The Weather Tuesday: Warmer Details page two * . ° 112th YEAR kek THE PONTIAC PRESS | PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955 —28 PAGES A*INTERMATIONAL NEWS GERVICE Te. U.N. Asked to Invite Red China to Peace Congress Gets lke s Health Bil for Medical Care Proposal to Encourage Expansion of ‘Low-Cost Group Insurance WASHINGTON (INS) — President Eisenhower sent to Congress today a “help- ful partner” health pro- gram designed to provide better health and medical care for millions of Ameri- cans while steering clear of socialized medicine. The -President renewed his controversial proposal of last year for a federal rein. surance service to encour- age expansion of low-cost health insurance by private organizations. He left to Congress the size of the federal fund which would have to be set up, asserting only that it should be a _ ‘‘reasonable’’ amount. Last year he requested 25 million dollars to get the rein- surance program started. The President also recom- mended increased federal aid te provide improved medical care for the aged, the blind, de- pendent children, and the dis- abled. Here are some of the other rec- | ommendations included in the spe- cial health message sent to Cap- itol Hill: Hospitals — The President pro- posed government-insurance loans to make it easier for local com- munities to build hospitals and other health facilities. Juvenile Delinquency — Eisen- hower recommended greater fed- eral aid to state and local agencies to deal with this problem, includ- ing new grants to the states. Nurses — Taking note of the acute shortage of nurses, he ree- ommended a five-year program of grants te state to expansion of Public Winter G rips Fishing Boat Gow | Red Guns Miss Tachen Islands in Big Barrage U. S. Fleet Standing by for Possible Evacuation; Order; Quemoy Quiet ° TAIPEH, Formosa () — Communist guns on recent- ly-captured Yikiangshan BY belched in the direction of | the tense Tachens tonight) ‘but the Chinese Nationalist | Defense Ministry reported | j all the shells landed in the sea. } The combat-ready U. 8S. 7th Fleet stood by for pos- sible orders to evacuate the| Tachen Islands, 200 miles, north of Formosa and eight | miles south of Yikiangshan, | but the U. S. Navy boss in | the Pacific said Sunday} such orders had not yet| been given. The Tachens were fire-bombed by Red bombers Sunday. Tonight | | Communist guns hurled 22 shells | toward the two offshore islands | within 10 minutes. The Defense Ministry reported all was quiet farther south in the Quemoy area. The 7th Fleet needed only a “‘go | ahead"’ to begin an evacuation of the Tachens. : United Press Phote However, Adm. Felix B. Stump, | DE-ICING JOB—The calling card of winter is encrusted thickly | commander of the U. S. Pacific and heavily on the rigging and masts of the fishing boat ‘‘Tony Maltos,” | Fleet, said on a quick visit to | which arrived at New York's famous Fulton Fish Market after a this Chinese Nationalist capital | fishing expedition to Gloucester, Mass. Tony Frontiero is shown | yesterday that an evacuation had | | | | | | | | housing was estimated at buildings damage Million Dollar Fire in Baltimore BATTLE 12-ALARM BLAZE — Severa} hundred new and used cars were destroyed in Baltimore | apartment houses in sub-freezing weather as a today when a 12-alarm fire swept through three | precautionary move but were allowed to return the Martin Motor Co. one million dollars. | control two and one-half hours after it started at At least 30 persons were evacuated from nearby |4 a. m. . AP Wirephote Total |to their homes when the blaze was brought under attempting to de-ice the vessel in sub-freezing temperatures that not been ordered. | prevailed in New York. Unconfirmed Chinese press re- ~~ opengl die oma os New Arms Call for Bigger before the evacuation takes place, } nal ———— here expect | them to do. Army, General Tells House gizsrz srz.c: orders to prepare for a bitter stand if the Communists should attack rters after a quick WASHINGTON (INS) — Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway | trip to Taipeh and an unheralded disagreed today with Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens’ Second of Year Mrs. Max W. Wells ; with top American | CO! Hits Tree in City proposed Health Service operations te | commanders in Tokyo, Mrs. Eleanor Wells 49-year -old establish traineeships for grad- uate nurses in specialized fields. Smog — He recommended an in- creased Public Health Service ap- propriation for research on air pollution, which has become a major problem in Los Angeles and other industria] centers. Water — The President proposed greater federal assistance to the states for water pollution con programs. Eisenhower emphasized that all contention that development of new weapons permits a planned cut in the size of the Army. wife of Pontiac's assistant fire became the city's second traffic fatality Saturday when her While here he told a news con ference that “any time American chief, ; trol | Ridgway, Army chief of staff, declined to say publicly forces are attacked anywhere they | whether the Joint Chiefs of Staff unanimously approved will defend themselves. the scheduled manpower reduction. He asked to testify; ! came here to see that my commanders have everything they in closed-session on this matter. need if the job is ordered. We The general, who report- have a pian to assist in the evacu- edly opposes the reductior, ation if it is ordered. It -hasn’t also requested that the) been ordered.” House Armed Services Com-; Nationalist army headquarters mittee hear him in private) reported today 16 civilians and on his views on the effec- | two soldiers were killed in yester- auto crashed into a tree off Mt Clemens street, near the east city limits. | Mrs. Wells, of 5885 Williams Lake |Rd., Drayton Plains, was pro- |nounced dead on arrival at Pon- |tiac General Hospital. An autopsy, held to determine 'whether she died before or after the impact, disclosed she died Boxing and Theater Subject to Trust Act | of his proposals recognize the pri- | afterwards of internal injuries mary responsibility of local and | state governments for the health | of the community. He declared: “These recom- mendations to the Congress rep- | ‘0 antitrust laws. resent a broad and coordinated | offensive against many of the | problems which must be solved | if we are te have better health for a stronger America. . . “With the cooperation of the | states and the medical profession, | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Flint Second Largest City in Michigan Now FLINT (INS)—A. University of | Michigan survey disclosed today that Flint, with a population of 190,000, now rates as Michigan's second largest city. The survey, conducted by Dr. } Basil C. Zimmer, resident director | of the university's social science research project, showed the city’s population increased 27,000 since 1950. | pionship prize fight and legitimate | imous in the case of the theaters, | WASHINGTON (—The Supreme | tiveness of the Army if the | y's fire bomb raid on Lower Court decided today that the cham. | cut is put into effect. Sitting beside Stevens at a pub- lic hearing, Ridgway told the | | House group that the introduction | | of new weapons will require more Chief Justice Warren delivered men than now are in the army. both opinions. The court was unan- theater businesses are both subject } A few moments earlier, Se- | vens had testified that a 70,000- man cut in Army. personnel this year was made possible by ip- troduction ot mere effective weapons and a buildup of forces | | but the court split 6-2 in the case dealing with professional boxing. | Justice Frankfurter wrote a | dissenting opinion in which Jus- | tice Minton joined. Minton also wrote a separate dissenting opin- jon. Justice Jackson died before | by Allied nations. Ridgway told the committee that | while a new global conflict would the case was argued. | not require as many ground troops . as were needed in World War II, The Justice Department had ow weapons have increased the | boxing within the scope of the fed-| He based his contention on two | eral antitrust act, so that it could’ points: prosecute a suit which charged a! 1. A combat %one previously | monopoly exists in the business. | estimated between 30 and 50 miles, | The department appealed from a| has been enlarged to between 150 decision by U.S. District Judge! and 200 miles. Ridgway said this Gregory F. Noonan in New York, necessitates bringing forces much | dismissing the government's mo-| deeper into action than before. nopoly complaint. 2. The Army now must be able te concentrate its forces very Instructions: 1 BALET Ewch jumbled 2 XOYPR word is re- SELSA work * on a ser de you have 5 IDEA 4 fere you | ~ 6 SOKCT my line?” 7 TACRH 8 9 0 rapidiy, withdraw them with equal rapidity, and then recon- centrate them. A MARK GOODSON-BILL TODMAN PRODUCTION Chairman Carl Vinson (D-Ga) said the committee will whether the testimony given by Ridgway executive session Chiefs of Staff favored it. Defense Secretary Charies E. Wil- tt eR Tachen Island. The army said 23) civilians and two soldiers were wounded. Margaret Flying to West Indies British Princess Plans Caribbean Islands Tour on First Solo Venture LONDON (INS) — British Prin- cess Margaret left chilly London by plane today for a month-long tour of sunny islands in the West Indies. The 24-year-old Princess “Meg” | left London Airport at 3:09 p. m. (10:09 a. m. EST) aboard the double-deck stratocruiser Canopus, | special Brittish Overseas Airways’ | plane manned by a 1l4-member crew, She is scheduled to arrive at Trinidad’s Piarce Airport tomor- row afternoon. Queen Elizabeth, her sister; Queen Mother Elizabeth, and Prince Philip, husband of the Queen, said goodbye to Margaret at the airport. 4 The plane crew intends to stop | either at Goose Bay in Labrador or at Moncton, in New Brunswick, Canada, and then at Montreal en route to Trinidad. 7H ie Hl | f —_“ * | with No other autos were involved in the mishap. | Police, who said there were | mo skids marks at the scene, | quoted two witnesses as saying | Mrs. Wells apparently made no attempt to avoid striking the tree. Police theorized she might have blacked-out before the accident. | Mrs. Wells, according to police had been considered a ‘‘good and careful driver."’ She and her hus- band once made a motorcycle tour of the United States. Her death was the second traf- \fic fatality in Pontiac this year |Andrew F. Chunovich, 59, of 675 Cortwright St., was killed three days earlier when he was struck by a car at an intersection. Last year, when the city ex- | perienced five traffic deaths, the first traffic fatality was recorded Feb. 7 and the second April 26. Surviving besides her husband, Max W. Wells, are three daughters and a son, Mrs. Maxine Berry, |of Muskegon, Mrs. Barbara Van- derlind and Mrs. Lenore Vahl, both burn Heights, and Clarence E. Smith and Miss Vera Smith of | yesterday. There were showers and | snow flurries in the mountains in- Firemen will act as pallbearers land. Pontiac, and 10 grandchildren. Tuesday when she will be buried in a Pontiac Cemetery which will be named later. Funeral service Funeral Home Tuesday at 3 p.m., ing. In PPP PPP Ce st asveeeesecbieccsbageees ' | Dies of Injuries After. 6 Perish in State Traftic for Worst Weekend in ‘55 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Four teenagers whose automobile skidded on ice and collided with a roaring train were among 16 to dié in Michigan’s weekend traffic. It was the highest weekend death toll on the state's streets and highways in the new year. Talks Soviet Demand to Bar Chiang Defeated 10 to 1 New Zealand Delegate Wants to Detain Confab for Red Representative. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (P—Sir Leslie Knox Munro of New Zealand, president of the U. N. Security Coun- cil, proposed today that Red China be invited to send a representative here to take part in the debate on a *Formosan cease-fire. Munro made his proposal immediately after the Coun- cil refused to consider a So- viet demand that National- ist China be barred from the debate. The New Zealand diplomat sug- gested the Council suspend its discussions until the Chinese Com- munists can get a Tepresentative here. He said U.N. Secretary Gen- eral Dag Hammarskjold already had established contact with the Peiping regime. Hammarskjold, he said, should urge the Commu- nists to accept the invitation. The Council ran into its first controversy when Soviet Delegate Arkady A. Sobolev tossed in his demand to bar the Chinese Na- tionalists. ’ The vote was 10-1, with only the Soviet Union voting to consider excluding Nationalist China. The move to throw out the Soviet demand was made by Chief U.S. | Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. and quickly drew support of the The Council then cedural debate on the form of its agenda. i oN - A brother and two sisters | The issue was complicatéd by a were among the four bat-/Seviet move to include on the tered to death in the auto-|*senda a charge of aggression Midwest Seen Getting Warme Temperature Will Rise More; Later This Week train crash near North Bradley, a community 13 miles west of Midland. Besides the traffic toll of 16, Michigan counted three dead in miscellaneous accidents, A baby suffocated in its crib. A boy denly enveloped his father's car. | A Detroiter slipped on an-egg and | fell, fatalfy injuring himself. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS . Killed in the car-train wreck The bitter cold that blanketed were Wollace Graham, 14; Ver- much of the nation east of the; nop West, 19, and his sisters, | Rocky Mountains for nearly a); Joyce, 16, and Connie, 14, all of | week has begun moderating, and North Bradley. | | } Spark From | Finger Sets Off Dr. Milton H. Bank otficiat- / $60,000 Fire ‘today at the Vulcanizing Material ic ! | | battled the flames which ripped | through the two-story brick build- of Cedar. Rapids, lowa, and Rob- | ries yesterday were extremely light ert, of Pontiac; two brothers and | except for a 1-inch fall recorded at a sister, Howard L. Smith, of Au- | Redwood Falls, Minn. Witnesses said the youngsters’ car skidded on ice and was hit (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Forecasters See Relief From Cold light snows moved eastward into | the Midwest. Temperature rises of 3 to 20 de- grees were recorded yesterday in many of the below-zero sections. Continued warming was forecast for today. Only in the east was the sharp | ; chill unbroken. Temperatures The weather bureau predicts | higher temperatures for the next were as much as 7 degrees lower yesterday than the day before few days. Tonight's low is expected from New Eagiand aeresd tb to be near 20 degrees, with a North Carolina, and high tomorrow of 25 to 29. readings extended as far south Light = forecast for to os. wee. Wiaeila. night and Tuesday, with rain ex- | pected Wednesday. Zero temperatures were ; still; Weekend temperatures in down- prevalent in the upper Ohio Valley town Pontiac ranged from 3 to 16 and northern New England. \degrees Saturday and from 5 to Precipitation moving in from the | 21 Sunday. At 8 a.m. today, temp- west was predicted to take the|eratures rose to 12 degrees and form of rain or mixed snow and/| continued to rise to 17 by 2 p.m.!the House. rain in southern and central por-| — tions of Illinois and Indiana, tient | S@ I in Rubinstein The Pacific Coast had light rains Serge Rubinstein. GRAND RAPIDS (®—Static elec- Snow Forecast burned to death when flames oud | | against the United States and a demand that all U.S. forces be withdrawn from the Formosa area. There was speculation here that Russia might spell out its demand for evacuation of all islands and |‘other territories belonging to China” to include Nationalist China's surrender not only of the Tachens, Matsu and Quemoy but . of Formosa itself and the Pesca- dores Islands, which United States has pledged to protect. Raccoon Coat Too Thin for Nebraska Weather GRAND ISLAND, Neb, (INS)— The cold spell has hit Grand Is- land so hard that even the animals want to come inside, Mrs. Orville Macomber said she heard scratching on her door and, thinking it was her cat, opened it. Instead of her pet, a raccoon walked in, warmed up by the fire- = and then walked back out- side. Machrowicz Named WASHINGTON (#—Rep. Machro- | wicz (D-Mich) has been named re- gional assistant whip for Michigan land Indiana by Rep. Albert (D- Okla), House Democratic whip. | Machrowicz will keep Albert ad- | vised on how Democratic mem- bers feel about legislation before ek ‘Woman in Brown’ Murder Case From Our Wire Services NEW YORK—An unknown “woman in brown” added a new note of mystery today to the strange slaying of — Police said they were searching for the slender young woman who was seen wandering about Rubinstein’s five- story mansion shortly before the killer strangled the draft-dodging playboy financier. for the first. time that a small bone‘in Rubinstein’s ‘Te thick neck was broken by Ten pieces of fire equipment It was also made known? ing on the city’s Northwest Side. | the cause of death remained | No one was injured. strangulation. , | weeks Firemen reported the blaze! These developments as | death under control about 11:15 a.m., but) plans were being epmpleted-for| The woman, were standing by with equipment | funeral service for the 46-year-old owner Anna Borshuk, to insure against a fresh outbreak | Russian immigrant. stein had told her. then in the stored rubber material, / : rubber cement, auto tire | sunt teld police they saw a young boots and related accessories, woman dressed in brown im the | o95 t \ ‘ ha teagan we ee OPN es cto ty, catia Aaa an i * ' Two Stores to Test New Space Kits Replace Horror Comics With Scientific Data for City’s Children When the Wrigley Supermarkets decided to purge their bookracks of horror comic books, they found themselves involved in space travel with their Pontiac desig- nated as a “take-off area.” It all started when a group of the young executives of this groc ery chain declared that they would not let their own children read some of the comic books in their stores—hence they could not hon estly merchandise them for thetr customers’ children. Challenged by top executives to produce something better, they looked to ‘'space’’ for the answer! Presenting their problem te James Sayre Pickering, noted astronomer-educator and direct- ors of the Hayden Planetarium, , the. result was a space kit as contemporary in space travel data as anything known today. Space travel, they discovered was just beyond the horizon, and science knew much about it that should be included in education for boys and girls. Included in the kit is a factual book on space travel, an inter- | planetary map, space calipers, space speed charts, course finders, a space log and other parapherna- lia that adults know little About Pontiac was selected as the test- ing area for the distribution of these kits which will appear in the local Wrigley stores for the | first time Tuesday. Wrigley execu- tives state they will distribute these kits to local area elementary stores teachers to aid them in teaching | about this new mode of travel. Falls 1,000 Feet Into Snow Bank; All Bones Intact ELMENDORF AIR FORCE BASE, Alaska a — Pvt. Stanley Melczak's parachute failed to open and he fell 1,000 feet — without breaking a bone. He landed hard on his back in deep snow. The 20-year-old paratrooper with the llth Airborne Divison was the Ft. jumped with other paratroopers over Talkeetna during the Opera- tion Snowbird maneuver Saturday. From his hospital bed, he said today he didn't realize his main | ‘chute had failed to open until he was too Close to the ground. He yanked open his reserve _ chute but sa t began to un fold only a “ h’’ before he hit in 38 inches of snow. Doctors found no broken bones but said Meiczak apparently suf fered interna] injuries. Circuit Judge Faces Heavy Court Load Some 20 criminal trials have been scheduled for the first month of the February term of Oakland County Circuit Court, Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem said today The trials, beginning Feb. 8. include murder, three: negligent homeicide, one: larceny. three: assault, one; breaking and en- tering, three; and aiding escape of a prisoner, one. Others are drunk driving, one; gross indecency, one; robbery, three; possession of narcotics, one; and check passing. two. Judge George B. Hartrick will preside Vive La Chivalry ROME (INS)—An Italian crim inologist declared today that wom- men commit fewer crimes than men, but added hastily that this does not mean they have a higher moral senses. Prof. Benigno Di Tullio of Rome University, reply- ing to a question from a reader of the magazine Epoca, said many feminine crimes go unpunished because ‘‘many men mask their | women’s unlawful activites and are often ready to také the blame themselves."’ The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly cloudy through tomorrow with eccasions! light snew tonight and temerrew. Warm- er Lew near 7%. High tomor- row % te ®. beasteriy winds te- night 8-15 miles. Tomerrew night mostiy cleedy with snew ferries ond somewhat colder, 15 te 19. ture preceding 8 am. 8 Sun sete onday at 5°44 pm Sun rises Tuesday et 745 & m Moon rises Monday at 11°28 a.m Moon sets Tuesday at 2:5¢ a.m. _-——- THE PONTIAC PRESS, i t . MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955 ———— “| 34 From Area | Begin Career | in Khaki Today Reporting for U.S. Army induc- tion at Oakland~ County Draft} Boards 65 and 67 this morning | were 34 men. Leader of the eight | men leaving from local Board No. 65 was Ronald J. Rossmeisi, of 3 Dwight St The 26 out-county draftees dr- parting from Board No. 67 were led by Tony V. Sparks, of Walled Lake. Drafted by Board 65 were: Ronaid J. Rossmeis!. 64 Dwight tiaic Thomas M. Gambie, 472 Howland tiac Vincen'e Quintana, 81 Wall Pontiae Herfert, 158 W.' Mapiedaje, #on- Poa- Robert E Harel Park Arthur J Payne, $1 William E Moore Pontiac Eugene P Samoriga tiac Arthur W Pontiac local Board 67 listed the follow- ing inductees | Crawtord, Pontise 727 Menominee, 34 Beminoie, Pon- Aldrich, 3% Lerraine Ct. Tony V Sparks, Walied Lake leader | Raymond K. Walmoth, Birmingham = | Richard O. Garnett Il, 4876 Hobson, | Pontiac Rebert E. Jacobson, 2416 Silver Circie, Pontiac Charies J. Allen, Detroit Edward R. Oliver, Birmingham Edward A. Cote, Oxford Joseph H. Stamper, 48766 Pontiac Trail, Wixom James H. Martin, Milford David R. Steinhoff, Walled Late Charles W. Vallance, Rochester William D. Turner, Farmington Jack A. Congdon, Rochester Clifton Goegwin, 363: Prospect, Pontiac Jona D. Veitch, Decatur, Alebama | Donald C. Colegrove, Milf t Robert R. Maxwell, Wixom aan B Russ, 3405 Mill, Auburn ts ries R. Widger, 2481 Hoover, Pon- thi Richard J. Mitchell, Troy tise James B. Phillips, 225 Calgary, Pontiac. 16 Killed in Traffic ‘Over the Weekend | (Continued From Page One) broadside by the Chesapeake & Ohio train. The impact carried the ) automébile almost half a mile down the track. | Patricia Riley, 19, of Trenton, | William Runco, 22, of Dearborn, ,and Rundo’s 3-year-old stepdaugh- ter, Sheryll Lee Klempner, were killed Saturday night on Telegraph road in a head-on collision with a car driven by Richard Moore, 20. of Trenton. The accident occurred a mile south of Flat Rock. A third car, driven by Robert A. Hersten, 24, of Detroit, piled inte Moore's car. Four other persons were injured in the ROE. CALL —The pups are minding mother| Channel firehouse in Queens, New York, checks pretty well as Fawn, firemen’s mascot at the Broad | litter of 12 on one of the trucks. o Deaths in Pontiac Area Primo V. Alessi Primo V. Alessi, 40, former Pon- in a Saginaw hospital Sunday fol- lowing a long illness. | Since leaving Pontiac in 1941, he had been a tool and process en- , gineer for General Motors’ Steering ~| Gear Division there. He was active in youth work, | participating in YMCA and scout- ing programs. He was scoutmaster for St. Andrew's Catholic Church, te which he was a member. also was active in the Saginaw In- (dustrial Executives Club. Born in Utica Oct. 24, 1914, a son of Joseph and Marianne Alessi, he came to Pontiac with his family , when still a child. He attended Pontiac parochial schools. He was graduated from General Motors Institute in Flint in 1937 and was employed at the Pontiac Motor Division as-a tool designer ,and process engineer In 1941 he moved to Saginaw jwhere he married the former Alice- , Rae Johnson Aug. 15, 1942. They had no children. Surviving besides his parents, of / 238 E. Pike St.. are four sisters, Mrs. Marion Fox, Birmingham: He eSCufsSia te | orach Mrs. Francis Dionne. Mrs. Haroid . Martin and Mrs. Reginald John- Mrs. Eleanor Wells, 49, of son, a!l of Pontiac, and two Drayton Plains was killed Sunday brothers, Adolph and Robert, also when her car crashed into a tree | of Pontiac in Pontiac Services are scheduled for 9 a.m Dale Miner, 45. of Hillsdale was Wednesday in Case Chapel Funeral killed whed his car ran off M34! home, Saginaw, and at 9:30 in St into a ditch in Hillsdale County Andrew's Church. Burial will be in Gloria Roelofs, 7, of Zeeland was Forest Lawn Cemetery there. | injured fatally Saturday night“when Baby Girl Beckett a car driven by her father, Gil- Funeral service for Baby Girl bert, collided with another on M2) /near Holland. A two-car crash in Plymouth (Beckett, daughter of Herman and teck two | Alice Taylor Beckett, 2451 Snell- Township Saturday lives and left three’ persons ser- brook, will be Tuesday at ll a.m lously injured. from Huntoan Funeral Home. Bur- ial will follow in Perry Mt. Park Killed were Michael Cox, 11, of | Detroit and Peter Queva, 533, of Plymouth. Michael's father and mother and a rider in the Queva' *” | car were injured seriously. | pital. Mrs. Frances McClellan, 62, of | Surviving besides her parents is Inkster was injured fatally Satur-| 4 sister Carole, at home day when she lost control of her _— ‘car and swerved into a tree near Sylvester L. Carey her home. Fannie J. Lewis. 71. was found Sylvester L. Carey, 60, 490 N. fatally injured on a Detroit street Perry St., died Saturday at his Cemetery She died 15 minutes after birth | Saturday. Police said it was in- | home. dicated she had been hit by an|. Born in Scranton, Pa., he was automobile. the son of Byron and Mae Dailey Carey and married Willanna Carr in Manistique Feb. 16, 1921. Last employed as a carpenter for Pontiac Motor Division, he came to Pontiac from Gulliver, | Mich., 10 years ago. , | Surviving besides his widow are four daughters. Mrs. Fred Griffin and Mrs. Frank Bouback of Pon- tiac, Mrs. Earl Martin and. Mrs William Harden of Rochester, and four sons, Clarence of Escanaba, George of Gulliver, Lawrence of 'Waterford and Marvin James of | Pennie Mazzie, 9, of Detroit, | was killed Friday night while hitching a ride on the back of a truck, In home accidents, Carolyn Faye Miller, 8 months, suffocated Satur- day in her crib in her Charlotte home. Frank Sepulski, 51, of Detroit was injured fatally Saturday when he slipped on a raw egg he dropped on the floor of his kitchen while cooking his breakfast. | In addition, Charles Ray Patter- ; _ | son. 5, of Monroe was burned to| ‘he U-S. Navy. death when his father's car sud-| Also surviving are a sister, denly caught fire from an explo-| Mrs, Ina Barney, of Rhinelander, sion | Wis., and 22 grandchildren. Willard C. Smith, 30. of Lansing | was killed Sunday night as his car crashed into the rear of another at the intersection of U.S. 16 and Pontiac Trail in New Hudson. Funeral service from Voorhees- Siple Chapel will be Wednesday at 1:30 p. m,. with Elder Claude Cook of Latter Day Saints Re- organized Church officiating Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Errola E. Croger | After a two-month illness, Errola | E. Crager, 52, of 53 Euclid Ave., | died yesterday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. } A son of the late Charlies and Elmira Ormanie Crager, he was born in Reed City and married } Saturday in Pontiac General Hos- | Asher R. Fox Jr. Asher Robert Fox Jr., 55, 792 Young St., died Friday at his home. The son of Asher R. Fox, Sr., and Elizabeth Smithers, he was born in,Manistique Feb. 11, 1899 A veteran of World War 11, he came to Pontiac 30 years ago and was last employed by Pontiac Mo- tor Division Surviving besides his parents are six sisters, Mrs. Leonard Parker and Mrs. Charles Ewald of Manis- tique, Mrs. Vern Haggerty of Men- den, Mrs. Otto Keller of California Mrs. Chris Jacobs of Florida and Mrs. Jay Riley of Keego Harbor Also surviving are two brothers Charles and Forest Fox, both oi Manistique. Servige will be held from Hun- toon Funeral Home Tuesday at 11:30 p. m., with the Rev. James Luther of Silvercrest Baptist Church officiating. Burial will fol- low in Oak Hill Cemetery Joseph Manning Prayer service will be Tuesday at 11 a.m. at William F. Davis Funeral Home for Joseph Man ning, son of Jessie Franklin and Mary Garett Manning of 316 How- ard McNeil] St. He died Saturday a day after he was born in Pontiac General Hospital Surviving hesides his parents are a sister, Patricia, and three broth- ers. Jessie Jr., Charies and Wal- ter, ali at home Burial will be in Oak Hiil Ceme- tery, Mrs. James Robertson Mrs. James (Myra) Robertson 81, of 249 S. Telegraph Rd. died yesterday in Pontiac General Hos- pital after a two-week illness | Born in Lapeer County, she was | the. daughter of Abe and Nellie Eaton Haines. She was married jin Cheboygan and lived most of her life in Pontiac. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs Warren Asetin of Detroit, and three | sons, Romain Martin of Petoskey | Ace and Cleve Cole of Pontiac. | Also surviving are two broth- | ers, Bert Haines of Fostoria, Abe Haines of Pinckney, four sisters, Mrs, Ned Flansberg and Mrs. Carrie Fiansberg of Flint, Mrs, Charlies Steinbrink of La- peer, Mrs, Will Welch of Jack- son, and nine grandchildren and six great grandchildren. Funeral service will be Thursday at 1 p.m, from Voorhees-Siple Chapel, the Rev. John W. Mulder of Central Methtodist Church of- ficiating. Burial will be in the Lum Cemetery. Motorist Faces Trial Irvin Walton, 38, of 31 Hood St., pleaded innocent to drunk driv- ing Saturday when«he appeared before Municipal Judge Cecil Mc- Callum and posted a $100 bond, pending trial Feb. 2. Suburban Official Dies DETROIT # — George Hamil- ton, 65, suburban Lincoln Park councilman, died Sunday at his home. | in Detroit Feb. 19. | Michigan State College and has Auditor Probes Ta ‘ 5 Attempts to Halt “St. Clair Fill-Ins State to Ask Injunctions | in Effort to End Alleged Land-Grabbing | | LANSING (INS) — Eight tem- | porary injunctions will be sought | | this week to halt so-called land- | | grabbers along the shores of Lom | St. Clair. Asst. Atty. Gen. Nicholas v.| Olds refused to reveal the names | of those. affected until the docu- ments are filed. He said he was acting on orders issued by Atty Gen. Thomas M. Kavanagh. Olds said the restraining or- ders are being sought in ‘the | state’s battle’ against traspas- | sers whe have been building swank homes and business estab- | lishments on state-owned lake frontage which has been filled state law. 4 The law, passed in 1899, sets : aside all submerged lands along the shores of Lake Erie, Huron, Michigan, Superior and St. Clair \for Conservation Department use as fish and wildlife preserves and for public recreation areas. Conservation officials said nat- ural breeding grounds for fish and game were being destroyed by the filling in of lake shore lands. So far, the officials said, the state's sporadic attempts to halt such fill-ins have proved ineffec- tive. Woman in Brown ¢ Sought in Murder TB Sanatoriums Face Budget Cut Legislator Says Funds Asked by Williams Not Justified by Need LANSING uw — The State Ap- propriations Committee cocked its pruning shears at the state's tuberculosis hospitals today as the | | | | [Hat eS | City to App The Day in Birmingham ortion Costs for. Paving Triangle. Area BIRMINGHAM—A preview of to night's City Commission activitier finds lawmakers with park- ing problems, but with a cost split for paving to serve the tri- angular parcel bounded by Adams road, the Grand Trunk Western Railroad and the northern cit) limits. A land developer and the Board of Education are expected to share costs with the city. - A comparative traffie survey of Quarton Lake Estates subdivision will. be submitted, and further dis- cussion will follow in the proposed alley behind West Maple property between Bates and Henrietta. os * * A kickoff dinner will start vol- unteers on their way in a mythi- cal beat race at 7 tonight, spurring workers on in the annual membership A report on “What Europe Did With 28 Billions,”’ a recent maga- zine article, will be discussed at tomorrow's 10 a. m. meeting of | the’ Ruth Shain Class in Interna- tional Affairs at the Community House, by Mrs. Earl May. Mrs. D. G. Babbitt will review an arti- cle by Dorothy Fosdick entitled, **How a Global Policy Is Evolved.” * * . “Pan American Affairs’’ will be taken up by Mrs. Vaio Woodford Schroeder of Grosse Pointe, when she addresses the Woman's Club at a dessert luncheon at Baldwin Library at 1 p. m. tomorrow. Mrs. Schroeder was chosen by | Service for Albert Lee Pence. 82, of 113 Fairfax, will be held at |Day and Carter Mortuary, Bed- ford, Ind., on Tuesday, with burial in Green Hill Cemetery there. He died Saturday at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Robert R. Cosner, Mr. Pence's body was taken from the Manley Bailey Funeral |Home yesterday. Besides his ‘|daughter he is survived by one granddaughter. } ‘Margaret Flying ‘to the West Indies (Continued From Page One) |ed carefully weeks ago, ranges | from simple cotton dresses for in- |formal events to evening gowns = the many official receptions. Margaret will be met at the | airpert tomorrow by the British | geverner, Sir Hubert Rance, and his wife, Lady Mary. A gar- den party at the governor's resi- dence will launch the royal tour, feliowed by several days of carnivals, fireworks, hospital vis- its, formal dinners and other events. the General Federation of Wom- | en's Clubs to represent the Unilt- 1955 legislative session went into its fourth week Sen. Elmer R. Porter (R-Bliss field), the committee chairman said he was aghast at the number of empty beds in the institutions and the fact that Gov. Williams budget was proposing funds for more occupants and more em- plo e¢ Porter said the four state TB hospitals have space fer &33 pa tients but that only 484 beds are filled, The governor has asked for funds for 595 occupants for next year, Porter said, despite the fact that the four have stead- ily declined im use during the past year. The patient.’ Porter said, but the gov- ernor has asked for 508 employer four’ institutions have 457 employes — “‘almost one for every (Continued From Page One) ed States government in its threatening notes had been tied to} recent investigation of coffee rocks and thrown through his win-| prices in Brazil. dow. Police confirmed that one ~~ wv & note said “You have your warning.| Fire and Police Departments are Next time you won't walk away | ‘‘cousidering’’ an investigation to Pay your debts.” | determine whether negligence was Rubinstein’s 84-year-old aunt Eu | responsible for the collision of a genia Forrester told police she was | train and fuel oil truck which awakened at what she thought was | Spilled 3,600 gallons of oil over the about 1 a.m. when a light was/sround on Saturday, Fire Chief turned on in her room. She said | Vernon W. Griffith said today. she looked up to see a fully-clad| Police said the Grand Trunk woman, ‘dressed in brown’’ stand- bia Railroad _ locomotive. ing by the light switch driven by Earl H. Knapp, 53. of Apparently seeing she was in the wrong room, the woman turned off the light and disap peared, Mrs. Forrester said. Rubinstein'’s 78-year-old mother Stella, said she also saw the wo man in brown, walking down the | stairway to the third floor, where | | Thieves Picnic ‘at Expense of Bar, Cleaners Thieves feasted on hotdogs and Rubinstein slept. She said she saw in the next budget. : } the girl about the same time she “I hesitate to advocate that we close out one of these institutions,” | Porter said. ‘‘but we've got to do something. This situation is espec- | cially serious whea you cons there are 12,660 acceptable beds available im county institutions for the tubercular and that 2,771 of them were vacant in December.” Porter cited the Howell, Gaylord Hancock and Kalamazoo sana toriums. from her son's suite Mrs. Rubinstein also was quoted | as saying the mysterious woma¢ ‘didn’t look like the kind who be. | longed there.’ There was no in dication what she meant by that but it apparently wes not uncom- mon for young women to be wan- dering around the Rubinsteir mansion at all hours Police said Rebinstein gave house keys to a number of young girts se they could enter when- ever they were summoned. When Rubinstein became tired of Sanilac Farmer Bids for MSC Board Post SANDUSKY — Frank Merriman, Sanilac county farmer and civic leader announced today that he will be a candidate for the Repub- lican nomination for member of the State Board of Agriculture at the Republican state convention police said, he had the changed on the door and issued new keys to those he still wanted. sible that one particular girl saw her days of favor were close to aa end and gave or sold her key to the killers Merriman was born in Decker- The New York Journal-American ville where he graduated from ‘said today that Rubinstein's mother high school. He is an alumnus of , and his two daughters are the prin- cipal beneficiaries of his estate | remained very active in various. estimated at close to ten million agricultural functions of the col-| dollars. - lege. He owns and operates a| Ignored in the slain financier’s 200-acre dairy farm in Sanilac| wilh the paper said, were the county. Under the terms of the will Serge’s mother, Mrs. Stella Rubin- of Kent Welfare Funds stein, will get a lifetime income | defalcation in the Kent County Bu | The daughters are Diana. 9. and | reau of Social Welfare. | Alexandra, 8, now: living in Targonski said Allan Spraker of | Verdes, Calif., with their mother, | | Grand Rapids, the head of the bu- | the former Laur®tte Kilborn. ‘ing attorney, | pop early Sunday morning in the) boiler room of a cleaning establish- Pontiac Police said today. Detective Sgt. John A. De , investigating the breakin at Ogg Cleaners, 379 E. Pike St.. said the thieves forced a padlock on the boiler room doér and consumed a quantity of the refreshments be- lieved taken previously from the J&K Tavern at 369 E. Pike. De- Pauw said, “Hotdogs, buns and orange pop were found in the boil- er room. Some of it had been eaten.” Nothing has been determined sto- len from the cleaning firm, but vending machines and made an unsuccessfuj attempt to enter the Detectives said it is highly pos safe at the tavern where they | gained entry by removing an ex- haust fan in the rear of the build- ing. Gerber May Be GOP National Committeeman FREMONT (UP) — Several top Michigan Republicans have launched a campaign to elect Dan F. Gerber, president of Gerber Ba- national committeeman, it was re- ported today. The State Republican Convention who has been named general coun- sei to the U. S, Treasury Depart- ment by President Eisenhower. ee reau's accounting division, had a been dismissed and his case turned | over to the Kent County prosecut- | At Interchurch Fellowship for. Spiritual “The thought I will endeavor to ‘Faith in God Is Stressed Security z i i 3 Z : : Fes bil E | i Hie rt ait! ; i i TL mL it g 323 ? * z ij The people of Trinidad have been busy for weeks preparing their own colorful welcome. The streets were decked with red, white and biue bunting and Union Jacks appeared on automobiles, bicycles and donkeys. One calypso singer already has distributed a four-verse song of welcome with a chorus which goes: “Oh, Princess Margaret “In the atmosphere jou feel it “How everyone here glad. “To welcome your highness to Trinidad.” Other songs of welcome, not yet | Published, were be prepared by ,one of Trinidad's tknown | calypso singers, known as ‘The Mighty Panther.’’ | On Feb. 6 Margaret boards the ' Britannia for Grenada, After vis- to other islands, including she will fly back to can is really | Jamaica, heard angry men’s voices coming | ment after taking the food from |London aboard the Canopus. a nearby tavern entered earlier Court of Honor to Bestow Rank of Eagle Scout BLOOMFIELD HILLS — At the ripe old age of 13, Jack Mason, of 708 W. Long Lake Rd.. will have scouting’s highest rank be- stowed upon him fonight. He will be awarded his Eagle Scout badge at Boy Scout Troop B-17's court of honor Jack has moved rapidly through his current group of girl friends, police said the thieves took an un-/ ‘outing ranks since joining the 10¢ *. determined amount of money from | troop when it was founded 2', years ago and is now a senior patrol leader. Five tenderfoot, four second class, four first class, one star and , one life badge will also be awarded |at the ceremonies.. The troop is |; Sponsored by the Men's Club of j Kirk in the Hills | Al Escape Harm in Blind Landing COAL CITY, Il. ®—"I kept los- ing altitude and decided I would have to come down at the Joliet airport. Then I knew I wouldn’t be able to make it. It was dark below, but I had no choice.” Thus Capt. Edward Kuhn, pilot, told of his decision to crash-land an airliner with 41 persons aboard into a farmer's bean field early yesterday. None of the five crew members or 36 passengers. all mil- itary personnel, was injured. The Southeast Airlines’ twin-en- gine C46 wag chartered to fly the % soldiers from Camp Kilmer, N.J., to Ft. Ord, Calif., and the | Oakland, Calit., Army base. Kuhn, 30, of Miami | Springs, Fla.. a former Air Force combat jet pilot, said the plane developed en- gine trouble near Bloomington, Ill., about 180 miles southwest of Chi- cago. He turned back toward Chicago, he said, but with the one engine out he gradually lost altitude until he ws down to 100 feet. He de- cided to belly-land, without wheels. “All the odds are against you when you come down nowhere in the middle of the night like that,” he said. > - * The plane skidded 500 feet to a safe stop in the snow. Damage to the craft was minor. The area is dotted with hills and rough strip mine fields. Kuhn walked the mile to Coal City for aid. The soldiers were re- turned to Chicago by bus and later boarded another charter flight to the West Coast. 4 From Area to Head Auto License Branches Auto license branch managers | appointed Friday by Secretary of State James M. Hare include sev- | eral from the Pontiac area. They are Neil R: Crowe, Rochester teach- er and accountant; Marian Mur- ray, reappointed at Walled Lake; | Steve S. Skula, Utica insurance agent; and Harold F. Jackson, Cass City assessor. (Advertisement) Aimest Frantic from DRY SKIN ITCH? First applications of Zemo—a doctor’s soothing antiseptic — relieve itch of surface skin and | scalp irritations. Zemo stops scratching and so aids healing. Hal Boyle Say: ar You Can't Take the Army| Out of an Old Sergeant, “I just go around seeing my| the other end, and climbed out. | | friends that know me well,” said| And I did it without getting my | Marty. “A man must keep in touch | chin wet." with his friends. “To my mind there is no man ever lived enjoyed himself _ resolutely kept at it without com- | much as I did there, and I'm | plaint until he fainted: when Cadet still having the dangest time of | ™ my life. W with the boys | Omar Nelson Bradley could throw y Piste is ,@ ball from anywhere in left field | selon kept me young.” { unerringly to home plate; when | Marty admits now ‘I was a wild | Cadet Mark Clark was nicknamed boy myself when I came here from | ‘‘Contraband’’ because of his suc- Tipperary.” That was in 1896, he} cess in smuggling food tidbits into was only 20, and his first job at) the barracks; and when “‘I told the West Point was as a mess hall | only lie in my life’ to Cadet Dwight D, Eisenhower. “He had hurt bis knee in foot- ball and I took care of it for. ' Cadet Douglas MacArthur, red “As soon as 1 could I enlisted, | because I liked the brass buttons | very much.” Thirty years later he retired as |a sergeant, but merely went home and changed his clothes and came right back as civilian superintend- ent of the West Point gym. That was in 1928, When he finally retired * . the Cadets paraded before him in special review and gave him a gold watch. Marty's blue eyes still get misty when he talks of that day. Over the decades Marty and | bis late wife, whe reared no | children of their own, became | | father and mother conf | the Cadet corps, helped hundreds of future colonels and generals to | brea out their youthful troubles. 3 A roll call of Marty's memories | is a roll call of 3 years of West |® Point athletic history. His book of | memoris, ‘‘Bringing Up the Brass,’’ has been made into a film, “The ow. 57¢| & 98¢ SIMAS —Drug Dept. /sesweeseneseseesavesess 4 Simms Has Everything For Long Gray Line,” starring Tyrone § ‘55 Fish License ond Power as Marty, by Columbia Pic- FREE Fishermen tures. It is probably the only movie Calenders self. Carrying out a strictly land technique, Maher, who has| a low opinion of water under any | | Circumstances. taught hundreds of | | Cadets to swim over a 35-year) fi Pa jf At : g F Z ( You Can Get $1.1 ; Broom or Dust Cloth Toward Purchase of GENUINE O-CEDAR ponge Mop $4.50 Value I? YOU DON'T HAVE YOUR a= IN don't jet thet — you to bring it tm ister .. ut now is the time to that ni — ene “as 4 . bw 7 for Your Old Mop Never Fail—Non-Freeze Tip-Ups Of] treated hardwood. all meta! parts cadmium plated to resist rust. Large reel, double stahilizer 17” long. Fiag stands 2? above ice on strike. Exactly as pictured With — In : :,8. “he he later LEADER MATERIAL onl e 29 Gry’ at this New LOW PRICE Now oat SIMMS For Kitchen—W orkshop—Garage—etc. 2x1'/. Foot HOOK BOARD Complete With 20 Assorted Hooks eee eee eeene 5 3 < : 5 LOW PRICE for Students, Hobbiests! Powerful Interchangeable Lens 100, 200 and 300-POWER ‘ MICROSCOPE Usually Priced $10 of More gee Holds In hy aoe Others from ........... a4 WONDER BAITS Famous Gould’ c erecislon made wieresctne BAD. Gl Saeed: Cia tte 29 +.» just the price of a toy. } a $298 ali steel .. were eete For Advanced Students 600-POWER MICROSCOPE fa or eae fl 4 i aE: > ay TUE, (RTE ts SHSSSHSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSHSSSSSSESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSHSSHSESSESSSSSSHSOHSOSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSESSSSSSSESHESSSEHHSHSESESSEOOEOESSE i A cheatin ss . aie Macias: Ss | pool, swam across it, then down to | #&4in the rest of my life.’ Marty remembers the time when | Z to do knee bends during a hazing, | Costs MUCH LESS at Simms this magical 3-D viewer. 7 ie Gift boxed. A Colgates New Soap yy > ©» SR am ¥ x Ne Famous ‘CUT-RITE 2 SOAP | WAX PAPER 10c Size Bar 3s 6 bu. 23¢ 2\° ao Chieroiphy ll etd 2 eeese eee mp ct ; ¥ “> THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1635. Pao ep yeep eroubhe . Sater alg, Bie PROVIDENCE, R. |. #— Lake was hauling 18,000 pounds of macaroni from'a Fall River eS tee wat ca tf en wouldn't. He wen his ‘A’, head he never got to play again.” On the back of hie‘ right hand | ass macaroni, factory to nos are painted black, although NEW YORK @ — You can take | judice against water, aid ea ha Marty has four aces tattooed, | Army base in New Jersey when) as late as 1948 it was used on an old sergeant out of the Army,| was forced to. | endied by the years. | the trailer truck developed engine | 25 per cent of the new cars. pa peg take the oid army “In 1911 a captain who was | “In 1905 I was playiing poker,” | hag alpen. equary trying to get me busted ordered | he said. “And 1 had tour sees in| : fi It's that way with Marty Maher, | °° O.Sr 0 ang go ime the | Such BIG Values.We Must Limit who retired in 1946 after 50 years ” he eald. “f went inte tho | ™Y hand. 1 bet everything I had) of service at West Point. One of aie room and put my head |" them. But another guy in the) § SALE to Tonight end Tuesday Only! ft Us an heen between my hands and cried [game drew three cards ‘and beat| P 78 the white-thatched old sergeant | ‘Then I told myself, ‘If you just | ™¢ With a straight flush. That very | DRUG DEP T SPECIALS still goes back every day of the|do what you teach others, you | Might I had the aces tattooed on : anak © Sunday to visit “The | shouldn't drown.’ I went into the |} me to remind me never to gumble | BEONOMY Did it work? “Pretty well,”’ said Marty, “‘ex- | SIZE BOX cept for pinochle and dice.” | 4 Soap Powder -@ RINSO ° BREEZE | @ SILVER DUST ; Buy GIANT Size and Get C 242 times mere Seap than large size box. Ce ws ie fa . r. @ You pay less, but get more... il sede, ares A that’s what buying GIANT size box- tx) es of soap powder means. Tonight and Tuesday only! Limit 4 boxes per customer. GIANT SIZE BOXgs “oun Soap Powders @ Oxydol @ Cheer @ Tide SUPER-SIZE @Fob ee @ Vel s ia ts @ Super @ Liquid nag ps °o Suds @ Joy Lux Pp: cell automatic pane ll ecsures best prints 4 Over t's Lifetime wagewacer. deckeled a sons Ss i a C im the GIANT 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor = ee aks Why pay more for your seaps? Reguler $1.00 Value _ Buy the GIANT size for less and Simms Sells Them at get more soap. Limit 4 boxes. | HALF PRICE Shopping Bag Full of 12 Rolls Toilet Tissue Tonight & - Children's 100-Piece Tuesday i STEREO SLIDES “3 3 Onl) Ps 3-D Sets Famous ‘Stylene” toilet tissue in 1,000 sheet rolls. Limit 12 rolls per em 89° aN Shopping Bag Full of 6 ROLLS PAPER TOWELS 15@ sheet rolls of Fort Howard Towels Shopping Bag Full of 4 BOXES CLEANSING TISSUE Each box has 400 sheets of cleansing tissue % Complete with Viewer Cc 10 complete fairy stories | that really ‘come alive’ in Drucs Main Floor {{(@ BROTHER IMMS Half th the ‘Price You'd Expect to Pay | | for Soothing Relief from the Aches and Pains of | ARTHRITIS, RHEUMATISM body. including salicylamide—a medi- cation frequentiy recomme by doctors At Simons t the ONLY Difference Is Our LOWER PRICES © Savings of 10%, to 40%, © Freshest, Pure Drugs y change t course fine by turning to PRU 5 VO for the quick- Why not join the thousands who est, longest | . non narcotic retief known to medical science. It contains Vitamin ©—the vitamin essential to PRU VO —0@9 out of every users have found satisfaction 4 PRI vo— you, too, can obtain ite special soothing relief. No prescription required. Start today! Me metter whet yee heve been peying fer the relief of nagging pein trom Arthritis or Rheemetiom you can seve money by insisting en PRUVO in the $1.50 Trice! Size Bettie af your druggist’s — fer even @recter savings get the $4.09 Econemy Size or the $7.50 Hospital Size. GET PRUVO PAIN RELIEF TABLETS AT LEADING DRUG STORES $8 N. Saginaw—Main Floor sith aie ON THIS NEW AND GARDEN SERV-A-TABLE HOSTESS CART REGULAR S 79? 5 y ALUE Styled exadtly ss pictured. Folds flat for easy storage wher not in. use. , SIMMS rl are fivig & more comfortable l- with | SIMMS BROS. — 98 N. Seginew — Drug Dept. | __ THREE SIMMS FAMOUS BARGAINS +» EXTRA SHOPPING TIME OPEN | TONITE UNTIL 10 P. M.gmgptgtaaingtn Heavy Duty Twill—Sturdy Elastic Edge |. Ironing Board Cover 49° 4, Slight irrgularities don’t lessen wearing and durable quality of cover. Drum-tite elastic insures perfect fit, no need for straps or springs sre ig cy Value Price for Tonight and Tuesday Sturdy woven bamboo basket has many uses in the home. Use as laun- dry basket, toy basket, fruit basket, tor the garden, etc Slight Irregulars of $1.19 Values Sizes 8'2 to 11 New shipment of flattering spring shades. Irregulars of Ist quality, but flaws are F not noticeable. Limit 6 peir. Stylish, Comfortable Yet Very Inexpensive to Buy! LADIES’ COTTON POPLIN White Uniform 89 @ FOR NURSES @ FOR WAITRESSES @ FOR RECEPTIONISTS @ FOR DEMONSTRATORS Preshrunk poplin white uniforms with tucked waist, wing cuffs, double beit, detachable buttons to belt, grip- per skirt fastening. Limit 2 per cus- tomer. EYNTOINS BASEMENT _ ‘BEACON’ First Quality Indian Blanket | Sizes 10-20 | & 40-44 $2.49 Value $ 88 ; $4x72-Inch $2.98 Value, 64x76 inch... . $2.19 $3.98 valve, 70x80 inch... $3.19 Colorful designs in red or maroon. Cotton and rayon SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSHSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSESSOSSOSE ‘CANNON’ First Quality Pastel Sheets green, blue, grey, | $2.79 Value $ 19 | 72x108-Inch $2.98 Value, 81x108-in. ... $2.39 ‘Muslin pastel shéets in yellow. green, bive or pink. Over 130 thread count per sq. in. no weighting Matching Pillow 48c j Cass, GOOG. 0 ccnccecccesssses MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS Special Buy Means LOW PRICES! 2 and 3: BLADE STYLE Pocket Knives « Values to $1.50 Hundreds of knives at this low price include many shapes and designs. . Pearl handles, scout at low price. Seoccccccsccccooce SOSHHASSSHHSSSSSHSSSESESEES FORGED STEEL — 6-INCH Sewing Scissors $2.75 Value | 38 S wT sewing scissors in ee handy oo a To- ae @ - e . ie seaiieeemmeieenemnameenn ee an Costa Rican Border Quiet After Flareup SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (»—Ten- sion een. Costa Rica and Nic- aragua ‘appeared to be subsiding | again pie angle a after a border clash between Costa Rican troops and | rebel remnants raised the fear of | more trouble with Nicaragua The staff alerted all re | servists after the clash Saturday | but Col, chief of _ believed the situation was — * down. Quiros said the government pa- trol killed 10 rebels,. while seven government troops were unaccount- ed for and one was interned in) Nicaragua when he strayed over) the border ‘Saturday Bandits’ Now Operating on Sunday DETROIT (UP)—Police said to- day they believed Detroit's ‘‘Satur day Bandits’ have switched to Sunday operations. Two mien. answering the general | descriptions of the bandits who | had staged 13 Saturday hold-ups | f THE PONTIAC PR HERE’S AUTOMATION IN ACTION — At Ford’s| control board lights to follow automatic handling | Dearborn plant operator Jamés A. Smith watches | of cylinder blocks for machining Automation: It’s Changing Your Life This New Type of Technology to Aftect % Every Person in the U.S.---and Soon (Second of three dispaiches biue- rab the “‘second industrial revolu- ion."’) By DOUGLAS LARSEN DETROIT (NEA) — Where the workers? That's the first question you ask are | robbed a tavern of $360 and several | yourself when you walk into Ford's a bartender and three patrons and | overwhelms dragged them behind the bar. | engine plant. The roar of gigantic machines | you. Through the smoky haze you see raw engine 7 ———. blocks slithering swiftly along on t - + » For that confi- dence in kriowing that your clothes look well, let us keep them in good shape! Call FE 4-1636 <a | 79 W. Huren Both For $] 295 Wedding Bands, bands in 145 Jewelry Department GEORGE'S NEWPORT'S | cutting machines, | machines, | chines. conveyors to clusters of gigantic then to drilling then to tapping ma- You stroll among these |} metal monsters for five minutes | before you see the first man at) 0000) 80|% @ ae eee | Tee work. At last. The naeaanenne-| ing human factor of today’s new phenomenon known as ‘‘automa- tion,” or ‘‘cybernetics.”’ Although these twe new terms generally mean machines doing FE wae [2 the werk of men, experts disa- | gree on exact definitions. However, there's no doubt what —- looks like in this Ford | plant. rated as advanced an ex- ample of the phenomenon as exists our industry. Our first visible worker is a portly, grandfather-type, smoking a huge meerschaum pipe, sitting on a stool casually watching two big boards with buttons and flash- ing lights, One board tells him what each piece of machinery in his bank is | | doing The other one tells him when This scene indirectly affects ev- | ery person in the U. S, today be- cause it symbolizes an advanced | type of technology which is lutionizing industry with probing action speed, Automation is behind record production of better goods in the U. S., with decreased costs for | manufacturers, and safer and bet- | ter working conditions for workers. | But critics see ominous elements | | of automation, too. It could cause | | “SUFFERED 7 YEARS— | mass unemployment, they say. They claim, for example, that the imability of smaller firms | like Studebaker to lay’ out the | reported $50 million each—which , it cost Ford and General Motors then Pazel he A lief!” eae Mr. H. S., Chicage, Ulincis In 9 out of 10 canes of | Reduces swelling WITHOUT SURGERY tested by doctors Pazo Ointment stopped or erovreigee Mibapnt onl Pazo acts to soothe itching In tubes, also modern Suppos tories at druggists. Get Pazo® wonderful fast relief Now also in new STAINLESS form. te automate for their new engine production—is what has forced so many mergers. W. C. Newberg, Dodge, says: “The company that gives up cdn- | Sideration of automation because of the high cost is the company | that will soon find itself outstripped by its competition." Last year 750 automation ma- 'chinery firms did: $3 billion worth C , oa WE URGE PEOPLE 10 TELL US WHEN WE’RE WRONG... JUUUUVUUUUU . in via sary SPARKS-GRIFFIN > —— Funeral Home FOR ON THE CONSTRUCTIVE CRITICISM OF FRIENDS, COUPLED WITH SHULL AND UNDERSTANDING, PERFECTION IS NEARER ; “Thoughtful Service” yea FE wis tel 00 noisy | president’ of aol of business. ume this year, experts predict. Reports from Ford say that the | number of men on its engine block line was reduced from 117 to 2. And it’s this way throughout in- dustry. A newly-automated radio line requires only two workers to | make 1,000 radios a day. The same production used to require 200 peo- ple. An automated foundry kicks out a two-pound casting every second at the push of a button. in a new refinery, automation | permits 12 workers to do the | same work formerly requiring | 800 people. And so it goes, with a constant drive to improve these money-saving machines. At Chevrolet they've got a ma- chine built by the Cross Co. which | adds a new element to automa- tion. It's a battery of five giants which slice and polish sections, drill all the holes and do all the It'll be a bigger vol-|threading. These operations | run by two persons. are The Cross machine provides for automatic storage between each of | the five sections. Without this, if each section was stopped for main- tenance an average of 10 minutes per day, the whole battery would be down for a total of 50 minutes. Drawing from the automatic storage, however, the new Cross arrangements permit the other four parts to move while one part is down, This reduces total ‘‘down’” time to 10 minutes per day The electronics business has automated about as fast as any industry, with startling savings | im laber. It expanded output 275 per cent from 1947 to 1952 but with only 40 per cent more work- ers. Any industry you investigate to day is rushing toward greater au tomation, saving on labor costs, improving quality and quantity, { } | po SE ge ee mrygraer £ s ‘ee woue Omran “se i ? i =| = 4 ~ 3 | | & 2 * Keego Harbor ee 5 ESS, | would not be available without au- | tomation. For example, many frozen and | processed foods would not be pos- sible without fast operating auto- | matic freezing, cooking and pack aging machifry a retail grocer is fed into an elec- | tronic machine. This sets in mo- | tion an automatic conveyor which | pulls the proper number of cases | of each item from each pile in | the warehouse. Then the order is automatically assembled and baled for shipment. A machine used by the Poultry | Producers of Central California ' automatically separates eggs ac- cording to 48 combinations of size and weight, sprays them with a shell-protecting coating and pack- ages them. Electronic signals at gach stage give a complete writ- output according to grades. Minnesota Mining and Manufac- | , turing Co., of St. Paul, Minn., world’s largest maker of sandpa- per, has just opened an automated } plant 970 feet long. Electronic de- | vices control machine speeds, vis- | abrasive — spread automatically from overhead bins. A beta ray checks the uniformity of the glue apd coating on the paper or fab- ric. Dr. L. T. Rader, GE's expert on automation, says that ‘‘the cost of materials handling accounts for 50 per cent ot all labor cost in many products.” This explains why suicieoeen are concentrating on reducing (Advertisement) GETTING UP Nic NiGHTS years prove safety and = druggist for CYSTEX under ' sottetnstion or money-back paerenten, ¢ S lon ee es Wet Be OY, . | a WHERE THOUSANDS SAVE MILLIONS yl | To Crow Is ; One Thing... | ... to Produce Is Another! ~ YOU CAN DO BOTH - WITH A NESTEGG! of Pontiac : WITH BRANCHES AT e Perry at Glenwood Out of Town Branches at Ww. see P “ee om a ee oe on te: iy he -. oo * “a, ‘ oe . ¥ es ¥ % oad ART. Shim, nF al asd. < ht athiaitist Bs dite ‘nab sae8 bit ctx ra 8 Nothing builds security like money in the bank = —Talking:won’t do it—it requires action—Make te the move today to open your savings account fe with any amount. Start that nest egg. ae & é The Community hs National Bank Huron at Tilden MONDAY, JANUARY 31, and even, creating products which f In a food plant an order from | ten report of the days’ total egg | cosity of the glue, the grain of the | ‘| *Avtomation by Admiral . . . new kind of 1955 this factor with machines to han- die materials automatically from | the time of delivery at the plant to loading the finished product aboard a box car. - | The absolute ‘push-button fac- | tory,” where a few managers oper- ate electric machines which di- rect all functions of the factory, is a few years away. b But that’s the next step in the ° chain-reaction growth of automa- r " tion. ;@ ial. . . i ° Strip Fur Mannikins : 4 : beanie CITY, N.J. W—Rob- F fe Fine co. : 4 e sverem . | bers disrobed mannikins of $20,995 | - (I dewey van.) . in mink furs in a boardwalk shop | ‘ 2nd Floor « Lawrence 7 WEST LAWRENCE ST.: window last night as subfreezing | : Gerald Harvey, Manager e e FEderal 2-9249 . | weather kept Sunday strollers | - Loens mode te residents of afl surrounding towns ° away from the oceanfront. The | « | robbery took place at Koff Furs, | Ine. The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC Pontiac's Oldest and Largest Exclusive Appliance Dedler AUTOMATION by |Admirat | makes possible these sensational TV Values .with amazing ROBOT Chassis and Deluxe Features precision mass production that builds TV sets automatically. THE TALK OF THE TV WORLD The NASSAU—Giant 21” Table TV—21’ television’s top value! Equipped with powerful new ROBOT Chassis... Giant 270 sq. in. screen, aluminized tube for pictures that are twice as bright ... Wide-Range FM Sound System. Blonde Oak or grained Mahogany Finishes extra. GIANT 21 THE TV YOU CAN TAKE WITH YOU ANYWHERE... LEADS IN POWER, PORTABILITY, PRICE! ‘lightweight—carry it from room to room with picture tube. Blonde Oak or Mahogany Finishes extra. LA 90 Days Same As Cosh. Service From Our Own Neo Money Down When Trede-in is Medel fle COOD HOUSEKEE : of PONTIAC ag cad = Open ‘al 9 PM. * eset: FA :) < * < ~~, 7 2 re oe ‘ ‘ 51 West Huron Street ‘ i { =a 4 un % 2 . ) i ) ‘ \ = - f q ¥ \a = Se ¥ \ / a Soe 2 Baie. oe — > ——— —— ’ 5 : . ——— ee ANNOUNCING Uta Vila Studebaker British Chiefs Meet in Crisis Premiers Plunge Into Formosa Question at First Parley LONDON #®—The prime minis | ters of the British Commonwealth | met in London” today amid grave war fears and plunged straight into | talks aimed at helping to end the | Formosa fighting. * * . The China coast crisis topped the agenda at the opening of the 10-day om ~—— i Tt a} TS Ob and one deputy premier. . * * Other topics were shoved into | the background as Prime Minister ; Churchill worked .to muster the in | fluence of the Commonwealth be hind today’s move in the United Nations Security Council for a China cease-fire. * *¢ * | On hand for the closed-door meetings with Churchill at his of- ficial 10 Downing St. residence were: Prime Ministers Nehru of India; |Louis St. Laurent, Canada; Rob- ert G. Menzies, Australia; Sydney NWEW/ A WORLD OF FULL VISIBILITY! MEW / TREMENDOUS ADDITIONAL POWER! MEW! AMERICA’S SMARTEST TWO-TONING! AND NO INCREASE /N PRICES / Now here! Breath-taking Ultra Vista Ali, Pakistan; Sir John Kotelawala, Ceylon; Sir Godfrey Huggins, New | Central African Federation h.p. Commander V-8! 101 h.p. Cham- Rhodesia and Nyasaland; and Dep- models—a far-advanced additionalline pion 6! Sweeping new two-tone color uty Premier Charles R. Swart, | of 1955 Studebakers! saaaly soctped in- effects! No premium to pay! No in- South Africa. creased visibility! Excitingly ste crease in Studebaker’s low-level com- ? The Premiers’ first plenary | up power! 185 h.p. President V-8! fea petitive prices! Come in right away! mectifig was scheduled after a busy morning of contacts on the Formosa situation among the con- ferees and members of Churchill's government. Before the opening Studebaker...so much better made...worth more when you trade / DAVIS MOTORS P. C. McKIBBEN 608 North Main Street, Rochester, Mich. 8145 Commerce Rd. the Jatest Formosa developments by Foreign Secretary Sir Anthony Eden at a Cabinet meetmeg. at Union Lake Rd., Walled Lake, Mich. parley of eight prime ministers | civilians who last week were taken | | alls, patched sweaters or hand-me |was a handkerchief for blowing Holland, New Zealand; Mohammed |* ot | of a table lamp led the youngsters | | pink session, Churchill was briefed on | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 381, 1955 “~ Madam. Chiang: Receives! \Tachen Refugee Children TAIPEH, Formosa —A flock of children, the first to be evacu- ated from the bomb-pocked, Com- munist-threatened Tachen Islands, today called upon Madame Chiang Kai-shek and voiced their thanks. Scrubbed, brushed and beribbon- ed the children showed none of the pinched cheekbones and dull eyes of the child caught up in the piti- ful refugee treks in Korea. The & children, aged 3 to 7, are sons and daughters of soldiers, farmers and fishermen killed on recently Red-captured’ Yikiang- shan. They were in the first group of olf the Tachens, cluster of islands only a few miles off the Commu- nist mainiand. Behind on the Tachens are sol- diers and civilians who may pulled off under protection of the | guns of the U.S. Tth Fleet Dressed in spanking-clean over- down clothes, the children filed into Madame Chiang's office at the Chinese Women's Anti-Aggression League headquarters in this For- mosan capital. Safety-pinned to each youngster noses or other emergencies. The youngsters eyes were wide and white as milk saucers. Hsu Shu-yun, 4, about the size | in song. Tai Pao-pag, 3, her fetch- | ing pigtails done up in a bright | ribbon, handed Madame | Chiang a bouquet of white roses. Madame Chiang hugged the tiny | girl in her arms, then set her dower | on the floor and she scurried back to her seat like a water bug. The tot said later she is ‘‘very happy’ to be on Formosa She does not yet know her fa | ther and mother are dead Neither do most of the other chi Idren. In change there is opportunity In the next minute — five more Americans! America is having the biggest pop- ulation boom in its history! Every eight seconds a baby is born. More people are living longer. Our popu- lation has now reached 164 million— and is going up at the net rate of five Americans every minute. ices This record-breaking boom in population is bringing new oppor- tunities to every section of our coun- try. For example, in addition to the ‘ need for millions more life insurance | money is used to help the farmer : protection, it also means: provide more food, to provide hous- } ee ing for more people, to finance more ; od o begs — ee alata” public — to = electric every power plants, and to put up factories - BOue nr Set a which produce goods of all kinds. s 4 @ a demand for more homes. We will . ‘ need to build or remodel millions of Today, life insurance is America’s } homes to keep abreast of our growth. most popular form of thrift, owned | } @ ademand for more public construe. by 93 million men, women and chil- ; tion. We will need more schools, ‘ren. It not only provides protection | : more hospitals, more and better and security for the family—it helps the nation as a whole. & ; oF ; *~ _- £4 t- See ¢ There are now 32 million more people living in America than in 1940 ‘ @ a demand for more electric power ... 2% times more by 1975. @ a demand for ALL goods and serv- . Americans will need millions of new refrigerators, washing ma- chines and ranges... telephones and television sets. More clothing. More recreation facilities. The investment of policyholder funds by life insurance companies is helping fill these needs. For this | Institute of Life insurance \ Central Source of Information about Life Insurance 488 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK 22, N.Y. - automobiles, MEN WANTED To Train for High Selery Positions in Electronics, Radic & Television. Day and Evening Clesses Allow Yau to Remain Fully Employed While Training. lafermetion, No Obligaten «= WO 2-5661 ELECTRONICS INSTITUTE : A woman ‘welfare worker ex- plained most of them think they are on a trip. They have never been away from home before. The children will be placed in ari orphanage run by the League which Madame Chiang heads. The older ones will go to school they seemed to be pleased at the prospect. Only one little boy cried. He was frightened by a photog- rapher's flashbulb. G. L. Appreved. Pay No Money Down! Join Waite’s Budget Credit Club .. . receive up to $120 to spend to- day . . take many months to pay! soft, dressy ensembles for slender youthful silhouettes! | Spring Linen - Like Ensemble ap°* Lovely linen-like dresses for longer, slower, gentler . . . long-waisted fashions for for Juniors... now through spring! Matching ensembles for an exciting Easter in red, navy, powder. and aqua! Sizes 7 to 15. Saddle stitched sleeveless with bolero and kick pleats front! Bolero with 3 rows of tucking, pert Perter Pan collar and kick pleat back! $1 Holds Your Selection tor Easter in Our Layaway! _ Waite’s Junior Fashions—Third Floor Save up to 50c! Regularly 1.10 Value! Both Enamel & Basecoat! You can keep nail enamel on almost twice as long! Ralonis new ‘Super base’ Manicurists know that to get proper wear out of nail enamel, you. should use a basecoot first.. That's why a beauty salon manicure lasts almést twice as long as when you do-your nails at home! Use your very own Revion’s new ‘Superbase’ before you apply Revion new-formula nail enamel. There's never been a besecoat like it!. Flows on like liquid glass, dries in seconds, and nail enamel just glides on over it. Hurry in today. for your frée bottle of ‘Superbose’ with each bottle of Revion’s new-formula nail enomel —~. all for the price of the nail enamel alone. Hurry — get yours today! basecoat ee an per ys W aite’s. eg eR Floor PMR, BM eta OME Ne ge epi. BS f » THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1935 a ll egg, Am eB a a a i ng hataaaaa lari ce = EE 2, Beene «er ee r- Sisal Rane Roo grt nS ees 2-8181. MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS | MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955 Great National Unity. Shown in Formosa Vote History wi made in the speed with which Congress has voted overwhelming approval of President EIsENHOWER’S Formosa policy. The policy itself isn’t new. But in asking Congressional approval of the use of our armed forces for the defense of Formosa, the Pes- cadores and certain other pur- posely unnamed islands, the President was restating that policy. x * * Mr. E1seEnnower didn’t need the ap- proval requested from Congress. The Constitution gives him power as Com- mander in Chief to use our armed forces wherever he deems it necessary for national security. But because of threats made by Communist China, he felt it nec- essary that Peiping understand “our readiness to fight” to keep these islands out of Red hands. Thus, while drawing a somewhat indefinite line Peiping can’t cross without being at war with the United States, the President has made it clear to the world that his only objective is peace. x ® * One of the finest fruits of the special message is the magnificent display of national unity that resulted. Seldom has such quick or sharp notice gone out from Washington as that voted by the Congress, 409 to 3 in the House and 85 to 3 in the Senate. We believe the President was wise in asking for the stamp of Congressional approval on his restatement of policy. That there is an element of risk in- volved cannot be-denied. * * * It should be remembered that there was no such clear statement of U. S. intentions before the Korean war, as Congressional adoption of this resolution pro- vides, A top Administration official ex- pressed the belief that favorable action by the lawmakers would stabilize the Formosan situation and we share that belief. It is felt that if there is a chance that we might have to fight, making our intentions clear now might avert it. CHIANG Kal-SHEK and Mao Tze-TuNG have rejected talk of a cease fire. It also remains to be seen whether there is . justification for the general feeling that the Reds won't cross that indefinite line or interfere with the evacuation of the Tachen Islands. . ——$———— Expert Tells Committee Imports Benefit Nation Members of the House Ways and Means Committee considering extension of the Reciprocal Trade Act have had the benefit of some expert testimony on- the importance of foreign trade. It came from Dante. W. BELL, former Undersecretary of the Treasury. Mr. BEL. went to the heart of the matter with some illuminating and persuasive statistics. * » * He started with the fact that the total of all world exports in 1934 was only $18 billion. That total now has grown to $76 billion. Part of this gain reflects infla- tion but more than half of it is actual increase in trade volume, thanks to the more liberal tariff of our nearest competitor, the United Kingdom. Highlight of Mr. Betu’s testi- mony was his statement that the volume of U.S. imports is the « most important single factor in determining the free world’s eco- nomic health. * bd * “We all know,” he added, “that if the largést industry in a community is pros- perous, it raises the trade and profit opportunities for the whole community. So, too, in the community of nations, a prosperous United States buying all the imports its people want will generate a healthier level of trade for itself and for all the world.” Pontiac’s Symphony Members of Pontiac Symphony Asso- ciation are justifiably pleased with the fine support the orchestra has received from the city’s music lovers. It can be said in addition that the public is well pleased with the orchestra, for the attendance at all concerts has been excellent. In fact, so favorable an impres- sion has been made by these musicians that volunteer support has come from outside the city. Pontiac is fortunate in having men and women able to supply the musical, promotional and financial support with- out which this fine cultural project would be impossible. ‘Incidentally, the date for the orches- tra’s next concert in Lincoln Junior High School has been changed to Feb- . ruary 9. ——————————————— “I orren have the feeling that I don’t exist,” says a neurotic. He should re- alize that a non-existent person doesn’t have any feeling of any kind. The Man About Town Still Has Hopes Driller. of Our Nearest Oil Well Is Optimistic Intuition: What we should recog- nize in a woman, alse in any other source of faith, hope and inside in- formation. With many other sections of our nation striking it rich in ofl and gas wells, Pontiac’s nearest attempt should succeed if persistence means anything. On the Williams Farm in Springfield Township, Frank Summers has had his gang at work over two years, with varying prospects. At one time a depth of over a mile was reached. The pipe then was withdrawn from the 6,480 foot level to a point at 4,525 feet, where there are strong indications of both oil and gas. Both have come out there in limited quantities. Mr. Summers is expecting a gusher with the same hope as when the drill first was put into the ground there on Oct. 20, 1952. Dean of the Oakland County Bar Associa- tion, J. A. Tillson, who soon celebrates his eighty-first birthday, was bitten by the golf bug nigh onto a half century ago—and has never recovered. Winter cannot stop him. He did 18 holes on a number of occasions during the month that closes today. A gadget that warns the too rotund eater when to stop is coming en the market. It is a small belt . strapped around the body, that reg- isters abdominal tautness, and starts a warning buzzer in the pocket. Back on the job after recovering from in- juries received in an automobile accident last summer is ; John H. Reagan, Superintendent of the Pontiac Lake Recrea- tional Area. He tells me that the Michigan Conservation Department expects to build a riding stable there this year. Managing Director of the Pontiac Cham- ber of Commerce, . Robert J. St. Clair, agrees with this column in claiming that our people are too modest in “bragging up” their city. when talking or writing to outsiders. Oakland County Health Director, Dr. John D. Monroe, says it often is difficult to get worthy people to take advantage of the health facilities that are available for them, and for which they have paid taxes. Every time that you have ten gal- lons of gasoline put into your car, 66 cents of what you pay for it is for taxes. The great increase in the number of type- ~ writers in recent years has made poor pen- men out of many of us, but Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore says the old documents show that penman- _ ship never was a common art. Verba | Orchids to— + oye] The . y a > entering its eighty-fifth year of publication. Mr. and Mrs. William Van Horn - of Lapeer; fiftieth wedding anniversary. £Winees ame — Ike’s Policy Spelled Out Voice of the People Cites Need for North-South Throughway; Suggests Haggerty Road Be Considered Letters will be condensed when neces- similar position to some in down- town Detroit. Also now we are building a have been 742 million in 1949! A new state administration can- celled further werk. Do you know that this 120 foot right-of-way is laying there idle when it could be serving so many communities? ‘Should More Frequently Praise Nice Juveniles’ It's very seldom that you can pick up a paper or magazine with- out some article on juvenile de- linquency being in a prominent place. It is a problem I admit but how about a word once in a while Trouble and perplexity drive me to prayer, and prayer drives away perplexity and trouble.—Melanch- thon. : Retired Old People Should Cultivate Hobbies That Give Service to Others Hobart is like thousands of you talented folks who have reached the golden years. He needed a hobby but he picked a silly, useless one. Instead, select constructive hobbies that are not only a lot of fun but which help make this world a better, safer place for the next generation. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE bart informed me. “And the first six montts I fidgeted and fussed till my wife said she'd lose her mind if I didn’t get interested in something. “Se I heard a speaker say it is wise to develop a hobby. Well, “What would you advise for us retired folks? We don’t want to piddie around in idleness.” We refer to these years after 65 as the golden years where people have valuable experience that should be harnessed for human welfare. Hobbies are very desirable, but please cultivate hobbies that ren- der a wide public service. Boys in grammar school often become almost fanatical in col- Aunt Het gidei ie Lett £4 tthe g? if t fit 2 *£ David Lawrence Says: Formosa Vote Nips Fear of Weak-Kneed Support WASHINGTON -- There is good . cause for about the state of government of the United States in the world today. For the virtually unanimous action of both houses of Congress which pledged both parties to support the leadership of the President in pro- tecting the far Pacific frontiers of the free world is the most signifi- ance of large-scale war im Asia. Resistance to aggression in Korea was intended to achieve that objective but a lack of resolutness crept in from Allied sources and conceded to the enemy a “‘priv- ileged sanctuary” for its planes of their Manchurian bases. This was There are always the timid who cry out ‘‘this may mean war.” Defeatism in spirit by the non- aggressor can be the biggest single cause of miscalculation by the ag- gressor as two world wars have tragically proved. Hence the resoluteness of the policy of the United States today can be hailed as the best pre- ventive of war that could be de- vised in dealiug with enemies who respect the forceful but have only contempt for the weak-kneed. It is the fact that unrestricted power has been given to the U:S. commander-in-chief by the Con- gress which is most encouraging. For despite the efforts of a minor- ity in the Senate to restrict the scope of presidential authority at a time when jets fly 600 miles an hour, the final rollicall showed only three votes against the joint resolution. It is to be hoped that nobody on the “left wing” side, which senator who doesn't go along with his party or with the Presi- dent, will condemn the three sen- of course, and there are lots of pit- falls ahead including the possible consequences of a tragic misun- ing the over-all picture of an American stand against aggression te i ; J as : fl that there is as yet no evidence of But in the main there is reason for contidence and for as- surance because the govern- ment of the United States is keeping faith with the young men who died in Korea to uphold the principle of collective security, For while the joint resolution passed by Congress was the act of one government to defend its own vital interests, it was also a step taken for the collective protection of Ko- rea, Japan, the Philippines and southeast Asia. (Copyright 1955) Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER (International News Service) Probably the greatest security move in history was in 1920. New York gave me the key to the city and then changed the lock. That would be a safe caper in Washington where Caesar's wife does not live in.the duplex apartment above _ suspicion. Where: the international date line runs down the middle of the time clock, And where the five o'clock tea-leaves spell state ciphers. We seem to be suffering from a duplication of indifference along Pennsylvania avenue, The higher- uparchy of the Senate is doing a bit of dirty-farming in the confi- dential reports. How can a character be a secu- rity hazard in the Agricultural Department where alfalfa is trumps? And be okay in foreign operations where the expense ac- counts carry red ink on both shoulders? Authority is stretched like rub- ber bars on the monkey cage. Investigations get no further than a dip in a bird-bath. Recommen- dations are used as wrapping pa- per for adjournments. It's about time the Christmas office parties should be over. The White House said that honest men were reaching dif- ferent answers on the same ques- tion. Ike, we'll tell you about the time a Philly pitcher took a full wind-up with a man on third. The guy stole home without los- ing his cap. Manager Moran waddle-footed te the hill, shook his fist under his pitcher’s schnozzola and howled, “Whattayamean, winding up with a man on third?’’ Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE How can a woman bear a child . .. And then abandon it? . . . What greater sorrow can she cause .. . Or crime can she commit? .. . The baby that she brought to life . . . Through ignorance or shame . . . Or legally in poverty . . . On which she puts the blame .. . To start a baby’s life. (Copyright 1985) Looking Back 15 Years Ago FISCAL YEAR change to go on * city ballot. > O 3 < 2 ... but It Certa fis. lie HE ila 2. kE f i i f | lt i ; i ae | " if 33 He et A sa Kintera Zz =O n it | : : i < ‘ se aL ee . n < : it * iS 2 = De fk PPP Pee ee eee eee 8 ) i better than | occu- + THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955 oO, y . : rote ogee, i a complete combustion. MOMIGAN CREDIT’ we NO. FUEL KIDS/ We do not want to brag or boast, but our good MARAFUEL oil will heat the most! Let us supply you with the kind of fuel oil that’s best for your burner. High-heat MARAFUEL oil gives you and regerdicss of how mech or hew many yeu owe. SECURITY OR ENDORSERS TO PAY—BONDED AND Ph. FE 2-9181 CRED St. of credit counseling at. 9 IT experience assist you.” to 1. Evenin COUNSELLORS Above Oakland Theater Phone FE 8-0456 Wife Tells All: New Congre WASHINGTON (INS)—A fresh- man congressman from Texas and his wife kept a date with Presi- dent Eisenhower and the First | Lady with no apologies for appear- ing in a rented dress suit and a borrowed mink cape. These sartorial] facts came to lights when Mrs. Jim Wright, wife of the legislator, wrote the home folks in Weatherford, Tex., telling them about the big event. EERREGE s 3 ia i | SHOPPER Here Are Your Values for Monday--Tuesday--Wednesday PEop T-lb. Tin Chase and Sanborn COFFEE 89: Jiffy Pie Grust Mix.. ™* Stokely’s Finest Cut Beets..... Nestle’s Instant COFFEE...... No. 303 | 0 Can Bi Jar Ruby-Bee Pure Strawberry Preserves ™="=« Va Swanson New Yellow Lb. Square Pack 19° Hygrade’s Ready-to-Eat HAMS Whole or Butt Portion 59: Skinless, shankless, fet removed. » COVER ana _WABFLE KNIT SLastiC Ike in Rented Dress Suit | ssman Meets red, with all this falderal going on all the time.” “What a ridiculous costume,” the congressman kept saying about his rented dress suit. But at the appointed time, 9 p.m. they presented their cards at the White House. Mrs, Wright records that they Here’s her own blow-by-blow de- scription : #1 al taek coer ehiel Efke z 8 aor i g gif THe done in bed. Would-Be Trucker Slightly Under Age GALVESTON, Tex. ® — Two policemen whipped their cruiser around yesterday and pulled along- side a truck, moving down the street with no visible driver. When they saw a tuft of hair sticking up where a driver usually sits, one’ of the officers jumped from the squad car to the slowly moving truck. The 6-year-old driver said he got i tired of walking so had climbed into the parked truck and drove off. He was released to his parents, |who whisked him homeward so | fast the officers didn’t have time |}to find out how he learned to | drive. ROK, U. S. in Parleys SEOUL #—South Korea is pre- | paring to negotiate with the United States on administrative agree- ments covering the status of Amer- ican forces stationed here, the For- if- | the biggest money in the country; “ Texas Turnpike Will Be Longest : 450-Mile Toll Highway Will Cost Nearly Billion Dollars to Build DALLAS @—A chartered airliner today flew a load of Yankee bank- ers along the route of what's | scheduled to become the newest of Texas’ boasts—the nation's long- est tol] road. The visitors, 15 New York and Chicago men, represent some of the kind that’s needed in million- dollar chunks to build the 450-mile superhighway planned to run from the Texas-Oklahoma border to the Gult Coast city of Corpus Christi. ca + * Today the road was still an the drawing boards and the visitors saw only picturesque Texas scen- D allas-to-Houston motorists 223 miles of four and six-lane divided pavement with no cross traffic, no stop lights and a 70 m.p.h. speed z 7 ar” A’ der and southwest along. the Gulf | Christi, will be comparable in cost. | Completion of those sections will make the turnpike the longest in| the nation, engineers say. Longest | at present is the New York State Thruway, running 427 miles from scialliaigtal cesses tama Jumps Three Stories | CINCINNATI @® — Louis Duffy, | 56, a one-legged man, suffered cuts | and bruises when he leaped three | stories to escape flames in an) apartment building fire here yes- | terday. ang - e* ‘ wtag meLACT CO £ECLAl HALF SOLES MEN'S WOMEN’S & CHROREN’S ] 1 } $159 | PAIR ATTACHED Tues. & Wed. i ' ‘wmete © WAIT O8 SHOP Seevice | NEISNER’S * Shoe Repair Department of Mexico from Houston to.Corpus | York ag the most populous + _____ SEVEN state by 1970, if present trends continue the next 15 years, California may challenge N e w 7 ——, Expertly Repaired Phil Orencia, has been in charge of watch anc jewelry repair departments in leading stores. During this time his skill, talents, thorough- ness of detail and exactness have established for him a repu- tation of doing the finest re- pair work. For complete satis- faction bring your repair work, to Myer’s. Mr. Phil Orencie Graduate Watch Maker Expert Jewelry Repaigman ALWAYS FREE EASY PARKING RICHT AT OUR DOOR AT TEL-HURON MVyEns a NEVER BEFO AT SUCH SE Regular $129. faithfully to bring you a @ low price! Bed, chest, Takes UP @ Minimum of | eign Ministry said today. The ROK government said the agreements | would give the ROKs the right tc | try off-duty and off-base U.S. mili- tary personnel in Korean courts | - | | ! | WANTED! | AND Married or Single 18 to 55 Many Openings HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATION NOT REQUIRED Get a U.S. Government Job Home or Abroad .. . THOUSANDS OF OPPORTUNI- TIES IN OAKLAND COUNTY AND THROUGHOUT wane? YOU -CAN FY. PREPARATORY TRAINING FANCY PEARS No. 2% Can 25° BEEF, CHICKEN, | 4.1 eee Birds Eye Frozen _—-_— [| TURKEY PIES | CIVIL SERVICE and list of positions ter NATIONAL SERVICE NOW BEING CIVEN. Covernment Controlled Return this for full information DEPT. PP, BOX 5771 BEECH BRANCH DETROIT 39, MICH. 1 am interested in Civil Servies. STE S Cee eH HEHE R OES OR OSES see PR eee ee eee “custom desi Satisfy your yearning for room furniture without “pi Early America’s most beautiful world of important drawer Blond double dresser with bookcase bed Regular $219.95 Deluxe 3-Piece A suite that has all the earmarks ged.” So many fine details. You Get the double dresser, chest and pane! bed a bit! Double dresser, chest RE SUCH GREAT VALUES LOW PRICES 95 3-Piece Colonial Bedroom 4 G95 Ne Meney Down Regular $159.95 Contemporary Modern WT) a> Ne Meney Dews Modern 129° Ne Money Dewn. Regular $299.95 Massive 3-Piece Period 179°” Ne Money Down NSATIONAL furniture copied charming bedroom at dresser. room yet gives you a and surface space of being 18th Century bed- nching your budget and panel bed. if Hf is zi He 108 NORTH SAGINAW i All for Only... ae EDROOMI VALUES Ths TTT LLL \\ ED counr > s aS © = Le oa - a ‘RIGHT .. Meat “sticks to the ribs’ be coum demas ev “ous Appetite Poor? cause it digests slowly of hunger contractions. (Advertisement) Hard of Hearin ? 63 ow Shown is the Model A-210 3-tran- | sistor Acousticon Hearing Aid be- ing worn as a barette. Men can wear this transmitter as a tie clasp Try this new Hearing Aid for 10 days WITHOUT OBLIGATION! Two offices to serve you. Come in or phone for home examination and fitting. Sallan's Optical Dept 17 N. Saginaw, Phone FE 4-707) or... Ernest F. Denne, O. D., 914 W. Huron, Phone FE 2-2629 Authorized Representative of the ACOUSTICON.- WILLIAMSON CO. d, Shelbyville, Mich. * weighed 212 Ibs. and now have e. i cular dealing exclusively with dash- | é Try Dasheens | Boost in-America From | Agriculture Department | WASHINGTON (INS) Suffering ifrom a jaded appetite? Try a mess of dasheen greens or a pack- age of tasty dasheen chips. Although relatively unknown on American dinner tables, this versa- | tile vegetable has been part of the Oriental diet for at least 2,000 | years Even in the U.S. it has had a small commercial market since about 1913. But to date it hasn't made any serious inroads on the demand for potatoes, the tuber it most closely resembles Average citizens could pass a growing dasheen plant right by and never know it. The foliage looks much like the glossy-leaved | Elephant Ear grandma used te | grow im the front yard for deco- rative purposes. | Now, interest in this fairly novel | food product may be stirred by a/| }new Agriculture Department cir- een, its growth and uses Here are some of the uses it | suggests: Chips—made in the same way as ordinary potato chips; but only from the best quality tubers. Chips | don’t absorb as much fat as potato | chips and have a distinctive, nutty | flavor. Flour—excellent for a variety | of uses such as in soups and grueis, and in combination with other flours for pancakes, crul- lers, biscuits and bread. Blanched Shoots — obtained by “forcing’’ the corms (bulbs) in the dark. Prepared for the table in much the same way as the leaf- stalks of swiss chard. Greens—care must be taken to | destroy the acrid element by boil- | ing the leaves and jeafstalks for 15 NO MONEY DOWN minutes, adding a large pinch of baking soda to the water. Drain, | | then boil them again until tender. | | ‘The pamphlet asserts that dash- | |een bulbs and tubers of good qual- ity, when well cooked, are mealy have a delicate, nutty flavor. ONCE-A-YEAR PRICE 3095 Pay $159 q Week It's here! ... the once-a-year savings spree that really smart home-makers wait all year for! Here are genuine SEALY mattresses... with so many high-priced, market for the current | U.S, crop is among Oriental and) West Indian populations in the ° . larger cities Limited Supply The pamphiet says many native | ééé“S33————- © <i! Mo ££. @oo POUT CCC UVTE. uta born citizens have become ac- PAPPAPPPPPPPPPPPPP APPA AAS ;quainted with the crop. But it | predicts this market will not ex- pand substantially in competition ‘with the potato and other tubers until dasheens come to matket more regularly and in more attrac- | eae 74" ANNIVERSARY | fatalities in the U. S. result from | collisions with automobiles, About '70 per cent of the victims are | young people ranging from 6 through 12. ~wererey* Ti m a. o = a me nd = ] et | o rrvvvTeYeYeYeeeeeeeeeeeeee @ SAME HIGH COIL COUNT AS TOP-QUALITY MATTRESSES! @ SAME PRE-BUILT BORDERS, FOR YEARS OF LONGER WEAR! Take your cleaning to one of Huron Cleaners see what Sta-Nu Finish will: do for your clothes exciusive IT’S us! You'll be thrilled with the new beauty in every garment. Clothes look new longer. Not-so-new clothes LOOK NEW AGAIN! TRY STA-NU TODAY! luxury features ...at an all-time low price! You save dollars and dollars on every mattreés you buy! .. . that’s why you can afford new bedding for every room in your home during this sensational savings event! Compare these Sealy Anniversary Mattresses with, mattresses selling for far more. : SCIENTIFICALLY FIRM, HEALTHFUL SLEEPING COMFORT! TZ => Neo More “Sleeping in a Bow’! Sleep “Straight As An Arrow’’! Worn, too-soft mattresses offer little or no support On a Sealy Anniversary Mattress, thanks to Sealy's freshed and truly rested! » does wane” @ SAME TRU-BALANCE INNERSPRING UNIT, FOR THE HEALTHFUL FIRMNESS PIONEERED BY SEALY! @ SAME QUALITY DELUXE, DECORATOR-DESIGNED COVERS! @ SAME QUALITY MATCHING BOX SPRING, JUST $39.95! 11 branches and Pe : It’s | Dry Cleaning at It’s Finest ! COPYRIGHT SEALY, NC. —1955 74* Anniversary Value Individual Cellophane Secked and Boxed Your Shirts Beautifully Laundered 4-HOUR SERVICE at Our MAIN PLANT AVE DOLLARS and DOLLARS > ™ $1.09 _~rwrwwreweweT wverrvrVvevev’Y 731 N. JOSLYN AT PERRY FREE PARKING Will Pay Parking Meter in Lake Orion and Milford STA-NU IS EXCLUSIVE IN HURON DRY CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDRY Main Office and Plant 944 West Huron FE 2-0231 11 NEIGHBORHOOD STORES TO SERVE You! 1894 Unien Lake R4. Oppesite Gtrees 13 WH. Wanton Blvd. ot Sachadew OPEN FRIDAY TILL & Choice of elegant modern decorator fabrics. w& Exquisite styling fits eny reom scheme! > PONTIAC and SUBURBS at i Includes exclusive Sealy ‘“Wrist-Flip” operation! Converts trom sefeteched ve eutlly, #e quicldy a chita von do Wl 9 P. M, _ & Makes 1 room do the work of 2! Once-aYear Price 4 : OF - Pay $15.00 Down ‘$2 Weekly sg. A Big Selection of Covers! ~ , Eee stiles Me ees bes 4 - 7 & . ° . s e vs ; gute 4 . t a. oy, eS oe | | . THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955, | NINE | Bn commerce, patly tice is we | 7 ~ David, 11, and Christian, ®, slept : ee _—" : ; They were identified - os Ftc ne Bee. borstcde: 1-Word Message : . tre ae Ny |Father, 3 Children Die | 7 y ee peatipst d 4 as Fire Destroys Home T. Jr., 6; and Virginia Rose, 2, : oF AUGUSTA, Ga, #®—A 83-year-old| The wife and mother, Mrs. Rose B peed rot ay Pisco Ke ae Koma Smith, was at work at the | small children ned to dea : a flames destroyed an ejght- Camp Gordon hospital, where she |room house at Camp Gordon yes-| is @ registered nurse, when the terday. fire oecurred. Via Phone Helps | tempted siaying. They could give "OT FLASHES” Locate Tragedy ““yirs. Engstrand was in critical Say |, mDoEPORT, Conn © - in 63-80% of enses in doctors’ tests | YOl* SA#Ped over the gpa ese Cheboygan Committee Beyond 2 SHADOW | of 2 Doubt | g “LITTLE JOE" STOKER COAL IS BEST! Taken from the very heart of America’s richest coal fields, “Little joe’ Stoker coal is deep-mined, Y correctly sized, and scientifically prepared to re- spond more readily to automatic furnace controls. Giving an abundance of warmth when needed, yet holding a long, low fire on warmer days. Ne) . SELECTING 8ONGS— Young people from the Featios Prem Fhots Newman A. M. E., St. George Greek Orthodox, and | Assisting the Rev. Herbert E. Ryan, pastor, in| Salvary Evangelical United Brethren Churches are | planning the program music are: Phyllis Smith, joining youth of Baldwin Avenue Evangelical United | 219 Rapid St. (seated); Jim Hiscock, 16 Utica Rd, | Brethren Church in observing National Youth Week. | and Helen Ritter, 74 Hamilton Ave. ‘(Church Groups to Observe ts." nao wert Open Mon. Night to u National Youth Week Here Sisnc2e sas tue'wn| St (W0tl 8 Fridoy and Saturday “Little Joe” is cleaner burning, forms no soot stringers, has a low ash content + » « yet is more economical because it contains more BTU’s (heat units) per ton. This all adds up to make “Little Joe” the finest, trouble-free stoker coal on the market! CHECK ALL OF THESE FEATURES: Youn people of the Baldwin in the chor, eller prayer and ax-| Hams, Anne Levis, Phlis Ver ° Inj | i strete, P. Bell, Anton and Arnold Avenue Evangelical United Breth- \"c with the banquet, Thursday. - ; “tat Tord wil . “ ‘ i ; _| Simpson. Mrs. jerne F w df “Little Joe” is dust treated df Little Joe” responds reedily to ren Church will be in charge of| Charles Williams will be toast sae eiaucie af tou mewn env: automatic controls | most of the services in observing | master at the banquet and Mary rs m re | ‘ , , a | ay | ices “Little Joe” is wed ~ “Little Joe” is low in ash, high | National Youth Week this week. | Mapley and Joyce McClellan will oo d . . property s in heet , The Rev, Cletus A. Parker, | be in charge of the decorating. Young people of the St. George Joe” is cleaner to hendle superintendent of the Bay City Con-| - Othe is week’s | creek Orthodox, Newman A M.E. | oN clooner to bore + ff “Little Jon” in more economical fiance aad’ icmer poor of te | acetic erat nwt | and. Calvery Evangelical United | j church, will preach each evening| Hiscock, T. Parker, A. Hoover, Brethren Churches are included | at 7:30. Ushers for the week will! Yvonne Miller, Marie James, in the groups. 3 be from the youth groups. They | Jerry Frederickson, N . | | will also read the Scripture, sing | on ie | eG cae tant, Lillian Samardizja, Gloria Ex N F ht ; Cooper, Connie Kolb, John Dowl- | perts ow righting : Orae Nee 5 Ke ing, Grady McFee, B. Holts, |Offshore Oil Well Fire i “esas” ee Parrett mena, | VENICE, La. w—Fire-tighting 7 ° , . | equipment and a crew of experts , . Still others included in the plans; from Houston, Tex., have been | ; . ‘are: Phyllis Smith, Perc Hollis, | Pushed to the scene of an = well 3 me i= \|\ H. Mapiey, R. Metz, C. Williams, | ot Poa ae ot nalegs any ot % CO |). O. Harris, Eddie George, B. Fell, | o¢ control since Saturday. TONSILIN |B. Dowling, Rutn Bell, R. Hollis,| California Co. officials said they — | Steven Ritter, Marilyn Hiscock, | hoped the fire would be brought sous oucmy suave w= Marie Jones, Marguerite Ryan, H.' under control today. OPEN MON. NIGHTS to 9 + oer wor + ‘ 7 | f p r H A as well as Friday and Saturday Nights | : ‘ 5? cs ad : ros qe hE * M . ; i ; 7 ; Sy ¥ -. o . ae ot fe ® ; a s e = g 4 : © r | 3 | eteee 21” CONSOLE TV rr’ eo } -ilbcessgc dee tile wih wow SS an 9 5 oie 7 Federal’s has itf The start : and only 199.95! Has giant 270'sq. in. screen with Se” ni ” F saataladtmteigiiniie ine bcighter pioneneo, groster ; on ped of the new “Outer Look’... : contrast! Buy it now on Federal’s easy terms! Terms D, s a ”" vv “under-look | ADMIRAL a 21" TABLE TV : 13°° | At yg bs x an | WA The new “Outer-Look” flows in one long, un- i ? broken sweep from naturally rounded bust, to ' “1 little middle, to smooth slimmer hips. All with ; SK wonderful freedom and comfort. Satin lastex Pa . “he, and nylon leno. Sizes 32 to 38. Try ittoday! {| er NO / “7 Other Formfit girdles and t You get a bi 27054 2 foundations ...............++.+: 5.00 to 12.50 Imagine! | a . inSscreen on this sensationally low-priced Admiral TV! This MON EY FEDERAL’S EXPERT CORSETIERES new 1955 table model has controls on the side to will fit your new Formfit girdle correctly, com- ‘give you more picture in less cabinet, Aluminized fowssbly.<courteverly, Aether Sane Sar. picture tube for sharp, clear pictures! Ebony finish. DOWN! - , : a SACINAW AT WARREN PONTIAC OPEN MON. FRI. SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 anmen Ha ' : ‘ eo or = : ; * ‘ ‘ r+ ‘ ¥ ey \ : ’ : ’ ¢ ’ LJ ; ’ \ ‘ \ if” ’ * . 4 } . THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 31,1955 a a: % r, J Clothes for th Young Zitt Boys’ and Girls’ Robes Quilted or Flannel! fey. 2 = $2.98 g Pajamas Outing and Quilted Hew $1.98 » Boyd" and Girls’ Sweaters SNOW SUITS 1 and 2 Piece GREATLY REDUCED! CORDUROY BOXERS $1.59 wi Boys’ and Girls’ $2.69 up Now | drive and Dr. and Mrs. C. G. E. G. Clarks, Meddaughs ‘Ready for Warmer Climes The whole town’s talking about! Wayne University. the wonderful vacation plans ip| Mrs. Oscar H. Lundbeck of Chip- citizens. Miami road were. co-hostesses at a Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Clark of Silver Lake are making plans i ep party Saturday evening in that trip to Hawaii, and the John | the Lundbeck hpme. Meddaughs of Motorway drive 7. * *# | have been wrapped up in prepara- Janet Fairbanks arrived Fri- tion for a trip to Mexico. day evening trom her studies at * ores of Ottawa | Contra! Michigan College of Edu- ha — we | cation to spend several days visit. Burke of Birmingham are busy ‘ng with her mother, Mrs. Orval with plans for a trip to Vene- G. Fairbanks of Niagara avenue. tuela. : Janet is a freshman at the Mount d fp, “> Ratbuland INFANTS TO 10 YEARS 2 5. SAGINAW ST. Early Week Special! MACHINE or MACHINELESS PERMANENT WAVE * ¢ ® | PA. It’s a new home near Coldwater | ‘ se. . and Mrs. Leon H. Se * s °¢ fe De wig James H. Bersche, son of the i i : 7 : 2 F i rt 4 He Ef is tpt HE F f i Treat yourself to a really soothing slimming! This light, light Skippies Pantie trims and smooths you with the gentlest touch—no bones, bulk or bind. You're pampered—never hampered —because Skippies are de- signed to “go with” your active way of living. Fash- ioned in freedom-minded nylon elastic net, with satin elastic front and back pan- els for added control. Try it—for easy-on-you new figure beauty! No. 843, S, M, L. $7.50. Other Skippies Panties - and Girdles from 2.95 %s ,, New Life Romance Bra No. 564, in coo! if [nr ee ems a gg store for a number of well known | pewa road and Mrs. L. F. Hire off Several: Pontiac Residents Planning Vacations - Saas eee : e. a. ; at ee " Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Critchfield of Lake Angelus are shown with the new Pontiac Safari station wagon at the New York Mo- % cade, Ss the model was introduced Piety Hill Plans Birthday Celebration Piety Hill Chapter of DAR will celebrate its 20th birthday with a luncheon in Birmingham Commu- nity House Feb. 8 at 12:30. Special guests will include the two girls .who have been chosen as recipients of the Good Citizen's The DAR Good Citizen award Aur ettit irgit! HH The girls will attend the DAR State Conference, to be held this year at the Sheraton-Cadillac Ho- Sure, frozen fruits when | and peaches are out of season. It's | the perfect dessert for a fish din- ‘|| ner and works in perfectly with | your plan to use frozen fish sticks, | after you've been shopping all day. Next to Batley Market (Over Testy Bakery) Benfign adi gney bis- | s to save them 80%, N. Saginaw Opes tvesings by Appeinimens FE 2-5600 | in the oven to bake at the same . Set —— on bin, for des- Gch stic’ ‘ You're pampered he * s.snever < He Knows hampered ° ay 2 A / Vee ‘wae 476 Auburn Ave. 430 Oreherd Loke Ave. 379 E. Pike Se. Detroit on March 28, 29, and Mrs. Lula Bachman, Detroit at- \Fashionettes to 'Slink’ Shape Featured by . Joseph Mercy Hospital, will be speaker Tuesday at a meet- | mt Hi : He also showed “slink” fashions, but they called it “the moulded line.” It was the same long unbelted the hip E fi : i i birthday party will include re- gents of DAR Chapters in the Detroit area and friends of mem- bers. The speaker of the day will be fi f ' INCLUDES: \ Cream Shampoo ee ...aaaneee AL ey 50 1.50 Camp Nesbitt 11, Ladies Nation- on West Pike street. Mrs. Worth is secretary; Mrs. Fart Brobst, chaplain; Mrs. Mil- ton Linsley, marshal, Mrs. Helen Smale, assistant marshal; Mrs. Steve Sapalak, picket and Mrs. Emma Kinzer, sentinel. and means committee for the coming Others present at the installa- were Mrs. Leora E. La Fond of Bay City, national president; al League installed Mrs. Phil | Orencia as president at a recent dal meeting held in the Grotto Hall | Ladies’ National League Holds Installation MRS. PHIL ORENCIA A. ETRE. tii tit 3 \Editors See New Elastic Stockings NEW YORK (INS) — There's a new fashion note for the 8,000,000 i fc i if $5 | CLARE ANN SLICK | _—— nh ee , > tet ar <n eee 7 ee hes t B a 5 : . \ ; bl bit I ae far cere. Gtoeeresy ph eee i 2 3 je tae ‘ s 2 a * LS “ie & oe 4a e miPes ———ss A. heart-shaped either the fingertips or the wrist is the focal point of this unique ring of round and baguette diamond which won recognition by the Selection Committee for the Diamonds USA awards. Paris ‘Look’ Begins 1955 Showings if i if s8ieg Maple Leaf Club Is Entertained With Playlet Feedeai pile rf : He r : : i E Fi 5 4 if di i ue it fh BS te Sy a 2 hye i [ : Hi i t i g : i} i i \ vy ake ve i a. f NF pi eS he Ue i i i . Pees et eens t ; i dah ic. Rs od oxy diamond which can be worn facing _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955 ee Society Plans 3 Initicted aaa Tuesday and Wedne: pecial Program ) i’ ae | society has asked Ola Hiller, dire Amaranth fe ee Schosts to bing 8 ru from red pag: . ~ } j vias to Gacuss rewed rs. Crawley andiF | N. SAGINA ° Wile Hiller will bring Eiizabsth| the James Shaws s a w eT. — Se ae SPECIAL training class, two cadet teachers | and Mrs, James Shaw were ini- and Mrs, Harriet Latimer, <- | tiated into the Order of Amaranth, é Friday evening, when Esther : tho cadet teachers at work 1 the | cos oot at Rooeevelt Mason | ¥Y 4 LUE : Future Teachers Club of Pontiac | Temple. =) High School will be at the| Edward Pritchard, royal patron, | © tea which will be on Feb. 9/was in charge of “Obligation at 4 p. m. in Longfellow School. | Night,” with officers, members and guests taking part. Hayride Is Held le Be Seay ot Boot DA . s and Zeta Lambda Chap- a ~ seloiat wey bun tees Ya Date oe ek ete mitten a invited guests to a hayride in| ,o4' satin coronating pillow on |( : Rochester. recently, Zefh Eta chit | behalt ot the conrt trom Mrs. | GUGSESnm TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY ONLY! eo ees — pase honored during the meeting. Brilliant sportswear makes news with a suit inspired BRAND NEW fre See ste cet 22) Daas ot she Moe fe Spiced wich ae ee SPRING SUITS pesmi ere vals || A NT) sist in the installation ceremonies ANDRE Suits That Regularly Sell for More of the Detroit Court on Feb. 12. Refreshments were served by LJ a. oon cn etn! First for Hair Styles and Mrs, Charles Baynes. Guests were present from the Royal i Court, from Royal Oak, Detroit, 3 Walled Lake, Redford and the state | @ Cage. - @ Fitted jackets, boxy jackets |cede the annual natn on @ Flannel, tweeds, plain worsteds ‘ ain Se : @ Novelty, pockets, buttons, cuffs ; Algo a Tea @ Navy, new spring shades 4 Slated ebruary 3 @ Junior, misses’ and women’s sizes The face of this watch is covered with an array of round and baguette diamonds in an unusual design. Baguettes are slanted from the outer border to point up a center dome of brilliant cut diamonds. A curving loop of several strands of 2 baguette seems to go right through the center cluster and comes out in a graceful swath of baguettes tipped with pear-shaped diamonds. Mercy College Announces Series of Special Courses will be the title of the lecture for Botanist to Speak to Garden Club speak on Feb. 1. future. PREPARE NOW . For Interesting, Well-Paid Positions in the Business World Our graduates are making good in every branch of the business world. Join them! Prepare your- self today or a happier and more successful New Classes Monday, Feb. 7 Day, Half-Day and Evening VETERAN APPROVED 7 West Lawrence St. Call, Phone or Return This Ad for Bulletin Phone FE 2-3551 hh) eid he he DD Ld Address fool OVELIER hain Try One of Our Hair-Conditioning _PERMANENTS $5 = *G°° 2 240 INDIVIDUAL HAIR CUTTING by OSCAR 4 Beas Re ia ta Goat oe PARISIAN 7 West Lawrence é‘ Over OM Profs Beck Store Wave 2nd Floor Pontiac State Bank Bidg. of Our Operators MAGNIFICENT PERMANENTS 5 “" 10" Open Wednesday All Day—Friday ‘til 9 P. M. NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED IMMEDIATE SERVICE Including Hairs Cut end Styling Phone FE 5-4490 7 ® > “GUMMERBUND” The Shoe with the Beautiful Fit IO.95 FE 2-4959 The new, feather- weight in operas! With skin-soft leather lining, elasticized collar for snug fit, half heel that’s slim’d to look high ... plus the comfort of cork-foam cushioning. Block patent, Black or Navy Red calf. As seen in McCall's. SIZES: 6 to 10 52 to 10 5 to 10 5 to 10 AAAA AAA AA A B 3¥%2 to 10 Suit Salon—Second Floor TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY ONLY! BRAND NEW SPRING SKIRTS Skirts That Regularly Sell for More @.00 @ Rayon spun linen @ Slim, flore @ Nubby spuns @ Pocket details @ Pastels and colors @ Sizes-10-18 Skirts—Main Floor TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY ONLY! BRAND NEW ‘a ? aad ee . ! Ps ! . 3 es SLEEPING §- PAJAMAS Regularly Sell for More 3.30 @ Beautiful new @ Cotton washable @ New colors @ Wonderful fitting @ Sizes 32-40 Lingerie—Main Floor @ Interesting prints TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY ONLY! BRAND NEW COTTON DRESSES Dresses That Regularly Sell for More! $.00 @ Bine combed broadcloth @ Many new styles @ Prints, solid colors @ One, two pc. styles @ Dressy or tailored @ Junior and misses sizes Dresseo-—Secend Floor ” T Ty - } dh Matte. i ale te Par Fe - <P <Deeae mae ay > i Bio’ i illness attainment hl te ae a —- OS Serr, i ant ° ‘ / é }- - f : ‘ ‘ F : , et . . 4 . 2 TWELVE - | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 331, 1955 j "Widely Acknowledged Medical Doctor Has. Deep Philosophy for Living Thank You’ |D!: Schweitzer Devotes Life to Others’\{other Told MARY MARGARET McBRIDE | Schweitzer at noon go by the | I hope that all those who think . ° SAYS— ; | kitchen im the yard to collect a of this as the greatest man in th Right Reply Dr. Schweitzer Recoils From hit of hend-usst- seme ansad. Then wept ites co we TO Volunteer _ ‘Greatness’ betore he had his own meal he of his wise words, notably: ‘The | . " | When Dr. Albe *hwei w feed with stern justice | only way out of today’ isery is! to Praise inaeuen his 80th birthday a few | bine —_ as it perched on his for’ people. to become worthy of at Libra | the greatest man in the world by, | Friend’s Appearing | among others: Elsa Maxwell, | | Read Material ALAM | champion party-giver; a writer in j Too Inquisitive a acepapar cece Gerad. ana | Submitted By EMILY FosT | = participants on a television | By ANNE HEYWOOD bat —_ show. |~ “I would like to write children’ Today's first letter asks: ‘‘Will | “Oh, it would hurt him no end | books,” a yourg mother oe. you please tell me what is the to hear that they called him that.” proper reply for a girl to make declared his friend, Dr. Emory when she is paid a compliment— Ross, anxiously. “A few years such as when she is told she is 8° When. Life Magazine named good looking, or has a lovely‘ dress, or that her hair-do is very estly begging me to use every pos- ing, or any other personal! sible measure so that such a thing '“‘and I know I can do better than most of the awful ones in-the |i- brary which my children have to read, for want of any better ones. “IT tell wonderful stories which my own children and all their friends adore, and I don't see why I can't write them for publication remark. should not happen again. Yet, every one I send out gets re The answers of safety are! - ‘Who, except God, can know | turned with just a rejection slip, “thank you” or “‘how nice of you,” | “® i great?’ he asked’. : COMBATION | “I'm sure the publishers nev- Tho real requirement is the tone) _ | hope BN. Sebweltner will not SvEET- —- On Me Fone oF GLASS 1S! or even read them because if in Which out, off there in his African | they did, they’d know how much = Dog rad eek ane Gasgiead. Mink Sins eee Try It | better my own are than a let of who is treasurer of the Albert the junk they publish. Can you 4, s80me or persistent, you say ‘‘thank Schweitzer Foundation, has been B ] F k ] tell me the names of publishers you” very lightly and change the| powerless to halt the Schweitzer aiance Or Ss on a Glass whe ‘will really give the new subject. acclaimers. a ready for another real| balancing part of the trick, Look wrttor a bevel, or de you have t Te a friend whose remark is To me it seems a mostshopeful | 8°04 IT trick? Perhaps you drinki n New City and have spontaneous and sincere, “thank sign of our times that so many | ill Want to cut this out for your, Sry Oe een the right contacts?" you” is naturally said with | kinds of people should wistfully |" file. — a nal’ | Most of us who have told stories warmth and evidence of pleas- hero-worship the man who has The oe which are | on the edge of the glass so that ' successfully to our own children ure. meticulously carried out the pro- are two table forks, one arge you will have your forks in come eventually to the decision Dear Mrs. Post: Occasionally, | Tam he formulated at 21: to live a cork, a long thin nail, balance? that we're good enough to publish. y wife is not at home, one | for science and art until he was ! p14. nunting Se ade oe pa Move the nail, as shown on the But it isn’t that easy. First of all, or another of her friends ‘tele-| 30 and, after that,.to give himself | Ors) about bot ence dann °% Me right of the drawing, so that the !'m sure that your material has phones and asks to speak to her. |.to the direct service of humanity. , ad forks are in balance. TRY IT! | been looked at, and found wanting. 4 + = * ; : When I announce that ‘she is out,| He has said of that time, “It Leok at the left hand side of You can also put the materials Most decent publishing houses take One of the smart provincially designed white and gold or antique parchment with — : ’ today’s drawing. Now, puch the | out on the table and ask if anyone look at all material which is sent chairs shown at the recent Grand Rapids | gold striping. The fabric is a gold, charcoal | “Where did she go?” I consider |I had not the inward right to take| ™&ll into the middle of the cork | in the room can balance the forks !0 them, but unless jt is really furniture market is shown in provincial fin-| ing white chintz such questions in poor taste and| as a matter of course my happy | © the bottom side, This is your | by using these things. | Promising. they cannot write a Zs not business. ish. The piece is also available in antique | Will you eas tell me how 5 oa power of work... whoever is Around Bush srt, es ame - ’ . . = . sive = ve answer wi spared — mpg ane feel | This Cake’s |Philosophy on Nursing “i. cota squat Sit 22 min Sometimes _ | all carry our share of the misery Tops, Says Is Given New Mothers ws sine ‘ston ore et ae [Shortest | cational, and mest children’s , | Whether this is good or not, is an Y Cook | By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE | He looked at me with interest. | | : oung Last wedk I attended the aneertl | ae if yen aun “T would say that.| «Mrs. Doctor.” | with the treatment of-Hanson's | Suggestion Given to beg tigomeen pglcldi-taghm ga ; ye : | But if you e me as saying it.| pear - 4 | disease as leprosy is called : : 0 womer® I know who sell to . Grace Williamson’s cee eae saci tat Das | Diease add that there is no reason Prana Paige aol ra =! Se many new patients were Ps Avoid Dismal Time this field are teachers who have Luscious Dessert |for a woman who cannot breast-| day while visiting her a letter | tracted recently by the stories o¢ | Ot Dance had lots of experience, or chil- ease. Its members said many feed a baby to develop a phobia| came addressed to Mrs. Dr. Henry| bie successful results with the | dren's librarians. , I thought that Dr. Frederick H. | So, now that this ‘noted child | this form of address and thought | the doctor sometimes had to | did it. too Umpteen blocks out | unless it is accompanied by sim- : Foe te rina reed Héitor — jance Center said the best thing: | who can't nurse babies, let me ad- tho wombers | hed been divine and the man eves | trations. This is especially true for Asap L mae: we ‘The basic esseptial in a child's | dress the prospective ones who . | more so. And, at that, the trip | | the younger ages and if you just nominate made fresh | emotional health is in the inter-| don't know whether they can or | send in the , coconut. Grace con, » home seemed all too . | Same m the story. without, Shustre- Williamson, a not. | “To be a success in Lambarene | tions, your chances slim teenager we met recently, shares ‘ be The theory holds for unpleasant i =e aa her favorite cake Your obstetrician will not make ya an eS | deed. recipe with us; ‘carpenter, a mechanic. a farmer, | things too. You have a problem | oM bee thes the cocomut mill in- the solange ge wpamedinnel boatman, a trader, as well as a| that torments you. You can dive | you, vebuateer at Jour wearest itself nurse you. probably . straight tack) head olunteer your nearest Grace, a ninth grader at Water face you with it at a time when He was a carpenter the day high ind. poebehty caien Xt, Bet oom. library, to take on a children's an on die tes ak Leer Sedona, Ie ain be Peench officials came iat your | Sane ee fring otter aia CMe onli a eaae cooking and has worked in a 4-H hard for you to see your baby | They ware oatsiem | ig on the incidental iasuse, will teers for this purpose. Then, read : cooking project for several years in the weight you carry. Mostly, | ire it lete | S0lve it too, | all the books you can which are 2 glee a i Te eek oe a they found the, And that’s just what I would | nally wake Goat eee piano lessons. plays you your te yourself . and ; trombone in the school band and again. ; nage erty or geo a | | ly. 7 sings in a church choir. In he , —— , a at | - aa ey yee ping slices of casaba clon | the dearer tree Mghs. fe" ske | jacic. catch snd seo the ci school’s dramatic group your decision, they a oa ‘Oh that he was | wettes: intg = talang, tee os cee: After ° native . © "\e tana = dooms vel sgn gta grcageeie = hed! «Dear Miss Woodward: I'm 14 | years of this, you will have a pretty t, cup shortening again for dein Pediatricians never stops ee 5 Pod pin in ond ee | — aoa — 1 cup sugar , , is tender to ' aa = you can write your stories 1 ess a po nag ioe Pte favorites is | “%t Year in grammar school. So and find a gifted artist who will Iss"cupe cake fleur rear tio baby his teats it you . puppy had : ice = : take cia with you, and 3 teaspoons baking powder 7 y cally for high school students were : you'll have a better chance at sell- ‘. cup coeconut are tired or Jim wants to take you the habit of chasing chickens. just what the doctor ordered for - inn then: Seu Sie © pee ea away from the drudgery for an ~ p os . now that we have |») = you Save new, sented evening.” piss 4 the Nobel Prize,” he was heard... by fon AH beloms . me egg and egg ae ae | | So let me put this to you: , - | i , “we can't chase ) and tc i pon . ho ne IF mature figure— and add to creamed mixture. Sift | Upon his birth, year baby will Some women give parties for the chickens. 1X did very well at the first dance Double value for your sewing dry ingredients together five times | | be & primitive creature. His | sole benefit of the ones they don't! Myrta, Dr. Ross’ wife, tells | cdnsidering I didn't know any of the | “ime! This is the season's most | _, and add alternately with the coco- | eyes, so long used to the un- | intend to invite. | me that she used te see Dr. | boys because none of the boys ]| practical, prettiest wrapon—make | nut milk: (use milk or water to | focused darkness, will not see did\know showed up. The last two/ it also in ‘ make the % cup, if you do not | you. His cars, so long insulated dances have been awful! Not al a -naopinasc ally have enough coconut milk.) Add | against noise, will not register single boy asked me to dance, I'm | DbIr 8Pron! See the neckline— vanilla. Bake in layers in a 350-| the words you speak to him. His ] not bad-looking and I dance fairty | /*'s cut low for cool flattery. Check Roreutcs the wen ont} wt he uitite & sencmite*te you help me?’ a seven-minute icing. While i¢ing is w unable penetrate ttern 4803: Misses’ sizes still soft, sprinkle with any communication familiar to Just off hand, those dances 14, 16, 18, 20; 40. Sire 16 take grated coconut. you, . for high school young people do (3% yards 35-inch fabric. The milk that will appear in your sound like the perfect answer fer | This pattern easy to use, simple breasts will appear to solve your a girl whe goes to an all-girl’s | to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- PERMANENTS problem of communication.. Its school and doesn’t know many | picte illustrated instructions. ae tee oeh ardor ie th ee ee ee Send 35 cents in coins for this ectly interpret that essential organised there’s someone | pattern—add 5 cents for each ee for a , spont warmth” to his prim whe sees te it that boys and | tern for first-cl pat- i pe, itive understanding. Sirls meet each other. to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- ; : It is the beginning of language There’s something very dismal | tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West ead Cal by Casra Wheddr between you and your bebry. indeed about your turning up at | 17th St, New York 11, NY. Print P ents that third dance alone, only to/| Plainly name, address with zone, ermanen Half sizers! Make this dress gay ers sit on the sidelines for a second | ize and style number. 