é _ % * % & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955—44 PAGES 52,000 Workers Now Idle Wildcat Strikes Make Production Cuts at Ford, General Motors Plants in U.S. UAW and wags reported tien Ua a fresh offer. GM mid a check fisted 38,304 idle at 12 plants. Ford said 13.250 were off the job in four plants. The GM troubles were at- tributed to a combination of anx- jety over getting a new contract and local issues. Similar local issues and dis- satisfaction with the newly reached Ford contract were held responsible for the Ford walkouts. Ford's giant Rouge plant in suburban Dearborn sputtered along with only a fraction of | normal] efficiency. Some 8,000 of the regular 25,000 day shift workers either had refused to re- port for work or had been sent home. Leading the stoppage there were over the Ford-UAW contract set- tlement. Skilled workers, with! the average $2.10, said they were more interested in wage boosts. Longshoremen Postpone Strike Schedule Talks Today on New Contract for Three Unions - DETROIT ® — Three AFL longshoremen’s unions try again today to reach a settlement with the Great Lakes Dredgemen's Assn. In a contract dispute that could tie up almost all” shipping that top) officials of UAW Ford Local at the Rouge plant have | affected. appealed to the company to give ‘the skilled workers an additional five cents an hour, The Ford walkout spread today {from Dearborn to the Mercury as< sembly plant in nearby Wayne. About 2,300 employes were idle | there Ales idle were. nearly 3,000 em- ployes at ‘ee installations concentration. of idle . biggest GM workers was in the Cleveland area; About 15,000 of the com- pany’s total of 20000 there were (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) 2 More Firms Get USW Plan Wage Increase Demand Carried to Bethlehem, Republic Stee! Makers PITTSBURGH #—The CIO Unit- ed Steelworkers Union carried its |demands for a sizeable wage in- | crease to two more of the nation’s largest basic stee] producers today. Union President David J. McDon- ng i ir i ih iar TH rates only, That bars demands for a guaranteed cman wage. * ! e The same observers predict that the final settlement with the robust steel industry will be for about 1214 cents more an hour. The union will be free to strike June 30 if an agreement is not reached by then. - Solunar Tables Start Today in Pontiac Press Today, on page 33 of the Pon- tiac Press Sports Section, will be found a new, and authoritative fishing and game guide. Prepared by the creator of the tables, John -| Alden Knight, thése tables will ap- pear each Wednesday in the Pon- »| ae Press Sports, Section Out- ‘doors page. Knight, confirmed believer in the Watch for the weekly ‘Solunar Tables in the Pontiac Press Sports pages. |4641° McEwen Dr., Area Authorities Join in Search for Detroit Girl Oakland County authorities and Pontiac Police this. morning joined in a search for a “tiny” Girl Scout, who is apparently lost some- where between Detroit and Pontiac. According to Detroit Police, who requested Pontiac and Oak- trying her Girl Scout merit badge by walking from Detroit to Pontiac. The little 12-year-old scout was Parolee Questioned in Jeannie Murder KALAMAZOO & — 4 25-year-old Prewent | parolee was held for questioning today in the slaying of 8-year-old Jeannie Singleton May 23. - Kalamazoo schooj earlier in the day. The older giris identified the man as the one they had seen. school Pontiac Tot Killed FLIN?P —Mark Verwiehbe, 4, of Bloomfield Township, was killed today when his parents’ car collided with a gravel truck on U.S. 10 at the Genesee-Oakland County line. ‘The child was dead on arrival at St. Joseph's Hospital in Flint. The boy's father, Gerhardt Van Wiebe, said he lost control on a curve and spun into the truck. Neither driver was injured but Van Wiebe's wife, Evelyn, 4, was thrown from the car and suf- fered shock. 4! Set Alcohol Funds LANSING @®—The State Board of Alcoholism hag alloted $48,732 for research, education and treat- ‘ment programs in alcoholism. Public Housing Measure Gets Senate Approval Democrat Bill to Cost Four Times What Ike Asked Originally : WASHINGTON Tr) — A ‘Democratic move toward construction of public hous- ing at a rate almost four times as great as that Presi- dent Eisenhower recom- mended topped its first big} hurdle yesterday. As part of an omnibus bill | to continue federal housing programs for another year, the Senate voted to author-| ize 135,000 low-rent public housing units in each of the next four years. Eisenhower had asked authority for 35,000 units for each of the next two years. That is the number authorized this year. The federal government does not build public housing projects. It The 540,000-unif program still fz i § # F | litte ing of $2,500 on home improve- ment loang would be raised to $3,000. : Other provisions include: 1. Nearly 1% billion dollars in gram of 10,000 units a year for elderly persons. 3. A 200-million-dollar direct- loan to ease a shortage of housing for college students: Colleges could borrow if private financing was unavailable. . 4. A %-million-dollar loan insur- ance program by -the Farmers Home Administration and 100 mil- lion dollars in new money for di- rect loans for farm housing. 5. A 50- million - dollar smoke ‘abatement program. In Today's Press ee re ee ee ee Visits Hatoyama FASHION NOTE — Wearing a blue straw hom- burg with an off-white ribbon, President President Sports New Spring Homburg blue shirt. vevlitpttteg tu Suna wok: gaslluséy tax teem exercises. He wore a dark blue\guit with a light AP Wirephete Continued Rain’ Forecast Today, Thursday Here “The rains came” to Ponfiat Monday and will. continue through- out the night and Thursday in the form of scattered showers, accord- ing to the latest report of the U.S. Weather Bureau. following the fall of .70 of an inch of rain since the first of the week. Forecasters say “not much change in temperature” will ac- compariy the showers, Tomorrow's expected high is 70 degrees. Today the mercury downtown seemed glued to the 62 degree mark until almost noon. The low before 8 o'clock was 60 ‘degrees =q the temperature at 2/p.m. was ‘| Seeing Eye Dog Fund Provided in Will - A Bloomfield Township woman, who died May 18, has left a $1,000 fund to care for her ‘dog, cats, birds and other household pets” plus. a trust fund to supply fi- nancially needy blind persons with leader dogs. Mrs: Genevieve Skinner, 64, of 3518 ‘Franklin Rd.,. died following an auto crash. _ (Her will, filed in Oakland /County. Probate Court, lists real estate and personal assets total- if ing $70,000, The former insurance company representative left small cash sums plus valuable household articles .to two great nieces and several friends. The trust fund for purchasing the end of which leftover cash will’ be distributed to charity. TOKYO -#—U.S. Sen. Earl C _| Clements (D-Ky) called on Prime Minister Ichiro Hatoyama today. is quickly gotten for urmused articles when ig! al é : LF leaves the U.S. Military Academy yesterday after | “dogs for blind persons needing | ‘ money” is to run for 20 years at |’ # The House Post Office and+ Civil Service Committee goes behind closed doors to- day to try to agree on the amount of the raise to be — the million-odd classi- ed civil service employes. Other members of Congress, how. smaller boost for the civil serv- h reclassification of pay schedules similar to requirements long in ef- fect nod cv il service workers. day the question of pay raises for rank-and-file govern- . ment workers with dome signs of new friction. with the White House. A compromise bill to hike the pay of 500,000 postal workers an average of’8 per cent retroactive to March 1 was sent to President Eisenhower yesterday, ending a long tussle in which he vetoed a somewhat larger boost. ‘Solons Tackling Problem vernment Pay Boost " WASHINGTON (®—A House coninitiee takes up to- Union Confident of Getting Pact [Before Sunday Settlement ‘Include Benefits’ onee to Ford ‘Workers 7 DETROIT #) .— Motors Corp. today a new midnight strike deadliné. ~~ Nobody af/GM would say so but UAW officials ‘said oe fully, — anew er. | eee French to Talk With Molotov About Adenauer » PARIS (#—The French will have a chance to talk with Soviet Foreign Minister V, M. Molotov. tomorrow about the Russian’ in-| .|Vitation to Chancellor Konrad Adenauer to visit Moscow, Premier Edgar Fatire and For- eign Minister Antoine Pinay’ are to be hosts at a luncheon to Molotov, who will stop here on his way to the United States to at- tend the United Nations com- memorative session in San Fran- cisco June. 20-26, And in London the British For- eign, Office made it clear today Adenauer is barred by agreements ‘with the Western powers from negotiating with Russia either to —_— treaty. Will Remain he Kremlin of Western Ike Sure That Adenauer True to West WASHINGTON (M—President Eisenhower said today he has the utmost confidence that West Germany's Chancellor Adenauer will stand by the Western world in any dealings with Soviet Russia. ; Eisenhower volunteered the remark at his news con- ference in taking note of Moscow’s bid for. establishment of diplomatic and trade relations with the newly sover- Sermany. Eisenhower said it is only natural that Russia would, extend such an invitation, in view of what Charter commissions were reunite Germany or to conclude |. cee a lie st M peat, al = = s 2 : me t $ om yO PB. ¢ * i ii THE PONTIAC PRESS. | WEDNESDAY. JUNE 8. 1035 2) — mm Quarry Mishap. Electrocutes 2 Upper Peninsula Men’ Killed by Short Circuit in Big Drill | CEDARVILLE # — Two men were ,electrocuted last night when a short circuit caused by crossed wires in a big electric drill sent 4,600 volts through thetr ‘ae * * The victims were Charles Wes- ' ton, 40, father of two. and Norman -Kosier, about 35, father of four, both of Cedarville in the Upper Peninsula. ‘ Buena Vista Subdivision until the . contractor brings streets to city-| standards. ing on Strathmore .and Fairmont Avenues spoke in favor of the move saying the streets are impassable following rain and the contractor's agreement with them calls for im- provement to put them in. good year-round shape: (District 4) Introduced the res- olution stating the contractor had “provrastinated beyond réa- son.” : ; The two men were working in “the Cedarville quarry of the Michigan Limestone Division of. U.S. Steel Corp. when Weston had difficulty with his electric drill and Kosier, an electrician, rewired a motor. Fy Wires were crossed and when The resolution cited the “danger _ i Weston turned on the power from to life and property” caused by || “THUMBS DOWN” ON NEW CONTRACT SAY AP Wirephete the drill cab, Kosier, standing out- road conditions sometimes making / — F gathered lant. Most ‘f the men voiced dissatisfaction Side, was electrocuted. | j = — | tio : | | Inited Auto Workers con- Weston saw Kosier collapse and | ice, medical aid and sanitary at Local 600 (UAW-CIO) headquarters and filled the | with the new Ford-CIO Unit uto Wo: | was killed himself by the charge when he stepped outside the cab to investigate. * services to gain access to the area. Commissioner John E. Carry (District 6) called for “legislation on the local level” which would | prevent a recurrence of the sit- . vation. : City Attorney William A. Ewart said the move might bring court action by the contractor but “the health and welfare of the public” should put it an a solid legal basis. | City Police Join Drive for Safety Pontiac today joins the State Safety Commission and the Michi- gan State Police in a traffic acci- haps during what has been termed as the year’s most critical auto accident period. Straley pointed dat that ‘535 persons were killed last year between the two holi- Included. these categories are motorists who speed; pass at dan- “gerous spots, @eal the right-of- . way, and follow. too closely. Na- tional figures show that these faults were responsible for 90 per cent of highway deaths. Straley also reminded drivers: _ that schools close early in June: and children are in the streets without protection of school safety programs and officials. ‘The slo- gans ‘“‘Watch Out for Kids” and “Slow. Down for Kids" should be uppermost in every driver's mind,” the chief said. ’ He urged residents to heed the “Slow Down and Live” slogan not only when driving in the city but when driving in the country. “It is significant,” he concluded, “that most of the persons killed on coun- try roadways are those who live in cities." June’s Circuit Court Term Lists 81 Cases © Some 8] criminal cases are Slated for trial during the Jurie term of Oakland County Circuit: Court starting June 13, according to Chief Assistant Oakland County Prosecutor George F. Taylor. (of Garrett, hall. to capacity yesterday after a walkout at the | tract. Rouge plant was closed by the walkout. Pontiac Deaths William Hatley Service will be held Friday at 2 p.m. in the Voorhees-Siple Chapel for William Hatley, 36, of 2135 Dixie Highway who was burned to death in a truck-trailer accident ae two miles north dren, Linda J., Jerry Lee and Wil- liam Alex Hatley, all at home. Four , Fleet of Toledo, Clifford of Cleveland, John and Walter Hatley, both of Newport: three sisters, Mrs. James Hill of Cleveland, Mrs. George Owsby and Mrs. Jay Webb, both of Newport, also survive. : Mrs. Guy Jackson Mrs. Guy (Mamie) Jackson, 71, of 2% Elizabeth St, died Friday night. She had been fll one year. Born in Jackson, Miss., in 1884, she was the daughter of Mrs. Mary Scott. Coming here from Jackson 12‘years ago, she made home with her sister, Mrs. ttle DeWalt, who survives her. Also surviving are seven nieces The funeral will be held Thurs- day at 2 p.m. in the Macedonia Baptist Church with the Rev. L. R. Miner, her pastor, officiating. Bur. ial will follow in.Oak Hill Ceme- tery ‘ Friends may call at the William F. Davis Funeral Home after 3:30 p.m, today, Agnetta M. Lambert ’ Agnetta M. Lambert, 69, died yesterday morning at the home of her sister, Mrs. John J. Dauphin, 54 Niagara Ave. with whom she lived.- She had béen il! seyeral years. Born Feb. 23, 1886, in Rayfield, Wis., she was the daughter of John and Cornelia Johnson Lambert. A member of the Episcopal Church of Bayfield, Miss Lambert had owned and operated a retail store there before retiring. She has lived in Pontiae seven years. Surviving are a brother, Lester of ‘Chicago, Ill, three sisters, Mrs. R. C. MecNurlen of Minneapolis, Minn., Mrs. Homer Corrier of Spooner, Wis. and Mrs. Dauphin. _Miss Lambert will be taken from the Donelson- Johns Funeral Home to Bayfield this evening where service will be-held Friday at 2 p.m. Burial will be in Green- wood Cemetery. No cases of a more serious na- ture than robbery armed are scheduled, .said Taylor. Judge Frank L. Doty will preside. The Weather AC AND VI Parity eleady te cloudy with a few’ seatte: shewers tonight and = . oday tn Pontiac Lowest temperatere preceding § a.m At @ ami: Wind velovity « mph rection: Nort ‘ : Sun sets today at 8:07 p.m Moon rises Moon sete Thu: at + y at 16:77 p.m, aday at 6:31 a.m, etree sd eee t B Mi ccceens : My. es canteen, 83 2 Mivcsevees O +enevegs fl p OD Mnscsee 8 - mm, Misseesense + Bscgecened m. ee ee ee ee w eee it ere ce Pen eee ease ao 735 ‘om 4. Mrs, Chester Miller Word has been received of the death of Mrs, Chester (Lillian) Miller of 213 Norton Ave. She died suddenly early Yhis morning. Mrs, Miller had gone to Me- nominee to attend the funeral. of her brother, John Sawall and was taken ill yesterday. She was born in Menominee and was a member of the Eastern Star and the First Preshyterian Church. Surviving, is a daughter, Mrs. Troyace (Florence) Doolin of 213 Norton Ave. with whom she had | made her home for 10 years. Sev- eral brothers and sisters and two grandchildren also survive. and one nephew. t Commission A proposed noxious weed-control ordinance was withdrawn by the City Commission last night. Its provisions instead will be incor- ordinance also controlling tree growth and trimming. The move was recommended by City Manager Walter K. Willman on request of the Parks and Rec- reation Dept. By a 6-1 vote, the CSmmission approved first reading of an amendment to the city peddier’s ordinance, providing for con- trolling rather than outlawing sale of ice cream by street vendors. Objection was raised by. Com- missioner Floyd P. Miles {District 4), who said, “We're licensing them to do things we don’t want them to do.” ORDINANCE READ. ~~ | Also given first reading was an | ordinance establishing new boun. | dary lines for Precincts 3, 4, and | MM. Following passage of the | measure, which puts into law a, change approved by the voters in| Four Persons Hurt in 2-Car Collision Four persons were injured in a 2-car collision at Adams road ‘and South Boulevard last night, Oak- land County ‘Sheriff's deputies said. : Treated for a broken shoulder at St.. Joseph Mercy Hospital was Mrs. Virginia Fitch, 27, a passen- ger in a car driven by her hus- band Arthur. 