10, 2:20, 5:30, 8:45 Also This BIG HIT! { ae J. YATES” CHIVET MITCHELL § , and CLAIRE TREVOR : OAKLAND Last Times Today NEVER WARMER! NEVER WITTIER! NEVER MORE WONDERFUL! am EDMUND GEORGE Tate GWENN - WINSLOW - poniine=/ALSO THRILLS AND ACTION SOUTH OF THE BORDER . George BRENT “MEXICAN MANHUNT” “STARTS THURSDAY BURT LANCASTER MONTGOMERY CLIFT in TO ETERNITY” | | “FROM HERE — EE ea ane ny AO ea Oe ee Pn ae aN re ee eae THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 ne Longest river in Scotland is | the Tay. It is ‘| 118 miles in length and carries mare water | to the sea than any other | stre draining eee of the, British Isles. First pharmacopoeia to be published in the United States | appeared in 1778. A national | recognized edition was not published and generally cir-| | culated until 1820. . | IN AND ROUND PONTIAC RAEL’S ‘ Anything on our menu served in your car or in 'T’S NEW! ¢ dining room! ‘French Cut Old Red Tape, Get in Jam With Andorra By PHIL NEWSOM United: Press Foreign News Editor, finance ministry. The French government has been the frequent target lately of charges that it fiddles while, fig- uratively, Rome burns. Two bits of evidence to the con- trary, accumulated in’ the ‘ast week,| now may be reported. They are: 1. President Vincent Auriol dis- continued recognition of the presi- | dent and vice president of the | principality of Andorra. time consumed, months. have had to be renewed. | tired of life.’’ foreign affairs ministry and the The cost was about $70 and the about three They were lucky because it might have taken longer and then some of their original documents would That, the experts say, is where the French got their idea that | “marriage is for people who are | | | There are about three mil- THIRTY-FIVE Government to Trim Payroll by 100,000 WASHINGTON ® — Chairman Philip Young of the Civil Service Commission says the government intends to trim its payroll by 100,- 000 more jobs, but actually fire less than half that number of persons. The reduction, to be made by June.30, will be accomplished tbr the most.part by not filling va- cancies thaf-come up in the nor- mal turnover of personnel, Young said. He spoke last night to the ee Administration. ‘ About two million children between ages 14 and 17 are employed in the U. 8. PONTIAC’S OLDEST TV SERVICE DEALER! Authorized Factory Service for 15 Different Manufacturers BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE Bazley’s Thursday SUPER SPECIALS 78 NORTH SAGINAW ST. FRESH-DRESSED c 27 STEWING g THIS VALUABLE ‘COUPON 5 5S g ENTITLES THE BEARER a TO A TLE. LIMT FRESH ‘REMUS ‘BUTTER THURS. 2. Premier Joseph Laniel ap- | lion miles of roads in the U. 8. proved some 50 decrees aimed |or a mile of road to each at making life simpler for the | square mile of area. average Frenchman and visitors | __ __ Ss * by eliminating what the French r call | “‘paperasse,”” or red tape. Not that all the red tape has been /eliminated. And goodness only knows what will happen now in French and Andorran relations Andorran and Fench relations | reached a crisis when Andorra recently refused France permis- sion to build a radio station in the | V2-Fried Pierce Chicken With Any Purchase RAEL’S DRIVE-IN and RESTAURANT : 8 Minutes Drive out Huron near City Airport 3149 W. Huron FE 4-5791 . p ‘Dick & Jim invite sow to DINE tp our sew family room end DANCE tn our rotunda room DANCING Frit. Sat., San. Eves. SPECIALS FOR THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY OPEN FRIDAY EVENING UNTIL 9 P.M. 13th ANNIVERSARY SALE! §93 5 ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD SUITE 130 S$. Telegraph ' DRIVE-IN | Scribs, Adrian NEW DINING and COCKTAIL LOUNGE, Woodward at 12 Mile Rd. Deluxe Luncheons and Dinners principality. COTTERS “TS Qasr REGARDLESS OF AGE OR CONDITION! traffic. Andorra has a population of st | over 5,000 persons, has an area of 191 square miles and is sea in the Pyrenees between France | and Spain HOTEL ROOSEVELT 125 N. Perty miei aed FE 5-8126 ROCKY, “The Pizza "8. Bett Delicious Pizza Pie! Special . Italian-American Food Luncheons ...,. Carry Out Service Bob’ = Chicken House 497 Elizabeth Lake Rd.. near Telegraph Rd. Chicken Dinner, $1.25 || Rooms for Banquets. Parties. Business Parties Food to Take Out FE 3-982) | Beer—Wine—Liquor Henry § Bloomfield Inn | * Excellent Food, Cocktails, Wines & Beer *® Dancing and Entertainment Nightly * Open 4 p. m. to 2 a. m. Daily except Sunday + NO MONEY DON! --- FUSE eae aia SUITE AS A DOWN PAYMENT ! It has enjoyed undisturbed sov- erignty since 1276, although it pays | an annual tribute of 960 francs (about $2.50) to France and 460 pesetas (about $11) to the Spanish | bishop of Urgel. Now the French president as/| accused the two Andorran officials | of an “evident lack of good faith.”’ The matter rests there, although there undoubtedly will be reper- cussions. Now as to the ‘paperasse.” | Some French red tape dates , back to the days of Napoleon. | It covers all walks of life and | at its lowest level is administered by \a tired official who is paid | approximately $75 per.month and who believes the whole world is | made up of discontented, complain- | ing .people. The Laniel government reforms make it no longer necessary for a’ Frenchman to prove: 1, That he is alive. 2. More than once that he was born. 3%. That he has a roof over | his| head. 4. That he is a_ bachelor. The decrees also provide that | local prefects can act on their! 2-Pc. SUITE Your Old Suite YOU PAY only .... NO MONEY DOWN 35.00 .$114,95 . Resilient con- ' Covered in long wearing material . struction. Here is a real bdlghinit 2 Pieces, Davenpat and Chair, Comfort Deluxe, New Loveliness for Your Living Room at a Tremendous Saving! Easy Terms! Only *] 14,95 AND YouR OLD SUITE, NO DOWN PAYMENT Porties. For Reservations — Phone FEders) 6-300) 1420 8. Telegraph Rd. _8t Orchard Lake Rd FAMILY STYLE CHICKEN DINNER SERVING 12 P.M. fo'9 P.M. | -SPORTSMEN’S INN Dixie Hwy., Waterford OPEN EVERY DAY OR 3-9325 im YOU GET MORE THAN A MEAL Every Sunday! $169.95 35.00 2-Pc. Suite . USE YOUR OLD SUITE AS A DOWN PAYMENT xt a | Your Old Suite at The AS A DOWN PAYMENT EASY Terms 134” And Your Old Suite! JACK 0 HEARTS B d G rT awn if, on questions referred ° Covered Paris, the government has n 2585 Uixie Highway ¥ i on les a nate acted within. two months. This . YOU PAY only $134.95 oar ns gives an idea of how long it has ‘ 426 .W. Huron | aaee to get action in the past in a Rich NO MONEY DOWN MARTIN S DRIVE-IN 12527. Peron Ge sor tid an Americ Frieze HERE IS A REAL BUY! Della Calvin in France. Comfortable suite covered in long- Open 6 A. M. te 10 P.M. They had to get residence cer- | No Down wearing frieze, Here is your chance We Specialize in T-Bone Steaks, $43 tificates, health certificates, doc- | to get rid of your old suite regard- Potatoes, Salad, Roll, Butter, Coffee. . dewenn = umentation from thelr home | HOME MADE CHILI states, work cards and seals and Payment less of age or condition on the pur- wy stamps from the embassy, the chase of a new smart diving room —_ - | Easy suite. | USE YOUR OLD SUITE | Terms | 2 Pe's. Davenport and Chair 134” ONLY $15.95 Step lively in this shapely black suede that is cunningy trimmed with ae ( Bags to match. .14.95 plus tax COVERED IN LONG-WEARING FRIEZE NO DOWN PAYMENT __2-Piece Suite . . . . $199.95 EASY TERMS , Your Old Suite. . . _ 35.00 Here is your chance to get rid of your old su 2-Pc. Suite 164” atoeut Paki ; And Your Old Su of on fal od wieterl At iat Bereaint rome YOU PAY ONLY . ° na Todd’s Sh att J You Can Use One Account ) : .sme ERE | WYMAN’ Biba me Store vv ——— | Bags te match. 1495 plus tax | | Sure | 20 WEST HURON $T. ron Free womect sme tts FFURNITURE —pretrcic STORES | a. bebbecdad be oA Bp CUSTOMERS _ Premiuma! 18 W. Pike St. 2—Stores—2 17 E. Huron Se. B CUSTOMERS ~~ > MEO, Names I cS 8 Sera Reto Eee © Oly ei BF me neTHIRTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 YOU'RE SURE TO SCORE A TOUCHDOWN WITH ONE OF THESE BETTER USED CARS! a baa = tere: ™ iis , COMMUNIST rt . ee bie fe ‘7 ra of = F Se Rtas Oe ae? Sept. 24—25 — 26 — 28-29 < ge at * EOP ES Re at ee FE Zh Gre ate he % (ae eee rw ae Ha Sas, gs a oll aS Pee “9 Meals le Bet TNE 6 ‘2 ;' 1952 BUICK SUPER RIVERIA 2 DR. Has dynaflow, radio and heater. A sharp buy......, 1951 BUICK SUPER RIVERIA 2 DR. i $9395 1952 Pontiac Chieftain Deluxe Catalina With hydramatic transmission, radio and heater. *1895 x $1495 1951 Pontiac Chieftain Deluxe 4-Door Hydramatic transmission, radio and heater. Equipped with dynaflow, radio and heater. Yours at real buy at 22..... 5)... 7. 1951 Pontiac Chieftain “gr Convertible. $ 1952 BUICK SUPER RIVERIA 4-Dr. $O9QG —rsramatic trnamiason. raio and beste. 2 1595 With dynaflow. radio and heater. A steal at smoothie at .. 1951 Pontiac Chieftain Deluxe “g” 4- Door Radio, heater and hydramatic transmission 1949 Pontiac Chieftain Deluxe “8” Radio and heater. You can‘t miss at........, 1948 Pontiac Chieftain Deluxe 2-Door Radio and heater. A sure = at only. $1495 > 895 1951 BUICK SUPER 4-DR. Has dynaflow, radio and heater. Special buy at.., |. 1951 BUICK SPECIAL 2-DR. ‘ Equipped with radio, heater and dynaflow.......... 1951 BUICK SPECIAL 4-DR. Has dynaflow, radio and heater. Price slashed to... 1950 BUICK SPECIAL 4-DR. Redio, heater and air-conditioning. An outstanding buy 1950 BUICK SPECIAL 2-DOOR Dynaflow, radio and heater. A real beauty at..... 1948 BUICK SUPER 4-DOOR Redio, heater and extras......,. 1948 BUICK SPECIAL 4-DOOR Radio and heater. A highway robbery at.......... ° 1947 BUICK SUPER 4-DOOR Equipped with radio and heater. Yours for low price of 1952 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN DELUXE 4-DR. ‘Has hydramatic transmission, radio and heater. $1495 $1545 $1545 $1095 $ 995 $ 795 $ 695 $ 495 oe eeeeeeve @ LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS (up to 24 mo.) >. @ EASY G.M.A.C. FINANCING » @ ALL CARS GUARANTEED ie vo ite RE TELE RERE Meet eooee . | SEE OUR WEEKLY DISPLAY of new and used Pontiacs and Buicks every Saturday Night at ' the Pontiac Speedway out M-59. Meet our salesmen and enjoy the HARD TOP RACES . . . Starting time, 8:30 P.M. AL CRANDALL Gen. Mgr. DICK PARKER + “WRITTEN GUARANTEE! On All Cars Selling . for $300 or More! Your Pontiac &. Buick 804 N. Main; epee 8 @15 YE @ BUY WHERE YOUR FRIENDS HAVE BOUGHT WITH CONFIDENCE AllStar Team Ready and Willing to Serve You! PAY PIKE Rochester (On the Hill)—9 -Miles from Pontiac 30! Hours: 8 A.M. . at ee ry - ha J oo Nee let % So Pigs 1952 CHEVROLET DELUXE 2-DOOR Equipped with al a wh radio and heater. Really loaded at ... 1950 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR Has radio and heater. Very good condition 1949 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR Has overdrive, radio and heater. Here's the buy 1952 FORD V-8 2-DOOR Mainline with radio and heater. See this one . 1950 FORD CLUB COUPE “8” 2-DOOR Custom with radio and heater. Sharply reduced. 1947 FORD “8” DELUXE 2-DOOR Radio and heater. Excellent condition. . $1495 $25 845 $1395 > 895 «ee OF DEPENDABLE ; SATISFACTION =| CUSTOM 2 obese = oe -) ee et R a : ar ORS Re Se AER gy jj RRR Se SE z \ bad LEILA Our RALPH HUMPHRIES Sales Mgr. LOU GREER ommunity Motor Sales, Inc. Dealer in Rochester ar RE SE RI OI Most Cars Are “TRADE-INS on New Pontiacs and Buicks! Your Best Bet Is a One-Owner Car From a New Car Dealer! | We give HOLDEN'S RED TRADING STAMPS with each. Wied | Cer purchased! OLive 2-7121 - HAROLD HOPKINS, President ‘ BIG DAYS of SAVINGS THURSDAY — FRIDAY — SATURDAY — MONDAY — TUESDAY — WEDNESDAY, to 10 P.M. Fe EE te are 1950 CHRYSLER ROYAL 4-DOOR Radio, heater and Fliud Drive. Good transportation... é $1195 + 79 *1145 895 1950 FRAZER 4-DOOR Has radio and heater. Don't miss ....,...........00e 1951 NASH 4-DOOR Equipped with radio and heater. Exceptionally nice..., 1951 KAISER 2-DOOR Equipped with heater. A good transportation special at 1948 NASH 4-DOOR Equipped with radio and heater. sale to eee eee eee ee ee ee ee 1951 HUDSON 2-DO0R Equipped with radio and heater. Very clean... 1951 INTERNATIONAL 2-TON PICKUP You'll have to go far to beat this ............ no0dcc A 1947 INTERNATIONAL '/.-TON PICKUP An excellent utility truck at only.. 1953 NEW HOUSE TRAILER Sleeps 4 people. Equipped with stove, space heater. and Many more — Your family will love it at the low, low price of COC eee ere ererare * 995 1953 PONTIAC & BUICK DEMONSTRATORS Fully equipped with radio, heater, hydramatic and dynaflow. Come out and see these beauties for yourself. Valuable Prizes for All! Pia Our — Giant Umbrella One of the World's Largest! rs ry J THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 THIRTY-SEVEN Experts By GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK (®—The visiting ex- | pert from the corn country shook said. “If he’s even got a jab ! never did see it. I'll swear I be- lieve that boy thinks he can go You say to yourself that if you were in LaStarza’s shoes you would be practicing up to be as his head and said he was more in and fight Rocky and cut him| elusive as a mountain goat. You puzzled than ever about tomorrow night's championship having watched the challenger, Rdland ‘LaStarza, wind up two solid ‘months of training at Green- wood, Lake. ~ * * * “I went there expecting to see him pra¢ticing a left jab and gen- fight after | | up and beat him.” This reaction has been more or less typical of the scores of boxing authorities from every part of the country who have made the pil- | grimage into the Ramapo Hills to watch the Bronx butcher's son prepare himself for his greatest test. They went there expecting to | would be devising schemes to keep | from getting hit while at the same | time managing to catch the eyes of the judges. That’s why it has been unsettling to see the challen- ger doing just the opposite. Maybe he will turn out to have been a prideful young rockhead, Puzzled by LaStarza s Battle Plans Marciano head-on and outbox and outslug him again, as he firmly believes he did in their other meet- ing exactly 3% years ago. * * * No one at his camp can recall having seen LaStarza_ stepping about and being fancy. He does believe, as our mid-west visitor deduced, that he can hit plenty | hard enough to hurt Rocky and | perhaps even cut him up to stop-| ping size. He points out, patiently, | erally getting ready to stay away see one thing, and saw sl tai | 7 LaStarza has trained with no| that he is younger than the cham- | from Ma4rciano for 15 rounds,’’ he | entirely different. thought in mind except to meet pion, somewhat bigger and, in his | | Chief Home Opener Friday By BILL MARTIN Pontia¢ High's football Chiefs, fresh fram a 34-13 rout of Wyan- dotte, open their home season Fri- day night against Hamtramck in Wisner Memorial Stadium. Coach Ed Graybiel's sguad came out of last Friday's contest without serious injuries. End Leroy Moore is nursing a bruised hiff and co- | captain Bill McLarty, a guard, will) play with a cast on a_ broken) thumb, injured in practice last week, but the team is otherwise} in good shape. j Graybiel’s starting lineup will be unchanged Friday, with Moore | and Jim Wiscombe at ends, Tom | Metzdorf. and Jack Hepkins at | tackles, McLarty and Ed Shaw | game, || Sunday. at guards and Ed Hoban at center, Dick Ayling will go at quarterback, with Bill Rose and Homer Harrison at halfbacks and Coley Gracey at full. Hamtramck won its opening 12-6, over St. Stanislaus * * * St; Michael plays its 1st ‘‘road”’ AS XY + RA iif] 2. ! United Press Phote SANDLOT TO SERIES—Peewee Reese (left) of] and Dodgers clash in the World Series, they will be the Brooklyn Dodgers and Phil Rizzuto of the Yan- | the only veterans of the series between the two teams kees have come a long way from sandlot baseball | in 1941. The teams also met in 1947-49-52, the Yanks where sides are chosen with a bat. When the Yanks | winning each time., But Ted Denies It Intimates Say Williams Has Changed Since His Return From Korean War By JOE REICHLER BOSTON ®—Those who claim to know him best insist Ted Williams is a changed man since his return from Korea. | The Williams before the war was known, of course, to express, by word or gesture, his resentment of and contempt for abusive fans. He was known to wrangle with news- papermen: and photographers and could be downright rude on oeca- sion, , The Korean War veteran of to- day is far tess susceptible to criti- cism. His antagonistic attitude has given way to a live-and-let-live attitude. He has become much more} tolérant of others. He has learned to accept people for what they are and not what he would like them to be. It may ‘be that Williams’ several narrdw from death while y jets over Communist lines has made him more human. Williams blows a fuse when any- one suggests he may have changed. “I’m the same guy I was last year, five years ago and 10 years ago,” he reminds you. “I haven’t changed in the least. I still think most newgpapermen are jerks—and that goes for you, too. They don’t Baseball Result By, The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE. . Ww ioL *?et. GB New Yerk.....2..---98 @ 667... Cleveland ecoeqecer DD ° 61 es 104% Chicage ..ccseeees 86 G4 573 134% Boston ....sccccese- 81 68 540 1815 Washin OO a ue ae Detroit peccscccD 98 i201) (a2 a 57 93 380 4216 St. Louis........... 540O8T)ti«w8SKC 4 Lope 1st) 1 vs t. (15-4). Only games scheduled. JUESDAY’S RESULTS St. Louis 1 Detreit New York, 7 Philadelphia i 8 Chicage Cleveland ¥’S SCHEDULE (22-15); 2 pm—Elson (6-1) or Lown (8-6) Reltenaborger (6-14). oF “TUESDAY'S RESULTS Ne games like me because I tell them what I think of them. Why not? They he what they think about me.” Williams would be _ surprised, | however, to learn that most news- ‘papermen like him. The fans gen- erally, and those in Boston specif- ically, idolize him despite his out- ,ward indifference to them. | Very few ball players have more knowledge of things outside base- ball: than Williams. Although he | had little formal education, he is _an avid newspaper and magazine ‘reader. He has a lively and com- prehensive interest in current af- ‘fairs, with emphasis on finance, domestic and foreign politics and, ' since his first hitch in the Marines, aviation. Williams’ enthusiasms are tre mendous. These include hunting, fishing and photography besides, of course, baseball. = Davisburg Fall Best Bali Test Slated Sunday Post Entries Taken for 18-Hole -Event; Hartz Wins Club Title Davisburg Golf Club’s annual best ball tournament will be held Sunday, with tee-off time set for 9 a.m. Thirty entries have been ‘filed for the 1%hole affair, and post entries will be accepted. Defending ¢ehampions, Detroit- ers Jack Little and Bob Pres- korn, have not yet entered the tourney. Club championships at Davisburg were held recently, with Elisa Hartz of Holly defeating Hilton Stults of Pontiac, 5 and 4, for the championship flight title. Other winners included Chuck Nasstrom, Pontiac, 1st flight; Don Bremmer, Holly, 2nd flight; and Mrs, Val Walters, Clarkston, Wom- en’s Flight. TODAY A YEAR AGO—Unde- feated Rocky Marciano won the | heavyweight boxing championship as he knocked out Jersey Joe Walcott in the 13th round, game of the season Friday night, opposing Fitzgerald at the Spar- tans’ field at 9 -Mile and Ryan Roads. - Bob Mineweaser plans two changes in the lineup that dropped a 12-6 loss to Avondale last Fri- day. Bud Schwartz, 170-pound util- ity back, will take over fullback duties for the injured Wayne Mag- nan, and Bob Anderson replaces Mike Clever at left half. Anderson was the Shamrocks’ top ground gainer against Avondale. St. Frederick opens Suburban Catholic League competition here Sunday, against Highland Park St. Benedict. Bens bowed to St. Thom- as, 26-7, last week, while the Rams walloped Marine City Holy Cross, 18-0. Boxing Show Set Saturday Amvets’ Amateur Ring! Event Is Scheduled for City Armory Bemis-Olsen Amvet’s amateur boxing show, originally scheduled as an outdoor event Sept. 12 but postponed because of bad weath- er, will be held Saturday night in the Pontiac Armory, A “grudge” match between ‘Pontiac welterweights Dennis Huft and Dick Goyette highlights the 10-bout program. Goyette knocked out Huff in the 2nd round of their last meeting. Another feature bout matches Jay Latham of Pontiac and Henry Williams, Flint Golden Gloves champion. Tickets are on sale at Griff's Grill, Stadium Inn and Dobski’s ‘Bar. Remainder of the card: 135—Eddie Bridges (Pontiac) vs Bill Cataline (Flint). 110—Arthur McClellan (P) vs Bob Nes! ). 135—Wilfred Mitche= (FP) vs Irvin Nerd (F). oo Sykes (FP) vs Dave Ruanyen ). 165—Pete Remee (FP) vs Ernie Bedford, (P). 126—Dick Gideumb (FP) vs George McM y (F). 14 Heten (F) ve Mickey McCarty (F). Hes t+—MeKiniey Miller (P) vs Sam Carson (F). Lions Swap Cifelli fo Green Bay Club DETROIT w—Champion Detroit Lions cut their squad to the re- quired 33-player limit today by trading tackle Gus Cifelli to the Green Bay Packers for a Packer draft choice in the next National Football League draft meeting. Cifelli, who stands 6-feet-1 and weighs 240, was the Lions’ regular offensive tackle for the last three years. He graduated from Notre Dame, where he helped the Irish to an unbeaten season in 1949. Taylor Is First Entry in Sunday’s Drag Races Jimmy Taylor, former hardtop driver from Berkley, is the first driver to enter a rail racer in | 65 years ago. | . oe e s Here are important verdicts for the Granite Man, and the puncher, | |Fitzsimmons and Corbett twice. H . *. ‘e \farce since Jeffries, fat and \ This result was quite a shock to the American side, | the scene changed drastically when Jim Jeffries, The meeting of Jeffries and Jack Johnson was was the boxer. Then knocked oat Bob Record Shows Superior Boxer Nearly Always Gives 3 Slugger Tough Time, So LaStarza Is Given Chance By GRANTLAND RICE NEW YORK—One of the first recorded battles be- ‘tween a boxer and a puncher came when Charley Mitchell got a draw with John L. Sullivan in France opinion, just about as strong. ~ We recall. that Keene Simmons, a big Negro sparring partner of LaStarza's who has fought and trained with both men, told us ser- iously that he would rather fight Rocky six times than Roland once. Rocky Favored for Title Bout in Polo Grounds IBC President Predicts $300,000 Gate; Tickets for Ringside Going Well NEW YORK (®—The odds favor- ing heavyweight champion Rocky Marciano over challenger Roland LaStarza soared to 44% to 1 today No Love Lost Biggie-Evvy By ROBERT E. VOGES EAST LANSING @®—A couple of one-time buddies and bunkmates will be glaring at each other across the football field when Michigan State meets Iowa Saturday. There’s no need for a phoney buildup of the rivalry between MSC Coach Biggie Munn and Iowa's Forest Evashevski—this one is for real; There’s' more than usual inter- The Spartans will be playing their first official Big Ten game and will be shooting for 25 vic- tories in a row. But the personalities involved make this game even more in- teresting. Munn was an assistant coach and may go even higher when the two step into the Polo Grounds Thursday night for their 15-round title fight. Despite the long odds and the fact that there are few among the fight mob who give the 26-year- old contender a chance, interest in the fight continued to mount. Ringside seats were selling be- yond the 18th row. Ticket scalpers were demanding and getting hand- some premiums for the $30 ringside seats within the first ten rows. Jim Norris, the president of the promoting International Boxing Club, predicted that he would have at least $300,000 in the till the morning of the fight. Dime Programs Won't Be Sold at ‘M’ Games Crisler Copyrights Official Booklet for Home Contests - ANN ARBOR (®—If you want a football program for University of Michigan games this season, you'll have to buy the standard 50-cent university program sold inside the stadium. The 10-cent variety sold out- side the stadium won’t be avail- able because of Michigan athletic director Fritz Crisler’s action in copyrighting the official Michi- gan game program. For several years students have printed the names, numbers and positions of members of the Michi- gan squad and those of the op- ponents on cards and sold them before each game. Many fans preferred the cards, and that cut into sales of the fancier book-type official university publication. It was not made clear immedi- ately what was the legal standing of the| copyrighted program. Dublin Gridders Begin Season With 25-0 Win Dublin > School’s football team opened its 1953 season Monday by defeating Milford High School Jay- vees, |25-0, at Milford. Coach at the 10-grade school is Lawton ed ' Bur] Lee Gullett, fullback, stored three of the Dublin touchdowns, with quarterback, John Walker accounting for the other. Dublin scored once in each period. League Leaders By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEA Cleveland, Mantle, New York, -& Michigan when Evashevski was | gaining fame as a blocking back. |He grew to like the personable Features MSC-Iowa Tilt Rivalry Evashevski and in 1946, when Munn was head coach at Syra- cuse, he named Evvy as his back- field coach. When Munn made the move to Michigan State in 1947, Evashevski went along with him. After a year or so, a coolness developed. Evashevski was becom- ing a spokesman for the football setup and was assuming a lot of credit for the early successes. He made no secret of the fact he was aiming at a head coaching job somewhere. The break came in 1949. He visited his old running mate, Tom Harmon, who talked up the advantages of West Coast coach- ing. Evashevski left after the season’s end to coach Washington State. He took two of Munn’s prize as- ton State coach and Bob Flora, now with Evvy at Iowa. Evashevski is known to be aim-| jing at this one, aching to cut) | Michigan State down to size. Munn lhagesaaih enjoy being beaten by a former assistant. MSC Stresses | Defensive Play inLast Drills Varsity Elevens Hold Up Well Against JV’s Offense By ROBEBT E. VOGES EAST LANSING (®—Emphasis was on the defense in the last scrimmage session staged by Mich- igan State football squad before the Iowa game Saturday. second teams held up well under the attack of a junior varsity eleven using Iowa plays. . Only a scattered few first downs were made during the 15-minute defensive scrimmage session Tues- day. “It could be different Satur- day,” warned one of the coaches. “Towans will be using those plays instead of our own fellows and they’ll have a lot of new com- binations.” A brief offensive scrimmage also scheduled for the week. to fight them.” could mean penalties. Iowa," he reminded. Coach Biggie Munn’s first and | was allowed, the last contact work | oe and Ted Ellison of Birming- The squad showed good spirit “You got to hit them hard,"’ he shouted. “‘Be tough. You've got - Munn also was quick to criti-| cize players for any miscues that “Remember we'll be playing at Practice ended with a long punt | Lopez, Tebbetts Are Involved in Job Changes NEW YORK w—Al Lopez will leave the second place Cleveland Indians to manage the second di- vision Cincinnati Redlegs next year, it was learned today. Lopez is expected to be succeed- | Cleveland catcher who currently is manager of the Indianapolis: club of the American Association.’ Indianapolis is a farm team of the | Indians. ; * s In Cincimati, Gen. Manager Gabe Paul. of the Redlegs said, “‘no comment,” when asked if Lo- | pez had been hired. Three City Golfers on All-Star Squad Three Pontiac golfers were in- cluded on the squad picked by the Metropolitan Golf Association to oppose the Detroit District Golf Association team Sunday, Oct. 4. Mike Andonian of Sylvan Glen, Roy Iceberg of Edgewood, and Joe Kocsis of Twin Lakes were the am and Wally Smith of Royal Oak sistants—Al Kircher, now Washing- Paige |ed by George Tebbetts, former rig localites named. Others were Jay ¢ Bengals Lose, 7-3, to Browns in Home Finale Satch Paige Wins 3rd Victory of Season in 7-Inning Stint DETROIT ® — One thing about the Detroit Tigers—they were con- sistent during the 1953 season. Con- sistently bad, that is. . At home, Tigers had a 30-47 record. On the road, their mark was 29-45. Not much difference. They closed out their home sea- son last night and the St. Louis Browns drubbed them, 7-3, Sat- er 56 but that doesn’t make any difference to old Satchmo. He still 20,072 turned out to bade fare- L ST. LOUIS ABR HE RE Gunter, ss 8 1 6 Kuenn, mw 4 6 6 Mick’sen, Ib 8 1 1 Hatfield, 38 4 1 1 Kryhoski, 1b © 1 6 1¢6 Dyck, rf 4 21 Pesky, % 3606 Kokes, rf 1 @ @ Nieman, fW 4066 rat, 44 0 2 ment ef @ukce ¢@ 311 Moss, ¢ 4 @ 1) Priddy, 1b 3 6 1 Lipen, 3d 4 @ 1) Swift, « 1¢¢6 Young, 2 4606 1) 1¢¢e6 Paige, p 3 6 0 Batts, © 8086 Larsen, p oe | ’ Bw 1¢¢e6 Marlewe, p @ @ @ Mellin 1¢¢e Aber, p eee Beone 1et1 Weik, p eee Searbe'gh, p © @ © 3s678 : s1 36 ice ee ee Me eg hit imte a force play fer Dyck Mullin hit inte = double play for Marlowe in 6th. \Delsing struck eut fer Swift in Sth. |Beone singled fer Aber in Sth. lai, Tony Novitsky, Joe Peak, Sal Pomante, Dick Preston, C. J. Reynolds and Gene Woodard. Swigert Wins Title Milton |Swigert, 240 Sashabaw road, Oxford, won the single divi- sion of the horseshore pitching and . tant it when| Law, selected as captain, plays| sr. Lovuts........ Le ee 100 130 ee2—7 M 4 ar prin :* gl j| out of Sunnybrook, Ellison from DETROIT gies Wr te ecg ordered the players to start hitting Edgewood, and Smith, also of Sun- Groth 3, Mi Dyck, Hat? the dummies. nybrook. Rounding out the pub- ag ig =e eval Dyck. Munn was preaching “‘tough- linx team are Stan Bialo, Jack Young, Hunter and Mickelson Ha a ness’’ the workout. | Gregory, Sam Lima, Chuck Nico- | Brigéy, Mae Left st. Lente § Be a POE "el SOT ere et drill as the blockers peeled off; tournament which concltided Mon- Pic. like dive-bombers to hit their men | day at the Spirit 79 Mets Club of ; vielen S oar ae ‘ and clear an alley for the ball | Gingellville. Swigert defeated Mike | Tettps ‘ 8 carrier. Furney of Waldron road in the | ppppics ira & Jimmy Ellis of Saginaw, at safe-| finals. Dou bles title went to Basil See tiolns s Sweet Peas i ty, returned most of the kicks. | Wethy and Frank Cook. Indiv. serles—R. Morelli 568. / College Football’s Power Index Games Of Week Ending Sept. 27 | St, Vincent °43.9 vs W Liberty St 432 ) Lawrence _ 46.2 vsGrinnell _ °23.9 AMONG TOP 150 WChesterSt *@8.0vsP MC. _._ 0.7 other —.. 52.4vae Buena Vista. 33.7 ae ray teach’ a wena +t aoa | Mankato St °383 ve Winona BU > 38.3 ° . ne Vs °38. = ee eee Un” we | ALC. 54.0 va Colby *46.5 Normal 44.0 va Hillsdale — °25.1 °710 ve Fla State _ $3.9 | Bloomsb’g St 46.4 vs Wilkes — °28.8 Morningride 6vsOmaha _— °38.1 U.C.LA. . °113.7%vs Kansas . 85.7 Bowdoin _—, .8vs Tufts °4.4 0.’ W vs Otterbein . °13.8. SA AY, Carnegie t. 15.3 va Weotmrsiar 0323 ‘st asebeah '*a0-4 vase oly “Re Abilene Chr. 71.5 vs Ark. State °70.1 | Ciarion St. 573 boro St °30.0 | St. Olaf 449 va Wartburg - °S9. Army *87.8vs Furman —— 640 | Grove City °25.5 vs Marietta 18.9 | St Thomas . 56.3vs Augsburg _ °372 Auburn _ °81.8vs Stetson .— 53.5 | Hobart __ 395 vsBrooklyn _ ° 5.7 | SE Mo. St °37.6vs So. Dlinols — 27.7 Boston °78.8 vs Clemson — 765 | Indiana, Pa. 36.4 vs Thiel ~ 926.8 | (Stwestern K 33.3vaFt. Hays St. °30.1 Brown __ °68.0vs Amherst —_ 30.7 | Kutzto'n St. °32.5veN. Haven St 31.6 | SW Mo. St. 47.2vs Pittsburg St °45.4 — 80.4vs Oregon Bt. °71.7 | Mass. U. _ 56.0 vs Bates *30.5 paraiso, °583 vs Indiana St. . 46.7 Guakioal’” saa meuett 0.7 | Muhlenberg °54.7 vs Albright —_ 423 ash'n, Mo *41.9vs Mo. Mines _ 20.7 = $03 ve Reeup- oes N-Hampsh'e °$2.4 vs Upeal iia 217 ton _ °478vsKalamazoo _ 215 ——— ‘eastern. 9 vs tale r UTH Goiumbla = °744 ve Lehigh a3 | RB. 1. State °56.9 vs Maine —, OTHER SO ERN Duke —__ °94.1 vs Wake ree oe St Lewree. °30.5 ve Union Y. 30 ° ' R. Texas St. §3.3 vs Tridity, Tex 56}3 Michael *512vs Norwich __ 36.8 pop se carn Ala Po G. Wesh'ton 75.6vs VMI. °76.1 3 °663 ve Lock Haven. 29 Macon 29.8 vs Newp'tNews °14.6 °00.2 vs Tulane .: 98-0 | Slip'ryRock °38.2 vs Ashland 118 oh ee ene eee ee Ga. — 108.2 vs Florida __ 92.3 = rm. a Tech ,°38.6 vs! 93 Geity 084 vs Delaware — 311 | W = Se = sae SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 | Mie Cree. So2veDertmeutn. ore | Westyen, —°44.4 ve Middlebury 33.3 | {uss ie' tT 036 va Mise. 31.4 — 9.5 vs Texas A&M 903 | y, wn. 662s Scranton _. °442 | AustinPeay ‘°55.3'vs Henderson St 30.7 Dlinois *87.3 vs Nebr — 735 Fx Centre _.. 26.7 va Wilmington . 12.3 Kans. State. 82.0 vs Colo. °T1.0 OTHER MIDWESTERN. Concord | °37.0vaSalem ____ 178 L.£.0;'. 1015 93.1 ta St. 424s, —_ *ss Maryland _ °102.8.vs Wash. & 58.7 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 35 | 'y wa Cars. New'n °34.1 Miami, O_ °88.5vsBowl’g Grn 53.3 | Cent Okla St 41.5 vs NW Okla St °20.7 | Gienville St °37,0va — 181 Michigan |_ °95.0 vs W: ion . 91.3 Cal. Emporia °51.2vs Baker __. 23.2 — °34.3 Mich. State 116.0vslowa — °82.5 | Grt'd Rapids 113 vs Adrian —_.. 89 | Ipmar Tech 47.8ve wna °3446 Mid Tenn, St TLOvsE. Ky. $t_ °628 | Hamline _ °478vs Bethel, Minn 16 402 veE. Carclina °48.8 * 100.1 vs — eee eee ee yee rek Kan. 74 | L& College. 41.3 ,va Conway St. °2.6 Miss. South’n 99.1 vs 93.5 80.6 vs Bethel, Kan 7.7 | Ta Tech _ °S6.4 va NE Louisiana 47.3 Ney —. *S2veWm. & Mary 849 soeens S St8 ve Reet ‘al 76 | McNeese St. 50.0vsS. F. Austin 46.8 N. _ %SvsUteh State. °604 | No. Dakota °36.6vs A SD . Marshall _ °54.8vs Morehead St. 32.4 N. Caroline °04.6vsN. C. State. 83.7 | NE Okla, St 48.5 veSE Okla St °252 | Nownerry . °3i.2vs Catawba _ 318 No'western. °63.5vslowa State. 90.6 | Ottawa —. °37.1 vs Friends . Orarks __ °48.3 vs Southern St. 449 Rote Dame 1008 we Oman “Ney | Simpeoe — :mtve Central Mo. 21 | Siumcedg: ssave now. Payee at Ohio °95.7 ve Indiana __ 775 pe =~ ang osee ve Mo. 3.1/1 s *58.4vs How. Payne 41.9 Okla. A&M GOAvs Arkansas . °T05 . 653.7 vs NE. Mo. Gt. 40.1 _. °46.1 va Howard _ 18.8 nus oextord' 0634 | Wm. Jewell °42.3vsNW Mo. St. 35.4 SkLouis na omaraw tn. tut te8 Penn ___ °87.6 vs Vanderbilt . 873 SATURDAY, 4 *53.5 ve Texas A & I 478 Pittsburgh. °80.5 vs W. Virginia. 83.4 | Akron ——— 42.3 vs Witten $46 | Sul Ross _ °45.2vs Tex Lutheran 147 Princeton . °943vs Lafayette — 46.9 eer) —— 52,6 ve Wabesh —- °383 | Tenn. Tech °61.1 va Murrey St._ 85.7 Purdue __ 93.5 vs ° 1 Be, — (ol ve Milikin —-_ 374 | w. Ky. S¢ °86.0veR. Tenn, O O73 Sen Jose St Svs Brig Young °67.4 | B. Wallace. 61.8 vsJ. Carroll _ °60 Texas St °S2.5va McMurry — $2.3 8. Carolina |°811 vs — $13 Se" ae Le Seven “eee lofford _. °65.7 vs Blon 18 Syrecume "811 13 ae? — 5 Pet Normal - 35 OTHER FAR WESTERN Termipe vs No = ; FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER ( Tennessee. °102.1 vs Miss. State. 09.0 | Capital — -°32.1vs0. Northern 24.4 aim. Se * a Texas _. °88.5 vs Oe | rn eee ereaw a rie | Oncidental, °SR7 vel. A. Gigbe. 22.8 Texas Tech. 70. ve Tex. West'n af cutee a a a ee Barbara °52.3 vs Whittier __ 82.0 Tulea —— ,$1.2 vs Wichita _— °G24 | Coe S03 ve Mt Union _ *43.5 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 Virginia ___ S2.lveVae. Tech — 61.9 | Cent Mich. °67.0vs W. Michigan 58.7 St. °26.2veN.M.Western 48 Wash. 90.7 vs Coll. °383 Gus ...... “Feiner ..... WP Ce Ages ies ve whom St. . “M1 W. Reserve_ *64.6 vs Toledo 56.3 | ComeordiaM °55.l vs St. Mary's - 221 19.6 vs Whitmen —. 18. Wisconsin — ve . = he ate te e737 9S Cole. College 53.9 vs WMex. AGM "8.1 BES Ss BE | Bs — 22 ee eB | Se es See °04.3 vs Connecticut. 514 at caatee - ne ¢ “sn West's rf SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 35 G Adolphus 58.6 vs St. John’s. E, Wash. St °0.0vel & C 8.8 Dayton ._ 9.2ve Xavier, O- °T%T | Hanover — “40.1 Vs Anderson 8 Frome st “8 vs Cal. Poly — 3. ER EASTERN “| i Wer'n - 1148 ve No. Cantral sed - 29 ve aaiitary “Me FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 | Ind Central 20.0 vs - *18; Sd. - °41-3 0 Poe Lastheran Calif, State °S1.1 vs St. Francis. 26.2 | lowa Tehrs. S3.ivs5. D. State °S24 - 15 Cal. Tech — 3” Hofstra _ °542 vs Bridgeport _ 36.6 | In. Wesl'n. °42.3vsCentral. la. 218 Diego St °50.8've Hawaii __ 1 Mansfield St. 28.0veTthaca _ °16.4 | KansWesl'n °15.6vs Bethany, K. 153 . @2veW. Wash St = TOP RATINGS. THROUGH GAMES OF SEPT. '19 “ 11 Tov 98.6 © 31 Tulse “- siestons : 12 Cincinnati 86.3 22 Wash. State — aT 13 Rice 96.3 23 Texas A & M —._- m3 14 San Jose St. 5 24 Kentucky Bee 15 Duke $4.1 25 Oklahome A & M a4 102.6 16 Alabama 93.1 26 Miss. State 17 Utah $3.0 627 Missouri _ ms 2 18 Colorede oa 38 Texas as 4. +» 19 Florida a3 Coll. Pacifie nna S53 99.6 | 20 Washington 813 30 Oregon _ 85 Z Mew Teom. <= Copyright 1953, by Dunkel Sports Ressangh Service ~ - ~ | 4 ( ep hee Lee ee ee a eee eee __ THIRTY-EIGHT oe | Dn cle ae le, sll: i ie, nD 2 Sno, 1 a ees Ce SSS LS Ses <_< —— THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 “Auto Safety Glass a eet HUB Auto Parts Co. . 122 Oakland Ave. FE 4-7066 | Move ‘Em to Detroit! season—a torrid .909 pace. DETROIT ®—Since the St. Louis Browns are looking for a new home, why not Detroit? They play at their best in Motor Town: Browns beat 'the Tigers 10 out of 11 games at Briggs Stadium this By BEN PHLEGAR | Ckhchhcheuheuluheake hak, dedi dhkr' @ Remove front wheels and _inspeet lining. nt ®@ Inspect, clean and repack front wheel bearings 146 West Huron Street x. BaD a aa aaa. FHONT END ALIGNMENT TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED FOR ALL WORK. FIRESTONE STORE HERE’S WHAT WE DO: © Inspect brake drums. Check and add brake fluid if needed ® Adjust brake shoes to secure full contact with drums. ® Carefully test brakes. ie al pes eee alee $1.98 FEderal 2-925] IAAPALAL IO L@LALLAL LLL 2 \ \ \ \ \ \ \ . \ AP Sports Writer It could well be that Allie Rey- nolds has fastballed his way into the job of opening the World Series for the New York Yankees a week from today. ° * * * The veteran speed merchant cer- tainly has: erased al] doubts as to his fitness. And last night he gave Charlie Dressen’s spies an eyeful of some of the best pitching per- formed by any member of the Yankee mound staff this season. * * - Working against the admittedly weak Philadelphia Athletics Rey- nolds blazed his way to 11 strike- outs in seven innings while giving up two measly singles and walk- ing four. He struck out the side in the) first inning and whiffed seven in the four innings. At the end of seven Casey Stengel decided he had seen enough of Reynolds for the evening. And what-he had seen had made him very happy. Neither Stengel nor Dressen dis- closed his World Series pitching rotation. But Reynolds fine form in recent weeks has inspired con- siderable support for the big chief to pitch the opener. The Oklahoman is % years old. He has appeared in five World Series, pitching 69 1-3 innings in 12 games and hag a 62 record. The New York ts beat him once in 1951 and Dodgers beat him once and lost to him twice fall. The Yankees t Philadelphia night with! both Philadel- ff Bob Kuzava home run derby. Rosen hit his 41st in Cleveland's 8-3 decision over Chicago. By win- ning the tndi , lly clinched second plate. They lead the White Sox by three games with four to play. In other action yesterday the Brooklyn Dodgers closed their Eb- bets Field season by tying the Na- tional League record of 60 victor- ies and 17 losses. They beat Pitts- burgh 5-4 in the final game. Mil- waukee and St. Louis split as did beat St. Louis in the first game Cincinnati and Chicago. Milwaukee .143 and lost the second 10-7. Cin- cinnati edged Chicago 1-0, then lost 41. Philadelphia whipped the | New York Giants 9-3, Reynolds in Great Form, May Open Series Eddie Mathews hit his 47th home run in the first game at St. Louis but he committed two errors in each game of the twin bill. Stan Musial, still fighting to keep his batting crown, collected five hits in nine times at bat. He raised his average to .333 and would need an average of three hits in every four times the rest of the season to catch the injured Cari Furillo of Brooklyn who leads with .344. * s s. The Phillies pounded four New York pitchers for 13 hits, making it easy for Curt Simmons to win his 15th game. Bowling Clinic By BILLY SIXTY CASE — Fitting The Ball. CURE—Use Pencil-Palm Method ~—Particular care’ should be used Price Slashed Famous DORMEYER Mixer- Re t t} i | & | ( " | | } . i LJ ‘uicer } | l Value Batteries Extra 3-CELL, CHROME-PLATED FLASHLIGHT in selecting a ball. It should fit like a glove. Not tight, but snug. For secure hold during swing, three-fingered grip is preferable. Short, stubby fingers call for greater pitch to avoid dropping ball too soon. Better to have very little pitch on thumbhole to insure smooth 3 release of ball. Thumb must come out of hole first, leaving) fingers to apply spin or ‘‘stuff’’ pn ball. In fitting ball, use pencil-palm method. Pencil should slide freely between palm and ball, as il- Imlay Threat in SCC Editor's Notes This|is the last in a« series discussing football prospects in the Oakiand County area. By JACK SAYLOR Of Oakland County teams |operating in miscellaneous prep are tackle John Burkhardt, guard Dick Seerey, fullback Lloyd Syron of Pontiac, and halfback Mark | Boehmer. , Cranbrook is tackling a tough leagues, Royal Oak High appears| schedule with a small squad, but to have the best chance of bring- | 10 players are veterans.’ Dwight ing home a football championship | Davis, Doug Richmond, George ,.Tom Carle, Joe Moyer and Fred this fall. Acorns rang up| seven wins in nine games last year in Jim Ma- nilla’s first season as head coach and 16 lettermen are back. Wyan- dotte is given little chance to re- peat as Border Cities titlist. Manilla has nearly all his 1962 backs, including Dick Nash, who gained all-state | consideration. Also around are Jack Draw- baugh, Chuck Edwards, Rey Soldan and Dick Ulrich.° Harry Andreasen, Bill Bradford, Koenig are experienced linemen. Shrine of Royal Oak, which competes in the Catholic First Di- vision, has a new coach in ex-UD star Ron Horwath and only four lustrated, when ball is lifted. of 11 starters from last year. They 99 rely AM Throws Lhmited OTLIGHT Plugs into any cor Cigarette Lighter Regular $4.75 Valve RAINCOATS BE — Men’s or Ladies’ .. Sale-Priced! MOHAIR ote Trade Danger for set Firestone Guaranteed NEW TREADS _ Applied 140 N. Seginew Se. irestone | DOWNTOWN STORE FE 4-3553 FE 5-2620 Safety. i nat . - TERMS | ARRANGED. No Money . Down. | Is ( 8:30 to 6 — Fri. te 9 OT hh Py EQUIPMENT FOR ARCHERS & 4 GUNNERS , .. all popular makes ond brands . . . we can com- —, pletely outfit you! Buy Now—Buy on Our Lay-A-Way Plan Fosters Hardware & Sporting Goods 1651 S. Telegraph Rd. Ph. FE 2-3559 OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 |Glover, Joe Braff ‘and Sheldon Baum return in the line and George Cochran, Phil Dondero, Larry Asbury, Joe Prendergast and Howard Nash in the back- field. Cranes play in the Inter-State Prep School league. Eiwin Murray lost 13 seniors from his good 1952 team and has enly three regulars back for the Southeastern Conference race. They are end Glenn Whitney, guard Tom Costello and quarter- back Ralph Garlick, transferred from the line. South Lyon has six regulars back for its League of Lakes cam- paign including Arnold Byer, Roy Herald, Gene Comiskey and Ed Buatti in the line and backs Fred Royal. Oak Is Strong Title Contender in Border-Cities; Warren Bi-C Pick Top challenge probably will come from Imlay City with an all- veteran backfield and three good linemen returning. Linemen Ed Kasuba and Chuck Palshan and backs Lou Giddings and Bill McGinnis are their opener. BI-COUNTY — Warren favored to end Utica’s reign, but the Chief- tains are always expected to be rough under coach Barney Swine- hart. Warren still has its swift 200- pound halfback, Stan Orlikowski. Utica lost 19 men and has only eight lettermen. Two were '52 regulars, backs Ron Ewert and Ken Hilliard. Center Line and Lake Shore are likely to be in the run- nerup battle. SOUTHERN: THUMB — New Haven won the first game iin its title defense, 12-0, over Armada, and Brown City topped ’52 runner- up Memphis, 7-0, but the big noise was Capac’s 43-0 rout of a Huskies Aerial Attack Worries Michigan Team Washington's Fine End Could Prove Source of Trouble for ‘M’ By JOHN F. MAYHEW ANN ARBOR @® — Presence of one fine end and the absence of another may have a lot to do with |the outcome of Michigan's opener against Washing- | ton turday. | Abgent is Lowell Perry, the Michigan end who made the Wol- verine aerial game a dangerous one before he graduated. The one who jwill be on the field is Wash- ington’s George Black. Black rated aS a great pro- fessional and could find Midhigan’s defensive backfield for good yardage gained. Tony Branoff,* a performer of all- aronnd ability, is the strong point in the Michigan backfield. Else- where however, there is a lack t ! B L i f A i 8 a = Ht poe 7 g SUNDAY 9 TO 2 The F 147.165 Ookland Ave. HUNTERS layaway | {GUN . J. Poole Co. We will Be Closed for Inventory Sept. 28-29-30 | | Plenty of Free Off-Street Parking your now ALL MAKES ALL MODELS ALL SIZES FE 4-1594 S| future with De-{ FE ders! 2-9111 ending all specu-§ lation as to his troit. newspaper saidi Hutchinson would not be the Tiger manager in 1954 while another said he would. Nobody knew for sure. Now it’s definite. Hutch will be back and he says: “We'll be a better team in 1954. We have to make a few changes but we should continue to move up. What we need most is a good relief pitcher.”’ Hutch agreed to only a one-year term and that ordinarily wouldn't indicate a vote of confidence. But | SPECIAL SERVICE TO GARAGES Pontiac Piston Service Co. Complete Machine Shop Service in Hutch’s case, it does. In recent |. ; | WASHINGTON @ — Tonight’s televised fight matches Lee Sala, f 26-year-old Pittsburgh veteran 4 against Willie Troy, 22, of Wash- ington, in a 10-round middleweight engagement. Fight time over the Columbia Broadcasting System is set for 9 p. m. (EST). Pantera and Bob Gouin. veteran Dryden team. tial. Gerry Williams, a sophomore Briefly, here is the outlook in} Four new coaches are in the|is pribably the ‘‘comer” in the other area leagues: league — Joe Wilkinson at Ar-| group. But he needs experience. SOUTH CENTRAL — North| mada, Don Wadsworth at Brown| The lack worried Oosterbaan as Branch defends its title with a/City, Bob Brauer at Memphis and {he polished the Michigan defenses good line and inexperienced backs. John Fisher at New Haven. again Tuesday. Reserve passers ! ; : ere Oe ee era rapes | / of, passes. Oosterbaan’s Hutch Signs Up for 1954, \Sibtees itemieey pak wes only a practice session. What they Sees Better Year Ahead |= & suas veo wasine { ton quarterback Sandy Lederman By JOE FALLS made with the team this year. The | starts throwing {o Black is an- DETROIT W~—A season-long | 34-year-old manager guided the | other question. guessing game was at an end/| Tigers from deep in the cellar to ’ today with the appointment of Fred | sixth place, where they stand to- Hutchinson as manager of the De- | day. troit. Tigers for 1954. “Key to our rise,” said Hutchin- Hutch, who pulled the Tigers out | 80% “was, the acquisition of Ray of the American League basement, | Boone. agreed to a one- é > year contract yes- 4 | Troy and Sala Tangle pie 5 |on Video Bout Tonight FREE INSTRUCTION 3 P.M. te 5 P.M. 30 BE. Montcalm. FE 5-2221 Allstate's low rates are th expect from the company your Allstate Agent today Russell J. Boushell ts. A wholly-owned 102 S$. Seginew You can’t buy better auto insurance more> e better value you'd founded by Sears. See how much you save. Phone or visit ; eee) enh Ress Lechy 150 N. Saginew St. — Phone: FE deral 5-417! URANCE COMPANY subsidiary of Sears, Roebuct and Co., with assets ond lhabilisies diatinct ond seperate trom the parent company. Home office: Shotie, lifinols: } | _ ~ FF o auier __ _ ~_- Fr —_ a THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 19538 __THIRTY-NINE _ We Need the Room! Yes, sir! We need the room. New TRADE. INS are coming in faster than we can move ‘em! So we have cut prices to the bone! Don’t miss this opportunity! ACTUAL PHOTO + 4951 STUDEBAKER COMMANDER ‘895 4-Door Sedan with Hydramatic Trans- mission, seat covers, a good one owner, low mileage car eeeieei|eg eo ofeeisceoweeee ACTUAL PHOTO +1951 NASH. STATESMAN Custom 4-Door with radio and heater, “7 overdrive. One of the best of our used oa 5 cars es@e@eetPeoevereee* eevee eivnveeeet eee e “ ACTUAL PHOTO 1951 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE (Hardtop) ~ 1095 Beautiful two tone green with radio and heater eevee ewererrereeeeree ee ACTUAL PHOTO 1949 FORD CUSTOM SEDAN 8 cylinder 4-Door Sedan. Not the best § but worth every dollar ...........5. 5 5 pet bo OM. bls a Ge a“ Re Ss ee eee Here Is a Partial List of _ the Many Red-Hot Buys in Used CARS and TRUCKS! @ MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM @ Each of | Each of These (NIMS cere "sn the MONO 0m ‘athe vied 0% Viola Showing Showing the Same the Same netee MAY BE REPAIRED BY ANY AUTHORIZED NATIONAL acon Listed S.E.. WARRANTY DEALER IN THE UNITED STATES Listed eae Below! elow! 1951 PLYMOUTH SUBURBAN .............. $ 995 1951 FORDCLUBCOUPE................5.. 895 1951 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE .............. 1095 1951 FORD TUDOR ............. 0.002 e cues 850 IO5SZFORD .1 ow. ccc cc eee cee le ta fes 1295 1946 PLYMOUTH ...............000 ees enue 295 4 IDSOPONTIAC ..... 0... 2. cece eee tees 795 (. 1950 PONTIAC COUPE ...............,.5-- 725 Bs; IS49 FORD . 2.1... . cee eee eee eee pele panes 550 © 1949 PLYMOUTH .............00e seep ene 495 By VDSOFORD ........ cc cece cee eee ee eee 895 ss 1950 FORDCOUPE................. cee eee 695 Ba 1951 STUDEBAKER ...,..........cuepevee 895 - 1948 CHEVROLET .................0 neues 350 ©) DSI NASH .... cee cence 795 © WD49 AUSTIN 1.0... cece eee 350 & VOSOFORD .|......,.. ccc ccc eee cee be eee 550 (. 1946 PONTIAC ...... 0... eee eee 295 ¥ 1949FORDCOUPE............5.......005. 495 “< 1949 FORDCOUPE..................00005. 495 “© 1949PLYMOUTH ................. 00 eee ee 495 ( WQ49 FORD ... 0... cece eee ees 500 H@ VDSOFORD ......... ee cc eee e ele e eee 695 "* 1948 OLDSMOBILE ....................05. 550 | 1949 DODGE ....... 0. cece eee 600 1946 HUDSON .............. 0.0... 00 eee. 295 1950 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE ........... 995 1949 FORD 4-DOOR ...........5....00.000. 695 . 1950 STUDEBAKER 1946 FORD USED TRUCKS 1951 Chevrolet Tractor 1952 Chevrolet Panel 1950 Chevrolet Sedan Delivery 1948 Ford 12 Ton Pickup 1946 Ford 12 Ton Pickup 1948 Ford 12 Ton Panel 1950 Ford 34 Ton tal as nga: We: ages ee EARL R. MII es hoe, sak ag 2 Oe ce eke ROM PB Over 30 Years Your Ford Dealer TI WAY THEY G The Boss Sez: “Reduce Our Stock by October 1st!...Sell ’em at peajors and hearse Prices for 7 Days Only! We rip Room! a 4% , 2 es, See $4 Bottom from thru These Rock- PRICES GOOD Wednesday, Sept. 23rd Wednesday, Sept. 30th BUT BUY NOW— They Won‘t Last! ~ a Se, We're OPEN from 8 A.M. to 9 P.M. for your convenience 1950 at only ACTUAL PHOTO PONTIAC COUPE Very clean. Aone owner. A real special ‘79 5 Don’t miss this at ACTUAL PHOTO 4-Door Sedan. Has radio and heater. $ 5 50 LIMAN 147 S. SAGINA / ST. FE5-3588 (used car lot) - FE5-2246 (truck lot) Ate, ted, time in: sts dine lee ee fe ae SD ie — Be) a i alta ei oe, es ce eae Cc {a FORTY Se ee ess eS ae at Spans ie os poe Raed. fei bee Be ae ire, ne tier oy | ) sas 7 THE PONTIAC PRE SS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 Commission Studies Request for More State Land -. || SE Ken Schluchter abd Jack | Weaver, will oppose 2nd-half win- }ners Walt Stolt and Bob Trout in a playoff for the new Nicholas | trophy. Dinner Ends Season for Fisher League |: Various event winners: Jim Chip- Fisher Body Golf League con-’ an pitching contest; George cluded its 2ist season last week- | Chakroff, putting; Jim McPleely, end, with a banquet at they Bald | driving; W. Thomas and K, Kempf, Mountain Golf Club kickers handicap; H. Coin and Winners of the 1st half of the | Babe O'Connell, low gross; Bob Trout and R. Burns, low met: G. A Good Used Gar? | Wright, Jack Ross, B. Freeland | and H. Lawler, blind holes. Try COMMUNITY MOTORS Rochester and SAVE! | Bob Waljorf, who coaches Wash- |ington-Lee| High's football team at. | Washington, D. C., is a brother of | Lynn Waldorf, California grid | coach. aul of Nationally Known Sports Equipment Wool Shirts One Lot $ 85 Many Sizes Corduroy Shirts rat SALE GYM PANTS All School Colors Were $2.65. Now $199 SWEAT SOCKS 100% Wool. Were $1.25. Now 95¢ an BASKETBALL SHOES Value $ 85 New lees. $695 ¢ Packed 5 ‘wwvwvwvwwwwvwvvvvVVwVYeYVY* PPP PPPPP PPL PAP PPP PPP PPP POP Hunting Socks. 