50 | version without sleeves! interest out of anybody Rearrange Closet > 56 | Pattern 889: Half sizes 14%, MAKE FRIENDS arr eadt pow Apenyes. b= I ngncd fee eee 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%, 4%. Tissue) «| gidn’t et accidental and an oversight on the your linen closet ; a“ n't want to accept the part of the chaperones or leaders, | ©VTY 50 often and make sheets pattern, transfers. State size. invitation, but she made it im- ts and tablecloths No Appointment Necessary Send 25 cents in coins for this | possible for. me to refuse.” That otscanye 4 — want ire | Seuhat dined taniian This sonal 5 pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- has happened to you, hasn't it? . oo oe ' stant oe ae tern for first-class mailing. Send _ with me. Granted you want to meet | ita) "creasing won't always fall IMPERIAL to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft new boys. But being seen having | in the and wear the fiber | auty Salon |] 2%:,7.2.,2% i: mM rates ‘ oe ee Be . Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print D U , P b d 2 E. Pike St. FE 4-2679 || Plainly your name, address with esigner ses eg Oar Se solve your problem by tackl-— Pag distrib- zone, pattern number, size. By ELIZABETH HILLYER § The rug is gray; the sofa olive} '"S.' sideways. Line up some of Central Praaaed _ |; Perforated hardboard covers an | Teen; a chair red with gold, green your girl friends and some of the entire wall of his own study in| 0°OW™, and black threads running ee | Wright's New: York through it; and the tables are them to your heute toe Russell house dark mahogany. Should thé walls fet supper before the next dance. Save up to Here the industrial who's | of the adjoining dining room be the| @° % the @amee together, stick so well known for his home furnish-|same color as the living room| ‘S¢ther in a vague sort of way. : 0 atin aa constely dill Gl Gp einte. ent : ox pa a eye am Gray is the most logical choice | you can introduce new friends to — ae Lo es = he ceangue on WE for the walls of both rooms, a everybody in your group. ' | 3 Rearrangement is merely a mat-| “**4e matching the rug or light | vy tive the - a ter of moving hooks from one po-| “* the draperies to the inet ae ret owen ee i ok 3 on. Fabrics = sition to another to add perhaps| “*l* Oi teat ot 9FS | erode to you boys you don't know « . ‘ ~ er the newest portrait of his small) Co™s*ess, bet Mf you feet the |.” ——— : ms | EYRae al daughter or her Intest ‘erayoning| foes ueras, Patiern, Hepeet @8 | sou ) , ' efforts, a page he likes from | ‘rmiture colors on a gray triendly - 4 One Group of Fabrics magazine, an idea sketch of his| ST°™®4 imstead. ances : ee q : own. Photographs old and new in| Mrs. J. D “I have a Chinese pil- . x Mohairs-Friezes-Nylons antique and in modern frames ar-| lowcase 20 by 28 inches, which ts| Sane = cL. - Reduced to Save You Money! range harmoniously with an old| embroidered so beautifully it could] way to Me : . ee. sword and scabbard, a small land-| be mistaken for a painting. It is BP M, RIGHT wall is painted a dull gray-| ing room is too informial for this | MMQ " ‘ esr . black to emphasize the importance) pillowcase to be .used on a : norco BP "ERERS ‘ of everything on it. And it is an sofa, but could it be used appro- : = ‘Loke Rd. FE 4.0558 important wall, one that has a priately as a wall hanging? If so, ‘ Orcherd t : charming - personal significance should it be framed with the fringe . ad MS , .: Wile It decorates the room. ‘>? fe , ‘ ' * all this £ al _ Mex. LR. P. “We are buying |posséhsion "as "a. wall hating. ae & new home, and I would like, to| Frame it, it you feel this is’ Cae know what color you would suggest | sary for its préservation, the Ly eax} ' for living room walls and draperies. | fringe intact.: eric F ‘ ie \ i Es ¥ 2) P : ‘a af r . F - \ ‘ ' xe a! =e k —_ % 4 Pan ee | ape LO Ofte S a ’ eae oe CAVA ere oe ie be AS Oa >. in. OO ¥ . : Cg on ei Se THIRTEEN» Caneda's prevince of Ontario and west and also the same die extends) for about 1,000 miles east | tance north and south’ TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: JUNIOR STE (JUNIOR "This Winter Travel in COMFORT ‘and SAFETY by GREYHOUND iit apr fi : 5 eis5 DISCOVERER —Dr. Daniel 1. / Arnon, professor at the University ‘ of California in Berkeley, hes | found a method of artificially ac- complishing photosynthesis.. This | during the trial. Detroiter Wounded w—Silvio Olivero, companion Sunday while the pair was hunting in Branch County. »..and the money you save will have the last word! When it comes to buying that new home, sending your Children to college or what- ever your plans may be . . . It is the money you SAVE that will have the final “say. To get “YES” for an answer to your most cherished dreoms, start now to sove MORE NEW STYLES! COTTON HIT PARADE oes ‘age eat ond keep everlast- at r deposits in your savings account are the surest woy to HUNDREDS OF FRESH NEW COTTONS Tie ee It's Spelled It's ssw. cea | AT ONE LOW PENNEY PRICE Still Macaroni ager at Argonne National Labora- EAST LANSING (UP)—The next | ‘ry in Lemont, Ill., axplained the time you are in a cafeteria line, | *Ptlling errors. 7 rrent SRavbeea eoverhtae “Meme.| ona tase pooled gy aga 79 wid menu . a) Mickey Rooney”—it simply means | * some eof the foods. It nd the cafeteria ie. serving tomato scm of the eaten in cafeteria PONTIAC FEDERAL sea ee cen, he |, Pine ere rip pe ae , OF mpsaee eps | Stesaen cs tase eat PENNEY'S BASEMENT SAVINGS 16 E. Lawrence St. COTTON SHOP Failure of customers to read the menu boards slows up cafeteria Why do so many folks that own an electric range also buy an electric dryer? Personal experience with an electric range has proved to them that the electric way is the cleanest way! Why should | buy an automatic Clothes dryer? An automatic dryer saves tons of lifting, miles of walking, cuts sprinkling time to sero and ironing time in half. | 5-yard sweep skirt with 16 gores highlights this pin- money cotton at Penney’s! Notch collar, jewel buttons. Black, red or brown a check. 12-20, 1414-2414 No-iron crinkle plisse in a sharp, clear check ... with a swing skirt 4 yards wide! But- ton-trim tab neckline, crisped with white embossed cotton. All size ranges! 279 | | | | | | | | | | | | | 979 fhove DAN RIVER CORDSPUN* 279 Striped coat dress in Dan River’s famous “Cordspun”! Neatly tailored with notch f collar, turnback wing cuffs, big pockets. ; Favorite colors. Sizes 12 to 20, 14 to ; 244, me ee ey ee \ Does it cost much. to Which electric clothes dryer is the T? —— | at | . | t ture that will help you 1 | See your dealer or stop in at Detroit Edison for comparative data and descriptive litera- ake,» chtive. Pastel pin-chéeck coat dress of combed yarn Sanforized' ging- ham! Frosty pique trim, jewel buttons down the front. Pink or blue. Sizes 10-20, 14!4- 2414, \fMaximum shrinkag) 1%. Lace-touched gingham check —irresistible in pastels pink or baby blue! Fite combed yarn fabric is mercerized, San- forized' for lasting fit. %4 but- ‘ ton front, self belt. Sizes 12- ‘. 20, 1614-2414. 279 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 381, 1955 QUALITY STEWART-GLENN COMPANY FURNITURE SINCE 1917 ual Storewide February Sale Bookcase Bed, & 54” Dbl. Dresser “Clean-lined” style in Taffy Mahogany Trust famous MENGEL to set new standards of value in on oe bedroom furniture, and trust us to bring it to you at the lowest price ever seen for this quality! Here is the clean-lined beauty you've always associated with here is quality construction designed for years of use... here is an unparalleled opportunity to-save. 69.50 Triple Dresser..... 26,95 Night Stand....... 29.95 luxurious furniture... 159 Convenient terms 5 Drawer Chest Panel Bed. eee eepeeee eh ee ne 2 | Open Friday Night "til 9:00 | 6 to 6 South Saginaw Sire Beveled plate glass mirror Hand-rubbed and polished finish Dovetailed, dustproof drawer construction Silvery chrome or golden brass pulls Center drawer guides Dowel-joined construction '. © EASY PARKING off Saginaw at alley — see our ae tala: 1 at OUR OWN LOT! | Jas bs Hi Go oe eens mae eRe hs GS it \ < : ¢ eu * y he 5 4 Ae dnd = “ ye cae? Bh ‘ - os ; | eek (8 ik ae Mi De tic has a eS. g r | - THE PONTIAC PRESS. _. Ea MONDAY, JANUARY 381, 1985 * - | mi PONTIAC, MIGHIGAN ; aes ee —_ — —————- a Vn —— Jenner Asks. Against 3 ‘Red-Praisers’ >——— 7 Lauded China, Senator Says Trio Attacked in Report on Activities Prepared for Subcommittee WASHINGTON—# Sen. William E. Jenner (R) Ind., called today for government action against | three American citizens who lived in China under the Red regime ' Land “praised the Communist gov- érnment after returning to ‘the i Jenner. sharply attacked the trio in a report on their activities pre- pared while he was Chairman of the Senate internal security sub- committee. The Indiana lawmaker singled out John W. Powell, whe disap- peared last year after testifying before the subcommittee, Wil- liam Hinton and Powell's wife, Sylvia Campbell Powell who has been. working for the National | Foundation for Infantile Paraly- sie in San Francisco. HE'S A DOG SITTER—Most people have baby | os AP Phete “They are,’ Jenner declared, | sitter problems—not the Rudolph Sittengers of East | Dalmations they hire 13-year-old Wayne Gauthier , “members of a little group that | Braintree, Mass.,—they. were looking for a dog | (above), regularly to sit with them when they are United Press Telephote | Went to China at the expense of | sitter. They think so much of their five champion | out for an. evening. / water | is. Richard D. Pope Jr. former world water ski champion, who ee ne aa a - skis the vacationing Shah of Iran, Mohammed Reza Pabhilevi (right) | watches.the Shah while balancing himself in a sitting position on Last Stop on Journey Abroad ws proves that he can ‘hold ‘his own with the best. In this case, the best | one ski. They're enjoying the sport at Winter Haven, Fla. tal protection of aad a eee nt a ‘Old Brooklyn Fort Abounds With Sound Powel nd Hinton retived vo deny QS Cl S Children, Wives Head Overseas The senator continued: Communist affiliations. So did| Mrs. Powell. | NEW YORK (UP)—An old Army| Fort Hamilton. There are quar- | session today,” the ‘pretty young “Both men acknowledged that | fort in Brooklyn is the scene these | ters for only 700 dependents and = mother laughed. “The children they had been lecturing or writ- | days of weary and confused mo- the others are sent to nearby ho- thought the tem pan ing, in praise of Communist thers, mischievous youngsters, | tels. pere : check China ever sisice their return, squalli infants tient si “Y 1 with 4 meant another shot—we've been _ ¥ manda wiree sma’ | vaccinated so much. "So they be- was (and some rather bewildered | obi or give | dion. pest | children in the lobby today, and sem tb bdveame | ; ony Atala. om Geir sctivities.” | It is the jumping-off place each [crete day she's ever put in im her | “Them they tried to tel we | Jenner said he agreed with Sen. month for 6,000 wives and children | j:¢, + Mrs. Newby said. “And it about checking our baggage and en route to join Americans sta- was énly noon!” | taking care of the Children on the Mrs. Newby and the children are, “!p- But there was so mech From all corners of the United | en route to France to join her hus- | se with all the children none States they stream inte Fort | band, Capt. Robert H. Newby, a| @* heard much.” | Sy mae They come by train, ee gaalending Seg Fen Two-year-old Kathy interrupted > by plane and sometimes by car, | simmer, she waited until he found 's conversation sudden the young women often-carryimg | a place for the family to live. Now! par mother's Bet Ret Cine during baby in their ares eid timajonsty pete hak weld their home in Phosat) My shautne: | Teme lady?” Welker added: coaxing Seng ORS | Sat lo Eewing bigy, 2 | potalian' ene Ol ier torent “I believe I am expressing the | 7°™"s**e"™ | There were 146 women apd New York hatbor, Her older Sentiments of every member of the; They hold on tight fo a small children in her hotel that.day, brother jooked embarrassed. subcommittee, of every P.O.W. | yellow booklet, “Last Stop, USA,” | waiting to leave on ships or “She means the Statute of who suffered in Korea, and of the | with instructions on their last few) planes. Most travel by ship bat Liberty,” he explained. “You can great mass of the people of the | days in their homeland. some aire assigned plane spRee, | see it from the window.” U. &., when I say that conduct| “It's exciting but you wonder if usually if there are four or more | The next morning they sailed such as 7 been established in| you'll ever get there,” Mary New-| children. | past “The Lady” on a Navy trans case of should | by, 30, of Phoenix, Ariz., baid, She :, ‘ The « famil port headed for two and one-half penal-|was sitting in a crowded hotel waite soem a gona agg ind years abroad. a jroom. Her childreg, Bobby, 8 and while their papers are processed a Jenner declared that he felt | Kathy, 2, jumped on the beds in a and their health carefully checked the three Americans should at | Testiess game of tag by twe. @éeters. four. nurses Gad {0 Halt the very least be required to | ike many of the mothers, seven enlisted personnel. register as foreign agents. | Mrs. Newby found there was not ‘You should have seen our tent “Some means must be found to| enough room for her te stay at | peratufe check and the orientation | + : curb the activities of such people | — a ; ft mrs s) in ld Volunteers Working to Tame Kosi River's Annual Flooding NEW DELHI, India @—India is counting on an army of volunteers to help tame the turbulent Kosi, the “river of sorrow” whose an- nual floods bring tragedy to 18 million persons. , Some 5,000 volunteers — meh and women, chanting Hindu hymns | while they work with shovels and baskets — launched this month the first phase of the 400-million-rupee (#4 million dollar) flood control of the U. S. abroad’ and then re- other Antericans fought."’ He’s Getting Fine Glow but Wife’s Diet Suffers ALBUQUERQUE W — James Kellock, vice president of a Chi- cago picture products company, is a man with friends who want him to have a good time on his vaca- tion by train to California. At every stop since Chicago, there has been delivered aboard | the train (1) a banana split for Mrs. Kellock and (2) a double! | scotch for Mr. Kellock, ordered by wire by Edward C. Jewell, of Chi- » ik SS = in, gee cago, es. displayed by Valerie % Untied Press Photos | On their Sunday stop here, the plunges into an indoor pool (top). | her face full of water, A 50-yard crawl stroke is easy for the tot Kellocks both got banana splits. Shooting to the surface (bottom), the tiny swimmer winces at having | who learned to swim almost as soon as she learnéd to walk. Sunday is dry in New Mexico Senate to Debate Formosa Cease Fire WASHINGTON (INS) — Senate | typical Communist maneuver, and Asked if attacks on Quemoy , weekend against ‘appeasenient” of | president to ‘take . appropriate leaders promised careful scrutiny Assistant Secretary of State for) and Mateu would call for U, S. | Red China in any cease-fire agree- | steps to achieve that objective.” and plenty of debate on the For.|7* Eastern. Affairs Walter 3S counter-measares as approved |ment. He rejected reports that) foreign Relations Chairman Wal- Robertson declared: “I don’t think | by Congress in the “save For- | Nationalist China will be asked to|ter F. George (D-Ga), promised ; ments, about seyen miles apart and each 70 miles long. Their hope is that the Kosi will stay within those embankments when monsoon raing and melting Himalayan snows send flood waters swirling into the river. . z : | a i : Indian peasants in the Kosi area oa Bre er ys today, a that changes the situation at all.”| mesa” résolution, Robertson | sive up Quemoy and Matst as part | Humphrey immediate considera- 80 days. aabty pie geen be pec ti Robertson, inter viewed on Srey ot “it military | of a cease-fire “‘deal bw of his resolution—which car- However, no one expects Se In- and Soviet’ Russia’s dethand that) ABC’s “College Press Confer- a asec heen.” ’ The Senate voted 8 to 3 Fri- rot out the president's own, cease- — volunteers to ; oe the U. S. withdraw from the entire | ence,” warned that if Commun- day night for the resolution p endorsement. fg oy awe “te Meanwhile, the Southeast Asia authorizing the sident to use Knowland made it clear he did area. cu . Pw Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Mont) a eee clas reats Defense Treaty will be the pend- U. &. military forces to defend | 9°t oppose a cease-fire as such, Senate Foreign Relations Commit- the Nationalists, “they do | ing business when the Senate re- Formosa, the Pescadores And | % long as it maintained the tee member, said the United Na- se at the risk of wir with the | convenes Tuesday, and jlegislators| “retated’’ Nationalist-held islands | “Status quo” in territory for Na: of thousands of workers. For an other, the Chinese had to work to while the Indians are yolun- 3 States.” said this alone will’ invite more tionalist China. teers; officials here fear there tions negotiations for a cease-fire Unpied —presumably Quemoy and Mat- is “certain to be debated this| The top state department official | debate on the whole question of| su, The House had adopted it, | Sen. Arthur Watkins (R-Utah) co aaaigmegetinge Sponges : week.” sid be was speaking enty for bise- | Termocs dstaane and the Ameri 49 to 3. backed Knowland. He said in an is can-supported cease- interview: * | Project. i: . Me pointed out thatthe foreign wollen on” tect meee (ae Uae Ater iis approval, Humphrey in-|trcnut “any deal resucing ae oR eee eee consider to- | issues, | Sen. Paul Douglas (D-Il1) voiced | ‘Totuced A te tion | Nationalists to give up any terri- Sheriffs the “sense | tory to the Chinese Communists. @- | declared Socal are stgrted|the U.N. negotiations that the U.N. should | we shouldn't give County Mina) urging president s . . ia i up all hope of | Sheri bet ore ” the miscalcula’ tes” said: “Til not vote for a cease:fire | “8 “Prompt action to bring about them getting back to the main-| today the meet and said that if Red China's Jead-| until and unless the administra- and> request | the | jand : ciation has accepted The Russian demand that the|er Chou En-Lai “is not bluffing, /tion assures us it is virtually im- e 3 | Knowland, said’ the Netiqnalists : 1 to hold its state U.N. Security Council cali for | there is great danger of war.” op tage Sheeler Festive! Planned | *hould keep their present territory ? . United Press Telephoto | yyy 35.97, Sneak fren POR. COME ewe Gostected’ fees satsare' al Ciliiee the rth o's seaovies ot ie i ee ne ee a ares aan on esas eee : area a seizure of the effect of a cease-fire is HI pont |China” because the day might | & sweater y a Cameraman. Likewise, Sil We kced well Seah tpensieg’ end. Yeikén, Raaty. nhar lnnamrend thn om aati ets abe will spehent | come when the ‘Communists vie"| occasion Yor such action can bem: Variety of fleeting iacidents .0f | enna an't:: pit ime ates Senate GOP Leader William F.| winthr Pts en | ern ere Nesey at ee ee es ee Sn ee ee ee , resolution. toward ultimate (R-Calif), ‘a foreign re- inciudes skating = races,| China armistices the commeunity battle where « leash cats proposed. Kenyon, perme ot stronghold of ismbae, warned the. as | Saute diating, thd covonition of.s world would want to use Chiang’s | True, the léash looks good on the cat—as well as on Adelle, who lives m= ‘ eet rae ‘Dutly-over the high school girl as queen, j= —s_[ forces against the mainland, im Hollywood,, ot ie | : ihe eS ’ a ' . . en \ ; ' + , . ‘ i { Dead, 7 Hurt at New Hudson _4-Car Pileup on U. S. 16 fe | at Pontiac Trail Kills Lansing Man NEW HUDSON—A Lansing man was killed and six persons injured at 11:20 last night when he drove his car into the rear of another waiting for a red light at U. S 16 and Pontiac Trail. Brighto” State Police said, causing a series of rear-end crashes involving two other cars Dead is Willard C. Smith, #0 His wife, Doris, 37, is in serious condition in University Hospital, | Ann Arbor. Also in University Hospital are Smith’s passengers, his brother Donald F. Smith, 34, and his wife, Evelyn, 32, also of Lansing, both suffering lacera- tiens and possible fractures. ‘ 4 i, LORETTA HOSKINSON Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hoskinson of Milford have announced the en- gagement of their daughter Loretta to William F. Lowry. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albertus Lowry of Jacksonville, Ohio. No date has been set for the wedding. Others injured were Hazel = oorpsnanmans - Shirtliff, 45, of 45833 W. 12 Mile} Shirt of Wan e| They All Want to Be Howell, Jame» Sariscsany, 5, and | “ Richard T. Frazee, 37, of Howell. ‘A M | Sk The Howel residents were taken | rmy U e inners to McPherson Hospital, Howell,, CHICAGO (INS)—Even in this and Mrs. Shirtliff was treated at | jet-propelled age, there apparently St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Annis something attractive about the Arbor. | life of a Upited States Army mule Grass Fires Cause the Army recruiting center in Half of 1954 Alarms i Chicago has been deluged by vol- unteers answering a cal] to serve | with the only two remaining mule ‘units in the service—the 4th Field Artillery and the 35th Quartermas ter Co. at Camp Garon, Colo. One of the lures used by Army authorities was that the 4th and 3th offer ‘‘the greatest outdoor man's life available in modern America.” no loss of life by fire townsjip during that period. by fire was estimated at $24,670. Seventy-sight gress fires dari ng After Short Weekend the year made up more than half WASHINGTON w — President of the department's alarms, ac- Eisenhower returned to the capi- cording to Carl Schingeck, fire tal late yesterday after spending a chief. | little more than a day at Augusta, —- |Ga., where he played golf and Party Today to Climax | relaxed with friends. | | His only official action while in Youngsters’ Dance Group | Augusta was to send a message WATERFORD TOWNSHIP __|to King Fredrik of Denmark ex- Twelve weeks of ballroom dance ne = nang orate Danish Prime Minister Hans Hed- instruction for community young toft. people in grades 6-12 will end with a final class and party to be held Plan Supper at Thomas from 1:30-9:30 p.m. today at the | THOMAS—Thomas Community CAI building. | Association will sponsor a Beef and Approximately 200 dance students Chicken Cafeteria Supper at the are expected to attend according to| Community Hall, starting at 5:30 Thomas Belton, township super- p.m. Tuesday. The affair is open intendent of recreation. | to the public. Today Pending Action by Supreme Court 1 LAPEER—A factual condensa- tion of the December 1953 trial of | Clayton C. Gilliland, 58, of Detroit jon charges of conspiracy to ob- | struct justice | meeting today between Gilliland’s | attorney, Lapeer County Circuit | Court Judge Timothy C. Quinn and the county prosecutor's office was -the This would pave the way for the | | State Supreme Court's decision on whether they will take up an ap-| peal of the conviction which sen- | | tenced Gilliland to 4% to 5 years |in prison. Gilliland was sentenced | for his part in the long legal and often. physical fight of area farm- lers and the defunct Lapeer Farm- | ers Mutual Fire Insurance Assn. | Gilliland, found guilty Dec. 2%, | 1953, has been out on $5,000 bond pending first an appeal for a retrial, which was denied, and | them an appeal to the Supreme Court, Judge Quinn warned Gilliland’s attarney, Leo Hoffman, that a de- lay in the meeting which he asked @veral weeks ago, would be the last extension made 9 St. Louis Schools ‘Drop Race Bars ST. LOUIS w—Racial barriers come down today in the nine gen- eral high schools in St. Louis Integration of the high school enrollment, which in the first term was 14,093, is the second step in ‘the Board of Education's policy tc gradually end segregation in line | with the U. S. Supreme Court rul- | ing. About 30 per cent of the high school enrollment in the first term were Negroes : | Teachers’ colleges and special |schools were integrated last fall. | The integration is scheduled to be |completed next September in the public grade schools | Socialists Nominate DETROIT # — Frank Lovell of | Detroit Sunday was named the Socialist Workers’ Party candidate |for state superintendent of public instruction. Rita Shaw was nomin- ated for a regent of the University of. Michigan, and Robert Himmel Jr. for member of the State Board of Education at the party's state caucus, aim of a! j when the wire hit a Z | ) : ; THE PONTIAC. PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955 ~ Meet to Discuss Grand Jury Probing ' Deaths in Nearby Communities s+ Gilliland Appeal ¥ | Review Case at Lapeer Income Tax Scandal A federal Louis prepared LOUIS (INS) in ost ST gran@ jury today to continue an inquiry into alleged scandals in the Internal Revenue Service during the Tru- man administration The study, launched by an Oma ha grand jury which recessed Fri day, stems from reported attempts by high Truman administration of ficials to whitewash James P. Fin negan, convicted former tax collec tor in St serving &a prison term for misconduct T. Lamar Caudle, former head of the Justice Department's tax division, was reported likely to be a witness in the secret hear- ings, The Omaha jury heard former Secretary of the Treasury John W. Snyder, his undersecretary, Ed- ward Foley Jr., and former In- | ternal Revenue Commissioner | George Schoeneman. All could be | recalled by the St. Louis jury which may also call former Attorney Gen- eral J. Howard McGrath to tes- tify. Caudle, fired by President Tru- man in 1951 for outside activities incompatible with his official du- ties, testified previously before a House of Representatives commit- tee that the Justice Department had tried to block a grand jury inquiry in St. Louis Louis now Model Airplane Proves | Undoing of Navy Pilot | SUNNYVALE, Calif. (UP)—Navy pilot Ernest Callaway, 28, who | has had good luck flying leave airplane real planes, says he'll models alone He was flying a model airplane on the end of a wire yesterday a 12,000 volt power line and knocked him un- conscious County Calendar Imlay City The Wotiéeti's Study Club will hear 6 talk on photography when it meets Tues- day afternoén at the home of Mrs Bar! EB Secor Ortenville Christian Crusaders of the Baptist | Church will meet at 1:30 pm Tuesday at the home of Mrs. C. B. Crossman on Church street Remeo Michigan Culture’ will be the theme for the next meeting of the Romeo Book | Club, to be held Tuesday at the home of Mrs. H. B. Garling, 37¢ Chandler St Trey Tewnship | The Progressive 4-H Club, of Troy Township will meet at 6:30 p.m. Tues- | day at 1516 Muer St } Poppleton Women's Club will meet at | 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Mrs. | Thomas Laurie. 1481 Muer & Waterford The Adult Bible Class of Waterford | Community Church will meet at 7:30) a Fpaseter ot pi OF x, Road from 39 p.m. Feb. 4 and | presented in behalf of President Mrs. William Grenger will be co-hestess. Mrs. William Jones CLARKSTON — Rosary service for Mrs. William (Sarah) Jones, 39, of 5 S. Holcomb St., will be held at 9 p.m. today at the Sharpe Fu- neral Home, with funeral at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Our Lady of the,Lake Church, Waterford, and burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery, Pontiac. She died Saturday. Mrs. Gertrude L. Hadden ROCHESTER—Service for Mrs. Gertrude L. Hadden, 75 Livernois Rd., was held at 2 p.m. today at the William R. Potere Funeral Home, with burial in Troy Union Corners Cemetery. She died Saturday . Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Phyllis M¢Pherson of Troy Town- ship, a son, Glenn of Rochester, a brother, Floyd Lawrence of Water- ford, and one grandchild. Mrs. William F. Lear WATERFORD ‘TOWNSHIP Service for Mrs. William F. (Ruth) Lear, 950 Premont Ave., will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the First Methodist Church, with Won't Press Charge in Jan. 28 Shooting A 3S -year-old Pontiac woman, who was shot Jan. 28, hag told Oakland County Prosecutor Fred- erick C. Ziem that she will not press charges against her assail- ant Recuperating in Pontiac General | Hospital is Mrs. Eleanor LaRousa, of 714 Raeburn St. She was wound- ed by a .22 rifle slug fired by her << jaunt, Miss Williaming Purdy, 28, at the latter's Whipple Lake home in Independence Township, state police said. Mrs. LaRousa was attempting to |forée her way into the~basement dwelling and the shot came after she broke a window with her fist, | police explained Miss Purdy said she didn't know who was outside and became afraid when the window shattered Two Centenarians Die LONDON, Ontario (INS)—Two of Canada’s oldest women died in Western Ontario Sunday — Mrs. Susan McRae Smith, 105, in Wal- laceburg and Mrs. Helen Bayes, 104, in London. Plan Rummage Sale KEEGO HARBOR—The Business and Professional Women's Club is a rummage sale at the Encampment Hall on Cass Lake from 10 a. m. to 7.p.m. Feb. 5. of 6059 | 4 rs a ——E © Holly Sets Up Traffic Bureau Collection Office Open 8-5 Daily Will Handle Minor Violations HOLLY—Today witnesses a new era in the Holly Police Depart- ment, with the incorporation of a | new and completely independent traffic violation bureau. In the past many of the minor traffic violations, mainly moving violation, were settled in justice court. This caused inconvenience | tor all involved in instances where | the violation was only a minor one. Provision fer the violation bureau and a traffic referee to be on duty~during the police de- partment’s administrative hours, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., was made in the bi-monthly village council meet- ing Jan. 11. ? Chief of Police James Parker Nancy Millard to Get stated. “The bureau will not be a ase = court as many think, but a more DAR Citizenship Award complete medium:.oef collection of j ; \fines for minor traffic violations.” = Leading Senior | “It must be remembered though, ROMEO — Nancy Millard of |that all major violators will be he burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery by the Pursley Funeral | Home. She died Saturday William R. Andrews j IMLAY CITY—Service for ‘Wil- | liam R. Andrews, 65, of 3322 Slat-| tery Rd., Lum, was held at 1 p.m. | today at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, with buria] in Maple Grove | Cemetery, North Branch. He died | Thursday. Mrs. Wayne D. Page MARLETTE — Service for Mrs. | Wayne D. (Susan) Page, 59, Tus- cola County, formerly of Clio, was held at 2 p.m. today at Marsh; Funeral Home, with.burial in Mar- | lette Cemetery. She died Thursday. | Mrs. Ida Helen Johnson | LAKE ORION—Service for Mrs. | \Ida Helen Johnson, 8&4, will be) | held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the) | Norwalk Lutheran Church, Nor- | walk, with burial in the church | cemetery by the LaValle Funeral Home. Surviving are five daughters, iMrs. F. C. Webster of Detroit, |Mrs. J. E. Obenauer of Roseville, Mrs. Evelyn L. James of Manistee, | | Mrs. Dale S. Meyers of Utica, Mrs | Albert Johnson of Norwalk, two sons, Henry T. Johnson of Mt. | Clements and Earl G. of Muske gon, two sisters, Mrs. Laura John- | son of trea. River and Mrs, Ellen | Peterson of On ama, and a broth- | 213 W. Hollister St. has been se- | summoned into justice court."’ er, Hans Iverson of Manistee. lec i } = | Village Jawmakers also rewrote School's Daughters of the Ameri | the fine schedule, affecting mainly can Resolution citizenship award. | moving violations. NANCY MILLARD Romeo Student to Be Honored Sen. Potter Inspects ,U. S. Units in Berlin The award, presented annually | BERLIN (® — Sen. Charles E. to a senior high school girl, is| Potter (R-Midh) arrived by plane b. 1 on qualifications of depend- | today for a three-day inspection| : tour of U.S. military units sta- | bility, service, jeadership and our of os in $713 Holdup The senator came from Alsace.| The senior class picks three Three men, accused of robbing a where he attended weekend cere-| giris te compete for the award, | Bloomfield Township gas station at- monies marking the 10th ‘anniver-| gag faculty members choose the tendant of $713 last Dec. 3, today | sary of the Battle of Colmar. It! ‘winner, om the basis of the | Pleaded innocent in Oakland Coun- |was during this battle that Potter qualifications. ity Circuit Court. lost his legs | They are Chester Shaw, 18, of Included in Potter's Berlin itin- | Eighteen-year-old Nancy is the | 22684 Tulane, Farmington; Edward erary is a sight-seeing expedition | daughter of Mrs. Harold Cooley. | Godin Jr., 18. of 8627 Robindale, into the Soviet sector Her school activities include trea-| Dearborn: and Charles Oxendine, surer of the senior class, member | 2]. of 15706 Grayfield, Detroit. . ° of the student council, member-| State police said the trim held up Polio Poster Girl Lays ship in the Girl's Athletic Assn., | Wayne Taylor, of 14034 Evergreen, Roses on F. D. R. Grave and vice president of the junior | Detroit, with a revolver. ‘Judge HYDE PARK Ye-— This |° . , Frank L. Doty ordered the case , set for tria] and returned the three year’s March of Dimes Poster | y ~ Girl, Mary Kosloski, 5, of Collier- | Books Will Be Topic to jail under $10,000 bond each. | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP —| ville, Tenn., laid a wreath of red ‘nah PTA roses yesterday on the grave of gc4 winiam Shunck will talk | StTingnam PAA to See ‘the T3rd anniversary of his birth. | about children’s books when she Cub Scouts Program Among other floral tokens for | “PP©@rs before Study Group 2 te| WATERFORD TOWNSHIP | Roosevelt, founder of the National | morrow night. The meeting is to Stringham School PTA will meet Foundation for Infatile Paralysis, | be held at the home of Mrs. Wil- |* § P-m. — at — nage |were a tribute from the Warm |,, | The program will be given by Springs, Ga. Foundation and one |= Beer, 4535 Dide Hwy. at 8 | the Cub Scouts under the direction |p.m., with Mrs, Bernard Heaney | of Thomas Roberts, assistant cub- master. Trio Deny Guilt Eisenhower . jas co-hostess. OPEN TONIGHT Big 21 Inch Model 5 Hours Only ---’til 9 P.M. NEW — IN ORIGINAL CARTONS WESTINGHOUSE NO MONEY DOWN! $ Pay Only...... IF YOU HURRY... You'll Love It! A WEEK OR THIS NEW RAYTHEON. 322 83-Channel TV Set BReg. 500,95 Innerspring Mattress ‘18 _ PReg. °65.00 Hollywood Bed... . . 539. Reg. $200-2-Pc. Living Room Suite $98.00 deg. $200 3-Pc. Bedroom Suite. . .°% t FIRST COME FIRST SERVED Gg g : Hurry! The House of Discounts «78 They Didn't Use to’ Laugh When Borge Sat at Piano NEW YORK (INS)—They didn’ | “It’s partly my face, of course. use to laugh when Victor Borge sat’! But it’s mainly that I poke fun down at the piano, They only | at formality and trivia—and any- gazed at him with awe and sober | body who is being formal can see reverence. | how silly he looks.” It was almost unbearable for! This is the handsome Dane's little Victor, who was then one of | philosophy, the old “laugh and the from diapers called a ‘child prod-| paid off in hard cash (Borge now igy.”’ ° | has a house in the country and a “They're taking it seriously,’’ he | suite at New York's swank Hotel thought, his stomach jiggling from | Plaza) but, even more, it has giggling. “Oh, well.” And he'd| kept him good-humored in situa- shrug and go on playing Beethoven tions where other, more high- those. dynamos lately removed | world laughs with you” bit. It has | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 51, 1955, Give Son’s Skin to Burned Girl Parents Approve Graft From Body’ of Boy to | Help Fire Victim CINCINNATI @—The parents of a boy who died have donated his skin in the hopes that a girl may live a happy and normal life. Ronnie Wilson, 14, of Osgood, | accident last October. He died Ind., was injured in an automobile |; & NORGE HEADQUARTERS AT WAYNE GABERT'S. NEW 1955 AUTOMATIC WASHER-DRYER COMBINATION! ° and Mozart, inserting fancy Borge | Strung artists would fall into a yesterday at St. Mary Hospital. Oakland Fuel-& Paint Co. | '™provisations’ to break up the | Diack ‘izzy. His parents Walker and Audrey : s monotony. Nobody noticed; too| “When I first cdme to this | Wilson were told about Sherry 496 Greherd Leake busy admiring what they thought | country and could speak barely | Cassada, 7, who was critically FE 5-6159 was “an exceptional Beethoven| , word of English, I used to | burned a year ago when her skirt touch.” make people mad. People hate | went up in flames. Burns cov- It wasn’t till the now-tamed | to be delayed by somebody who | ¢red more than 70 per cent of her : “Clown of the Keyboard” was is slow with his tongue, expe- | body. .~ e-# aace s 15, and playing Rachmaninoff’s | cially in New York,” he recalls. ' =e _" y plane Concerto No, 2 before a | “When they'd get mad, I would | Her life has become one of ex e cultured Copent aa think to myself something like— cruciating pain. Twice doctors _ ri that he finally broke down. He ‘Could this have once been a fat eS aoe ue ee vee | 10 ¢t 20% stared soulfully at the audience | little baby whe made somebody Seta ot une hea "Fun oak toe i) o which was staring soulfully at | stad’ — and the thought would i him. Then he grinned, two | foree me to smile. of precious body fluids and possi- OFF put . bility of infection, her doctors said. “And you know, mostly when — On All Merchandise Except Fair Trade items Hudson Household Co. 390 Nelson FE 5-5552 you smile, people can’t be mad dience fell apart at its stiff, anymore?" straight scams, | In those days, Borge was living “As far as I know,” said the| on 25 cents a day. Though he had |have been laughing at me ever | tion of Scandinavia, he was not | since. i he made the dgsh to the U. S. from Nazi-occupied Denmark. So what'd he do? He looked at his quarter and thought “You poor, miserable one-fourth of a respect- jo piece of money—I am happy to have you along.” Ah, yes, Borge will tell you. Even money can be charming droll Mr. Borge today, "people | been a comedy-concert hall sensa- | More skin gtafts have failed | because her impaired health has | made her unburned skin unsuitable | for grafting. Ronnie and Sherry had rooms | side by side at the hospital. But | | J = | | The doctors told the Wilsons | their son's skin could help the | blue-eyed blonde daughter of Irene | and James Cassada, of Cincinnati. With SUDS SAVER at NO EXTRA COST |Some of the outer layer of skin | from the boy’s body was removed | | within two hours after his death. The skin was stretched carefully | on gauze, rolled, suspended in a} sterile jar and placed in refrigera- | tors, who asked that their names» not be used, but it nmiay live for | "| a few weeks or several months. | In the meantime, Sherry’s health | if you look at it good humoredly. | tion Medel The unmelancholy Dane is now | , * © « | As Iilustrated AE 600 ‘ 8 — = po ignited rc Today it will be grafted to Sher And Your area ° Comedy ry’s exposed flesh. The growth will | id WwW r Music has been running since) no¢ be permanent, said the doc- | Model 0 ashe October, '53—meaning he has been AW 405 | NO MONEY DOWN! | SEVENTEEN. may be improved to the point | His most popular number, per- where her own skin may be used. | ” He “inne number mere Swabbies Win Brawl, wane. secs eee Lose Out on Cap Rule to help itself, reacts as if pollen, | ose Uur On ap ule rather than plano music, was | NORMAN, Okla, # — After get- ting into a brawi with a quartet 2 YEARS TO PAY. NO PAYMENTS UNTIL MARCH OUR PRICES INCLUDE ‘Delivery and Normal Installation and One Year Service Norge Automatic GAS DRYER ' Full 9-pound capacity Cas $ 95 Clothes Dryer. Buy today, anjoy the convenience “They think I am very funny.