30, of Bi their daughter, Tonie, 8, and moth- er, Mrs, Hilda Fitch, 60. Also treated for cuts was Mrs. Mary Koch, 52, of Rochester, driv- er of the other. car. Mrs. Koch told deputies her brakes failed as she approached the intersection and her car col- lided with the Fitch auto. \for five zoning shifts to com- Treated for cuts and bruises were | ¢ Withdraws Weed-Control Proposal April, residents of the areas af- fected will be notified of the shift, according to City Clerk Ada R. Evans. In other action, the Commis- sion passed a resolution proposed porated In a more encompassing |hy Commissioner John E. Carry (District 6) directing preparation of an ordinance rezoning to resi- dential classification the portion of Herrington Hills Subdivision now zoned for manufacturing. “This will conform with our | pelicy of uniform soning,” Carry explained. The ordinance will be presented to the plan board for he suggested a few weeks ago. approval. . | But he said he will want some. ‘Approved was an exchange of city-owned land in Murphy—Park for a slightly larger section ad- jacent to the park owned by De- troit Edison Co. The Edison land will become part of the park. PREPARE MEASURES City Attorney William A. Ewart was directed to prepare ordinances mercial 1 classification. They are: * 8 A third worker, Sy Hurban of lke Sure Adenauer Will Stick With West (Continued From Page One) the Senate will be able to take the initiative on the bill if the Stalemate in the House cannot be BIG FOUR—Eisenhower said he | Certainly would not insist on limit- | ing any “at the summit”’ Big Four | Meeting to three or four days, as definite Hmitation on the duration of any such conference with the premiers of Britain, France and Russia, in advance of the meeting. He suggested that without such a limitation the Russians might try to capitalize on the meeting for propaganda Purposes, EMPLOYMENT — Eisenhower said the latest figures on em- ployment and unemployment in the Cedarville, went to their aid but | stopped when he “‘felt a tingling’’ [ in the ground and escaped injury. | broken. : a difficult math problem at his home in East Green- wich, R. I. And the pooch isn’t kidding! His master, _ chemist George Wood, claims the dog can give quick, “LET'S SEE—THIS IS AN EASY ONE”—"Chris," . who is part beagle and part mathematician, studies | accurate answers to complicated problems involving square roots and what-have-you. The seven-year-old canine genius _gi numbers with his United Presa Phote ves his answer by patting out the paw. Jet Ace Given Welcome Home Arms to Newly Freed AF Captain thanksgiving for the deliverance of double jet ace Capt. Harold Fischer Jr. from a Red Chinese United States are a -cause for Lots 39 to 47, 153 to 156 and parts of 150 to 152 of assessor’s plat 13; lots 6 and 1 to 8, O. F, Beier Subdivision. Received and filed were plan commission reports approving ordinances rezoning to commercial 1 lots 1 and 7, assessor's plat 147, lots §3 to 65, assessor’s plat 103 and lots 591 to 593, Ferry Farm Addition. . ESTIMATES PRESENTED Engineer's estimates were pre- sented and public hearing set for Tuesday night for curb, gutter and drainage work on Blaine street from Oakland to Montcalm, and on Jefferson avenue from Blaine to Summit. A public hearing also was set fer Tuesday for a special assess- ment roll fer curb, gutter and rainage on Carlisle street from Walton to New York. Public hearings were held and, confirmation deferred for curly, gutter and. drainage on Fourth avenue from Joslyn to Fuller “ind on Ypsilanti avenue from Carlisle to Stanley. / i k Special assessment rolls were confirmed for the followipig proj -lects: Euclid St. with whom she made her home. A brother, John Hallack and 12 Arrangements will be announced later by the Huntoon Funeral Home. : grandchildren also survive. | . Water main tn West Cofumbia ave- {mue from Baldwin to the jf assessor's piat 107. j Curb, gutter and drainage on Going street from Beuth boulevard to Prospect, Curb, gutter and one on Willard | street from Jessie to irley j urb, gutter and drainage on Luther | street from Howland to Earlmoor, | Curb, gutter and drainage on Beverly avenue from Baldwin to University. ¥. west boundary | | gratification, He said they show | | that 62,700,000 persons have jobs, | that employment is Up ong million ‘in May as compared with April | and that unemployment is down | a half-million, . | POLIO—Eisenhowey again paid | tribute to Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby, secretary of health, education and welfare, for her handling of the Salk polio vaccine : Some Democrats have criticized her handling /of the inoculation campaign. ’ YUGOSLAVIA — Asked whether the United’ States plans’ to reap- praise its ‘program of aid to Com- munist Yugoslavia, in view of the visit by/Soviet leaders to Belgrade. | Eisenhower replied that this is a | world of change and policies are | Teappraised daily. He went on to say that the United States does ngt diminish its interest in other gountries merely because they are /striving to be somewhat neutral. Waterford Tot Struck by Slow-Moving Auto Four-year-old Terry Davison, of 5776 Dwight; Waterford Township, was treated for bruises at Pontiac General Hospital last night after | | he. was struck by a car near his | home. | Driver of the car, Preston Rice, | 101 W. Hopkins St., Pontiae, told | Waterford Tawnship Police he was | driving slowly looking for a house prison was being celebrated today. by residents of this tiny north lowa town. | ~ Officials braced for a crowd ex- pected to swell the town’s normal 800 population to more than 5,000 ‘for the official ceremony of wel- come in the town park. A parade through the town and an address by Gov. Leo A. Hoegh precede formal introduc- tion of Fischer to the It's his first visit home since De- cember 1960, The townspeople were preparing a surprise gift for the captain, who is home after two years in a Red Chinese prison. But it ap- peared the gift might not have all the glitter -originally planned. They'd hoped to give the captain a new airplane, which Fischer, in his letters from the Chinesé prison, had said many times he wanted to own. * * ® Thé Ametican Legion post here sponsored a drive for funds. But it had only a few days to work after Fischer and three ~ fellow prisoners—Lt. Col, Edwin Heller of Wynnewood, Pa., Lt. Ron Parks of Omaha and Lt. Lyle Cameron of Lincoln, Neb.—were released. Plans now are to give the captain what has been collected so that he can apply it on the purchase of a plane. an a Minnesota has 30,000 miles of fishing streams in addition to its number when the tot darted into lhis path, | 11,007 lakes. Swea City, lowa, Opens. SWEA CITY, Iowa W—A day of | Hills School BIRMINGHAM—The Bloomfield | Hills superintendent of schools said today education progress in Hills’ schools “has kept pace” with physical growth. Eugene L. Johnson said the Bloomfield Hills school district in two years had grown from an en- rollment of slightly over 600 to over 1.200 pupils, Pointing up the educational progress-growth idea, reading tests were given ‘students in | grades one through six. Results inthe first three grades showed scores above state and na- tional scores, Johnson said. In grade two the average gain in reading ppility as shown on the test was ‘a 12 months’ gain in 5 months of school, he said. Test grades has not yet been com- pleted. In “his monthly school bulletin. Johnson also listed progress in Bloomfield Hills high school. Included were: an e French program which includes experimental teaching. of French to the fourth grades in elemen- tary school; addition of shorthand and ‘advanced business typing in the business education depart- ment; and homemaking, speech, dramatics and journalism courses to be offered. . A club program designed to fit hobby and leisure time interests of students will be started under faculty supervision, and the Stu- dent Council will he given more responsibility in governing the stu- dent body. tion June 13 at Vaughn School. There are two board vacancies to be filled. * * * Manager Charles Mortensen of the Birmingham Chamber of Com- merce said he was “pleasantly” DETROIT «8 — Two Ferd Motor strongly opposed to a 100 per cent guaranteed annual wage because ‘it would impose far too great a financial responsibility upon the company."* * * Carleton W. Pierce, manager of the Industrial Relations Depart- ment of Ford, and Richard John- son of Ford’s financial staff, were assigned by the company to an- panel of editors. R Pierce ,ang Johnson said the contract. upen which Ford reached agreement with the ClO United Auto Workers was not a questions and: én! Co, spokesmen claim Ford is still | swer a series ‘of questions by a. What Will Happen Under Plan. . . Ford Still Opposed to Full Pay Guarantee farm out that type of work where’ there is a high seasonal fluctua- tion in employment... A~The likelihood of “exporting instability” and other risks and dangers are inherent in any true | guaranteed: annual which. the Ford plan is not. 6 CENT INCREASE Under the Ford plan, the finan- cial obligation to the company is ho more and no less than a five- cent-an-hour wage increase. * * * ; Benefit payments tied to” the trust funds and have no direct financial impact upon the com- pany. Q-t 1 would were a Ford worker, know what ts 3 || only way you. can tell is when it goes into actual ‘operation, * **.* In the first places it will not pay 26 weeks during’ its early wage plan, have fairly stable employment as | we have had in the last few years, the employe can expect pretty good benefits out of this over thé long pull, : But there is no absolute guar- antee about it. * EJ LJ If there were a recession or de- pression, the trust fund, because of heavy layoffs, would not be in as good a position to pay long | duration benefits. Once the fund is ; built up, it might well ride through | any recession or depression. | ‘To answer your question, the ‘is no such thing as a complete | guarantee, which is one reason we say this is not the, guaranteed |load. The cost is borne completely by the employer. “ Q—Then the Ford plan is pre- dicated on integration with the various state unemployment compensation systems? A—Yes. Completely. It is inte- grated both as to duration and eligibility of the laid-off worker. Q—When' does the plan. start operating? When can a Ford worker start drawing hig bene- fits after, a layoff? in any case during the first year off the new contract. This >is to A—The plan.won't start operating |. ; I fand any two-of the fellowing states — Illinois, Missouri, New York, California and New Jersey — also could bring this about. Q—Is there a deadline for ob- taining these favorable rulings? A—Yes, if appropriate rulings Hil al i HT i i iH i ; i | | / ies il kis 4 L Keeping Up, Superintendent Reports surprised by the nunber of mem- bers who showed up for yester- day's breakfast meeting at the Community House, Some 50 mem- bers were on hand as the cham- ber launched its membership drive. Mortensen said the goal ts to recruit 200 additional members. There ourrently are 225 members in the Birmingham chamber, he said. Ld . s Dr Emil Kontz, pastor of the Birmingham Baptist church, has been awarded an honorary doc- tor of literature degree. The de- gree was conferred Sunday at the 103rd commencement exer- cises of Hillsdale college, ; ¥ * * * : The regular meeting of° the Franklin’ Cemetery Auxiliary will be held tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Harry Rainey, 424 W. Maple. A pot-luck luncheon is scheduled for 1 p.m, . LJ * Owen Pinkerman, directo? of the William Beaumont hospital and a member of the- Royal Oak Rota: ’ /club, addressed Birmingham Ro- tarians at a recent meeting. Speaking on the progress at the new hospital which opened in Feb- ruary, Pinkerman said all patient rooms have been opened for serv- ice and that the staff now consists of 140 doctors, : on Larceny Charge Pontiac Police last night ar. esteti Gerald Holst, a 22-yeaf-cld Rochester man on a charge of “larceny by conversion.” According to the warrant, sworn to by Community Motors Co., Rochester, Holst had @btained an tense of wanting to buy. Justice Luther C. Green, Avon Township, said Holst, without com- pleting the purchase, was allowed a night.” oe police found car and Holst at Hazel Park last night Holst waived a preliminary hear. ing, and 1s being held in jail in lieu of $2,000 bond to await ar raignment in Circuit Court. Wildcat Strikes Cut Auto Production a brief walkout. Other walkout slowed production in GM New Jersey to ee 5 i E25 of : ‘ Rochester Man Held. automobile May 17 under the pre- to drive the automobile home “for . s stopped or as rete ge fe! THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955. eo = West Prepares (INS). — The re gets a big series of summer di declared by a: ! of State John: Foster Dulles yesterday as the US. announced plans for two of the meetings. lai Bulganin of Russia, Sir An- thony Eden of Britain and Edgar Faure of France, The three Western powers pro- posed that this meeting begin on July 18 and run for four days ‘at ~ Geneva, Sutcarlend, Tt was also announced that the | three Western ministers will meet in. New York on Thurs- Wants Gopher Tal Legalized as Bounty ST. PAUL (UP)—Have you ever smelled the feet of a dead gopher? | -“They smell terrible, according to state Rep. Leo Madden, who is concerned with the bounty situa- tion, * td] * If you live according to the letter of the law in Minnesota, you must produce the front feet of a pocket gopher to collect a bounty. For a striped or grey gopher, it’s neces- sary to turn over all four feet to the chairman of a town board to collect the bounty. ; For decades t , gopher hunters have been winking at the law and collecting bounties by pre- ducing only the tail, and Madden ‘thinks it’s abqut time to legalize the long practice. He has intro- duced a bill to accomplish that. . “Even the tail smells - bad enough,”” he said. Buggies Dangerous LIGONIER, Ind. ® —Indiana | — police report: The right shaft | a buggy being driven by Mrs. oe Miller broke and the horse Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov in San Francisco the following week, OTHER MEETINGS Other conferences in the works or under consideration include: 1, A late June meeting of West- ern ambassadors with the Yugo- meeting, and if the Western pow- erg agree, as it seems they will, try to find out what Tito will do slavs. Marshal Tito proposed the-- with the military aid he has re- ceived from the’ West if there {s trouble in Europe, ses ; * * ® The West wants te know par- ticularly how Tito regards his role in the mutual security pact Yugoslavia has with North At- lantic Treaty members Greece and Turkey. 2. The June 13 talks in Washing: ton between West German Chan- im ASSIGNMENT FOR: JUNIOR EDITORS. é fay ree | =< AJ ad ie aif 4 ‘a =. A | Yrhceldad le Cai: | ~ ui | (3 I The study of chemistry dates FUTURE CAREERS—3 A Chemist A chemist is a person who studies the makeup of all the earth's matter, such as air, water and metals. Chemistry !s closely related to physics, which deals with the forms and forces of energy. But in these days of atom power the fields often overlap. back thousands of years. In the | Middle Ages chemists‘ often surrounded themselves with mystery, and péople regarded them as magicians. Many chemists of this period spent all their time trying to turn iron and other common metals into gold. “Now chemistry is a vital part of our life. Public health depart- ments and the federal government employ chemists to test food, milk nd.drugs, and to maintain high standards in many products. A chem- it who works for a company designing new products generally is known'as a chemical engineer or a research chemist. To become a chemist, you will have to spend many years in ment Service to help him cellor Konrad Adenauer and Presi- dent Eisenhower and Dulles. ~ ns ” _* * 3. Possible talks in Washington | between Indian Ambassador V. K. Krishna Menon and American leaders on his plans for easing relations between the U.S. and Communist China and ending the Formosa crisis. Menon has made it clear ‘he wants to talk about his plan, but so far the U.S. government has set up no meeting for him with Eisenhower or Dulles, PRE-PARLEY TALKS 4. Working group Meetings of the Western powers to prepare for | talks at the summit. “These ses- sions are expected to start in Washington within a few days. _ * &# & 5. Meetings of foreign “ministers or Series of Peace Talks and experts that are expected. to follow. the talkg at the summit. President . Eiserhower has said | that the summit talks cannot be expected to solve problems but can be useful by giving impetus to the foreign ministers and others in) working on problems that are creating friction in the world. trols, jaaiiailian o¢ Germany, and the Formosa crisis. From the Communist point of view there are also the problems of a United Nations seat for Red China; ending the economic block- | | ade of the China mainland, and ;an end to the embargo on ship- ments of strategic materials from the West to any Communist country, Quits as Shoemaker; Ate Too Many Tacks TAMPA, Fla. & — A man who had been a cobbler for 30 years asked the Florida State Employ- get started in another occupation. Most cobblers, he said, hold ing, spitting. ouf tacks as needed. Over the years, he had gulped too digestive tract. ; He now works happily on a label machine in a canning factory. In a single year, one female moth and her family can destroy tacks in their mouths while work. ' dozen _ sheep wo _ Produce. | New Liquid Kills Scientists recommend that you control erewling insects, the modern way — | aeons and Ants with Johnston's NO-ROACH. Brushed jest where you want it, the colorless, odorless coating kille these pests, and stays effective for months. Not « spray, there's no need te move dishes, pots, and pans while applying. | meery NO-ROACH ie so effective, and so easy to use! 8 o2. 