69c up ; Gun Cases . $1.25 up Duck Decoys $2.35 ea. ; PP PP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPPS Hunting Pants $/A65 Up 4 NAAARAPAAPPPPPAPPPAPPIPA, ee A be be he bp bp bp hn hi he Linh ho hi hi hn hl 3 HUNTING CAPS . . .95c; 3 SHELL VESTS .. $2.45: a - i hh hh hh \rVvuCreeFeft,fe.,trwrwvweevevrvrvrv™ wvvvVyTVvVTVVVVVVVVVVVVVV Record Field | Soper, Bill Bosserman, Ed Nagel, | - ~~ cee | f ie e Scouts Seeking A LIMBERS BOW-ARM—Comparing modern archery | equipment with bows and arrows from many lands, | Yvonne York limbers her bow-arm for the Oct. 1 | opening of the state archery hunting season. Bows |5 p. m. daily. | and arrows from Mongolia, North and South America, | Academy of Art. Africa and the Eskimo lands have:been assembled, along with modern hunting equipment, for a special exhibition at Cranbrook Institute of Science. Ex; hibition, free to the public, is open from 2 p. m. to | Miss York is a student at Cranbrook 4) More Acres in Washtenaw State Body Adds New Recreation Area by Use of Condemnation By JAMES A. 0. CROWE MILFORD # — A request by the Washtenaw - Livingston Boy Scout Council for 42 more acres of state land was under study by the conservation commission today. The council asked for a 50-year lease on the additional land ad- joining 37 acres on Bruin Lake, Washtenaw County, which the com- mission leased two years ago for a Boy Scout camp. Rep. Lewis G. | Christman (R- for the council, said the original | | lease had proved too small for the needs of the 3,000 scouts and 1,- 000 leaders in the council. N from Christman, Rep. Joséph E. \ Warner (R-Ypsilanti) and George | Langford, chairman of a camp | ao. fund raising committee, to ap- prove the lease on the spot. Shirley W. Allen of Ann Arbor said he was ‘‘disturbed at the con- | | stant nibbling away of public rec- reation land for restricted use.”’ The commission, meeting at Ha- Michigan Outdoors Ranges Draw ven Hill Lodge Monday and Tues- day, resorted to condemnation pro- |ceedings for the second time in An all-time record number of laa participated mae week: By MORT NEFF” end's skeet and trap shooting at! One of several complaints against | the. Oakland County Sportsmen’s|the red fox in Michigan — com- Club range. | plaints that hdve helped maintain | Leland Vandewater and Bob | Thiefels posted the day's only per- | fect 25's in skeet shooting. Gene is the charge that pheasants are an important item in Fox Control] Program Doesn't Help Hunters its history to acquire land for a ‘public recreation project. Court action was ordered to force three property owners to sell their land and three to give flowage rights across part of their land Next, all hunters in both areas | were carefully checked in and out, ! | ing project in Mecosta county. sien cen Mists york Staff members reported |that the | ia aa i ince ah six had refused to set ‘'reason- ‘ership for the Martiny Lake flood- | a widely disputed bounty system—|‘There was no noticeable differ- | | able’’ prices on the remaining land | Sl ated S unday ence in hunting success on the area | needed. The commission {has al- | where the foxes were trapped, and ready spent more than: $70,000 |the area where they were left un-; for some 2.100 acres in the area. Newly: appointed commissioner | to complete the needed state own- | ~ Guaranteed Lure Assures Limit Catches for Anglers By JACK PATTERSON Hard as we try to get on to the all-important consideration of the forthcoming Byer burning season, we can’t quite seem to shake loose from fishing—a situation which will probably obtain until somebody clamps down a closed season on fishermen.) We've/all run into “‘irresistable’’ bass lures at one time or janother, but a new gimmick— to this writer at least—is a fancy priced job which is sold on a money-back guarantee. No fishee, no payee, like the Chinaman said. Frank Green has such a device, said to) assure a limit catch in half an hour or so unde. any normal fishing circumstances, if properly used. Those last three words speak volumes, because a 28 page in- struction book comes along with the lure. PATTERSON ° ° : Architect Bob Swanson was relating the other night that afl is not beer and skittles in Alaska, the fisherman's paradise. Bob was in the territory during the summer just past for purposes other than fishing, but had a few days to kill so decided to wet a line. Couldn’t find any fishable water in his area and couldn’t find anyone interested enough in the problem to offer useful advice, found it all but impossible to get a plane to aid in the search for greener pastures. e * ‘se Perseverance paid off, though, and Bob finally coopered' onto a Widgeon, flew down to the Kenai Peninsula, and after much experimen- tation arrived at a Colorado spinner-salmon egg |combination that filled Ann Arbor), principal spokesman | , boat with husky rainbows and Dolly Vardens in jig time. Now then, about this hunting business. Prospects look good in every department. Partridge. seem to be holding their own at the rather ‘unnaturally high level of abundance that has made shooting good for the last few seasons. There is evidence of a cyclical decline in some Commission resisted pressure | areas, but widespread reports of doubje nestings this year would tend to make the outlook bullish. One word of caution: in years of a major | cyclical decline the birds can be very plentiful during the summer, then virtually disappear overnight by opening time. But the abundance | of birds in check areas at the time of writing makes this possibility ‘unlikely. P . s s Pheasants are definitely up in nearby counties. So many imma- ture cocks are in evidence it raises the suspicion that maybe there has been some double brooding among the pheasant clan, too. predicting pheasant increases in the thumb area, there are indica- tions that the '53 season will be the best in several years. | Although the conservation department is rather cautious about | The continent-wide duck picture shows a little slippage from last year, but in our own fly-way there shouldn't be much change. Redheads \are already showing up in numbers at Wildfowl bay. There is some difference of opinion as to abundance pf local ducks in the large marsh areas, but !n the writer's opinion, the local hatch will prove to have beat last year's all hollow. - | kind of farm estate financed by local businessmen for .Oakland \County underprivileged young- | \sters. | An action-packed program _ is | Fifth annual Royal Oak Kiwa- | planned far the show, complete ‘RO Kiwanis Horse Show Lice | 6, | Doug Brokaw and Fred Hancock | had 24's, while 23's were posted |by John Smith, Keith Van Kirk ee som el molested.” It was obvious that fac-| Approved was renewal of a re-| nis Horse Show will be held Sun-| with judging entries, riding ex- or aN- tors other than the fox were re- ciprocal agreement with Wiscon-! gay at 1 p. m., at Ivory Field, & | hibitions, trick acts, and hig league alysis of the stom- sponsible for variations in the sin on uniform fishing regulations ' pole game. Oakland County Sher- ach contents of) pheasant population. to govern waters lying on eS SSS with the | and Mrs. HUNTING LICENSES and REVERSIBLE PARKA | | | | Was $8.95, Now 6” | Ideal for the Duck Hunter SPORTING GOODS AnD HARDWARE 6-18 S, Cass FE 2-762! DUCK. STAMPS Mac ROGER | | are open for shooting every Sun- | Vi Vandewater. | Lloyd Sibley, Jack Hyder, Jerry | Wooliever and Mike Kenjola had | 22's. | Skeet and trap fields at the club | foxes taken in for bounty has failed to prove this charge — and Michigan b i olog- ists have published reports along this line from time to time. It remained for the State of New York ta set up a conclusive experi- |ment on this problem. They chose day. NEFF Bowling Results — _ SQUAWS decided Michigan-Wisconsin boundary. Changes in the new uniform reg- ulations, effective Jan. 1, provide for opening the black bass sea- son on the affected waters on the last Saturday in June, removing New York thereupon that a fox control program to im-| prove pheasant hunting would not be wise even if the cost were low, | ‘Dog Points Snake, Saves Its Master pert ee approved pur- opening the pike, walleye and mus- | kellunge season on the Saturday |. the size limit on black bass and | ed to be the club's biggest and | best show in its history. Net proceeds of the Show will ; go to Camp Oakland — a new iff's Posse is working | club on this event. | Tickets can be obtained at Ro- meyn Drugs in Royal Oak or at the Ivory |Field gate. | HARD TO BELIEVE BUT ALL OUR USED CARS WARRANTEED S| WL Shell 30 Team | 26'a 74,000 acre tract mostly sur-; A 15year-old English setter, | ;chase of new public fishing sites |More 4 Seam 4 }$ rounded by water, and with land which held its point on a rattle- ;0 Dodge Lake, Schoolcraft Coun- Team 6 44 Team 5 1 7) connections Closely guarded by snake, was credited last week with ty, and Bass Lake, Grand Traverse Indiv. game—R. Thomas 179; serles— | R. Spuk 434; team game, series—Eastern | trappers. — a | Most important is this fact: An | County, and the lease of a site, ‘on Big Star lake, Lake County. Purchase of three platted lots | | possibly saving from injury a Twin | Beach sportsman. Art Lane, of 6525 Dandison Blvd., GM e000. Onsite aes SENIOR adjoining area of 71,000 acres of wt till t hip, alth os ‘ ° Post's : : similar type|land was set up for | was running his black-and-white | |eceeounten by the Higgins pul aa ee AR RANTS an. Sethe 3 t Tarpin-uay 3 checking, and here no fox trap- | setter, Lady, at the Proud Late state Park, was also approved. MAY BE REPAIRED BY ANY AUTHORIZED NATIONAL Tiaie. % ; spat | ping was done at all. areas Recreation Area when the dog en- | : Indiv. series, game—W. Toph O08: J.) cre in the best pheasant range | countered the rattler. pee eet was sues Pe S.E.1. WARRANTY DEALER IN THE UNITED STATES Gaines 7224. | chase 50 acres of new land for, Lady pointed the snake, which $22,953 to add to existing state | measured two feet in length, and | game areas. Lane killed it with a club. Snake! had eight rattles, Lane said. | Angler Reports Biggest ‘Catch Late in Season in the state. | In both areas, according to an accurate count, there were four or five foxes per square mile. Trap- pers went to work in the larger area — almost completely a Outstanding 1950 Pontiac Streamliner Deluxe 8 Sedan, loaded with extras. Super value.... *1095 *875 Beautiful Black 1950 Ford Deluxe 2-Door Sedan. Equipped with Overdrive. Compare, then drive W. HURON HOUSE we rounded by water so that the ani- Poole a. Becte bent rire and buy this one for mals could not shift from one sec-/CV¥ «2 Miller's 44) Clayton May waited until late 1950 Chevrolet Styleline Deluxe Sedan, an ex- $ : tion to the next, and in one season | serv. Wing. (83 tancltonse 35|in the season to land his biggest | ceptionally clean car in original{green. Equipped 5 they succeeded in trapping out 75/ Qi" ‘Rec. 5 3 Drewry's 3.5 | fish for the year. with radio and heater this is a/great buy for.. t W.S. Ree. 44 Trombly 22-6 | | |per cent of the entire fox popula- | Weldon's 44 Frenchy's rz | May, who lives at! 8588 Cooley | | tion. ee) ene. Shane ee Beach oe Pontiac, tool a ave) SPECIALS | pound, unce rainbow trout ’ ’ | Union Lake early Sunday morning | 46 FORD .....$375 ‘47 BUICK ....§595 | with a flat fish lure, on a spinning | 47 FORD ..... 475 (‘47 PONTIAC .. 575 feel. '48 HUDSON ... 475 ‘48 PLYMOUTH. 550 puck AND | May, who was alone, had no} | landing net and battled the trout | for 20 minutes before making the | catch secure. | DAVE DAWSON - FORD DEALER 51 N. Broadway MY 2-2641 Lake Orion Our Reputation Rides With Every Used Car and Truck We Sell ARCHERY SEASON OPEN OCTOBER Ist! @ WINCHESTER @ REMINGTON @ SAVAGE @ ITHACA @ FOX @ MOSSBERG @ STEVENS SHOTGUNS AND RIFLES “~ PHILIP'S | = “LZ Perfect Circle's 2inl Chrome Piston Ring Set Hore’s the way to got About 2,250 persons in the U. S. | die each year of accidental gun- | , Shot wounds, | Extra Traction for Winter Driving With Our “9 in-1” WINTER TREAD Why don t you CHECK overhaul! With Perfect Cirdle’s 2-in-1 Chrome piston ring set, you'll enjoy sus wer, with new oil aay, ie than twiee the life of ordi ” OPENING If you are not yet a member of the AAA, the ' ring uote! ’ Automobile Club of Michigan and inéured with 2-in! Treads give you double service: SPECIALS Single barrel First as a snow tire, then as regular treads! No Slipping! No Spinning! Why worry about winter driving? There's no slipping and spinning in mud and snow when you use our 2-in-1 treads! The deep, tough tread gives you that extra bit ie tractiom you need! for winter driving . . . smooth riding . . . long And only 2-in-1 furnishes an alternate HiPressure this Exchange at the Club, why don’t you check? spring with each oil ring to assure positive oil con- trol even in badly worn cylinders. Ask your Doctor of Motors to install a Perfect Circle 2-in-| ring set im your engine. Learn directly yourself of| the advantages, privi- leges and protection available to qualified motor car owners. Check it yourself. Ask an AAA member or phone the Club office for a representative to Dictrit Lis eetenally edwattiond 'subtmebiie peste. call on you, and you will have done youreelf Plomb Tools aaa Welding a good turn. mileage, plus non-skid protection on wet or icy pavements. Delux Filte oe e Ol rs Perfect Circle Piston $3 | $10 5 sa a aa Rings . Detroit Autemobile 600x116 ..... e 650x16..... e 670x15 ..... $10.60 710x15 .....$11.65 Atlas Lathes and Accessories Federal Mogul Motor Attorneys-in-fact: Ralph Thomas Autolite. Charles B. Van Dusen Roy M. Hood rec rae | i RebrtC. Jamioom, General Menage 760x15 ..... 912.40 Automotive Machine Shop Service and Rebabbit me er ae er ee 6 at Automobile Club of Michi PRICES ARE FOR “2-IN-1” TREAD ON YOUR PRESENT TIRES “Parts Headquarters for the Doctor~ of Motors” aren OR YOUR TIRES IN EXCHANGE FOR ONES ALREADY TREADED PONTIAC MOTOR PARTS 84 South Perry St. Phone FE 2-0106 Don R. MacDonald, fae 370 South Saginaw re 5-613¢ OLBES Economy F aa? fanliate | ee _ oon: | in Local Markets eh | rt Fj hti Says Salesmen Are Key Grains Bounce q 2 Im § Md Id Ing to Expanding Economy ! . Produce : MILWAUKEE (UP)—Walker A. ‘ Williams, Ford Motor Co, vice- er Retreat Farmer to Consumer aT OO" Face uspension fresher it Charge ef selos and | Beets, buncD ..j...s.eceeee 10 advertising, said today American ' Di fers. ss heeedeseeses 25 ; P; 1 . | industry will continue to produce CHICAGO —Grains retreated | Green peppers} for’ seve 38 || NEW YORK The Stock Mar- Curly’ Won't Drive for | at a high rate if its salesmen at the start and then bounced Cucumbers. ¢ 108 Sl ecscsee 3 tT" continued cinta today on Jug Despite Court | “sell hard and well.” back on the Board of Trade to- — qeart ==} 3 | fhe heels of yesterday’s sharp Restraining Grader Williams told a meeting of the day. a 1 omy Wisconsin Automotive Trades As- ee 4 . : soos . : : e In neither the initial slump nor Radishes, bunch 10 | There were few large individual COLUMBUS, O, w» — Wayne | sociation bse ag Bik ye Rae | the recovery was there much of | Carrots, bunch 22.20000): 10 | gainers, but almost all key stocks (Curly) Smart; veteran harness | ™en gi = mah mai ; : for ens ree Pa 3) Were higher b much as : . . os so that m us productive a change from previous closing} onions, bunch’. 19) 8 7 as _ horse trainer and driver, is fight-| ,ower of our economy can be prices. And it was all accom-| potatoes,” bushel AS HT ee la Losses were infrequent. ing his battle against suspension | maintained and expanded.” plished ‘on a very: light volume of | SS>paS*, Dead -----***""" 1 a5 49 a'sq| The volume of business was good in the courts of both Ohio and Aree Celery, bunch “...... weet ag spats | and maintained a pace right Michigan . nny i gs “om ae ‘oo around’ yesterday's 1,300,000 . Wheat near the end of the first | Peppers, bushel oe one cad shares! y Because of temporary court or- TV REPAIRS hour was. % to 14 higher, Decem- Carnations, dozen Among the better acting major ders in both states, Smart is free Work Gucranteed! ; s eraniums, ozen » p ° ver $1.905s8, corn was unchanged | Giadiolis, bunch ... groups were railroads, steels, mo- to drive for the time being. How- ia A MPTON TV : to #3 higher, December $1.4712, tars, oils, coppers, radio-televisions ever, he withdrew last night from 4 | 286 State St , oats were %s Jower to 4 higher, | Wholesale and chemicals. the $63,000 Little Brown Jug at FE 4-2525 December 74'4/ soybeans were 1, DETROIT PRODUCE | Studebaker, yesterday's oom ace | the Delaware County Fair Grand to 1% higher, ‘November $2.59%, sik Pann Caceekl Iearaats prices on | th nearly aon hodey. Se Circuit meeting tomorrow “because | ; 5 5 : P Apples, Crab, No 1, 2.50-3 bu; 7 - ‘ . ! : and lard was 5 to 35 cents a apples Dalticad No 1, €25-4.75 bu: | erate activity. of the confusion surrounding my S hundred pounds lower: October eee Cae Eng ge A dar ic z Higher stocks included Pennsyl- status.” i - u; 5 , . oe. : : - $13.97. bu; apples, Mcintosh. fancy, Pads hy vania Railroad, American Tele- In both states, the Delaware, 1, 3-3.50 bu; , Wealthy, 2 . d bu: No 1, 350-3 bu; apples. Wolf River, | Phone, U. S. Steel, Chrysler, Stan- Ohio, driver still has a legal Grain Prices Du: fOr a ones ae © dard Oil (NJ), Kennecott Copper, fight on his hands to be en- CHICAGO GRAIN 1-125 pk ‘bskt. Peaches, Elberta, fancy, Union Carbide, Douglas Aircraft, tirely out from under the suspen- aa ‘AP)—Opening grain Hale.| fancy 150 bu; Nol, 350-4 bu; and Radio Corp. SF gu ag spe 4. sions, based on charges that he Theat PC 110's | peaches, Fertile Hale, No 1, 3.50-4 bu. WT ak administered a mericant to the FICC Velseae 190%, Soybeans | . : N i wt ates , ' | Mar eces "392% Nov... 2 58h 4 | 3350 bul pears. ‘Bose Not, 3 50° bu New York Stocks Pe Patan a . - Casteleton farms horse Abbasong , v 91% 2 . J 50- . } | - “ : 7 - roe | july se eeees 1 a5, Mar Wereees 2 $0 ‘ ra het Py $0 ‘bu slums rane | Figures after decimal points are eighths | THINGS A’POPPIN’ — When W. L. Niederhise | engine operates the corn popper and a little clown | at the Wolverine Raceway at De- | pe n ie . Ma ped No 1 2-250 ‘ia-bu Watermelons. No 1 an oe ee ed Le at ial = _s rolls out his ancient steam powered popcorn whirls a peanut display on top of the roaster. | troit last month. | 5 M: Meee, 9 >! ard aaa aN ceei ables misc Beets. No 1, 80-1.00| Air Reduc .. 22.6 oe $0.7 | popper in Kalamazoo, business pops all over the|There’s a shrill steam whistle, {oo. Niederhiser | Smart first was supspended by “dinner of the 1983 Audic "Oa 1 Nov 12.70 A ad eet ae HOT, 350-4 or chant | sive. cc - 353 Rannecelt’ 43.1| place. Built in 1912, his popper is mounted on four | found the popper a few years ago and has restored ‘the Michigan Racing commissiion, | Faci . Aqacd baile Mat veeetien le Gaydean Ou | SEED Fool, 474.80 bu; beans. War, | Allls Chal |. 436 Kresge 68 $2‘| buggy wheels and has a handle at the front so it| it completely. | and last week obtained a tempor- | patocering Me. ; 1216 Dee 10 v6 | eet 450-5 hu: beans, Kentucky Wonder, Alum Lid — “8 arate . 41.6) can be hauled through the streets. A small steam fe sandeep in a aa haar | WORLD'S FINEST [NO 2, 2004 eu: Deane en fanes| 306 lame Ai! 7 eeping the suspension from ng —--—- — io 1, 3-3. , fancy, m Airlin .. 116 LOF Glass ... 35.1 : 5 tabu. 1 oa ee oe ate Mba, Cabbage, || aml Can |.... 343 Ligg & Mey... 77.1 . ~ — effect until a hearing Oct. 2. TRANSISTOR AID Poultry anes vacate Meh itatatalne [a Guar’? ad ieee os B Lodge Calendar Health Policies |.2c sr.t cree DETROIT POULTRY et 1-160, De: eanett, Pee ace beDe; | Abd Loco, .->. 13:1 Mack Trucks .. 113 n rim | handed down by U. S. Trotting ; DETROIT (AP) — Live poultry’ prices | Carrots, topped, No 1, 1.78-2.25 bu. Caull- | Am Ma&Pdy ., 19.7 Marsh Pield .. 26.7 Special communication Cedar Association president Lawrence B. Call or Write for paid per pound fob, Detroit for No. 3 | ower, 'No 1, 2.25-2.7 dos. Celery, Mo 1. | Am N Gés .. 34.2 ocig ey . Lodge No. 60, F. & A. M., Clarks- ® ® Sheppard, barring Smart from Heavy Bens 34-28: light type 20-21: | Re Si gg! as dee he Ad Sealing 2. 195 Monsen Ch ... 903 ton, Thurs., Sept, 24, 7 p. m. Work further harness activity until Sept. FREE heavy roasters over 4 Ibs, 32-33: heavy | corn. sweet, No 1, 1.50-2. 5-doz bag. | Am Smelt ..., 27.2 Mont Ward ... 56.4 ame in 0 : In FC degree. Edmund H. Bunyan, | bro:lers or fryers under 4 Ibs, reds 30, | Gucumbers, slicers, fancy, §.00 bu; No 1.| Am Stl Fd .. 26.7 Motorola @ ... 35.1 WM Adv 7, 1954, white rocks 30-32, say crosses 34%, and | 3.3.50 bu; cucumbers, No 1, 3-350 bu; | Am Tearel 183.3 Merray Cp 506 133 — : Yesterday he carried his case BOOKLET! wales ight type broilers OF | cucumbers, dill size, No 1. 3.50-4 by. | Am To . aie inati = . : fryers 22-24; heavy ducks 22-25; h cumbers. : Dill c .31 Nat Bisc . 44 Special communication of tothe Franklin County common young hen iurkeye 37-38. heavy youne [ cocoate o8\ den bebe,” serpin, No 1: dias Wc ; ATA Nat Dairy . 57 Former Welfare Head Roosevelt Lodge No. 510, F. & A. Cash Benefits Totaled | pleas court and the ban was lifted | dso 1 50-2 bu; eggplant, long type No 1, 25> | Aimuwon apa Nat sn... 2! to Answer Charge of M. Thursday, September 24th at/ More Than $2 Billion) with a temporary restrainer by | ecalcnaa polar bait, oninabr Nond, 1180 dos bens |All Cst'Line ga? Nat Thea | €2 ; : | 7 p. m. Work in MM degree. Louis | . Judge William C. Bryant. NOTONE CHICAGO ‘AP)—Live poultry: barely | Leeks. No 1. 1.25-1 . Aig ae — ply . -; NY Gens 20:2 | Mishandling $83 lB. Livingston, W.M. —Advy, During Year “ The USTA said it would request | steady. Recetbts 1.073 coops: fob, pay-| 0 j* i125 g0-lbv bag. onions, gteen. | Bald Lima .. 82 Nia M Pw .. 25.4| | j that the temporary restrainer be | Be ee eee ae uy ceae m Peed | taney, 1.66 [Hos beba; No 1, 18-90] des | BElt & Ohio 213 No Am Av. 187; BELLAIRE — Robert J.' N in Brief | More Americans were covered by | dicectvad and would ask an ion | i . 195-21; fryers or broilers 30-33.5; old saga lig gr ee. parsley, | Meseeat "ya Nor Pac . 564 | Helms, 58, former Antrim County | ews | | voluntary health insurance last | diate heari Hearing Service | roosters 18-20 ducklings 27 leurly, No 1, 80-75 doz behs. Patsley | Beth Stl... 46.4 Nor Sta Pw 126/000 Giroctor, will answer in| year than ever before, according Mediate hearing, ; : | | Fopt. No} €0:1.00 doz beepers cayenne | Bohn Alum ..1t4 Ohio Ou ..... 53 | Circuit Court Oct. 5 charges that| Pontiac Police report the follow | to a report released today by the | beaded tend At if : 2 : : ; : : 7 A ’ ° Price Index to Boost Ne ee ee Peete ND, sei ‘tee 7 Panam W Air. 86|he mishandled funds of his office. | "8 street locations closed to traf-| Health Insurance Council. D 5 ' ‘ 357 N. Saginaw St. ae race . aa erean’ Sweet, | Borg Wain ., 66.7 Param Pict ....25 Helms, a Bellaire grocer, was | fic: N. Marshall street, from AU-| Cash benefits to subscribers were [ iver | : No 1 1.50-2 gu: peppers red. sweet, No 1. | Briggs Mf .... 297 Penney JC) 108| arraigned before Justice Ray-|burn avenue to Michigan avenue; | more than $2 billion during the|,), dig : FE 2-1225 Pay of Rail Workers bag: potatos, No, 230-3 100-1b bag. | Brun Balke .. 16 : af tele’ 4 | mond W. Sexton Tuesday and /N. Francis street, from Pike street | year, the council estimated in its Hike Effective Friday | Pumpkins, No 1. ote ee ee eira a wo a Phelps D.... 30.6| waived preliminary examination. | to Michigan avenue, and N. San- | first public disclosure of insurance chi - chs: r - . . . WASHINGTON ip — Higher food | fancy) 1100 doz behs: No 1, 10-90 doz hens, | Campb Wy .. 208 are bes 302 He is accused of converting to the | ford street, from Pike street to | payment figures. LANSING #—The first time you prices and rents pushed the gov-|Rutabagas. No 1. 2-250 bu. Squash, | Can Dey ..-. O01 pit Plate Gi. 46.3/use of another, funds turned over | Michigan avenue. The streets are| In the nation as a whole, medical ar , we ; ho | Acorn, No 1, 1-1.50 '2-bu; squash, Butter- i Late pence sl occct Gamer ele| BS LE _ lici howed the great-| 8¢t a driver's license in Michigan ernment’s cost of living index up| nut, No 1, 1-150 bu: squash, Delicious, Capital Air! . 2s Pullman 26 | to him in his official capacity as | scheduled to be reopened Friday. | expense policies show eg after Oct. 2 you must pay a $3 three-tenths ‘of, one’ per cent be- | No 1, (1.25-1,75 bu: squash. Hubbard) No | (aot lo ic ti 466 Pure Oil ..... 465/wel are director. The specific | | est gain in subscriptions — 29 per . Cs RI E Pa _ 1.25-1.78 bu: squash, Summer, No 1 Radio C 233 ‘ ; | : ‘ell 36 Fildew Ave. | ' fee. tween July 15 and Aug. 15. The/1.150 ‘2-bu; squash, Italian, fancy, 2.00 | Celanese .... 221 D&CIO, ER +. tt) arnount involved is $83. David Powell of 476 ew Ave. ! cent — over all other health insur Th as the rui tod f index figure announced today re- | 32->u; No 1. 2-150 bu. apmaioes, tee oe oO) is Reo Motors ... 20.2| reported to Pontiac Police that| ance categories. Att . ~ F *k G wall ad o M O RE ceded liv oat A 5 | 2.00 pk bskt: No 1 Seis it | Chrystie... 66 Repub Stl 43.4) Helms resigned his post earlier thieves stole an estimated $20 ha-chiaties Rideican, the rev | y. Gen, Fran . Millard. ; iving:costs as of Aug. 15. —_{ tomatoes. outdoor. fancy, Reyn Met ... 444 ted in- ; ape ‘a 4 Millard ruled on conflict in The rise to.115 per cent of the | No, 1 225:275 'a-bu: tomatoes, No. I Cittes We ---: SOS Ney Tob B ... 46.4 vnc Merl and are ee = worth of articles from his auto! port said that over 5 million | 40 new driver License law which | THAN ANY | - u urnip, ney, 1! ns : r - 5 | ; . : Ss 1947-1949" average means a three- | No 1, 90-1 2 de behs, ‘turnip, topped. Sole sited eet mali ie 7 vee ering Pony ine: fon. while parked in a factory parking | persons in the state carried hos- the Legislature passed last spring OTHER BILLFOLD cent ine Pade nae erective Greens! ‘Cabbage, No 1, 1251.78 bu. Se eee 3 Sears Rocb.... $6.5| iams ordered the probe a month |/0t last night. pra ir wa ote At . the ~ and made effective Oct. 2. nex ,300, -| Collard, No 1, 1.25-1.75 bu. Kale, No 1, oeen 2: 4,773, urgic | ns ries baal ra WORK T4530 bu. Mustard. No I, 1.25-1.75 bu. peed lg oH Sinclair Oli... 32.4 | £0. Admiral TV service. Picture v i nd. i — The new law calls for a $3 lal Spinach, No 1. 2-2.50 bu. Sorrel, Np 1, | COnURL TW ++ 34 Socony Vac... 31.7 : ne ] tubes on terms. FE 2-5197. —Ady.| Policies and more than 2,000, fee for an “original” license This will boost annual pay roll }1-1.25 bu. Swiss Chard. No 1, 1-1.50 bu. | (one vie 7g Sou Pac....., 38.7| The warrant under which Helms | had insurance covering medical re ’ sts of ‘the railroads by 100 mil-| TUm'p. No 1. 125-176 pu. ap- | Cont O11 504 Sou Ry...... 424] was arrested Tuesday was issued| For quality food at substantial! expenses. $1.5@ for a regular adult license, F Lettuce and salad greens: Celery ¢ Ps Pd 714 Sparks W..... 5.2 Thrif ‘: $2 for a chauffeur license and $1 ‘ on dollars. bage. No 1, 2-250 bu. Endive. No 1. | Com an * 99 «Sperry ...... 39.2/0n request of Prosecutor Harry T.| discount on Food Freezer {t| The year likewise saw increas- S 150-2 bu: endive, bledched, No 1, 250-3 | Cite Sis. “> gtd Brand... 26.2/ Cook | Plan, call FE 4-7919. —Ady. | ; b f for a restricted minor’s license. % | bu. Escarole, No 1, 150-2 bu; escarole, | DUrtin. } 27.1 Std O11 Calf... 50.3 . ; ing pu lic acceptance of major : ; } t . . f bleached. Mi tee Goa we Doug Aire 1. 