| of teen-age hoodlums, two sailors Delivered ond ; - Really, it is they who are very| were asked to apear on an Okla- N and comfort all winter! le Contains UP funny. You see how easy it is to} homa City television newscast. at L#) Extra Cost nstalled ve. : agents para rely on it! be happy? | The show was watched by the | wonde RNEUMATISM, Oe gay tor Children Ask tor mud “Just make your own fun out of | commanding officer at the naval what you see, and those who are | technical training center here. He | with you will respond.” | didn’t mind that the uniforms of a (Copyright 1955) | John Vincent and Jack E. Davis _ —_——<—__———_———- were dirty and disheveled. That . was to be expected after a fight. Ice Breaks, Two Die The two sailors, however, had CARTHAGE. Mo. ® — Merle their hats on the back of their | Blanset, 10, chased his dog onto | heads at a jaunty tilt on the show. | thin ice yesterday. His mother Mrs. | That's strictly nonregulation. The | . THE ORIGINAL BAUME ANALGESIQUE | Earl Blanset, 32, went after him. | pair was slapped with two weeks | 121 N. Sa inaw St. |The ice broke. Mother and son | confinement to the base just to re- ~ | drowned, fresh their memory. | WRIGLEY’S Naturally Tender Table-Trimmed EAK LB. LAKE PERCH FILLETS... . s.<; » 49 Pan Ready WAYNE GABERT | | Your Electrical Appliance Specialist OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 9 P. M. Phone FE 5-6189 Caprrtghs 1964. bs THOS Looming & ion Ben'Gay DARTMOUTH Fresh Frozen lage Sugar Sweet FRESH CUBAN PINEAPPLE = 29 - Size , season one-point loss EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, MON DAY, JANUARY 31, 1955 ~ le Wolverines Win Unofficial Team Tifle in Relays Pontiac High Runners Collect 4th and 5th in Prep Events ANN ARBOR @—With the un- official team title in the -Michigan A date with Kansas at Ann Ar- bor Saturday. gets the sessions un- der way. Michigan State College, closest to the Wolverines in Saturday’s re- g Fs ry brad ifs e REevak Eek stilt SaHEE Le ! Htpalif Hh ff : : one, too. The Spartans did it up brown in taking De Paul to avenge an early It was De Paul's ist defeat of the season on its own floor With Julius McCoy scoring 3 Mortie Dutra Wins PGA Senior Tourney DUNEDIN, Fila ##—Mortie Dutra ran into trouble at the start of the final round but regained his put- ing touch and went Sunday on to win the annual PGA Senior golf geles was tied for the lead going into the final 18 of the 54-hole event.’He shot a 72 for 213 total. Pentise Press Phete HALL TO THE QUEEN..—The camera recorded |Colleen succeds Jackie Dubay, the 194 “monarch.” the coronation of the North Side Community Club’s | Coronation was one of the top features of the 1955 ice queen (above), Sunday ‘night, and the lucky | annual carnival, held Saturday and Sunday at the girl is Colleen McEnery, 56 East Colgate street. | Northside rink. Action will be very light the Oakland County prep front Tuesday night as high school teams prepare for the home stretch of pre-tournament play. schedule sends Lake Orion to Roch- ester. Oxford, Walled Lake and the city -parochials are the only other Pontiac area teams in act- tion. Feature game on a 17-game area Rochester will defend a modest.| ing team led by Lynn Hazlett and $game winning streak against the Rod Wiley, each 6 foot 2, and Dick Dragons, who have played good | Johnson. Freshman Nick Neira, ball at times, but currently are |5 foot 7, adds speed. carrying a 4game losing string.! In other games, Oxford ends a Bill Dean Hal Carlin’s Orion te Rochester meets a good By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gene (Cycione) Fullmer anew en Salt Lake City middleweight who: looks like a real ‘‘comer,”’ tests a new French import, Mar- |cele Assire, tonight at Brooklyn's Eastern Parkway. Assire already has been given a double check by the New York State Athletic Commission after its trouble last Monday with - Italy's Angelo Brisci at St. Nicholas Arena. Chairman Juliug Helfand ordered new precautionary inspec- jtions of foreign fighters mak- ing their first New York appear- }ances after Brisci was outclassed | by Pete Adams. . The Frenchman will have to | Nov. 15. The 22-year-old prospect jhas won all his 26 starts, 19 by | knockouts. Determine Given Victory on Miz Clementine’s Foul 5 | Hint i i H fi = mine was’ driving at the finish. Deter- Fullmer-Assire, Zulueta, Perez in TV Ring Bouts | -| Veteran of Links ‘Death Takes Brinke, | ABC-TV will telecast at 10 p.m.,| EST r * * Orlando Zuluéta, bing Cuban lightweight, and Dan- ny Jo Perez, New York youngster, DETROIT (UP)—Chris Brinke, | one of the state’s top all-time | amateur golfers, died yesterday of | ie i Light Action for Preps Berkley and Southfield of the Inter-Lakes will take winning streaks into non-league competi- tion Tuesday. Southfield has taken _| four in a row to move into 2nd) | place behind the league leading ‘more made it Vance day in an of late and his tion is not expected to hurt Bears’ title hopes measurably. Berkley will be at Hazel Park, while Southfield is at bome to Redford Union. T g i Fei! tH i 2 3 “= “ : » Mary at &t. ntee Sets World Indoor Mile Record Says 4-Minute on Board Track Kansan Finishes 30 Yards Ahead of Dane in Boston Event BOSTON w—Wes Santee, holder of the new world indoor mile rec- ord of 4:03.8, has changed_the out- look for a 4minute mile on banked boards and may alter his running strategy as a result of the per- formance. Santee, who feels ‘‘at sea’’ run ning indoors, said after smashing Gil Dodds’ mark of 4:05.3 in the | ee For a guy whé maintains ‘I don't feel qualified to say much about done it enough,”’ Santee did all right. outdoor mile king, as the North eastern student pushed to a sizzl ing :56.7 quarter and 2:00 half mile. Then the 22-year-old Kansan opened the throttle and finished a good 30 yards ahead of Den mark's Gunnar Nielsen. + * * field from the start. _to- campaign in major indoor meets it. I'm ‘Dazzy Vance Day’ |ing great’s election to baseball's 1 1 | } | their goals in the first 32 minutes | Detroit. Near NHL’s Top - Wings Unleash Biggest Scoring Spree DETROIT —The Detroit Red Wings unleashed their biggest | scoring spree of the season last | night and trounced the Montreal) | Canadiens 7-1 before a capacity | crowd of 14,938 in Olympia Sta- | Time Possible = ::* Striking with startling swiftness ‘the Red Wings poured in all of | of play—with five of them coming | in a 9minute burst in the 2nd | | period. Resounding victory pulled the | | Wings te within one point of the | | jeague-leading Canadiens, who | _ suffered their most bumiliating | defeat of this season. | Glen Skov and Marcel Bonin led | Detroit's surge with two goals | apiece. Gordie Howe, Johnny Wil |son and Marty Pavelich each | scored once. | Maurice Richard tallied Mon- | ‘treal’s only goal in the Ist period | but it was the Rocket, strangely | | sticked Vic Stasiuk and was given | 'a 5-minute penalty for drawing blood. Red Wings scored twice and turned a close 31 game into a rout. Willowy Wes measured pacemak | Going into the 2nd period, Detroit | tance Sunday—270 er Dick Ollen, IC4A indoor an¢ | held a slim 2-1 lead on goals by blows under par. | Pavelich and Skov. It was, at that | time, anybody’s game. | But things quickly changed | At 3:14 of the 2nd period, Skov | pounced | drilled in his 2nd goal of the game. Benham’‘s Ban Fails to Stop Record Runs Sled Racer, Suspended From International Tests, Sets 2 Marks LAKE PLACID, N.Y. #—Contro | versy clouds the immediate future | of former world champion Stanley Benham in international bobsled -| competition, but there's no ques tion of his present status — he's still breaking records. Saturday while winning the four- | man title. | The performance came less than |24 hours after the International Then Richard drew his critical penalty, and the floodgates were While the Wings were pressing in front of the cage, Montreal de- fenseman Doug Harvey acciden- tally knocked the puck into the net and Bonin was credited with a goal. That made it 41. In rapid order, Wilson scored at 7:22, Bonin at 10:05, and Howe at 11:36. Wings never came close to another goal after that. But they had more than enough. Despite the one-sidedness of the score the game was closely played and referee Red Storey handed out 19 penalties. to Crush League-Leading Canadiens, 7-1 He for Skinner. in Playoff at Boston AA games Saturday night: | enough, who was primarily respon- PALM SPRINGS, Calif —Three “The 4-minute mile is possible | .ipje for the Canadiens’ downfall. | professional golfers, Freddie Haas indoors, but I'm not going to ge! |p the 2nd period, Richard high-|Jr., Mike Souchak and Shelley Mayfield, went back to work to- day in a playoff for the $2,000 top money of the Thunderbird Invita- running indoors because I haven't; while he was off the ice, the tional tournament. The trio wound up even at the 'end of the regulation 72-hole dis- strokes and 18 Today's duel was set for 18 holes, and a sudden death engagement in event there was still a tie. | Haas, from New Orleans, at 39 | 67-67 for his 270. Mayfield, registered out of Chico- pee, Mass., had 63-70-68-69, and Haas, who won the 1954 Thunder- bird event with a 72-hole score of | 268, probably merited the role of favorite in the playoff off his pre- | vious experience. Of the three, Haas had the most | right perhaps to groan over Sun- | day’s climax and today’s anti-cli- par 36-36-72. Fred came to the 18th green leading the field by one stroke on the par-five hole. But he found a |trap to the left of the crowded strokes to | ters turned out, a clear decision. | But he missed the putt by inches. Johnny Palmer, Souchak and Mayfield started the final round Haas, Souchak, Mayfield Thunderbird at 272 for $500 apiece and Jerry Barber crept in with his second straight 67 for 273 and $400. Wininger, Gene Littler, Ulrich, Tommy Bolt and Paul McGuire were tied at 274 for $309. Today the remainder of the wan- |dering pros head for the $12,500 | Phoenix Open in Arizona. |-Platoon Idea 3 bap ol sar ease Soe SIOWS Up NFL's Roster Building Pros Say 2-Way Play Shrouds Collegians’ Natural Ability NEW YORK ®—National Foot- | ball League clubs, convinced things | would be easier if the colleges re- to legians they drafted during their annual business meeting which ended Saturday. The NFL coaches feel they've ‘been handicapped since the col- leges shed the platoon system, which still is a pro standby. One- | platoon play shrouds a player's natural ability, the pros argue, and that makes it all the tougher for | them to spot the college stars who | might fill their needs. That problem was obvidus dur- Bobsled Federation suspended | one stroke ahead of Bob Rosburg. | ing the draft, top matter of busi- | petition — including the 1956 winter | Olympics — for three years. Ben- | ham’'s withdrawal from the world came on with Souchak, Mayfield | }four-man championships in 194 | and “improper letters addressed to the press and the president of the FIBT,” led to the suspension. Now Play at UD Cagers Deteat Wayne, Wichita U. Soo Tech 89-79 in a non-conference Steals Show at ip g e ! : tif bak 32 8% : ii ~ oy 586 oiki agi z i “4 5 » ERE wt) a Hi Ba H E li i gz i i i Fa : a f 4 al | i seball Writers’ — cD —_—— cD g i EGE fi ' i PE Z F isi B ° week | Benham from international com-| Wally Ulrich, Bo Wininger and | Holscher. | In the, drive for home, Haas held and Palmer, Holscher, Ros- burg, and the rest drifted back. Palmer finished at 271 and win- } Mikes Entertain Clems Tonight Shamrock Five Seeks in action Tuesday night. | erick (45) entertains James (1-8), St. E i fi : a sb ; i 5? E ae Be tee. Tomne 83, _ = ee n 73 ner of $650; Holscher and Rosburg ness during the three-day NFL ses- sion. It took more than 16 hours for the pros to select 360 players. Only a handful of top college | stars—such as Oregon's George | Shaw, Baltimore's “bonus” pick; | Notre Dame's Ralph Guglielmi, , Oklahoma's Max Boydston and Wisconsin's Alana Ameche—were on every club's list. Once past “This one pletoon football is | hard on a boy who wants to play | pro football.” he said. “It doesn't . and after An iin i é i #3 HY STATE... oeeee eeeeeeroneeeee ; “eeeeeeeeseeeeee eee eeeeeeoenoores se eereeweeeenere 4 tr ewoes geoeeees 24 so: hc Se! OU 2) we) pe RE Te OMS eee ee ee eke ee Se Ge ee ee ae ee ee ee ee ee a —e of - ¥. 5 ul rg ei? . or oe “> es att UZ = ey “4 _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955" aa an Colorful Exhibition Marks N.S. Carnival! (===: S350 ( 2-Lap._ (30-12)—Keitth Parks (ist); Rindfuss (2nd Norton ); Bruce Olympic Skiing Hope Injured|*wlten 2223.5) QUALITY TOOLS | luded R | gage ea Se ee ATLAS © CLAUSING © DELTA University of Utah took the 10,000-| air. She fell backward, landed on nc ' aces : ray (18-14)—Pat | Walsh-Lyan SH TH © DeWALT . | ning time of one minute, 39.9 sec- | wheeled 50 feet down the slope into Lf. . furor, Ghats Derby, 20-Lap (over 18) PORTER-CABLE @ SKIL meee and Coronation |=" Seti nines sits |] BROWNE-SHARPE © MILWAUKEE Colinas is |e Ry ey se| ee mang, sleet eS" gewvas Grayling Review |" Size” “| GLENN WING POWER TOOLS 2 | ay Bs 1 1437 SOUTH WOODWARD AVE. 10-12 (Ist); Ger- maybe 1] Winter ice spectacle Sunday might | autins'Sewman Gnd), Secqueline Sov: Five Blocks North of 14-Mile Rood ; F : her as a promising ¥ | i i f if F g | : 5 g 4 x : ! i a! afet rf i | : F F i E é | £ j : : 4 c gE é E qi 4 5 : 5 : ' , é atF : ' i i li : ras | 3 I jid- “And eras should ask them to carry me past wound up a 2-day series of events (3rd). were ’ «ye: the finish line.” on the Northside Community Club's | Rinéfuss (@nd); Jane Bentham (2rd). BIRMINGHAM MI 4-0444 Stockton 1st). J 5 E As if foe é 1 z i DAILY 8 te 6:00 — FRI. 8 to 8:00 | Pt , if} Greek Orthodox Five in 4th Straight Win Greek Orthodox Church won its 4th consecutive victory in the Pon- tiac YMCA Junior High Basketball League Saturday, defeating YMCA “A” team, 39-24. Ron Mastick paced the win with 18 points. Eastern Junior Hi-Y trounced it i Hi it te 4! if | i { it j i : fl : aiid, { ae Hi ° view, Feb. 12-13. At that time | YMCA “B” 34-10 in another junior queens from all sections of the | contest. : ea | eT. e€ague state will represent their commu-| Im the YMCA- National League, 36 W. Pike Se. FE 2-9101 nities. Hi-Y titlists posted their 3rd See Robert Rectar. Mer. ® ¢ ® Activities got under way Satur- | it triumph 75-22 over Water- * for Free Estimates on All in Hur {0 Hit day with races of all lengths for | "4 Hi-Y. Louis Schimmel was top Makes of Cars youngsters of all ages. These | *orer with 20 points. In AL con- Ne Distance Teo Great tests included the preliminary for | ‘ts. Central Methodists edged (within reasen) the top speed event, the Silver | Noma@makers 29-21 and Swishers West Coast Skates Derby, Figure skating con. | Tcked Central Christian 45-26 tests also were held preliminary a Male rr how se eaetrese ==) What Ain't We Got? Toward Expansion ning 1-0, over the All-Stars. Win-|f // ning goal was scored in the 2nd . ‘ promised to develop into a bitter, Tom LaValley making the assist, e in 0 ames down-to-the-wire fight between the ¢xcellent goal-tending by Bob Ctandal helped the D & W sextet major leagues for the West Coast | ~~ : Pa é ° tenvttery hes eveperated. pay Tipromag dc pl a Png vont «But we do have everything else for your Automotive Both the American and National | effective, needs that’s why we are known as Pontiac's Motorists leagues seem determined the oth-| Some very good skating was of- | Headquarters er will make the first move to ex-| fered in the figure contests, but | ° MEETING OF ‘MINDS'—New York Giant Manager slime ae ee a So eee Leo Durocher, left, and Al Lopez, pilot of thé/| since last Fall's classic at the 32nd annual dinner| ; ' j Cleveland Indians who lost the World Series to the |ot the New York Baseball Writer's Association at || “Expansion would peel oo ee — Not seconds, not change-overs, not second-. Giants in four straight games, meet for the 1st time | the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel last night. years from | ; ° ° “ [what we have learned so far,” said! geaters from 8 to 17 years of | line, not tread blemishes, but Factory Fresh Frank Lane of the Chicago White | age participated. There were 21 ae eo on | first line, first quality, brand new, fully guar- Baltimore Reject Al =| Kentucky Seeks Revenge 2%, ected Sic) Sere! se anteed tires. Offers for Alan Ameche | the subject. as ae interest- . . 7 led end NEW YORK (UP)—The sat fOF Upset by Tech F lve by club supervisor in- more Colts have turned thum This was more definite than the’ structor, Peggy Bowman. Mrs. i all off on Alen (The By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS _ sota finally broke it up 59-56. Those | National League statement, which) Bowman is a former queen of H . , “ ‘ - | Col. Adoph Rupp’s Wildcats get | six overtimes — with the first four | only Saturday ruled out any €X- | the carnival, herself. ist Lin Black Walls i = a chance tonight to avenge the scoreless — matched the college | Pansion for the present. The Amer- old e ! __Américan fullback. damage done their old Kentucky | record ican League group finished its bus- a a skater wag 8-year-old | Orizinal a ' General manager Don Kellett of home by Georgia Tech, but | Seecciai just wouldn't giv iness yesterday, and Lane, acting ——~ aap 9 he rigina Eq ipment Quality give up the as spokesman, said the league had Skates gave good about | @l in the first three extra per-| an “open mind.” crowd a big thrill, Sunday. Danny that six-overtime cold war between | ods. choosing to wait for a last- “We're not saying we won't | week's National Football League | Minnesota and Purdue Saturday. | second shot. All three closing at-| expand,” he explained, “because meetings here. * * « SIZE _ (Reg. Price| Your Cost |You Save . 6.00x16| $20.75 | $12.95 | $7.80° 6.50x16| $27.50 | $18.75 | $8.75 6.70x15| $23.20 | $14.95 | $8.25 7.10x15| $25.75 | $16.95 | $8.80 7.60x15| $28.10 | $18.75 | $9.35 All Dayton Tires on this sale carry Big Three Guarantee! All prices plus fed. tax and exchange! Dayton’s Big 3|| BUY ON BUDGET! _ Guarantee || 10 MONEY DOWN! 2. 25,000 Mile Guarantee. ONE FULL YEAR 3. 2 Year Written Read Hazard wie TO PAY! the Colts admitted ‘numerous Sa i are most a / . Shyé : | to capacity both nights. were one of| The Gophers and Purdue found was Minnesota's turn to hold the , sag et ce amen | The poser was conducted the teams trying to land Ameche | themselves in a sit-and-wait deal | 41 in the fourth after getting the —— = pe™, | jointly by the Northside Club and , Colts at Lafayette, Ind., before Minne- “| am te. Seqaite. Our repert will a. Pentioe Parke and Reseation : _. | center jump. | go to Will Harridge (league pres- Each hit a field goal-in the fifth! ident) and he in turn will bring | 4Partment. Purd ook the matter up before the club . SAMSONITE LUGGAGE \enree-peiat wed tm the aisth. Aniow™T™” lowan Wins Trapshoot $15.00 to $35.00 Initials Free that scoring activity rattled the) Lane said that at least “six or Title in New Mexico PHILIP’S sfonrne coovs 79 NORTH SAGINAW ST. 102-88 winner over Purdue at Min- Smith | mark, includi 7-71 scrap with elding Equipment _ | ps Ste <'2" ce va! | plays at Tech tonight. “Nothing Finer” | Over the weekend Villanova ed North Carolina State, SEAT COVERS|| "2%" Dayton & Auto- DO% OFF | enn soe During This Sele! Reg. “1199 2 to 5 Year Guarantes $24.95 Fully Guaranteed—Alll First Quality ‘8% INSTALLED FREE! shia 3 sew dys tecomeis clears. EVERSHARP HYDRO-MAGIC | SCHICK MUECTOR BI ADES | FREE!! Cutting Tool & Suppl INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY DISTRIBUTOR W. Pike, Corner Cass FE .2-0108 | |e: Sptech Ts No Substitute for Thowghtl~ } (,oo0drich ig TWENTY ‘There are 70 different pieces in each violin, or, ITCH 2. sh iit" i ite sole Sudden Poverty in Family »=e| Means Junior's in College ™ By MARGARET LATROBE jroast beef are like, if they are If @ family in the “middle in- patching and mending instead of come bracket” suddenly sells the | buying new Spring wardrobes— “| jalopy and starts walking, if they ‘they probably have one or two) have forgotten what vacations and children in college. Fifteen years ago the kids could oH ust, TONIGHT TTA TIN ‘get out for institutions of higher learning without all of Dad's higher jincome in their pockets. Thirty- | | five or 40 dollars a month would | see them through one of many top- | |notch universities in the land. Many state - supported institu- tions dedicated to stuffing infer- | mation into Junior's skull re- | quired no tuition. Plenty of campus dormitories housed and ’ | fed potential Phi Betes for nom- MOURIULILLIM |) voucur secondhand, 11 tse scholar r , if the scholar STERLING HAYDEN FF But four years of college did not reduce the homefolks to bread OLDEN - poi DOUGLAS really worth what it was costing. Nowadays—wow! There are still | | part-time jobs and second - | but the cost of food, clothing and | college professors has really gone | up. So have family incomes, but | reven s0, keeping one or more youngsters away at school causes | real hardship at home. +. at Ted's we always try to think of our young friends’ comfort and pleasure. We try to make dining out @ real happy adventure for make it a happy event to remember for the whole family! FAMILY NIGHTS Expansion Watch Bands | Ladies'—Men's a | 95 jand water, wondering if it was | | books available to college students, STARTING TONIGHT! Bunny Paul Sy Ce a4 yond ”" “Pom Poo Day,” “Honey "Whe Wan Sing Your Requests fa 0 Manner You Will N-E-V-E-R F-O-R-C-E-T DANCING No Cover Chg. Floor Show No Chg. Continuous Every Men. and Tues. Night from 8:45 eee oe een COCKTAIL at 9:05 ‘6 ” TEEN AGERS DANCE LOUNGE Coming soon . watch for on- ’ 1122 W. MURON ST. nouncement of our All Teenagers Moves: Rout Sep Matinee Dance. to « 1-tb. Limit, Fresh REMUS BUTTER THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 31, along in higher mathematics and a poetry because this | Sagan > than putting him out in pasture. Fn sag me we truly believe that higher “education is to be encour- aged among those eager and able to receive it, it seems equally sen- sible that some of this ‘charity’ | could well begin at home, where “to go or not to go” to college now depends not on fitness but on the pocketbook. Our schools, beth public and private, are going to cost more, not less, Teachers must be paid | more, mot jess. Equipment and Pree ghegy incur yn foto: | proved, not allowed to become | Michael, obsolete, It should be one of our prime concerns to promote every | phase of education, Why not, then, put higher educa- | tion within easier reach of those | |for whom it was intended in the | | first place? (Copyright 1955) ' Doris Planning to Take It Easy From Now On By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD w — Free of her ,Warner Brothers contract after seven years and 17 pictures, Doris 'Day is not going to rush into a Fang Doris on the set of “Love Me or Leave Me, Manisa 46 tenets Bath! Fo ge bagel ike night club as "her | James Cagney) she talked about her future . Z i, on = ater going to knock myself,” said flatly. ‘‘What for? You | any of the money you | like to do just two pic: | 3 é 5 i ? Thomas of the state reformatory lat Buena Vista, is pressing & search for the two, among a group et inmates entered in the boxing show. > 1 c i] bb. CASH with meet purchase ! 78 North Seginew Street MARKE Y ZLE Open Fri, "til 9 Bazley’s Junedale Brand Redi-Eat SHANKLESS HALF 39: Center Slices, a 85¢ Tender, Sliced BEEF LIVER Lean, Boston-But Pork Roast.... Lean, Small 39% Spare Ribs.... --39i. Fresh, Lean Grade 1 Skinless Hot — ? | | | ” } | She was doing one of the | that haye come | 1955 Lucy Show Shoved Me, Dennis Day Confesses , By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—That sweet Irish lad from the Bronx, Eugene Patrick McNulty—“Dennis Day”—has been dispensing a few truths at the Copacabana He confesses publicly that Lucy and Desi knocked him out of | gest to Washington television. * * * * “I had the program that people switched off to turn them on,” admits the Hollywood father of five (Patrick, Dennis, Margaret and Eileen), who's in town for a spell. “I was replaced by Medic,” he further testified there on the cafe floor. “I made NBC sick—and they cashed in on it.” Such frankness is unusual in these days when everybody boasts about a rating. Later in his suite at the Hotei 14, Dennis said: “I wasn’t kidding. This year Lucy and Desi are down to about a 56. Down! That'd be going up for everybody else.” * * * * Right now NBC’s working on a new) have to go on opposite Jackie Gleason. He lasted a year against “Lucy” and a year against Ozzie and Harriett. Yet many think of him as that nice young chap .who’s frequently on with Jack Benny. And with permission of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick he'll tell a tale or two about that. DENNIS DAY guest appearances on radio—it didn’t cost either one of them anything,” Dennis recalled. * * * * “Once Bing was on Jack’s show and didn’t know we were on ‘live. He didn’t start out very good. “Suddenly he said, ‘Who the hell picked this key — Dennis her from the bar. Between | Day?’ It was heard round the country and Bing—who'd played a cleric in two previous films—was worried and asked Dennis if | he should do something. “I don't know, but in your next picture, you'll be wearing _ a tie,” prophesied Dennis. | commander of the U. TV show for him. He trusts he doesn’t | “Jack and Bing Crosby used to swap, 1\Europe Commander Wants More Armor STUTTGART, Germany ® — Lt. ;Gen. Anthony C. 7a new . Army in Europe, says he he "requested more armor to step up the mobility of his forces in atomic warfare, Staff officers said McAuliffe’s re- “would indi- cate another complete armored di- | vision for Germany and assign- | ment of more armored carriers.” They said such an armored unit probably would replace one of four infantry divisions now in Germany. There are also an armored division and other armored combat el- ements equivalent to a division. Train Shuts Off Water for Firemen at Blaze ' MONTVILLE, Conn. # — Fire- |men had a fire in a five-room house pretty well under control yesterday until a Central Vermont Railroad freight train passed. When the freight came by, the | water stopped pouring from the ‘hose. The firemen looked back and discovered they had laid the hose across the railroad tracks. Damage to the house was esti- mated at $10,000. When you're overweight, heart overworks, ; edhe \ New Lake Theater N Wationutce | N % On Our Wide Miracle Sereen \ \ “BLACK SHIELD OF N Nt a . N \ “MERRY vy MERTH SRTHQUAKE® weessrea* (4 LEARN TO of Students 8 A.M, - 10 P.M. Watching Dennis perform—he has a pleasant manner and | gets enormous pay—I was struck by the durability of Jack Her plans preclude accepting the Benny’s “cheap” joke. For not only does Jack use it still after all these years, but | Engiand, Aus | ., does Dennis. He mentions that Jack has a sign in his bath- room reading LSMFT. Translated: “Leave Some Money for Towels.” * * * * And who perpetuates this one joke? J. B. himself. Dennis a telegram saying: “I would come | to your opening, only I understand they | have a minimum.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Shelley (St. Louis) Winters—here to expects to play the bathtub scene nude, wearing only soap bubbles. "Twould sure make TV history. “I hope the stage- hands will be gentlemen and turn their backs,” she says Tyrone Power dated Gwen Taylor, a North American Airlines | hostess . . Julie Oshins, is ailing . . . Red Buttons recovered, and now his TV director, . Arnold Stang, the great TV stooge, is burned dt Gleason, claims he borrowed Arnold's line, “You're | suckin’ around for a fat lip.” x *&* *& ® Tiona Massey flew to Milwaukee to sign a TV deal with a) . Marion Brando and his gal find it fun at) beer sponsor. . La Zambra... B’way if Anna Magnani’d co-star . Peepers” book in April. Burt Lancaster said he'd do “Rose Tattoo” on . There'll be a TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Richard Derr insists he heard an | octopus arguing with his wife: “One of these days—pow, pow, pow, pow, pow, pow, pow, pow, right in the kisser!” That's earl, brother. i Pe > ntl ne i Slate nw PERSONALITY GLASSES He sent | do “The Women” on NBC TV—says she, “Mr. | 807 ‘os an Driver oe Al eee pie ete lela ele eiete: 0-0 Se €. Lewrence, Pontiac FOR | INSURANCE | SERVICE ! See or Call Maynard Johnson General Insurance Community National Bonk Phone FE 4-4523 | | | | t NEXT ATTRACTION = caeectows} | Spencer Tracy in “BAD DAY AT BLACKROCK” strand BOX OFFICE OPENS 10:45 A.M. RIDGES. DC, OSS, bate m SUN || JENNIFER JONES GREGORY PECK JOSEPH COTTEN “At—11:10 - 2:40 « 6:00 - 9:30 ‘ . TWENTY-ONE Bob Considine Says: Who. Recalls a Kind Word | Las ot | the mari who, while throwing the About Serge Rubinstein? By BOB CONSIDINE NEW YORK (INS)—The passing | show — . To paraphrase,’ or lift, ‘Police have narrowed down the list of possible slayers of Serge Rubin- stein to 2,794,316 persons.” Charlie MacArthur and Ben Hecht once wrote a movie for Noel Coward called ‘The Scoun- drel,” a ‘piece about a soul in limbo who could never find happi- i . These thoughts come after read- ing the obits of the international scoundrel Serge Rubinstein. He has been around our town off and on for 20 years, but I've never heard | for all about them in the country in which they had found haven They were the kind of people who i j ' [ ' national good, being teo busy writing letters to the papers ex horting the plain people to rise against the foreign forces which expelled them. Maybe limbo is too good for this this bum. The U. N. Security Council meeting on Monday to take up the question of a cease-fire in the Fo- mosa area puts the U. S. in a a single person say a solitary kind | tempt (at some time in the future) word about him, He even hired an occasional public relations man to delouse him. One, a good friend of mine, brought Rubinstein over to a table to say hello one night, the only. time I ever met him. He looked like Peter Lorre play- ing an international rogue. The mutual friend apologetically said, to regain the Chinese mainland. can confer in military matters, and diplomatic relations may follow. | Most of all we hand down a sen- ‘| ble, and said, ‘You're faded.” .| Draws Line on Pigeons at least a power with whom we | THE*PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955_ tence Elba let I like. the Vegas story dice at “The Sands” became so excited his false teeth popped out on the table. The stick man quickly removed his own choppers, placed them next to the errant teeth on the ta- KENOSHA, Wis. (UP)—Police- man Louis ,Blood recorded this complaint: “‘Man complained that neighbor permits racing pigeons to . | exercise when the wash is on the | line. Officer dispatched to notify | pigeon fancier to fly his birds at a more propitious time.’’ . by Ernie Bushmiller = - NANCY : : cy-- I SEE YOU USED MY lsc ike MASCARA, TOO ie You USE My | Til Ce “ia ¢ DO IT YOURSELF No Matter What Your Problem May Be A Quick Action WANT AD Can help you solve it: DIAL FE 2-8181 ¥ “It you people want to go to bed, go shead, don't let me keep you up!” aot, TEES be | A Dervine, tne, TM Bee UD Pal Oe /-3¢ ALLEY OUP ES’ GANGWa YIU Geer. 1088 by EA Seren ee. FO Beg © O Pet OF. 1 wonpDeR Wir THEY BVEN HAVE coors NS CHOW vayuuuilin) 4 Vii YEAH / AN’ BESIDES. bet EVERY OUT OUR WAY .GRANOMA, KID IN TH WHOLE INVITED... v FIVE- -ZERO 7, # fy iff a | To itll wishes Mag ......++ ISTH | | Peer Tote 129% Saly once 14% Mar ........ 83 Sep 2.17% May .......- 2.78% Dec ° 2.20% July .... 2.76% Corn Sep oe . 256% od 155% Nov a 7 157% Lard FWY cocvcces BO. PORE cocccee- 123.85 Bep 154% May ....... 12.97 Dee evsee 148% July -.. 43.08 Oats Soybean Oi) Mar ......+ 70% May... 11.80 BAF ccccccee ei] July 11.63 3 Fy ee 1% Sep ....-. 11.33 OSB cccose. 11.18 BRAT ccc cccce 1.35 Given Model of Mayflower Ga. 7h i ih fee Hi if fi He nial al st a F Fed | | e : hi | Tene _' rH He i g 7 HH Bs pte Bi Uy ii Contract Rift idles 2,300 at Wyandotte Chemical DETROIT (INS)—A strike affect- Two Detroit Teenagers - Deny Breakin Charge 4 ie e ar g i : | If | F : le ; ’ MeIntosh, fancy, 4.50 bu; No. 1, 3.26-3.75 bu; apples, Wagner, 1, 3.00-3.50 bu. o. 1, 3 Vegetables—Beets topped, No. 1, 1.00- Cabbage, No. 1 1.00-1.50 bu; cab- bage. red, No. 1; 1.50-2.00 bu; carrots, to , No. 1, 1.00-1.25 bu. Cele root, No. 1, 1.00-1.50 dos. Pennel, No. 1, 1.00- 1.25 bu. Horseradish, No. 1. 5.00-6.00 pk Lee No. 1,” 1.00-1.50 dos. behs. Onions, dry, No. 1, 1.35-1.35 50-Ib. bag; parsiey, curly, No. 1, 85-100 dos. dchs; parsley root, No. 1, #5-1.00 dos. Par- snips, No. 1, 100-150 % bu. Potatoes, No. 1, 1.35-135 S0-Ib bag; No. 1, 2.60-2.60 100-Ib. bag. uber. hothouse, No. 1, . 80-00 5-Ib. box. Rhuberd, bh » No. 1, 90-1.25 dos. behs. Rutabages, No. 1, 1.30-1.50 bu. To- matoes, se, No. 1, 2.75-3.60 10- yma Turnip, topped, No. 1, 1.50- DETROIT EGGs DETROIT. Jean. Ji. (AP)— . fob. | Detroit, cases included, f -state andes: Whites: Grade A jumbo 45-49 weighted average 47, large “41 wtd av. 40% medium 36-38 wid. av. 36%; grade B rowns: Grede A jumbo 45, large 37%- 30 wid. ev. 30° medium 36; Giede 'B large 36; grade C large 30-31 wid. av. 31. Checks 30. CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGs CHICAGO, Jan. 31 (AP) — Butter réceipts 1.311.751; wholesale buy 37.5; mediums 36.5: t ; @ir- saan iChalk Up Gains 00- | steels were higher today in an ac- .| at 78, Youngstown Sheet & Tube 7 pat 113%. 10 om ; heay fryers (2%-3 lbs.); whites (4-6 Ibs.) 30-35. : Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT, Jan. 31 (AP)—Hogs salable 1,300. Barrows and gilts under 260 Ibs mostly 25 cents lower; not established | on heavier its and sows; most sales 170-230 gilts 17.25-17.75, | eek i] He iff 8 8 a i Hi HE i FF gf if al i HF pis f HA rt} i : 3 &. 3 : ei i i 4 i if; ! E z SiH [ | : ; i iti Hes i ip i a f i Si Ala spilt il i i cee By tt ¥ i : r F 5! B BS; 8% #F:% see i é i i sli 8$35 if if i :. i H Hi : 5: se ; + ? i stitt Hi i] he il : : \ if NEW YORK. w—Aircrafts and tive and generally firm stock mar- ket. Some coppers, oils, utilities, and radio-televisions did well: Through- out the list there were a number of sizable individual losers. Gains went to between 1 and 4) points* while losses usually were cut off at a point. The opening was fast with a} number of large blocks on the} tape. American Airlines started on 10,000 shares up % at 23, and! among other blocks were Pan| American World Airways 4,100 up % at 18%, Boeing 2,300 up 1% 1,600 up 1% at 78%, Chance Vought 6,000 up 1% at 4042, United Air- craft 1,500 up 1% at 91, Anaconda Copper 4,000 up 1 at 53%, Balti- more & Ohio 1,500 off % at 38%, and Standard Oil (NJ) 2,700 up 1 The market was strong last week with the Associated Press average of 60 stocks gaining $3.20 on the week, On Friday it was up % cents at $155.50. New York Stocks (Late Merning Quotations) Adams Ex .... 41.4 Int Tel & Tel 25.5 Admiral . a6 Cre 22.3 Air Reduc 30.8 Jacede ......0- ® Alleg L Stl.... 42.6 Johns Man.... 46 Allied Ch 98 Jones & L... M1 Allied Strs . M4 Jelsey Hay . 24 Allis Chal 76.2 Kennecott .-108 Alum Ltd . 7$.6 Kresge 88 31.3 Alum Am... 82 Kroger «6 jAm Airlin... 23 Lehn & F...... 19.3 Am Can .. 41 LOP Giass..., 664 Am Cyan 53 Lib McN&L... 15.3 Am Gas & Zl... 43.7 —-* My.... 64.7 | Am Loco ... 23 hh Airc... 86.7 |Am M @& Pay.. 284 Loew's ....... 20 Am Motors... 116 Leone 8 Cem... 60.6 am N Ges 49.) Lorillard ..... 36.1 Am Rad 23.3 Mack Trk.... 3 Am Geating .. 306.2 Marsh Field... 33.2 Am Smelt . 45 Martin Gi.... 14 Am 6tl Fa 305 May D Str.... 36.6 Am Tel & Tel 175.2 Mead Cp ...... 644 Am Tod ... 00.2 Mid Con Pet. 106 Am Woolen .. 25.5 Mid Sti Pa. ‘2 Am Zinc ..... 20.6 Monsan Ch.. Anac Cop 62.6 Mont Ward... 63.4 Anac W & C..583 Motor Pd ..... 216 Armco 8tl Pid Motor Wheel., 29.4 Armour & Co 1523 M 48.5 Ased Dry GO . 2.3 M Br.... 447 Atchison 138.6 Murray Cp.... 32.7 Atl Cat Line . 36.6 Nat Bise...... 43.3 Atl Refin . 33.4 Nat Cash R...106 Atlas Pdr .....61.2 Nat Deiry .... 3646 Aveo Mig .....43 a teen o-- “7 bald Lime .. 13.3 Mat -... 42 felt & Oh .. 39.3 Net Steel .... 4 beech Nut 2.6 Nat Thea .... 10.1 lendix Av ...10464 NY Cent eo S| ~ » See, Nia M Pw ....30.7 Steel ...118.4 Nort & West . 53.2 keeing Air ....%.1 No Am Av ...87.4 ohn Alum .. 313 Nor Pac cvec ee lond Strs .....17 Nor Sta Pw ...164 ~~ 8 Nwst — em arn: are brist My .....38.5 Shver Sp “Ths run Balke ...21.3 Otis Elev 62.5 tudd Co ..17.4 Owens Il Gi 108 lurroughs ....362 Pan A W Air 166 Calum & H ...12 Panh EPL 72 Can Dry ..... 4.5 Param Pict 38.6 Cdn Pac : BY Parke De -. 4.9 Carrier Cp ....60.6 Ae ~ { a ‘86 Case JI os 194 Pe 35.2 Cater Trac ....66.4 Pepsi Cola 16.3 Celanese M1 «Phelps D a6 Cert-teed ..... 26.7 Philco 45 Ches & Oh ... 46.4 Philip Mor ... 403 Chi & .NW..... 6 Phil Pet....... “ Chile Cop .... 37.2 coer Se, « 62 Chrysler ..... 67.5 Pit te GC... Cities ..198.2 Proct & GO.... 83.6 Clark Equip... 57 Pullman ..... 60.6 Climax Mo... 63.4 Pure Ofl...... T16 Cluett Pea . 411 Radice Cp..... 41.2 Coca Cols... 1172 Rem Rand... 304) Col Ges ...,.. 165 Reo Holding... 28.1 Con Edis 44.7 Repub 6tl.... 61.1 Con GE... 325 Reyn Met..... 115.6 Consum Pw “4.2 ilo Tes B... 41.5) Con Pw pf 4.52 108 Pict..... + Con Pw pt 4% ™ poss a a oe me SS ee Bt ae 126 soe Corn Pd...... so4 Shell Of ..... “7 Crue 6tl...... 33 Simmons ..... & Curtiss Wr... 16.5 Sinclair O ... 8 et Edis...... 34 Socony Vac... 52.4 Dis C Geag.... 31.9 Sou Pac ..... 1 Joug Airic....136 Gow Ry ...... 3 Jow Chem... 47.5 Sparks W.... 58.7 yu Pont...... “16 cosccce G4 fagle P...... 305 Std 2 fast Air L.... 38.4 Std Of] Cal... TT Bast Kod..... br | Std Ot] Ind... «@ Ei Auto L.... 374 Std Ol] NJ....118 El @ Mus in.. 4 8&td Oil Oh.... 5 Bmer Red.... 14 Stevens JP... 27.2 End Joha..... 30.2 Stew War..... 246 Erie RR...... 28 Stude-Pack..., 13.2 Bx-Cell-O...,.. 96.6 Sun Ol) o. 4 Firestone ....1163 Sylvy El Pa .. 46.3 — Sul ....7%2 Texas Co .... 872 Fea. ... Fen , Sul ....0 Gen Bak ......10.7 a. . $33 Gen Elec +> 8 Timk R Bear . 50 Gen Pads. .¢... 7.3 Tran W Air ... 29.1 Gen Mills .....66.6 Transamér ....39.3 Gen Motors ...06,6 Twent C Fox . 29.6 Gen Sig ..41 Underwd ...... 363 Gen ++ 30.5 Un Carbide .. 04 Gen ---- 36.8 Un Pace ......367 em BO ccccse #4 Unit Air Lin ..40 Gillette ....,..739.2 Unit Aire .....922 Goebel Br ..... 84 United Pec Goodrich +. 424 Unit 52 Goodyear . 912 Un Gas Im 38.7 Grah Paige 24 US Lines 21.7 | Gt No Ry * US Rub. g *; Gt West S .. 224 UBS Smelt pf Grevhound 143 US Steel e144 Guif OW 63.1 US Tob 18.6 Hayes MI +» 12) Van Raal 4 | Hersh Choe 41.6 Wale 29.4 Hollan 16.1 Warn B Pic 192 Homes “5 Sent te bei 3% Hooker Ei 2 #8 West Un . 23 Houd Her 4 86 Westg A BE ...20.4 ™ Cent 6.2 Wests El .....005 Indust Ray ...51 White Mot ....43 Inland Stl ....73 Wilson & Co ..117 peels Cop «... 28 ¢ Bi Pow . 31.7 In P ccc eee Int Harv . 34 & A 3 Int Nick 61 ey Int Paper ae T 7.2 Int . ood STOCK AVERAGES NEW YORK, Jan. 31—Compiled by the 6s 6 Ind Rails Util Stocks Net change .... —12 a +1 +7 Noon Mon ,,... 2154 4 @e 1962 a rr 2142 1309 67.9 166.5 Week ago ..... 2003 1184 683 1828 ago .... 21445 17.9 68.0 1964 Year ago os 106 @T ST 1138 1954-86 high ... 2145 123.0 687 186.4 954-55 low .... 1439 TI8 85.4 108.0 1 high ...... 1918 83.6 S68 116.3 BD cccsece 102 DS MS 8S JOHN F. BRADY | Promotions Made at Pontiac Motor John F. Blamy has been = ap- pointed assistant chief inspector at Pontiac Motor Division it was announced today by Buel E. Starr, tors Institute in Sept. 1930. For the past two years he has been director in personne] was announced by George M. Wat- son, personnel director. Brady has been with Pontiac crease production. The Division currently turns out about 3,000 cars a day. pighe Pit iu ! i Chairman Byrd g s 8 ry | : : : g e t i TH fi ; af ! 