89¢ ; pt. $1.69; qt. $2.96. ran away. The bu u Mrs. | Study. Work in chemistry demands a great deal of knowledge, talent Miller. had a- Pinietis gee and | | and patience, but it can be a very rewarding career."Color today’s | 98 North {{@ DRUGS cuts and her son, Danny, 9, had Picture, and add it to your collection of future careers. Saginaw —Main cuts, Tomorrow: A Librarian. Street BROTHERS . Floor ° 7 . / Why pay up to $500 more for a | reer rae came mre | AND HERE'S WHY: ghz ouner orice one tn his cs a . More comfort i in the biggest, roomiest car of the low-price 3! { Don = ewe gg ° sine © of medion. see py ia “ak, a | The advanced styling of Plymouth’s all-new Forward Look! — ‘ rics a rte et da all $” and discover that — Top economy from Plymouth’s 6-cylinder PowerFlow 117 engine! and gives you more car for your money! by like you to see this at . The greatest visibility with the new swept-back windshield! . : : wonderful tt would look perked teh z & #| : ’ ea a ec 9 ce ee a No a Th. TS _PLYMOUTH—BEST BUY NEW; “BETTER TRADE-IN, (Too) i : 7 : < big . often when he should have spat. | He produced X-rays to shew the | large ‘collection ‘of tacks in his | as much wool as it would take a/| LUGGAGE VALU We've Ever OFFERED! TRAIN CASE —< WEEKENDER CASE — PULLMAN CASE Matched Set 4!'3 Pieces , Regular $19.95 Value § 6 6 $1.25 HOLDS NOW ONLY All Pleces Have 2 Stitehed Bindiugs Yes, all THREE PIECES at less than you would expect to » pay for one. Choice of Tweed Gray ... Mare fy bleized White... Biue and white. Get yours now. Wonder. ful FATHER’S DAY gift. PITTI TIVIIIIIIIII IIIT IIT iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiriiri rrr ir DOUBLE. DUTY —Finger-Tip Change-Over Control Steam & Dry IRON | Regular $17.9 $7 O* Scientific 5 J ‘alu * Iron, Steam design saves -er Dry times and effort. Auto-" * Dual Themb Rest temp control for all fab- ® Insulated rics. Non - wrinkle heel. Handle Convertible for right or % Button Nook left hand ironing. SSSHSHSHHOSSSHSSSS SHOKHKESSSSESHSSSHoSSEeeeseoseseooesocoscosoeCoeeeSeS Folding Army Folding Rocker Frame end Camp Cot Lounger Hammock $4.95 Value $9.95 Value $13.95 Value $3.99 $6.88 $11.88 Pull 64”, rein- Aluminum frame, Complete with forced frame, colorful canvas. storage box, hedvy canvas. Chair style. Polds iriiiiiitiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiryy yy AUTOMATIC Thermostat Control ELECTRIC DEEP-FRY : Large JUMBO SIZE — 9” Diqmeter, 6” Deep Ay Regular S$ 8 8 $19.95 = i . }. : Value . HOLDS YOURS ‘© 5Va-Qr. Size It fries .. oS a * Control -.. roasts... blanches, .. stews... osha bakes... etc. Factory guaranteed with * Li che all the features of most expensive deep Signal fryers. Now, at Simms low-LOW price & Pyrex Cover you can afford to have your own. ~ * Recipe Book now! PIISTITIPTITIIIITI rrr rt eeeccceesd Maker’s Own Price Tag Says “$5,95 VALUE’-—Save Over $3 at Simms Hassock $ 88 Styled Exactly as Pictured Just 144 at this special low-low price: It’s another YOURS. typical money-saving alia you find so often at Simms. Get yours now. Choice of Colors— RED - CHARCOAL CHARTREUSE Lerge 14x14 Inch Size. Fs ies ihe cas pe é A ; : 3 i. : - : , : THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JUNE 8, 1955° “= OPEN TONIGHT ” |. THURSDAY: & FRIDAY 71 9 P.M. On April? 26 we had a fire at our Woodward Ave. store.in. Detroit. ,We. ran a FIRE SALE there but we must have faster action because we must decorate our Woodward Ave. Store. So we are helping them clean up al! merchan- dise. Very little merchandise damaged. _. . NOTICE! THIS MERCHANDISE IS ONLY THE REMAINS OF OUR STORE OF 13831 WOODWARD AVE. WE SENSATIONAL DID NOT HAVE A FIRE AT OUR PONTIA STORE. | STOREWIDE ALL SALES FINAL! - NO. PHONE ORDERS! - NO REFUNDS! } } AST LIVING ROOM | Aer BEDROOM ri Ronen 2 7 secTionl $60.00 iis DOUME DEESER aN cuEsT | $55.00 A terrific value—brand new except for minor = weter damage. ey, CUSTOM SOFA AND CHAIR SUITE tie. Coveee DRESSER CHEST—-8tD $88.00 : N. rn korina blond © s2i Just 2—in “quality fabrics Very small smoke damage $65.00 wind is “- F Rey. 2 PC. LIVING ROOM Re. DOUBLE DRESSER—CHEST—BED — "$110 00 $279 te eerescin wet fabric $95.00 Platinum grey A = Reg. DOUBLE DRESSER—CHEST—BED ez. SOFA AND CHAIR $115.00 | 28 tives ont tnt $135.00 In cocoa frieze—sitghtly soled a ° — , — — Rea. TRIPLE DRESSER—BOOKCASE BED Rex, ROWE 2 PC. SECTIONAL $125.00 | 2 srercess manogany-—sompe $145.00 Massive styling. , ——* Reg. DOUBLE DRESSER—CHEST—BED fey. NYLON SOFA AND CHAIR $155.00 | 222 Moors sear - $175.00 5289 New Rose Frieze ° . Reg. DOUBLE DRESSER—CHEST—BED Reg. RUBBER FOAM SECTIONAL $165.00 $779 Huntley timed oak. CHES $225.00 $299 2 pieces—sampie. | : , , Reo. DOUBLE DRESSER, CHEST, TWIN BEDS $950) OO rt 5 epeagiioce 2 en $245.00 $399 Bali Hi mahogany. 4| "APPLIANCES and TY | DINING .ROOMS i 575.00 | iti ‘auasany Prorwearvams $50.00 CROSLEY REFRIGERATOR $155.00 | 2% SURFET TARE -cHanns $185.00. 5 THOR TTOMATIG Wha —! 3125.00 Reg. ed eee CHAIRS $235.00 mm APDCWASR——SSSSS*S*«R GROG IMEAMTASTTTAMLEcwAIS 5260.00 SEB Ces come Sorale. $150.00 ODD CHAIRS HIDEAWAY BEDS Reg. PLASTIC CHAIR AND OTTOMAN _ $38.00 ’ Bi intone $110.00| ‘3s sTeTotouncer, = $65.00 _ Bav ss oe | Reg. PLASTIC TV CHAIRS mA NTA «838.00) a £8.00 rig SEALY REDLBED $145.00 | stele KRORHLER swivel Tv chains "$28.00 # | BEDDING ~ RUGS and CARPETS Pas ee nese $16.00} 23. emt $14.00 |r? tai "nn $16.00 $%0 Sr Herta a $38.00 ml Tone soe 210.00 ays Hed sme , $9.00 | Reg. RESTOKRAFT RUBBER FOAM | $129 BOXSPRING G& MATTRESS—samples. $84.00 Saat Monae” sonoie $12.00 | Sten Swat. “$16.00 _Srmiel SIMMONS MATTRESS * $29.00 | Siotic 2%. $12.00 | 9x12 Rug. . $39.00 BEASYTERMS..LIBERAL TRADE-IN POLICY| 25 SOUTH SAGINAW YO ALD “ whereas the married man with $20,000 income probably’ wouldn't. ' who has considerable native intel- | -- . Park at Port Elizabeth; Addo, “lost herd” of about 15 elephants. g 1 ff Ante soon dicappear. THE PONTIAC PRESS, “ WE EDNESD. AY. JU NE. 8.1955 How to Handle You Money: 3 = Following is the third install- ment of a ten-part interview with Benjamin Graham, secur- ity analyst and Columbia Uni- versity professor, who answers questions on the how’s. and when’s of investing your mon- ey. Q—Do you recommend corper- ate bonds for the man making $20,000? A—No, I don't see any reason under conditions today,-and those we've seen for many years past, why a man should buy corporation Q—Why? A—The yields of the good bonds | are only slightly in excess of what | he could get on U. S.* savings bonds. On the second-grade bonds, | the risk element offsets, approxi- | mately at least, the additional in- | come, There’ is, of course, the. question of tax-exempt bonds, | which is a separate factor; a $20,- 000-a-year unmarried man might | find the tax-exempts interesting, Q—We've been talking up to new, by implication at least, only about investing money te get in- come, Is there a stage at which where profit can be made by an advance in the market value of a security? 3 A—Oh, yes. I think in the early part of one’s career.’ in business or the professions, if you have considerable iriterest in “financial matters, as many people have; and ‘ Corporate Bonds Risky r $20,000-a-Year Man © want to educate yourself as far as” you can in finance, there, if you | wish to get the full advantage out your education, the advantage would be in investment for appre- ciation. The rewards are greater, of course, in appreciation than they are in income, and there's: no rea- son why a person shouldn't aim. at those things, Q—Even at a relatively low in- come level? eg A—He could do that, too, as a matter of fact and get more interest out of life, being a skillful inves- | tor for appreciation on a small scale, than he would if he just did it to get a few dollars a year income, Q—You think the average per- | son Is capahle of doing this? A—Well, taking everythirig into account, I would say “No."’ I mean, if you took a person at random and gave him the ideal surround- | ings and education and counsel, | and so on, you might turn him into a person capable of doing this. | But, under the circumstances in | which he lives, he probably would | not do a gooti job. Q—Who would, thea? A—It would be good for a person | ligence and ability and who has a | TV Zoo Parade Staff Planning Africa Safari CHICAGO (UP)—Marlin Perkins and the staff of television's “Zoo Parade” program have schedu'-d a two-month safari to Africa to shoot film for the program. Perkins and his party hope to get enough sound-track film of fild animals in their native habi- | tat for at least six programs. The party will consist of Peer. | kins, director of the Lincoin Park Zoo; Don Meier, “Zoo Pa- | rade” producer - director; an- | nouncer Jim Hurlbut and a tech- nical crew. The trip ts planned for July and August. ; Perkins said the itinerary will: include a trip to the Krueger Na- | tional Park, 200 miles east of Jo- hannesburg; the HluHluWe game. reserve, home of the rare white rhino and African buffalo; Snake | near Port Elizabeth, home of a the only ones in that part of Af- rica. i _ A side trip is planned to the Tel Aviv Biblical Zoo, a unique zoolog- ical garden which contains only -those animals mentioned in the Bible. New Survey Can Tell What Voters Will Do EAST LANSING ®—Dr. Claude |. Bosworth, of Michigan .State Col- | lege, says he has devised a ques- | tionnaire that tells what a citizen | thinks of his community — and | what he'll buy for it. “We can help community léad- ers determine if an industrial de- velopment, new school, sewer bond | issue or recreation program will he approved by the people,” he arThe method hes been retiehle to surveys run in several Michi igan cities, Bosworth says. GeiRidot ANTS! TI Pe a = az: peti? taps. Carry bpit nest. Whole colony de- strayed. Quick acting. hardware and vend cones eepety Pos eee it real interest in financial matters and is willing to devote the amoiint of time and energy to it. Q—And who has time for it— the time is important? A—Well, everybody has enough time for it, It's really the deter- mination that counts. I. mean, in-- vesting a few thousand dollars is not a full-time job. But it is a job that you can't do casually, by tips, and so forth. (Reprinted from US US News &@& World Report, an independent weekly news Magazine published at Wa. ashington. Copy- be, | McWhorter Jr. wrote in his column —. — United States News Publis (Columnist Pleads for Kinder Words ° ROANOKE, Va. -F — Kinsley in the Roanoke World News, that most people are starved for kind words. He said doctors get them less frequently than almost any- one else. — Doctors reacted at once. The ' Roanoke Academy of Medicine passed a resolution of thanks. The American Medical Assn. reprinted the column and sent it to the secretary of every medical society in America. From Georgia,, Ark- ansas and Pennsylvania came re- ‘quests for permission to reprint it. Individual doctors wrote to say | thanks you. Reacting himself, - McWhorter | words get you farther than harsh | tax,” ong hel. savieal dae” Wins | ones — or just being neutral... He asked his readers to try it for a/ week. ee He Just. Didn't;Kiow About Income Taxes RICHMOND, Va. # — Joel W.. Stowe, of Dry Fork, a saw mill operator, was acquitted in federal | court. here of willfully failing to. file a *ederal income tax return after testifying be didn't know about it. “It is rather pe to-@ee a person who is blissfully ignorant of the burden of federal income said Judge Sterlihg Hutche- son. ‘This is a case where I think | this is true.” | Stowe's attorney said his client | lived an isolated life and seldom went to town. Don't forget ‘your Dad... < © Won't shrink as much as 1° ! SPAR. 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", © .12 fruit dishes - ¢ Medium platter e12 salad pistes © 12 cups. ‘ pe wel es) _@ Pickle dish™. bow! a | @Giavy boat, + name , * i eo, =: hast peer THE PONTI . #. 8 SoS eee VoisoftiePepe a Lee we ‘ Ex-Teacher Advocates Piping Water. 7 A final sidelight on Kunv- AC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 - “From Lake Huron for School Supplies | sucuev’s character came ata FF o= | 7 caviar and Vodka party at the = ts ae i : Letters ofl be when neces people. A ‘get tough’ policy is much 70,000 population not have a Soviet Embassy just ‘before the Sarg because’ af lack ef pace, Pal, ee decent rest room the people — Russians left for home. A be- | A mg Elizabeth Powell when they go or when — liever in “living it up,” Kurv- fs ‘tsure ree people comé in from other places, — 7 os a iscussion @UeStions ‘Model’ City It seems a shame and disgrace sucHEv did just that so enthu-_ There has been some discussion With No Public R when other cities, or towns with a siastically that he had to be te cee ee ee Xe MGSITOOMS fraction ot the population have , 2 . F downtown rooms. should helped to his car. | I have vistiod most of tho asa modd city. Tule writer would like to know what the readers et en ee a © er ee ee ots eet Sink et uch a conn: very few are there really you call it when a city of about . W. Mesick MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS | A Safety Step Forward adequate drinking, water teil a , ESSE ; whea ° : Our Legislature deserves credit for a aad WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 taught school 30 years ago, : a — long needed improvement in the loca- the condition ts little Improved Some “ei Take Rid “»: ., tion of traffic signals. ey. : ' ’ _ Supplemental Benefits: ““r: nas passed and sent to the Gover- jim many schoos there is & mere 1 Small. USINESS avors . Feature Ford-UAW Pact 2" * bil! requiring standardization of sis seus ccuuas(e fda tTNTInT 1 C8 ngeasiin/Goammmiasene Nl cuore is mesanemipny acon Agreement on a three year contract flic A : - Local wells often cannot supply Lincéin femarked that the Lord” Tv ouct pare Arar ‘between the Ford Motor Company and "6 ey Grinking” purposes, School needs tiade so many of them. amet for thelr own legidlative - the United Auto Workers (CIO) without * oe at is = eee eee egret en, eer drive.” . a strike is economic news of the first ogg rined arta Ame el) Suggestions, Anyone? ee en ee taka sie eee ne - Magnitude. Spe Gee ee — uss , y 7 - —G. bias toward small operators. teu by Walter Li coon : Details of that contract make it way after it becomes operative, David ys: °.. ; —_—— . corporate income ‘© thé effect that in self-governing clear that the company’s 140,000 _ the _ bill also requires that all aces ash | Agrees ‘Get Tough’ Policy Saeed eiecier acd coment a the part of quvarnament efticice te - mn have won the biggest existing installations must -be Talk of Third World War. Overdue in Traffic Cases eigrarelia aaa ote Cam ge oeoes caters pathar than bs maaiee single package, amounting to made to conform by January 1, ~ more than 20 cents an hour per 1958. Pedestrian control lights Is Tapering Off in Europe - employe, in the union’s history. - are to be at the curb line. ‘one ; We ae ean = bigness per se, thinks : ; ow. Douglas, littleness cds uieta Another section forblds banners and ciniaions tote drawn trom a cette tis imporast plot of bate asd” wenn, ies's|_ tun