68 sta ou Ind... one Since Helms’ resignation. peti- Rummage sale, Fri., 9 a. m. to medical _ expense coverage, the But, since the law is Conft ised, usiness Driers 3.25-3.75 3-doz: lettuce, head. No 1, 160-2 | Dow Chem ... 381 sq on onio.. 31.3| tions signed by more than 300 9 p.m. 2 8. Saginaw. Opti-Mrs.| newest form of voluntary health} Millard said that a minor's re- : ee a 2-2.75 bu. RO / gagie Pich .. 176 Studebaker... 23 | Antrim County residents were —Adv. | protection designed to help meet} stricted license is an ‘‘original’’ : Ed LX Williams announces | ™2¢ No 1}. 22-50 __ apt —- Bwift & Co... 377\filed with the attorney general Fish fry, public invited. G catastrophic costs of serious ill-| license and will cost $3. that, as of Oct, 1, the Pontiac CHICAGO POTATOES El Auto L 404 Sylv El Pd.... 306) asking investigation of the offices ’ + TAee | nesses. When a holder of a restricted General Tire Co., at Cass and CHICAGO (AP)—Potatogs: Arrivals | Fl & aaee mt Tex G Sut . $33 of Probate Judge William Sever- | bg i a te ge ea Almost 700,000 persons had laid} minar’s license applies for a reg- West Huron Sts., will change | 201; om track 511; total U8. shipments | poy jong 26.5 Thomp Pd.... 43 | ance and Register of Deeds Lau- To. “Te “Ady, | Out money for this type of pro-| ular adult license he pays $1.50, . ] mIpE 703; supplies heavy, demand fair, mar- | 20) DD ig Timk Det Ax 193 eg) —Adv. . : its name to the Ed Williams | ket’ slightly weaker on Russets, slightly pote, Oo $73 Timk R Bear.. 36 | rence O. Isamen. | | tection by last December, accord-| not $3, Millard said. Regular Tire Co. Se aot Si 7d, Washing. |Gen Elec ..... 70.6 Tren W AIF... 238) Both” officials have said they| Shore Mkt. news. Our new) ing to the report. licenses may be renewed for $1.50. : Gen Fds_ ..... 57.8 Fo | butcher is particular and likes; ‘The Insurance Council] is made| Anyone moving to Michigan S16; Wineonsin, Pontiacs $210.2. 35; Red |Gen Mills $8 Underwood... 35.3 | "8d no idea why the probe was particular customers. Try his : as ee ini _Two optometrists from Pon- | Warpas $1.60; round whites $1.70. Gen Mot... $52 Un Carbide... 855| requested, Preliminary hearings | P's oy chops, 69c Ib.: his new | UP of nine leading U.S. health| and obtaining a license for the tiac and another from Drayton ae ee” Unit Air Lin.. 231] in the case have been held by | Steak eto an 4 oven - ready underwriting associations. first time must also pay $3. : Plains were named to offices at DETROIT EGGS Gen T & Rub 255 nite Co.” : | “ie | the 57th annual convention of | DETROIT (AP)—Prices ‘paid per dozen | Gillette 15 Unite Prov... ang| representatives of the attorney | loaves. Our bf. quarter prices are sae : . |f.0.b. Detroit for case lots of federal- | Goebel Br 7.2 Un Gas Im... 33.2| general. oa dropping. Buyers should delay a ' the Michigan Optometric Associ- | state graded eggs: Goodrich 62.7 US Lines...... 18.2 bit. 2425 Voorheis. FE 4-2233. Adv. | 3 Al | | ! ation Sunday, through Tuesday | ‘white corede 4 ume 0. weed |oreeritige UE OR BE ; oi : : average : rge -15, 13; me 4) in Detroit. diam 56-60, “wtd avg 58%2; small 41; |Gt No Ry Pf 48.6 ug gmeit Pf 55.4 ‘S t t G { Rummage sale Friday afternoon, | Dr. James St. Louis of Dray- grade B large 65; peewees 33 |Gt West § 17.6 Us Stecl...... 35.1 | ana oriums 0 e 3:30 to 7:30 p. m., sponsored by ith 1 Pepin ; . . : Browns—Grade A jumbo 79-80, wt avg | Greyhound 12.7| UB Tobd...... 18.3 PTA. Crofoot School. Huron St. wi ag cy. ton Plains: was appointed chair- 79%; large 4: (medium 56-59, wid avg Gut Ol 43.3 Van Raal. a 28.3 . fi p b ; - Ady be certain that, if ~~ ssoci j : 58%; 5s -41, av a; + arn Guns mat . ; = “| Seman ot epee. weep B large #4: grade c large 40: peewees 33 ear ack . or ba bg tg 5 : ie egrega ion ce) e Public H Din held at Oak eniy te dg your BUXTON SUPERFOLD Checks—39. ‘ ey nae est Un Tel.. ublic Ham ner held a - ml ¢c So OAT : |, bureau, Dr. F, Milton Hathaway —-~ Inland St! 5,386 Wene “eek: 423| LANSING Ww —~ Gov. Williams] land Park Methodist Church, Fri- |} loss.-|- - and help you |Especially made for ' of Pontiac was named liaison ele ee ae _ baat - ol Cop ite s Woolworth a has handed the state health com-/ day, Sept. 25. Served from 5 to 7 ly os possible wu carrying large number of pare A ( —Butter steady; receipts 4 ale w : . | } officer between the association | 59 943: wholesale Maying prices un- |Int Harv 35.6 Yngst sh & T 383| Missioner a touchy problem — the | P- M. $1.50 adults, 75c seinen, Bet remember. thé time to F a ap hee ) and the Women’s Auxiliary, and | changed: 93 score AA, 66.25; 92 A, 66; | Int Nick 38.6 segregation of persons by race in —Ady. he incured edcauciels is Folds easily fully loaded, Dr. Lynn D.. Allen Jr. was| re- | $2 2: $5: 9 ©. @.8:: cars: 90° B./ 44; STOCK AVERAGES Michigan tuberculosis hospitals. If your friend’s in jail and needs haters ths Paint y keeps handsome fiat lines. appointed editor’ of the associa- | Eggs firm; reecipts 6,234: wholsale buy- | NEW YORK—Compiled by the Asso-| ny, werncr acied atier the] bail, Pa. OR 3-7110 C. A. Mitchell. | Stitchless ... guaranteed ’ : ing prices unchanged: U.S. large 61-66; | ciated Press. le governo e e : ale to last as long as the leather! tion's magazine. U.S. mediums 54: U.S. standards 48-51; 30 615 = 15 60 ~| civil liberties committee of the | . Members of the Auxiliary | current receipts 45; dirties 42; checks 40. | shale indisst. Rails Util Stocks state bar charged that certain san-' Greek Premier Pays ;' " Austin Norvell Come in today. 4 0 « + + P | & , e } elected Mrs. F, Milton Hatha- ; Noon Wed | ..--1339 777 $24 1026 | atoria, mainly county institutions | dwill Visi ital & $500 up way secretary + treasurer and Livestock Week ago 7: -1322 62 S22. 19e3| segregate their patients in wards Goodwill Visit to Italy i Mrs. Allen press chairman dur- Month, ago...... 136.5 81.3 53.6 105.3| on the basis of color : surance ing the convention DETROIT LIVESTOCK Year nhEO- +00. 140.6 83.9 52.5 107.3 . . ROME (® — Premier Alexander £3 OTHER BURTON $740 oe a ; PaneGacol | 5 116.3 : : - Others attending from Pore | Qe ee erie ae cents higher, | 1983 low....s...130.2 73.5 508 99.5| Williams asked Dr. Albert E. | Papagos of Greece arrived today Agency Inc. BILLFOLDS .........0-: l up tiac were Dr, Clarence Phillips, | supplies limited; sows steady; bulk bar-| 1952 high .....,.1509 94.8 54.8 1157| Heustis, state health commission- | at Rome's Ciampino Airport for a ‘ ' Dr. and Mrs. George Haskiees. rows and gilts’ 180-260 Ibs '$24.7-25.25, 1952 low........ 131.2 66.7 90.7 97.0) er and chairman of the state | short goodwill visit in Italy Your Name In Geld Without Charge . . ‘ ’ i an "s aroun i val and Dr. and Mrs, Clyde J. 200-220 ‘Ibs held higher; scattering 160- DETROIT STOCKS tuberculosis sanatorium commis- Top-hatted Italian officials, i- 70 W-: Lawrence St. GENERAL PRINTING | r : 175 lbs $24.00-24.50; most sows undef 400 Hornblower & Weeks sion, to look into the and ‘ p no eal Hathaway. Mrs. St. Louis at- | ins 22.00-23.00: heavier sows ranged visures after decimal points are eighths * charge cluding Premier Guiseppe Pella, Corner Cass tended with her husband. oe slienes lable 375. Fresh receipts | Baldwin Rubber* .....,. - are wa do what he could to stop the met Marshal Papagos. His plane os FE 2-9221 and OFFICE SUPPLY mainly cows; som poe- 1600) cattle | stil Seki Saree esse rH a practice. flew in with an escort of Greek Ralph J. Austin = : Dow Corning Corp. of Midland | 9m Hand tromrlier in the week: no bigh | Kingston Products*....,.. 27 32| The trouble is, said Dr. Heustis, | and Italian fighter planes. | 17 W. Lawrence ‘ announced Tuesday it is forming | good) to prime fed steers or heifers of-| Masco Screw ............, 3.0 30 3.) that at least some state and county | = ~ . ' c di bsidi Dow fered eligible to sell $22.00-27.50; no Midwest Abrasive® iseee 4.6 $4). tutio 7 7 ' Gorsing Siicties Lad, with bee. | SAREE. “Satins” esSine's "etek | Wasee rey ("cad BA 14] Setuer tan weed who ll be coe a if . a? orning Silicones Ltd., with hea @rs, trading strictly .| Wa OW eee ee LA 1M 14] ge in a ward w con- e d k ff . tch-b: ffair, f sales cutter a No sale; bid and asked. ee quarters in Toronto. Vice Presi- cists erase 1200 down | to, ¥6.09: genial and companjonable. That is | Betuer sealing steppe up wor output In our OIrice Olli i s slow at week's mostly $1.00 low : ; : Pa | dent Ww, R. Collings said the new oh ‘outlet narrow; bulls strong to Forei n Exchan e a major item m obtaining the | firm, with authorized capitaliza- | 50 ¢ents higher; shockers | and feeders g g mental relaxation and quiet which . . . T- ' tion of $450,000, would take over | isi" cows $10.00-12.40. few. high com-| , NEW, YORK (AP)—Poreign exchange | 8 Necessary to a cure for. tuber- Dow Corning’s Canadian patents | mercial $13.00: canners and cutters most- ethers ¢ poy in ° - | cular patients. | re. ly $7.50-100.50; bulk utility and ¢om- s in cents 4 4b ‘ oe F } on the uses and compositions of | mer¢ial bulls $14.50-16.75; mostly choice | | b at read eee ie “Thus,” he said, ‘‘these insti-| organo-silicon compounds. | a ee ee Oe Sere aeons | O10. centa git 1-16 of a cent: “" | tutions try to group patients of a | [steady: choice and prime very scarce. | 4 ce ka ~— repeomerg Eine gh A ro similar type, regardless of wheth- Appointment of Fred W. Ad- | few | $27.00-29.00: most como cull and | 30 day futures 2.80 8-16, up 3-16 of «| er the common factor is education | “ams a$ advertising manager of | utility in sizable supply, at $8.00- 44.00 sae be ag ake a apg bora or color or something else.” American Airlines . es Sheep—S. le 550. eceipts ude . = ° r the new Kaiser-Willys sgles divi- teal white faced Montana feeding lcmbs: pedo lg ahd a = A Meret . sion of Willys Motors, Inc., was weet eesivome, a ek ae cent: Prance, (franc) 20% of cant. Gen. Br adley’s Suite announced today by Roy Aber- about, meady: few shod and cholte lowes Oe nel en chee de | Burglarized of $3,200 nethy, vice president and general sales manager. Adams formerly was advertis- - ing manager of the Packard Mo- : : : t Cosco chairs reduce ~tor Car Co. He will be in charge | .44"25-50 higher on sows: most | choice peepee | hg Sicaie 110k aoemesd Verne. | Was burglarized yesterday of workag, errors and too :of advertising for both the Kaiser | t,t sates Biase Cob Tie | "Ptr GT Mins ese baker ila, ua. | Urs and other property valued frequent pavses for rest and diversion. ys lines of passenger | 190 ibs $24.00-25.00; most sows ibs | changed. at more than $3,200. Thus secretaries, typists, clerks, busi- cars and utility vehicles. pope ny rihaner girnod veg dia paallae Paar ’ ey -23.00; g clearance opera- ; : a Salable cattle 12,000; salable jcalves . tore~ondl executi vee—perform better aa DETROIT (UP)—Frank A. as wsanen fiuty” dette coaniy | te FIRE INSURANCE in Cosco chairs. Sturdy, all-steel Rober tson, who has been with pe huakars ealenaes Re wor dcher, =a4 construction. Saddle shaped, foam tthe 8. 8S. Kresge Co. the past] ana grades steady: hetters oe aS PROTECTS YOUR rubber ahloned seats. U ntoured 4 years, has been named | Seovier strong to 00 Me eke te backs have three posture adjustments. assistan veran = han Tuesday:| bulls Poi Sela to HJ Lirerance | ER el See Beatenredfinghpe bu Feat “vice-president in charge of | Sttive. : Seapets te” or merchandising,. it was an- Brine “steers 24 90-287 teferal louds HOME, TOO! upholsteries in choice of ofboe nounced today. Retail deliveries of new Olds- mobiles totaled 243,339 for the first eight months of 1953 and tially exceeded sales $4.00-5.00: small lot good and choice 64 I} native feeder lambs $16.00. |= | €HICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—Salable hogs 7,000; fairly active; 15-25 higher on butchers $24.00 cull and utility $10.00-15.00. Sa’ 2,500; trad ee ee lam active. large y with y:; top 50 lower; sheep about steady; bulk; good spring slaughter lambs $17.00-19.00 $19.50 ly; utility to low bs $14.00-16.00; down to $0.00 land below; “cull choice slaughter ewes $4.00-6.00. . } THE PONTI AC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 cent, unchanged; Portugal (escudo) 3.50. | uachanged; Sweden ‘krona) 19.34, un- changed; Switzerland (franc) (free) | 23.33%, off .01 of a cent; Denmark (krone) 14.52, unchanged; Latin America: Argentina (free) 17.24, FORTY-ONE _ NEW YORK (AP) — The _— Astor suite of Gen. Omar Bradley and his wife Fire insurance for your home is YOUR PROTECTION against financial loss. Call or come in now to... Crawford-Dawe-Grove Insurance of All Kinds 716 Pontiac State Bank Bidg, © Phone FE 2-8357 | 08c0 Contranen Sool $2750 As Advertised in Fortune General Printing & Otfice Supply Co. 17 W. LAWRENCE « i, Ae hh Ge EE i i, Bt Be te et | BETTER SEATING moons BETTER WORK LUSCA NS 4 - 4 | } Sk ee ae ee ee eee Cie ieee tn peti ines BD — : — eee OOOO i, I ga guy tr tt OOO GOLEM OLE ALY * FORTY-TWO ——eoOr ror - THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 U. S.’s Net Debt at $553 Billions Figure for Individual $3,500 at End of 1952; Slowly Growing WASHINGTON (#—The nation’s public and private net debt in- creased 31% billion dollars last year, to a total of 553 billions, the Commerce Department said to- day. . That was a het debt of $3,500 for each American at the end of 1952. Total net private debt, placed -by the department at nearly 303 billion dollars, . overshadowed net public debt (federal, state and lo- cal) of 250 billions, The federal share was $224,169,000,000. All these amounts were net debt, with duplications eliminated. Net private debt of $302,700,000,- 000 was’ made up of, $167,400,000,000 owed by corporations and debts of individuals and new corporate businesSes amounting to $135,300,- The’ increase in debt during 1952, the Commerce Department said, was about the same asin 1951, The department estimated that indebtedness is continuing ta increase at the same, or per- haps a faster, rate in this year. About 75 per cent of the in-| crease of debt in 1952 was private, billion dollars to their net debt last year, while federal, state and local governments increased net public debt by 8 billions, The department arrived at its net debt figures by counting only once the debts that were listed H-bomb destruction and the un- | in more than| one category. folding potential of almost unlim- Total federal debt at the end | ited power for peaceful work. of 1952, for Instance, amounted to $230,715,000,000, including some | field of extra-nuclear physicists funds not subject to -the legal _ scientists who explore outside debt limit. | the hearts of atoms in the mys- But various federal agencies held | terious spaces where electrons | $56,546,000,000' worth of U. S. se- | 200m in crzy patterns at fantas- curities—that amount being listed | tic speeds. |both with the treasury and with| And their research promises to | the agencies in reaching the total | harness the elements even closer debt figure. \to man’s needs in the world of ! By eliminating this duplicated | Morrow. i ‘debt, the Commerce Department | In fact, some of the M4 scientists | calculated the net federal debt at from 14 nations meeting in this $224, 169,000,000. jancient capital of Japan with their Japanese hosts say that in the long run extra-nuclear physics Says Firm No Fire Risk; | may be more valuable to mankind than atomic energy. Not After Big Blaze Ever hear of custom-made chem- | WAYNESBORO, aV. (AP)—A | istry? Non-stop electricity? | day after a fire destroyed four; A group of the scientists inform- buildings and damaged six | ally discussed their specialties out- |others, city, council cited aside the closed meeting. | lumber company building as an| “Looking into the future, we may Extra-Nuclear { Physics Rivals ' Atomic Energy KYOTO, JAPAN @®—Atomic sci- entists are the glamor boys today with their awesome progress on someday be able to put all of chemistry on a prescription basis,"’ said Prof. C. A. Coulson of the Oxford University, England. “We could decide just what we want the chemical to do— “Its effect on industry would be incalculable.”’ made long and complicated chemi- cal calculations predicting the quantities of a half dozen hitherto | unsuspected anesthetics. They But there is glitter too in the: were made and performed exactly as predicted. Prof. John Bardeen of the Uni- versity of Illinois said: “We have now discovered some- thing we call super-conductivity— or ciectricity without friction. “When we get temperatures down as low as we can get them, close to absolute at 273 degrees |below zero centigrade, we can start an electrical current flowing |in a ring of wire, | “Then we take the original elec- | trical impulse away—and the cur- rent keeps going around and “If we could keep our power lines chilled close to absolute zero, what an advantage that would be! It is like starting water flowing with a pump, stopping the pump and having the water keep right on flowing.” J apparen ey dangerous fire SIDE GLANCES by Galbraith The company owner replied in an advertisement in the e_ city’s daily mewspaper. He ‘assured the [public his building | 'wasn’t a (fire hazard. It) wasn’t after that night. It burned down. “GIVING THEM THE AIR Webster-Roth WO a i PL Ne ¥, Sd OEE EET FELLA fy 9 My Yim ME St. “a Thun = Hey, sts!HERES fF re MX’ WLW f ~ N Ke SNA MRARROAAY Sy “I think those new short skirts are positively unflattering!’ As a mathematician, Coulson 7 DIXIE DUGAN Ak SCORCHY SMITH THE ; —LEAVE By McEvov and Striebe' — BESIDES, 11 SOUNDS ‘cal ATER Dns ae AIN'T EVEN FOR ERE P YOUR NEW CAMOUFLAGED 2,| CANTILEVER LANDING AREA 1S A FAILURE! YOU WiLL By Walt Di ccy I'M GOING TO SEND THIS PHOTO TO SPIKE DUFFY | WA = NANCY--- I WAN'T YOU TO SNAP MY = f { cz i ia — ak —_ a {RON [7 PILLS Sa FRAG BUSAAt/LL FO «SEP T.-23—, CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner ID UKE TO RETURN THESE TO HiM.ONE AT ATIME, FROM | ABOUT FIVE PACES! SHE \z wh ic wi pl ra Ma! i I HAD A TALK Tie MORNING ! MISS SPRING— TIME AND HE FEEL THEY’LL BE TOO BUSY TEACHING TO TAKE TIME OUT FOR A BIG WEDDING, THATS WHAT , | THEY THINK. AH, L THOUGHT SO! THE HOUSE DOES 5 AUNTIE, HAVE A TERRACE! AND, BY GEORGE, } LOOK! ‘S ON IT NOW! LET ME THE EASY WAY Buy, aS Rent, Trode, Hire, etc. , | { Face a Quick Action. (DAILY PRESS ANT AD ‘DIAL FE 2-8181 Ask for Want Ad Dept. | SPEARM SHE WIN By 1. V. Hamlin By Cari Grubert , ee BOUTS AND HEK BUDDIES | Fo. ¥. -] YM SORRY | [TYOR BEEN WONTING FOR A LOCKET a J 1 |] OF MAE LIT HAD A PICTURE OF sO SN LENE MRS. BVER *oeee, >» *¢6, (Oreos, « 4466 GRANDM| oe TRE IDEA “KEEPING US FOR OUR BSREAKT ALMOST SORRY 1 TOOK You a, \N | #2 = “ OUT OUR WAY WA ASTSL IM pe VTING le ee ee =i cL __|___ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 23. 1953 | FORTY-THREE | Ship to Film Missionaries Meet | Little Change From “45 in Tonight in Pontiac |Government Study Shows Individuals , Sea Monsters A missionary homecoming |)a7r Biggest Share of Total Farm Land Galapagos Island Near has been planned at First Bap- tist Church tonight. The meet- | WASHINGTON (®—~ There's a|and 174 million acres of nonfarm | dividuals and by corporations, by Scene. of Underwater Science Movie lot of farm land in the United | land. states, as shown by the Inman- i st uise Pee Te ccicwed tee States. Wh~ owns it? Federal government holdings | Robinson study include. ast: y Two ge ernment experts| were placed at 16.2 million acres Bast North Central — Ohio 20,- reception in the lower audi- | checked int. ‘© matter and came|of farm land and 382.1 million 969, 99.1 and (5; ‘Indiana 19,659, HAMBURG, G UP L torium. up with this answer: Individuals} acres of nonfarm land. 98.6 and .0; Minois 30,979, 98.5 and ied Seven missionary families will |own most of it but corporations; Farmland (in thousand acres) 1.2; ,Michigan 117,270, 99 and 6; " ry Young, Austrian deep-sea explorer be greeted at this service. They and the federal and state govern-| and the percentage owned by in- Wifcasin 23,221, 98.9 and .9. Hans Hass ‘sails from here for the Galapagos Islands in August to study and photograph sea plants and animals. Fifteen of his 34 years spent in- include the Revs. D. L: Martins |e" hold sizable chinks. vestigating the mysteries of the a Buid T. Inman, of the bureau of , , . —_ Curae ‘ried Lodwigs Agricultural Eeonomic, and HE ) Children Die Nehru Demands ; R ’ Sebitilan auld Pearl Hes ron made a sampling of 1950 agricul- Lar g er Role a ‘ ) pb tne ch pre ese ogy avSEn erehip and tubcioded| that iol the cin Old Ice Box for Asia i In U. N. deep, Hass says his eight-month Also expected to be present | 1.158,566,000 acres of farm land in NEW DELHI, India @ — Prime trip to the) Pacific isles off Ecua- will be Mr, and Mrs. Alfred | the ry: . Minister Nehru today demanded dor will crown his earlier achieve- Gould who expect to be leaving | 1. Individuals, partnerships | Georgia 4-Year-Oldsj|a bigger role for Asia in the i ! for China soon, and Dr. and/| and estates own 1,017 million ‘ F United Nations. ments. | Mrs. George Westcott, from | acres or 87.8 per cent; Suffocate While Playing | “Opening debate on foreign at- ; : anti, who were the firs . ‘ His 350-ten three-mast. schoon ha ns ated to be sant Got 3. Corporations hold title to 51 | Inside Refrigerator fairs in the upper house of Parlia- million acres or 4.4 per cent; ment, he called for inclusion of er “Karifa,” meaning “Beauty” in i eet is well equipped for the expedition. Besides a complete, modern lab- oratory and comfortable living quarters, the schooner wil! carry a crew of ten — Hass; his pretty ‘blonde wife, Lotta. also an ac- complished explorer; and eight from the local church. Z. a come ig prin BAINBRIDGE, Ga. ®—The na- eatich countries in the Korean | ; ernments own per cent | tion’ tiseries of suffocati itical conference and sserted: ) | with the remaining 3.6 per cent | OO" CUTeNt series ea ne | ‘It does. not seem proper tha M oney Worries: ee re in discarded ice boxes had added | oti ot toate atiectee Ariat Like Onions? These percentages, the two re- = Georgia children to its death | problems which are in fact of Asia, . port, show no great change from The bodi should be disposed of largely. by Go to Panajachel] |195 when individuals owned 7.9} |The bodies of Susan Hincheliff| ignoring Asia. Wig @ tt per cent of the farm land, cor- ry if ea : | | Nehra also pointed out that = money | porations 4.5 per cent, Indians 3.1| Were found in an old refrigerator Pakistan's term on the U. N. technical 4ssistants. Hass plans to travel in waters problems have you down and if you | and public bodies 4.5. yesterday. A small dog lay be- rity Council will expire Dec. never hefére explored scientifical- re metignt ore oe Guatemalan/ Inman and Robinson said the | tween them. and that “Asia will then be ly, and toi shoot a full-length un- ce yous anajachel is the place| percentage of individually owned| ‘The ice box had been stored in | represented solely by the gov- dersea celor {film documentary. Vo ean ait by there on S180 = farm land varies | considerably| the family garage at Susan's t of Formosa (Nationalist y : from region to region and state} fhome. Police . id the children ) and Lebanon.” The water* surrounding the famed *Turtle Islands’ are particularly rich in strange flora and fauna. “Pye been’ working and waiting since the late 1930’s for a chance to pilot a really adequately equipped; ship into these waters.” | 4 gTINGING REBUKE — John stopped to smell said Hass, a tall sun-bronzed man 4 pretty posy at the Colorado State Fair flower exhi- year, Dr. Sol Tax, a University of to state | Chicago anthropologist, said in a : and the dog apparently crawied | ‘Leave out Formosa ~- because study published today by the| 1” the 17 western states, which| imto the box to play and were | that does not represent any part Smithsonian Institution. contain about 60 per cent of the! smothered after the door slam- | ‘of Asia but itself, if it does repre- Tax isn’t selling Panajachel real ee farm edge ar oe med shut and trapped them. sent that, Now, Lebanon is an estate. studi: economy dings consti per excellent country, it is er is up to the reader’s imagination. But one can al- | the vide ote pet pete in avs cent while in the states east of Mr. and as. E.) J. Hinchelift a big Drkden on Laban,” Aptacrd most be sure that 12-year-old John Milliken will be | report that ‘‘a penny is still money | the Great Plains individuals own —* parents, were away St) mented. et aa SE with a small goatee. bit — but a villian lurked within! The end of the tale | more careful where he puts his nose next time. in Panajachel.” He added: 98 per cent of the farm land. a . Nehru declared that ‘“‘it is going Hass expects to have some ; tn thin ly ae Florida is the only eastern A series of multiple ice bOX | t) be less and less feasible for any < , community a man deaths in other states began during world organization to function in ultra-modern ‘“‘secret” weapons . } ’ .: had ale l ~ state where individuals hold less ns rare entre, wo tree Asks FHA Leniency | crrsecers clos: Nemes |Library Acquires | s'w"rcu indium iin. ne | San 0 po cot tat tate |r w Proctor Ark Aut | intone i is will allow. the expedition to study | | robably would not have to work j : the habits of some large, mon- | ¢ . ’ ' 5 P and corporations 14.5 cent, | 12: Four others were victims of &/ or their conflicts.” ster-like creatures who live near for Livonia Workers || WATERFORD CENTER — Al- Thirteen New Books sheet al the | sd is Dh This represented a pay Tre similar tragedy about the same, the ocean floor and are known lan Bradley was elected presi- within his cul mira forded shift time at Richmond, Va., and two . to man mostly by the fables.| LANSING — Gov. Williams! gant of the Crusaders Class of| Pontiac City Librarian Adah “ tural hort owned 89.2 per cent of Florida | tied in the same manner at Haver- Report on Institute Shelly has announced the recent| 1m Panajachel, you'd probably be farm land and corporations 10.6 hill, Mass. — built around them. | Says he wants the Federal Housing)| ¢ mi unny Vale Chapel when the group : , . Hass and his wife Want to get| Administrator to go easy om men) met Sunday at the Church. acquisition of 13. new books. cottes be i heig edi coh a per cent. The Bainbridge ee f or p alsi ed Chil dren on intimate terms — scientifically | who can’t keep up home mortgage Also named were Bill Saunders,| The works, including both fiction | of the 780 Panajachelans ace their], Much western land is Indian the tire pian nc sxikat ae ye a Payments because they were laid) ice president; Edna West, secre-| Nd non-fiction writing, are: money, land or land owned by the federal | aineq ice boxes soon after such; Parents who attended the other man-eating cold - blooded off after the General Motors trans-| tary. treasurer; Ronnie Combs,| tne Plower ee teey une O'Brien: And you'd live in a rather poor, a deaths began occurring elsewhere.