5 z Feats With Feet Venezuelan Boy Scout Plodded 20,000 Miles Through Americas | WASHINGTON — The modern | American, the world’s greatest | rider, sometimes proves he still can walk—for. fun. off 13 miles from one end of Man- | hattan to the other, the final lap in a 3O2-mile -jaunt over every street on the island. | Other Americans have performed | more prodigious feats with their | feet. But it doesn't happen very often, says the National Geograph- ical Society. For foot experts point out that no American generation has walked less than the present one and has paid less heed to Thom- | as Jefferson's dictum that “Of all exercises walking is the best” or to Walt Whitman's fa- mous lines: “‘Afoot and light-hearted, I take to the open road, Healthy, free, the world before me.” According to one study, the American man, 21 through 65, av- erages 9 miles a day, the woman 10 miles. The high school student hoofs 16 miles, the policeman pads 18, and the waiter 13. Probably the outstanding walkers are the English. Hundreds of years ago their walking excursions over the placid countryside de- veloped into pedestrian contests. English heel-and-toe speedsters set the world pace with a formidable array of long-standing records. reETE, er »& il i Hi Fee! i FF $35 iUBi Es Bg* i 4 i i ; = Hitt i g : il H s j rite ff i Recently a Navy officer stepped | OR 3-7118. that someone entered his room and took a gold pocket watch and four rolls of pennies sometime Satur- day. ¢ Arrested by Pontiac Police Sun- day on a traffic warrant, charging he was driving without operator's license, Joseph H. Phillips, 27, of 1129 Myrtle St., was scheduled to appear in Municipal Court today. Frank Phair, 57, of 328 W. Dal- las, Royal Oak, was sentenced to 30 days in Oakland County Jail Saturday when he pleaded guilty before Royal Oak Township Jus- tice Henrick Smit to drunk driving. Charged with reckless driving after his arrest Saturday by Pon- tiac Police, Franklin W., Gale, 19, of 39% Bellevue St., was sched- uled to be arraigned in Municipal | Court today. If your friend’s in jail and needs bail, Ph. FE 5-5201. C. A. Mitchell. Adv. Te buy or sell in Waterford, Drayton Plains or Clarkston area see White Bros. Real — —Adv. Ohio Bank Robber Named on FBI List WASHINGTON () — Kenneth DETROIT (INS) — The Detroit Auto Show moves into its third day today after Sunday's turnout of 54,375 persons broke all previous attendance marks. The old record of 49,414 was set last year. So packed were the four build- Hamtramck Day at the show, Death Keeps Double Date DETROIT ® — Two Detroit sis- ters, one 103 years old and the other 84, died within 24 hours of each other over the weekend. They were Miss Emma O'Leary, &, who died Saturday, and Miss Mary Ellen O’Leary, 103, who died Sun- day. Double funeral services will be held for them Tuesday. To remove ink stains from your fingers, rub the spots with the head of a match which has been uwell moistened. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS . POR SALE OF SCHOOL BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT The Board of Education of the Roches- ter Community Schools, Oakland County. Michigan, will receive bids for the of the school buildings, heating systems, water systems, and miscellaneous items clearly Darrell Carpenter, an Ohio des- perado wanted for put on the FBI's list of ‘10 most | wanted men’’ today. The FBI described Carpenter, 42, a native of Wyandot County, Ohio, as “‘a hardened, desperate criminal,” habitually carrying arms. He has served time in a number of prisons, and was con- ditionally released from Leaven- worth Federal Penitentiary just about a month before the robbery of the bank at Oswego, Kan, last Nov. 27. Two men looted the Oswego bank in five minutes, and one of | them, Leroy Adolph, was caught | ’ | two weeks later at Webb City, Mo. He confessed, named Carpenter as his companion, and got a 15-year federal sentence. Carpenter is brown-eyed and brown-haired, about 5 feet 12 | Sense inches and has a slender build. He has a “true love” tattoo on the fingers of his right hand. Minister Returns to Take Up Arms Against Nudists BATTLE CREEK ®—The Rev. in one legislative quarter. Rep. Peter J. Kelly (D-Detroit introduced a bill to ban nudism. Coke in Large to Be Tried This Week office of the Board of Education located | at 1321 Pontiac Road, Rochester, Michi- of the Board of Bduce- tion to be held on February 16, 1955 at 8:00 | oe at 1321 Pontiac Road, Roches- . Michi . The Board of Education | reserves the right to accept or reject | any or all bids or to waive any formali- ties therein. Purther details and spect- fications are available at the offices of the Board of juca é Bigler School Building—3¢’-3"x28'-2” oo at the corner of Kern & Gunn Brewster School Building—3¢' -3"'x2¢'-4" oa” the corner of Brewster & Dut- ton Brush School Bullding—3¢' -4"x24'-4" located &t 1621 Inwood Road. Christian Hill Adams & Butler Road Kline Bchoo! located at 2011 N. Rochester Road cor- ner Stoney Creek Road | Snell | located at 11 EB. Snell Rd, corner Roches- ter Rd. SMALL BUILDINGS Prame Shed 14’-2"x10'-3" located at Brewster School Bite. 16"-4"x14'-2" located at Brush Schoo! Bite. Prame Shed 1¢°-3"x12'-4" located at Snell Schoo! Site Snell oil fired, 1/6 b.p off burner motor, Mofel ND 2 No. 18076, all ° WATER SYSTEMS — ler School—Hoosier Pump. FY) tank. ime School—Deep Welt Pum: 7 banks- Model SKC49MB * bp. single motor, 30 tank. Myers, serial No. 104950, 4% bhp. 30 lon tank. 34’-2"°x24'-2" located at the corner ot) is | Building—4T'-6"x26"-6" | Schoo! Buillding—34'-3°'x28'-6" | 697. Model No. 455, % hp. motor, | 3 _ THE PONTIAC ‘PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955 i | MARKETS |Aircrafts, Steels Hikers Perform > News in Brief Attendance Record -| BE SrtyxS'it'e, | | | it aececet 2 rarer Set at Auto Show: "Ese ono ; MR. LEWis B. ARSCOTT, Jon. 28, 29, 31-Peb. 1 2. Os STOWE, peniea BERT A McKEATCHIE, Clerk, White Lake ' Jan. 31 Ped. 18, 8 One Full Year Gucrentee From Houses, Apartments, Rooming Houses. Remain qut only three hours. No signs used. Rox Ex Company 1014 Pent. St. Bk. Bidg. FE 4-462 No Contract Necessary FUEL OIL Call Today Gregory Oil Co. 94 East Walton Bivd. Phone FE 5-614! Is Our Business THATCHER _ PATTERSON & WERNET 609 Community National ce EMPLOYMENT AGENCY contact FE 4-7172. TO THE VOTERS of PONTIAC Any voter, wishing te secure names on 2 petition te ask the city commission to place the fluoridation of water on the ballet, please 121-123 E. Montcalm Motor Mart uto Parts your bills all at one time. overdue bills all at once Keep your credit good the modern, businesslike way. Get the money from Household Finance! Then pay Repay only Household— and—on your terms, comfortably arranged to fit your paycheck. Up to 20 months to repay. You'll like HFC’s easy-to-meet requirements . . . loans made without endorsers . . . fast, friendly, one-day serv- ice. Start fresh with an HFC loan today! $20 to $500 On Your Signature, ~ ee eS Oe . i eee —_ > =. = | a ee ee ‘ a e Ne ae a eee Se ee eee aE ee Bern, Sg ee Ee — _ > —_—i —_——a—e / r - ‘ : : p- : ‘ 4 ; . aS Pave Oe NP ee es * ot ea es ee CUCL ee 2 ee ! . of } a / + , ; “ ’ ~ r ‘ ; { . . , ry w . - mt * oer THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 381, 1955 iwoex | Death Notices Help Wanted Male 6 ie i MANAGER wren ‘ss pOnE wee TO ORCKETT, 29, 1986, BA- For Retail Furniture Store Moeuting tad 004 fete. Focus O of Herman’ CLASSIFICATIONS iat ok. em ee O’DELL CARTAGE _ =a Panerai . ANNOUNCEMENTS “4 Home in Perry i én 16 sam Card of Thanks PRPC eee eee 1 the over ies ven, you. Smith Yo Memoriam vessessssoee 2| tumny LaMME Foghat = a safhn 3e ; Flowers eeeeeeeceesesccesos 3 J . \j - mee eee 3 or ee eta OWN YOUR BUSINESS tee amerean Vas Cemetery Lots ............ 8| hina "femes.c Me See aes PariOn” Wer WiLL | FURS sere EMPLOYMENT brother of Mrs. Ina Barney. |Pu- iv. rucks to Rent Help Wanted Male ........ .6 Voorhees Sipe Che i with ‘Mider ee : se Ag SOOT Help Wanted Female .....7| ‘ent m sot otating Hater: THEY CHANGiNC rE Damp i old baby desire 5 room Help Wanted ecceccoocec,, 8} Qaugsimttate st the Voorhees- MARKET. EARN $10.00 4 Pontiac Farm and unf. house. Close in. oo ©) Ge oem Home. YEAR AND UP. co. Industrial Tractor Co. Reasonable rent. Will Instructions eee eee eeeeeeeee 9 — oof Rag hy 340 N. MICHIGAN AVE. Open Foe Bagh: — +g . give excellent care, Ref- Work Wanted Male .......10| beloved husband of Mrs, CHICAGO “Li ILLInow ‘e+ rE sou PELIWG erences. FE 8-1215 Work Wanted Female ..... 11| eree Lareen. Bruce, Allen. and orgentsations for aa er | Palating & Decorating 20 FREE SERVICE TO ALL LARS veune taste ; dear broth- dustrious and sales councesorran | foes fea es “aes rere | uae ee ae Building Service .......... 12| Feb. 30d ot 1:30 P.M at the Hun. , Mt wore Nowexper i | F) PAnWrio | PAPERRANOING. ae OS oe - e Building Supplies ...,.,..12A| Paul Havens officiating. — Inter Kee not pecesvartiy” a factor: a Oe _sonabie. PE $1060 after 6pm. Business Services ......:..13| Giaftha"amy Rss ot yt at, Ten aot SO, a Oe | eee eae Bookkeeping & Taxes .....14| POX, Jr. JANUARY 28, 1965, ASH : Palntea. Two em mary. WE Rin Share Living 2 Chiropodists .......4..00..25| beloved son of Min Asher Retag efron to. fit ture) voces ing. C. White, OA 63801 or PE |GIRL OR WOMAN TO SHARE Foot Specialist .......... 15A Lecnard_, Parker urs. “Charies FORD See aM tervice alles ef Painting, Wall Washing | “ye” time afer tam” Dressmaking & Tailoring .16| Otte Helier, Me. Re . Panag OF} ae GARMENTS. Tore, x. Resesnanis. Va) _ Wid. Tremeportation 31 Charles Cleaners, TING AND WALL WASHING. — Refinishing .... 16A | Riley ‘end, Porest Pen. Puneral hanes ~ ee. ee ° | youna GIRL DESIRES n Plowing ......... 16B | 1st at 1:30 P.M. at the Huntoon . PAINTING, INTERIOR. EXTER- a. ca ng gl Plowing Puneral Home with ev. James attendant, sflernoon shift, apply | ELDERLY WOMAN TO BE COM : EE | Tee decorating. 30 ie. exe Pm | tnngn aad Wi, Musen to, Bie mn. Woodward-8q .¢ mingham by §:30 a.m. and fin- metre | eee ee s| Motor | Sette | Seen Sie hes epee ae | Mig es | So eS Laundry Serview .ccccccce- BB | S0S muee ot te Benters Pe- jn La - 1}. me Re A MAC . 698 - BCS. . WALLS CLEANED Landscaping ........ .++-]BA | MANNING, JANUARY 29, 1955. BA ve_26301___ i.“ ~~ ; a nantes * ening and va| Saierive Aub FADER Lie De-noohetr Mtge, 23 Moving & Trucking .......19| 5. beloved Infant sou of Sesste SALESMAN DPPLY TR | 02 57 SSasetna. ‘nie aay to | WOusN WANT WALL WASHING. FAST Action! Pain s Pranklin and Mary G. Manning: r geeeen womepees make profits over $1200, part Business Services 13 Be STI If you have the contract—we have ting & Decorating ....20| dear brother of Patricia, Charles, O = . ethical time neighbors, friends - ALL WASHING PAINTING. | the ready m Clark Real & - wal end Jessie M nie Jr. ° rge, wel = GIRL oS 4 os with ee owe prod- ADDRESSING estimates. FE 1. tate. Phone FE +6682. Ask for Photos Accessories eeeees service ad call on ucts, Toiletries, etc. An Mr. clark aa) eee wamae 7, Cove pent Ang AE - nt eaten bor it~ opetiing near You in olty’ ef Mus- separately.” Typed or ysiotherapy § =. 21A —— naweuee - fit"c : con mun indoctrina locally and pe ography experience 08, days uttenaoe Oe Sa ad ceetie cne-| mat & Se THER. Highest Prices Paid elevision Service ........ — oe ee ee o we Ce gh ped WOMEN | gt. tor | PS F370 or write 2031 Elmabets tim 6. Fe On contracts. get our FREE Typewriter Service ..... 22A | LEAR, JANUARY 29, 1955, RUTH. Tractor and medical background belpful but conced write Peating your dime. or part work ) : - . MABSEUR. AND \ Upholstering snononnerornte. B 960 ©=Premont _ Ave. Waterford co re woe gg = , od _ Box 110. = ; . A A&B TRENCHING weekends. Home calls. ¢. NICHOLIE & * Twp. ge 52: beloved wite of lent employee benefits, 6 HOUSEWORK STEADY. LIVE IN. |" tist to take in part time work. | [ooting. Water tile. Pield tile. Television 22/| 3 Ww NOTICES ter et Bert Swit” Gant mether ecco Spigfa cas | Mk Me stl areteaes | pula prety Sei | Ta %_momr gv sanvice | oy 2.6, ORTGA : A [ARES OF FOUNTAIN PENS DA Lost & Found ............. 4 dear sister of, "john and Implement Div. pe a. “aod. experience NS ROUSEKEEFER Instructions S| Stach. en Piha | ve Ff a with 100 foot frontage. Ne Oriente a memes | ' x = A ee Hobbies & Supplies .......20A| Sirtsse wun te bets ‘Tesedey Pee smplorment tnormation —e = ae ee baled AKE. ry B.D. CHARLES Notices & Personals ......25| ist 8.2 P.M at the First A Fs : E ? Z ‘ . . ¥ p- Sa ee [+4 HEATING B. D. -| Birmingham to sRETRoEnaTON, PPLIANCE SERVICE | pOws nase ‘a fv ist 6. Parts | weunanie society 177 8 , roma rm. | ay Pee| eb eer | writ ee | a are ge | eae eps Wid. Children to Board es ak coe "~~ SALESMEN Re re Hence | ete ee ee ese | MITCHELL'S TV | ite - 0-8 which time she ‘wil be taken to : Sales position open. experienced Rake #36 to 050 9 week, Must | Dulles Inet. Bos Pouliee | SLOOMPIELD WALL CLEANERS. | «49 £. Pine Pe 22m | =e : Wid. Homsshold Goods ....27| 0° tite until ume of servis. Has Position sity elvertised TIMKEN SILENT | SAPs Mit Suust."*" | ie You ake NOT A wiow Fr it 9p cblguion. PE 310 Typewriter Service 22A| os "Vanweit, sud Diste Hey. Wtd. Miscellaneous .......28| ROBERTSON. JANUARY 30. 1955. atfrossaTse off end gee beoting MAKE EXTRA ; ecneel | greduate write for free t ‘AL ———————eeeeereereeeeeeee> 3-1358. 5 oa how MYRA. 2340'S closed ry.| ducing World's cutest children's to get your} SEWER CLEANING TYPEWRITERS RENTED CASH Money Wanted aua| i: ware meiner of be tee Op ae . Sook "iene SSE chi | dresses “Big e@lection, adorable | diploma at home. No time wasted, Mitchell's 123 N. w St. erccceeee a: - portunities for: details phone Mr. Janka, FE styles. Low prices. Complete dis | no interference. Write for | Simks.Sunder Serv. Ph. FE 42013. SETTLEMENT Wanted to Rent pcg pe moor maggee ag oe +1504, play free. Rush HARFORD, | a! and free samples ICAL WORK WTD.| chine "Expert eevee ascaccae mast ond Pog dear nega te a meee © 6 NL-1 Cincinnati 25, Ohio Wayne School, Box 8, Pontiac “iBlecmeia al Bervice General and Office Sup By contract - Fe Share Living Quarters ....30| Fisnsbere. Mrs Carrie Plansberg.” ; ; ' greets . boo a a rm r . Steinbrink, Mrs Project Engineers FUR? Na. FOPULAR BLECTaIC SER 2B Wed, Transportation .....31| Writ "Paperal service win" | 0) “SEISSE et Married | "sisters Zon a ork sane Er chee | J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor Wid. Contracts, Migs, ...32/ ur “scnn Ww Mulder officiating | For Electrical Engine Uaperiences, 23 Aubure. W _ yer OR 30466. | and exterior. Residential and com- ht. a tenet be Wanted Real Estate ....32A| lierment in Lam “Cemetery: Warrep PULL TIME REAL Be OMEN | msn aL Basement sprayed. EM Ne tm state at the Veorhees-Siple i _Duaee Dare. Part Time, Good Earnings | Want 198 OoV'T. JOB? 30000 | Elec. — Sewers Cl RENTALS OF FERED Puneral Home. and Hydraulic Systems Parte PR Tae art Time, gs an Weis JANGARY wT __ ‘ d : 4627! Monday openings | Mea, ee, - . servies results. Rent Apts. Furnished ..... 33 | egy 1 eg ; fr You GAN A with WORK. or Tuesdays 0 to arrange ie ie Beart bigh Experience charge: chemically “weated st be Rent Apts. Unternished ...04| Gaver cena wits: | Product Designers ag MS | SHDDLEAGED WOMAN TO CABE| Sle0 Soct'cnowing joes sslaries, | ROtO-Re Sewer Cleaners Rent Houses Furnished ...35| Serry,"sesee Wane Bet? | Deion Check HAVE THE PRODUCT, Tmis 18 | eeu. Pp baiey between Y ood t| SR ze °pren VAT™ ™* | FORNEFURE REPAIR AND RE nine | Rent Houses Unfurnished 3 vent: dear pty hm = — LY MOVE Ioramen hak i : ~ FORDER? onel er =... Free po t OL AARP Smith, Clarence BU ' course carrer = FOUND: To Buy—To Sell-To Rent Lake Cottages ...36A| Smith “Punerai service will be Specification Engineers @nLbend_M0sT ba EXPER: NEEDED Searse end Amish payments. FE acoee Ree ROP PE eae | FOU BUY iT—WELL ad For Rent Rooms 37| st the "Dousison-Jonne Punerai - ' —_ SF A Se. ey And Beld | Cost: RED TRISH SETTER PE seeeeene ee | Sea “tog thee "gtabiicetes | STENOGRAPHERS | _ Work Wanted Male 10) _ commenced Pasi ae Rooms With Board Seeeeee 33 Prenpag « — ae fie Specification Writers > tated Products, Highland n Pm pense AND Find. &. 6. | mre ; Yoon Patt walt 70 ; Convalescent Homes mrp the Donelson-Johns Punere!) YOUNG "MAN INTERESTED Th AxD 1 s ad om. ve = ve ome © ? PE bean. ay ag Home ‘sales position with opportunity _ . ae —Michigan Animal Rescue League. Hotel Roomg .......++00+-39 — ; Pattern Makers ecvancement, experiance benef. Statistical Typists 0. TEAR OL DOT Damnes| rm sone FE tee, Leo Leste “er, abot # re ee ee, | 0 Remt Stores .-..eeeeeeeee. A nn ented A mos warn, | Comptometer Operators KPTERNoons. pair, Vern Keller FE 14251. | Reward. coll FE 2se8.( |AND CONTRA Rent Office Space ......... Sian we 26 enikun co Dynamoneter Operators | We're tmerested in & man who \ A HIGH | ROBERT HCH. UMBING | Lost: WALLET Tim | Sel! Be_7eur, land contracts oe = owe isn’t afraid to work hard in order Must be Experienced P rn eon | eed booting. Phoes VE +3470 adel wn let them with us, and we For Rent Miscellaneous ..42| fu Meyers Coats Puneral Home vo make above averge Wages. . On EPTER 4:0 RELIABLE JANITOR SERVICE | avis papers, Pinder piesse retura | Guvers wating for the flowers and many acts of peng Sigh or lier. ‘have APPLY , Windows walls and tile floor | to David A. Rogers, 2740 Middie- Di ; REAL ESTATE FOR SALE} ‘indness in our bereavement in fence, Apply Portine Press” Box arr SOUR CERES WORE G0 |_inmen ™ OO Careers Oe en ee caren ee RIDGEWAY =e = ‘ . cE TRIMMING AND REMOV- 1 BLOED 6 WHITE COCEER For Sale Houses .......... ei ==. Seen cet te. ™ APPLY YOUNG MAN FREE TO TRAVEL. PONTIAC sto _Live a 7 thes cstinete. PE teens, PE | spaniel under | yr. eld. Vietay of | Cooperative Real Estate "Bachangs For Sale Lake Property ...44 2500 E. MAPLE RD. oc ‘from | Spm | MOTOR egg ae gy a ; BRECISION MACH FILED Pee _| Wanted Real Estate 32A For Sale Resort Property .44A i : a en ee or DIVISION a sere met. Ropete. D."W._ Piswater re ;| “erate bound ot Gutew Lene. Mis | ~~ Suburban Property ......65A )ORSTAN'® FLOWERS BIRMINGHAM, MICH. | Poensr® of “gt, me, Landa CARPENTRY. a Tieeret, low reies, VE G41. | cae os saown wales | ACREAGE—VACANT Few a Lt evn |e ABSEAGESY POPPE ay | OTRE DART 4m wm wt em) ERNE Tap iyeTizn| Personnel Dept SE | wizras, for cine soo ee | Prati oe owe | Ereyetnam & Meee For Sale Acreage .........47 GAT. 629 AM. TO % BOOM. Help ae en 7 GLENWOOD AVE. M > new. Bent Bookkeeping — 14| O97: BLACK MALE CAT JAN | us today sel —— Funeral Directors 4 : ARPENTER rry ry eat DIG: SERVICES ae. ~! i be . ; CA wom ant ° Edw 1 ea lly = pes terrier Suis Pans | Waae —— M. Stout, Rewer Pan tae es Pon | ee Asa Ors evel iets Con | fe trails wom Corey | CARPENTRY STEASIRR SRE | SOQERESEENO_TVPING | Sef Ghee s‘yE'Poua | __ OP Srenings “us ! aE re ; : _and Oliver &. FE iia Rent Leese Bow Pre! Donelson-Johns prniion fr, © Mendy women se | Soom wi ned oie Fv. aver | Fa cate, nf seiogrg na Fi eae, | Lost, wire, Exotion serves. | GREEN LAKE OFFICE ~ NED FOR | a coon ume ye SEAMSTRESS MUST BE EXPER of bendy moa. Px pee | Ine _All_electronie OL 381% R Auburn, Liverncis. “KEDGTRS. FOR AL FINANCIAL lovely things are ell emclusive | gusty to har” hd Postiss ET MAKER AND CARPEN. —‘7*™. ee. Lost: PART BEAG aa FUNERAL € ART BEAGLE. MALE. tens LIST IT Business Opportunities 5 | At: rE ae co oe, Ok pe 6. Tee we ter, Kitchens © speciaity, FE Foot Specialist 115A) Bisck white. Corser of Wal esse SP CHAPEL well-groomed and past 4 dour | KOREAN VETERAN W dog. FE 42008, Reward Sale Land Contracts ...:.52 2 s, nomen, Money to Loan ...........88] VOorhees-viple Tm asalg Be chicege aH Regi at Sas" San WARTS AY ERD SP Furniture Refinishing 16A| Sat oyrici wee wel oot! be. | Re McKINNE Mortgage Loans .........-- bs | FUNERAL HOME Foremen A CAP al ~s $100 P i name of “Jet,” PE 5-233. Office 8800 4 obbies & Supplies 24A mm. toe g = ® 8. : | iH =e Age % to 80. Minimum of 8 wiki children. adhane ae Bs of 15 BLA ‘with nice home DWOPO. o0rorererersssereees. = Monuments a) See = SOOKKEEPER, EXPERIENCED §| feads. you are sssured DOT of tnd of cert, Ranay| Income Tax Service 17) for games. Serappie $3.;, paint | Prefers a sre, buh For Sale Clothing ........-. % PILLS proding rience. Apply | ty ta person See's Ph = oe Diy en —Mew ype at ain a wus meta- | bf pg wg eegnes | necessary. Can qualify ‘eres a ACCOUNTING & TAX SERVICE tis ___ 2? Fa EE Sale Household Goods gr | peatnns Gren shucite Tou pervice, 14d Wayne Pont ater, : mantel ag reales FLOMBTNG WORK WANTED.| | INDIVIDUALS @ BUsinessxs. CHINA PAINTING TEXTILE | ALSO Valentine Gite sf mS ~ TAS “‘glonakers =e = * = we BEAUTY | OPERATOR. i | the oraeie oy you can sell. rapid seo e nae won. want alee Tae SERVICE, GUICR al eraft stone cutttne end’ peliae, | HAVE CLIENT TOR A 3$ BED. adaiaiia re “ean i Ine eon ee ee | ith the inrgest sng fastest gree ne nes Fe bie service and reasonable rates. 381 Wucuett we PE 2063. per 84.300 down. Call 7k: Tar wide Wieerianeeis xi | a PE 5-600) * rosea opt noueewiyes Ra OLD, | pervogal imuerview” Pontiae, is wat gonntet man VE SOOKKEEPING 6 Tax SERVICE “QQPn't ies AMERA 16 MM —e rst introductory which is — =a . . oa. ww : Do It Yourself .......0+++ a pelnsurance Inspector || Set, tckcmse, Pus sore (Emre) Wha SRORLOVED aa ACuTY mg | * Mermerd Go” re eae) Bree rie pom, wae {COME RETS Cameras & Equipment....61A BOX REPLIES Cg Nes thre briany. We, guarantee you UNUSUAL gears. i cccept moet cavming.| Eee are We Sisk | Sarin, MA vin 7? mae, vw. | Real Estate Service Sale Musical Goods ....... e2| | At 10 am, today an _ vee el ee Sen Pa | Most te tate rong pres Nee Sale Office Equipment ...c3| | there were replies at Work Wed. Female 11) S°3Gp8ii* po'os . Soe seu, “sad Wade. property "from Sale Store Equipment ....64 - » BY HIGH SCHOOL WOM BER | eM 3ia8 hrecit ersonals 25 om your Wot of gure, many lete- Sale Sporting Goode -..5|| ‘nen h tate om B ral Bae rd oe Ol ee sivenns , 8 a sere Hunting -Accommodations 65A| | 3, 35, 36, 38, 40, 43, oe a Wu 7 = a gn properties « : 44, 50, 54, 58, Gl, 67, 68, 32-3038. SAVE MONEY Vernon Vie, Phone FE SYLVAN REALTY CO. Send, Gravel & Det ...... | so, 72, 90, 88, 8, 101, Youn MEN rE see’ xves "PE 6.1882 | WOMAN TO . CARE ger i et DAINTY Mat Fou SOROS Pesci “ye Som Wood, Coal & Fuel 67 1 113, Trainee dr. Executive . $250 for 3 children. works eft References and transportation. somtment ap Mis, Burees. PE 3 seseeee-6T| 1 07, 108, 109, 112, Fraines = ‘Gonege ered CLERK-TYPIST crnoons. Mi 6401 wher 5:00pm. | PR Gaus a nets aN Sh — 4 Plants, 68 114, 115, 118. Tratnce — Office for counts re- | WANTED OLDER Y | xP WoMAN WOULD Like ANS TAX SERVICE | PRIEND, THERE'S A TREND TO Trees, Shrubs .... axed | Trees = Store Mer ceivable cf machine | for housework } block from bus | housework by day or week, FE. Cebeatee oe Rs A TT he Roabes tor incomes, large down For Sale Pets .........++. 69 DOOKEEPING SERVICE Borting Delpful“TYping, Tequired. | _ station “MI +60 2158) WOM DEWITT BY APPOINT. |EhAPP SHOE REPRESENTATIVE | Sauget Dues Pounet ™ rer car cervcig | u'sile petiae Mend ha | WALTED, MATURE SOMDE TS |MELPRGRE BY DAY OR WEEK | 0) Pres. mabey a es Spe tet cas Se Boarded Seeds, e large, tics. Socboep- =e to drive car GORING ‘DONE IW MY HOME. |S warrine “guiberiand Studio. 18 W. Buron RIS & SON _ | s Ww. 5 GRO The Postiec Press ine frm wil wrain yee ct | CAREER GIRLS directions. Chood, wart aod CAGY FoR CARE OF CRICDRER BENJAMIN R. BACKUS | , Frito seeking =_ Beet satvies, neaurons. co-oP Hay, Grain & Feed........T1 FOR WANT ADS Salary, comm., and expenses. See JAMIE FORD. she can help | right person. Joe MY € p.m. o weokends. y | 18 W, Huron st. Room 5 | OF 5 4, Li areas DA W. Huron For Sale Livestock t Midwest Em i ae : bt Se aes | Service 18 siser thes gree’ that tan | MAHAN HAS BUYERS ereeeess DIAL FE 2-8181 idwest Employment ORAPHINO. ‘ : yee N Wanted Livestock ccapuesees Ue ; baad woresne BANK BLDG. goa ih nt ge ate For Sale Poultry ecvcsogeete Sam. tos Leadi Force te ex to aI pre pad = — ing Northwest timest 1s rea. Farm Produce ....++.. ny ae, The Dealer Needs: No necensary ree: J - assures us Sale Farm Equipment oes sibility for errors ethes 4-Top-4 young cn that yon be — Auction Sales .. eoutt than to cancel the learn and some nent ot a, weep , , eeeeeeeeere ~. that ae é oa SALESMEN feee eqocceete career our : | AUTOMOTIVE oe were We offer quality ‘ ‘ Raat 2 tons are. made. be sure to ba sales training pro + an experienc 4 Trailer Space eeeeeeer number. os of i ; Si Auto Accessories aneseeees BO fe it. oe potatities EP s"Reare vancement. opportuni : Auto Service ....<0+++00+.-81| | Closing time ; 6h ments containing jf ‘Sale Motor Scooters ......82| | terse, Mon. 2 i For Sale Motorcycles conus ae b Ag i For Sale Bicycles ........84| | | Transient q 7 be canceled _ Boats & Accessories ......85| | Spe gar of « . For Sale Airplanes steee AB case * Transportation Offered ...87 one Wanted Used Cars = .i:...88/ 1 3 | Wasted Used Trucks 4+...) 7 §. : For Sale Trucks voeee : be | Hoe Sle Vind Car. \ \ tes $ ¢ +; ey in Ae ai =" 2 the "ay — a eee. * * des . ' ‘ 2 fit ‘ s ‘ * *. ee Se Ue ee eee ee ee ee ee EE Oe ae YY A. ie” eee — ¢ a Se ee ee — OO ——ae tad — a i i i “7 f2 a ee ay ¥ al 4 ® rn \ THE ; PONTI * ~ For Rent Rees | NTIAC PRESS, } coms 37 SLICE OF boot een ‘SS, MON DAY, JANU . - =" (close ay Men ome cuEay, gLREriNe | — nao ~ 4 | NUARY 31, 1955 ‘ 7 . t a , . Land Contract A CLEAN MODER —— __ For. Sale Houses | _— , s NS) | 43 4, REAL ao t Naandry od a eens ia ___ For Sale H a ‘ - ALE 6808 } ROOMS. GARAGE. sTOV a PE t26 ot : ee Unt $485 DOWN — ouses 43) For Sale H c | refrigerator Heat pas OL: “AND éu a ; —— 2 and 3 bed | WEST H | mnnnrnrnnnrnrnm ouses 43 i For Sale H LISTINGS W | NEWLY reo. OE ROOMS, oo 5 jomes on ‘> acre lots emi tee f eee OWNER LPL IP LIP nanan ree 43 DECORATED. 3 L ble. PE 4-564i BE OR DOU- | o tank ine , Well and sk bedroom mode 5 BEDROOM ED. NORDMA’ ! | WEWLY DECORATED. 3 LAROS EMPLOYE: ,_ 80 _W, Buren. + copii tent Included. Hear stores. | ve I = am Page Od HOME YOR SALE | ————— = oN N Marita aA minting GIRLS, COOKING (al ABY.L LANO nance charges, ‘William ¢ ena | srmd acon drive. steee wits 2 Consies, 4A St __- * cor eae. Bn By ND UTILITY. ~ nonteo., Mickie HIG AN 5 oot RAMEE, “APTS _ |. down town ‘pe Ta from 6h) : como. Realtor FE $0522. wee Gl STA AA “ LAKEFRONT TO BuY t ait garage. MY shan aoe ia eee GIRL PRIVATE ENTRANCE & ; $00 DOWN, s—$100 Moves You Tn!| cranes Some might ca” ee tit ‘BIRD’ TO —“TISTINGS WAN 4 us line F ; bed ° - | ELSE home Right LISTINGS WANTED | 102 saree UIPSTEAD EARGE,,CUEAN wana ROOM _brict fireplace oWaréwood focrt) Rt CIVILIANS 41.130 | ig Wic ageing Tm T ROOM HOUSE, 4 ROOMS DOWN Farms business and commerci ? ROO! = EEret Race Ce et en MS rs. full base viok dupes homes. | St! Ortek f a beths. Net 4 full Btool MS AND BATH. PRIVA LARGE CLEAN 8LEE Ortonville 132, A ment, gas o es. On replace Outside grill and shower in olny . TE " c-EPING Rever, pprox $7 r oi] heat. a 120x2% | 443 men . wag ROY Knauf, Realtor, | cncrance, tNtmall baby no pets tiny OT people PE FOR 4ALE OR TRADE. BY OWN. thing Medes open daily Ie every | ciate it its tile ome wovapere: a Pedder VE soe 8 a Huron 3 ROOM E ! - : modern ho + Biv p.m. s @ Beauty. The fur- sAb COT ¢ PHONE OL 1 wom ah Gus weeaes al, NEW “DOWN- ae er CLEAN cocoa — ce as pe! ay et Clemens. between Perry | ——- RIVE RE ts heme. “ | FOR COLORED -6651 couple. Privat working LARG sonsble rate PE 9-1332 HOUSE oe nchor Real E FA) a interested < amt ‘40252 ate entrance ARGE SLEEPING ROO TO BE MOVED eal Estate | a beeutifu »FAMILY M CLOS premises 1! ory ——__Model_ bed 1 5 room, 1 stor attrac’ lend contract loin. ra, } ROOMS to town 22 Allison E plac » bath. natural f dodel Phone FE 3-9594 room hom y 3 + 3. bedroom was at “- city orm . AND Bats Heat, NICE COM . e Must be seen to ire- oe —sd|:Ssment. larg 4 with full bese-| Dome, almost new. on modern re ARK 1, PARD "Rape piwees J and 1 pms a 74016 N. for lord ladies FE fiom Stone OR 3-2008 ators. | ? sere ARK ST. , | a eigen tienen, full, bet | For talorms Price $10,500, ally 8 REAL ESTA: TE Perry pm. 4664 No pie 16 Near Gen Wessel. rx 5-8805 or rocm, 7 cl rece ges 2k large liyine ince a stone fires | FE Lee geod Mrs. Spears. ; ee eu } ROOMS -AND BA Se LEAVING TOWN, WILL SACR cud Neeson. Gove All herd mga ms og agen ig oor _tor 170 W. Pik vs Ps ren PE SIT PE 2100 | 5 noone UTILITIS BATH FE Siggggtnrr SS Dey smi Ove fee eouity” im home. #1680" Some a eee fea AN Rend’ weed Tt ae pn riverfront. home INCOME ae. i sious Ot ma - inisbing to do PE Some are floored attic 2 | e privileges on Cedi e es West side. FE 2 are FURNISHED pg ROOM FOR 1.OR Cate : : 5666 aot nice large lot oa.b08 | ake ar ls Walled Lake, large b IF PRIVATE 4 Tea —s sa ~Johnson 2 paul and Comfortable | |AKE PRIVILEGES —— apts. one 3 peo = well heated, back D BATH... ASANT ATTRACTIV eniently located 4 ID | This is a ni on j rage. basement. $13,900, You want vour ho door Ad porch »b ing reom w E SLBEP- alow with room bun- A | hom ce 6 room 1% to SMALL terms. fe ® it you wom 8 ally F moOMs. only. 111 Prospec at | _ PE 42786 orking girl only Aoi sca. Ah ae er cee ce Seiden —— a wil | Ass oe ted a eecrre cent i Fe | ‘aaoue Pe aa eae ce ste, edith. | Awe Be Eat re ea | bana Hine rome, cea ae ote tm a ue mee. We need list cail tae! “Gu BATH LIONTS. “Rooms “Phoen 8" Boer op Peletann, a intment veall Mr Otter Lak a shower, Oak floors. bichig | 4934s S| BROKER ae = listings., | | gas. FE 4-4686. ROOMS — “ : 5-1201 er Lak | basement. A . ea | ———_—_— rail 2215 Pon Ps oe I ee “E 4 ROOMS. ALL M DOMS WITH PRIVATE BATH BUD" Nichol; ballad 8 rme ¢€ Sckee tae a neuen 2 car! LE BAR )_Pon. Trail ; are waiting. dree welcome. Ineere tie" Lk Rd bie rates. 973 Orchard awa. wikate 1e Seen 6 io, bet on high eightiy | house attached to. Page io gg | a BARON , i ho De ROO pla al at arden nearly 2 acres for | —it's ve gprase- room plastered and oF _Edw. M. Stout, Realtor ,noow, ayo, nazn, wea Pantin, STEAM MEAT. _| Relist) a Cob Buy! | See er Heroes ae =. fa" See at ba cele ee | SLEEPING ROOMS FOR No Dow y-- ween dsca't in en i| Geo tacken Oee home with | ae ni “7 bens hot water, pr | 2 blocks enim n Lath u e. 4 bedrms. & ead Nice liv EARLMOO Cc potest 16 Hend Db: 2 block single. No drinkers toda b. Fuil basement. Se ; 3 rooms ar ing room R BLVD ouple only erson. Uates a poglemy Office. 56 Pa y e ite beautiful lot a on es 2 bedreams beth Ui choo j— . ree, i, young Hardw . Si’ < ROOMS AND . BATH WiT! SOUTHWE ° — yment Scott Lz | pear tree Fal 3 peach ond a| eve .2 more - Could easily ISN’T IT LO | sho AND . BATH hou 8T ROOM During the bi ake < price eal heat rooms upstairs pe Cicai.+ | Sone ee cae house. “Working lady pret NEw | | During the alance of January <a. mad | with y "94.200 | Dest 1, already. in. . Aaa live in the Wate | ment, kitehen fui in base age available Mr erred. | came ve a 3 bedrom starte 6°x160 lot ern home on iar I ‘OG. “c ~ Gas ° Full base- Cla rford Dra and ‘bec rnished. SLEE €-1066 : built o r with f ge ABIN HOM dows and sec. Storm win- , SS et et ares | oe goes Geen Pecekeka to |. PING ROOM FOR ' : po gg gg As Civing ro, dining Fea. e.| This ts E CUCK = oie Re © | sage cinta re hott Utomne Sea Tae Be iecta a bass SO |e CREER REALTY selling exclusiv ates on | EM 34377 ept Sat. and Sua LEAN SLEEPING | oe studding up for qurtit orated astered walls nicel eges on Willie wl hed w im your ares? |4 aL | 1 er 2 gentiem ROOM “It's mortgage costs jons. Smail U FA. oil h y dec-| living and ms Lake. Large Eves. PE 5-831 : ROOMS, — - 123 en. Close to _ t's our be Pon c is al th aut eating syste 2 + WHITE es" BATH “wes soe Rooms With Boar = a Peta own” Priced from Bet iy et ae Kae “ge ier "@xiy eow|y ONEORD EO AREA 3 rance, couple on! v en- s ith Boar ene eres 7 a av ? erms O - i 7 1 | smn a. a neater.) rd : 38 __ For Sale Ho | z pen for | ‘ | 1 room home. well - a rn uses 43 : nspection wiet residential located on GE AR AIA areal ‘ BROS . LAROE ROOM UPPER | fae, Gon uaa bee we nn | __ For Sale H Houses 43 West Suburban “i st a tew A new < Soom “geseh. ¢ | ea. 8 bedrooms es ne. "pom. ilche =. ment, gas hested APART. _‘"inkers FE 2-031 mae uel ORM. BUNG | CLARKSTON ~ 3 bedroom ranch cat t more of these 3 bed in e Complete. Read ype ment w Base arg cation. 1 or 2 West Bide lo- | 2 GENTL bd : BUNGALOW Ea 612 8 #M part basem ch style home with te b rick ranch type home = Large living y to move | Price $8 7 t Edward children allowed EMEN TO SHAR Just off Po : riy American 7 AUN wat ent. oi] heat electri e built’ Large 75x154 s will beautiful pict room “with @ G with $2,000 down 4 races on SifToe on sire | Pie agionw Breet Ph) PE cleny private home, PE ae Road sutra large rooms age oi od Bas 3 garage tng aide Sige ear routhout tei Piastered walls rite wih eiiee Lea TELE auming 70s .s —__Open_* to 9; Sun 1 to ROOM | — ; down ond c ARAGE HO : ack ton 260 bemt . floors, full shower. Plast , re ree ee ra . . J . M AND BO - : room up. Oak a bed trie! USE WITH ELE liams roads) near Wil- with partitioned Coved ceil ered walls. TELEGRA ig a . _ fimed ARD FOR R painte and city, gas city wat LEC Lake, $8 500 i orm Gas heat recreation out &. Oak floors through PH RD. | o2 PLANNING § ROOM AND BA . { _gentieman. FE 80154. E- d walls = lee clean neighborhood er, stool. in a down with $3,000 ter heater auto gas hot wa- fo Full sement. Auto 4 6 room mode _ aN 7 TO SELL? water furnished TH. HkaT AND | "OOM. BOARD r | 2 fruit and berries nbd Motor. sto Near Pontiac ei idtna: bos Just $1,078 down in- — als i meatnesi nalitreta oil fireplace, ra bungalow. ick as Jt will be a pleasure Available Feb. $75 a month. in bachelor hom ND LAUNDRY or terms, or trad rice _with $650 aon bus lines s2980 costs bs water heater. This i electric | sulated ecttee seome property for to handie| Call after 4 _ 1. Couple only. | Place. off raat 23 Lexington family income. e for own PE 5-337 fe. C. W | sedogns just completed! 18 o new garage age ok bing, cat ea oe wan oe _Ra. Auburn feig Yigt Churchill | nGone — os : OO Co Joh K j 7s ad meee on Wwoskeee apprec Sing “tf Jou_wum cose | ROOM UPPER TIL Room AND SPENCE ST -_ n K. Irwin, st set aun etraoe | “ER ses" sae er + can al UPPER. TILE BATH. BOARD FOR ME! | — ys Realt . ; y Sat. & Sun. esfte ie prop- | SAST SUB ae or trade, A cing, We buy and basem aoe the plant and N 6 room home Gor aA Sip | Lak . wfternoon only.| AN full fore: . sell oe edulis ment Utilities ¢ - | Markie. bus. 624 in med —best location ~~ Willams L 10:" ce 1925 | cake Privil | rooms near Utic ( pd . FE 50410 © ROOM ee ees eee 31238 ake Rd & Mie! Ph i‘ No Saginaw Street ° ivileges 2 car Utica. 3 bedrooms, + Syke a einer bres cena Maat med aE Mm el Ree oa at ie . private TH ROOM. rooms up. Ht e — - me. 3 bed ranch ESTA Fi Russell Y eee One Ti ereet:| tues BOARD AND TAUNDRY._ recreation space ganda BEST BUYS GOING | K a BES oom with picture window. ane ott Dequindre a % Or ec OG | Mana beta orce. west aa A ae pe, TODAY GOING SM apegt leg NET ves. PE iit er_PE_ 21a 2 ' matic heat est side. Auto- Walk: FOR MAN. | erred. 2 car | heat electric O a Seen Bren "ul 9 ge <3 mote Oe ra sende. aner 0:00 -? Cee AN.) terms. Price $13,500. FHA - G sisanreaed. i408 plastered | beth ond shower” wih | LD HOUSES % |__P.m. call : r 6.00 | VACANCY — “1 T’T ; O sand ¢ S viny DeaRAbES — | for elder! IN | NURSES HOME | SUBURBAN SPEC AIT TIL. YOU SEE ING MOVE RIGHT IN nant eel mes eee ee ory, RRR ERE wt ry tarome |stauenay special. | Setetenoae | es No, ott had eh RE Sie NEW and put dollars im your! Unie furn., 7 WIDOW WISHES BOARDERS. ae en 2 bedroom bun. | but ine inside the outside Be ee sade co cae te home eae a of eit ee eee te nas: | We _sccept your kdallare in your | Union Lake Shoping tater” EU | Convalescent Hom ~_~| Sieoeee: | feaae Aa rec Hage "OME oF ball Pome Meurtanfe — L. C. LADD mam ca eeenh dest homes. z oe all R Hi Convale H — = at elect ri oi with be farther Living doc Room ri reg 4 BED- eee Close Rcgpexnot = 4286 Dixie H | tle yoy —< = 8 CASH FOR LAND ouses Purnished 35 nes 383A) firepiace Let kote: Natura! roomy. ee ee es A FACE .BRICK ‘en ULL*-: g¢ Pacis street Total price ___ OR “sana” Drayton Fiains doors, copper plumb: closet . CONTRACTS (4 BOARDING HOME PO! $11,000 with fg ge Mg le S breakfast kitchen [ — NO DE ay ae an egos _Oven Sundays io heat. electric gg reer TTRACTIVE | - wn. nook over- | Lb D . - ANOTH ——— = ‘| o e R. D. RILEY, BROK bedreeen bom LAKEFRONT, } a eal pt ool AgED. | - sore Mtge | yard of a ke MEDIATE OCCUPANCY BAILEY SCHOOL AREA. 7 | Maceday FOUR Room ‘HOUSE, full om ggg kitchen. paved : ’ ER| heat and e, basem: | men. For rer $950 DOWN Plharperas wo bedrooms | AND L GAS HEAT bedrm modern rm + Very small ew and modern. laundry tra steel eye beam Phone FE ¢1157 bent end het wotor $00, couple | meet wa 2-0311 ae Ge Crese &t tne fires floor, where =| AND LARE PRIVILBOES ee eS ae baths. | One @ down payment. ee ee restrict. Orion. “MY 36762 ar de hy POR THE AGED vin 6 Se ek cap mate up the bed with a weice mea tines — ep This will | lect. yeme very OM Available Fm os eee | patieots. 34h now taking bed agg yo and 2 and beth — Thses are just —— SPACIOUS LOT AND DES £3 000 — monthly vanoukae| 2 — v2 pl nursing = on | jal ape lla ame en a !|CO eo sxe OUR paved credit gl ement, , swe oe renee. very small | HE PR BE RT C. DAVIS aS) a (Bat wee" wl nome Siete ae) FLOYD Sree te Pestns Late Ré__on 3. wins Cana pce \ Bi x38 MIDDOLEBELT | R KENT, Realtor | mest oe lake. | : POR 1 ELDERLY JOHN : ; AR ORCHA D «Ww ’ altor ment. y low dow i ; a | Sai a Wari one home wed K INZL R | FORGET-M F-NOT —.— SPEDERAL | ee Ope een TE SAO GEO. MARBLE, Re = . ‘ od LL C care. MY >-s00. s is the . xt to \ ea ot Oe Stas. ee | catvaigeeotpersan ig oP | E | er ee Ticieladimemiceinnal ts ammeter 3 ‘water EAST = ‘ reference per month. ©. oe Ww. H REALTOR wighty nice. at. It's so \ . ~ = . |3 bedroom home with j wee te ae “ oc Once Eves “le | one ms convenient pies Organizat d Suburban Beauty a qed. sised, ot. ‘ Hotel = ‘o-operative Real Estate al Sukie ame a ar rganization | — coreg eo 2 bedroom brick BROW bus, parochial nei oreo’ Near —_—_— | Too ivi | me with the lose to do schools. t HUR aaeeeenenens i ( 3 Sttached two. eer ge wea ~| Tr aco hg ae pew. it hee colt gy — yg Ow HOTEL. CLBay EWAY make it right for ‘living. ee tee RANCH PR ng Wo iy i By“ a. 4 ped, sogms O7 600 oF wt to. vee ere be pt | bedornesta! oe gg picture | itv TYPE HOME — Large | Wee yment buy. _ See eet Fe |] HAPPINE sabes atte | Satm win, bln vamiys"warkensy Plantered. Tasle htchen CU pr a big SUBURBAN fa Hie | AP PINESS oe Lwacaet es ET eS ee eo aa Se YRAYTON WOO — i ; price 825.000 For your Pull price, 600000 ren es. tes | tion. On extre sirable loce- ate os Pag VTON WOODS | ATTRACTION Fast Sie Bs ek Miers sare Se eae j “ = i . SI PY ee aubern Ph “7. te = | cates, sitered ts euslity end te toa the makers cone of tae “RUD SN SUBURBAN — Bi | fiet™cna “grapes A. really ver. % . FE 20239, sulated £ im this fully in- Does eee cede aoe You appraise it’ | “BUD Nichol bedroom home t room 4” buy for a veteran with HOT EL RO RC 0 | 2% remb! | peal % doubly ft ¢ Compare 1e automatic with basement. peyment down = NEW SEVELT sonry home of § en ranch ma- Lnponipes © Lecated near Ale paeoaed ally—you ll be im- _REAL ESTATE eee furnace. garage and : LY DECORATED ROOMS two 14 ft bedroom ¢ rms with bea tee living room. 2 Late with its sound va) j : y located 200 de | . 810 | bath, spacious 20 ms, colored tile Se - a eee a WEST SIDE . = NE Senin Gu a) See ee erica canant | ‘enon sepauig eatin | NEST SIDE Lovely tres bet = IN TOWN FOR. room. Ot) heat. stor reation seatures rey y modern room 3 ‘twt breakfast } ated Youngstow lly decor- STONE = Pe sain | ime a wi Tandscaped. lot. 60 Bria sees | resmeyens enya ee Basement and fenced beck yard * E REALTY CO ES § m with . a ee Ex a . yard : j Rent Stores ry Sas ir as Tet 300" $2.50 down. Qn lil ae N | i aot Ce we Tee FRONT 1. H : ;—o ‘ety m daily; Sun. "se —e . nd side of . : } is $ room lak . _B 5 | mS ? Sasi, Htienbeth -|3 BEDROOMS SMALL NORTH | SAGE | CLEAN V Gun keneun ae wat, eee. | Want Cash | . ae oe ae ROWN, Realtor | « wv = -LIAMS LAKE — a F AnD 3 ROOMB Priva ; Beauty shop. dress, she hee aees:'| aa VALUE up. sving por aan Wiekee = | Det tents eae cnser, | Member Coep' Resi Esters osm | _ eet ee aS, ne — } Tess | WON'T = you e ce € system Barbe = p Real Estate Exch be 4 Teen S| be evttaee soa ueten iene Smjmed piviceey EEA? THN) Srgatege bse hrs resctees, Gigaee tae | REROEATAL GE Bead gut moun tengo ES Ses a eat | Clark &t., = Ct. FEs 2% Fene- | EXCEL! ist: , 32x86 ft hom on you better b | in e have buyer : Lake As on IN 32. W Huren vy Snook FORNIAMED A Apt 7. < nooMs nap LENT LOCATION FOR sisting of & rooms with @ con this one urry g Experienced dy weit $8.950 with ter: ing price only Small modern home EAaT SIDE § ROOM MC 3508 : pha bath and — AND BATH PARTLY quire ‘ve e $2 W. Huron. In| of 9 ead bee. pers fel vent ; [eee cetve sen tat oo ™ payments north end low monthly = Cory. easy 5 ROOM MODERN : required — COMPLETELY Hwy - W. Huron or call FE 8d¢ steam eek for ones ment. | Edw M. St your property today 3 BEDROOMS Se. eS ee Ee tur- a " . ® om. end ‘ house FURNISHED SHOP, STORE “al Gan ole 2 Gee ot = eee jw cmaiadion Realtor L.esl , [ee ee a ee JIM WRIGHT, R | Rreet, 65.500. terme ted. Paved y‘pooms ’ pa. writ gerage, Al A STORAGE On| 0% OM. per <2 basreome., reste | PoE S88 nw Un R. Tripp. Realtor | plastered walla, sluminum neers. | Seeperutive ee GEO. L.. SCALES, Realt ot by % location 3'———_—_—— wrence St and scr ipum storms - rative RE $044] 86's N -EO, or < x (teed et: mons Fores ood 5 voor all per month. +) oe 0. os rw slo 100, Fiyl ging wy. | re’ Ssiel or PE Open, Eves. | | 62.000 er ™ downtown. _REAL Estate Exchange oN Saginaw —s FE 2-081 | 3 3 a. rent. . House FOR lease or long term | LOOKING $350 r , - - 4270 Suitable FOR $350 DO : veers | PRA tor ‘coupie, Mar-| Ke. TES Pee Werhove them in alr price sicko al teepe eal Sonsini f : FaAlLEn | TT » &. “MPSTEAD YOU BUY IT—WwE’ ‘o Trede With po money do price ranges cated sear A a half acre. lo | Se nm rooming house close ; Woodward. 