Democrat has teed an ti poacher balmy and Contrary to UAW hopes, however, the decorations to be hung over streets and — survey of ony i wer preveltion. pane shame. ‘Short-term probation and ill: (8. — =. forbearance in pricing products. contract DOES NOT INCLUDE a guar- highways within 10 feet on elther side Portugal and Holland—with an op _ 8. There ts a big guif between {shin ‘They continne laughing at of natural gus : ts itaned unas ano stow quae Ip y ughing F anteed annual-wage. But it does feature of a traffic light or signal. The idea of pata talk with leaders at America and ow insofar a8 the law. The Dlinoig solon would modity the big fellows are price leaders, unemr fo. Pp and often with spok understanding American public the S Court decision of which ‘ a supplemental ployment compen- this section is to give motorists the mid tek tee cppuaitica, a fet aaiapeen ae eat § hice bashenees of these Who ap egar ls Ht & sre _ and ot te aus —— sation program which pioneers an en- clearest possible view of the traffic best eet forth in categories—mili- . Bey of some of the correspond. drive = short distance to drink iat natural gax producers Were ground ay & ‘professional econe- tirely new field in labor-management signal _ tary, ‘economic and political—as ents for European newspapers in and then drive all over creation, sininct tg Federal regulation, tulet at the University of Chi- relations. Under this plan the company ° * A t follows: New York and Washington to Wig ak aeraen a There are bills perkting wholly to cago, Dougias i familiar with . , oa * 2e @ - report. only quotations from ndo the impact of this decision significances in price compe. will set up over a three year period a ‘p rs t nistely changed 1. Amefica !s important to Eu- “left wing” mewspapers tm the read for the good of those who pcoigttcmcentiog Tal ‘ise of te cies ease “$55,000,000 trust fund with ents ontiac is almost completely chang rope in every sense. A recession United States, and portray their _—try to live by the law instead of 96 PER CENT EXEMPT whe may corhprise the marginal é Pe paymer over to the center suspension plan and nm the United States would have views as a = making fun of Ht? ~ producers, per employe. , dorsed senate seune oe fed eed AMERICA BELITTLED either law or justice for some inutute Feteral regulation of the tears for the big and successful = ~ oe. Department have endorsed this measure orn mm their Certain American per 7 big ones. He would draw the line operators, but we should all be — = 100 per cent. it te ° an oa writings regularly belittle the Portraits and exempt from as ee oeraggrnal im ground, rules that . From fund workers receive much a American ernment’ ti tion those who produce n make American free-choice 65 per cent of their take home pa tion of jut imports and experts. or ive erroneous impressing thet By JAMES J. METCALFE — Wo billion ‘cuble feet ot natural —- society Sourish. Some- : ¥» The Man About Town the remendous toarist trade and encourage a beliet in Europe that 60": 8 joving wife who helps gas & year. times, in a clamor for popularity, including State unemployment compen- the vogpremaPg a raggpitin ve topaae lap pap lle . .. Her husband go through cok * ¢ tte + only & demogogic yoo to sation, during the first four weeks of i Ae | ane arene e. tself, forget. the 40,000 American i03. Whose sacrifices urge @ senator says = incentive system fe reverse : Vvelume, many times the reve-. killed in Korea and welcome } lude 96 cent of the and to give rewards for inef- layoffs. These benefits will be reduced To Honor Pioneers nues that any prospective reduc fed ‘Chinese lenders into_ the im on... To gain that sopcial “vers, while it would subject to ficiency. a to 60 per cent during the next 22 weeks, = Annual Meeting, Luncheon Sette "4 ™ United Nations with a isd on Soe"thii in terme. Of Hoxury re ee Ro ee ice, 5 aotbaiice ot ewe to operate that long. It should be noted - ways but mostly as- a hoped-for | When important Europeans in She is the wor goed a’ In Gstending hes geepeeed-Gis- eg rt ret oars (malin that the company’s lability for layoffs Marry: What people de for better continuation of the present stale- influential circles are told that this 1.40. That golden inspiration ertmination, Dongias argued: Ad peagivery seniors begee is specifically limited to $55,000,000 and «wre ut toe few for good. ction te Bare ey aria toe ha ae eerie... To keep her spouse intent “Tem stil firmly ccavinsed of Eps oo Case, nesentng to Me nied . of 38 oa . = : action in Europe. gpinion today, they seemsurprised. UH, - . Success in his vocation ee eee contribute in accordance with his period weeks. 12 Local pioneers are to be honored at the “LITTLE WARS” EUROPE PROGRESSING — eae grateful is the husband est defea legislative ability. _. . x * annual meeting and luncheon of the Oakland —_ Bloodshed in the Far East or in 9. Americans, conversely, are as... He makes his way in life said ng epragiline- interstate = On the other hand, the competi- A . County Pioneer and Historical Society. The Southeast Asia or the Middle East not as well informed about Euro- . . . To her who is his helpmate < rene tive system undertakes to reward Wisely the company tailored event takes place at the Oakland Avenue is recognized as likely to bring pean attitudes as they might be. and. . . His understanding wife Producers of om. each according to his contribution. the plan so it should avoid the United Presbyterian Church on June 15 at “‘little wars” but no serious dis- For the fact is that Europeans are .. . Upon that graduation day... “If the little fellows who are This is ap incentive system, In noon, with a social hour eding. The ‘turbance to world trade, Peace- doing some important things in He says to her sincerely .. . “I being used to run interference for its pure form, it provides for no two main dangers of the guaran- “a eae caske![U™!™~!C*~*~*~S making -“‘at the summit” is ac the scientific, educational, in hank you for your faith in me... them are exempted, it may tlitre- free rides, such as exemption from teed annual wage. One is that : cepted as worth trying but as dustrial and political fields. And, oh, I love you dearty.” fore serve both the desirable ob- the income tax of those of small unlimited financial responsibility ~ Julia Hubbard something too flimsy as yet’ on . : income. . 2 : . 4 dw * 7 a ° utider & GAW contract could _—°”- Dato!» who will talk on | Se ee Case Records of a Psychologist: Looking Back wreck a corporation. The other ee bd ee 8 AT : rs OoKINg bac | connection hi is less than | : ‘4s that full pay for no work could Stine Puntae aes, Luncheon featatons seer am. aay becuse soe GILL Who Allows Pre-Marital Relations =. starts kill employe incentive and lead . _— are to be made not later than June 11 with '5 ® Widespread acceptance'of the y 4 . - ° = from Paris. ) t» Giessier, eT ) sere, 1. E. Dunlap, theory that war tas become «© MAst Accept Inevitable Consequences "ARATE PLANE ett Ford ine | — so plan of mass output. Time, of course, will provide the acid 5! Delaware Drive, phone FE 2-7154. — Marilyn’s moral dilemma can even in this advanced stage of don’t accuse the churches of being 20 Years Ago test‘of this contract. Subject to such Many informed persons, how. ppt Ma onesie hae he modern medicine. _ kill-joys. CHINA THREATENED by Jap test this supplemental plan appears to “When any conversation gets dull,” says full facts. For morality is the CHARM LOST Besides, she would - thereafter be an historic step forward. The Ford | Seat ee — om eae ee pores eek eee Armaan m’s greatest charm in Cosi 5 Stamped refi envelope debt to -U.S.; others expected to agreement provides added grounds for ,°°™ebody sugge ciel ierimasce: the deadliest of weapons by both ligious fiats over youth as psy- the eys of man, which is her “+ very frankly shows youth the % SMe. | hope that GM-UAW negotiations, which have been extended through next Sun- Now I hope they'll get back to the Tigers t the proper moral pre- support the good trai And Absalom said to Hushal, day, also be luded without a ° the weather—but forget about me.” taken for granted as ineuring the Coney re scrambled” Whew har bey fiend pen mae "Zs this thy kindness to thy friend? y, can be conc a _ defense of Europe. To the doc- . nae her to immoral . Always write to Dr. George W. Crane Why wentest thou not with thy costly and paralyzing strike. Z : trine of a deterrent-force is unis - By DR. GEORGE W, CRANE = eet ~ in care of Pontiac Press, Pontiac, friend?—II Samuel 16:17 7 A new brand of adverse c: , che ad tes ee 8 long, 3c" stamped, - , rae criticism on the ersally attributed the fact that Case 0-351: Marilyn T., aged 17, than girls self. envelope and a dime ts * * @ = — _ building of turnpike highways comes from ee ee eee Eee is the senior high schooler whose dh ttewoise ioe Bad, Pemting costs | when ee eee ent, a Oe Khrushchev at Belgrade Randall Tripp, wary Ow a-weapoens boy ‘lend wanted her to grant Moreover, any boy who i try =a ten be on ~ formerly of Pontiac. He says that building . oh rete him unwarranted sexual liberties. ing to brow beat a girl into Ever since the liquidation of Berra _ the world on the right side of the Iron Curtain has wondered what manner of for governor or something else. During the strike negotiations: they gave me a rest. 4. American military strength is: ‘..., American atomic weapons are believed responsible for this sense of security. Despite the fact that chological clubs, give them the facts apd they will also come spunk. or spirit, a .- 2 e - The Bible describes a girl as Pyorrhea Patients Helped by High Intake of Calcium 3 ra 9 Russia has a larger number of Anybod Icohel man is this Nixrra.8. Kimusncury, =—«'","__he_ writes, “in building a highway on troop divisions than the North at. °% Te - sisa betes os lacey tongeat ‘eax which we'll have to pay. for its use has lantic Treaty Organization can - h . : ts BY DR. WILLIAM BRAD It was not until Russia's top trio, destroyed the ones that are free.” mobilize. | Pa ag Parmer arg Pree cnaumee ) ¥, M.D. 3. The care and regular supervi- — a | ee e middle. a Stink chain entire crowd. What happens in the course of sion of physican and dentist: co- Premier BULGANIN, Deputy Premier poe “a. wi. . 5. The Soviet strategy which ‘hat involves her parents, herself CHURCH MORALISTS pyorrhea is that the alveolar pro- °Perating. grade that the latter emerged as a liv- “a train from Detroit at any’ of Europe by “cold war” maneu- Her parents dote upon her pertains just to our church leaders away. The alveolar process is nosis ee ee ee. Set © during the past ten years, the engineer vers—such asthe detachment of popularity and school success. or the ancient Biblical prophets, the part of the jaw bone in which Further I'd advise the pyorrhea ae ts re ‘ans make cl ee awk at Cauuee oe her ie aleting ate Tt is al sdule te ths coach oe "6 6 a sither «f thems calees Gap as cae » accoun v ear, / Lester G. Carpenter . as pe : ~ ere pres together and agree upon every STALIN’s successor as head of the Com- — of 111 North pasties Dek tae a oting Gas tea eee : ta okie Cen Om Gere Th sates finely. tee OO ee --., ° munist Party revdaled himself as an after being with the Grand Trunk 43 years. are beginning to reflect some con. cast ok ida oie Wee ke a | Soa f ievsioes the’ Ieee of the tooth CALCIUM STRESSED * #5 ae, ; He also has been “at the throttle of the cern, interspersed with frequently ’ wiAT 70 00 sockets and the as well —_ ‘ over-talkative boor and a bungling tyro * : : hood when she. ran a high fever ‘ e gums When I say the pyorrhea- pa- ng evening train reaching here at 6:25. A resi- expressed beliefs that the Commu- with a contagious disease. : The familiar for this de- tient must be sure to fag at diplomacy. ) dent of Pontiac since 1912, and néw 65 years nists are on the defensive in their * 2 @ A \f aa ie ; : : manifestation of phy- _Tuate daily ration of Vitamin D, * xk -* of age, he may spend some time on a farm diplomatic moves on the European So they are investors in her, OF “¢€ sical | al- Which for child or grown - up A Wear word viet which he owns in North Carolina. _. Chess - stg ol emag ocd ass Sl ve wy ris veolaris, was given the condition . Should be at least 1500 U. S. P. - clear word picture of the man mmene. . _" @ Disarmament is a word 0nal attention: by old who had litte Units daily, F assume or anyway i furnished by U. S. News & In & recent conversation with Michigan often mentioned but one im Urol Dor temn if she acceded Ad ca wane ct pelitneyend 0 te 2 Ng Oe palat © gues : -, : any % * applied and ’ her dees watt mens Semetary of Donte Dames Ware, The idea that Soviet Russia wily ‘© her boy friend's demand? ficlans who have ite, knowt- For the chlet if not the only talking he expressed an opinion right up our alley ever consent to international in- CONSEQUENCES . Px edge of nutrition. : function of Vitamin D ts te = steps out in front leaving Premier = —tnat we should have license plates on spection or throw away the atom Suppose she becames pregnant : Pyorrhea means flow of pus, and ~ mote and maintain good assine- ' -* Bulganin two paces to the rear. both ends of our cars. | , Boon Ndiaye mee Hel ots ber holon ares Spyies "alveolus means tooth socket. lation ‘of calcium from food and ~ » . = fetehed and fanciful, : oma, as. : ite utilization in or recyindy te kee ea: memes Ta pos pe sat Scere pve toe eis _ingn of vagy pcg & "Sf gnc ore Meine dy ipesaped ! Verbal Orchids to— vee America as a nation with im ho think they Know i all. veto on young people. formation of pus pockets are in- fore, should inchee hte oe Not only did the Russians fail in their ‘scien mack pulsive and untried leaders who 414. 4 , The reason the church lead- cidental, and no amount of treat- day diet two or more of th me, a in the ‘ouldn't this social shame be — day. two. or more. ofthe high -hatin hand effort tolure Tito back into. . Mm. Tracy MeKensle atin ate ‘nema aben heart-breaking to her loyal and fof antiquity placed the ta- ment of such secondary effects calcium foods -- milk, akin mit Hamilton St.; ninety-second birthday. benders evecyutts tage Oe! Peres? Sal on eatin, Ute ie cums Segue pee en eee chacee, cee yolk. greens, peanuts fact, that the . : : Ulted cgainat K'tn ite borere Bonen, an feet : ap bene Poe edie tok WW Bear in mind, the vitamins and - Buta and Kanvsucusv is lower than of 296 State Ave.; fifty-first wedding anni- {9 Attached, Furthermore, suppose Marilyn people over the xtart ekon mn and a stamped, self-addressed en- S979 tho inks 1 recommend - they had expected. oe a i i. a §._—Ss=—s COitracts syphilis and gonorrhea? time. en * velope — and if you expect a reply seuitins Care tine nr for ee ROE Ge ovoage pecs p , ro Pvc FACING FACTS west — I devote 2 examined. Once this de- ee Eis of Milford; ninety-second birthday. often cause 's THE PONTIAC PRESS. ‘WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8. 1955 as uvenile” Court J udge: “Gets Know His’ Customers | 8 By ‘PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK (INS)— Some of New York City’s “ : are such familfar customers in Children’s Court that Justice 1 morning: Two fautesdly clean boys, 14 M4 and 13, accompanied by immacu- late, well-dressed ‘parents. They were picked up, the accompanying officer said, at 3:15 a.m. for loi- tering in an apartment foyer with plicating General Douglas MacAr- thur’s feat as a cadet, Lee D. Olvey of Hinesville, Ga., will grad- uate from West Point Military Academy as number one mah in! ings. The 2i-yearocld cadet has chosen armor as his branch of service. ° . a p Haas ry hammer, a screw and a nail punch. When ae tend nt ee were doing at that hour with that equipment, Ramsgate turned’ to the older boy’s father and asked if he had any clue.. FAMILY FIGHT “Yes, sir,” said the man, “My The fudge stared at the father, who was smiling sheepishly. Re there wag to it, eh?” he slowly. Tean"Paceehl Me yes How tough do you think the hide who would hold an argument heated enough to make a boy like this want to leave home is not worthy of the responsibility of rearing children.” 3 Cabinet Officers Sworn In at Bonn BONN, Germany (®—Chancellor Konrad Adenauer’s three new cab- inet_members — Foreign Minister into office today, The ceremony was conducted by Eugen Gerstenmaier, president of Parliament). Appointments of the new ministers were announced Monday, when Adenauer gave up his second post as foreign minis- ter to. put more drive behind the organization of the new West Ger- man defense forces. |. Von Merkatz was given the jun- for post of liaison between the | Cabinet and the Bundesrat (upper | house). 