| Summer Rackham Institute creatures.. The 24-year old Lotta, | Mission plant fire at Livonia. heed [ant The Sleeping Beauty, Elizabeth Taylor | Whitewashed adobe house which corporation owned land | ‘rhe fatal box was overlooked in| £0F cerebral palsied children in : usher; - ames France,| ‘he story of Esther Costello, Nicholas.| often is filled with smoke and has|in the West and in Florida they Ypsilanti reported at Tuesday has won more than a few bouts| (He wrote to Albert M. Cole,! assistant usher. Monserrat pol little or ino firnitute said: the safety drive. night's meeting of FAITH at with hungry sharks. Her advice; | the administrator, urging the fed+| West of the River, C. G. Laird “According to either American or} ‘Much of this land, where it Stevens Hall. Sneer at them, and they'll swim’ oa) agency go as far as it could aogier Guatemalan standards, these peo-|was used for ranching or for fruit} Attend Ohio Meeting FAITH, an organization “For away. | jegally ot permit mortgage hold W t rf d C t see vee wer a tous, J 0 Coles: | ple are Tax said, “but not | and bi the Aid and Instruction of The . ortgage ers efore You Buy & House, J. aljen- e poor,’’ Tax sai , “bu vegetable ction, Enroute to the Pacific. the|¢, deal generously with the unem- aleriord Vener getable production, was OP! DRAYTON PLAINS — Vern| Handicapped,” is sponsored by der oppressively so.”’ erated for the owner i Hasses will anchor in the Carib- ployed factory workers. . conan: Tr ore wenn ene For instance: They take part in| manager. Surraing ind ranching Green, member of the Session of) Oakland) County Society for bean Sea, Armed with oxygen! The governor said he was in- PTA Begins Year perrenidentiol Election Reforms, W.| M- | siaborate rituals which require the |half of the corporate-held farm. | Community United Presbyterian | Crippled Children. : masks and cameras, they will re | ¢-med certain mortgage firms | Bewing Magic, M. (B) Picken expenditure of time and money—| land.” Church, Drayton Plains, represent-| Members, who will meet search among the coral reef for-| snd banks which hold the federally.| WATERFORD CENTER — With| annilet *o4 the Tibetans: Teung-tein | « coecially to buy liquor, Men and of at group at the annual meet-| again Oct. 6, were told of a mations there. . insured mortgages are willing tO] the theme “P ality in the Welding Manual, U. 8. Department of | women can take days off to go to The study said that outside the |igg of the Synod of Ohio, held| Michigan Associaton for Re- ; Unlike the ‘‘Kon Tiki” raft the |b. jenient but cannot because of nan ant reer World Beneath the Sea, Otis Bar-| festivals. Young men and women| Western states and im Florida the / at Zanesville Monday and Tuesday. | tarded Children conference at | ‘“Karifa” is designed for comfort. federal rules. Making, Waterford Center PTA} ton even indulge in fripperies of fash. corporate lands in farms were | He was accompanied by the Rev. Michigan State College this a said ifrat se pepaieae aeary | will begin activities Thursday at ion.” ia — 0 Esra corpora W. J, Teeuwissen Jr. Friday and Saturday. ship once belonged to two ‘‘kings } as estate . : } Sir Thomas Lipton, the tea king; | SCout Leader Class Set af dig pans ee oth Den Mothers Needed PTA to H P| nesses and timber, mineral and 1} Ik h and Singer, the sewing machine! ponTYAC LAKE — A training|‘Do Not Let a Stranger Teach| SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP — Lo- o hear Plans railroad companies, which sel. | PTA Meets Thursday To Talk at North Branc cal Den Mothers and those in-| WATERFORD — Tom Belton, di-| %™ farmed the land. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP| NORTH BRANCH — Sponsored king. class for prospective Girl Scout} Your Child.” The schconer, was built in Eng-|leaders}will be open for all moth-| Also highlighting the meeting will terested in becoming one are in-| rector of the Waterford Township| In addition to the 51 million| — First meeting of the PTA of| by Senior and Wesleyan Circles of land in 1929, and saw service|ers and young women Friday ati be vocal renditions by Waterford vited to attend the Den Mothers | Recreation Board, will reveal plans| acres of farm land corporations| Hudson-Covert School will be|WSCS, Edith Parks, on furlough Township High School Barbershop | basic training course now offered| of the board to the PTA of the| also own some 90 million acres of | Thursday at 6:30 p.m. Mrs. Fran-| from Southern Rhodesia in Africa, ‘as a coastal cutter during the |7 p.m. Those interested may con- t war. Hass hought it at an auction | tact Mrs. Warren Allen, OR 3-6730,| Quartet, get-acquainted games and from 1 to 3 p.m daily at Bushnell | village school at 7:30 p.m. tomor-| nonfarm land. Individuals hold | ces Dawson, new principal, and the give an address in Metho- in Copenhagen. for further information. | refreshments. Congregational Church. . | row, 1,017 million acres of farm land | new teachers will be introduced. ist Church at 8 p.m. Friday. Death Notices Death Notices : Wanted Male Help 5| Wanted Male Help 5| Wanted Male Help 5| Wanted Female Help 6| Wanted Female Help 6| Wanted Female Help 6 ~- PPP POPPI PPB PP PPP PPP LAL as ~ on ~ — — ~~ BLOB SALESLADY WANTED TO SELL The Pontiac Press SEWING MACHINE ee LADIES’ SPORTSWEAR AND AC- oss, Wendell J. 11033 Bisckburn, |" Glace [Me pees Beid ‘Mountain w SALESMAN Add It Up DO YOU NEED SOME? TELETYPE OPERATORS TION. ONLY EXPERIENCED peat aera ar Preece |! Bay Mm Ciy Seva! g FOR WANT ADS | Yace wieom be New Tort frm, soe of the laren | fore’weammae | MAYBE YOU berger; dear father of James Jr., daughter of Mrs. beona’’ Mark; DIAL FE a of aon for “oetting sew cancerns in America needs 2/ Beginning Salary 63400 per year FULL TIME DAIRY & FOUNTAIN Charles; Carolea and George| dest mother of Patricia, Jeffrey. ; A 2-8181 machines. Must be experie Good hard work plus a i At eee (me eur Week) clerk. 3 to uy p.m. Apply in per* ARE THE GIRL preheat hes f vinigag Bo Seem eeciges pg oe pe mg aoe thorough ee good product and organi through radio and television ad- Paid Vacations __son, $24 W. Huron St. ‘ . . sisters, an rothers on Varty; dear sister o rs. ge machines. r © rrito TER IRMIN : =e will be held Wednesday, John Fatt and Paul James Yee. From 8 a.m. to$ p.m, is oceqvary Position otiers full zation e uals ood a Hh ener ke Te naee en Retiremery) end | Tapcranee Plane ae ary Perea an MI re are seeking a ah ie for egg ig BS a i See Tate & UMETAL em) oe youl, We make no} iat «tepenrance, and™s car that | igh school Oraduat Ovod | eeoaras ia eee CW tn bbe ter p a osep r you. e make n will run, will interview you for ping Abil or Frevions Ex-|WOMAN 10 CARE FOR CHIL- Mich. Interment in Mount Hope| Church, Lake Orion, at 10 a. m. All errors should be report- . : rene “Operatia Telet SM ntis Game works ara} jesting: field of classified Cemetery, Lapeer, Mich. agin coy fin East’ Lawn Ceme- eq immediately. The APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE wild promises but we do A $150 PER WEEK DRAW Fauipment Rea e teetype | live in or by day. "vic. of Coo ey) | d Sp —_———] tery, LakejOrion. Mrs. Varty will assumes (no responstbility 23ND FLOOR ; ; Lr EM 3-581] ofter 6 la vertising. fof errors other than to say that if you will put after 5 p.m. __ EGNATUCK, 1 ot (BER 22, 1983, We in oe Py pod yenerst cancel‘thea charges fer, that < Roebuck & C f ¥ h y p against commission (plus addi- | OFFICE DEPENDABLE GIRL OR WOM- A : Drayton Plains, age 53; beloved| funeral, Recitation of th Rosary portion of the first insertion Scars, Hoeouc a orth some real effort on “eelicting leveives A Gee OAKLAND COUNTY PERSONNEL Generdi housework and essistanes n earnest desire to learn puchnnd bf Mary Denstact: Goer] Visi best] Allene Panersl, Bent | |) bie ween resdered, velbaipe nd ah your weekly pay will be} seotemen Poution with, edvance 1 Lafayette street vib a.pmet, ares, Seanigeny|| the profession, a pleasant : . men iliti ee ' ° ° Recitatiog of the Rosary will be through | the error. | When EXPERIENCED FARM HAND BY| VCTY satisfying. If you} pointment. ay ee see Pontiac, Michigan _ an “Mayfair 62545. personality, being able to ya . _ month. | - : . m ren lookine for a R a acacataaes WAITRESSES, FULL AND , sure to get ‘« - tence te Relate TIME Mr, Menatuek will pte lp tienes bers.” No sacar” Ot PART TIME HELP, EARN $30 TO ane on experienced auto copnection ad « futu part time at Scribbs Drive In. type and spell acurately ” the Melvin A. Schutt. Funeral be given without it. gio weekly. Inquire 2036 12 Mile | mobile salesman, come in WOMAN Apply_in perso. || are the only -essential Homes pntil Wednesday night. He toda ’ and see us and learn PHONE 'STENOGRAPHERS ualifications. You will i) be send Thursday to the Closing time for advertise- A Jo a TEN q : pre A ela ig reg Meng sates ments containing type sises } | CARPENTERS WTD. GOOD MEN,| about the many benefits inal | "ia eae housework, ‘private room| SALARY 62533 TO #82 PER |! enjoy working in our Minnesota, for service and burial.| Some may orget you now that latger than regular agate § | house jobs. Union. PE 23-7986 after : with TV, in Dr. home Afust Wave MOWTH { Joy § 3 ool esr emter on mance || SO Sac! Sree f | SE = and fing future we offer /watpnon wore, re sansa] fistencty, erierince & decir |"S" Peat, xpericce feguinee wed] Pleasant modern office. KINNEY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1953, e em | aco TION Ni 104 b a home. +7: bene: P! sg Test Pe Oe eelevae” cas Migsed Fegsr. eee Transient Want Ads may Permanent maa seme a x Milliman Co. edeaient wn HOUSEKEEPER | FOR Ww MOTHER- _ Bae io “personnel office. city, See \ Ir. Inman for more pas ot Bye A. Kinued; | dear re hter. Mrs. be| cancelled up to 9:30 the men with came knowledge ie” ss all MIDDLEAGED CARPEN- _Write “Pon 2 school age children. i East Pike. | details. Peree| ot | Cocnac W. miondg: Gene Ro ee day of publication. . music. Wil train epplicants te | Gas~ ee Sutton FE 6-8312. tine Press Box 28. a DRESS SHOP IN YOUR HOME. : rested ini this a werk SER “MAN. VACATION stoke, gee “OUT BOY P GIRL TO LIVE 'IN Be DaYs. No investment. Good comm. W brotey of Danie, Wallace "yllen Funetal Directors 4 CASH WANT AD RATES ust have car Apply tn person,| Drebard Le at benetita Apply 2625 | bedy's Marret. MI 65222 PEA-| _Pvi. room and: bath. MI €0631. Modern, Manner 300 W. THE Fog eg ay a ae Tet te oer eer EL tin waited Tor enc Ta | aan SoBe ERE SRV | MEFENHOR AEE ARE, TOU ware, Fe MS? OE agi ate ures 6 oan service will be held Friday, Sept. V h Si ] 7 ir : ed sp an wanted for work in eee wark. 33 maléws ic nice pleasant fob wits BIO wages. _—s Eis. oth Lae Mate ee ra PONTIAC 25th, af 1:30 p,m. at the Hun- oomeespwpiple|is 2% 38 8% home decorating, Unlim-| RERMENGED | WASHING \MA-! _c Collector-Manager WES EPPICIENE COOK Burton etfies a “a x: ° 6 2,40 4.32 6.48 ited earnings. Must hav top wages. vacation with pa ‘RTE MAN POR HOLLY AND] for large Pontiac furniture store. holidays = Rundays. Twins Re: PRESS Alig. state at the Bunton! FUNERAL HOME 3208s car Inside work. E; 0 | FR = a = ag id Ee ee eS "write lgiving. cnn figai| taurant, 390 8, Saginaw. Pane ome unti] time of the % . I i i . ms) = neers | Brust . person. Write giving experieuce,|SALESGIRL FOR GENERA Ambulance Service, Plane or Motor 9 3,60 648 9.73 WANTED ‘Oo THE yusn, _PE_2-2318 desited ' funeral. Interment in Drayton Bat Bed ssicoin 0 ployment office, Waite’s. must be experienced Wobltes, | MAN FOR RAWLEION BUSINESS Write Bex she" 00. Pontias Press, certian ie dime store, at. -_ r rmingham Office ESTIMATOR FOR SMALL METAL | Enrfpeering 4 8. Tele) phic al Oak oe mou | MIDDLEAGED WH son or Mr Cummings gg ot Boe gga mr Donelson- Johns Ph. Mi working plant who likes to work aig 16 4 Oatland Rosie’ Coaea | Mtr tor bou-ekeeper for ph Meg MI 160 for eppointment © Wil cals tees aeGaren wEae momar » Bliza’ Dixie dw 4-0844 orking Diant s to wo Oys, or older, not go-| for a a A pp | Da Matus “ ingh |] works. FE 5-8525. Highway, age 65; beloved mother HOME e est figures & enjoys detail work.| ~~. 9 t teieh's , ¥-| COUNTER HELP EXPERIENCED WAITRESS WTD! ERAL OFICE WORK. OVER of Mrs. Mildred Pariow and Mrp. “DESI( ba FOR FUNERALS” Roowledes of a ae 3 mg back to school, wish- _ po SCP SRAE, Tree : ~*. to 12 bin Apply cite Liberty Cafe. | OB TCul af Vanwagompea, 1 is KE. Mra. Nofa Delauter, Mra. Pred | on on wane 379 Hamilton Advise age. ‘mort “dove one. De pay te ing day, work as parking PART Te USED CAR SALES. burg. ri A Perrys nee WAITRESS | Wi WOMAN FOR CLEARING aE a Lae al | + | Box 76, Pontiac Press attendants. Apply Riker] tral Lin? Bar WOMAN OR GIRL TO CARE FOR a foi" eek and then 2 nerel Teevice, Wal be held, Thars- | WID EXP. |TOOLROOM LEATHE Garkgel, 9:30 hi 0:30 & me a | eq celires, hls mother werks “MACHUS- Megha ty aey. waled Parmet-Snover Puneral| Home. B 2 time. ° ° FURNACE MAN SERVICE WORK.| {:30. ’ t . e. tery, Mrs. Martin will Ile a state ox Repetes Wanted Male Help 5 Wohlfeil I Dee Engineering 2 to 4, 59 Wayne. Wright Sheet Met tel Co, $008 Dine| BABY SITTER. § DAYS WEEK. eee avon tame “ia tor peenel restaurant "work, Pi ri ed may t 10 a.m. today ~~~ | __a214. 8_Telegrapn RATE CLERK | stony, ete. — CRT ate ental PM | “Gorge plierncons ct eveningr frot| _G7qanae, => Ou OF Haudars MARTIN, SEPTEMBER 11, a = eg oo 9 | 2 men ek eb. work: and | trecing "Hours | pee. 2. ap cste, Anly th ‘ply Pes’ Dry Clecne tw. Pala, cvery dey. No delivering EXPERI ENCED wWAITRE . 10 s te -| er co’ection rience s vi A Walter Clyde, 3130 Dixie Highway, the Press office in Y M tor 8078 ber” mont. oe Truck Fines” 853 Woodward Are || APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK- Frdroe _sary. OR 37606. — “rr || _ply after 6 p.m i age th: ‘eeseed father lef’ Man” the following re oung ani...| 2s Meus, mus avy NI —TS:ll oo for diechwasher. Good salary, WTD. PRACTICAL NURSE FOR BAKERY SALESLADY | 2XPERIENCED FOR TELEPHONE Mildred Parlow and Mrs. Vefa estment. G iT PORTER > i lus meals Uniforms furnished.| ‘comvalescent home. 45305 Cass edvteed saleswork. Living vicinity Roche: Vandemark; dear brother of Mrs. | § Wh Fars kie| Mi. Metee for epee ter eka & mopping. Appty| Reisner Brothers. 42. Saginaw.| _Ave.. Utica. Phone 6161. No nights ter. Salary and commission. FE Maude Kelly. Puneral service will ere To EXPERIENCED TREE TAnGueER | —")P"'508, 8 8 Kresze Co. | == Male Pharmaci WHITE GIRL OVER 18, FOR Uniforms furnished. 47019, 9 to 10 om. only. Be te rr eeay parte Seoets | f | 8/14, 17, 28, 94, 28, 34 Mijiverry b3700 | CATH OPERATORS, AND APPLY | nove ave ag peg OU dren, vier nig, weenenge on-| VW,\CHUS BAKERY || *Oite pute sec callin perce if ; . : = — _ a er ; { e eeke op- i bake pies. Call in Funeral Home. Interment in Of-| } fo, Ut 45, 56, 63, 83, 85, From Here? WOOL PRESSER HION Pay, | “binigié MANUFACTURING Rcnety "PS tox tao or phone mal. FE 3-100 after’ $:30 pm. SEDDLEAGED wat ae swounn | 200 TBpagheea House. 1086 Ww. will le im state at the Farmer-| 86, B8, 101, 108, 109. poly im person, Douglas Clean: | gagq 5 pant Pane tne) _ Mich . = Order Clerk for work in small home of eldet: | wawren CAPABLE WHITE OIRL Snover Funeral Home uptil tine You ¢4D continue to, shop _%# Co. 55 8 Woodward, Birm,|MEN 'O SELL Past palecting WrD DISPATCHER POR COM | Pull_ time Bick benefita & paid I Sele, ore jnor i" = a wien cae lee eee service. 1.4 gular” \Gealiinn of an een WTD MALE ATTENDANT. AGE| Earn big money: or fuli| "0" Arrier operation Top wages ee eres orton No experience neces- | _O t housework while PACE, SEPTEMBER 23, 1943. HAi- tec “tess end oe = chistr | hated wre es | Bontes commicsions. quat against! Brite Pontiac Prete Bor te | _eplegel’s ine, Ais ye ial aE ge hy ol} weges to” righ persen. “Can PE husbayd of Mrs. Leone Pace; desr| Wanted Male Help 5 | ‘be, position we now have -__Rechepter, Mish. son, 6 N. |Sawinew Wit TO ROW Gas | TRL CARs | OFF ‘CRILDREER eerie Bon 12, Pontiac Frees 5 | 28571 ext. 28 2 to 5 Dm. of father‘ of Jack. Bernard, Donald. | ~~ P wows | Trtiainie “Department that weoriver-Salesman | ida. 6 Pleasant Si. Offord. Mich. | _ 50087 indy for exclusive women's \Ge | iIDDLEAOED LADY 70 LIVE TH ' start e ve ~, ay 9: 11:30. or Mrs, small Pace, Mn A Avis Vandeonr, Mrs. | ORTER can start you en your way pad gt hE og A REAL ESTATE OR WOOL SPOTTER MUsT MIDDULEAGED | LADY | To DO) Gay 9:3 to 11:30. Ask for Mrs] Sonvtiescent homer Good wages. rainne Burris and Mrs, Donna ust be cver 18 yrs. of age and Using between 30 and 40. To qual- SALESME experienced. y to Mr. y within Call after 4 eg _ Lepides, Osmuns. Farmington 1995. are, “Clesde | Mallo work pers he og 2 This position handling classi- Seasaneel te o oa i We ceed le sales, S_Telegraph near Oreherd Laxe.| OB 21 . ever |e more | ; dept 9h, at th 8. ay me G yarn = Well equipped, a counts i please be er-trmer und ee plebtr of prospects, Wanted Female Help 6| Woman with car would teed Siete or Typist CURB J 0. new ; recom menda- —~ —_—— a : ’ ai service bas lie | bparke-Gritiin | Panerai py tions Apply to Route Sup’ and ve worker =“ “—~—~ | like work after 4 o’clock aathain wait me. Mr. will He in state = 8. WwooDWwa fers an ideal opportunity for Pontise Laundry & Dr} TYPISTS week days and all da fied woman, 20 t» igre GIRI S thé Sparks-Griffin Puneral New, Car Salesman | 8, Slert, young man who crane: 5” 8 Tel CRAWFORD AGENCY $208 to $234 per Mo y Y] snd appe ‘nce are also 4 prj andl Ayan gd has the tect and ability to Ra. ree, oF a Mond Call -27 T and , Avert, Aggressive man needed to| contact business firme prop- erred | Ral aQhEN EVES with fhe City of | |= omaay. FE 2-2744| Wit. “ate pi y te peree Found ‘ou sales stall selling Pon pena SINOLE | EXPERIENCED MAR | 714 Ooivke FE PE +1845) acetion and gg coy ge Newiy ena No Joslyn bus rth Hat Na & month. , gas and water MI 46669 pci or Holly 72142, 2 ROOMS & BATH. CLEAN. REAS. bape —F ad professional man only. Fenians APT. — CHILDREN Felcome. _Call Romeo 2360, ALL ‘OTILITTES ™ $120 per mo its cheap for this ultra-modern Cass Lake home, $100 deposit. References Fequifed, Avail. now to June Ist Jack Loveland. FE 2-4875. PT. PRIVATE Adults . Rooms, “BATH AND TV. IN- * guise 55 Henderson. FE 2-5883. Rent Apt. Unfurnished 36 4 ROOMS AND BA TH UN __FE 5-233. Call r an PORN. LAKE ORION. 4 R __lights furn. Adults’ refrig., Le me ‘only| . required. an be seep 5:30 : 5 5) to 7:30. - TARE ON M-50. - NEW, modern, heated 3 rms. and bath ent, Stove and refrigerator, Mu- tual 4-2382. 2 RMS., PVT. BATH. 890 ROBIN- __Wood. Baby welcome 4 LARGE RMS. pyr. Bat BATH & _ entrance. 22 School 5 RM. GROUND oon 139° Ww. Lawrence 8t., see dartiakes, Mrs. Ferguson. Rent Houses "Furnished 37 4 RMS. WITH “TOILET & sHOW- oa unk ay monthly. ms e child wel Pew elcome. 6 RM. HOUSE’ TO. JUNE ay Inquire 5123 Grove Ave., Harbor, SMALL 3 ROOM COTTAGE. _ Couple only. FE 2-1333. EFFICIENCY CABINS. _ 9450 Dixie Hwy. 2 2 BEDRM. vibe OIL L FURNACE 130 Hulbert, 1 bik, off Eliz. Lk. Rd. _Oxbow Ref. MOD HOUSETRAILER. ADULTS. _ FE 5-4860. 2 BDRI BDRM.,_ ELEC, STOVE & RE- rig. oil ars son priv., Union 8, after 5. CAREPRONT = maLDnocks HOME. Adults only. Strictly modern. Ve nice. 9 miles from ee Ava able ‘til June 1, 1954, EM 3-5240 3 RM. APT,, BRAND NEW, HOT a hea! apply 8240 Highland 1954. Keego CABINS FOR RENT BY MONTH. _ Very reas, OA 8-2729. Rent Houses Unfurn. 38 SEER OPP PPP PRA 3 BEDROOM HOUSE IN GOOD west — location, $95 per month. FE 2-29 5 RM _FE LARG water. advance. MODERN. “CLOSE IN, PH, HGME—A AUTO HEAT, HOT $85 a month. 2 mos. in Immediate possession. References. 1283 E. Lake Drive. _ Walled Lake. Market 4-2162. 8 RMB. 191 MILES. 6 MONTHS tent for repairs. Box 535 Pontiac. 3 SMALL ROOMS. ‘COUPLE ONLY. FE | 504 after a4: 30. NEW | HOME AT UNION LAKE. 2 betirooms, lake Wen tes rie _Detto! rig! $95. rmont For "Rent Store Space 38A SOP OPP LLLP LLL Shop or Warehouse Space Grade floor, close to downtown, ble for shop, light manufac- too or ripley to 6,000 ft. r mo, u " REALTOR 102 Eg Huron 8t. Ph. FE 4-8284 STORE 24x 60. GOOD FOR ANY business. Full oo 930 ure Clemens. FE 3-968 WHITE BROS. Open 9 to 9 for oy i oa Ph, OR 3-1872 o i A 5660 Dixie Highway maar _ Rent Office Space 38C FOR LEASE 5600 Sq. Feet of Office | Space New Brick Buildin Paved. ia - a arking divide to suit H. Delos “BUD” NICHOLIE Real Estate and Insurante 4 Mt. Clemens St. FE 5-1 OFFICE SPACE ON MAIN 8T. Rochester. OL 2-5162. Shoe Repair. Rent Bus. Prop. IN Rochester 38D RENT WORKSHOP IN GOOD BUSI- mess location. Suitable for any _ business. FE 4-9602. DESIRABLE OFFICE OR BEAUTY shop space, 2nd floor, Huron Seater. Inquire mgr. Huron Thea- ¥, | For Sale Houses 40 OBO OOOOerrerrenwrnreasanen eee LR. TRIPP Cherter Road ranch home. 2 bed- panelled den, sun- tile bath with stall shower also tile powder rm. all on ground r. Full basement with rec. room. Attached garage and many other extras. Let us show you this ideal home today. Oakwood Manor Brand new e custom built on one floor, Anderson win- and natural birch trim. an appointment to ge lovely home todayi{ Drayton W ood: ome, 2 bedroom ranch — cy large rooms, nice- decorated. Built in 1951, aaa Attached garage. 80x * jot. Fully insulated. Priced right th terms. Hurry on this Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 22 W. w 8t. mn Evening FE ssiel or FR en NEAR pkibe AND JUNIOR HIGH a Good 6 room home with flag ea garage. $1500. tole. MENOMINEE ST. (FE 87741] — | NEW - a we are about id out of these popular § room bun- Lan eee <8 ve 5 Z af z $ 5 g g ae 3 3 Ted . oak oors. Only $2,700 mortgage WE ARE “OFFERING—in , everything tor comfortable living. will enjoy the large airy bedrooms with double closets —_ sliding doors. Beautiful ype = convenjences, such as vent, fan and garbage disposal. The full ceramic tile bath done in the latest style is the crowning feature. large 26x40 foot basement is designed for your comfort, equipped with automatic gas air conditioned furnace, now aire incinerator, and cop roo You must porch is ouse apprecia full value. fmtaeth a buy at $15,950. DRAYTON AREA}-5 room modern home with attached breezeway and garage. Situ- ated on ‘% acre of land- scaped and fenced grounds, 11x24 foot living m, full bath, basement. furnace. House in = § A-l condition throughout. You ust see this ideal home. Priced at only $9.500. ONE OF THOSE-Hard to find west side bungalows, consisting of 2 bedrms., liv- ing rm., kitehen with break- fast nook, bath. Has plastered painted walls, hardwood floors. Full bsmnt. with Luxaire gs hear and % mi. south of 8t as. Hospital $10,500 with reasonable down payment. RAY O’NEIL, Realtor W. Huron Open 9-9 Phone FE 3-7103 or, FE 4-4178 Member Co-op Exchange 15 Hammond East Side 3 bedroom modern home, gas heat, new rear summer porch, garage, corner location just off East Pike St. Owner transferred, immediate possession. Price re- duced to $9,500 with $2,500 down. PAUL D.;HAMMOND 2642 W, Huran St. Eves. FE 5-4714 OPEN 4-8 P.M. DAILY MODEL | BRICK HOME Corner of Edgefield and Noyle Drive, in Donelson Park WM. A. KENNEDY Open Evenings - 8 3097 W. Huron, 8t. FE 4 4-3569 RANCH HOMES, 8 WITH rough plumbing and wiring, lake rivileges, SMALL WN PAY- NT. Schneider, 924 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake.| OPEN SUN DAYS. Phone MA 4-1554. CASS LAKEFRONT Including 16 well located lots. This attractive 2 level 6 home is in excellent condition throughout. Stairway to large at- tic for additional bedroom. Sun rch in knotty pine overlooking ake, Living room has fireplace. Full basement with aut. —— Recreation rovm with fireplac Nicely landscaped. Pichia beach. Ail for only £19,750 $6,950 WITH $1,500 DN. Partly furn attractive 5 rooms. Expansion attic. Insulated, bath, Electric water Giass. enclosed per baseinent agg A 80x130 ft Eleiad easant Stainless Ste el Plant, THELMA “M. ELWOOD os Sean Rd. FE 5-1284 |; Open 9 to 7 3% ACRES" Ne HOUSE. “BASE- ment, full ieee em to Clark- ston, Only own. $500 down. eat A ‘g0d Basement house, naa wa- ter, with 1 Bg GEO. ei ice 6261 Andersonville ont aauy Sherborne PHONE SEMINOLE HILLS 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, lovely living room Tile kitchen and bath, gas ar aemes Priced a vely. wn. Reasonable terms, me ONION LAKE Lovely new ranch type home, large "tots Lake. andl tome 3 bed- ms rms. DOROTHY ENT DER ie LAVENDER Fe pe ned Office FE yeu LAKE FRONT HOME LD, pas. A c orate "OR price INCOME Two apartments — § rooms and nicely landscaped, fenced-in back yard, 2-car rage. This prop- erty in st of condition th attractively priced — terms. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 52% W. Huron Evenings NEW BRICK 2 BEDROOM. COM- bath water. Electric, Save money aan interior. $2,000 dn. TER GREEN, MY 2-5831 66 Park Blvd. (Mos) | Lake Orion BARGAIN -— BY OWNER, $3,400 fo- ne ‘m modern 4 rms. and PIONEER “HICHLAN DS wer. Master bedroom 13x)) doors. its Toom and din- L. Toom., Ty room. Automatic heat. 1% car with a ee fon and bi lot. ered at sinsee HURON GARDENS LEBARON SCHOOL Cricely es decorated . base- ment, oi] Meat, Deere mr screens fenced yard. sub payment mo NEAR WATERFORD 3 apts. income —— 2 are Huron Eves. EM 3-3303 |" | bath each, gas heat, corner jot, | A HOME OF YOUR OWN ttawa Hills O Grand white frame colonial with landscaped double bee ae ' Three bedrooms . and 1 festibule, ag ore downshaite avatory, full basement. A fine property, $16,500. West Side Brick of three ae 4 1 age. bule, room, breakfast nook, downstairs | { javatory, wall to wall carpeting ga heat, Make an appointment | joday. , ith One Acre wo bedrooms and full bath, ex- ellent kitchen that will really lease you. Golden oak floors. onderful soil for any kina of arden, Vacant & ready for you. 13 North off Oakland ve room frame with gara 18 living room, 12x14 fiche: bedrooms bath. Quick pos- ession, Full price $5,500 with 1,500 down. ICHOLIE |AND HARGER CO, Business as) 48 " Open 8:30 "til 8:30 SUBURBAN Well built 3 rd igang 2 tar gerage. Electrica) water sys iro <— lights. 