260 NORTH pomeongg f ger RENT. BABY WEL- ikowe one PB cane LL INSURE IT | Be down to tentde to Gls | uburn Heights. ars Bargain bead = ATTRACTIVE can Li peme, | PaNTLY. Pinas R DOUBLE #1 Se “4 , \ ; STuGDERN apr | "pstig tows Tomes si ste out 2, ath ea Mit OFFERS Sia ea aaa | 2 are teem a | WEST HURON BRICK > a weekly. Near ‘crate | FE +4016 between « =. . | _t- a, mile from WN. 3 Homes—Ortonvill reer —— per ete | 1 income, terms. . _ PREE RENT apts ste « KEW MODER! cRN 2. ille W. WORON e ville Y . @ ef attractiv | oe Blue 8 . Wig Heat end ‘we REALTY CO. REA Good Invest bath down ek gaa Y Russell Yo R. JIM WRIGHT, Realtor ees, is e 2 room and bath. . Partly a. _ 52383. water furan. FE Member ahs LTORS s1.00 ment ' Coca tm bath Und se pias V, ALUET, | 248 Oakland Ave ’ a ofnce work. Must for part time } © ween oes = Rat oy FE mate Bxen wonguy = A 3 | oo wach ‘cpartment” 4 REALTOR Realtor Co-operativ Resi Estate A mens : circ work. Must be np. in real | amaeY FURNIIED a Y __ For Sate Houses a Gens Seed. 2-0263 ar peat: | sitached: 2 car os ag ; 2, ——s , PE Bodie me ae PE 60003 Aner 4:98 call ne . . Thelma ratle . "th 8: foom, kitchen , _ ° | TENN ee oo aes 7 Elwood, | 412.50 Rs a om pretereed, | O ELLUOTT & eae. BO P al price re 5] forma, "tees od ‘condition. “$13,000 ; —_ 3 IN . pete _berise ig home ae om 7 eee cK. soomETEAILER: $261. merce. EM. keener a BB ew a Fo - TO BRANCH 7 rent less — VILLAG W ATERFORD P= Py COME APTS | Rear — ent, 1% car Prono Colored 231 FRA r Poeden 6-53), tastes o-2088 SO ae 3 2 bed m 6 veeme. wen| oetettre — © sos 32. Rose vacu : ture a Some furni- ie : a" 5. PRIVATE = children. NKLIN LARGE j= FAMIL ne aa hewpe 2 ane ee oak rooms, vestibule living room ou'l} see! 15 x 20 or CEN-| weeks _ Peseession to oul. 1 ye — og ae connie | Rent . FB ots. | 2 Boor Some. 8 . "bed: poe onde gamed hg em screened summer porch. Separate entrances, 3 paths. su-| a as a ce cous eee rt ter ne inten. FR EFai8 | bert Sn coret tin eat | | C) a ae a ae tee | BEALE nl weer ox ses ee we" cate ‘ gem woman aR Bagiew, FE 2 BEDROOM HOUSE NEA pg $10, al §2 060 dows ‘ome tae ithe, Rorebes. lM, car 18 pedros A Se Oe pa: Mh, bg ae ' j nan. 386 N. he 4B $75 meats Available USE NEAR — “por sai iu. room pome. 1 badtvots sad WEST SIDE. Cory cue. ng furnace.” Hit carne sonal ment. e as down per bed: teags A Pgs Ogden 2 ROOM RNISHED > noosss. __ OL 2-1382. | ag En OR TRADE FOR BETTER HOMES aan Gown end 3 | ern ony A | garage ig entraince 0 attached 14 00 with baby welcome. Utilities furn. 17 apne Ma MODERN REPRIOER. | roome, ub bath, large living ort lot ey ee recreation room. oll Cessment, | | THis OME. us swow Fou PAUL A. KERN, Real —_ ya and $38 : 21 Steinbaugh aaivaher S dyke ve furn, 1668 Op ou beat 3 asee. eae living | Lovely 3 ilies om ance less oo Be | peak, ond, pen CBS at | A 31 Oakland A naipsponl ‘ i LARGE | SS } ROOM HOUSE AND BA Sesiiaed Wi nekee ieee as eaoes fireplace. attached gafage. oi fer Teese hemes ore i aiee'| only $10.00, terms. BOUT $1200 DOWN Real Estate Since 18 o ' HAYDEN Ec 2 Newly , B- AND BATH A? “Inquire 209 BD BATH. OU: | out Aa! hae = 7 imetde and pees, ee liv Seaan Will sell and well located. ORB | VACANT yas | ony nice | Tm Bird : Vevement Oe Roe weter, onortete Row AND COLD "aman geet —_ ur preoioe ston to be @ banc “n —" weeded ry pcadinn with #1 300 | ca | size Goad con, 26.4. Utility ‘crore | empleton — * _open_ Eves, ' i ROOMs AND BA ; [| Seen Meee Pee eee; & * Also building G.I. REL | Breetags aioe 8:08 08 rectated. | Coloni | room 1 on Approx. 18 miles, itty | room. | BY Eves, . AND BATH EMPLOYED i _ _ W. Dinnea acd anemes. tek FE 42060 t. Yos- vyonial Lake F hoses floor bungalow. “wre Sacrifice wet of Peatinc. | CRE | New 3 OWNER grote . PLOYED BEDROOM R . Huron Son, 66 West : ront pine fi iled 3 2 ° aa 4 170 dow Price of $6,450 with SCENT L K. is bedroom brick and frame : to ® y 58 Williams st home Garage tty TY __ HOLIDAY po Beautiful 4 bedroom h den: Neors. ft = a. $1,- Vacant. ARE A | ‘anch type home. Loe 4 security deposit 00 mo 0 orgs HOMES Have a } You on lace front lot ome e ip Went x = ing to be bath New 4 | lime. City water and ated on bus AN BE WARM - led Lak .. 165 Tees Riane, 3-1104 porate arge family? If so be ving rooms, ft 1265500. 2 x 300 fee ity 180 . hardwood — complete | includes full sewer. Home i 2 in this AND COM —R e. LI tes, = HOUSE ON ic rte — 1 reom brick eled hbrary, b _ pan. a Hum h ‘ pte Macs nioat iy, Plastered cupboards. Be _haotty pine Private = 3 room eautiful Call ACRE | reat! sement and 2 tile le room ARK R | 1eS joned feat. 80 rcon- oven ove and Sense, wate en-| New 4 ul City Home | Sesh Spm EM perece room. oll furnece 3 io, downstairs, are some, of tne a EAL ESTATE REALTOR FE buy at only #2 ft lot Excellent _ ft acer pert, and lot sT¥nien . . Child | bath bedroom hom | vening lot 180x220 eatures. 4 | e of the Huron iE > arranged ms con | OC ATIT py Sal pace gins per month ws fur GI HOMES a sos mie, bh = ee SEDI aa 8 Exsuines Cooperstise’ Neat Es E2-0474 | PONTIAC LAKE | Sd yaad ve, mear Te t 2 couples. PE ¢ 1 vost porch aiuto enclosed BE tate : aaeeaoge | aterfront, 4 . “ room unfinished . : | MODERN + ROOM xan OPEN WEEKDAY! © resm modern bem igs em fe cct| lem oe MS Eh | wee Gene conditioned beat, p= age y included Ww Huron 3-9906. D j We ate AYS 28 wtultt modern home fi garage. Also J ear Large b n, West of Pontiac izabeth Lak - ery condition at on your lot. ail - FE 28041 of PF OR | WODER SMA | modern of this 3 bedroom 7 reom, ond a, Me -—-E- ungalow. full be -| Three e Estates | 7 #000 ¢ widen gta | yeas, Wel vane 3 down = m aggeen saath wooge "wre sitet hn fs sie wi, Sith ee? Lee eS) S th Lake Estates | 9 Fespiton, Realtor [= —— st apt. OA 3 I couple. . with paste! acres on approsim Near Crescent : tile 2398 ealtor | > - Pa tu. ~ RM | 3819 Auburn Fae a Inquire Beets, dream por alily ike full price oniy $7500 Daviabarg. BI . type bungalew tebe, jarge ranch walls, select oak Goutored Orchard Lake Rd. FE fr a | OMS ADULTS ONLY. cidee | San WARWICK HAS 3 BEDROOM pointments. We pee Ad a. with oomfield Highlands living | room, 3 bedreste, lnage ated en's nicely jandseuped ot 5 +oe3) A HOME OF YOUR si pie cmeuar are PAN HA S TaansMng ok | OFFICE OPEN #4 fattest | "PO Sete) ae cerium artrid wih 2M. seni SAMEAENT Ay | SMALL BOOe thereon ™ es A lent condition, veetbuie, iiv-| PONTIAC REAI sad ‘protected. ares ge _T ’ ‘ LL HOUSE. — DANDY URBAN . JOHNSON . den fire- | 137 Bald ALTY this offering to see Washi & 6 ROOM APTS 1 or NO CHILDREN BUNGALOW N. Realto itehen with Foom win #1 once in on Jr.H ' oe fprnimed. 78, UNTIL JUNE or pels. Close in. $40 mo, FE 34x34 en Seundetion i FE 4.2533 “ Ip tile bathe. full be spece. WHITE OR ve sem| “he om 6ntee done. s+. 18 THE “BIRD” TO sEE __— home igh a Dist. a 7 Rooms. en cieeme. | WALLED LARE MODERE, | | acy ac neat fireniece | _ 1704 S. Teles AC cil hest, | incinerator. | pirat hoot nto ‘OLORED WM. A. 4 FA fireplace DRY best rom spelt Ihe BATH AND |*f*. meas} shower. 3 Blocks to ‘eal rage on Des senuten. Yes, this'ts| ——— graph Rd. — cay tat! finished ~—- By Has 2 three MILY $17,800. Secsment, 6 SORE TPARTMERT. | eee | ee forget, | ° “yang mmoue 7 include carpet, ‘torme and fete attic, Pull basement. fi KENNEDY | eitrateess” e__room apartments | Webster School Distri . PER. MODERN. Pai. WILLIAS- UR ROOM DUPE BRICK TERRACE Ke = oe a wn ee, oe gg we pe REALTOR seeenene. Fe eA fue fants lems strict : tae ene cheese Oe Pax | —ATe_Jen_ 20. PE Bi Al ear TERMS oO "$6,000 will handle | fenced. Pa pe one eyeleno soon Bee Evenines “tl © pm decorated exterior. 6310 A! | and beth up 4 roonre itrence. FE 2-408 | For R . Cammee comfortable home Elizabeth Lak | Shown by 12 aA1°°° anne i +3800 ome Takes only month | ‘Sirs lavatory, wall Down- . 2 men, no pF ge mg 3 ent Rooms 37 pope to ige large rooms, ee Brick e Front ae. : cH fits to mn 000 dn. ye t lvene fem -. wel i close in. FE | 1 SINGt a 100 ft. lot. — . ond garage co YOULL BN on home, 73} 150 feet 55 N. Parke PRICED FOR LIKE NEW ‘ane V- __ sizable kneby Mt. Room, FOR MAN. ‘win. JOY—the hes Lake ist ing lot North of , Cozy § room basement.” i ment. ae _Mt. Clemens. rE 161 mer in this peat sum- FR an ie ieee QUICK SAL oak modern bungalo Double 3 om sen 2 Willies || pRoome a ri eemath ak Just ‘a stone See, Sa rm. Sate ettce. FE 66isi of | 7 family E feore, full besems ve yard, $17,500, earee, ? IGHT “HOUSEKEEPING FOR *| were bath and entran Five ively Sane a ter rom aoe at or bet Senor. bearoom. fl tile La J nies 1 .~—. east side close Goa Btn neignbornood | a I) FOR | A hoethertiareeilhcs ct our ow ‘pus a eundy mos.) im bag full. bastment fs Se *) PS - oe with) Side home uct On Lx $1,000 Dow 2 _near Alpen Tae manc| Beat a. i or 2 ~ 4 rent Gas heat. De ng large ‘unfinisived attic for a Ae Meny ble 2 Dedroom home, PRICED LOWER WA Just $0500 co terme | (TOUT choice of six (®) n rt Adults, OR 3-1943. _ ferred. 154 N. of ay ‘pre a ‘love A, Disekiop drive, | Soom’ Bee this ene Bue. sit 2 car Gal orca wie goed Tenten. THAN RD E. PARTR — rT APART a “CLEANROOM el Suties anton room. See this one now. pet-« potina Gnd Grunes. pera Also has lngeverecasd | =a VACANT REALTOR rE Sper: $400 Down . . UTIFUL SYLVAN V cad’ tenet” oom, ge with nice 4 room | 4 W .6316| RE 22. Te A nia 8IX BRICS TILLAGE 12 LEFT—s700 4 R A feneed toilet ‘room. ale Ay, Prived . Huron St. Open Eve our at sae large lot. piace, fan ac eo dandy base fore. te ‘bathe. oti | "bye “prorat cluding fViianire. Por only tes SEE WFORD: Near S and beth ene bedroom plete ee ecom- Open Evenings and 23-7193 EMBREE eg. ‘ r ot. Joseph H Gown. 2 bedrooms Buncey re GREGG a ! Nice gaissed in rear up. water heaters. was * ay 1-4 1865 Union ne fine 2 betrwens car garage. Sell _— and er. we: ates. ao ; , , Union Leake Vil EM. 3-439? | 93's _W. Huron . = seas te home or contract bine water. select SYLVAN VILLAGE tae Aaa a FE +150 9 betveem heme, DORR ime tere, goed, aveot | 3 os eh REA RIS & SON . yood garden % large ‘ home, full Se —~ : Ads Sf. Teese | nee, Tem | hae | ees ‘ eton. . R. HIL WILLIAMS gat heat full WEST. SIDE INCOME. re x KE | “Gasp CoWimatak come mores inn. taker cary ‘et 4 ‘SO on es Se ‘ ats! To $d ase Classified "nome Stine to Cass an: ee , 4 car) fer-dial FEI Le ie ae aad y : 1 eton, Realtor ** tat bd om x Patt See | a ge oe { . 2 SEE Hy 5 Gee : , fae a Na aad) | . a a Cae ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 31 ee For Sale Miscellaneous 60 DEST: S By Jaq Ale : ms. Du-| ANCHOR. FENCES — - 47; MODEST MAIDEN . an ’ For Sale Houses 43) For Sale Houses 43/ For Sale Acreage ; ey |A “fee, "room sites. glean Ais | Bo mo Ra peti. | Seo ane DRAYTON PLAINS — ACREAGE ane . ' | Siste an Se Or ede sii Riots ‘PPLE | New eat sails esisien ote crogins | WATER PRoeTace acre farm with 4 acre qines Ve fais ee eb ee, Two family income ie 1 pear Clarkston, Full Oak. pallens erase: Daly "ete. too $2.000 = teak. tite 1d . sel, Ou ons don, | er acre ' wroves — it, near bus, 4 Py ‘oe Tila Tele per sere, . Puree eee ate seen ee ae Giroux & Hicks are hea » asp on ofc “| BENVAMIN G STPRERS. TNC, | 98 Diste WT Payton Pain “Vavatorien, 428.50 value ‘ew | : 2| Semplete) stmber rez ee VETERANS OPEN EVES. UNTIL 8 eats and curtain, 408.00 value | Birch Doors 2 Ft 7 SURPLUS L ee heron mee S| HOT SPOT | Hiden First "S| eencen Oe ee ae tS | oe eer et RANCH La How you to chard Lake Ave. 490 : ne | Open o_ Pisin “Luxurious tox mf. | HANNAN, LI 4-4900 for Destnene : TWIN BEDAPREADS” DESK AND BICYCLES, BOYS fang. branes MEDICINE CABINETS with breese Beawtha vine tm, wit | For Sale Lake Prop. 44 ce og es 1 TELEVISION 16” MA. | G40. valve. d4ia0.- Thane ere oe aks garage. bed als : : . po , ~ “Only $48. MI 6-1300. Fluorescent, eeeek lh Serlil veseeve | 200 FT. Drayton “e pores _Sondilon “Sniy Gas dl 61300. a a _resceat "HAS “Orchard Geis, SPR ge oa | hte ts, rat mat] me 92 Gal. Electric | sugeng. 1 cane FEES | sie mea v * ’ ’ . oe . > Se asveeas wrmouvow |g fiOMES -BARTRAM Giroux & Hicks not “iies ce. | Burke Lumber | strata Hw 4 i INER CO. controls, suis aatit BaR" gs stk | Sele Subectan Prop aA | on un att “"Ba.in rum ee Con nany rected SE tare Soe new oll Dy peves = ‘. rm 6-033! 13 HP JET aetna etude | CALL FARM baba dan x) PRICES SLASHED | snus riny wicca. mnie wht eal tom. ound Oni . Terms s reg lengths, $275 per } what you want. Only a try home, located For Sale Farms 48 a ee ee trade) CHOREMASTER GNOWPLOW A a Thoms S N. of Rochester O C—O eOeOeOOOeeere” a a asher, floor m < la mower. e Joseph F. Reisz) ta “n*tittng te hudeer 5% ACRE FARM ee ase s¢|_ ew Fe Saas” NTME EMS 4 QUE R lence Coppeitive Resi Metals Enchangt | Showa! oy open o"™ | }o ee eae Prigigary (jem ones: 80898) SULATE NOW aye SER et REPAIRED TO CHARLES a Ds sere ean | Hay raw Maytag empmatie.......... $2888] ” AND SAVE MONEY a 5; seeks 2 and evergreens. (with ’ $130.95 rage For Sale Lots 46 . bedroom, suite, blonde 4139.98 . A. Benson QUALITY "Costs. Lass ag Sa bower toa L. C. LADD me step tables, ‘on M.A, Benson | * Dj. ood Cre Ute beautiful bic or square | 12_lote 40 ft Sewer and weter im. Dixie Hwy. Drayton J] prepa ag ieee: 6 086 | “Cia pon POR yw prick sanches Soe cunte or squnee | ™ ee end af Pee Terme M | 200 Dinte Bey. ndays wansamn @biass Ark. ELAYTON’S _ PE 4788) i ts. ‘thee gem on ee BY BRADWAY COMPANY T_ACKES. NO. BUILDINGS ry) ’ Furniture, Appliances vas Phir tov ote at Kitchen cabinet doors & aeren ermons TEMPUS | 160 ialesiie Ww ae : ’s painted!” “ ip Ra. 5% DISC PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO. oT ecaras S |ar or wee Pinar eae Wpesignon foe | “Sealy wt bas ses tae - PHA terms. | _ 6116. wt : INTER. | ie OAL. mee ELFEN 9S room. path | Ideal Ranch Homesite |PARM FOR SUB-DIV oe. unities 51| Money to Loan 53 . oo incldes many ener pains | 52 aL aes Ge eee ae Se ne Bequtifully shaded. High snd dry foe'tarruing purogses, Huron. _| Business Opport = (State Licensed Lenders) SOLID WALNUT OVAL TOP Also BLAYLOCK Cab ink fittings sant 8B a a Wehers bake Wee’ setae @ ACRES, 3 BEDROOM MODERN ae ee. os Ge = ee TO $500 colea e Welke, L_& BUILDING SUPPLY CO | Laundry pty too. ‘8 Saginaw Bt. included. on ht to beach. Only | #, ACR bara, 63780. dows, Mids “THE BIRD te vee, BAXTER b LIVINGSTONS soe x; a ge of 8 stent fr Orebard 7 al a SROOHETT OED SINGER SEW. $1,363 DOWN close to Eliz. Lake. 4 ; 286 a. rade A. é NEAR FENTON . | 4_W. Lawrence St. PE ¢1 furriture and NITURE CONGA WALL 2%c ave mace | machines $29.50. ey rooms, bath, c ~ room, na Lots—$15 Dn., $15 Mo. ea alll home tio‘ioe "down. r and Wine takeout. nggers & MAIN shiner pon se TALS ox a. 287 5. Saginaw on ag ~ bome page ag Rg sale oe trontag others to choose from as pumps, living Good 1220 Baldwin SPEC Smith's, ee ot 94.980. = “ bow "Also ee ee re. hag Fenton, paca * ey hy ye BH Pree Parking rE bm? 2 pe. mohair living room suite $49 CHROME DINETTE SETS. ASSEM- | a pore bag “| America's “ Wonderful building ‘sites. MA 96406 of Ext “enfora So ed fe 60. | cash POR ALL KINDS OF USED | White *Plonde ‘bedroom sulle | $58 | Ble poe Pee lee eiise |) ten ee coe New. guar. Be EE OST et | Panne wpa aro 79¥s ACRES OPPORTUNITY | Sealttrarry, vos, So *e see Soe ee |e eren yee | Semel oae Se Teie| Sobttat belt tar tiet Es FE 4-0521 —_— a Ripe for on. 7 7 a. pipeincl gave waiting |" = FRIENDLY SERVICE Case OR on Sait. —— agaren - Sages a Gee qelpes” Come in | a used =o ard Lake Ave aie Fe eae. On POR BETTER MOMES, SEE Brayton Pini Level, abivtce | Tu, suaasd hi a6, pared DENCE OO oer OE TE akc aas | Serene, breaktaad oot oo HES ciahace “picritan? "gjss | RIMFORCED CONCRETE SEP Co-operative Heal, Bstale “Eswangs | CHEROKEE HILLS! itn Usanay iam tad" shallow. foad. Thi story, building het wee eee MAIN | See eee Oakland Furniture Michigan Ave + OF | tte ion Ong WEA PERSE = r m - + . 4 SC esses | Sot Eee ak | Spats abe ROCHESTER, MICH. peaeri pete nace” UEP | 8 Sa aS | eB “af fey sect beer ot beth Lake . $43,500. . kitehen, ¥ _ $25. to. 4, : , or doors | _©- OT eae ber a ag 4 greph Rd.-and select your site ” ACRES cencnad ae tnd > ath “Needs Wan Gros. i aves PORT AULSBI $100 “rE E ~ ic PRIOIDAIRE unit you hove seen ‘us All weed SEE Us BEF tt — as 24 room. se LIVESTOCK burgandy, | ea TWENT PRIGIDAIR storing $ room, Neat IRD, Realtor = frontage north of | Som Deo with 62000 dows, HOUSEHOLD GOODS _ i ree (AG SR] Mam colt owned. L& 1V Ling’ afta ai tee af. fenunges Palacie A tame CARL pila Hetnoa! aah Bie Rochester: Meteora rea L C LADD Ph. Rochester OL Lethaia 121 | SELUXE FRIAS | STOvS used Maytag washer se Aveing ond Stee iM oh with fat Soe terms. Gas . Terms. Bateman m ares. & farm home. barn. 29 stan- ° . PRIENDLY . with wonder ste. Oa ‘bsres "| Used y ...) g3a'es - Fuccrom nd re Tht | ett SOONG atte omen Soe Taga GS i |e Dice er, organ rams) WHEN VOU NEED BLECTRIC anvet Deer) ‘sed GaaSitutee ERE oul ORES yo ree eS v street nea: . * farm SEs peel —* model, ov eu | controls. ry a lloneliscne a Nissi at bestabew a $20- 500 A eeeameatonitign es “CRUMP. ELECTRIC AYTON EALLOWWELL JAY tung, BREW int Pe usse. " e . a a Can seen . . | . . Pike. FE 4-5005. — Tee oe er OR RENT. #2 E. Beverly. | Rd 4-3873 Pumps : FY - . KNUDSEN or Prove PE $3000. a ive x sae QUEEN BE | “Sroplems "you ean ry 7 y a fF - pers, Ovaresteed. | USED TRADE-IN DuPont ighertor ssmigioss $3.19 gal | ’ F E * ¢ pm. __Phoue 3 . ; yaa . > E n to 9 pm «150x150 " “Bensumers Power — | “Skuse ot illness sedis, | mente Telephone user call ai Bre Rotax —O000 — GOMDE DEPT. McBride Hyon | STORER AND COAL PURNACE a a onal see eee in piscass tastmomciar ar 20t 2 Statler, SBE ormmeommargy to ure seme Toe Weel Bat, 38 home with one bed-_ sot! with excellent ——— ——— RE- A size elec stove mt ne a i ae Gece tos | Sh ee a artridgqe) STATE _ sscaic*werimoncos Kooi a eB | FUANG POSES ee | aia Pink Bie Pee amr ing . ‘ | . er conic’ = tte . ment with plenty ed possibintics | 2,8 mederalely restricted area P t g TAN FOR QUICK SALE | 3" pe" fiving room su fis.os | FE 5-016 : on 2 rs ee ee | Oe Ge oe ‘ FINANCE CO. sebold furniture. Very |8 pe. dining room set $45.95 UEL OIL TANKS pe OM gersge and 2 landicaned rots | om oo . ) 3 ve store.| 18 THE “BIRD" TO SEE FE 4-1574 nite Teevooabie A few entiques Upholstered” cose escapee ron. 10 tm loge, enuge. yenteg | $82 is Washer, 12,800 with $3,000 down will take this lot| 39 # frontage : 702 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. a Pe PARKING Delt neods = sccsien apgres. Apri ist | gay ts ieontes a's wise bor- Brisk fests. Gs go of Fee BAR, GRILL FOR SALE GUARANTEED B FREE PAR "Ss 85-1467. ; a BAL cop ake ; . Prontag eet mr S & 2” STEEL IN mink Seminole Hills Le tod, eine Enos A 4658 | on crcombination. Main'siTeet | Gevena, Eomiad toan comp.| fesriers oS uv, Puc ony ___| PORRACES EE 5, SEES BF shirts” fur ‘cape Al - , “4 bedrm. home with 1% baths | 100x190 ee eee comes’ Ineotins right dowstows. | tw HURON BT. rE pms} Vacuum cleaners. $198 | Tae GAs BANOS, 400.50 AND | Fx STANOING TOILETS 633.98.) dion PE ! Also ist floor den Large rec- | NORTH OF PONTIAC pope bony Call for further Ge | Over $30,000 gross Will Roy's 96 Oakland VE 321 up. R. B. Munro Electric, eeadl a 3 Saeed CLesnea per reation rm. Fimished irq fir Scenic homesite for a ranch t bed as : FOR BALE. 1 USED BED AND . Huros. 21x32 bath set, with | — Thompeon, - 6. Sela be eote warmest | Eee a od me OYD KENT, Realtor BUSY GRILL Up to old crib and mattress, Mat ¢-bsee. | A pg | Ci - e ap 2 ” | saa ay tine , . CNL, . mai Irena ertb and WO ROOM riental rug. MI 60614 = — COL The FER WM. H. KNUDSEN home for veetier ving. As ‘ew Ei Lawrence 4, vm Seu Sesie gman. be Pigeon tory $500 CASH Parte} PE e-4e13. one Second comic a ae a eave uMBI am perce | Oe aT perry: REALTOR = Ir s Power location on main street. eo » Rd, Between Waites | 180 5. Cee eee Re | pereeins pe ~~ bie REA Bank Bide ee | how te Sensumers Power Good, steady ee for You Today c| FoR SALE OR Lipe We fod Bete, 7 MICA . ng ligne = A, Bie t Ph cE tase © Des) Peg Mm bullding sie $2..* | DIXIE HWY ae eee Eites priees ga me ay A ah SS Sa ee a | WAYNE GABERT’S a Terme ae eS PERSO: te . schoo from new : Buckners tp the : | ay || “2 =) 0 217 $1.95 es. . SIODGRT BUMOAOG POLE | eed ands, “igee, “a Dus, schools @ by 100. Prame Ty TIN ed Airport R4_ APPLIANCE Tadic tops desk. ter, OL 20011. > wanen nes L | and stores. Only 7 dove. NLY BOWLING vears RADIOS $5-06-08-Gi0. FE) w legs in — T LUMBER gg fg gg ty _ 735 on Sone Me. in town. Best of equipment, UCKNERS THE RE et _ 56 WASH. } SPECIALS “FLOOR SHOP TALPOTT i sce or rei DIXIE HWY. eeu Gears leue ware LIABLE UpTeBA ov “Ske Gas Ma Eacine ave. 0, FE nace fo cute. Oe oe id ae ware ae tas at 2 ~ ee ek neat Ser! cusses mm eth coment tek! Srenrets fi only « ve WELL TREATED. tines. os ay gg BS gy SALE. ie SHEETS OF Senile sump Pe S YLVAN Saat haat ate on Sain ee See | Ste aT eee pene en. | a8 spans. PENaim afer 30, itgeer” fir sample oom j=! Wiieeck. PMbution: | Sytem for sree $150 down rear. Terms. snd tna pg A or iport time om. | — | a = 2442. | wall tu . 1035 | (ELAGE contaty merece, | RIDGEWAY [warp SR Bucket tJhery | HOTPOINT Bra nacorai “hee “Se teaps Mins Syne ee en uae | Caro CoxAiR Git PORNO VILLz . | Corner lot with city water a | FE 46203 | MICHIGAN B USINESS you ere siwsys sure % Now only $17 floor . ; 8A ALL WORK | Orevety * eoudtiicn. San. face site for @ moderate | 975 Balaute Exchange| SPECIALISTS IN B considerate treatment . Milx’s Appliances. 1483 13) N. Saginaw ——— SHARPENED. | s good condition. bret }, bedroom ‘heme falt — mine "L ADD | Seepesess o_Rest — — THROUGHOUT MICHOAN BETTER SAFE THAN SORRY a smoodward. —, < WALNOT prcarome dinette vo tT ene ne 8 ee OLVERIRE m plaster. Te ~ > : 2 — _ 7 rapes . fireplace, knotty — 5 he WEST ° . 7: obtain ep to 8800 te | i ,asOCK MAN'S STORM | ee ee ne oe. a ea tee es heat poe "with ixie Hwy Drayton Plains § seres soned for a heutans, ~~ TAVERN on or. any Gay at ogg wtosk Co. Tees , -— s Rannanebie. “EE a See cle fae teaser Ot Sn Sass” ope Vitro | bees Smt ie pentane, | Mia at Seeley" ey sind | Tas Du A OR cmos wb Ee se pie Mee Et eons ° v - bn sections — sDM less ' — _ ~ _ installeg. $24,000, rE sie. Fe " Ghoice locations ‘in Pontine Buta S this ig sold we bave =| tourent pustnces ‘man wie | Pad toe think . ior heat ef ELECTRIC RANGE ALL ELECTRIC TOOLS, APPLI.| fee Wiese seer Deviecn, Koo | <4 +5000 pn Sunda ee individua: elcome. i e tonight. = hour i ble +6661. rholesaie te L nT. v....... wae carry Bomrom AVE lncosbe | ereverty Geninet Mr ee ee eee, Realtor | fross,s.000 mo. Good lease *| NEED AT WoovEr VACUUM Like _WEW, GENERAL W at ee “jmesbine “sad et wit eet pen teas | For Sale Acenge wtsege -.) reven| “)ScmpH F REISZ roe tance ‘wie’ atyris, Waree “Oar: | 2280 Diste Ney. PARE FREE WALTON TV) | ai passe rae oi Near Oskland. & room a palintetdh gs. uw. wrence Eves. . a. * PE 2-0250 | makes . — Walton, Cor. Joslyn PE 32-2257 ——— tifully ——OOCOH P e 53% W. Hurea foe dens ~ t . - GOAL COM- | waar possible 2 ee xen te ™ ‘Sale Land Contracts 52) Bi ickr 1er ee Win mean eaves wok | Artiata® supplies, hobby gg Sg — Se COMBINATION DOORS. | WHITE Small eed. lary houses tm and BUILDERS, LAND ~ A Scares | FINANCE COMPANY ve 600.00. Blighty eee aad | supplies—check our new) [hs Parke. 8st. rakes, 616.0, srenre : ne we some D EVEI OPERS Rent-Lease Bus Prop 49 (voy. ot whitemore iemore. Write, be ae | anevs Wadeers bight oon “models at terrific ye or.| Classification Sane” Garage Doors CHI RCH S INC. FE_2-2163 or spapendontennied - Apt. JB. Bay | Ce North Saginaw aod Hu Michigan : lies” No. 24A. _2-0233 4 ROSE MCLARTY i Es ENT COMMERCIAL : Corner ; chard Lake Ave _ _ and Supplies ot number 2 doors) TING BUSL a MOVE IN AT ONCE || prot ciotma sore ot | FES Gl GQineeraat EER, COREE OS | Oe i a ‘suai ab Pam 8 3, Great th ager “Ee eee Aa e * e, . : ; - old; x a ce . ee eet . : Past oet| Sia |e eee eee ae io ok Ree Bee te ning throug ie — ao en a CEL. TV ivmnatl cl’ wee VA ; ehein . .. sum eq z ey a "igs Vorgdon *tbock tm Fee INVEST [Linourva noon sre” gam| Sout Sams, 'boe an “Sled | Biznn boom sates co. | Se" bispenaemt Jeers? closets, gelored. bath \furtures 116 ACRES wed ter eevnse & name. 3. B.| coal foersi ‘Giscoumts, Cou PE | | ‘Armetreng’s jase Tue tee| |) CONE’S se HAND BRAIDED | Tnoterial aed ~ 25 PER CENT Se te Mico eg | WANTED pAcrORY BEMBORG.| fate 'e"Pk toc hae De tel |— Fora os Loans Hi cL Atle ORI TT is AODIOM WEARING AIDS ARE | _\"rsiot"any ase. wave | | 25 F Siteriot patois” Dis . best parcels * ry : - BEA tee ou _te color, « a J features thronghout. ze ioe! Sten mile of paved read “Aporon 5.000 sq. ft. Pontiac Press J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor LOW INTEREST | ROORE eat, a anon “ot nolay: get free trial, be com ee es _—— Continued colors Cekiand A good buy at $10. with low | henner $700 an acre e E. Walton Bivd. Open Eves. os. ited funds for single family S ’ S, ve! Aodod sasyet ats BA 1%” Blenket ........ be 84. rt. y gore A See pagment, Ghowe by egpets Business Opportunities 51 eney to Lean = 55 | Punnet fate te _aecties | civiNG ROOM SET. GOOD CON- inette car bed. stroller, playpen. | } et KD Do tf YOURSELF SEPTIC TARE OHN J. DYER | eee i oe = ETERSON | dition te. "407 Central a ien — Me _PE S207, ALER COST. | s-n1z" D.68. No. 3. 13\s¢ Lin. PR. Meieaner ‘Only 98.8 © 4. tne J i, “eM san | — Located be ehy ttmite All SALE. BEAUTY snop, rus-| —(Stste Licenses Lenders) H. G. PET Bank Bldg. es ae edie aad: Gael nie, ak eee ee OSE: Re. 3 fesse Lan, vu | com. 00 8. Perry. ooo _Commoree Re. igh gE ge y equipped. Good year sround By a or FE $4T72 | ning mirror ‘Lage three, mir- or brands bal’ os wel een | oe ee 4 ee | FOR THE +g’, — A fiat. le business. Walled Lake. MArket Need oney FE 50008 of FE $- ne table $50 Call FE s* but ere well known jx ¢' D coe , Delta, Skj{'trol, Falls and I—No Down Payment te ripe, 6180 an cere. -¢+181i, Sy 5S ror gerd evening of all day off i man, This is ‘not a) HAGGERTY | Pgorter-Cable Miller's drills G hh ments. g cS RM. MODERN HOME. REASON- tic ~~ — — wen ad. We simply are ciear-— "MBER CO | Stanley vower tools, saws, — | en oe 205 ACRES * ible. $1800. down. Pull price tr as near as your me: YOUR vacant city — ***_ — ou. 3054 machines because L LU} wanes Laxe | 20d senders a 3 and 3 bedroom Homes.| vy A approved One = $10,000. 561 8. 4 | Just eal — PS $3000 ——- MONTGOMERY WARD WASHING } “Miller Carden & Laws | 1047 ——* yet 41004 F J POOLE CO. c. PAnoUS ge Bed taywhere, 3. miles norm ef | SERVICE STA sauire vat oi F 5-812] EXCHANGE YOUR” Ls | Coe | machine,’ geod contition. 69 Fawipment. 153, orth meh pas — = oun HOME . 7° ; FE 41504 Ontario 13s Reverse Charges | anywhere. 3 miles north © Garni tmventery. tag tract (Where you have sold prop- Boston 8 Muron Gardens = Fautpment 188) Sen er ooy with on MC. LITTLE 15: Osuiand ave mae. i. CASS LAKEFRONT Low down payment BO Neonte o PROFIT BAR refinancing.. erty) for late model ag cash | 083 ; mingham Phone: Midwest — For non om utility room oF PLOOR SANDERS, POWER 113. frontage. 2. bedroom finn Edw. M. Stout, Realtor “input, you tw the ae ge Poe eo — we CHEV. + DR DeLUXE. SELL MAYTAG WASHING MACHINE Bath TUS AND Ta DOW! | eutemetie decttype eit farmece, tools, cham seve, Oe a ee e. Needs some a «| Ldw. M.* Seekhs able soft ice cream and . purpose, most loans ‘o jand contract. Also ee | we OFS _ | 8 sim it reelf. PETRO a Jackson's Rental ae ee Se SE he Ce oa aa a eee 3 ROOMS [pitches fituree Mautomese| Best “service,” atsociateg “Ltn ORM SASH ing on this J see us. G. R. ‘| ment plan GOOD CLEAN ° pi a fixe oll 001. = .S M > 99,950. \% down, ———| $138. Washington, “Royal Oat. tor "80 pickup truck. FE 43284. bil and gas water Meeam” and |_ After hours, FE = We .. $178 0145) Case Biteabeth ot ake a. 1) 4Q Acres—Metamora _ Phone i Sse. Home & Auto FistOn DIRECT DRIVE PAINT OF NEW AND USED end ocal balers i Teed OT be ae proved. foy use 08 — Comb pene 5 +4 FE 5-128 FE ¢3844 Open 9 to 1 | : ' low in a aoe A a thKATES ON A t : S SU sumer’s . ; "50, | Alum. Comb. + ae Bomvdarnicwn. Pe 'swek | {2cciuat Sethe inetuoe BROWN |Loan Company aa pair Seateg marpened | FURNITURE 1] Eee re. oC ee CEE WEEDON = : 3 bedrooms t : s Hardware, : or lamps Phone F! ~ and bottled 1961 8. Tel eaters ee) Seer oe GET ASH QUICKLY marie ieee ae SRLS! ais | See ee Fm ee > wi new : R ae . Se "os eepareen bias’ bear =") BEAUTY SHOP. |"GET CASH Q "ET Sr vere | a ee Se Sa, ER — | Hentincame ac, vaniers | Quire . , | = : pe Mac-O- Zz 2 bedroom jake front bungalow. year, around business, roo: Up to $500 TRADE YOUR OLD HOUSE ON A modern. $79.50 OFF {ce "faints, Phone Fu tes. | OSE OR TOOLS BO YOUR OWN brick and Kmectone with best | Clarkston Area ston] elientel in -— title 5-4628. bed with boards. $70|__Lec paints. Phy PHoTOGRAPH. ™™= stock soll, sewer efock and house, hes 2 fireplaces, 2 baths, 97 acres with lake frontage,| munity, on ee bee | 1946 to 1963 cars. ec oe ne tanh CONTRACT Dresser. chest, full size b ( 6&8 te, chocting beards. O78 inraaneTED im PROTOGRAPH. plete stock Montcaim * Buidery Seeaatrtes Sega | ‘ear suming oo se: Senay” ho” yn | Reta ie Cee oe memes | TRADE OUpatanees German tor | Sets a $99.50" sect iy Ervstiat rraveed, , event me Stes tah and rriday vhrouen. Weaveedey tleman's . other securities. | or used : ling, $218 : -| £ & SUPPLIES A ment with cooking facilities, modeled home. 2 NY 1 one | Of” SRAILER EXCHANGE TY ITEMS fiding. “#210 M. Inside end out-| EQUIPMENT, GiA.| § to 6: h. Closed every Thursday : fireplaces, 2‘— baths, den, 4 L. H. BROW N, Realtor | } FE 32-3200 MANY =—- siding. at wholesale price, CAMERAS & 4 i UP. |---| Goods 62 rome pedresme, cnctese’ perch, | . Huron 8t. Pe 2-4830 O AK $2 6. _Telegregh thin s $100, 02.00 and 63.90 eal KITCHEN SINKS PROM 63.78 UP. —“Gol) Musicas Soames’ Saat S.A Immediate possession. Will Member Co-op Real Batate. —— - dawn Devens. Ss. THOMAS ECONOMY nil "Busie ey, sn Oneeeton $10.30, é A Thompeon. #8) ACCORDRONS, PACTORY PRICES. 2 berms, garage, well house, cil = er 2 ALASKAN BRAL PUR COAT, 0100. cient : Perry, | Binroll ta eur school now. ° : . er: if T I TA VATORIES COMPLETE WITH nomce Grepery, iow = I | Do It Now LOAN CO Ale boule Or FE 21872, wih cing co * ea ie Get te cordions, leaned. . Basement Apt. Pnieken picker will take smaller Roy Annett ne, Get, inte @ ery siecning business FE ? 9206 ae Oo ae To c= tebigan a BURMEISTER’S tollets bathtubs. shower stale. st it Pian - ir a : Ave. TTRESS AND HOLLYWOOD anced. Wicioan Pinsguenenk 1G fLa KING JEROR GAZA- INCOMES PBderei 21183 ine a “wonderful net return for eee WiNrEn Coa re sine | MA You save. Closed MBER marred 980. io aave cuveenl Seeomen. ¢ tas. | My Se nventage and en is food, We, eles and i's Drofite: 302 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. | 7 ane a nary tine jacket, size on. Get. mubere 00 Witenes. YS Orchard Lake Ave. Bo YOU WANT T0, SKIL YOUR income. ineome, Check No. 3310. and « black oe c= a a =o. Set aera ee fy "Bar & Building F Tromuais,, ooLD ano, Gaowt | Fono® Ong DME Bex" | TWO YARDS LUMBER satey consoue Pine PIN eral different locations to choose A beautiful 10 acre parcel. Close r S a ggg size 10. rina | 1685 Rockwel’ St. in ® PONTIA “eg 4 manthe New trom, to Pootiec, with a live year length, Pe 6-4262. chard, , OPEN 8 A.M TO 8 I"s6"- | Bench to match. pa mn around wn Tt | tecated tm the center of the [AGd al, GOAT. Zi — Cc & Cc, 9t| Sheetrock and Rockiath, aeeat a SWIKT & ROGA| SACRE IV ESTHTEN ear Soe toe Seemed Scene ere ww AR | Sen er, Rey | Pa ot te a 4 . - . . ee re . boards, : . VL. ~ | WIN ROSA Hwy. Just 2 mit north of Mis Propert ~ eh . ot batinese "end Extra Fast LapY's J+ og Bg Bs Ra innersprine mettresses. oad ixta kK Pioe ph he ge oo ae oe, Rome One Se | oy, Saginas PE 5-6222 REAL ESTATE CO-OP MEMBERS | This parce! has ® con dann! «bee. tee avatietie. Savestt: | ‘ and beige check, size eo oe o£ 4 “mattresses. $49.50 | 131 rod EF epecial, pee © ccs! fur pir mete wag BB ‘pa? Baldyin Avenue the. veoperty’ eles with “Sees ake no. Dean Service | ae AGE Bea OER COAy | Cee EerIne mattrocses. 008% 2s red fie cpectal per Mf oms.ce | 5. fs. Pha 50101 20544 FE 22161 ihe property $6500 ; | MAN'S NAVY BLUE OVERCOAT. i Hollywood bed treme... 55 | ae red fir special per m $ 110 . Oak & tet Bee % bE mews Towraag | Soe Or STATEWIDE. | rm serene wwpegaey sineetem Hagen Siiakres, cen (a8 Bs Sp eee BR pees Be remahee Ge eth Laks | QU paved road 4 mi. north of Service of Pontise | 90 signature. car, or furniture. Eevee nena kt ne 0 re 1% Gate ey sores, Sieanet Lake Pontiac. This parcel includes 2 Estate od Loans mace - Up to : i * | Unfinished qhalve.......++4-+ 50 | Loose ol ..... . 4 fa. pear +5031. acres of large timber and 1 iio 4 t.— B. J =. any be sony = aa - Rens. | oes sofa beds...... os = INCOME PROPERTY wen se down ey ENO) dean ne) = ae a ONTHERN, BEAL PUR COAT. | 82%, davenport sleeper with im ° Scopes wey tase “etl ater "seo rat ae, jut sort ot| For lease—Modern 2 stall] P11 JCEEICY D | sommny sas |W. retura for your investment. level land service station. Good gal- head . ? og Whe rea ee . Fine location. > Gail". H. Cole Oi Cos} EE TNANCE |Past FE 29173, | _ ns gente Sapone ‘phe Kay mie | , fa Stage Dee, area's fixtures and a. : + 80. Seca SHOPPING : : ¢ cutrige. paint ‘ie bay MAKE rs : AS ses i Bn vs “TPR BURMEISTER - “, QPPORTU iT Rs single vst Jour, . © Oreneaily 6:30 til Northern Lumber Co. - Por ha an Py mins dealer fran or com chise on ’ ve eee ee __ Boats & Accessories 85 85 SAY onan BOR! MICH. . CHAINSAW DISTRIBUTORS We have used chainsaw ant from $35. Fang = for $190 50. MY 3-582] for rentals SILVER KING DIRSCT DEVE GUNS—BUY, SELL. TRADE Leach, 10 ley } MP 30-06 Le Swing mount. $138. OR Sand, Gravel & Dirt 66 cr STONE Greve) and fill dirt rad gue GARDENS © FISH AND TEs 87 N. at E 42853 CANARLI STRAW. CORN, OATS RA BALED 08 A ya one haha ee TE 4 of Satur- bay MO, Samy ser gr Soa AND STRAW. Ww. FE ALL KINDS WAY STRAW. OATS, Slog ser 1A'basel_“*™ Pin aN ee HAY—STRAW DELIVERED PE 407s — FE +1113 Powmac 8D AT OPDYKE clover. MA Both for $75. MA | $3802. 198 8. _ Saginaw - mat BUY A GARDEN TRAC- chap saw, weighs 190.38 Briggs ‘& Btratten, Clinton Wis- eonsip & Power Products En- — Parts & repairs for al) ick’s s Air Cooled Engines SIMPLICITY GARDEN T Tuition, 62917 after 6 p aS E. Smart, Sale Fram ae tae EVERY For § For Sale Hous: e Housetrailers ‘ 78 “‘Parkhurstt: Tr Trailer Sales All trailers on hand at big savings | Demos 1540 , 1 mile _north of Lake _MY 24611. 7] PT. SPORTSMAN TO! e i f ee sree a ay i I z i = O ee) > tr APARTMENTS s pipe 3 pf i 93 rt a c a = e. ° =" cs ° * Fi 22 f%. to 4 ft. tm length. Up te 5 years to pay. You can buy « Les Hutchinson reconditioned trailer as low as $108 down. Hutchinson’s Trailer Sales Phone OR 3-1 Corner 8 Mile Rd. Mound. Ph | For Sale Livestock 72 OUERNSRY. COW. ¢, YEARS OLD. $7308 cl — Attention: Auto Owners ATTENTION! — ~ = eee to 1964 We have sev- at tase model ah wy mileage = silos: and ‘body parts. parts. Rebuilt 8 ~ Wanted Livestock 73 St LEINES OF LIVESTOCR ALSO kens and rm tools. H. P. Sutton. MY 2-6432. For Sale Poultry 74 “Eas miles wal at whee “Sale | Farm Produce 75 ae Hon con ott Pe y. . out Baldwin to Clark- . and voltage commen. | SCHRAM AUTO PARTS 2539 Dixie PE 4-4533 FOUR a parrewELs U. 8 Royal tires, tubes and wheels ‘“# Ford V4 . Perfect me- banically. M: heater. Ph. | Midwest 42211 after 3:30. 4 CADILLAC WHEELS 1 month oid, new $138 each, Ae amt Ave, Ph. FE 4-4513 “1 Ou 5 WANTED | Pontiac 8 motor for "49 or "SO. hydramatic. Phone OR 3-5313. Auto Service 8 aarsee pre & PAINTING FREE ESTIMAT E AUD ATMENT PLAN BRAID MOTOR SALES Ear! 8. Mastick Co. Milford, M5® at Milford Rd Ph. Milford Mu | — _ 48042 or MU 4-8078. a | NEW AND REBUILT GRAIN drills and spreaders. Clinton chain saws. Lincoln farm weld- ers. Davis Machinery, Phone 45 Ortonville TRUCK GOING _ load eithe CLEAVING FOR b EVINRUDE MOTORS PENN mun Yan “ boats. Marine Nee trailere Everything for the boats) Owen's Cruisers OWEN MARINE SUPPLIES 396 Orchard Lake Ave. PE 23-8020 Transportation Offered 87 | isso Ford ~ BONNIE'S DRIVEAWAY Cars to Texas. Gas Bg ® oil ished. FE 4-3580. ; calm. furn Mont- CARS READY |} FOR 8 BALT y LAKE. San Francisco Denve PONTIAC DRIVEAWAY SERVICE FE 45139 53% Union 8t ) NORTH. PART d either way FE 5-6606. NEWPORT NEWS. want riders to he share expenses. F Va, Feb. 3 drive & 5-3823. ——— OOOO CALIF. BUYER HERE WTD. SCRAP AND CHEAP CARS FE 3-9467 or FE 2-2666 eves. THE HIGH DOLLAR Por high grade used cars. We 1953 __Wanted Used Cars 88) e THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955 For Sale Used Cars 91 TAYL OR CHEVROLET 1954 Chevrolet deluxe sedan. Pontiac 2 door. 1953 Chevrolet deluxe 2 door. 1953 Chevrolet special 2 My Pick TAYLORS at Blea Lake i 1831" e “Market. #1561 "48 CHEVIE CLUB cou HEATER. $50 CASH AND SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS 60 WASHINGTON THIRD FLOOR APARTMENT. RING DOORBELL FOR STEVENSON. Plenty Other Late Models and Transportation Specials 115 8. Saginaw 54 Chev. Bel Air Four door model, with radio, power equipment, windows, heat- er and Powerglide $1,489 ) — LATE MODEL Wrecked cars and junk cats. Hol- lerback's Auto Parts. FE 86-1431. 254 5 Saginaw St iso 1 INTERNATIONA! AL Excellent ti WANTED. LATE MODEL CARS. MUST BE CLEAN & SHARP Bring title—Money waiting at GLENN'S MOTOR SALES FE ¢7371 For Sale Used Trucks 90 16.‘ TON DODOE PICKUP condition. Private owner. FE 96107. — condition ji FORD. ao TON PICKUP, Ex EM 34625. <DOMP. , TRUCK. . vl with rE 1951 PONTIAC SEDAN DELIVERY O95 LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer PH. OL 1071) “VOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS A ___ GOGD PLACE TO BUY” ™% TON po . Sharp con Lake Orion Motor Sales M2 Buckhorn Lake, Lake Orica MY 22611 till 9 p.m. SPECIAL 1951 — Pickup WIL <on GMC 908 S. Woodward FE 4 -4531 For Sale Used Cars 91 1954 BUICK 5,000 miles, ws scott" Scott Lane Ra. 194 BUICK CENTURY RIVIERA. radio, heater, 1952 SabinLac sitse. 1 CADI Birmingham in? CADILLAC, 4 DR SEDAN. ‘53 BUICK Dynaflow, radio and heat- er. Whitewall tires. Tint- ed glass. Clean and -in | excellent condition. One owner. Siac = = 7360. Door. Power steering. eer ory. glass, white walls, ete. 31708. = ——— condition. Bunker's Gatage, Keego Harbor 53 CADILLAC $ DR. N Walt - GLASS. R & HA i *AND TS AND MANY MANY M EXx- TRAS. THIS CAR IS GUAR- ANTEED. . OWNED BY LOCAL EXC Jerome's Orchard Lake at Cass FF 8-0488 [AC i963, @% DOOR. RA. dio r. Hydramatic, power . power brakes,-easy eve glass, rear seat tT. Good as new. 62.895. Carkner-Studebaker MI 4-3410 side walls. conditton. Shared « 53 CADILLAC Jerome's “Bright Spot” Orchard Lk. Ave. at Cass 8-0488 | 1952 Buick 4 dr. need them. Drive the extra mile, MICHIGAN’S it Daag pay you well. 4540 Dixie FINEST "HL. VANWELT THE BIG PAVED LOT Jo ums “wood ak ease eh oan FETS, Set ROM cuemncur e stn BILL SPENCE “miles PE S7347__ $1.05. > USED CARS ides LET FLEET LINE 62 Oakland Ave. PE 46-7333 | sedan. Clean. $198. FE 31542. | Seman ‘cana, OR CHAP cana |, SoEvE 22 SSIES PUTS | NOW BUYING f AN CARS GOOD * | 88@_8. Woodward Birmingham |) TRANSPORTATION fy te Seaas noe. REASONABLE WANTED: USED CARS ‘so TO | 12 CHEVROLETS $225 EACH. ‘$4. GM and Ford 101 W. Huros JEROME DRE bot 54 Chevrolet WANTED: LATS MODEL WRECK | Oise “‘Powerglide pig ghee Bagley Auto Parts = “sl. 989 ity BAGLEY _ = MICHIGAN’S See M&M Motor Sales So ean ee Por dollar on late model ca: FINEST THE BIG PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD 53 Chevrolet 2 Dr. Here is a neat and clean sedan, ‘radio and heater MICHIGAN'S FINEST THE BIO PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD Gimmicks Truthful, simple language sells more cars and makes more friends. That’s why OLIVER BUICK rolls on and on. We DO NOT give you nine years to pay — we DO NOT make your pay- ments—we DO NOT antee. BUT we DO sell at the lowest/ best of our ability and| we DO figure the lowest payments possible at a fair interest rate. And above all—our salesmen are courteous. OLIVER Motor Sales CARS TO CHOOSE FROM $495 1950 Ford 2 dr. with ra- dio, heater and excellent starting on cold morn- ings. $795 1951 Buick 4 dr. with ra- dio, heater and Dyna- flow. Very clean appear- $895 1952 Chevrolet. 2 drs. and 4 drs. Radios and heat- ers. 2 to choose from. $1095 1952 Pontiac 4dr. Radio, heater and Hydramatic. Ready to roll. $1195 Radio, heater and Dynaflow. Good value. $1395 1953 Pontiac 4 dr. Chief- tain Deluxe 8. Two tone paint, and one owner. 1953 Buick 4 dr. Roadmas- , ter. Radio, heater and all the power equipment. NO DOWN PAYMENT SPECIALS % MONTHS TO PAY '49 Dodge Clb. Cpe ’50 Buick Tudor '49 Ford Tudor ’ 49 Buick Tudor "48 Pontiac Fordor "48 Chevrolet Sedan . | 50 Pontiac Tudor ee! 'SO Dode Fordor OLIVER Buick Sales icke Gentine Retail give you a lifetime guar-| CARNIVAL by Dick Turner I U © Pot OFF. {MEA Service. ne. Se ie ob i Soyer 8 $: - s ceaal? 4 = | | \h UF ie ‘Talk about your old mov ies! Look there! A parking place in front of a department store!” For Sale Used Cars 91 “Goodwill Used Cars” 53 CHEVROLETS — | $895 to $995 | 2 door models with radio. heater. , Ready w go. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE j 65 Mt. Clemens 8t FE 37117| ChEV. 1951. WHITE WALL — radio snd heater $500 FE 54-3963. 54 Chev. Bel Air | FINEST THE BIO PAVED Lor THE CORNER OF | WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD) BIG DISCOUNTS 1954 DeSoto § — cars. Pully | equiped with power ' SCHUTZ “MOTORS | PLYMOUTH DEALER 012 5 W ward. Birmingham _MI ¢7811 ‘ii } | MICHIGAN'S | | 51 DE SOTO 4 door, radio and heater. “So Value.” $595 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE | 65 Mt. Clemens St. FEE 3-7117 ~ BARGAINS “ie Dodge pickup perfect mechan- | | “Goodwill Used Cars” = | “| teally 991 Mercury 2 -_ club ec Radio. ORTH Rex ‘$3 DeSOTO, . WITH RADIO. —— gearin’ | Its sharp and handles besutifully, | It has power steerin’ "StfUre 3 MOTORS DESOTO | PLYMOUTE i ay MI +7811 “Goodwill Used Cars” ‘53 DODGE Diplomat. Radio. heater sutome- tie transmission and « real buy $1,395 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt, Clemens st. PE >T1T TIP TOP USED CARS 1964 Chrysler, deluxe, 4 joor, radio and heater, auto- tie transmission, white side wall tires, light finish. A real clean car se! for | : | 1953 Chrysler, New Yorker, 4 door, heater. CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES mach, WT) a 8 p.m. Daily WE Ber. SELL AND TRADE MA 5$-5141 1948 DODGE 4 DOOR. ALL ACCES 2 9 Ford tudor’s. Both run ‘8 CARS MO Baldwin 3-T! car. Auburn, ‘® FORD CUSTOM ¢ NEW. Low mileage. EM : FORD CONVERTIBLE SKYLINERS For Sale Used Cars 91 ee eee esas ‘832 FORD, RADIO. HEATER. | With overdrive A world beater. | Got jin ood credit? See the town, NO MONEY DOWN LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES M24 AT BUCKHORN LAKE MY 2-261, ‘tl 9:00 PM No: Credit? Bad Credit? Here’s the place to buy. is sharp car | No co-signers, no past | credit references neces- sary. If you are 21 and have a job, we have a car for you. Buy Here Pay Here NATIONAL MOTOR SALES 171 Ss. SAGINAW ST. $3 BUICK RIV 81.645 33 B $1,345 8) PORD © DR... $1,195 se BUICK 2 DR... $ 505 47 CAD 4 $ 495 # KAISER ¢ DR ...... 8 195 % FORD CLUB CPE $ 395 @MERC 2 DR... $ 395 80 FORD 2 DR $ 305 Jerome's | Orchard Lk. Ave. at Cass FE 8-0488 - GIVE US A TRY Te Give you a Real Buy PAULSON WE FINANCE At Economy Used Cars OVER 150 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 1938 to ‘SS in models. Prices ge from $25 and You make ur own dea «wt “Feovom n' Auburn otf Saginaw PE. 42131 ‘Sl MEP Y cL COUPE. &1 big] Larerrs ee PETERSON "For Cars That are Sharper Than Sharp SEE GLENN’S MOTOR 234 8 Saginaw St FE ¢7371 RIEMENSCHNEIDER’S BEAUTY CONTEST 30 constants from all over the city 1953 Buick V8 4 dr. Super - 1962 ar. Ka a at 22. a a ea + bed ee ede eee To Serve You - - ’49 Buick Sedan ..... $275 ’49 Chev. Dix. 2 dr.. .$245 | 51 Ford 2 dr. ....... $495 | "47 Chev. Util. Pickup $325 For Sale Used Cars 91 SOOO OI ILL I 1951 NASH RAMBLER STATION | Wagon, $395. _FE 61363 NASH. 148, GOOD ‘MOTOR RADIO, | heater & overdrive. EM 3-472i. mee Nash Rambler beautiful hard model. E00 my-—plus with bargain $489 MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BIG PAVED LOT | ON CORNER OF | WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD | 1940 M0 pLDS. ‘82 ENGINE HYDRA- FE 5-9782. “a OLDSMOBILE. ~HYDRAMATIC, Tadio and heater 1018 Premont _ FE 25302 NEW CAR “ TRA ADE-INS ‘$3 DeSoto 4 door tone, radio, ye white = Auto. trans. $1,045 ‘83 Plymouth club coupe, radio, heater, overdrive. $045 ‘62 DeSoto f heater, r., radio, & radio, heater, auto ‘61 Fords 2 ‘ee & radio, heater. heater. ‘st, Fiymouts 2 dr., radio, : Ly " Be ny ag Your car Prep < SC HU TZ M MOTORS DESOTO PLYMOUTH DEALER 012 8. won etn re ——___ ™ 1 51 Olds. 98 Sedan ee of the tneets at toh mee 8) $797 MICHIGAN'S FINEST THE BIG PAVED yr 2 ON THE CORNER O WOODWARD AND 13 MILE. ROAD | OLDS 48. 5 PASSENGER COUPE Hy radio and heater No money down, 15 months to pay. Carkiver-Studchaker Birmingham MI 4-3410 LOOK AT THIS 1951 Olds. ‘98 4 door Radio. heater, hydramatic, half white Royal Masters. This ts a 1 owne: ear and runs wonderful at a bar- gain price 68 Oakland FE 2-2351 OLDS ‘50 88." RADIO, HEATER. Hydramatic & twin spotlights. 664 _N. Perry between 4 & 7 p.m. 1950 PACKARD CLIPPER, 4 DOOR hydramatic, good condition. Must sell immediately. FE 8-0282. “Goodwill. Used Cars” ’*53 PACKARD 2 door radio. heater. automatic transmission, very clean. $1,395 PONTIAC - RETAIL STORE 65 Mt Clemens St PE 3-7117 } ‘41 PLYMOUTH. $100 PE 5-2757 ee PLYMOUTH CRANBROOK. 21.000 miles. 1 owner caP $960 FE }-7336 ; PLYMOUTH CRANBROOK. 1953. Good condition. MI 45420. | “Goodwill Used Cars” ’48 PONTIAC Streamliner 2 door radio, heater and Hydramatic. A rea) buy! PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt Clemens &t. FE 37117 | SPECIALS 1942 e Tudor $68 50 at “ moult Fordor $295 00 rdor $1195 00 ips Plymouth Fordor 1003 00 | j BRAID MOTOR SALES PONTIAC, 1950. & 4 DOOR. PER- fect condition. Hydre. 1 e Windshield, twin spotlights, fee seat speaker, new whitewall tires. Month End Sale: BARGAINS GALORE | 49 Ford 4 dr., R&H, O.D. ...... $18 5 | 49 Hudson Clb. Cpe., | exc. cond. ....... $225 | ‘008 | 30 Ford 2 dr. sedan. .$245 SO Ford pickup, real good $385 ’49 Olds 88 Clb. Cpe. $395 eee ewes | ComeIn | Lame be = ae that these are more the price tag Bring Your € Good Cfedit | NO MONEY DOWN ae ee ae. eee ~~ - ell body styles. LIBERAL TRADES & TERMS Central Lincoln of at Zl] ~ South Saginaw “THE WORKING MAN'S LOT’ "51 Chrys. Sedan ....$895 ’51 Plymouth 4 dr... .$595 52 Hud. Hornet 2 dr. $765 | 52 Chev. Sport Cpe. $965 "$0 Nash 2dr. .......$295 51 Nash Sta. ‘Wgn.. .$595 50 Ford Sedan .....$395 "53 Pontiac 2 dr. .... .$1395 | 195 door , COMMUNITY ; 803 N. Main, Rochester For Sale Used Cars_9f of teed fitted “Goodwill Used Carsf *§2 PONTIAC Station wagon with radio, heater, end Hydramatic. $1,295 © : PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 37111 ‘47 PONTIAC. BLACK COUPE 3-0490. als, FE PONTIAC, ‘54, STAR CHIEF CATA- lina. Perfect condition. 3210 Frembes, Drayton Plains. pm. OR 3-4336. ‘S) PONTIAC HYI HYDRAMATIC. 40,000 miles good condition §725. EM ssi «4 “DOOR I HYDRAMATIC PON- after | py . _ For Sale Used Cars 91 AGoodwill Used Cars” ‘53 BUICK “$6 R” Super with Dynafiow, re- dio. heater and low mileage. One owner $1 895 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemeng Bt. PE +7111 ee 1983 PONTIAC, CATALINA, ALL leather interior. 2 new ell accessories, good condition. $1,500. 1.000 mies EM _ 3-4531, PONTIAC 1950, 2 6 CYL- inder Good condition ‘ust sell. Mr. Dailey, FE 5-7460 PONTIAC ‘53 DELUXE ¢ e! Low m onally clean. Loaded. FE 5-7333. PoMTIAG 1950 4 DOOR. FULLY —_ Good condition. EM 3 jose CUSTOM STAR- PONTIAC all chief Catalina. Low orlleage. tiac Private owned Cal) after after 5 Dp rE _¢ bm FE sate 8 TE) Saagss.. Call afte ie a i” 1954. PONTIAC STARCHIEF, 64 Goodwill Used Cars _door, FE 47070. 53, PONTIAC Wagon with radio. heater, ydramatic 795 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens 8t. FE 317117 Sta and PONTIAC. °53. ‘3! | DOOR | DELUXE. Clean PE 48 ‘$4 PONTIAC. SST ORAMATIC DE- luxe 2 door 5800 miles. 39 Pin- gree FE 22-6646. PONTIAC, 1950 4 DOOR RADIO and heater Hydramatic. white wall tires. $125 down. Carkner-Studebaker MI 4-3410 “Goodwill Used Cars” *52 PONTIACS Chieftain Deluxe. 2 dr. & 4 ar. models. A good selection $995 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 63 Mt. Clemens 8t. FE 37117 Birmingham PONTIAC ‘51 BLUE ¢ DOOR standard shift Mileage 32.000. MA 5-7506 PONTIAC 1954 STARCHIEP CUS- _tom 4 door. All access. FE 23-0075. Where to Go for Clean Cars 1954 Chev 210 4 door Station wag- on, 7000 mile car 8 000 mile car 1963 Buick Riviera 2 tone. white wall tires Like new 1954 Byiek Riviera coupe 1952 Buick Riviera coupe 2 tone, | — white walls tires. clean 1951 Buick sedan. 2 lone paint, | . sharp | ub coupe 2 tone apint. Exceptionally clean. Loaded 1952 Buick special] Riviera coupe, 2 tone paint. white wall tires, very clean Over 75 Other Cars to Choose From MOTORS OPEN TILL 10 PM OLive 26311 | 147 8 Saginaw st 1954 STARCHIEF, 2 TONS green all accessories. Excel lent condition,. Low Mileage. FE 3-0045 1954 PONTIAC STARCHIEF, LOAD. ed with extras $' 795 ‘48 Mercury $197 100 other beautiful cars. We also arrange finance. Small down. ECONOMY USED CARS. 22 Auburn 1983 PONTIAC 2 DOOR DELUXE. = dramatic, radio heater and ite wall tires. Other accessories rx tone blue $1175. FE 46607. i963 PONTIAC 8 2 DOOR DE- luxe, Hydramatic. with extras. _ 15000 wiles FE 44697. i049 PONTIAC «4 DOOR SEDAN. _Phone OA 833860 1951 PONTIAC, DELUXE, HYDRA- matic. radio ar heater, 1 owner. 1070 Dover Rd. FE 2-4296. PONTIAC, 1954. CUSTOM STAR- ina. $500 miles, fully hite. Call 33). PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN LOAD ed. 116 Summit. PONTIAC. 198 RADIO, HEATER, and Hydramatic. PE 2-740. PONTIAC ‘52 CATALINA. ALL access. Excellent condition Must be seen to be appreciated $1200 Owner. Call after @ FE 4-7636. 1953 PONTIAC STANDARD. MILE- age. 32.000 1964 Viola. Orton _ville, M‘ch. “Goodwill Used Cars” Special Sale On Studebakers From $295 up. Three 1951 models te choose from. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens &t. FE }-7117 ’*51 STUDEBAKER CHAMPION . bag a = : ITION THRO NGTON 3RD FLOOR APARTMENT RING BELL FOR STEVENSO Carkner-Studebaker Birmingham _ M1.4-3410 SEE CY FOR THE DEAL OF A LIFETIME IN AN A-1 USED CAR Cy Owens “Your Ford Dealer” FE 5-410t 53 Chev. Sedan ....$1045 |] s000 | 51 Chev. Sedan .....$695 | VOL OUR PRICES $289 down and $32.85 monthly. You payment. "A-1" Buys ’51 Ford Cust. 8 Clb. Cpe. ...... $399 ’S1 Nash Rambier Sta. Wen. ....$644 "53 Ford 2 dr. .....$844 51 Plymouth 2 dr. $344 54 Ford Convert. $1644 50 Mercury 4 dr.. .$499 54 Ford Ranch Wagon ...... $1599 52 Hudson 4 dr... .$599 49 Ford Convert.. .$499 "49 Merc. Clb. Cpe. $499 i. 50 Nash 2 dr......$175 50 Chev. Clb. Cpe. $299 +49 Hudson 2 dr... .$125 51 Merc. Clb. Cpe $544 ee Plymouth 4 dr.. .$95 at aa 47 Frazier 4 dr.. ..$125 a Nash 2 dr..,...$399 48 Dodge Sedan .. $95 "52 Chev. Del. "49 Chev. 4 dr. ....$125 Ch, Cee. cc wss $69 = "47 Buick 2 dr...... $125 ‘52 Plym. Clb. Cpe. $644 s Herre ; dr.. ev , : : uic r.....$14 50 Buick 2 dr.. ee . $499 49 Plymouth Sed. $195 \ ’53 Chev. 2 dr. "46 Merc. Clb, Cpe $145 Bel Air i... $1099 42 Ford Clb. Cpe.. .$75 Trucks 53 Chevrolet 2 Ton Tractor .............. $000 "62 Dodge % Ton Pickup ..... estectecesss sR90 33 Pord % Ton Bxpress ..........+. @creee 3699 "M4 Ford % Ton Pickup a) "S1 Chevrolet 2 Ton Tractor .........+-.:: $399 ‘83 Pord % Ton Pickup | "80 Chevrolet % Ton Pickup .........-. .. 09 49 Dodge Platform ss) 62 Ford % Ton Express ......... es "48 Studebaker % Ton Pickup ...........4900 2 BIG OUR MOTTO IS 54 FORD 2 dr 8 cylinder A real clean family car with lots of good miles ieft. $1,095 $1,095 5 \ “HAROLD TURNER, FORD 464 S. Woodward, Birmingham 134 Mile & Ss enagtare UME" ARE PROOP r old car could even be the down Hardtops ’52 Buick ........ $944 SS Ford cccvus sc Qld 52 Cord ys. AA eed "SA Ford «sics<s. $1699 "$1 Ford ......... $699 52 Lincoln ...... $1499 Cheapies ‘49 Dodge Cl. Cpe. $175 49 Lincoln 4 dr...$175 49 bord 2 dr...... $175 46 Buick 4dr ....$175 48 Plymouth Sed. $125 "48 Ford 2 tr. .... .$125 LOTS. ~ 4 a re er Oe ~~ - ) i TEE Pa OR ee ee ee a ee i cts anc ef ee ee ge eg ee a ; a . .* . Ws ——" ‘ ‘ i ‘ , ~ Linkletter Relaxes = -- Today's Television Programs -- Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 1—WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW.TV TONIGHT’S TV 6:00—(7) Little Rascals. “Bare Facts,” ‘Feed 'Em and Weep.” (9) Capt. Video, Adventure serial (4) Time for Musi¢. (2) Gene Au- | try, He proves boy’s innocence in | *‘Sharpshooter”’ | 6:15—(9) News, Austin Grant. (4) | News, Paul Williams 6:30—(7) Wild Bill Hickok, Ad- | venture film with Guy Madison. | (9) The Passerby, Drama. (4) | Norby, Norby’s wife imagines | the careers she could have had in “Helen's Holiday’. (2) News Ace Ken Cline, Van Patrick 6:45—(9) Frank Conners, Music, Wally Townsend at piano, (4) | Tony Mi . Songs. (2) TV) Weatherman, Dr. Everett R. *Phelps 7:00—(7) Kukla, Fran and Ontie, | Puppet show. (9) Hopalong Cas- | sidy, Bill Boyd in ‘Don't Believe | in Ghosts.’’ (4) It's a Great Life, Former boy friend of Kathy's gives trouble in comedy with James Dunne, Michael O'Shea, | Bill Bishop. (2) Big Picture, | Armed Forces report. 7:15—(T) My Story, Tyama. 7:30—(7) Name's the Same, Quiz. (9) Million Dollar Movie, Mer- cedes McCambridge., John Ire- land in “The Scarf.” (4) Tony Martin, Songs, St. Mary's Col- lege of California honors Tony. (2) News, Doug Edwards. f 7:45—(4) News Caravan, John Cameron Swayze. (2) Perry Como, Songs. ] 8:00—(7) TV Reader's Digest, | Martha Scott and Douglas Mont- gomery as Mr. and Mrs. Robert Louis Stevenson in ‘“‘Unforget- able Love Story.% (4) Caesar's Hour.. Comedy with Sid Caesar. Carl Reiner, Nanette Fabray, Commuter’s sketeh, satire on musical series. (2) Burns and Allen, Gracie hires valet for George and valet takes job too seriously. 8:36—(T) Voice Program, Patrice | Munsel, soprano sings ‘‘Gavotte"’ from Manon, Frim! and Brahms songs. (2) Talent Scouts, Arthur Godfrey host to new talent. 9:00—(7) Wrestling. (4) Medic. “A Time to Be Alive,” story of young boy who is hemophiliac. (2) I Love Lucy, Lucy gets riled when Ethel plays the visiting movie queen in ‘“Ethel’s Home Town.” 9:30—(7) Lynn Bari Show, Boss Lady, comedy. (9) Mr. Show Business, Variety. (4) Robert Montgomery Presents, Girl falls for her newspaper boss, but finds | he is only interested in his career | in “Deadline,” with Peggy Ann Garner, Robert Webber and Paul Stevens. (2) hunters. 10:00—(7) Boxing, Middleweight bout, Gene ‘Cyclone’ Fulmer vs. -MarcelAssire. (9) Boxing, Welterweight bout, Jo Perez vs. Orlando Zulueta. (2) Studio One, Mystery of disappearance of beautiful girl from Maine Island in “The Silent Woman’ with Everett Sloane, Gaby Rodgers, Peg Hillias. 10:30—(4) Secret File USA, In- trigue and murder in Near East in “Mission Baran,” starring Robert Alda. 10:45—(9) Ringside Review, Chris Schenkel commentary. 11:0@—(7) Soupy’s On, Variety. (9) National News. (4) News, Wil- liams. (2) News, LeGoff. 11: 15—(7) Armchair Theater, Gracie Fields in ‘‘Shipyard Sal- ly."’ (9) Good Neighbor Theater, William Bendix, Grace Bradley in ‘““Two Mugs from Brooklyn.” (4) Little Show, Drama. (2) Fea- turette 11: 30—/(4) Steve Allen. Tonight, Variety with (2) Weathervane. TUESDAY MORNING 7:00 — (4) Today. (2) Show. 8:30—(2) Morning Show. 9:00—(7) Breakfast Club. (4) Romper Room. (2) Welcome Traveler. 9:30—(2) Breakfast with Murphy. Morning December Bride. | Lily and Hilda turn uranium | | 1@:66—(7) Wixie’s Wonderland. (4) | Ding Dong School. (2) Garry | Moore. 10:30—(4) Way of World. (2) Ar- thur Godfrey. 10:45—(4) Sheilah Graham. 11:00—(7) Story Studio. (4) Home. 11:30—(2) Strike It Rich. TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—(7) 12 O'Clock Comics. (4) | Tennesgee Ernie. (2) Valiant Lady. | 12:15—(2) Love of Life. |12:3@ — (7) Beulah. (4) Feather Your Nest. (2) Search for To- morrow. 12:45—(2) Guiding Light 1:00—(7) Lunchtime Drama. Bob Maxwell Show. Faces Life. 1:15—(4) Sonny Elliott. (2) Road of Life. 1:30—(4) 1 Good Cooking (2) La- dies Day. 1:45—(9) School Broadcast. 2:00—(7) Stars on Seven. Bruce Mayer Show. 2:15—(9) Bobo the Hobo. 2:30—(9) Myrtle Labbit Show. (2) House Party. ‘ 3:00—(7) Theater. Matinee. (4) Big Payoff. 3:15—(4) Golden Windows. (4) (2) Portia | (9) Tuesday Greatest Gift. (2) 3:30—(4) One Man’s Family. (2) | Bob Crosby Show. 3:45—(4) Concerning Miss Mar- lowe. | 4:00—(7) Captain Flint. (9) Justice Colt. (4) Hawkins Falls. (2) Brighter Day. 4:15—(4) First Love. (2) Secret. Storm. 4:30—(4) Mr. Sweeney's World. (2) On Your Account. 4:45—(7) Rickey the Clown. (4) Modern Romances. 5:00—(7) Auntie Dee. (9) Go to the Museum. (4) Pinky Lee. (2) Robert Q. Lewis. 5:30—(7) Rocky Jones. (9) Howdy Doody. (4) Howdy Doody. (2) Pi- rate Pete. I Se Today's Radio Programs - - Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject te change without notice. WIR, (768) CKLW, (see) ww, (ase) WCAR, (1130) WZ, (127) WIBK, (1499) WPON, (1468) TONIGHT CKLW, Van Kuren CKLW, Good Neighbor. WJBK, News, George WJBK. Houseparty WCAR, Temple Academy WCAR, News. Harmony 6:00—WJIR, News WPON, News WPON, TBA WPON, News. Platter WW, News WXYZ, Wattrick-McKensie (Wis, GiideTsieeve " CKLW, News, Sports w WWJ, MeBride, Peale WPON, News CKLW, Sammy Kaye WXYZ, My True Story WXYZ, Top of Town CKLW, Homechats 6:15—WJR, Clark Quartet WPON, Off Record WCAR. News, Temple WWJ. Rud Lync 10:30—WJIR, Treasury Show WPON, News, Piper Paul WXYZ, Lee WWJ. Stars for Safety CKLW, Eddie Chase CKLW, Coyntry Btyle 10:15—WWJ, Joyce WPON, Idietime Serenade 10:15—WJR, World Neighbors 11:00—WJR, News WWJ, Charies Lewis 10:00—WJR, Arthur | 10:30—WXYZ, Whispering Godfrey 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins 1:36—-WJR, Dr Malone CKLW, Story Time WJBK, T. George 1:45—WJR, Guiding Light Jordan 2.06.WJR. Mrs. Burton CKLW, Devies €:3%8—WJIR, Reynolds CKLW, Kuren, Sports WWJ. Fran Hafris WJBK, T George wre —— WPON. News | CKLW, Mary Morgan WPON, News, Eddy a . Hong dn 11:185—WJR. Sports WCAR, Song Parade - = WPON, Sports WWJ. Mayer, Music | : 2:15—WJR, Perry Masos , CKLW,- World Windows 10:45—WWJ, Break the Bank WWJ, Plain Bil S—WJR, L. Thomas N, Manhattan Music WEES, Gist Masses 2.30_WJR. Nore Drake WXYZ, Police in Action 1):30—WJR, Music oo—_wwJ tr WWJ. L. Jones WJBK, Auto Show CKLW, Feller, McKeler |" Woy2 igogern Romance | WXYZ, Martin Block WPON, Art Van Damme WPON, Sports CKLW. Florida USA. WCAR, Hall, rts 7:00—WJIR, Guest House - WJBK, D. MeLeod WPON, Club 14660 WW), 3-Star Extra TUESDAY MORNING ba oe Hsin gene 2:45—WJR, Brighter Day CKLW Patton Lewis Jr. 6:30—WIR, Agric. Voice : d WWJ. Marriage Pays WJBK, News, Sports . WWJ. Bob Maxwell 11:15—WXYZ, Companion WCAR, Harmony WPON, News, Gid Shanley pi sig = hin WPON, Hymn Time 3:00—WJR, Wendy, Werren . 11:30—WJR, Make Up Mind WWJ, Woman in Love 1:15—CKLW, Guy Nuns WJBK, News WWJ, Phrase That Pays | WXYZ. Ed. MeKensie WW3, Nation Bus vaeae — WXYZ, Curtain Calls WCAR. News, Carousel : eo m 1a0— HM, Cherahere CKLW, News, Davia Ser are Ow 3:15—WJR, Aunt Jenny wzYt, Lone WJBK, Gentile, Binge WPON, Party 3:30_WwW, Young CKLW. Gabriel 7:15—WJR, Music Hall ak: Meenas WJBK, Don McLeod 7:45—WJR. E.R. Murrow CELW, surrence G'Del WWJ, Second Chance 3:15—WJR, Gal Sunday ‘ » 5 t . — . SE. Soar | Sowa news nn | Ram Sewn Metsed | "wanted Repti $:00—WIR, Northe 8:00—WJR, Jack White _—, a — 4:00—WJR, Musie Hall Ww, Your Land WWJ, Bob Maxwell Sek: eee ten. Sank J, Backstage Wite Stoppers WXYZ, Dick WIBK. a WXYZ, Wattrick-MecKentsle CKL' Gecret CKLW, News, Toby WCAR, co CKLW, Chase . ° WJBK. News, Gentile WroN. Re WJIBK, News, McLeod 8:15—WWJ, Best of Al WCAR, News ‘ ws WPON, Sports WXYZ, Show World WPON, News 12:16—WJR, Parm Roundup 4:15—WWJ. Stella Dallas 8: Talent Scoute $:15—WJR, Bud Guest WWJ, Fage Elizabeth - WCAR, Talk Sports WXYZ, Vandercook WXYZ, Pred Wolf CKLW, Austin Grant WPON, Club 1460 WwW, Bway Cop WCAR. Coffee . WCAR, Noondayv Caller . o-—W=Tar 8 WPON, Egan Show WPON. Luncheon Serenade | 4:360_WWJ, Widder Brown ™ o 8:30—WJR, Music Hall 12:30—WJR Time Out Music baba a Tig Perry _ 8:45—WWJ. News WXYZ, News. Music warn, ¥ = ieenrams WCAR, Radio Revival CKLW. Bud Davies 4:45—WWJ Woman in Home CKLW Charm Hour 9:00—WJR. News WJBK, McLeod . CKLW, George Wright WPON. News, Off Record WWJ, Minute Parade WCAR., Harmony Hall [5:00_WJIR News wxyYzZ, 9:15—WJR, Bing Crosby WJBK, - ° WCAR 9:38—WJR, Amos ‘n’ Andy : - WWJ, American Band WPON, 9:15—w Breakfast Club 12:45—WXYZ, Charm Lady WWJ, News, J. Deland News, George WPON, Farm Mkts CKLW, Sgt. Preston News. Rhythm WJBK. News, McLeod News, Music a WCAR, News WPON, News, Serenade wae World Music W, Reporter's oundup WISE, Gentite eT Mrs. Page 1:06—WJR, Road of Lite, 16:00—W, ‘Tenn. Erhie » Good WWJ, News, Mullholl 3 = McGee WPON, 6. Kaye WXYZ, Paul Winter WJBK, IR, Kitchen Clud McLeod News, Joe TUESDAY AFTERNOON 9:45—WJIR, Pete CKLW. Musical Airs 5:15—WJR, Reynolds, Muste CKLW, Eddie Chase . WCAR, Carousel 5:30—CKLW, Eddie Chase Bill for Poker Chips Stumps School Board SPRINGFIELD, Ohio W—At a : You Should Feel ‘Squeezed Out by Year's End Provided your teeth aren't store- bought, you and every other Pon- tiac resident with a mouthful of ivories he calls his own will use about 30 feet of- toothpaste in year were emptied at one time, the lucky — if tired — squeezer | would behold a single wiggly line 2.000.000 miles long, enough te circle the earth 80 times. Or sp says the council, anyway. « Deaths Last Night (AP)—Pred W. Mueller | CLEVELAND $3. former executive secretary to the (4) _THE PONTIAC PRESS; “MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955 Himself Into Millions Gold Mines, (il Among Holdings’ TV Host Says He'll Quit ‘Being Millionaire When It Stops Being Fun HOLLYWOOD (INS) — TV's Art Linkletter could write a book about how to become a millionaire, but jhe has a one-word prescription that fills the bill—‘‘Relax!:’ The ebullient emce of the mi- crowaves admits he's a millionaire | with the aplomb of a young boy | taking over ownership of his third bicycle. “Yea, I've got a good bit of money I guess,” he shrugged, “but I didn’t get it because I like the feel of it. I got it be- cause it was fun. “When it stops being fun then | I'll stop being a millionaire.”’ Link goes ‘‘all out” in pursuit | of the mighty dollar but he un- | rolls his nerves while in the pro-| cess. “I believe in relaxing,”” he in- sisted. ‘ His strange form of relaxation has netted him a bowling alley, a beauty and health salon, a low-voltage wiring company, a steamship line, uranium, lead and gold mines, numerous stocks and bends, a half million acres of Australian rice fields, a mag- nesium plant, 35 oll wells and a | solid gold money clip. The genial and witty host of NBC-TV's ‘‘People Are Funny,” and CBS-TV's “House Party,” says he came by his business acumen in San Diego at the unripened age of 13 “I used to swipe left-over lemons from a packing plant outside of town, take them home, scrub them in my mother’s washtub and give them to the other kids to sell. “I let em sell the lemons for a nickle apiece. They got to keep | one cent and I got four!” | That Linkletter’s nose for nickles | paid off is obvious in his latterday business scoops. “T have another advantage too,”’ | he laughed, “‘because when people | meet me the first time, they're thoroughly prepared to greet a screwball without a brain in his head. “The fact that they usually wind up saying, “Gee, this Is no nitwit’ really gives me more credit than I deserve!” He has one stipulation in his business deals and it is this, he firmly believes, that has kept his head above the high-million mark. “I always insist on having a partner that knows more about the business than I do,” he said “‘If |they don't have enough money to | be a partner I give it to ‘em and lif they don't want it then we don’t | do business! "' At present, Linkletter's varied enterprises are thriving in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Fran- cisco, and four foreign countries. “You see,”’ he said solemnly, “I | la nickle on the flip | the roll of the dice!” ‘Gen. Hoge Retires With Final Review MANNHEIM, Germany @* —| Gen. William M. Hoge retired from | the U.S. Army today and told his troops of the European command they were in a “stronger and bet- ter position’ than ever before for | defense of the world. He closed out his 42-year mili- jtary career at a big farewell re- view attended by Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther, supreme Allied com- mander in Europe, and virtually every top American and Allied military chief in Europe... The 61-year-old Hoge was suc- | | ceeded by Lt. Gen. Anthony C. | McAuliffe. Hoge’s Army career spans both world wars and the Korean con- flict. In®1942 he commanded en-| gineering units which built the | Alcan Highway, ' | Former Editor of Ohio, Monroe Papers Dies DETROIT (#) — Robert E. Tracht, 68, onetime newspaper , editor in Michigan and Ohio, died Saturday at his home in suburban West Dearborn. ‘ shown in Paris Tuileries Gardens. SNOW SUIT—A new winter outfit called “Snowman,” with white |llama coat, matching hood, mittens and pants tapering into gaiters, a - ' | Bobo Scrapping | With Cousin Now Over Dad‘s Care WASHINGTON, Pa. #—Barbara Bobo Rockefeller, ex - wife of millionaire Winthrop Rockeferrer, is quarreling with her cousin, a glass factory worker, over the care of Bobo's ill father Julius Paulekas, Miss Pauline Paulekas wants to keep the 68-year-old former coal | miner at her Washington, Pa., home. Bobo, residing in New York, | told newsmen she would like to see her father placed in a rest home > * “I am interested only in —— my father’s last days comfortable and his best interests must be the | determining factor,"’ said Bobo. | Bobo's father, now recuperating from ppeumonia, lived with a brother, Anthony, for 2 years Anthony, who was Miss Paulekas’ father, died last year. Bobo saw her father for the first time in 31 years last April, shortly after he had suffered a heart at- tack here. He and Bobo's miother were separated when Bobo was 6 Murder Retrial Set for Feb. 8 The retrial on a first degree murder charge of Walter Banks has been adjourned from Feb. & to March 8 in Oakland County Circuit Court, according to Prose- cutor Frederick C. Ziem. Banks, 45, formerly of 116 Wes | sen St., was previously convicted of the May 2, 1951 slaying of Alex- ander Bell, 53, a local pool: hall owner. { » | ' of a former police identification | expert, whose testimony he had counted on, required the delay. The retrial was granted because | ‘of an error in the first jury’s findings, said Ziem. Daughter of 1934 Queen Wins Title This Year PETOSKEY (#)—Patricia Wil- | ton, 19, a blue-eyed brunette, | followed the path of family tradi- tion to become queen of the 27th annual Petoskey winter carnival The five - foot -two, 110 - pound charmer was crowned yesterday by Circuit Judge Edward H Fenlon of Petoskey. Her mother Mrs. Wilbert Wilton, won the honor in 1934. Patricia, an adept figure skater will represent Peoskey in the Michigan Winter Queen Contest in the carnival’s third and _ final weekend, Feb. 12. Eleanor to Speak MOUNT PLEASANT (UP)—Mrs Eleanor Roosevelt will be a guest | lecturer at the Central Michigan College artist course series Feb 16, Fred R, Bush, chairman of the series, said today, Mrs, Roose- velt’s talk will be the fourth in the college's current series. Baby Sutfocates in Crib CHARLOTTE (UP) — Carolyn Faye Miller, 8-month-old daughter | of Mr. and Mrs. Charies Miller, suffocated in her crib Saturday, FAST RELIEF NEURALGIA Whee yeu suffer from pain of aches Before him was a bill for $2.33 1955. ee = — Tracht was a former editor of for poker ; Roughly totals Ranceeeen mee Se terete eee the Daily Chief in Upper San- | E. E. Forrer, schools business| miles of — ere NEW YORK Dr. Hubert Vivian Guile. | dusky, Ohio, and city editor of the explained that “‘the lit white (or 4, Whe founded the first heart etintc So! ee es ee ele Sachi Sr teictaases Tm | Monroe Evening News, Monroe, money before noon. So now they| These wavital statistics are | avsri, Tex —capt Roy Ww. Aldrich | He retired last year after 32 swap it for poket chips in the| Sent ont 87 te Celtapetbte Tube |S yearn sci-eticaica whclar "| yeqrs asm Detroit Free Press morning when they come to school. the DELMENFORST. Germany—Waiter | proofreader. = “‘Losing poker chips—in this case increasing use ef the fold- | Boehning, 48, who claimed to be the | ‘—is a phys ~ than losing real cus oe coe ps = “fuches tail and. weighed finn , a money,” observed. pounds. | inquire about nation’s oldest packaging med- | townon sir gaw eitanby RENTAL-LESSON PLAN Wi iums, 5 oy «| Rhedited with Gineovering vitamin 'D. Complete Plan $10.00 Says Viet Nam lling But getting back to the mouth- | 4,"ZMINOTON, Del—John C. Hansard. | L-F HT to Fight Reds to Be Free | watering figures, the council has tnd oe of Deinware's best “tnown politi: BEL OUGHT WASHINGTON (®~Gen, J. Law-| en will personaly put the equcece in tis me Loor B80. Ti B. Qaginew ton Collins says the people of Viet | on six tubes this year. or ead : - _ Nam are determined to be free| Ah, not tubes of toothpaste, mind : Socowem es see] PONTIAC'S FIRST salt wes now fe Proateel ieee |e eu TE TY SERVICE DEALER! who now is President Eisen- The : wilt fa ¥ 3 J ‘ such goodies as anchovy paste, : Ee ae Seis Se ci Sot facie day | BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE optimistic” that} compound and leather softmer, 1] Authorised Factory Service lor 1$ Dillerent Manslecturers y & a % : ;< a squscned inthe United seates tani. 2149 W. Huron | ee he kd es F A ra Rea: to Pca re Ls se ‘ v 7% : } an a > 4 ok s s "Al ve ae i shang | the merger of Jobs in Wisconsin Offered Detroiters MILWAUKEE (UP) — Workers laid off in Detroit have an offer of jobs in Wisconsin's auto industry. The offer was announced yes- | terday by Claude Keim, president of Local 75 of the United Auto Workers (CIO). Keim said the deal had been worked out last week between the union and the American Motor | Company for workers laid off by the Hudson and! Nash motor companies. The Defroit workers would be- | come eligible for the jobs with the exhaustion of the company senior- ity list here, since the list at Ke- neosha, Wis, was already ex- hausted, Keim said. Detroit Soldier to Give Skin for Burned Buddy MUNICH, Germany (UP)—Pvt. Thomas B. Tarreto of Detroit was among the five soldiers selected to donate 18-square-inch sections of their skin for a buddy who suffered burns over 75 per cent of his body. A surgeon, Capt. J. W. Blunt of New York City, called for vol- unteers when it became apparent that skin grafts were needed to save the life of Pic. Walter Jindra of Ft. Towson, Okla. Jindra was enveloped in flames when a gaso- line can caught fire. Red Guerrilla Counts 168 Killed in 4 Years SEOUL W—A recently captured | guerrilla has confessed he killed | 168 persons, including two Ameri- don't gamble. I can’t stand to lose| The adjournment was obtained! can soldiers, in 4% years in South of a card or by Banks’ attorney. He said death | Korea, police reported today. Kirn Chong Ha, 26, said most of his killings were in the Chonar area, some 60 miles south of Seoul, in the early days of the Korean War, police said. He described himself as a straggler in the retreating Red ar- my following the Allied Inchon landing in 1950. 35,000 Packages for Italy NAPLES, Italy —Some 35,000 Care food packages, gift of the American people, were turned over today to Italy's two non-Commu- nist trade to the nation’s poor. Fire Loss $18,000 MIDLAND W—A fire destroyed a combination restaurant and tav- ern in downtown Midland Sunday causing an estimated $18,000 dam- | age. Firemen said the blaze appar- | ently was set off by a defective furnace. Special Show Tonight ! WPON Polio Party Beginning 11:15 P. M. City & Coun- ty Officials will act as yeur dise jockeys dur- ing this in- teresting pro- gram, MARCH of Japan Seeking Soviet Support | ported today to have made Soviet | | support of Japan's admission 'the United Nations as a condition for the signing of a peace treaty | with Russia. observer, Ambassador Renzo Sa- | sent these requests: unions for distribution Wants Russia to Back | Admission to U. N., Lists | Treaty Conditions TOKYO (INS)—Japan was re- MOTH PROOF PROTECTION . « « is part of our excellent service to you! Care in spot- ting, cleaning and pressing . ‘GENEY CLEANERS * ‘Pickup and Delivery The influential newspaper Yom: | juri, quoting authoritative sources | close to the government, said Ja-) pan's conditions were embodied in instructions sent to Japan's U. N. vada. The instructions, dispatched by | the foreign office to Savada, | were to sound out Russia's U.N. | delegate on a peace treaty offer made Jan. 2% by the unrecog- nized Soviet mission in Tekyo and if the offer is valid, to pre- 1—Soviet support for Japan’s admission to the United Nations: 2—The return of the two small islands of Habomia and Shikotan north of Japan's northern home is- land of Hokkaido; 3—The return of all Japanese still held prisoner in Soviet terri- tory. The Soviet offer to end its tech- nical state of war with Japan was made personally to Prime Minis- ter Ichiro Hatoyama by Andrei L. Dominitsky, acting head of the So- viet mission in Japan which lost its official standing in 1951 when Russia refused to sign the Jap- anese peace treaty The offergaggravated a long- standing feud between Hatoyama | and his foreign minister, Ma- meru Shigemitsu, on Japan's re- lations with the Communist | world, Hatoyama was enthusiastic over the Soviet proposal, but Shigemitsu | took the view that it did not neces- | sarily reflect the intention of Mos cow and urged caution until the offer was proved official. Phone FE 5-6107_ 12 West Pike Street See Us Before You Buy Trade-Ins Accepted! Easy Terms! Free Home Triall Open Every Evening DuMONT SYLVANIA MOTOROLA GENERAL ELECTRIC HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. 825 W. Huren = FE 4-2525 Hard to Pronounce— Easy to Settle With 367 East Pike St. FE 4-0588 . that is what every family can confidently expect when they call Broce-Smith. Every detail of every service we conduct is considered of the utmost importance — nothing is slighted. The result is full satis- faction for every patron. 136 West Lawrence St. Pontiec, Michigan Phone FE 5-0738 4 STARRING ie Palmer & Sammy Dibert with ; Earl Stuart’s WW4J-TV Orchestra WWJ-TV 6:00-6:15 P.M. Channel 4 Mon., Tues., Thurs. & <@ - Brought to you by + Your lronrite Deatens = G : ‘ AUTOMATIC monn \ gh ~ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1955 ¢ (U8. Navy Photo via AP Wirephoto) COMANDS 77 — Rear Adm Frederick N. Kivette is command er of Task Force 77, the U. S Navy unit patrolling the Formosa Strait. Dispatches from Formosa indicated all was quiet on and over the ain ——— Romans ans Haggle Over Demolition Italian Modernists Vie With Ancients. on Plan for City Improvements ROME (#—The fight is on be- tween ancient and modern Rome At stake is the future of the city of the Colosseum, tourists, cobbled streets and jammed traffic. The City Council, the press and the volatile Roman public have split between the two sides. Half want to preserve the old central city in its unpainted, crowded con- fusion. Half ‘want to see the old give way to a broad-streeted mod- ern business comer. + Defenders of the old Rome won one of the opening rounds. Yielding to public cries of protest, the City Council’ temporarily forbade any further demolition in the old sec- tors to make way for wider streets to stop the increasing flow of traf- | fic directed jnto the old art quarter | by new traffic measures. oa * - Police tried to shoo them away but failed, Then a downpour damp- ened their enthusiasm. Reluctantly they lugged their easels back into studios lining the quaint, nar- street. iF Gee on eiitr side of the ar- gument favors any menace to Rome’s really ancient monuments —the Colosseum, the Forum, the’ Pantheon or other great relics of Imperial Rome. 1,756 Traffic Deaths — New Low for State LANSING (UP) — A record low | of 1,756 deaths and 55,300 injuries in 182,850 traffic accidents were reported during 1%4, State Police said today. The figures were higher than earlier 1954 estimates because of a jump in December accidents, police said. The December toll of 187 deaths and 5,460 injuries was the highest for that month since 1948. | “The estimated 1954 death rate of 6.6 per 100,000,000 miles of travel will be the lowest on record in Michigan despite an all-time high in motor vehicle registrations and travel,’ the police year-end re ports said. Crosses Ocean to Vole NEW BRITAIN, Conn. (UP)— Orazio Guillaro believes his may be the most expensive vote any- where. Guillaro, who maintains a street address here, has lived in Italy since 1947, but each election he returns to cast his ballot. Guil- laro estimated that the trips cost ah average of $1,000. ‘It's worth it,” he said. our “LIKE NEW” LOOK FOR YOU! Dry Cleaning Rejuvenates Your Wardrobe IND -~ SEARS WILL ARRANCE INSTALLATION and FINANCING... Ask any salesperson ter full information. Phone FE 5-4171 for further details. MORE Guttering 10-Ft. 1.59. Heavy galvan- ized half round guttering. 5-in wide install yourself 7 es Homart Jack Posts Buy Now — Save 1.01! piel a:iile @\ ivkdes Galvanized . Easy to - yo omy we WATER HEATERS Regular 89.95 30-Gal. Model Pay Only $5 rps on Sears Easy Payment Plan Save stee! 1095 now ank formed of glass fused to heavy — W never t c rode' Racked by Sears guarantee! Thick layer ef ir tion surrounds Plumbing and Hecting— Perry St. Basement wow ras Be ‘79 White Seat Sale Smooth Hardwood Stock sei the price Reg. 5.15 A bargain at ‘DO-IT-YOURSELF’ : $4 Down | Fold completely out of sight into M4 ceilings Made s0f Pande Frosa pine S Sturdy hard- 2 Homart Value Tile The Thrifty Plastic Tile Reg. 8.50 7 49 Reg. 35¢ 29¢ Sq. F . Strong, all-steel supports re- Beveled edge plastic tile for lieve strain on sagging floors, beautiful walls that are pract beams. Adjust from 5-{t. to 7-ft cal, easy to ¥lean. 4'/x4'4-in 9-ifiches in height sale! Easy to Install’. os =. store to Walls or Lay in Place! Homart Rock Wool Batts square, in 6 bright colors ae Insulation 1.39 Just pour from bag into open- ings in walls, attics. Fire - re- sistant. 17 sq. ft. wi Vinyl-Asbestos Tile install Even on Cement Floors Reg. ]Se 12¢ Ea. Use them anywhere — even on basement floors! 9x9-inch tiles clean easily — come in bright Harmony House colors. Save! Our Lowest Price in Many Years! - Regular 3.59 Purchases of $20 or More Can Be Made on Sears Easy Get Yours Now—At Big Savings! Buy now and save at the lowest price we've offered in many yeors. Now, improved spun fjbers trap more air for greater efficiency. Mounted on heavy asphalt coated Kraft paper to sea! out moisture. Homart Rock Wool Batts also sesist ltd settle, SPECIAL SAVINGS! Mica Fill + Asphalt Floor Tile Marbleized Black or Brown Plain bleck or brown’ tile 4c 8'4c Marbleized. 4 colors 7'/2c 10'4¢ Marbleized, 4 colors. 9'/:¢ Asphalt Cement, 5-gal. 5.85 Laundry Tub Sale Sturdy! Regularly 49.95 Ideol for use with automatic washer Cabinet finished Has woter connections on both sides holds 20 gallons enamel! faucet. 19'/2x28x34-in. high at Sears—You'll save 5.00! Shollow Well Fume With 17-Gal. Galvanized Tank 1 mt hy Hy) LM, TERRIFIC SAVINGS DURING THIS GIGANTIC SEARS EVENT! COME in NOW-SAVE! |. 44” Leak-resistant, in white baked With Choose yours now... n ‘Wnt Nasiastidyyy se aati A, ¥ ad "ta easeent Vane: Vass er * te. ao . ” hia ” # ow cin, ¥ ‘- = = at — es = = Homart 20-in. Fan Deep-Pitched Steel Blades Le HP. 86. 95 Reg. $4.95 $44 $8 DOWN $3 DOWN Pume ip to 0 SPH Cast- rives out hot air, inside re n nize tank places it with fresh Ooi alr brass je 8 t Easy Oper ites 6 q 2 speeds © in e 3450 CFM With Timer $49 Brand New Homart Quality! Exclusive “Linked” ALUMINUM WALL TILE INSTALLS LIKE MAGIC Each sheet has 2C 4x4-in tiles, 3%. covers 2'%4 sq. ft Works like magic, hides ugly cracked walls, adds lus- trous beauty and glowing charm to walls applied over any surface. Harmony House Natural Wood Kitchen 3° Cabinet, Reg. 15.50 24x30-Inch Wall Cabinets, Regularly 19.25... .17.32 30x30-Inch Wall Cabinets, Regularly 21.25... .19.12 21-Inch Wood Base Cabinet, Regularly 26.00. . .23.40 30-Inch Wood Base Cabinet, Regularly 33.00. . 29.70 18x30-inch Wall Assembled Pieces Gther Sizes Available at 10°% Savings Now—at Sears 10° savings—you can modernize your kitchen for more beauty and convenience! Have as many wall and base cabinets as you have room for; : have ample storage space for all your dishes, pots and pans .. pertly constructed . .. . appliances, all your kitchen equipment. Ex- ready to paint, stain or varnish Slate Roll Roofing 3.69 Heavy felt base, asphalt soaked. Slate granule covered. 90 - lb. ; roll covers 100 sq. ft. Reg. 6c 5¢ Ea. 19 Cov 50 ba. Fr. Invest Con be to look best in your home! See them now! Easy to clean. Save! Modernization Dept.—Perry St. Basement Brush Cleaner 89¢ Hi-solvent brush @nd roller clean Beautiful, clear h outwears varnish- times . Use Vp pr. 45¢ Beauty of na- tural grain in one step. Stains, fills and seals close or open- grain woods Patching Plaster 49¢ Smooth, easy to apply; add water and mix. Fills big cracks, bag Trnite, 5 ble Four-Hour Enamel It's Easy to Glamorize Your Furniture With New ae 419 | oo + Quart Regularly priced at 1.79 quart! You'll be amazed at the colorful effects you get with 4-Hour Enamel. Flows on smoothly; dries quick without showing laps. Sili- conized; extremely smooth and. tough. Paint Dept—Sears Basement ~ -— A : mE e Bees) AL Sy y Hn * Aer eee eye es ee