3 | into an insoluble puzzle. don’t deserve fine boys like these. |: of a teenage child is? Any parents| — the Bundestag (lower house of| Giving the parents a lecture in private, and each of the boys @ gentle warning (“every mar- ried couple disagrees — don’t think it’s @ sign they don’t love each other’), Ramsgate -dis- missed the case. The court day proceeded, eae at ae ad oe a his job of attempting to play Solo- mon in the case of boys and giris under 16 who had stolen, siugged, browbeat, bribed and wandered totaling their mental and emo- Says Atomic Power _,| Won't Cut Into Oil 7 is = BATON ROUGE, La, ®—Atom- ic power isn't j to cut into the petroleum for the next 20 years, says the president of Standard Oil Co, of New Jer- into trouble. When the day, aj sey. typical one with about 40 young offenders; was over it shaped up| NO EASY PROBLEM What causes kids in the city to g° wrong? "Gabe them alt together, and they have too, tittle of, same yearning and man- age, with the help of and training and instinct, fo survive. “Nef an easy problem to figure,” as Judge Ramsgate said. ‘‘Not an easy problem-at all.” Gone and Forgotten SAN DIEGO, Calif. @ — Court Clerk Al Fern has this request from an ex-GI in Maryland, who had lost his divorce papers and wanted new copies: ‘The case was entitled Foster xs. Foster. I do not remember the girl's name.” a oe eS ee No fewer than 40,000 separate ve. unit of a diesel-electric locomoti OF THE DEALS: ~ Before you pay _ over $2300: for any car, ‘See how much more the big 188-hp MERCURY gives you for your money! Central Lincoln-Mercury Sales, Inc. 30 West Pike Street Phone FE 2-9167 AMDA much yearning for too fnany things | Ess - But good. little kids have the PLUSH CASES! Available on Convenient Terms!. = Made G. CONN, the = Pe pons My Be, manufacturer = Ask About Our 90-Day Purchase Rental Plan CLOSED Pig yd Sees — THRU AUGU CALBI MUSIC (0. Pontiac's Locally Owned Home of Conn —— and Baldwin Pianos and Orga 119 North Saginaw St. OE a = MO LL = : , = Ta ADMIRAL 21. -in. TV _with giant: 270 ‘sq. js compact, smartly-styled Admiral table mod. the 21” field in both power and price! 270 sq. in, screen with Aluminized fee osteo aete ROBOT chassis in tala Bnet fom en dtanec! Hadvoly de with controls on side of ebony finished ! See it, buy it... NOW at Federal’s! — Admiral giant 21” TV gives you a full 270 sq. in. viewing surface! The world’s biggest 21” picture! Come in to Federal’s s6on and see the new Admiral for yourselfi Hurry}. Biggest 21" screen you ve ever seen! ‘aluminized screen , No more clothes er dries damp-dry Dollar Days Sale now in Progress Hundreds of thrilling buys in every department For the BEST BUY | on any appliance or TV ... compare Federal’s everyday low prices before you buy! COMPLETELY INSTALLED AT NO EXTRA COST! and both priced for big Federal Savings! Reg. 190.95! Whirlpool '. gutomatic gas dryer » 148 Ieealig when you ouch 6s devinig the stats Wisp wy! Tis aly omg steal Bey haert Ricncecrgd he and Serviced for in no more time than it Reg. 299.95 ‘Automatic — ‘Supreme’ model washer HOME LAUNDRY x THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JUNE 8, 1955 . scemnendink evaiiemnatent - fOisee True Life Adventures | Steele Aden ~ SEEDS AWAY 2 scarnencom > wre can angen i Alexander today cleared Singa- man Chancellor Konrad Adenauer VaRiev AND INGENIOUS ARE NATURE'S METHOVS 'pore’s police department of re.) C@lled his Cabinet together today OF VDISSEMINATION.,... i , to study the Soviet Union's sur oe ee a prise invitation for—-him—te visit a “ 2€Te . THE SEEDS OF . THE MILKWEED are | Moscow. The Russians said ‘“‘nor- EQUIPPED WITH TINY | Symonds. He ruled Symonds was’ malization of relations” was their murdered by “‘a person or persons | aim PARACHUTES TO TRAVEL ae BY AIR. — St. Louis Prisoners Demonstrate Over Ban on Visits by Girls setae rioting here last May 12 ‘ent of. his country’s rearmament Alexander, at the end of the as an ally of the West, declined three-day inquest into the death of last night to comithent on the So- the 23-year-old United Press cor-| viet bid. He was known to be per- respondent, Said he found Symonds’ sonally reluctant to make such a died as a result of a fractured trip because of his past policy of skull and laceration of the’ brain uncompromising anticommunism sustained when a mob of 500 at * * tacked him with sticks, stones B | tacks ut pressure mounte bricks and bottles. r comren Fee o “IT am” satisfied no member of |. the police force was criminally edqgeq it would be difficult for him responsible or concerned with his io refuse death.” the coroner said. | Eugen Gerstenmaier, president He added that Symonds was on! (speaker) of the Parliament's a “hazardous assignment and went | jower house and a member of Ade- ; unknown” in Communist-inspired = The Chancellor, staunch expon- “\ ail tresses, _- Two of three high police offi- eials racing to the scene from the municipal opera were injured in an automobile accident. No one) was hurt in the riot. Warden Harold E. Baynes, ap- pointed to the post last April, said journalism although he knew and party, came out flatly “in favor litical allies and foes alike. Politi- | | circles here generally acknow!- | about it in the best traditions of nauer’s own Christian Democratic | \ the riot followed distribution of cir- \ eulars to prisoners announcing that \ visits would be restricted to ‘im- | ‘mediafe relatives.” “| “TE think thé. 37, 18, 19 and 20-, year-old boys didn't Jike it be- | cause | was cutting off visits from +.» . girl friends,” he explained. Injured in the accident en route | WATER FLOATS AWAY ITS COLONISTS IN SEED-POD BOATS. © Copyright 1995. | ,of entering the riot area.”’ | Tick’s Church, a _landmark for nearly |-has been sold to the State High- was Warned of the certain danger | ee ' State Pays for Church | GRAND HAVEN « — St. Pat- Grand Haven 100 years, way Department for the new U. S. 31 right of way. Spokesmen of the | of accepting the offer of the Rus- sian government to resume diplo- matic relations.” - * The leader of the opposition So- cialist party, Erich Ollenhauer, said Adenauer’s reaction to the So- viet invitation would clarify wheth- er ‘‘the federal government is real- ly prepared to negotiate with the Soviet government over German * Wak Disney Productions World Rights Reserved Grand Rapids Catholic Diocese unity.” The Socialists far a long said a cash settlement of $90,000 time have demanded negotiahhons was made by the state. They with the Russians. : said construction of a new church It was believed Adenauer would will begin in September or take no firm action on the invita- Octaber ‘tion until after his visit next week Np A / Police Commissioners, escaped in- (hi jury and continued to the work-| j y, house. Shouting, yelling and general tu-) , (i s _ mult erupted in a cell block known : = a o a WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES , ce | Aae auer, Cabinet Discussing Red Bid ~ Cleared in Killing for ‘Normalization’ Meeting in Moscow to the United States, where he will, it came so soon, only @ month: see President Eisenhower and Sec- | #fter their country had been given | i | its sovereignty. j retary -of State Dulles, He will, oe ‘lunch with British Prime Minister . . Aer Eden June 19, on his way ra Ship Hit by Missile . * * * | In Washington, the State Depart-| DETROIT w—The ore carrier ment had*no formal comment on | George R. Fink docked yesterday the Russian overture. U.S. officials | with a six-inch hole drilled in its appeared unenthusiastic about any | hatch cover by a rocket missile Adenauer - Kremlin negotiations,’ which hit the vessel while it was i but they top conceded German re- passing through ah Air Force tar- ‘fusal would be difficult. ‘get area, The dummy missile bur- Most leading Bonn. politicians jeq itself harmlessly in the ship's | professed not to be surprised at-jron ore cargo. An Air Force | the Russian offer to set up normal spokesman said the carrier missed | diplomatic relations with West warning devices established to | Germany. But they were surprised keep ships out of the area. Bad At D & D You Get All . These Extras at No Extra Cost EXTRA . . 1 . . . . CM New Fillings EXTRA . « ‘Springs Hand Tied Eight Ways EXTRA . All Woodwork Retouched and Retinished EXTRA . All New Marshall Springs in Cushions EXTRA o + « + eh) 6Brass Nail Trim . EXTRA . . Beautitul and Durable Materials Dopcnastie = EXTRA, Finest Workmanship Obtainable EXTRA . 2... - Easy Payment Pian OR 3-5048 - Ne lob Too Big. No Job Too Small “Depeadtbie Dave” Can Handle Them All D&D UPHOLSTERING 4967 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains ——— a Pa " 4 es and debrig at first prevented police from entering the block. But Pe Tue LOCUST TREE ~ WAITS FOR WINTER WINDS TO ; 4 | BD by toy ~ dtm groggy} Beers GLIVE ITS PODS OVER THE ICE. pace Fo ap lowe one ao. Salsa ie og SEPT. Distributed by King Features Syndiceta- | Seieareriscs = | | LEMON-AIDE........2°~ 29 = : Thomas, two of whose children! py: esuzse ep eeese . —s hadi cairns . The sling got Ex-Husband Charged were killed in the blaze Friday Blind Man Run Down He seen) a With Murder of Four night, DETROIT u—A partly blind trying to ad detail to; Thomas pleaded innocent at his arraignment, however, and asked for a preliminary hearing. No date was Set, man was struck and killed by a car in Detroit Tuesday night. Hillard C. King, 55. of Detroit, the victim, was hit on an outlying street as he walked with his back | to traffic, police said. He was | carrying a white cane. The car | driver was not held. | |- GRLANDO, Fla. —A_ jealous | nt was ones ond ttenda it y with the murder of four Park A — Up | children who died in a burning HOLLAND (®—Season's attend- house, ance at Holland State Park was Detective Lt. James R. Beach reported Tuesday at 289,108 per- | said 33 - year - old Amos Wilmer | the Mormon Tabernacle at Salt sons. Manager Clare Broad said) Thomas signed a statement say- | Lake City have the two famous 248,644 persons had visited the! ing he set the fire to get even | whispering galleries of the United park at the same time last year. with his former wife Annie Lee’ States. 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S. 1-B Prices are for full 9x9 perfect quality in _ .. full cases only PONTIAC’S ONLY CALIFORNIA BAGS © 4) KOOL-AID 6°25" 1 Lb. BROOK'S : Ta - - 11 Beans ee ~ Gan ibe J ‘ - aed \ ot e ee e 2 a é : = 2 7 ' AC oS eee ss : 1 meEN we Pork & CHARCOAL... «24. ns 39 | : = * ; “ . : t ; = THE. PONTIAC PRESS. "WEDNESDAY. IU NE'8, 1955 nae . i : me aig pare ——— . , No. 1,843 as of April 1955. Cubs, | : Stes Generale ‘Team You Seat oad | 20th Miami-Hotel the hagel management.to at nag Burned Child Dies - | Clinton, Valley Council | Scouts. and Explorers totaled 5,~ Diem Promises Return Bacut weve preceding’ satiatac me > [4 Melter which Herman sest out-| DETROIT u¥—Lawrence J.| Recruits 1,537 Scouts (7m N361:6.564 were. listed 10) of North Viet Nam wily 3 : = t p k ti by 's demands. It! schoensee,9, died Tuesday of : ues | April 1986. “The disintegration has “begun r-. FACeS FICKETING would be the 20th to be picketed | S*hoensee, 9. ot] Ciinton Valley Council has rec-| Since 1951, the Council has added| SAIGON, South Viet Nam @—| 04 win continue in the days that onivned ue = im the 56-day strike. burns received Sunday when his/ruited 1,537 new Boy Scouts since |12 new troops, 20 Cub packs, 10| Premier Ngo Dinh Diem pledged follow,” he declared, utomatic elec MIAMI, Fla. (~The Martinique; The Robert Richter refused to| home in suburban Center Line| 1951, along with 566 registered explorer posts, 1 explorer ship,/in a radio spech to the nation) — . cna Oot te Ys eer Hotel came under fire iof the AFL | negotiate yesterday and picket | was destroyed by fire. His sister, | ®dult leaders, according to figures | and 1 explorer squadron. © today to liberate west Viet- Nam To the best of scientific know!l-| have to look at. General t hotel employes union today as the | lines were thrown up last night. SPeciinn. 0. thd tect g,|teleased today by Ed Leland, | from rebellious armies of the Hoa|edge, all North American and/ said the system is better than all latest to be offered a choice of : bs J ee , Geng, | council executive. | Sumatra has a population of 11| Hao religious sect. European fresh-water eels spawn | previous ones because it operates negotiating or facing a picket line.| The inch originally was. the | iso were burned. Their parents,| Statistics for 1951 show 1,277 | million contained within 183,000) Diem said the national army’s|in an Atlantic area mear Ber-| perfectly even at the high tem- Dave Herman, special organizer | width of a man’s thumb. Paul and Alfreda, were ufhurt. | adult leaders registered, compared | square miles, operations against troops of Hoa | muda. ‘nual | peratures of supersonic flight. 4] rae Ge ee Black and white stripe with bright red trim. Large pockets. Sizes 14-20. Two-piece style in bold check. Pique col- Wrinkle-resistant plaid cotton styled - with lar, contrasting belt. Sizes 9-15. 257 : 257 fall skirt, long torso. Sizes 9-15. 287 Sleeveless stvle_ jn easy-care polished cotton with linen collar, Sizes 9-15. Hurry! 2511 ut eS see ee Long torso style with polka-dots, tie should- Petticoat cotton with hip interest, contrast. Linen-weave rayon with : collar | ers, novelty helt. Sizes 9-15, 2511 ing button trim. Sizes 9-15. . 2511 studded with rhinestones. Steen 12: 13-20. 211 ilkened cotton 2-piecer with solid color Sleeveless dress with white bolero Pee ees teen oes 7 skirt, striped jacket. Sizes 9-15. 2515 trimmed di apelin Sizes 9-15. 2 +] > jacket. Jewel buttons. Sizes 14-20. 2" SAGINAW AT WNT Ta PONT ee Pd T } PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955_ e ~ { | authority given President Eisen- | Tariff Cuts Okayed in New Trade Bill Near Passage | WASHINGTON 4#—Congression- power to cut tariffs, The reductions al sources said today the United: would be offered in return for sim- States plans to embark shortly on ar concessions from other na- | tions in trade pacts. a new round of tariff cutting under | Koreans Hit Jap Aid hower in a compromise’ foreign trade bill nearing final passage. SEOUL w—Korean war veter-| = j ans, 200 of them, battled with po-| Senate - House on the measure yesterday, break- | ing a month long deadlock, The fi-| nal product is considered accept- | Nese demonstrations, The melee able to Eisenhower. | took place in front of the Capitol ==? - (aS leaders shouted “Charge” to The chief new power would au- the veterans who sought to see thorize the President to cut tariffs President Syngman Rhee. They up to 5 per cent a year over the carried banners demanding “Stop jlice an hour today in anti-Japa-/ |next three years or to lower to 50 U.S. aid to pro-Communist Japan.” | per cent any duties now above that | level. This is the first new grant . | of tariff-cutting power since 1945. bribes Pontiac's Most Complete | . | ey HISTORIC HOME DESTROYED — Flames rage | of the White Mountains it was known as the ‘‘Deer- ' through the Grafton Carrier home, North Conway, | N. H., minutes after it was hit by a bolt of lightning. | Built in 1823 as one of the first homes in that section | tiques were lost in the $30,000 fire. ing Place." Nobody was injured and Carrier freed two Collie dogs trapped inside. Many valuable. an- | Dean Martin i Embarrassed~ by Feud Tales of Lev, blackmail Lev for $15,000 to stay the ways, Martin said yesterday.) Uncle Sam Is Looking Ba ey a i) G. Shenh d together as a team. . or = epheras _ * * © | MINNEAPOLIS (UP) — If you Martin said a misunderstanding | 2re & German shepard between the ages of 1 and 3, Uncle Sam_wants | up first in the House early next Congressi 3 | United States is likely to’partici- Fj /pate in a new international bar. [ Selection of Unpainted Furniture Pick and Paint Store 143 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9562 Tt also would extend the 21-year- eld reciprocal trade agreements law for three years, to June 30, 1958, the longest extension in a decade. The compromise bill is to come / — week, then in the Senate for al legislative action. | i *. ¢ #. ional sour¢e -said «the gaining conference within about Lean, hard-riding cowboys in LEVIS tamed the wiid eayuse of the early West! developed when he refused to go’ HOLLYWOOD «—Dean Martin /YOU! “makes me he felt that most of the limelight | would be on Lewis. | communities which can round up | G t 9 He didn’t know Lewis was going|10 or more German shepards | e / * alone until after. hia "departure, | which meet service qualifications. | Th a vacation with his wife, Lewis Marffn said. “I'm not mad," he| The service accepts either male | ose is in New York to attend the pre-| said. ‘But naturally I'm upset. All| or female dogs with the qualifica- | | miere of the team's latest movie. | this publicity makes me look an ties that females must be spayed | It's purely a temporary parting of‘ a heel.” at least 120 days before enlistment. ——_got a 1951 government contract to -make 169,646 garrison caps at 21 oes ‘, © e Ie Tall and trim-in LEVIS LEVI’S have a Western fit and cowboy éut —feel like no other biue jeans in the world. Wear like iron, too! So next time, get the real thing — get LEVI'S — the original Copper-Riveted biue jeans! Base, Dayton, Ohio, pending fur- ther investigation of his story. 