4 lots, Near school. Rinesel A. Nott, Reaktor > W. Pike 4-5905 MILFORD 2 LOTS, as ROOM rame, full basement 3 jece bath, furnace with stoker. ec. hot water, garage. $6,500. Floyd R. Jones, Broker, 339 First St., Milford, Mich. MUtual 46125. LAKE INCOME 3 for the price of one is the way to describe this buy; one on lot (100x100) is an attractive 5 room modern year around home in, Across the + -_ a lage on @ with an A-1 beach. You can rent this cottage in the summer for B50 per week and still have beach or your own family. Property is located on beautiful Maceday and Lotus Lakes There is real value here. Call for details and ap- pointment today on this new list- ~ Full price $11,000 and very convenient terms. . i WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT FA SPECIAL For you one have always wanted Williams Lake front, but didn’t have enough down, here is your # ffhance. You can buy this at- tractive small but compact home and add to it to eet your needs. As it is there are 3 rooms and bath, breezway ard attached garage. House is livable the year mround and is fully — _ It is located on a 50x180 ith one of the best beaches vs ak- Jand county. 2 boats, motor and picnic table included in sale. The ful price is $10,700 and only $2250 down. See ‘t today. WHITE BROS. Open 9 t 9 for Your Convenience Ph. OR 3-1872 or OR 3-1769 $660 Dixie Highway, Waterford CR: NT LAKE A nice little 4 rm. home with full basement and extra lot. Very livable, but needs some work to complete. For a quick sale. $5,500 with $700 down. ROY KN NAUH, Realtor 2% W. FE 2-7421 Eve OA 83339 NT TO SELL YOUR HOUSE? Call —— H. Myers Real Estate. IRWIN ‘INCOMES e 8 Imme 50x how vacant. ssesion. Located on Johnson Street—A 6 family -ncome, all furnished. A ood déal for a retired couple or a lifetime income. Close Bus and schools. Must be seen t be appreciated LAKEFRONT A 2 bedroom bungalow located bn Lotus Lake that has a beauti- ul setting, has 3 lots, has full basement with garage. in base- ment, mutomatic hot water and heat. Reasonable. GEORGE R. IRWIN, BROKER 269 Baldwin Avenue [Phone FE S-0101 of FE 5-246 _ ROOM BUNGALOW ist Suburban — % acre, close te sew school, basement with hot air furnace, not in perfect ey ut has possibilities. CASH PRICE 500. JEW BUNGALOW est Suburban—Lake privileges, ime mediate possession, 2 rooms, large liv picture window, suto- ‘matic oil heat, and more. ‘39,500, Terms. | J. R., HILTZ REALTOR LISTINGS APPRECIATED §-6181, FE 40334. Eve, FE 2-6587 Special Offer and bath ebay — ay 00x 150 is se has been used as @ odel. ; Pesulariy priced at $6,295. ow be sold at $5,950 with poly Interior | save purchaser money “LADD 3496 Pontiac Lk, Rd. er Cass Lake Rd. FE 2-0207 Dixie H' wy. Drayton Plains _ OR 3-2361 Lk TR. 7 ROOM HOUSE, FULL msement. 44x22 garage on 1% cres, On main hway. 3 mi. south- | =. \east of Rochester. $21,500. $5,000 _{down. OL 2-6705. | FE 4-9584 You WILL AEVER TIRE OF Five room home on one floor in be proud to ju jm inv E I8 INDEPENDENCE lv q a room te hve your shop SS ee i a at ile oy 2k) te .. (iimmenat ncetel dilaa rt eal oe bea ae ee eA SS eee, ee ae we se ee Eas i Us aa = _ | | | § | | {| | } Ht e ‘ j | it , | 7 ad hg " : ‘ 7 ( _| THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTE) [BER 23, 1953. | FORTY-FIVE | | =| ‘1 A Sale Houses 10 Sale Houses a CARNIVAL by Dick Turner For Saie Houses yy For Sale Houses 40 Sale Lake 41 For Sale Acreage 43 | Business Opportunities 4? Y —S ~ if es ——eeeee ~ PAPAL | | WA CRES ON PAVEMENT $28. — if down $10 month, Ph ' aK aeRO atH | ANNETT "erate" | Dortridc = -_.| Partridge ‘IMME DL. ATE PO$S | ARENA ) WO | ' O Or) Business Property 44 ~ Mi and /bath. Newly decpraged || CesT ‘FERS ii eines ~ — IS THE “BIRD|' TO SEE RENT BEATER ioe tat balk 9.950, with) $1,880 down. Hurry on IW BOXING : OFFERS LAKEFRONT . {| TALK To THE ROHT MAN breezeway and attached garage. ; ’ 5 ~ . ‘ 11 lots est suburban location } Ie XCELLENT S] 'E; IN Pontiac Lake . wt 249 | YQU WANT TO BUY A BUSINESS 96,000, full price. Needs 9 litte, | | MI 4 room and large sun porch, Where Lasting O | : work | tnt 2 F AM LY al ‘ fireplace. com nel tur. Satisfaction $100 PER DAY ’ Ss income features TraQms ja no oon fron’ e. Im- . : ster I od - Minit gent room bungalow, ofa: | Eath fer owner 2 cme woh ter THE 1,ARGEST seston, posetsion. [94.008 Is Definite RETURN | | 255 CORNER Cre or tenant, Large “~ car | gargce. eee Ee — $ own - | | Yes it will average over tee cathce. wet ataccuend ea: 2| lots House is newly deqora! NEW |HOMES BUILT OF BRICK STONE per day It's p meek eal eq tet of Pontiac Leok it oyer ell Be Goer Send nies Toley FOR YOUR MONEY Auburn Heights Area Sh ee _. pee ght Just on the ier seement at BL spot we agers b ss and I e as bu or seperate : z NE < * 1 . wn men I - booth: ase rf mo. ; rental units. Full price $14, bad with t Situated on lot 65x220 close) pane.ed recr room with fire- monthly foceme ‘is $515 per : iced at onl 44.200 Ly eas NEAR BUS AND SCHOOL. Nicq § lk y pe Pri y y room bungalow oak floors, P -| .& Substanial down payment to schools. 4 room and bath; place in basement. This home has | The monthly payment is only $30, terms. “ee it today. tered walls, 2 bedrooms. full b VACANT BUNG ALOW 'Drive out Orchard Lake Road ‘a bungslew in excellent condi | all the trimmings to make it jen mo! Therefore you jhave $ auto. hot water. $2,000 down. Dae cay * oem ee ta ee re-| showpiece, Situated on 1% acres mo. income besides payit SUPE ¢: 800, ull price. ant en Middlebelt Road. turn left to 2136 diant ‘beat. 1's car garage.! with 180 fi, of white sandy beach. | off the balance owing. [Fixed em: UPER MARKE {| amd bath, Basement move | Middlebelt d| We will be glad $7,550, terms. ; Ten minute drive from penses avg. $31.10 pe mo: #0 Grbssing around $180,000 per yr 6 ROOM MODERN. You'll like this) ‘P immediately. Price $7 a with to see you there any day from; | An exceller adaress for business | you'll he’: * NET |RETURN. A |very ‘ow overhead operated .neat home on 2 well landscaped | terms. 3-0 pm. (Sunday 1-8 p.m.) | | Crescent Lake Estates or professional man. You must about your monthly payment and super market that has anything- jolts 2 car garage, verv g Situated on fenced lot 110x- ecu ae pea ap ee the us en tnognees of $2.205/84 or bet-| beat 7 = Sat a te ae i vith $3,000 down. y eauty ome. r than per cent net) return @n seen. No he make @ in- copdition. | 933.660 with $3 C ae er | $14.650 i 130, Sere ences boas en next move — call for ap-|. year down rayment alone This estiment in a lot of expensive 20 ACRES 23000 DOWN. Herel is | $14.0: 1 | I et ick. sunparibe, all | |Spustmeat. is the kind of dependable invest-| fixtures—they are jincluded in the »a good farm for a working man. | 975 Baldwiu ..ve FE) 2-46 Is Liow Price al floors "ulate water © m nt to own. | “t consists of |2| lease. Owner has had one serious The house is @ 7 room modgrn Office Open from 9 to 9 al heater screens, storm sash. | | 4: OHN SON Renlt _ leased main street corner stores | ration and must soon go for with 3 pe. bath. part basem4nt, 4 ‘RooM MODERN (HOU When you consider the features ace | Fully ‘insulated, new pump. fm Xo J NSON. Realtor and 2 modern apartménts. WelJl; another. Offered jat just 84.500 oi]; fired, furnace, 4 bedrooms breezeway * garage: Large | | fered in these/three bedroom. face 5 fru’ trees. good garden Ope’ Evenings ‘til 8 p.m. gladly show you, but please make | plus inventory of stock. Easy There: aig Bets bee nt = Small town in Central | Florida. Gacions cauée & poured concrete | plot $10,000, $3,500 down. Phone FE 4-2533 an Appeiatment now, term: caa be arranged. barn, silo, tool shed and garage. Gash or terms. Write! Ponti Our New Isocati Full price $10,500. On good rod, iin! Dasement stone sills . . 7 ur New lpocation ) - =e thor y few minutes drive itp mn | eet mon et enuine plastered walls... se-) \\Vest Side 1704 S. Telegraph Rd.. just ee of | | WARD E. PARTRIDGE, (A | IV ILLAGE TAVE RN nn | | CHARLES as eater Zoned] CL 8 rooms wand | | | Been! renee Se REALTOR, FE 2-8316 | MOD. APARTMENT : ba room a oe T SIDE.‘ Centrally located 5 | . couble sink with tile drain- || 4 . | zer — —— 43 W. Huron St, Without a dou.t; the neatest, Wrom modern home near Pontiac | LINCOLN ST boards . , .|Knotty pine kitchen pact Wy ga ag A floor; | BY OWNER, 2500 SILVERSIDE ; ie = claanent & busiest tavern we've . : . i space in ull basement. o eat, Drive, Silver Lake, 3 miles N. W. INDUSTRIAL BLDG ; High School. Owner leaving State. cabinets . . dining sp car garage. $14,000, $4,000 of Ponti t ; . ever offered. Doing around §36.- Otdy $8,900 with $3,000 down. | 2 #AMILY PAYING EXCE kitchen . . fully insulated a : . lps atiac, Attractive home, 2) 16 miles rom Pontiac on Gr. per year on |a straight bar RETURN on investment 1 aluminum) storms and ereren | ° “tn emediate | mag Ry {ern Trunk R. R., 2 acres, 5000 sq. ft. —10 food. The shfiffleboard pays Many nore to choose from, Drive ($10500) 5 ard Bath dowh paved solid drive ‘this home with , ; e Aegean no a = block. 7 yrs. old. 2 loag-| th, rent. The beautiful apartment pil to our aries Boe eoe over bur | goth x ? c. R- parage 2 oF oe gafene amd. sresee | Walled Lake Area— __ment necessary. Phone OR Bail. docks. one .nclosed |For qui¢k | 1s |6 rooms an! pb th. We urge es 8 arking & ur te) easonable, down p way, , Ow i Terms to ‘suit. $18,500 Cla: ulck action on rt . j | | takes it Might! consider Laie ig and hot water _., @bw 8Y, Acres 1 Lakefront by ner Bedding sieeatecraiee ri dub ar only $14.0 gyal ps sid | eee ee isi 4 bedrooms, large living | OU eed cep, ‘room. 2 fiteplaces, | —cazEstap: eo oom Ww replace, au —= ——+ , - = C AME RON H, CLARD is » fine ‘ocstion Come vut today nfs gt de matic water cach pc heater | _ $16,500 terms. OR 31312, MOTEL SITE WARD FE. PARTRIDGE Realter open peste: qmbar 1 ACRE Fg ed ty and y peal al eat toll Poneman | Sale Resort Prop. 41B Gas station and ree urant, 41! pies Lean note : | he . + : new ipment, - 1362 W. ‘Hyron FE “ CRUNCH HOME, AT DR peting included. 396 ft. front. | —— | ines. ‘Dolng fie ‘busicess "Wah QFFICES 'N PRINCIPAL CITIES : $1,500 DOWN te ateret walle nice te “| e on Pontiac Trail. $21,- | GRASS LAKE -N NEW CABIN on | 20 acres on main highway. Only COAST-TO-COAST : i a ted ' Bt lity and ¥% basement jae | 7. M. Rog. U.S Pat. OFF , terms large lot. center resort area. ad- $13,500 terms or $12000 cash. \ Very nige d bedfoom home, octet ae 5 ee carnage | ioe oe) fg ining “Near Suecs noptt'ei OOTY RUWCrog*YENPER ‘World's Largest Hes iarge ‘ot, shade trees pnd tractor port Good mud¢k s - REA' TY CO. RF*&' TORS R An tt In Gilad $795. $200 down. $25 per 4140 ' parce ese ane hardwood fs val el D CHARLE i “| “Tf feel as though I had already met youse—I've heard so | | 1075 5 A __ ee ad OY oe Cc. | ate Bi Taw oF Office re Daal ray "EM _3-3303 Dedsonaur an n Eve. —FE 2-8316 kit rang th but in pe ae dio lhcien Rea’ Estate Exchange Much about you from my manager!" POST OFFICE 28 E. Huron FEderal 2709 | ier, 7 ‘miles from | Oscoda, | M-59 FRON TAGE Write Pontiac Pr ‘ Ber Hee ee ots 14 earhee 222 Wo buron Ph FE] 40921 _ 2 BUY. TU Se ete | ening Fe anes. hunting and, 4. READY FOR BUSINESS! [TO BUY. TO SELL. w REAL TON A g - | . . Guiek pohsession $8 450 i. 500 Eves FPF 5.7145 or PE 21704] ; wis, tenaa rh To ¥ iE “Bi D ALTOR = Partridge IS THE| ‘BIRD’ to eee. © ORES 0 BRICK OR FR AME For Sale Houses 40 Sale Houses 40 ; ior gareas, shell homie, tool shed. | Pers saad & > = GREEN LAKE ‘OFFICE, woh seb” eaceeUed eomuners aif BE YOUR OWN BOSS - "; Nit REE & Gis 1 | [4 of |? bedrooms. suitt on vour | PARRA AAR Re eee | eee eer ee eee” etc. Must be moved immediately. Homes Cottages (ON GREEN LAKE) section pf Pontiac's fast growipg. aes py hegre upstairs. Maip Office 1565 Union Lake Road ~ interior unf« ished 5 Can be dismantled in sections, WALLED LAKE & VICINITY “HEADQTRS FOR ALL LAKES’ west suburbs - W. Huron Street) , Pi ge it rt Fa etl Branch Office 4305 Geen Lk. Read | Gotu come and see mod IN R for easy moving. Pom Cam oor Bgmes, Lots aod, Estates! (M-50) at Pontiac Lake Rd. ll ote mache baad a ioe : 7 | ap ARE Union Lake udcy PY LAKE LAND REALTY CO. } } : | HAROLD GOODE K J il ] LIZABETH LAKE $250 each. OR 3-8451, 924 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lk. ORMAN F. RICE CARL \W. BIRD, Realtor | ) Bathing. ae 13.000 ‘down. 320° Rochester Rd OL a Nearly new 6 rm. ranch home, _ MA 4-1554 7070 COMMERCE RD EM 3-4412 } , a. { KERGO HARBOR. NEAR | | Goon | . A: 2 well iandscaped lots 895x193, — So aa Line Prom Detroit— WO 5-17744 516 Pontiac State Bidg. } JAC . HAYDEN, Sell / 1, | =RCO etn © Casal Leke, li Svivan \ illage lake privileges. Large livingrm, F INITS FE 4-42)1 Eves. FE 5-1392 (26% = Huron 8t. 5-2264 | «6 | Sem-Bungalow. By owner |S trms,| Charming white frame 2 dininerm, ultra modera kitchen, TWILL PLEASE 6 UNITS COMMERETAL BUILDING 302/60) ves. FE 5-588? pr EM 34 3-5042 | & ban. Small house on same) bedroom bungalow, lovely 2 large corner bedrms & fu ' Lovely 7 rm. home. 5 nice year with full basement. Loading d 'P PARTY Tees bert A tile bath all on one floor. A YOU MUCH A WANTS CLASS C Established 1916 let, 3° rooms & bath. Both gpad’ tile bath, 2 picture win beautiful high & fireproof bsimt a ‘ around Cottages on Lakdefront. Suitabie for any business or li ht bar or high gross tavern. FE | cond. All goes $6,000. Terms. FE ' SOMA. ares se eaters Timken AC oil heat, 62 gal auto. is THE “BIRD” These friendly rooms are liv- Clove wi oo $30,000 full roi Paste 5 Cie m 7 h 54 ‘ -2090 | ' -_ — a he = OXFORD ree 5 bedr m! ho : i! pe Ting basemtat— as Wir, beater, launaivy tubs, pice on : Taty ilarsom | eumpuk iol ce vance m Terms: 1918 M-15 with 164 ft. A ie0 atage on El | R AURANT FOR SALE IN PON- ge ae pent Mor | EAMBERT SCHOOL. hucrep | [Reatraot! Hnuted recreadon | «recreation rm, & Dear. jp bom PENTHOUSE AND | teeing ‘porch, streamlined Kitch: | Pn. Ortonville 132, reverse charges | beth Le. Rd, Owner, FE esupl.| {44 /, Good business “Ress, OA ¢ eakt : H room. 2 ricely landscaped er ena del hen . All ‘t od | _be de rE Reavbitn "bunds, “it pb-embt nd netted Wali, large glee teit | ohm Pruvate."aand.oegch | & priced nent BUSINESS BLDG. | Speedboat, Located on Case Lake For Sale Lots 42! GARAGE BLDG. ‘WEST HURON 2-car gave e, paved street Bedie va eher. ol toe ed Yar nearby. City bus service | \ ‘| its ideal for m doctor, dentist} w't. 80 foot frontage. Priced to | “~~~ ~~~ |_—Ss For: lease, gatage bldg. 16,000 sq hs S “RES NEAR LAKE ORI hegt natural fireplace Only $1,550 (6 ROOM HOMIE and any other professional service sel’ at $23,500. Cal] for appoint- . ; ft.. 2 parking lots. 2 apts. above ft. f.ontage with 46 ft. front- > ACRES NEAR Ideal sub pan 1 Own Watkins Lake Area Located on large corner lot zoned or business. An attractive, built | mnt Now . showroom, available about Oct. |15. Pe: rear abe ae ——_ men tn aati me ot a WALLED LAKE pa years old. 1Bxl2 eras ii cues ere’ set | Seis hema pteodera. all mnt ae te ig Bae N AC ANT! We Price aa oar "Fare foes An additional 110 ft. avail tht ovgaer, duniex of 5 fms. | q be thoice suburban ome -+al | “rhe : : * she : ] Cal lis istace : / ; s . t in a fast develop- Or Sale Farm Frop. 5 | able. and bath cach and additionpl 4 living rm Large picture window | white bungalow — built) in 3 bedrms.. livingrm., diningrm pevepeve mes Yes. the | 2 bedroom modern, master bed- | DOROTHY SNYDER LAVENDER I'f.e bath, lovely kitchen. Generous | 942 ms ro eo brent paren ing area nest Pontiac Yes. : O L L ~~ | to be “fpneeciated Call to ee utilit room with Bendix Dryer. ied pear ius large attic | oe pos ‘Call super market °r ee er cee eons rac | ocellgls iets y niste eae ur ots OW 31 ow i for “appointment | 922.7000 pith | eT eee TMDTIER, | [porsemened terface tm |e ike oath ee pephcung, | Avbeste shingieg inmusted taree| TO SEIT. VOLUMES “RES [otys re dt ves" ma 3.90 , yn} ' “ | one P- cy" Fa PREM: EMBER | eeteaian soon TORN Ky IRWIN] Ss hai cP 8% casuthatdbcam re excrups navcn sowesres) = BY ACRES. | [meget a.tttn, 22 DRAYTON AREA Ali on 1 floor y — ale Ss garden soil : + anytim Thurs. -bedrm west suburban home BEAUTIFUL. 7 RM. M car garage City bus serv- <= er ae WIDE FRONTAGE- Cgnvenient to Pontiac and Flipt,, - rooted. 1 EIN Apt = Srey "n living r¢om home, all bamt.. an DE a lice. Owner transferred Rea- son Marr ee aiseut 2 MOD. HOMES, SEML EAST SIDE Po WOODED S/acres tillable with brick 4 fully insulated and ot! furrace. stane. approx. 3 acres., FE 485 sonable qown payment ; r FE 2-180! OR T Ee “OR FARM 2 bedroom modern, lovely kitch- HOLLING ON A er bedroom Lome. Modern kitchen, C MERCIAL BUILDING. BRICK farge heated 2-caf garage With bef. 5 to 9 p. m. a | Phone FE 24031 /E¥e OR TRADE FC abies en, basement with recreation! , 00 Fo (WIDE. (OW AB S605 bath. full basement with joi] and Masonrly Construction, space (or hobby | shop, Alf] in | Pioneer Highlands \ i 2 fine homes on 1 acre of garden Space, adequate closet space, 4 aes ee $170 alas fired steam heat. 60° hip roof paved main street. 2 Stores, Al condition Large lot [G1 A FE Faultiess 6 rm. white frame 0 |e | Mand just outside the city limits | targe living room. Close to stores HUNDREDS TO” pte al oe eee 4) 4 foom igpgrtments inciud- resale at $12,500 with $4/000 sto Inome. 3 eure se eee | aa a of Pontiac, Owner lives in obe| and bus. New home neighborhood. BUT THE? ARE GOING "RAST. ideal Ey toaie ou pyye =i ng stoves, reldgerators, beds. ios we HAPPIN ES eva, High on, Besemgat, || EAST SIDE. 1]. ma ittinat"utes” alteeperige | HOT dom pevmemt | Down PAY ARTS AR LON. AS Oe) iets Tard asi, Heme) pon) TE . ef : "it enly de Larze 7 room home completely : . anise . rf PAYM s I Se Metecth. gt bette | | TGSS i ote” guttes arated fe ROS not Ties rotted gar aw st seat | | WHITE FRAME 1c Papp FLOVD KENT, Realtor || 11, Delos a | lve . : porc 2 “v7 . 1 at H . . Gents Maltin toad condor | NORTI L215 \¢ RE = | (IR Pronk paE Priced. | Ei" phetercks W.qoo with terms | CURSE wu here's wd ork) | BUNGALOW sao Pecuac te. na | Mele etalinens FSA Y| “BUD” NICHOLIE + Full basement with gas Beat. = 9 BarpwIn AVENUE | | home. | ‘ROLL. G. PORRITT value you ant beat for ony ee J pelreem hse ae Corner Cass Lake Rd. FE 2-0207 Real Estate bbe Insurance Garage, Near bus ~iihe. Only Biacktop road. with 4 toom! 2 bed: | 7 CARROLL G. JWT bg ren +e - Ten” toi ng Ropar pan cates ence, 4286 Dixie ‘Hwy. Drayton Plains we BAVE FARMS OF ALL KINDS. | 49 Mt.. Clemens FE 5-1 $9,000, ter | | ,foom home.’ gak floors, “Ohi” heat. | $1,200 Down | 26'4 West Huron FE 27124) pot too far ftam Pontiac. Yes, & full basement. ofl heat OR 32-2361. “| Some real batgains, PW. Dinnan NEW MODERN SERVICE 8TATION " ONLY $1250 DOWN. In smal} rilral ‘sppce for, 4 additional sionere | Vacant Located near [in- te me ee ibe sh FOR . and hot water, Lot 56x140. The OpcHARDVILLE 8 U B D1 V1z- Se ik ve bed rage Boon oo et age po ‘village porth of Pontiac 4854 Gitered at $6800, 9.000 down | | (COW Jr High 6 on black lop large family ge ROSEMARY LAKE price? Only $7100. sion now open on 1# Mile Rd. ',) #0, ACRES FOR TRUCK GARDEN: | a. op el oa = fre . ae building on lot 99x165. Here ts wo H jstreet. Insulated 2 bedroom Modern. Gas heat. Near schools ide “EY AS ete elas ' Pp 2! ing, paftly muck. Located at 750/ sowrooms rm. modern living del for h me ti THE MONEY-SEE IT; |pungalow with oil floor fur- bus & lake. 150 x 100 all fenced. IT’S BEAUTIFUI > mile west of Northwestern Hwy | Pennell Rd, Imlay City, Rte. 2, Guarters. All new, stock & equip- s @ chance en oA . TODA |macé and gas water heater | $5000 dn PE 4-7156 | : ae ‘ : & Orchard Lake Rd. All lots Mich (No Sunday calls) . ‘|, mpnt including gopd used wrecker or combine hom = usi |Full’ price $5,000 | ~~; Situated right on the shore of a | ] I I } T1eES . 12 to 1 acu, Lovely home sites. | NEAR Mas. | Aj} at wholesale jinventory. Rea- Ideal for pouaee? urnace : VEST SIDE | | a“ | beautiful small Jake that has fish b. ge the owner. Tom Finnegan, | 84 ACRE MODERN. A 5. | sohable rent with! a lease. If you or electrician. Total price ghly ; ’ * - : | . and everything. Just a half mile SAVE REAL ESTATE FEE - | Suchy Realty, Ortonville. Ph FE arp interested inj a good paying $3750. Call for further or yoRAR Poutiac GOLF CLUB John Kinzler, Realtor | . sutgide the | Pantiec city, mi, Co-Operative Realtors Exchange FE 2-2416 | 44-3142. 1 y iness, inquire at 3389 Dixie | ning of this large YB) 4-3525 | tiful s all floor, oh weg & a er ar Cas 2 a a EXT GOOD SOIL. | _ nWway. “FL OYD KEN T. Realtor | e yoom bee Eee, 2 bedroom fem! 670) W. soda ee tH FE, 43525 | plasterd a gg ea eeerel eae! FE 2-0474 Open Evenings | LOWS es ACERS. EK oul ‘aad barn, | ¢ ’ Lk SUPER SERVICE 24.West Lawrence | i livin eae Sith paraeas Ch-operative Realtors Exchange | : y de-orated inside & out, car-|10 ROOM HOUSE & FURNITURE. | Large well restricted homesites in| other buildings. Needs paint.| °7 #E'5-6105 | Oven Eves.| firep'ace, stairway to floored attic \\ ASHIN | peted wal. ta wall in living room,! 347 N. Broadway, Lake Orion. Wateriord Twp. Shallow wells. $25! School bus at door. 2 wells, qne mee ay off periuds (when you oper- Next to Consumets Power | | with space for 2 additional reoms. | 3 GION PARK | full basement. MMtomatic oil fut | gown. : : flowing, $15.50. 4 mile north | of your own Galf station. Call t— | ba sa Foon Vitor: (2 berm | Fm 2663! an } nace & large lot 160x135. If “you | : rrr 1, CG. HAYDEN, Realtor Ortonvilfe on M-15 then 3 miles t. b Col oil Co FE 20173 We ANCH HOME | | | oil heat dtprms "and keveenst | want the most home and the most | WILL BUILD Ar a Cait W.. corner of Groveland and Thay- e _rea) oppartunity for you. IX. | Landscaped ot 10u130°. offered ai STARTLING VAL UE S | | enjoyable living $13.500 will buy, 20x40 ranch type home on s \3 a yo ae ill wae 35042 | er. Owner, M. Mason. Mobil Ga St tio Brand new 2 peepee ‘4 saree ye $10,500. terms. GOOD NEIGH, 3 be room brick ranch homes with Bedroom call righ now for an appt. lot. L.aterior complete. $3995. yeas Vf he ei Fo Sale Land Cx t ct 46 | 8 ation acre. tat ae aieeat yell & septic BOR4O00D ; 1 ay ot oe, pa in village of WARD FE. P ARTRIDGE _ Nr, aavkcs aad Moceateer Ras., See Eisen dis letatcelebb te be ra For Lease tank installed. You. finish th¢ ip- A cee LS ts AES esl VL R h H ANRD Wy Fe ‘ 1B, Ad R ] Located on U8.-10 neighbor- 5, ul rice, 94,500, 9006 down. | 7°, Buy-to Sell-To Trade | sibule’ |dinette. tile bath. plastered | CiiG ome REALTOR, FE 2-8316 ams ed ty Jane . owAy COMPANY NEW HOUSE, SOLD IN APRIL “obG° gs transient business® Low Mane G G ‘WHITCOMB r | Bi rt gt IT 1 as heat, solid concrete | , L - } - J | ior Sll,iuy, $3,9c9 Gown, $75 per! inventory Available immediate) ),REALTOR | ar ve ft. lot, sewer, paved | Finish on extcrior only, 1'2 miles | 43 w. Huron St. Open Eve. 7 ta 9 382 Auburn FE 43393 Detroit Office, WO 2-0700 month. Land contract balagce! phone Mr FE 2-0103 ae PE 4.7530 streets, tathing beach and boat| West of airport corner of M-59 ‘ 2 DOWN | Pontiac Office, FE 2-0440 | ROW $8,000. Will discount. Phone can ee - ae! e. Buy direct from builder and Willians Lk Rd $450 down | —. eT eo Fas $850 DOWN Tele. Rd. mear Orehard Lake Rd. | J. A. Taylor Realtor, FE 4-2 Money to Loan ~ 49 WE! HAVE HOUSES & iweohias z yts. exp 1980 Warwick {| 0D your lot. Prices range from | 4 ROOM. PRIVILEGES ON 213 room nearly modern. Well in--~ pig) LOTS ~~ 100x200 , “| y to a n all- parts of the a | | Rd. nr. Or-hard Lake Ave. FE 3.695 up lakes, good fishing ety | sulated. Very comfortable small | . I nn (State Lhoensee Lenders) _Dinna: & Son ‘0 | REALTY |CO.. REALTORS Ee FE 2.2105 e | 3 DOWN _trict. . Owner—Ph. FE 5 pres Darel! basceienienwith tit Nr. Auburn and Rochester Rds. LET YOUR S$$H$S ~~ aad CO-OPERATIVE MEMBERS - Open Sun. or $350 DC —— — co. * s 7 | $203 to $495 i TEAGUE FINAN Open Evenings ‘til 9 — yg ee I sl ores sere 24x53 cedar shakes bungalow in mulch Tyco at only $3,750 for! SUDsSON BRADWAY COMPANY WORK F “OR YOU INANCE CO. oN EX Tbe OR TO BRANCH Sy LVAN N SHORES | good west suburban location. Lake ON PAVEMENT ; soba gl sof = es | 20014 S.|MAIN: post. OFFICE 13 | pelrm. tanch type. Complete in| Privileges on Crescent Lake. Com- a ; | ATTENTION CONTRACT BUYERS . | — —— |" ‘every detail Hae 3 car Antashea | Picte on exterior with studding 4 rm. with utility rm. large lot Tele. Rd. mear Orchard Lake Rd I have several excellent invest- ROCHESTER, MICH. | I.E BARON SU B. | gatage, cnclosed rear terra¢e, out-| JP vey pace ee the inside. | 3095 down. Mew 24235 two bed | tor garden, bousework ra gee 2 LOTS, HUNTOON LAKE SUB- ments. Large discount, new prop- LOANS $25|TO $500 Sm. 5 rm. house, 2 lots, fenced, uobr Dar-p-que. lanascaped) arcai- | _Smmet ate pastes: room bungalow. Exterior all com;j; $6,950 with $1,850 aad 7| {een net pipem eee Sah Oe ee “ AUTOS Best Buys | near school, owner. $1,250 down. tect’: yatd, with dog run & baby F C W d C [ pieted. Full bath, automatic tot | CLEAN AS 4 SUT dqy. Call FE 4-4525. LIVESTOCK | | Feast Aare ed ee ee ee ‘Ladd's Special| propel Soa, : ; ttn Na — 4to- sink, all interior stu « elec- ery modern bedroom = gabe | SACRIFIC 30 day possession. FE REALT ‘RS tric wiring. 22’ livin | i 3 ~ . g room. Vés- low. Large living room Ee | g Today 5 room house in F ham. | —- = _| "Since Open oa Mt tr ine tibule entrance. ‘Priced at only ture window Up to date kite en 100x150 ft, Just «ff Sashabaw Rd. | usse oun | Dining room Large kitchen voxis | is ’ veces | $5,695." 4 & dinette. Tile bath. Full base Close to bus serv’ec. Good drain- REALTOR screened porch. Outdoor _ grill. | BIRMINGHAM. 2 BEDRMS. UN- ment. with gas heat, Landscaped! age. Easy to drive your own | 412 W. Huron 8t. FE 4-4525 » ROOMING HOU SH Landscaped. Aluminum «torms. | | a 2nd. OS as Se, screened $1950 down 3 bedroom home iin = bla Hea near gene) well, One at $475, $50 dn. __ Open Eves, ‘til 9, Sun. ‘til 5) C evi L C -} c ; j | stores . ome you Ww . a i. $1500 DOWN | | Sh re Regs te, _ $9,800 | Brill, built in 1042, Pave. $1800.| furnace’ aiumimam’ storm sath; be. proud to’ own. Only $10,300 | I.. C. LADD Business Opportunities 47 ‘epee d apes Immediate possession op so EER HI } Terms. Immediate possession, and screens, Large 75x150 ft. lot, | with $3,000 d | 3496 Pontiac Lk Rd ———ararrEr~E—n—nme—” 30 ne Lawren¢e FE 2-713] this newly redecorated older BY OWNER. | RMS | 3 BEDRMS. TBebutitnl Se at ndes featur- | Kurth Real Estate MI 4-7676. An excellent home at the law) CRA\\ FORD AG ENCY | ee 1 Cass Lake Rd. FE 20207 FRIENDLY |SERVICE home. All large rooms onth 2-7990 . ing) 5 ropms. e dining L. 2 $500 DOWN | Price of omky 7.960 | REALTOR | oven eves. T™ Loe GROCERY F ft HF : contain: 4 large rooms of: = co ; | |bedrooms, kitchen with * tning At Crescent cake Brand new, 4 * 2141 Opdyke FE 46617: FE 41549 = ist ah : , = CASH HAST! fhe fir: floor, 4 bedrooms | CR ESCENT LAKE ; space sliding doors, stairway to rooms, bathroom and utility. Out $4,000 down. “Little farm.” $2 SMALL HOUSE CLOSE IN. GAS, | BUILDING LOTS sslenee ORCS | Ge SO to $500 quickly on car. far. pr full bath on the second:- — stodern furn. 4-bedroom home. 15 x unfinished attic, cement drive side complete. You can finish i gd Api gts lr ig cl ; lights, & stool, new cu 2 ree: Warneee £ laa - i niture or no.: We've been making foor, « bedrooms on th pall . iCompare our home before buy- the inside and save the differs oil furn., modernistic ere: cup-/; ton areas The leading business in this Michi- friendly .oans sipce 1906. Phone raft Basement wit | 27 living room; also rental unit in y lastered walls. Beautiful boards, Deh decorated, oil heat- Tm “8 " {1 ard floor speak hs . | rear: lot 80x318. A good buy at | ‘98 , ence. Call us right now p lke er, & drum included. Paved street HOLMES-BARFRAM gan ‘seaport’ city of 10,000. Es-| 0. come im today) Provident Loan H. A, turnace and gas hot 39.500; substantial down | 6 room modern, ‘good east side rooms, also out bidgs. 28x46 Small down paymen Di tablished in same main street jo- and | Savin :« Society. 4 West Law- water: 1 car warage. vot . “st 850 DOWN 6) ROOMS MODERN location. Paved street. $7.950 ful) cement Gor 4nd = ove a ROSE | MCLARTY o. sine: apprl - ' ' catjon for orer as years. A ae rene St Pontiac 2-9429. shade Nd x * - 11 Immedias ’ rice. 5 es, berries a Be i / &vV ss. © ,_3-800 _ ng) community w many 5 lao eae siding. Located between Sad | | o.bedroom modern home on corner } ‘| bedroom) Sone ahh lites ton l tc. § acres of excellent soil : 23162 LOTS FOR SALE NORTH OF | tries. All the best of equipment. $25 to $500 Now! inaw and Paddock in good Jot: stoker fed heat. basement & | 16x20, full basement, oil heat, oak J. C. Hayden .' hd 1600 Stanley Ave. FE 41315, =| Name.your own terms — good/ Here is the cash joan service you tocation. Call now for your garage. Priced at $6,950. | |floors. 2 car garage. $9260 with $30,000. Large 87 ft. brick ranch LITTLE FARM ; leape. 1312.) have been ooking for jsppointmeat koveeellihia ting | Het be e R . Yy ll teresa! 26'2 W Huron St 5-2264 bungalow in exclusive Bloomfidid Ss | GET YOUR LOAN ene Ghee Pie ceils | ood PULL, F Eis" rer gis or Ei Soa | Eiticee” ine Tioouces” Late fons iaremeenate sent) | TAVERN IN ONE] VISIT : fee Eves - or 119 ULL PRICE ) < r new subdivision. me on | j S PICTURE WINDOW ED 236 N. sagina’ FE 4-4091| | 4 room modern, full bath, lot 60x BIRMINGHAM nop OR iteniace, | Bttached breezeway and two car BEAUTIFUL LAKE FRONT paved r¢., cose tp flores. schools | BP. Cope ttGN ° ban 52 mode! = OP TT OWNER. § RMS. BATH, FULL | | 204 lake iprivileges oo Cass Lake.) alum. self storing storms | and vee Bpdropms “very attrac: gual Mg and transportation. Large 100x400 s t \ | Feud title, tnt ta, timemes fone CUTIE | Sdsoulint ‘aia Meat Lat inees | (Tem | screens. Penced, beautifully land- ive home Attractive. two level, three} ft. irects. | Buy now and get. OnLy paeuaW in Sawa — Ps pe og aoek aryl Mrandiuawkhomelcentainin Gar : { scaped, trees $14,500. Kurth Real . i bedroom home with 70° ft. on four cd Real investment . fe. pr rand ni ome c hi m bus line, near school. stores. |. Bstate’ MI 4-7676 1. BROWN, Realtor jake. Full bath and half bath,| for your hae. ; truckload of new equipment jn- and) reduce youf monthly pay- : (@ rooms and bath plus util __Leaving state 323 Raeburn. Cole th | ' | large and massive ledge stone y\’ ni) | stalled this year. Business. bidg ments by as much as %. Loans y room,-Contains large liv; ; | Levee 3 *Y es A on yard, West Side ; 1362 a Huron Ph. FE 2 “9 | fireplace beautiful summer kitch- Fe Fe Ht, BROWN, Realtor | with living quarters, and an acre made on furniture, signature, ear rook bg eeinielapy on | epeaking of bergniee, here's one for 'Member Coop Real Estate Ex j en in basement with view of W. Huron Ph. FE 32-4810 | 0. po rae Pern a ao he ps other securities. Up to 18 months ciel . lake. Exceptionally large living ota OF LOTS with LAKE PRIV- | OW! to repay. lud ' only $5,000 down with an income NEW SEMI FINISHED HOME QN : B : Seo Can be Tandied ohnson | Russell Young | ite": fear, Si epartmens | “tenced tot Immediate possessiga.| Worae™ Gu neck eurictel loca] efits “ane Uiion "tate “Bast | PAYMENT AiEgr PART BOWS) OAKLAND LOAN CO. ree an r rooms, a own. q J z ul prom ‘ciding. Tenediale po | REALTOR rented paved street, full bas¢- By owner OR 3.8446 how i $16.97. terms. Consider —— Ted” uate bigs Pontiac wg Rey ane! tka ty a | 5| ment w ree furnaces. . a a ©. OPEN SUN- Patent eS eatim ttertel tase hanced ses" .on. | | coubmian wararss 412 Open ange rg on as aeeet eg ag to sell Fa + FOUR BEDROOM BRICK DAYS Phone MA 4-1554 ST ATE. WIDE “pre Beautiful Ranch-type 3 bedroom pen me NS | PONTIAC only Don't pass up ate eEvERAL LOTS NEAR —~N 20 ACRES home with attached garage. Sit | VACANT © LAKE | FORTIaC ! opportunity. Call bs today. Ve a henve Rana’ Modern. Longfellow Schoo! $350 and up. BOOT Crate BANE BLDG: * $1,300 DOWN uated on well landscaped lot. com- 569 Overton, permanent home with Vacant, Lots streamlined kitchen bedroom and | 825 down. also some tp North end | Pontiac Office, J. Landmesser, Mgr ane ihe pletely furnished with modern up | lake privileges, 2 bedrooms, large W> have a number of well located chanel) full bath down three bedrooms eff Walton Blvd FE 41582 on FE 5-0087 q 4, A 20 acre beauty) with 7 to-date furniture Featuring | iiving room natural fireplace, full| City and Buburban lots. If. inter- anc full bath up, fireplace, wall- WILLIS M SREWER wells plus flowing spring St. Charles Kitchen, ledge rock 6.8 Lom i ested in building let us show you to-wall a aan en Roosevelt Hote! PE 4-818) | *URNITURE STORE — 3 BLDGS.. iSmajl modern 5 room hom¢ fireplace with Heatalator. Flag. , | 0®fement with automatic heat, ti ocat ay _— wall carpeting. gas hest, 2 car) Eves & Sun - EM 3-4998 ) With 2 houses, big stock new and " ‘mice and clean 30x30 barn stone porches. Must be seen to! | De@utiful big lot with oak trees “CG dR $500 DOWN ateee * nice shaded and land- = ‘used. Good business. Terms or j6x30 corn crib. grainary be appreciated. 1 $7500 only $1350 down or 7 tmpstea ealtor scaped lot ¢ LT. 188 ON E. BIDE $250! trade, $30,000 Curren Palmer, ‘ehicken house, l'a car ga .? | | make offer or trade. 102 E. Huron 38t- This is @ real deal to some- fash each. FE 4-8694. E. Gr River, Brighton, Mich. bin rage. Located north of WEST SIDE ‘ || | DEAL WITH DANIELS! FE 48284 | | Eve FE 2-1317 = peed aged ge AP tng eee eee cive (\ THE COUNTRY NSEAR| Phone 7-241: purth a iat calinaaen Mig md Rochester on main pave Large -oom all modern home| | WEbster 3-7045 7 ROOM NEA! us city on « targe restricted RESPONSIBLE PERSON o_o . road. Really priced to sell. wit, basement. Close to at | 10406 W. Chicago, Detroit _ ‘ Pore MEN AR Fi ben Slee ae at giestiee haa ue Sve’ Pmt pee ghd Part homesite tm Waterford Hil) Bs-| maie o: female, from this area, = AE oc dggeted Ming bil; sickness iBee thir today , School and city hospital. Only price. at only 00,97. Five complete|, {#tet.. Convenient terme ar.) wailed to service & collect from ; F . . $2,000 down. ~ i rooms with plastered walls, oak || £8 Por infcrmation cal! OR | automatic vending machines. No d : - OAKLAND LAKE > TACI ar I OVE LAN WEST SIDE. $1.950 DN floors, living room and \oee i selling, age not essential. Car, Pr mpt. Frie dly Service 3 large landscaped lots go | 7 2188 case Lake Rd, Keego | drase oe ea aa other rooms sceaker te size, | BEAVTIFUL CORNER LOT. i0dx | ‘reference & $600 working capital If YOURS AT/ALL TIMES wis tide’ S sooer luamacu- | efront. 4 room modern, built 3-8662 Be sure ‘to investigate this attached garage ~ P.elkiwa? ond a micknyy Drive. ade 7 to 12 neure weekly inte bungalow with full bath | | with only $1900. down Has sere the wes side west aew wider wens Te aan bere | "#2000. $1 620" tates, \Gecritice | POT ise’ Toit Fee lockl tater: | Ong) Dasinens, te Bigg ino ‘ 7 “ as r ! ie e a (4 or or loca intjer- stairwa to large attic garden with strawberries. Hos | | Pp. pie DOW N shopping center Has full consider trade for three bedroom | _® "42.000. $1 020 Gown. MI iT _6-0191. view give full rticulars, eee, uals their with space for 2 additions! | chicken coop Located 15 mi. north fninediate ossession | 2 bed m, modern home basement with auto gas heat — $25 DOWN. Write P| 0. Box $21 Mpis 1 modey'p probleme Let us ele vee. pp ly —_ ime ten we yi of Pontiac, just off Dixie Highway. a 8 ete oe oe. | aren down. 2 oerms full bath, end hot water. a lot that DORRIS & SON i nie kth Gk eews Bel | Ratiiek Mins. Wad one 5-8121.) Write er eall ec - ig suburban north end : a ae also features a car ge- : j ; IN N. PERRY 8T :ter Garage and lake privi- A! JOHN SSON. Real j almost new. Has plastered walls. 4 acres. 6 , Modern. Auto- rege. Be the early bird ‘On REALTOR CO-OP MEMBER ae Ae en 1 mie to City. a 9 sal ha On ON. PEERY Et. HOME & AUTO LOAN }leges on Oakland Lake. eallOr | | asking price of only $6,000/ with | matic oil) heat, garage, chicken this first rum home. 732 W. Hu ron Street \ Hhigidig Seg aoe meine i cave: Shown by ap- Opem eves 8 pa p.m, | 6 eer & READY om $7,995 ol Phone FE 4-1557 0 3-2925 RIGHT OR V ALUET 3-4529. oad — “ci 3 | FOR OCCUPANCY | ey SFE eres me WEST SUBURBAN WE BUY. SELL *AND TRADE \= 8. Ri i ol __FE 6-003 ' opporronity FOR 1 NORTH SHIRLEY | Our New Location Off Baldwin, 3 bedroom bome} full ¢ Pangus 1919 M-15 75 OPZN 2 TO 5. BRAND NEW, 50-FT. LOTS, REAB, LOW DOWN | knowledge o! manufacturing plant “¥ . | | 17048. Telegraph Rd.. Just South of | | basement, full bath, oil forced, Ph Ortonville 132, reverse charges $89. modern 2 bedroom bungalow. Full , * payment, and terme. FE 42387. | to buy interest in going concern | Hou Another FIRST that you | | Bioomfield Fashion Shop i= heat. Needs finishing, but well | Here is that neat 5 room basement, Insulated. No mort- ie LOTS ON KENNILWORTH J AVE. | Wit. avve) backlog. write Box 63 must see. This home is clean | i MOVING J (AND MUST SELL § ry {| | the asking price of $6,000. | -9 frame on almost an — gies cost. Possession at once, || FT 5-899.. ' Pontiac Press. ee Se ra car laks 8 ales | | Francis EK. “Bud” Miller $7,950 Slut tncking [ter. me bess a ‘AUBURN HEIG % MILE OFF FOR RENT-2,000 SQ. FT.. CE- tke siue Gees plus 1 north uf Lageer..2 lots, new rock Realt $2,000 DOWN full basement, 1% car ga- Auburn ‘Ave. on 8. Squir rel ment f.00rb, Overhead crane, guit- laiva Kalveom ante tel well, $2,300 and take over $35 ealtor 3 bedreon) west side near the e and the flower garden nt |{__ Rd. 100x280. FE 17-0342. | _ able fer heavy manufactur. fidor. ‘Dry -vemot. with gas monthly payments. Bal. $1,300,| Member Coope rative Realtars Core, agg Ayer Neri isin. “There ere-more than Elizabeth Lake Estates’ ee ing. Write eer 69. Pontiac ae heat and gas hot water. 1 Ga aire "Nort a pe } Daily tet pm. ‘ heat. One car garage. Taxes just enough ee der te — Attractive 2 bedroom home with BEAUTIFUL gogo tw. eg mies Se : —— | Sunday 1 to $ p.m. $78.00. Now rented for $85.00 per po rr » = oil heet, automatic hot water, ee ee ices deen P Breet. 19 Joslyn FE ans month. Ypur payments $55.00 per Grails corms — screens. encteoes 2 LOTS, 105x279, CORNER 0 5 RM. H WITH RESTAURANT . . . : Customer Parking Space in mo. ~ : yard. eg space, de- MARLING' ee ti : NORTH END "RM. RANCH TYPE, 6 cei PD GILES REALTY Co, lightful kitchen. bath, lake wine AxD Ww er USED CAR LOT FOR RENT OR A REAL Large 3 bedroom ished good location. FE soe. | $7,950 REALTOR toe rea a Gl, Als lease, signs on, electricity, 1% vf EYE OPENER famece, ocittomatic oA pa org CE 1 $1,500 DOWN 82 W. Huron FE 56175 ' . | For Sale Acreage 43) car garage. FE 22600 eve. — _ || ‘excelent east side location Wel of eet con | | E ad cake a eles Geen 1s Want to Raise Chickens 1 ach business. priced: for ick enue. | 748¢ and. just about the most im- PONTIAC “REALTY ie) 4.2544, ~Ydeal for the working couple or | Bere is « fine : one 11 ACRES , 25508 or FE. 4-435, : ee eee SS sin Dudtie family without car. Carpet and acre parcel, house for 2 pore hes) © good high| ; er some e. Contains : « a incl. Full basement, approx. chickens, spick 10 acres of 4 big cheerful rooms on the SMALL | - Low Swe >| Ta, RSET ate 2 barons feat’ one lone waenge small yard. pee ple Amgen -y Any exceilent garden soil. Located 1 . Place a first oo bedroom _payment FE20729. fireplace, large screened-in) front Your payments 964.50 per month complet.. with full beth, oi! heat, | fille from Clarkston. §2.500 bath. y bed- larg . automatic water. . trade euity id rooms -on floor. | ; ye wy == Be $7,500 yourself, ech wis Son Dee in house or free and ait, BEE Bees Seca es | | Y, ‘ton >lains! |FRaisi! { om DOWN Dotelsbn Park a sy meseey Sf arom ant gas onl su } 6 y z _ n¢ Pontiac Pon tis water. 1 Pos- Located *o "QVERLOOKING ROCHESTER mew | raring: Wem h ceree of lead] = wew | renen home, tive| Brand New Hi : are really ‘ae, deve a ue a wuy- pvt ma sig home has a. oe ee ee house. Duilt in 1940, neome & beth, lec 3 ee ee dee eee 1TOuUX 1CKS ' bev aappotntes in ta —— riichen men i 7 "2 bed. witches, iS en with terme, ‘hak nee cutomgete hot water, lake “OR DL 5 : an (they're y rfect to see it now nace ° e = leum). Automatic ‘oll heat. just 3 2s, Pully plastered walls, | ANXIOUS TU OF % Edw. M. Stout. Realtor | ™ aka to. stores, a i acres -mi, east of Ari Gres —dual ° 2 tant ’ church, yhound bus. e toes . on U.8.23, — Good leca- R TIN. af nage Ne hata ws over a 4 — one workman- ws oe, oe trade with | month more — our terms . Britton | A LERRIFIC BA BARGAIN G . SE besee Hick t | transferred from state, side_home oe oe oe | Sete Coe If you have a want, let a we, & bam bain buneslo, 1980, Mies0. built iroux & icks reasonable offers. at parece. Tale fe i 10 ACRES | am: Ad fill it! ib — Mem, Boban ben ve gore land. | 4380 Dixie Hwy Drayton Piaing| pay down. | omy piss » ear Waterfora.| OT rent, hire hel Storms & screens, posses-, OR 30701. _ * © BUD” NICHOLIE ome eee! cover loss, di IM WRIG iT ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES 3 PAUL A. KERN, Realtor "0 See dows. 222 8. Telegraph FE §-0603 ment turn. $8500. FE 5-7106 199" Sto 737 | Baldwin YE 5-0775 | ‘ Le . / , ‘ t ] ) 7 é { e (| { s 85 Sale Used sie For . 55) _ ES | 23, 1953 O) A Se SHED | [BER Cars LA Ls SEPTE) lle Used ~ TI A EMBER a Y, a. —“T O | EPTE} . = EDNESDA Used Cars 55|_ B he p N AIL CLEARANCE = TIA sed Cars H | . , , —— PON U e } ak THE _For Sale T LE ED oT DWILL 8 CUSTOM oe ee eT 8 “ n's Red SA L | 5 GOO CARS ,49 FOR | ee a: ate | CARS Riri beara R } STA) . —w, . bu PE Ww oe) “Not a hes ‘ost re 7 FORD SU Led a H EVERY | ld AN MT 2 sep ie _ Service G WIT AR | Cars. O YOUR DEALER e IX Auto - wh SED C Il clean rou ther BUY fA D W Y-S 49 | 7 G MAT . US “D | area ive y * Mo RON y KNO ORT bE ESTI RS ASE these giv this d F "OU ro F Loan pnders) REPAIRS, EE OF CA RCH: T to iving bar y seer See nae lan cle ving i Hub A License a Oo ; A ul 7 oO SE EE BRAID ura bane {UNITY inter mae d with K her eee. pee NE "Cage at Wee PLETE = COMN RS time ss | pic have in talker cehates 1946 cela C ) Pho f IC ) TORS ar m , ed PQ} S CON ERV MO and Count RD FOR ON S ishing heater d see ith glee FO LETS ISI ae eee ios too. y an el with id VRO ( COLLI Ce Rater les € radios. | today je at pus ke CHE WAITIN “Olner Hto a sm Costs Ar pe values we m3) She sa oney ECIAL! Oliv ene N TH the — —w "till hm Borrow TET a ae ring arelif mud car P - You x 500 sar Rar a Forgotten cer ein tha's honey a mil | CR cyl oD, : : - tha l’s m4 om | car, eylin aH N CARS C 4 | P. M Habe d see $ 2 , | tases Asawa PE D , J. . * ie D TOP Caer S WANTED — Z : U Save | Dr. Sedan Just ¢ ND 1949 day "500 ae he Yo ‘47 Ford 2 Sedan ne ROLET ° To our GLEY aid fo an g4-3588. r ~ 4 Dr. l S CHEV] IACS rotect me BA dollar ee eee PE CARS j / a LER ; udson oupe ! PONT JTHS zr agathiy ‘payasen eee i 7033 mes Se ’ zd HRYS iimas-| 47 H n Club C 4 " LYMOU crea C 7 NER vee eo ree Te eee ost2a| 38 Buch Sede tis tester PECIAL! . Motor Balen rae Posts = for int ees I, Buic : Heate tingly 1. YER as ig thon Be A uk™ you 4 IreS ... \ " 48 iac Sedan . Radio & ic S RD BU [ANCE CO. Om angi ae se ee" EV "48 Pontiac Sedan “Tydeamat A 495 do acs. 12 0 | . & . | 5 hla GINAW & HU Motor aN f 2.2066. les r, hes been 55 ‘S] CH 2 tone 6 Dodge 2 Dr dan. | 4 5 $ ‘CORNER N. BA Y DOW N fe M Motor Sa re alk? Brothe Used Cars ol R&H, $1545/ oy d 2 Dr. Se te | $79 $9 e eh gee se? | Whe apg’ “3 ean | le ate ee 6 For ible | iD ’ ON ivin = hou a- M la OR ‘‘Does hour! { Sa Be oe rert ’ N ’ NO Pees a oS rag nel P een last half 55 _For, ’ s| gray vee f6 ntiac Conve n | HREE "50, 51 iw 53s “Beer a 2s VALUET | to “ra bina lead Sires Bargains: BUICK 95| "46 Po hh 2) Dp neds La ra “CHEVROLETS - feiaie T OR FE a |<. Ww af ot aoe — r Car r Sale + | ‘48 al : at i / Fo oe out RIGHT ilers Sadat cal ae ewe cesar ee | at Hwee 6 47 Buick sae anes hes ara ousetra aning Benue 6056 ARL R. | ; ns Super, R& 47 Sedan | oors A EDN oe le *| Top 8 ; a th D — fig | pee en ce LLIM Miciiag Ss | isa | nue Choice NODGES Te geet SCRAP 3-166. JUNK C R ; S Pp R& ’ 4 d Se a Yo 5 , D ! TOPS Pa eas RE SARDED mod- | wrp: CKED ce ah 121 “M EALE | Fine ‘52 ief. dix. 8, 1.895 49 For Sedan | $99 HARD IRYS R. ane mar A trailer, all mod: WIO wae 340 Ba R PAR ; RD D ARS Chief. oe $1, ker S | d ROUR Ser ae rlette trailer railer | 3-947 Fo 230. FO YE, 2 dr. . oan. deba - ME : OY OLAMEK ae ema cdcare 5 ‘OVER 31 ee Carry | Disc ape ara ste hydra. . The cuerrcce Seta | Special "ERTIBLES PAC YD mae Pater 2.) eM ed Use EMB eens | ee we, “eels V. Chevro dan | ante bie at es Sales OE ce aren “2 Want ‘ANTED SURE TO AE teed Sean Og Micon ” 'D] CHE R&H, 46 k 2 Dr. Se 3 Day Sr wr bh WACONS re S. Perry a a 4 tie and i | le gas si7e 4787 oa a All batt or 6 | “ee aie r4 dr. Wed Sane $1, 245 46 Buic uth Sedan | VS. Baa yeni 66 PbxmiAc i class con: pote eas aT, CARPET «tel, ‘48 : an aTO a 6-Mo Warranty singe ‘e218 4 dr., Praster : ‘46 Plymo iW ( S PAN ! Mose Ney tiest. wits good "ei Zh, ote Sect yao) Dix Cars 55 " ‘ | ai nbn, wo. ES Royalm AC “6 '47 Dodge 52 IALS ECIAL! tigd in abeplute ke Perinat . ANGE a 3- Sait Used ~ ~ JUST 4 } taoepetien ee ‘ ONTI dio, ee Sedan “alge Coupes SP ILLAC bohery sn Re IR DES —- LER EXCHANGE | shes bout Our FEW Chevrolet ‘Ol P dix. 2 ar er kas ’47 Chrys rt Coupe 2 Drs. Choice [ 48) $1095 1 ne Perry 1 ARIE over E SO ible ief. dix. -oe $1, iac Spo Your ; D. RA. TRA | FRAD i. gt pte k A ] n F TH ‘onverti heater 8 Chie dra. ntiac dan 95 $ 6 EYDPA. ANDERSO port: of en a, As e P a Oo Y a 8s 4 j ater, hy 47 Po 4 Dr. Se | $1 2 , ] 2 DR. | . at DEX gr td wha 2, bedroor re r00 2 tonller inanc AN ffered rk green. $795 he K ckard 1d SONA 1H atic, re PONTIAC “si cond., OR 50 floo fuspiture rigor Fin M ing of Da b IC io,| *48 Pa Sedan spec 30 pt HyHram a Py ag = Pan Oe ment, tourai of rcury ials being rance 4d eater. ’ BU dio, rd ay ador, heater Rie . 3) - Alte — ints, Hae ries. RE rh Me specials Clea ser &h : , ta , Fo bass 4-7836 wagon sonata Sori al "50,49, "46 ra, Olds opr sed ral on Bae gg 4 Rowden 395, 48 Olds Sedan 3p ” $795 : samt? aaa rateee |e Kaiser, hydra, Sale’ See ays Pont mereliellnac ls heater, dyna ++ 28 “ ury Sedan ! Plym | 2 Open Ev TRAILE! apa all 75) - . Sa r f to 5) Nas tible tse ea TEEN. «ee » 9 Merc Coupe ] | i gi ae ee engine. Kaiser 1e 39 0 ‘ = onver & heater tone g (4 onv. r [A Pron bee we a = Elcar, Also V-8 48°47 47 Chevi ess. C Radio CK i coln C 9 Thea et NT Bogen. |e sipenardaon 40 La: pL 9, 748, Sontiae | Pres | CER saze ‘No. EH 8808 BUI io and} yao Tin Sedan io, Heat © | traile — ales, 15 North 51, °4 42 Merc tiae EBAK ene N vrolet ‘SO adio a incoln ' Radio, Clean - Pinal poe end r a ns > "49, A "47 Pon r ’ TUD YDER rans- "52 Chey dan eater . dr., r 1,095 49 L edan | ; d and chat oozes 2 49: ‘f Studebake i ONMANDER ins 3 sutra Ura ES 8044 Special ‘ saceeed $ '49 Hudson S | Goo $O45 RE A et Lake a condition eh = "51, °49, Dodge, RS} _.! ae “slow mileage 2 Strode Cine | neater CK RAL ST RE oe ce Tank Fe van 50, "46 ED CA 131 $595 and de dr. Ul] | NT Y TION © er peg lh ties eat 4900, Cas Y US sie cose — $8 ick Super 4 r plus ‘D2 B 1, dyna- CE ERCUR | PORTA ch Tra ER Bottle es71 ONOM AN, GOOD uick heate R&H, 295 N-M ot ANSP ALS 40) + Bran Mill ) io47 cond, Bott ley La L. a | EC m AN, i. SLma Lad TOM "49 B adio peg = 4 dr., » $2, NCOL et L TR PECI e .$2 ¢tory at i | yah ye —Goo MIPA nee os Aubu SEDAN tires, p CUS ck. R License Super © cad LY} - Stre Sts. iy rae! 595 Fa 1 ens 17 ll Dri AD — p.m F UICK, 81 new ; : SH N er. Bla Ww. 4 dr. . 2 ton Pike ’ ss. . 4 dr. ceca t. Cle -7] S we tele cot “noee ‘Sod ore be SG an S| epee! fleaies se V. bey bea mae | 6 Buick hydra. es 32 | 63 Phin fES CK Hon maw. PE Riva? Gidding T wnee LL SA rat tha best & Radio E hone . SUPER, Rai 48 Pont., AID wa 17 5 m E y I bd 25 P 4. A . UB D a Ont FI | AMERICAN ROINTE 4 door ea ot 795 Beck. nate ‘SO C .. $9 spe Mtoe De on 47 Chev, | yee . 495 DLX. tyoale, DITIONE Toso ried like 1. drive. | ‘onan | 'S0 CHE ivy: 2 e ne payme 1 , son . slic id 95 - visor, WSs. ; ON fed. Pi 5-304 lidc c URY 1951 | ; CPE. Pevmments 2dr, ... TIAC aaa i Coupe 147 Pont a Bee 195 ee ee Sci zme| REC ae P . uM ERC erdrive | IAC o- ~ rea] Down +. ; Capri TIC Kaiser oe Al sete | 395 bes ce DRA., he I SHO Pontia maser op fowmiac ce mee PN +145 aS Ecc te Fiona See “SEPARATE - t in eve On y O46 ‘Verd « 5 Ban radi wd , 1 Colonia ae al Maids ’46 Pont., PONT eye € ie I al ga “$72 ea Bee “ebis |Por ERCUR heater. 150 heater . cmap accept trade rs of i\Pe NA BILE. HOME: “ oso SEE oor : arguns ‘47 FORD J. ae SHARP tomer Conti x ee B| ee Lonlome a a re inson re- 950 ee ™ pone ae sa 4 dr. weeseee |S |} Cus THE N’S . a | Pai ores Meare > rSletas iow ‘ts a ie oe - lites ME OF Te V | con en Pos Be Valdes ny" Res Dur Shop tr tone $99 HO) N’S E . \ “LO erry in Du Tesetitaerd ler Sales tiptop Only HIGA '‘S2. CH lide, y P 45 $100 ss lh , UTH MIC EST 02 ee 498 | ; ei ei sotvare POIN TE ogy] ahha 0 PAVED, Lor ROAD dr., R&H, need a GON | JACK | VE AT 'S | pO ae ogee a ERIN O65 | Cae ee | |, BEL VEDES “| Bese 2 toe gray EOUIPEED — EMENSCHNEIDER'S| ae ee TRA LER I M Saginaw | (Har ia ODWARD TOM 3 AGE B NSC MC condi RIE a out. kman e 7 TWwo- io ri R ’ T ~ ; ferdury, MAD ech saeee ae 895 NE | Es , ea SL ar rite OT lee foc PANEL | | ioe PRA ayers so atin of ‘ RY r, 4 PR AL VR e iser i Bedan aie 97 1! -TON Whist } &s le. on ? . at FE M H Supe HE Cottag "48 Kaiser reel ee Sides oa | 1 a r ay Re A souTH? ane on STO C IAC MB R C at LG Eiym sce ee 349 n jas ~Sgve : a 0oING pe edes ks ters RD CU R NT 5 K EALE aginaw E 4-4546 R, (Si Na fon Sedan COM orncsees oes} | Clea oney _ New ier Sal arate Pe Dr. 49 FO 4DO00 every tor F PO . $69 SH D 4-1545 S. S$ NE F TUDOR, | 48 Pod i Sires 1005 | This Only Costello's Tre iN AT TIRES. 3 J2 : Se oe tra 48 H .... R ae S PHO a (48 Studede Tudor sees] | — {ERICAN ar Oa — Henry 2 Dr. 8 . ons R& you NIGHTS gee: 4 pm. | ey Pong obile en eee 749 \ | “ET, MiMERIC $500. Lake soos | 1952 dc Not the best, Dem 8, 2dr., PEN N INAL cae "Ber ee 0803 — IALS "48 Old ve e¢ ta iteaes sees: a y t49 | oa be Henry : y IA $295 ’51 Che Began 000000002 * electri ja Late Ra “Tandem 1951 * praised. wT $000 m DGE | ORE BY eure Re EPR fice,” FE L SPEC $305 49 Dessto Sedan: | | 1313 Ind Y equipped. ‘Park, ‘ Keloer, ‘Pr: i i ile gia ’ DO $495 ABH, dition. OD. ; FALI Pe CIAL | +49 Dodge Sed LE | rge | St eft Mrs. M. rh ‘48, 49 Kaiser 4-402 low nm aran- 47 eees top 4 DR. 5-4685. Ford 2 4 wae sooaabe Ses ‘sl DAB a La 1953 tr, ft and e. at 48, Ford. el. rE A — car with H eee NASH FE 1946 eine oe ree $7 EN KS ave nels pacer 29 Lak R 194 47 let pan IT RAPLOW, | ' have tn on Bnew R& Bh . Perry. 7 | 1948 ces NTIN' ‘tat — wees ack $286 EP UC * $395 Ve f Pa eer om Pootee ER tata Gaara URN AVE. DYN wane L R. We strators can be bend 4 dr., f. LEAN — 7 A Bune Pe acini D oe bite cee 95 \ tion o M-59 on ee 140 AUB SUPER, 25600 Yo EAR These car “avine. tion fe) | C aller 5s ov s, | 1947 hoa 2 i ees USED | pick sacs (Ty Selec g From Matt House ee Prk ED, be | AN tremendous INC. rie aaa io Ambassaor ger. BL Aw | 1e87 Pontiac SALES Re : TE Su Ok Fae oat PCE se Trader LIM “e OCH, INC. Sued True Tere oy in Ctos Sr ae bape 25) wan GENE ye PINAN re Top r. Besu- LL V mi ER-K De Use $ oe nd. Privete TESMAN, waar aters A 9 to 9 _TE ¢ $1 Fo Ply gs with rooe! 108 + — rs WE dn tiac’s a Fully eget aly SAGINAV KELL Permit Term pe FE 30473. STA’ L Coen sf TIC. DLX. 40 Dotiee 3 eletiee Jsed ore DOWN AL GOOD ~"Pontia k Riv igs Fs SAG 9 p.m. 8 Woodward, 8 | MAC teed _ ton FE eh, ee “HYDRAMA proce. so Doderl ls. . DER ve Us TRO % . DOWN Buic green. a L 4 RY! Wood G ran cot, 1951 $850. or 8, Saginay HYD) 2 ag vi '60 Dod whee EI a Fi | % OR RATES =e LIKE 1950 3 tene extr LES 147 S 8 am. ss MI s Gua NASH condition. oo a? adie 193 C °53. mi 30 D dual HN ‘ Als s to "beara ca BR PRtTo sa Open from § eet re son pi] All Car NITY Fess a pn . eee ease Ce pose Fee T 4 CK, s, hea’ rh iP. ——— wiped. TORS LN- Y for door : {* JEW. ORE CLEAN ie erates Ee Etec motes ae | treo Se fea YMOUTH ca ROta 5 ACCESGORTES tery) a Sur Lf ; _ after * ove od ; : os sopca on encoun "49 Olds Fy dor M CH CKS | as a Lapeer ‘Orion ee a : si » N MOTOR ta spec {UNCOLN ~ gg 1 3 ig A ad “+e 58 isn PLY RU mere tet oe aa ! BUICK, REAL G ie Reese pag room Ra Inc. ee eee delat “tito pes, ler c of Amer~ oT EWERA _,PA BUICK HARD falty 3¢ at Buckhorn a wa mn Rea. 0 Piece en S. $2,100 Dea 131 choic selec ( NENT Ak “er Ra “et at, : tfon. Raasoo- Seeora ad wih FE cso * end of tos Peale *. COND), R&H, ooo sa mint | eee ke you Our ey DERN Rest of esee belore i K BUICK ney aks Pioneet “fi dete, a8 TOR, ery ight 121 | pus. rd, EXC. © 8. Perry. mS eee ee AW eas L. T 6 Che pice. but money, Wo0e * ith’ the P mobile hom VIC poh ar — ER 4D. Ohad « Li EMONSTRATOR, Open every L2-7121 | pus | Tha bE pg x. tom. Ag CLEAN ; ’s ¢ big, Ax with see ES B dan sipped. 2-3606. — : ‘s Tie ae i Open . Oo mais. DR.., = og PO! Scott , 8 DL 3-257: 22 8. “al. 3 p. | ore. 1S §. mall, CENESEE cALt s/ | E O HEATER oe ee ate ot NROCHIESTER a de 0 FE sh era Orare at |Ppe or oy Re ditference RIFTY G = GOOD TRAILERS, ADIO- fae C GREEN | | $375. RAH. Go renner Rd od Po Cail altrider, R 5 Fagg, Pe 3a ea ae Mafier 4 p.m. ause 0 hese ca Bele tothe DCA TH . ne pac a a, t CONDITION mouth. &4 EXC. 5 Wwoodw s Top me bare! RD. ye a o I ca in. ae GOOD US I VINTER T KE — 51) wera CONDTT Otte se aN. tiac’ custo Tully | PO “ « ee. ae OnE bargai H. DUC & \ IC wy. Pearie Space CELLENT ADE ou DE. Se ied eae ae Suto: | Lae nee sill car ka Hi ner ae |. RE LL G TR ler Ex TR a CREVIE, i. 3 7) a 1950 is a a3 ge old FORD 6. o rust odel. YMOUTH. '#@ FORD Special dix. R FA) VIN with os Reat Trai 1.| | WE 1 ig i top, “This rth Pedio ro ce. | _afte ‘Sa Haas feat condition. IN-|-.47 Plymouth fear re, 806 FO DRI ymechant | Ren ‘9 =a | 43-1530 AIR. rifice + top blue with is a price. Perry +DOO cellent RUN- Piym Saal $50.50 dr, Has & m ae KIMBALL | pes ea PES al Pos ee Hee it ees eS| eT cane 32| NASH D +1545 tne © esis - KES. AUT ave. ae ine ‘mente i 7 “a tarry’ py mae calle ait, a hnineenes YOUR § xicuTs ““* Sy SERIE BELA <—o cer er Mi eT TORS meer: | BEE rot Lele TON WAGone = Lr. . Accesso CARS opr Doni 7 Black. res CL. and you? ’ Radio. i v do’ 2 N See 6 uto 46 lets, amy Fe O oat: ae {HEVIE radio ha dan priced or 10 | Sper ene +— dy for oN de with oe DLX. Custom whe ee TRADE 66 S. Pe STAT SO TiRERS whan aeeres “ery epg aha. te heir ste Veer Care, Cees [oly Gabe ved } ° 4 I ie — $s "82 7 a ona New 20 ; mM Origa. ‘MY eae in er yee ‘aw a * ae april fli W cars are — CHEV ol nS ore. | eas Ww. Jerome ae on GAL ARD AVE Sst thes give cher: 1982 tone. Gan" Personal ss ma Larry’ oe a "Has Bi FE Ww . is | 7 GLASS !