21,500 in Paris Attend Graham Crusade So Far America’s Finest® Spokesman for the Baptist Overall + sinceisse preacher said 1,396 persons made “decisions for Christ” so during the revival. © 1R Rea LETS AON TERE we TE. CTS eM A STD CONNNENTS Ra OLY BH LEN STRNES & Buy Your Levi's at... GOODMAN'S DEPT. STORE 520 S. Saginaw , BOYS’ Quality Luggage DAVE’S MEN’S . Get Your LEVI’S al Better Clothes for Less! 158 N. Saginaw St. 7,000 last night, 417 answered the call, Would Let Railways Drop Poor Lines at Lower Prices! (Next te Sears) . é LEVTS ng ANGe Boys & Girls’ aT ron CMR DREN” TEL-HURON CENTER Up-to Size 16 Open Thurs, Fri., Sat. ‘til 9 TWX: 98 N. Saginaw St. A hard game uses up energy fast—Coke helps Get Your ~—CLEVW'S: in Pontiac © = at eee A BROTHERS put it back. And what a refreshing service - that is! It’s magic the way / Clothing Basement Refreshing fom mitted to abandon delicious Coca-Cola brings you back so refreshed . ..'s0 quickly ... and with f as few calories ashalf . a 4 an average, juicy grapefruit. Study Ways fo Aid | he siete taken Poor U.S. Farmers .--MEMPHIS,. Tenn. 8) — Farm). LEVIS y x an eine Seen Dee ae : ee te ; qsliet ter Ge Depertanat of tee 3 DRINA entire family - riculture to lay a practical frame- aa _..=..work for q new’ program aimed at : — Po fms prmenen A ae, ae seats ate Four generations C Uf ) = | id ids include better rer ety L d Gi V7 ; ‘Bey Yd LEVYS at | . by far he miet eckedton , * ae _ Pontiac s | Exclusive Men’s Store! ~ aa : a ni \ —— : 18-20 North Saginaw St. POTTLEO ONDER AUTHORITY OF BNE COCA-COLA Company oN | HE COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF PONTIAC \ — : oe ‘ . \ ee ss eee a Maal oe ane a —1\) Om necoacoucome |} DRY. 2 i Z 3 = £ S ye haat 4 . /~- : ba Qe ee aa Oe *< , ’ , 5 a aa | ' fe He ae ? a i 3 . Le ° ie —* of “y j| ad = : ee ae c< € re Jy < he : B L é ‘ ee 2 fe Se a \ ‘aX ( bce. 3 Be | we nua i | ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JUNE 8, 1955 Wrigley’sff NAMED NATION’S TOP FOOD RETAILER: ‘cvpress GARDENS ORANGE JUICE | 46 OL. CAN"

33°. . OUTDOORS WRIGLEY’S DELCREST Dill Pickles 2325 AO co FFEE LIBSY — Delicious on Het Doge - Nemburgen ec. 19: N Sweet Pickle Relish , Sweet Finger ‘Peppers x" 39: SAVE 106 — Piner - Fresher — With “MAGIC PAK” - P Krun-Chee Potato Chips == 5 79: — - Shedd’s So Salad D Dressing " Cempen 2 39° Handy Bags ‘nits os 29° 0’ ‘ nak Ey ble Napkins | me id LEG Ye Eesenon | Re CONTADINA California — Red Ripe — Peeled TOMATOES | x 4 Cons. 69: , 3-Lb. Bag C — $909 BAG | Michigan Milk Fed NEW DROMEDARY CAKE MIXES 3- 79 nen © White je) a! Veal Chops im Fed ane Blede Cum ar Veal’ Breast win't; Fed Sais Wh Drei 23° Pork Loin Roast sis. ren 1012-8. Avg. Lote. ». 43° ) Ground Beef Hone For Your Favorite Dish fb. 39° Small Link Sausage Mickleberry’s Pure Pork — 55° USS. No. 1 RED RIPE . CANNON BALL Fancy Shrimp a oh Try Them French Fried rs 59° . ) Northern Tissue ~ “Oe 6 49: | ELC . Yellow Pickerel itt. completely bees 1». 49° , ev-sib MVion penta LaFrance Bluing “3 3 29° - ay, | Michigan Milk Fed Sno-White Oni 3 , ce 4 | Gaines Food — “A | al Mat lc VEAL RO/ = 35 ' Cut From 30-32 Lb. Avg. Melons Knuckle Bone Out | Whole melon $1.35 4-5 tb. Average 39 “KOOL KRISP” Fresh Gicumbers «c= 2 19* TOP FROST GRADE” A” | Leaflettuce ot: * 19% _ STRAWBERRIES| : Grange Juice cz, = Qs Pidnce Gandpaiee ‘Hollybrook Creamery Butter — 59° California Long White U.S. No. 1 All Purpose Prices Ettective Thru Saturday, . June W— We Risiive the Right to Limit Gustin 398 AUBURN 8 So. TELEGRAPH AT ALL 4 PONTIAC STORES : | Pre : Shes . OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY TILL 9 P.M. ee Sliced - Enriched ~ - White Wrigley’ s Every Day | Large ©536.NO, PERRY |" 0 59 $0. SAGINAW } OPEN, THURSDAY. AMD FRIDAY THA 9. PM. . Kraft Deluxe Slices ee "mem Ot° ; ! ) Pinconning Mild ILFORD HOMEMADE Apple or Cherry Pie 9. _ 59° . DARTMOUTH $ 100 & STORE CHEESE Orange Juice — = 8 w F é epee aiepnods | iT ff Oo f o uw | ; ss f THE PONTIAC: PRESS, _ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 oe 2 a - 7 Dewsbury, England. i called | auctions have been held there for Uroes Federal “Rag Capital of the World.” ed aan have be ‘Smoking Study ” alot p< eg ala LES = AUBURN’5 and 10 640 Auburn Ave. ~ a a s 1 Senator Asks ’ Probe s dealer a of Tobacco Industry _ a as 7 ~by Agricylture Dept. = { Dozen Flannel Diapers .... $1 595 wel ¢ a a WASHINGTON’ — A million- | 59 = a {re Pe St ht 21 8180 aimed partly at helping scientists 3 Bleoves. S| satis siden mite esa hen 3 This Valuable Ad Entitles " Gifts and Cards |} (PlOWp come bs 8 been Proposed in |S Bearer to o FREE Ivy Plont : jy Congress. | a TES! Sem. Scott (D-NC) introduced | Sgnnununssconcssusnsqessnsusqusssen tor Fathers Day v resolution which would direct tes Agriculture Department to ‘carry out a study of all phases of tobac- im | co production, marketing and con- im | sumption. } . Oo j WORLD WIDE COVERAGE ..for your prized possessions In a statement prepared tor CRIPPLED BUT NOT CRAMPED—Crutches and useless legs don't + cane ne ae |] Vacationing hye home, maaan aahecitins ceil | me cg |CAMP the dancing style of Jimmy Dempsey of Atlanta, Ga. The 17, "Should Toke Up Crime || fo al egearoein Don't have made tobacco production |) °™ old, shown jitterbugging his way through a fast number with MEAD, Neb. (UP)—Police are |] fet the threat of lase mar @ “more and more dangerous Linda Winslett, 15, is also manager and pitcher for a sandlot baseball | glad Virginia Siercks never con- carefree use of them. financial undertaking for the | ‘©#™. He was born with soft bones, and his legs have been stunted by | sidered a life of crime. A secre-|] 2% — -¥ ———* | small farmer.” Then he pointed about © frectures. tary at the Nebraska Ordinance |] |, ses Floater. | to the millions being spent on om she has fingers | Be Su 1 _ medical research and adde ordinary fingerprinting methods. | Sure... INSUR : ploy | assed: ~~ Undraped Mayor ‘Galesburg Woman 100 She was sent to the Netitaska mil- | Reg. $2.79 Value : “The consumer of tobacco also GALESBURG w — Mrs. Agnes itary district in Omaha where an — has been having a ha IF. N York | Agn $ 69 f = ing a hard time of it) / YOM ew or | Milham was 100 years-old yester- expert diagnosed the problem. Her TH ATCHER Pp ATTERSON & WERNET Special J == min the last year or so. There have | ae ope day. Mrs. Milham, who lives at the | finger tips are so fine and sensitive , been a lot of scare headlines and \f S H it In Britain | Matheson Nursing Home, came that any silght pressure causes |“ |some loo’e talk about the possi- ‘to the United States trom En Insurance at Your Service Since 1889 ited gland the ink to smear. It took the ex- ba ° : . . bility that smoking causes tae | LONDON «—New York Mayor | hen she was t two hours, bu fin . Open Daily 8:30-10; Friday, Saturday ‘til 11 cancer.’ | Robert Wagner has found that he nee impaired et agfagertsiclon ally ota readable ale 609 Community Nat‘! Benk Bidg. - FE 2-9224 : There is a good federal and | can get by in Britain even if he in in apparent health. | ginia's prints. a9 Ee! state tobacco research program, | doesn’t have the ceremonial robes ——--_—_ ———— DARRELL S$ DRU Ine. ra Scott said, “but it has been far | and chains of office the British ex- 4 too small in its scope.” He said rot meres to oe , the federal ernment gets over |*— visiting New York mayor 37-39 S. ag Corner of Water a billion and's half dollar a year | Wore white tie and tails last night | in tobacco and spentis ‘only | at a banquet given in his honor In Oakland Theater Building taxes and spenis “only |@t s banquet given in his honor FE 35-4521 ; : —_—_a as m. don's mayor, Sir Seymour To emphasize the importance | Howard, in his official costume of his proposal to the public, | ourglittereq his transatlantic vis- §- Seott cited statistics indicating | itor. that Americans over 15 years old * ¢ ®« | use an average of over 13 “They didn't seem to mind a WORRIED OVER DEBTS? pounds of tobacce a year—the |1 just don't have an insignia PITTSBURGH PITTSBURGH equivalent of 5,150 cigarettes— | fice,” Wagner said. “I expl . and spend 5 billien dollars for it. that we just haven’t got them.” He said port res are, unable Ge bay Jeer payments, dcbis_ or Mls when due. the crop is fifth in im- | Wagner, whose -casual_ manners Fou.cam afford, regardiem of hew mach or how masy You owe ance in farm income, aver- | have both charmed and surprised. NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED aging over a billion dollars a | Britons, told newsmen that “every- ONE PLACE TO PAY — BONDED AND INSURED year in value. one has been so gracious to my oo ~ In his discussion of the need for | wife and me. People have been . Hours: Detly #10 5: Wed. € Bat? tel Evenings by Appt. ||mOfe Fesearch from gm agricu-| wonderful. | a 77 yourself PLASTIC WALL TILE do it yoursell PLASTIC WALL TILE | you can DO-TFYOURSELF MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS average crop loss frém plant dis-| ceived by Queen Mother Elizabeth | 0456 Ah eases alone over the past 10 years -earlier yesterday. They also at- 41% See Segeew &. 98 8 Osklond Theater has been nearly one-fourth. - (tended the opening of Parliament. \e M Admiral Dual-Temp| [REFRIGERATOR-FREEZERS, AND YOU CAN DO IT YOURSELF bags $« 50 Bred y | COLORS | Marble “Your old rortaren ‘Week “| . ) as ar ae | Jee | c C Be ee) ror wi SEE ALL THESE EXCLUSIVE ea. | Qe | yy ee: | ter scaury is wexeo-n! AND DELUXE FEATURES grasravi | onsoravgr v9" | Ta ut ao che ° ‘King-Sive Dairy Chest " te ior A THE DIRT 1S LOCKED-oUT / , Racks, Snack Compartment. rmstrong’ Ss per sages a Just wipe with 2 cloth. @ Deep-Ca Door Shelves RUBBER TILE 3 @ Deop-Capoc atl asad | THE TILE 18 LOCKED-ON / . sa ve ° - © “Glide Out” Shelves ? 9 x9 xVe pews plus 1 Clear-View Shelf over Crispers. : to each other and to. wall. . a wp youn DEALER CAN'T SUPPLY YOU €ait © Twin Porcelain Crispers . with 3-¢. cagaciy—L iene Finish. miral | DOTS, DOWN sonch. | a Pea 179" Fi sq 1 Golng on Vacation?—Let the be—— >, ; “Press Follow ~ Coll FE 2-8181 «© - a j ‘ =a z : ‘ wee + . . — : : + 4 Nate Fab al a? a. 7 =— Ss. . WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 PONTIAC, THE PONTIAC PR MICHIGAN. zE ii psychiatrist. State Hospital, and what is signifi- cant about their treatment? BORN OUT OF NEED The Child Pyschiatry Program at the bospital was born out of com- munity needs for residential treat- ment of these distrubed youngsters. Dr. Ivan A. LaCore, medica] super- intendent, aware of these ‘needs activity, and they can govern such groups. But let's go back to February, 1954 when the program began (at that time ft was estimated by Michigan Child Guidance centers that there were some 600 young- its inauspicious beginning there has been a steady progression At the onset.of the program there was real question in the minds of mental health authorities as to ming. Certainly ‘the results speak themselves. Dr. James M. McHugh, in charge of the children’s program, came to the hospital without knowledge of a possible children’s program. His medical background in the spe- cialty of pediatrics, and his mani- fest interest led to his assignment to the children's program in 1%54: mixed with-adults on adult wards, sters requiring residentia) treat- ment.) REMEDIAL SCHOOL WOLUNTEERS — Mrs. Wil-| State Hospital. At the time of admittance to liam Baldwin, 745 Hupp Cross, Birmingham (left)/| pital these youngsters rejected school. and participated in therapeutic activities. with these patients. has | been reached where they are > |\less than 12 months the hos- now and Mrs. Richard Jones, 1070 Lincoln Ct. are vol-| have reached the point where they accept and attend unteers in the remedial school for children at Pontiac | school voluntarily. . Are Big Labor Unions Heading for Day When Success Will Backfire on Them? a [as a pension, with the size of it By a strike is meant such things* based on years of service and + company stock which a * e¢ # In'time UAW may obtain a con- work. scramble os few as possl- 5 : Scanoauwnune~ : 3 4 > A cay 12 TINRP ef % * — tained. Would the workers strike .| to win them, taking a chance on age te HE ct rf HH proud-of their handicraft in a group situation. ENTER 4-H PROGRAM Se proud, in fact, that they en- Achievement Day Awards flowers, taking ning bime and ACCEPT SCHOOL From a complete rejection of school, these youngsters have ac- cepted and attended school volun- his home after being hospitalized for six months at present is in the top 10 per cent of his class. Since this first success there have Been several other such suc- cesses, afid ‘for the most part with of treat- ment. Though great strides have ‘been taken, the Child Psychiatry Pro- gram is far from.complete. Much is stil] necessary in, every area. With increased state funds ex- pected and with continued com- munity support, there, should be little question of continued progress in the immediate future. {CREDITS VOLUNTEERS \, ‘ Dr. McHugh gives a great deal of credit for the successful pro- gram to the volunteers who have teer groups. working within the structure, Emotio tered in the Oakland County 4H S45 & nally Disturbed Chil VOLUNTEERS AID PATIENTS — Mrs. William A. Hyland, 30620 | youngsters with their garden project. Their second garden is in prog- Telegraph Rd. (left) and Mrs. Edward E. Wilson (right) Rd., Birmingham visit the Pontiac State Hospital each BIRTHDAYS ARE HONORED — These young patients at Pontiac State Hospital are ee shown with two members of the ‘Birthday Club”—a voluntéer. group which provides spe- employed on the fourth floor of the Administration building at Pontiac cial_gifts for the youngsters on their birthdays. Above (left) is Mrs. Michael week to General Motors participate in this program. On each child’s birthday a cake is | ribbons at the Oakland 4H Beach | ress now, and for their efforts last help | Fair.’ year they were awarded several Cause of lonia Riot Bewilders Officials LANSING @® — State corrections ; officials were at a loss today to explain the cause of Ménday’s miniature riot at the Ionia State ce ee ~ . The prosecutor joined -with Fin- negan in commending Irons for): ff ! i THE PONTIAC PRESS, f WEDNESDAY. JUNE 8. 1955 od G teday’s medical students a» | ——— =] go beyond that into. ; ‘ putediead has| proach medical. school “primar-/| work om one field. studénts with the sagrgfhemyrarieman Ryan A lot of medical students don't [ ability to do medical| net a research man.” “shave time to go into research in never got the chance. ji their regular studies. To remedy! et program at. the Uni- og iy said, — nigga ,| this, the university began a sched- Michigan is giving UD /yichigan. by Mc ar wle of summer scholarships. medical students that | Michigan. |The few who find tie! | oe 6 tt pause of ese bei Lip) Li dese has been. under ' Pref. said that the way six years and students recently, eight of] | as an) erauied have responded with a growing a medi- that students must fe| terest. When It first was offered and reed thelr OWS) ot 3 Nttle Imowledge ebout/a| oe ete lst bas grown 1 30 es yet earned the right to the name | 130 a year. ~ contributing | TRAIN. DOCTORS : : Imowledge of| ‘The primary objective of fhe Rn. segrmagend pEagrnckiagrel , medical school is to train practlc-| ssoaical students receive a $500 ‘Prof. Burton L. Baker, anate- | ing doctors. If a student wants) to scholarship tor eight to weeks mist at the university, sald that go into medical research, he m@st summer work on a problech that interests them.. OF COLOR 1028 W. Huron One of Pontiac’ s Finest , Paint — Wallpaper Stores. 1% BLOCKS WEST OF. TEL-HURON LVE/ yones Yh it greatest paint sensation in 50 years. You Need Not Be Present to Win! FREE! GIFTS FOR THE. LADIES! O'BRIEN PAINTS Special Introductory Offer! BEAUTIFUL NEW 75" HOUSE PAINT You can't beat rom 90:20 O* io usa Whe thaws pats best will tell you O'Brien's “75” is the BEST in fine qual- ity house paint. Made with patented Pre-Shrunk Oils, gives super service of any exterior surface, ht octuolly looks better longer. Choice _. @f many ready mixed colors. O'BRIEN PAINTS Nancy F. Thoms of Holland worked last summer on the effects the Se of Geuties juices by the stomach. WORK SIMILAR Their work was similar. Both concerned themselves with the tiny gland located in the brain that is believed to control the: functions of other glands in the body. Their work was done on dogs. * * * The pituitary, gland apparently the stomach. But more important, they had a glimpse into the world jot research, where much is be- | | Heved to be so, but little has been proved. Charles L. Votaw of seadienita ‘Moscow Papers 'Trying to Scalp- Ticket Scalpers | MOSCOW —Moscow news. | papers are needling the police to) y with the ticker scalper. | can be done, when there | tickets to go | sentry who collared the ticket acquaintance. = Py * * ° Then the Kolosovs wanted to go ito the | a hundred | Expects Delivery ; asus bp cnet an atonaked 008 wall: class flattop—largest of any Navy | vessel —is not expected to join the vintage | fleet until sometime next spring. A long shakedown period is necessary first. Present estimated cost of the Forrestal, without her planes, but with armor and armament, is ‘$197,859,000. This, the Navy says, is a substantial saving over the originally estimated cost of “219 millions. ' Both of them proved their point. | | governs the production of trypsin | — by the pancreas and pepsin by ; The students competed for avail- able scholarships. The money ‘financed their research was pro- vided in gifts from medica! oo pharniaceutical —houses National ‘Foundation hn int Paralysis. he | le! ‘eae Tos Eager — DENVILLE, .N. J, @--Commu- ter David rp 33, of Indian Lake, awoke with a start on Lackawanna Railroad train saw he had slept through We rushed to the door as train was moving out of the station, jumped and struck ‘head. Taken to a hospital, he was treated ‘for concussion and shock : and reported oe good condition, Hold Machinist Man, 63, Admits He) Attempted to Abduct i Millionaire's Grandson PORTLAND, Ore. ® — Jesse Moore, 63, who was to be married next Sunday and needed money, has been charged with onomyet kidnaping. said Moore, a machinist, had ad- old grandson of a millionaire Port- land industrialist. Moore was taken into custody one of her twin sons to hold for * * * The intruder was driven off by Mrs, Weinstein her rmother, and he fled by diving head-first through a window, But he left be- ‘hind the ransom hote and a gun. Moore identified ‘the gun as his and said, at first, it had been the Weinstein family through Mrs. Grace Clancy, whom he was to marry next Sunday. Mrs. Clancy | It was Mrs. Clancy who recog- | recalled she had seen it in Moore's ~ called Moore to tell it and he then reported to ce that the gun had been Detective Capt. William Browne | fe mitted trying to kidnap a 6-yeer| “2 = shortly after an intruder broke into | #7 the home of Mrs. Lillian Weinstein; ~~ early Monday and tried to grab) ~~: a ee 2 | * * * a P 5 THE WONDER safely stor and EAS! it can ber EAS Stores Food the Way You Buy ft ... the Way You Use It, Too! YOURS FOR AS LITTLE AS $475 PER WEEK LOW DOWN PAYMENT © BIG TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE MAE 4618-36 a AUTOMATIC __ DEFROSTING The Today it’s Pabst Blue Ribbon that sets the fashion in real beer enjoyment. For 111 | years, this world-famous beer has been deliv- ering to discriminating beer drinkers a per-- fect combination of satisfying flavor with gentle delicacy. Refreshment — without filling! - Quality that Refreshes + without Filling! est is always in fashion «and in beer, that means Pabst Blue Ribbon yo ¢ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 . Don’t Let Ole- Rockin’ Chair Get You Lack: of Exercise Blamed for Your Aches By ALTON L, BLAKESLEE ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. —May- be your aches, pains and tensions are due to hypokinetic disease. That means lack of motion or exercise. * * * And there's evidence, a medical | team said today, that lack of exer- cise makes you a more likely can- | didate for heart attacks, for dia- | betes, backaches, tensions or! Your Watch © Adjusted $ 50 ° Reguteled Ladies’—Men's “nerves,” fatness, est a8 6 and Dr. Kurt Hirschhorn of the In- stitute for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, New York Univer. sity. ‘ * * «@ They cited studies, some of them their own, showing: Heart attacks are twice as com- mon among London bus drivers, 'LA Firm Wants Court Protection From Golf Balls LOS ANGELES —A manufac- turing company wants Superior Court to protect it from bombard- ment by golf balls. The Frito Co. plant adjoins the Manchester golf course and driv- ing range. There's a fence between the properties, but it isn’t golfball proof, the company’s petition said - Expansion | Watch Bands Special! a | 95 Georges-Newports ' jewelry Dept. | leery of the danger, The fence is in such a state of disrepair that balls pass right | | through, ‘and, since July 1954, have | | shattered 13 window panes and a | truck windshield,. AND YOUR OLD STOVE 18 W. Pike St. ” TRADE- IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUR ( OLD SUITE Wearing Material... Sturdy Construction This handsome 2-piece Living Room Suite upholstered-in a long-wearing furniture cover. Large roomy davenport. Comfortable matching chair. Resilient coil construction. 2 PIECE SUITE .......,. $149.95 ‘Your Old Suite weeeeeses $ 50.00 You Pay Only. ' sins ; $99.95 12 to 15 Months to Pay | Easy Terms OPEN FRIDAY AND MONDAY EVENING UNTIL 9 P. M. RNITURE SALE} GAS RANGE /..... $119.95 Your Old Stoye sees $ 20.00 oF, You Pay Only. pee USE YOUR OLD STOVE AS /A DOWN PAYMENT /Easy Terms $20 TRADEIN ON YOUR OLD ‘WASHER ys > a io = = 4 blade agitator. Packard motor. Wringer- release. Sturdy built, WASHER ...... eee. $109.95 Your Old Weasher....... 20.00 eee You Pay Only. eee eeee .$ 89.95 USE YOUR OLD WASHER AS DOWN : PAYMENT. EASY TERMS FURNITURE = Le ~ Don’t Blow Your Bos ‘Artistry © in Rhythm’ . Is the Theme Proceeds of Event Are Earmarked for Carnp Oakland Patrons have been named for the benefit dance to be given Satur. day evening by the Junior Cham- ber of Commerce Auxiliary. The dance, with proceeds slated for and Mrs. F. Milton Hathaway, Dr, and Mrs. Ken- ‘meth VandenBerg, the Lynn Al- lens ang Dr. and Mrs. James 0. Whitmer. = Blending in with the artistic theme of the dance will be an exhibition of contemporary‘ Amer- iean paintings, used as decorations throughout the ballroom. ON THE COMMITTEES Committee members for the af- fair are Mrs, Dale Carney, orches- tra; Mrs. William Treanor and Mrs. William Brown, tickets; Mrs. James Wilkinson and Mrs. Gerald Harvey, decorations, and Mrs. Don- ald Anderson, patrons. ._* * * Completing the list are Mrs. Les- lie Hotchkiss and .Mrs. Stanton Deyo, publicity. Mrs. Frank Oosterhof is general chairman. Committee chairmen fer the coming year were aamed when the group met recently at the Menominee road home of Mrs. John Napley. Includeg are Mrs. Hursey, membership; Mrs. Wilkinson, ways and means, Junior Chamber of Commerce Auxiliary members have dubbed their' coming dance, “Artistry in Rhythm” and have brought easels and pallettes to the fore to stress the point. Shown with some of their handiwork done ‘in the modern mood are (left to right) Mrs. Don Anderson of Spokane * 4 = , : F boule: | onan ae mo Sb oan . . leg # " | ae oe F i aie drive, Mrs. James Wetkinson of Gateway drive and Mrs. Frank Oosterhof - of Mohauk road, They'll hang the works o Pontiac, in time for the Saturday benejit dunce which will get under way at 9:30 Satu rday evening. One of the posters currently to be seen around town| Junior Chamber of Commerce Auxiliary, will hold at Hotel | is shoun in the hands of Mrs. Stan Deyo of Westbrook! Pontiac on Saturday evening for the benefit of Camp i avenue (left) as she and Mrs. William Treanor of Berwick Oakland, | ard compare notes on the dance which their club, the'| | Mrs. William Wright Heads Association Local PTA Holds Installation, Workshop. Tuesday | -Mrs | ship training for the Michigan Con- | gress of Parents and Teachers, [paedges the rite of installation at the mass iistallation of PTA l officers ata dinner held-at Web- | ster School Tuesday evening. and Mrs. Brown, social. | * 2 « H a appointed an - eet Mrs. Schweizer stressed that the Ses. ee un iae officers thus installed were the program; Mrs, William Lampmah, telephone; Mrs. Leslie Langford, coordinating; Mrs. William Fox, notification, and Mrs. Napley, | fruits of all other past PTA presi- . dents and workers who earnestly strived to accomplish the objects and ideals of PTA. : Stewart Schweizer, consul- ; | tant for the pafent-teacher leader: ; council for the coming year are Mrs, William Wright, president; Mrs. William Mihalek, first vice- president; Warren Abbott, second vice president; Mrs. Cyril Davis, recording secretary; Mra. Merlin — Sanderson, corresponding secre- tary. Mrs. William Anderson, treasur- er; Mrs. Francis Oak, historian and Ellsworth Sturdy, auditor, also were installed. * © Special guests introduced were | Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, superin- iPontiaec schools, ° | The semi-formal affair will begin at 9:30. es —— Nie Sn Fee. i Se ninininans cate Se x Fr Pentiac Press Phetes { art in the ballroom of Hotel 3 al a7 hy ‘Names Saturday Dance Patrons She’s| orchestra will | Hotel Pontiac. } 4 All aloné by the telephone but hoping .will hold a semi-formal dance for the bene- to get plenty of response at the other end is fit of Camp Oakland on Saturday. A local Mrs. Dale Carney of Mohawk road. ringing up her friends to remind them that | activity, which will begin at 9:30 p.m. at the Junior Chamber of Commerce Ausiliary| . provide dance tunes for the + —— = |THE PONTIAC PRES S ! Womens Section WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 PAGES 16-21 By RUTH SAUNDERS BLOOMFIELD HILLS—The an- nual meeting of the Junior League of Birmingham will be a luncheon gathering June 15 at Bloomfield Hills Countey Cub. Mrs, George R. Squibb, president, will preside. Mrs, Avril Mason, provisional chairman. will introduce the fol- lowing new members: Mrs. Gor- don T. Getsinger, Mrs. F. Charles ‘Duryea, Mrs. Rockwood N. Bul- lard Jr, Mrs. Milton F. Coulson |” Jr.. Mrs. Howard H. Fitzgerald (and Mrs. Ralph C. Getsinger. | Mrs: Richard . Hinteemeister, Mrs, James B. Leahy, Mrs, Harold Stahl, Mrs, Richarg §. Wilson, Mrs, Charies D, McCall dr., Mra> Charles L. Getz ZIr., Margaret Sue- Manning and Mary Elizabeth Smith are other new members, Members of the new provisional Mrs. Whitmer, Philip Wargelin, principal of Lincoln Junior High | school, and Mrs, Wargelin, J. Cecil Cox, assistant superintendent of and © Mrs. Schweizer. Also introduced were Virginia Baker, recipient of the new PTA Teacher scholarship, as well. as Charlene Deeg, winner of the orig- inal PTA Teacher Scholarship. RECEIVE AWARD Mrs. Paul Gormian received the Distinguished Service Award of the | Michigan Congress of Parents and ' Installed as officers of Pontiac | tendent at Pontiac schools, and Teachers. Ralph Dawe, president By ANNE HEYWOOD | A! TEMPTATION jagency when she got out of col * The wise girl makes ita point to) itt fa a temptation. theres no lege: but it was a bad deal ~*——nake-ne-enemies,it she can help - #t, and manaes somehow to be on friewlly terms even with ber ex, * ifeubt about that. I * * ¢ But by all odds, the amartest thing to do is to resist that tenip- | tation. . : So “you hate the job and you've ‘|found a better one. Let it go at that. * € «© Resign decently, give enough no- tice and offer to train your re- placement. Obviously, if you behave _}badly you're apt to get a bad | reference, ie But there's more to it than that. HED FOR TWO YEARS’ oir + img to make a go of her secre- -| gratitude—-but the personnel office It isn't only a matter of refer(ii,, That fact paid off plenty, about LGVErTSing | After two years of really try. | | tarial job, she realized that her boss .was the type who never would give his secretary a break, . ae 7 ‘ Instead of telling him so, she re- signed pleasantly, cleared up all her -back work, trained her re- placement and left things in good Not that her boss appreciated ithe just growled about. her in- did, s's Head Off from the personnel director of that same advertising agency. The old bess had. left and the new one was trying to find a good temporary typist to help out his) secretary with*the overflow. . They remembered _ Elinor were calling to see if she could. eome In for six weeks or so. AN EXCEPTION Elinor went to see them and éx- plained her setup with two little children. so well and liked her conscien- tious approach, they made an exception in her case. ’ years later. | RECEIVED A CALL Elinor got- marti¢d shortly after’ ~ They let her work for them in | mother. It her.own home, doing the typing there and bringing it in once @ job for a young 46 Elinor because, had —resisted week. It wag a of Webster School, made the pres- ‘| munity and school in particular "| suggestions be put inte“action and | | class will be Mrs, Gavin Bawden Jr., Mrs, John L. Bonts, Mrs. Robert B, Dewey, Mrs. Charles.L. Foster, Mts. Fred W. Freeman,y Mrs. Frederick D, Hendrick: Jr., Mary Grindley and ‘Mrs, William S. Hodde-—- — Others will be Mrs. George | Knopf, Mrs. John Cohl, Mrs. Fran- | cis C,. M@Math, Susan Elizabeth | Mock, Mrs, -Jack L. Overman, | Mrs, Paul W. Seiler, Sara Stringer, | |Mrs. William M. Todd, Mrs, Pa-, tricia James Wells. TO VISIT EUROPE Mrs. Duncan MeCallum is plan- eritation. _ Several workshops were held. Mrs. Wright .conducted a con- j ference on presidents, and- the Incoming presidents were in- “formed on their duties and re- sponsibilities. A workshop on program was led by Mrs..Mihalek. Problems that are of general-interest to, the com- July for travel | abroad. three months eee : Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Girard were A ary A hosts to a group of friends at din- | The group meeting with Mrs. | "€T last Friday evening.. Gorman and George Yansen, prin-|. Mrs, Charles Marsh enter- cipal of Wever Junier High School, | tained at luncheon last Thurs- — discussed secondgry schodls. Sug-| 4ay for Mrs, Lather Leader of gestions that were most feasible | Creabreok road whe, with Dr. for meeting the problems of each | T4#ader and their daughters, will secondary school were, discussed, | 9#H for Europe late in June, and it was recommendéd:that these | ’ Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Steggall. will’ i ‘entertain at dinner Saturday eve- | ‘ning in their home on Wilson road. | _ A workshop on finanre was ted "6 s «6 «6 by Mrs, Donald North, She | ‘,,- srt | - that PTA “| Mr.-and Mra. Elmer L. Sylves: ter were .hogts at dinner last | Saturday evening, |may be met by discussion groups | Or panels, it was pointed out. There are six pages in Today's Women’s Section Ruppe’s sister, Mrs. Ralph L. Polk An active group would Friday their pl for-a visit with Mr, day evening Mrs, James Q. Goudie and her sisters, Mrs. Walter Willigms ang Mrs. H. M. Bacon, Will be hostesses at a dinner at Bloomfield Open Hunt. | * Ea 7 5 oy aed A May 27 graduate of the Phoe- nix, Ariz., Memorial Hospital was Patsy Jean Smith, who -was,presi-. dent of. her gradsjating class. She is the daughter Mrs. Daniel H. Smith of Wolfe ‘$treet. — | Mrs. Richard Junior League Will Meet on June 15 , Guests will include Mrs. Henry P. Williams, Mr, and Mrs. Judson | Bradway, Mr. and Mrs. N. Frank | Hamilton and Mrs. Albert LeGro | from Grosse Pointe, and Mrs. | Manly Davis, Mr. and Mrs. A. C. | Girard, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence F,. Otter, Mr. and Mrs. Graham J. 'Graham, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mantell and Mr. and Mrs. John — H. Fitch of Bloomfield, Hills. PLANNING SUPPER Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Proctor ? and Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Pittman Jr, are planning to give a supper | party June 18 after the wedding of | Susan Halsted and Charles A. Per- - | sons Jr. The bride-elect’s uncle and aunt, | Mr. and Mrs. Arnold F. Malow of +Grosse Pointe, will entertain the_ wedding party at luncheon. in | Bloomfield Hills Country Club pre- ceding the: afternoon wedding. The prospective bridegroom's | parents, Mr, and Mrs, Charles A. Persons of Elyria, Ohio, will give the rehearsal dinner next Friday at Orchard Lake Country Club, Lynn Halsted, who will be matron of honor, will give the spinster dinner next Thursday evening in her home on Cedar drive. Mr, and Mrs. Dale 0. Miller and: | their daughter, Mrs, Lee Hanson | | of Puerto Rico, will give a cocktail © i party next Wednesday evening. 