— 2 emi = service in any DR ia aa ere “ron uote “ik _ RAR, VA. | 1951 “cnerie, ong Mp 74 aa + 1, DR. € wee stares ‘ PA , eer LE $3 ean. ICE sets "47 UTHS . JA SAL —0 “ead. and radio TIB seen. OT er 46, 0 OTOR Dea Neds Pee . Ne ans Puss hee CHEVES Yous Hoon Dei ‘ng OPEN BUR — Ta : ea re Pontiac’ 4k DG WN . Pike Uh Sana ca pak | eee ras Sa “ fa Parts | TR AL: mikes fun nase | a ZAEE QRION 2 a to Poy M . Auto. P. TRAUee Auto| t! ‘Side At Pike - RY | TOF CLEAR as cee yd ‘BALDWIN ae One 7 a | arp | on pee ET 4 ech» meena oe. § S, eeleliioieellie. 2 7 —.. fh | | | | THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1953 meee U For Sale Trucks 56 Céme and See these ge bargains at MILLIMAN’S 1952 Chevrolet 1 ton panel Neat green finish. Low mileage. Only $395 dn. 1946 Ford Pickup ' Lots of work joft in this model and we'll sacrifice it for $195) Full Price 1950: Chevrolet This Sedan Delivery is a and span. Shiny black finish. 3 had very, g00d care. 3295 dn. EARL R. MILLIMAN Open Ives. "til9 147 8. Saginaw Street FE 54101, after 6 FE 5-2246 1953 CHEVROLET SEDAN.' DE- livery. A-1 -condition. Low mile age. H. J VanWelt. OR 3-1355. DODGE ‘51/1 TON PICK UP, GOOD. 341. N. Perry 8t. Pontiac’s ONLY Exclusive Truck- Dealer WILSON GMC CO. 809 S. Woodward! FE 4-4531 NEW ‘51 STUDE, PICKUP, SACRI- fice. for 50, or take ton i's _down paymént. FE 5-2640_— Motor Scooters 58 Sic a aA BS a WESTERN FLYER SCOOTER. EW b OnED COaMLAN BCUOT. __ers. 12 §. Paddock. PE 4-4246. “2 “CUSHMAN, MOTOR ‘SCOOTER, es | just overhauled, varmatiac tran, | excellent cond. $150. OA 8-3123. For Sale - Isabel Mle on 59 FOR PARTS SERVICE ON YOUR Harley son, see Harley Davidson Sales Cu, 372 5. Sagi- Baw. Boats & Accessories 60 3 ROCKAGE And a few, memberships avail. to qualified people. The most beau- tiful clu teounds, swimming and beach club, picnic facilites and | boating facilities in Michigan. 2 lakes, If you apply before Oct. ist and are accepted you can finish out this year all the 1954 season for jues and fees totaling $50 inciudi,; the whole family. Apply dail in person Cass Lake Yacnt Clu Nm hag 4300 Cass Elizabeth Rd Brown, Commodore. EVINRUDE GUTBOARD MOTORS MARINE SALES & RVICE 422 S. TELEGRAPH ~~ Let CaP HUTCHINSON, THE Boat builder, finish that fabricat- | ed boat you are planning for next | summer, Terms very reasonabie. FE 2-2625. MERCURY MOTORS, MOST MOD- | els now av a for immediate delivery. T GENE SEE § SALES 7101 Dixie _Hwy. FE 2-8783 MERCURY OUTBOARD MOTORS. Sales & Service. Terms to suit you. Shorty Hook's place. 3730 . cg a Lake — at Pine Lake. is) a ~OLDTOWN “EPONSON GAIL: 8AIL- ing canoe, | complete with mast & sail Sacrifice. value. MAyfair __ 62461, i 4 16 Fr. INBOARD, GOOD COND bled ott A for outboard. 12 & can. between 4:30 & 6 my i enact Be optge CUSHIONS §2.95. Spor goods of all kinds. Star- craft ts. Tee-nee trailers. Orchard e Ave. FE 2-8020 Transportation Oftered 62 FURN. VAN GOJNG NORTH, PART load either way. FE 5-6806. WANTED RIDER FROM | FONTIAC to aaa Mon. to Priday. Swaps «683 EXCHANGE ;YOUR LAND CON- tract (where you have sold p ied for late model car & ¢. J. VanWelt. OR 3-1355. z GAUGE REMIN REMINGTON 2nd. .22 hunting rifle with scope 2nd. sling or trade for —— on Ft or outboard motor. Oud Linoleum tile do sccesecccs. Qc | __= __|| $4,95 9x12 Lincleum rugs ..... 89 en ware TOUTBOARD MOTOR) 9x9 asphalt tile ../......... 2c off for past ie, rifle or shotgun. | 12 Gold Seal ss coe | 0 betes E Paint |. Pe g2. He ae R ‘a ee : REG. aes PU 3 Mos. i iat wall tle ise a. old, 1 2‘s-yr.-oid, 6-shot ga. shotgun or sell. OR 3-6840. 1983 PONTIAG 4 GR. FOR LAND. MODEST MAIDENS -23 MP Mewdeatores Way PLAN @ “Y don’t nlind doing your home work,| but the| grades I've been getting are very humiliating!” _ __ For Sale Clothing 64 | Sale Household Goods 66 LADIES BLACK SKUNK COAT % + | 1 length, size 14. Mens suits, brown sharkskin, 1 all wool gray mixture. I tan suit. Overcoat. All sizes 38-39. Waist ’’. 30°’. All excellent cond. 2640 Air- port Rd FULL LENGTH SILVER TONE Muskrat coat, size 14. Cheap. 833 Glendale. | _ 2 FUR COATS, SIZE 18. MAN'S short coat, size 38 Cheap. FE | Sale Household Goods 66 USED TRADE-IN pe. sectional Wakefield) 149. GE refrig.. 8 cu..ft.. demon. $199.50 4 CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE CO. 361 8S. SAGINAW lete) and dresser. Ph. FE feomp! 5-7820. DUNCAN PHYFE DRUM TABLE, 30°’, mahogany finish. Excellent cond, OR 3-0073., after ik ae q- BURNER a STOVE, 3 YRS. old, $75. 076. a Souvant “YOUR CITY | stove to bottle gas. $10 baaeals mo 2-100 lb. cyclinder. — = ine. a ces. e 3, ide Dixie High we KENMORE WASHING MACHINE, ; —e buggy, $10. high 63846. $20; __chair. MAYTAG » Viames. . REBUILT & guaranteed. FE 4510. Table gas range $39.95 Small down payment. ‘Easy terms. MAN'S | -18 W. Pike only” | Kenmore Gas Range 36 in. 2 yrs. old, $75, 4133 Airport Rd., Waterford. OR 3-80i1. Call after 7 Pm | WASHING MACHINE . 915 | FE 2-5832. , ae PHILGAS RANGES INSTALLED BOY'S SUIT & STORM COAT. After 4:30, FE 20713. Musical Instruction. 63A EMIL SUTT MUSIC STUDIO, Ee training im all phases > music. School students and fessional. 7144 North =. m 20. PE 57611 or FE + ACCORDION LESSONS, youn home New and used accordion, sale and rent. OR 3-8266. , Sale Musical Goods 65 GRINNEL UPRIGHT PIANO. EXC. cond. 2599 Tackles Dr., Pontiac Lare ACCORDIAN 1230 BASS. EXC. cond. The best for a student at a axons savings. Only $75. FE 4-858). UPRIGHT F PIANO, ¢ GOOD COND. $50. FE Bgl og Paes FLUTE GOOD CON- dition, reasonable. FE 47025, PIANO TUNING AND ~ REPAIR- ing. Oscar Schmidt. Ph. FE 25217. SPINET PIANO RENTALS WITH option to buy. $10 monthly. Gal- | lagher's, | Hotpo ACCORDION 120 BASS” EXCEL | Kenmore washer, Good lent condition. Decorated for fessional use. Sacrifice v “hg MaAytfair 6-2461. WANTED | 120 BASE ACCORDION, fn good cond. FE 45036. DARK MAHOGANY 88 KEY, APT. piano old. 2-9991. 1 yr. Geen "eee S PRICES, rich tones, st quality, all sizes and colors Save money. 7 Prall __{off W. Huron), basement apt. Sale Household Goods 66 —™ SHOP SUBURBAN & SAVE Where your dollars have more = eae at the L & 8 SALES CO. Red ig tr 4 radios. all kinds. ee Ranges, gas and electric. a ~ stoves and oil space heat- Corome dinette sets. Chest and dressers. Bedroom suites. Liying room suites. Dinin ang suites, OUT L.& 8 SALES CO. PE 17-0783 |B dae BEDS, MATTRESSES TS, atime rin WHO eae eae| ARM ARMSTRONG INLAID | **\ Harold’ s, 140 5. Saginaw Free delive: FE 2-5450 Cada che equity in house or va- ' DOUBLE RED STAMPS TODAY eant lots. Roosevelt Hotel PE 45131 Eves. & Sun, _ __EM_ 3-4898 2 FT. TANDEM TRAILER FOR pump shotgun, power saw, cash. FE 27-1142. TRADE YOUR LAND ) CONTRACT, small house, mortgage, equity furniture, autes, for new or well known housetrailers. TRAILER XCHANGE 6 8. Telegraph ___ Open 1 Eves. HOUSE | wire 2 1 2 LARGE ACRES of land rms. and bath mod- crn, * pavement, house and yard need | some work, ved road % mi) from town, mi, | D GAS HOT SHELLANE water heaters, apartment and full size ranges. Leonard Electric Co. 107 W. Maple, Birmingham. MI 43933. CLOSING OUT PAINTS RUBBER BASE PAINT, GAL $3.50 $4.95 Hi-gloss enamel, gal... .$2.95 Armastr. plastic vinbflor...% price | 12 ft. Goldseal Spe porta % price | Bonny Maid Inlaid! tile......... 10¢ 4% {t. wall tile rm ft.......... 1 SYER'S, 14 ON FE 4-3064 SALE HOUSEHOLD MISC. ITEMS. FE 47546. "$9 MOTOROLA 21° TV, TABLE _ model with serial! $250. FE 20283. north of tiac, will trade my | YOUTH BED AND WARDROBE, equi‘v in or lot for any- | ef value, Box 83 Pontiac 1941 DODGE '§ PASS, coupe, good condition, for. good used furnace, elec- tric dryér or what? Sell $80. 2536 Williams Lake Road.’ TRADE YOUR OLD REFRIGER- —_ or Aug J aes on 8 vador 199. torma, $2 pet week. MY’3-3711. “ SWAP EQ AND 12 ACRES for late model car. Write 1l Pontiac; Press. *82 rt prabairgg feo, 4 EXCEL- lent cnorgg 7 ieee For land con t. ey difference if contract is too large. EM OIL © WITH blower. Sell! or swap for good 2 wheel traijer. $95. MA _5-3913. ~~ For Sale Clothing 64 NEW BLANE a COAT, SIZE __12. 107 Glenwood $25. 4 piece ae walnut bedroom suite, $75. FE 1-$456 FURNITURE FROM COTTAGE. feirig. Run Large older elec. Runs fine, $10. Large wal- Gresser, $15. Walnut chest 1 drawers, $15; Wood kitchen cabinet with pordelain work table | drawers, $19 Upright . End tables, '$1. % MONARCH RANGE, WHITE enamel, comb. cpal and clectris __ston, MA 5-5206. SEMI YOUTH BED, A-1 COND. __ FE 17-0697 before}3 p. m. BEDROOM LIVING _mower, misc. ttems USED TN SETS AT WAITE’S All sizes—All =. 10°, 17°, 20”. jo, Admiral - gand RCA, others. Me and retail F ves. $19.96 EBCTRIC FE 417170. $ Soup Be sink and: dishwasher comb., $320. La = ore oT Ric, oe 20 a Lawrence. DETROIT JEWEL] GAS _ oe living room suite, Cheap. 33 clid EASY arth DYER, $10.;. STUDIO ouch, good cond., $35. FE +9 aoe: GABERT'S APPLIANCE SPECIALS a pl 5 eu, ft . $40 Good $29 Duotherm oil heaters 121 N ‘Raghaw St. LIVING RM., DINING | RM., stove and odd pieces, $76 Ave “CLAYTON Ss" Orchard Lake Rd. Keego ; HEATERS raytere. 13N. | paddock, & BEDRM. FURNI- ture, Sod| oon cabinet, Antique settee . PE 46310. LOVE SEAT, A-1 CON: | oo “alton, Pye, 5:30 - +4643 or 06 orth, | PC. FREN CH PROVINCIAL DIN- jal da t Holly we / id gy dre NG SOLE, zs Nv I FURNITURE ING OUT PAINTS eg Ploeg ee y GAL, on BEFORE YOU BUY a Sewing Machine Bee the Necchi or Elna Home Demonstrations ‘ With No Obligations. EXPERT REPAIR SERVICB Sewing Machine Sales Co. _ TILE. 10®" “7 FLOOR SHOP 99 ws Saginaw 8t. ning conc ea $11.50. 956 Myrtle. Office Equipment 67 L. C. SMITH 8sUPER standard nt ‘Tas. writer. Exc. cond. Pirst es cio. i 1410 Pontiac BABY BED, $15. BASSINETTE complete w ner, $6. Chrome dinet set, $35. Chest of drawers, $15. coe rack, $10. Sofa bed, __ $20. FE 71-8406. KENMORE OIL HEATER, $25. 45 W. Lawrence St JR. MAPLE CHEST DESK, $15. Electrochef electric stove. $25. Steel turnace with gas conversion _unit, Like pew. OR 3-1241. Store Equipment 66B BAR-B-QUE MACHINE, GOOD Also National cash register. _ Call after 5 eves. FE 3-9888 2 MILLS ICE CREAM FREEZERS, 10 can milk cooler, 10 case bot- le cooler. 8 ft. refrigerator, Meyers — well pump, 6 hole 4 cream cabinet, Hires electric dispens , ete, OR 3-0748 aft. 6 p.m, Sale Miscellaneous 68 ANGLES, CHANNELS, BEAMS, pipe, reimforcing rods, basement posts, complete line of structural Bteel Co., 135 Branch St. (across from American Forging & Sock- et). PE 4-9583. _ st USED WOODEN PANELED DOORS with latchets, 278"x6's’, MY BATH TUB & 2 CULVERTS FOR driveway; 2 overstuffed chairs; % bed; rubbish barrel. FE 5-2674. HEATROLA, we BOILER AND radiators, un ty con- version unit, 31 319 Ww “f FUEL OIL TANK. LEGS AND ALL og ly 4681 Forest Ave., Wat kins OR 3-2035 after 6 p.m. ' OL TANK AND GUN TYPE OIL burner. OR 3.7256 15. , PANEL RAY GAS HEATER, $50. FE 51515. LARGE OIL Office swivel chair, $12. bags, 10c, OL €1005. 377 8. Blvd. ao ressure, 4 burner with oven. TRON brig J FOR FLOOR HEAT. 26%4x32%, 328 Main St., Rochester, | COAL WATER HEATER, TANK | deep — pump. Crosley washer, : iit il , i 7x oc. FB After | 2:30 ie Sale Miscellaneous 68 _Sale, Miscellaneous 68 21: EB Water _ FE 2-7848 HOOVER VACUUM, GOOD RUN- we es heen / Goop COND.— S NEW TIRES & TUBES 670-15 $50 Rollaway bed .. ............. $7 Twin bed complete .. .........$25 ee errr eoeccces $3 FE 2-7757 itt oe | mour Lake Rd. 1% miles W. of in, Oxtfo DOORS -— INSIDE 2°6''x6'8"", 96. Potato ‘oal hot K rater heater, with ra- eg ee 46930 days, MI 40879, e disposal with automatic cold water control in carton. Retail $129.95, yours $95. Also Feat’ condition, “sus. MI +0042. BENDIX W MACHINE, DishM: rse Pos | cond. OLive 6-1777. 6185 Orion Rd. OIL AND WATER _ heater. ¢. cond. OR 37842. CLOTHES POSTS STEEL & WOOD COMBINATION DOORS PICKETS PLYWOOD M. A. BENSON 549 N. Saginaw VE 4-2521 8x10 PRINTING ‘vaaes WITH motor. FE 4-445 ALL sizis GAS & ELECTRIC po venues igus ‘etl fa ree matic e Thaces . carburetors and Ractng for oll burners bottle plates and ‘httings ; for trailers. and cabins. HEAT SERVICE Associated PB hg Trailer Exchange 60 8. Telegr Open Evenings & ys P. P.M. COLEMAN SPACE HEATER, 55,- __ 000 BTU, Like new. $65. FE 5-0040 «TO § RM. EVANS OIL HEATER. AS| _ $25. OR 32000. Anchor Fence OIL BURNER, LARGE, EXCEL- lent cond. ihectrie yes good cond. OR 3 1 be: bathrm. sets, comp. fi xteree . boeeeueeekes 150 New, fully guaranteed 30 gal, auto. hot water heaters ..... $65 New interior flush doors (B grade) .. .. $1 to 68 Pull line plumbing & builders supplies, new and used. We spell for less. HOLLINGSHEAD VARIETY 8TORE, 7 miles out Baldwin. Armstrong floor covering and Mac-O-Lac paints. We sell for less. for terior surfaces of brick, L asbestos cement and der blocks. colors. sulation. 1028 Oakland. FE 4-2622. C & H LUMBER CO. Open from 8 ‘til 7 Mon. thru Pri. Sat. open from 8 ‘til 5 Sun.: Open from 10 ‘til 3 lidays, open from 10 ‘til 3 geeepd Bosiey, Thanksgiving, Xmas and New Year's. PE 2-6141 Surplus mmber cH & Material Sales Co. Open 8 to 5:30 poh my 5340 Mighiand (M88) OR 3 1088 FENCING at sidential and comm AIR COMPRESSORS with pavement breakers Bn clay spades for rent; other CONE’S RENTA! L 1251 Baldwin PE 2-007! BATHROOM PIXTURES, SOIL pipes and fixtures, automatic oil and gas water heaters, oi] and coal furnaces, steam and hot boilers, of) fired. . HEIGHT’S SUPPLY 2685 Perry St. Phone PE 4-431 PLYWOOD At cut rate prices. Kitchen cabinet doors made. PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO. 1488 Baldwin FE 2-2543 [YERS PUMPS shallow 50 emp gné cation Wel, 007.50 We | ee ae Binks KELLYS S HARDW ARE 3994 Auburn at Adams Auburn Heights PE 2-8811 CEMENT BLOCKS Immediately delivered 84 Sheffield Ph. FE 32-6401 or PE 2-7275 | Russell Lemon GARAGES 14x20. $595 com also have a complete line of new burners furnaces and conversion containers. Shop dollies for Bora 6507 Dixie Hwy. MAple 5-7878. with eement pole and over doors. FHA MARBLE For ie mew =. _ Sareenes, antes, we, store. oo a pees iy 194 of phone book. tad Cc. WEEDON r inch exhaust fan $75, 1 set Ditzler with colores and scales _ mixers. EM 3-2551. meter 4 _ OR 31630. ONE AUTO IC MANLEY machine. OR 3-1630. . 3} RM. OIL BEATER, x ROCK HOUNDS mineral new, $70. FE ¢-0637, FARM ‘FRESH MEATS Boel} Teast ...cccccccccccepne) See Pork roast ....sescccceeress ME Lard teeee et eeeeeweeeegeee FIR ae co = fu; 2x6s & 2x8s, ag neli $155 M. Del. ak, tee of bi material in LAC ETI KETT’S plbiding Supplies 3161 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston MA 6-4391 7 Om HEATERS. IN EXC. COND. _OR 3-238. _ COLEMAN GRAVITY OIL FUR- mace and floor Philce radio. MA OUTDOOR FIREPLACE erecccege xe’ W. P. .......-...-.. $15.96 nf PIPE § gal. Can Roof Coating... $2178 BLAYLOCK : COAL & BUILDING SUPPL ‘ 81 Orchard Lake Ave. PE 3-7101 CIRCULATOR | HEATER, GOOD cond. 9446 Cooley Lake Rd. TRENCHING | auto. & ters. The one that itself & burns No. 1, 2 or 3 ofl. No messy low pilot fu a& specialt ——— With Trailer Exchange 60 8S. Telegraph Open Evenings and Sundays AM. SAND \ND YOUR OWN FLOORS, R machines and waxers for ed. and sm Power mowers — new and used, rotaries and reel Millers Garden & Lawn Eq 1593 8. Woodward Ave. taanh ol 14 Mile Rd.), Birmingham, phone Midwest 4-6008. Time payments __Svailable. We take trade-ins. OPEN 8 AM. TO 8 P.M. SUNDAY 10 TO 3 LUMBER 4x8 SHEET ROCK $1.35 PER SHEET 1x6, 1x10, 1x12 | W. P. Boards $86 thousand sq) ft. 2x6 NO. 2 FIR | Go 8 = ie @~ 17 = 1 2 16 Ue $118 per thousand sq. ft. Grade A Birch Doors |$9.95| Outside Boydell Paints $3.95 | Gal HARDW. ING Make Sure It's Li “Burnivister S Northern Lumber Cop, 6197 Cooley Lake R4. WE DELIVER 70 Mile Radius With 8 Trucks Serving Y. EM 3-465) EM 3-996 Overhead d Garage Doors. ‘rm He ‘mer with the more scuffed service availabe. Stover, “attecheicat. er attachment’ cost pias ong offerg MI 41738, 4150 Squir- rel Rd,, Bloomfield Hills. LUMBER BUILDERS SUPPLIES board 4x8x $1.6. Rock 1s''x48" Doors for your home or store. Trim mouldings, clear white SAUL Sit aided Ee Sale Miscellaneous 68 CYCLONE FENCE Mterms, Pree eadimates: PE 64040. GAL. CRANE LINE ELECTRIC Om pass. r, like new. $75. PLUMBING SPECIALS 3 Fc. BATH SET, A QUALITY See ee $2 GALLON INSTALL WATER TERS, I ON eon wenu tle $95.00 LIKE NEW pg ad AND = POINT WASHERS & DR EXTRA SPECIAL es ” ALLOW- re THIS UALITY PC, BATH hy Open Sun. 10 |a.m. wipe MPT Y ON BLACK dirt, gravel fill dirt, and ETAL OR GONCRETE {Cor ‘ pr heatalator fire- es, Tenn. or Briar Hill stone. ibley Coal & Bupply Co. 140 N. BARTLETT lst @ ctor a. left off “Sand, Oravel, Dirt 68A Tiiciog tpdypaoning. Pi PRL _ die. FE 23-7611. alr | 2 YDS. BLACK DIRT. , TOR OP ‘sor, ~_Peat or manure. PE? Fo, aa UP GRATER AND —_—_—f— EE “BTATE 7 TOP! SOIL i a grevel, biack dirt, N. Lilleyman FE 4-7338 PROMPT DELIVERY ON a E 3 3 [CAN STONE PRODUCTS AMERI saz. | Pit FE 57431; Office FE 20453 —_—S GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, TOP Kenneth a. rE “—: “PROMPT ce Top soil, black dirt, t, fil sand and gravel. 4-082. BLACK DIRT tested. Fill dirt, sand and gravel, PE4-0172, TOP QUALITY TOP . FILL _ dirt & gravel. On 3-308" —— Band & gravel, top soll, biack __ dirt & _Manure. FE 4-6640. PROMPT DELIVERY ON BLACK dirt, _ gravel, fill dirt. and DIRT AND rich bh emt aan” Se ne ‘mer ROAD GRAVEL, PARKING Lot eave and nit Wilkinson & Gravel. FE 46218. WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL dirt, Road gravel, trucking peelond end mortar, Pontiac Lake uilding Supplies. OR 3-153. ~Dirt-Sand-Gravel-Peat FEDERAL 5-7666 “Dependable & Reasonably Priced” A-1 TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT, _peet & fill dirt. Chap. FE 2-2650. LAWN DRESSING, BLACK LOAM, __not peat. MY 3-3 Shredded nag Humus _ FE 57606 (S Yds. $12) FE 1-006 _ "BLACK moss, fill Girt, sand & FE 4-0922. TOR BOIL, copy DELIVERY. FE 7-727) after TOP SOIL Sand, gravel, fill dirt, FE 42900. Blade. UICK! TOP soOIL Pear MIX DIRT. _ 4:30 daily SHOTGUNS r and Stevens. Guns traded and sold on sl Bird hun’ coats, tg a 2 Le tgun Enter our 3904 Auburn at~ Adams ____ Auburn Heights, FE 26811 ~ Art Lawson Gun Shop — EXPERT GUN BROWNING 3 AUTO, SHOTGUN. 12 ga. with Cutts & Nadar sights. facladad $85.EM At lens, Sage 6-2996. 3-0832. Island ; OUTSTANDIN( TRAINED 6 male English Pointer. fo & duck BRITTANY aT sa ee “AKC! _male, i old Cc REG. _ $100, FE 17-0814. FE ¢1873 PUPS. } after 5 iG 4% mos. old from ER fice. Overstocked kennels. Puppies ote grown |stock. Boarding. ingles ar = P toed. Since 1927. 584 BOXER - $50. 107 TROPICAL FISH ve PE 32-1545 LISH POINTER, 16 _mo. old, Very reas. ent — 78 Dixie at Hs 16 ACQUAT TROPICAL PISH & MILL 8T. IC GARDENS. TOP sor, | SHREDDED. BLACK & peat. FE _6-0448. Load or ce oe vr heats ae 8 to Sporting Goods 68B ———e mington Itheca, Win- KEL Lys HEARD W "ARE eaneee or tr supplies. eens, uoowars MA 5-7926 | wa an meet 8 x 25, COATED guaran., $23.05. Also have 7x35. 1x50, 10x50, 16x50. Of- 2 ONG RIFLE 8 te vy o* N win ost calibers trade. Manley ach, 10 y DUCK STAMPS e Apcuny ns RANGE arr Decors, 4 ty of ry ag ies Slaybaugh’s 3 $90 Oskier consi. SHOTOU! hs ers, $12.50 up. Will Bur- Shell Gun DRY SLAB WOOD $6 CORD. 2 for $11 delivered. FE 4-¢588. GooD WOOD $6.00 eord, 2 for $11 delivered. PFE 4-6588. Sa Prune Plums For Jams or Canning ix peck Ancus | sOME Tom 48 Rd., rE MU_ 43255. Roerini’s Feed Stbre Sat. work. | 77S TeRMLEE | | | | | le. | CASE (CORN Bit THE = PAR: TRACTOR WITH 1? or ae lemonstration. MY H. A. FITC] i R i : at f & i E is | eB 3% ESRERS or. Btate Inet izPiz | ui i af in 3 oy sin oe _FORTY-EIGHT 1 VINTAGE BEAUTY—Diane Bag- shaw reigns as ‘‘Vintage Queen of | 1953.”" The title was conferred on | the California beauty during the | California State Fair. Rumor Claims 5 Beria Escaped Into Spain MADRID, Spain 9) — The Ma-| drid morning newspaper ABC to-| day published a story that Lav- | renty Beria parachuted into Spain several.days ago — but admitted it did not know whether the story | was true.. The Spanish national police chief | said officially he knew nothing. about the report. Unofficially,. he | said it was laughable. “It looks as though Beria will:| now be replacing the flying sauc- ers,'’ he: said, The| ABC story said that Beria and a number of other Russians parachuted into the Mancha re- gion of: Spain,—the region made famous by Don Quixote’s tilt with windmills. | The néwspaper explained it as- sumed no responsibility for the story and only published it be- _\pause of the bare possibility that fit might ibe true. Wilson Thinks Danger ‘Is Somewhat Reduced’ WASHINGTON (® — Secretary of Defense Wilson professes the per- | sonal opinion that the hazard of || war ‘‘is| somewhat reduced,” He expressed it to reporters yes | terday aftet a conference with President Eisenhower. Wilsonf sail the country was ined “a much stromger military poasi- tion’ than it was a year ago and that he hoped this would deter Russia from any plan to start another .war. His hope; he said, is. that more and more people on both sides) of the Iron; Curtain will realize that “no one ‘can really win a war.” Do It Now! Three Face Death ‘in Western Murder LOS ANGELES (®—The deadly | gas chamber of San Quentin prison | | Barbara Graham, John A. Santo| and Emmett Perkins. After 54% hours of deliberating, a jury yesterday found the much | | married Mrs. Graham and her two | gangster pals guilty of the first | | degree murder of 62-year-old wid- | + for clemency, and California law THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, Y, SEPTEMBER | 28, 1958 thus makes the death penalty man- datory. Mrs. Graham, 30, and the two men face sentencing at 9 a. m. Friday, but a defense counsel move for a new trial may delay it. The brutal beating and garrot- 4 | looms today for convicted killers| ing of crippled Mrs. Monahan in her Burtiank home last March 9 | will make Mrs. Graham the third woman to go to -California’s gas chamber, barring a successful ap- | peal. Every state has a law re- Quiet Youth Sobs Story of Murder UPPER SANDUSY, Ohio H—A quiet youth who planned to become a minister is in Wyandot County jail today accused of viciously murdering hig teen-age college sweetheart. The sheriff and prosecutor of Wyandot County say 19-year-old Roy Roger Schinagle Jr. of May- field Heights;| confessed killing ‘night of brutality They say he sobbed a story last —fpun a bloody web ffom Delaware, in central Ohio, to a desolate patch of woods near here. They say Schinagle — described by neighbors in his Cleveland sub- urb as a “nice, quiet, youngster,’ —tore 17 gashes in Cynthia's face with aw lead pipe. They say that he strangled her and bruised her body, Schinagle signed a_ confession covering nine typewritten pages, Sheriff Dean McAllister said. But had trouble remembering what { i } | Seld in Pentine by: Walgreen, Cunning- | gee: | pw, Mrs. Mabel Monahan. ‘quiring the registration of| Cynthia Pfeil, 19, White Plains,| the sandy-haired Ohio Wesleyan ie | There was no recommendation | births. N. Y¥. University sophomore insisted he! er your bemelown a. — Dr..B.:R. Berman Optometrist Phone FE 4.7071 | pie] 3:iila @\, like e) » frame, full spring | Dinette | throughout, taut-sag base Neat- ly tailored in smart figured frieze in grey, green, red, of cocoa, ANNI N e00 ) QUALITY FOR LESs since 1986 _ *229 Living Room 2-Piece Suite Covered in Figured Frieze Modern comfort at a sale price! male Select double dowelled hardwood construction 188 $20 Down, Easy Terms exacting specifications ... proofed drawers with center guides, plate glass mirror. includes panel bed and double dresser, 2 Pc. Bedroom Suites Finished in American' Walnut or Limed Oak A wonderful suite if you're starting brand new... Planked top modern bedroom group is rigidly constructed to Sears oak white interior dovetailed, dust- or replacing! Suite | $139 Chrome Lounge Chair & Ottoman Smart Occasional Chair Pillow Back Studio Couch | : | 5:Pe.—Plastic Top Table § Tilt Back . . Tapestry Covered $ Frieze or Tapestry Covers 88 With Innerspring Mattress 95 |] Large 36 x 48-in. table with double Lounge chair has dowel } 7 Low and comfortable, spring- T 8 7 ed hard- ; , Spring A} by day, by night! x Es Gusved back i scaled meee "ei, 7 soilag filled. eet oat) pat . oe iar Biss Print febeis eovering i black, Tad red, gray, yellow. $16 Gewa able. Mahogany finished wood. $9 D aeiaie: coverings ~ S? Dews or green background. | See it! $9 D “Skid-Rid” RECAP | 3. Wet Black Top 4. Snow and Ice Covered Roads In: fact, tests carried on before newsmen, have proved that cars equipped “with SKID-RID can erous snow and ice covered hills without the use of chains. ‘ Roy Pulver Co. es of $3 Down ing bar for —— venient locks. White Metal $3 Down . , deep shelves. Heavy st 510 Coil Mattress or Box Spring : ea. m™ | $5 Down 1020 coil com- bination .. ‘kneaded’ sisal insulation, lay- felted cotton. Matching box Special! ‘22 Brown crackle finish ward- robe has welded seams. Hang- Con- Utility. Cabinet Special! +22 , Lots of usable storage apere Children’s Furniture! Lots of hanging space and drawers. Finished in waxed birch or ruddy maple. Sale! Juvenile Chest Chest of drawers is finished jibe ne or waxed birch. Juvenile Chifferobe $ 3 2° ‘29” Choose Maple or Birch Finish Save on Harmony House Drop Side Crib 2988 $3 Down spring. Full, twin. Special value for 4 ae sale! Heavy woven stee For ‘Safer Driving Complete Hollywood springs with angle iron ir Ti ‘ frame, Size, 30x54-inch. s Not the Tire— Bed Outfit Buy one now! it’s the Tread a al Laced ah Baby Mattress On your: own casings or we can furnish first grade $9 Down Onl 72 lla gt Outfit includes / Tires Expertly Capped ie i Bect — coil construction with ; spring mat- eavy insulator. Sale! Reduce Skidding On: headboard. 1. Wet Concrete Double Door 2. Wet Brick Metal Wardrobe Sale! Floor Lamps 38 Choose from attroctive 6 Way Floor Styles Greatly reduced Floor Lamps. Bronze finish base. Complete with rayon shades in white and colors. 6-way floor larnps Sivelyou the right amount of hohe—ahen you need Come get yours now! Regularly 15.98 Now vee eew ee | ~ sei Shadh [Molen of Belly: Proce Sewreniceny welded, @ motif decoration, Leis Dept-Second ai | FE 4-2505 | “ 1 | . Ledeen | Satin patented on pun money bash - 154 North Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-417 | | | | ) — : aa Ale b,, | my | } | | «& Ce 7 ris at, a A ra : ; |