3 ‘ning to sal br Exrore ate» PIQYHOUSe Opens Season With “The Moon Is Blue’ land handsome’ appearance as — _. By JANET ODELL Michigan's summer theater sea- son openeed last night accompanied _ by a chilling rainstorm.” _ Inside the converted apple barn | that houses Will-O-Way Playhouse ence applauded F, Hugh Herbert's comedy, ‘The Moon Is Blue.” _ Directed by William W. Merrill, Donald Gresham made the perfect — foil for his leading lady’s au petiteness, * * He's the villain; he's the third side of the triangle; he's charm- Size di LiTL wei warner tg » a small but warmly receptive audi-| ing. David Slater, played by Rob- © ert Bryson, is the middle-aged roue ~ 4 i z 5 \ En; rs | » WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 dd. seane: | to Be Hosts - at Party Republican women throughout Oakland County and their friends will be entertained at a benefit | garden party Sunday at tha Bloom- field Hills home of Mrs. John J. Susin, Sponsored by the Royal Oak Re. publican Women’s Clu will be held from 2:30 until 5 o'clock. ‘Proceeds from the affair will be : used to promote a town hall series of Republican speakers. During the afternoog refresh- ments will be served and there will Be dancing on the terrace. Those interested are invited to Ce en at the door, Patrons and patronesses party are Mr.: and Mrs. Will A. Kennedy, ite. and and Mfs. Bruce J. Annett, Judge Arthur E. Moore and Mrs. Moore; Sen. William Broomfield and Mrs. Broomfield, Judge George A. Hartrick and) Mrs. Hartrick, and Mr. and Mrs. Brooks Marshall. = Bandage Curtains Popular in Poland Wide gauze bandage is the most popular curtain maferial in Com- munist-controlled Poland, the Free Europe Press learned from a re- | cently escaped refugee. Gauze costs approximately $1 a yard on the black market, while other curtain materials cost several | were lighted as each woman took her office. times as much. , the party * a ee” gg ape a 8 . - For the second year in a row, Mrs. Daniel Foxman of | Keego Harbo? (second from post for Sisterhood of Congr left) will hold the president's egation B’Nai Israel. Shown ceremonies on Tuesday. Bletstein of Berkley avenue (left), one of two first vice handing her the gavel is Mrs. Charles Eilender of Wenonah _ presidents, and Mrs. Jack Gamburd y Berwick boulevard, drive, past president, who conducted candlelight installation! who was elected treasurer. ‘ Colored candles in a candelabra represented eagh of | vice president. | the offices being filled.at installation ceremonies held Tues« wife of Rabbi Hoschander who charged each officer with | day by Sisterhood of Congregation B’Nai Israel. Candles + was Mrs. Stanley Elbling of Oxford road (right), a first cheer : SINGER SEWI NG ys 00 FE 22-0811 Congregation B'nai Israel. Club, Haverford, follgwed the No Appointment Necessary? | ceremony. Williams Lake Rd. In a setting of pastel candles, | ——_—_—_—_—_—— | : = Contour Hair: on each one indicative of the office | Le Lindsy to be filled, the new slate was in- ‘Country Club Has | : t . Styting, ; stalled by Mrs. Charles Eilender, \Bridge Luncheon Jameson x Cutting and Shaping past president. A bridge luncheon’ was held this po ‘ The first was lighted for Mrs. | afternoon at Orchard Lake Coun- Lil < OR 3-9702 Daniel Foxman who, for the |try Club, with Helen Wilkinson B ] + B S ] second successive year, took | serving as chairman of the noon e va s eauly a on ever presidential duties. She | affair. 6183 Jameson - yten Plains and the other officers were ad- | The final event on the spring = dressed briefly by Rabbi Henry | social calendar at the club is a | * —_ “30 ek a ey eee PPE ERE EE rs Ba = ee ae Se z s dinner-dance slated for Saturday. | ie ys papain | , Dancing will take place from 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. | & Cocktails will be-available from i : |6 p.m. and dinner will be served | from 6 until 8:30. p.m Hoschander. Installed as first vice presidents were Mrs. Morris Bletstein and Mrs.. Stanley Elbling. Other officers are Gamburd,. treasurer; Mrs. Alvin ‘Jacobson,’ recording secretary; ; 3 Mrs. Joseph Kornov, correspond- Coming Events mm ing secretary, and Mrs. Marvin! Royal Neighbors.of America will meet | — Finkelstein, financial: secretary, “| T®’rTs¢ay at 8 p.m. im Grotto Mall, 128 | West Pike 8t Others are Mrs. Meyer Simon, parliamentarian, and Mrs. Abe Avadenka, Mrs. Nathan Crone, Mrs. Maurice Schlussel, Mrs. Morris Simon and Mrs. Irving Koper, board members. During the program which fol- | G1'MiGlemens Bt at 2 pm Com: | lowed, Mrs. Elbling introduced | | missioner Floyd Miles will be speaker. Fe : Ruth Seligson, who presented dra-; Huron Oordens Bacies AuntBery “for | | v o matic readings. She used. the | | eceaiietisas prs eatieete et the wail, 4405 ls works of Sholom Alacheim, Levinson and others. ” = ie And \ COTTONS.. COOL = . BREEZE Mrs. Jack .. Ny | Navy Mothers Ciab 358 wil meet | P Thursday at 730 pm. in the Neval | Training Center Welcome Rebekah Lodge 246 will meet | Thursday at 8 pm at Malta Temple, 82 Perkins St | WCTU will Pentiac Press Photes Frances Willard Unit of Looking on are Mrs. Morris Sam | Highland Rd Flint auxiliary will offi- | offi- re ay cfate with ritual and drill teams. ters will meet gt 7:30 p.m. Shower Given for Bride-Elect by Her Cousin Her approaching marriage “to | _- Paul S. Closson has started a series | "_M. Marshbanks. of showers for Annabelle Marsh- banks, the second of which was given by her cousin, Mrs. Jesse Bacalis of Detroit. The bride-elect is the daughter | of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Marshbanks | of West Square Lake road. Par. | ents of her fiance are the Rev: and Mrs, S. S, Closson of Manistee. The couple will be wed on June 18 at Central Methodist Church. Attending the recent festivities were Mrs. Joseph Deeg, Chartyne | Deeg, Mrs. C. W. Marshbanks, Mrs. Walter Dill and Mrs. F aS Others were Mrs. Lawrence Ba- ker, Mrs. Marion Drue, Mrs. Helen | Mangus, Mrs. Cora Parker, Mrs. 'Areme Chapter Gathers | Areme Chapter 503, OES, ret | | present. * *« * Job's Daughters Bethel 40, and her officers presented a lighted cross | | ceremony for those present under | the direction of Mrs, Harry Ver- non, bethel guardian. Mrs, Sidney Fellows, worthy matron, announced a picnic on Aug. 8 at Elizabeth Lake Es- tates Park. Worthy Patron Chris» Hornbeck | held a proficiency class with Mr. {and Mrs. Joshua Hebenton, Mr. | 'and Mrs. Denald Hethering. the | | Kenneth Hamiltons, Mrs. | Breen and Jacqueline Breen tak- | | ing part. Others passing their peeicency || 2 | see Mrs. Arthur Webster, Mrs. | i | Mrs. Melvin Patterson of Cass | PMoniey evening at Roosevelt Tem-| City was a guest. Refreshments | |of millions of tiny air! cells bound | ple with 70 members and guests were served by Mrs.-Chris Greve, assisted by Caroline Muecke, Mrs. | |The cushioning is said to add! | Thurman Lloyd, Mrs. Harry Bro-. Gwen Vernon, honored queen of | sted and Eugenia Erickson. + Hi ahs MO Ea St ae ons oS eo = -. Ses as 48 N. Saginaw $. |New Rug Cushion ts Spongy, Durable . A new rug cushion {s composed [together by natural rubber sponge. about 300 per cent to the life of | /any éarpet or rug. ie * 4G Don | ee ee Charles W, Deeg, Marge MacMil-| Hans Michkelsen, Mrs. Leonard lan, Mrs. Charles E. Deeg, Mrs. | Berglund, Mrs. Raymond Goins, | © Wilbur Thompson, Mrs. Robert; Mrs. Leslie Shorf, Mrs. Henry | ©- Kine, Mrs. Stanley Bale and Seneth | James, Mrs. Joseph Waring and Thompson. Mrs. William Georgia. ~ . croV-Murs 7 “- Special Selling 48 N. Saginaw St ; Look Girl! Regularly Sell for More SPECIAL... 1.09 Air cooled linen golfer hat with ventilated sides. In solid white, | N white with red or navy. ; a Minar Salon cond Plone 2 Reece ' ; oe ies Ge a ee ‘ rs a e i f ‘ * a & \a2 : \ 4 ‘ ahd : te Sue Santee Coe $5 co gd) ey = S SUN SUITS A warm weather must! ADS te 3.95 ‘TWO TOGO... MATCHING BLOUSE o s Ter A. 48 N. Saginaw Se. FUN IN THE... For little guys ‘n dolls. OUR COTTONS HAVE A DELICATE AIR 7.95 « Coordinates C SPECIALLY PRICED Others From, 8.95 you'll wear all . summer in broadcloth, or Qe striped © ; , ; : cbiton. Sleevelese Delicate flare of cottons in voille, rayon spun, Seersucker, nylon, “Slane and pima, shagbark, batiste, gingham, orlon and’ full unpressed’ cotton, and everglaze fabrics. Pe ‘ playtone and spun. Prints, dots, rayon. Stripes, pleat skirt. checks, pastels, and summer dark es . J checks, floral prints In pink, ground prints. Junior, misses’ ond and two tone turquoise, women’s sizes. combinations. black or brown. Cotten Dresses — Second Fleor ‘S Toddlers } ‘to 4 | and regular sizes Sizes 10 to 16. / SHOP :IN AIR COOLED COMFORT ate 3 to 8. SEE OUR LARGE COLLECTION > OF COOL SUMMER. SEPARATES . | Young Folks Shop—Lower Level | f ee een ae ar Jo * Se eee : z eh 4 a poe as ee eae oe a THE. PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 Se, Simmer DL By ELIZABETH WOODWARD “Dear Miss Woodward: -. I've liked him for three months now, and a couple of days ago I found! out that he doesn’t like me any more. | “T asked his closest friend about a@ romance, The girls have talked your boy friend into a frenzy of annoy- ance about you. They’ve teased hire into announcing that he “we'tt be separated so secon (your own attitude toward him? . SC uer EEN THE 3 MOST but he never asks me to any of the school dances. “He has the money, he’s not everybody has to get'in the act when two people blaze up a bit of parties, “Dear Miss Woodward: I like him so much, but when I ‘do see doe 208 amet rope hc t's ting about the importance - of these say to him, Down—This Isn’t a. F ederal Case “I'm busting te invite him te a” party but ae eee ee ae age to ask him. “It isn't my party, so I can’t Parents of the couple, are Mr. and Mrs. Roy sis 0 wcelon lation 3 & Sent him to notice me,and like me, So how do I go about it?” Answer: Your t over him has you quivering so fast you ean't hold the telephone? Mrs, Olivia, AM. Kemp of Ham- mond Lake’ drive, ;@ member of the Académy Playhouse, recently Education — Unit Meets © for Dinner Alpha Beta Chapter Concludes Season Tuesday Evening it and he said the girls in his} doesn't like you any more, Just ~ Robert Eugene All you have to do is ring his . room Were always asking him if he| to make them stop talking. Avery claimed | ™mber, tell him there's a party, A social hour preceded the sub-~ still oe and he was sick and iis é ment may be for Shirley Ann aire and ea ie are hed scription dinner which closed t&é — | from the truth. So why change V cndorhalk 2 big pila — “- season for Alpha Beta Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma __ Society | for the whole summer, de you (Keep on being friendly and nice for his bride|- and you needn't be nervous cvaniog .. ; think I should drop him? | just in case there's no basis for} in a Saturday rie sa have facts to talk ee 8 i “If you don't, how should I get | those disquieting rumors, nas about and a question to ask—so william wright Wee teaees «| Ne pelt ie making) big Gane evening | aive in, The buffet-style dinner was Furniture Mokers G Upholsterers | of it, or you'll precipitate a break ceremony at A served te 20 meuibers ‘end pusets We Gite Gold Bell a . Answer: You can run a perfect- | winecessarily Our Savior ti at the West Iroquois road home of FF ieee All work guaranteed for § years ly good thing into the ground with |' oe ee En Lutheran | P ng oe | Mrs. Theodore E, Wiersema, who 270 | Ave. FE 4-0 js lot of yackitty-yacking about it.| ear MISS Woodward: My boy ; was assisted by Mrs. David Hicks Orchard Lake E 358 ' Which is why I think it's too ) bad gee is pak _— to me and onli > resente ,| and Mrs. Harold Northon. iblaadadh ionslochibnanacssamsnnessaaaeses ——————EE e comes down nearly every night. etroit. |to Mrs. Kemp ie a Brown, a co-founder ef the chap- ter, who reported highlights of the state convention held recent. for Aug. 9-11 in Detroit. shy or afraid of being teased, : pe ly In East Lansing, Reports on f € MAGNIFICENT PERMANENTS and there’s no interference at V anderholk of Awe ar ctsandng tome ‘the session were givesby Mrs. 7 ; home that I know of, Keego Harbor | actress of the year for her por- “ — = — Kinsel- “My friends wonder if we and the | trayal of Claudienne in the play| '* 84 Mrs. Iva O'Dell. r haven't broken up when I go to Richard “Maytime Renff@zvous,"” “which! -During the business meeting con- a3 ; the dances ‘without him. | oer was presented last January in the ducted by Mrs. O'Dell, plans were = = = ' “Bo you think I should stay | E Averys of Tau Beta Community House in’ laid for the group to take charge 2 . home if he won't go” What do vou - pee Monterey Hamtramck. | of registration for the Northeast ; Pa . think of his strange behavior?” | MIR, and MRS. ROBERT E. AVERY boulevard. |, The Presentation took place at’ Regional Conference, — scheduled * Complete with Cutting and Styling DESIGNED TO TOP THE NEW PARIS CREATIONS .. . SMOOTH, SLEEK “Where Service Answer At first glance. I'd say he doesn't know how to dance, or | be with you alone, though. | Se why not try to find out from clear up the mystery for you, ahd doesn't like to dance. and doesn't | like school oan He does like to | In a double-ring ceremony at Our Saviour Lutheran-Church tn Shiney Vanderpellar en the bride's mother.- The maid of honor’s was blue taffeta, ballerina the annual Academy Playhouse | Golden Awards Banquet. Mrs. Kemp, wife of William G. Kemp. | was also nominated for actress of | the year. The presentation was | made by Tony Ciccoretti of De- troit, board member of the Aca. demy Playhouse. | TELLS OF MEETING Hazel Potts told of the organiza- tional meeting héld at St. Clair Shores where a@ new chapter was installed last weekend. . * * and Quality Are | him why he doesn't like to ge Detroit, Shirley Ann Vanderholk length, with which she carried Recalling a recent trip, Frieda’ . “ Ss ” out with you socially? and Robert Eugene Avery ex- | rs tions.. A yell é The Playhouse group presents |Huggett as guest speaker pre- upreme | ‘Then find out how he feels about | Ch@nged their nuptial vows. The | Pink carnations.. yellow Gress! an average of six plays per sea- | sented a travelogue entitled “A Staff of High! | your going to the dances without |5#turday evening ceremony was|With blue carnations’ was the! son under the direction of Gerry | Trip Through. India.” The evening orf y Ilka He's ihe andy eae whe |pertormed by the Rev. Norbert Choice of the bridesmaid, and the| Radd, the founder, who also | was concluded with group singing Trained Hair | cher up z can | Borchart. junior bridesmaid wore pink and| writes the shows and designs the | and punch served by Mrs. Aldine | : WIGGS——a most unusual chat buying opportunity! NORIT AKE IMPORTED CHINA’ “HAIRCUTS $1.30 and ‘$2.00 Open Wednesday. All Day Friday ‘tik P.M. No Appointment Needed! Immediate Service! Andre Beauty Salon ‘Church Dedicates New Organ Monday Joslyn Avenue United Presbyter- | ian Church dedicated its new or- _gan Monday with Gloria Brown presiding at the instrument. The senior choir-sang a selection with | Judith Kline presiding at the organ Phone FE 5-4490 2nd Floor Pontiac State Bank Bidg. ~- stead were soloists. Announcement wags made that | | vacation Bible school will be held | | June 20 through July 1. L: World Famous and Gloria Brown at the piano. | | Carol Venner and Ronald Bum- | ot | Cornatoms. The bride's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Vanderholk of Kéego Harbor and parents of the bride- groom are Mr. and Mrs. Richard Avery of Monterey boulevard. The bridal gown was fashioned of nylon tulle and Chantilly-type lace. A square lace-trimmed neckline accented the fitted bodice, with sleeves tapering to the wrists, Her fingertip veil of French illusion was secured by a seed | pearl tiara and she wore a pear! necklace. An orchid was centered |in her bouquet of dogwood and -Georgetta Runda, a cousin of | | che bride, served as. maid of’ honor, with - Julia Madach as bridesmaid and Linda Vanderholk, ithe bride’s sister, as junior brides- maid. DESIGNS GOWNS po Each wore gowns tashioned by! carried yellow carnations. - ¢ * * Other cousins, Diana Eldrich and Ronnie and Connie Gough, were also attendants. A reception followed at the VFW Hall in Keego Harbor. The bride's mother greeted guests wearing a powder blue lace dress with navy accessories. A similar ensemble was selected by the bridegroom's | mother. Both wore pink carnation | corsages. ; + WEARS PINK SUIT When the couple left on a short wedding trip, the new Mrs. Avery |was- wearing a pink suit and the | corsage from her bouquet. They |will live on Monterey boulevard — their return. go jhome of Mrs- John Crawford on |Spencer Rowe, costumes. Work is slated to begin in July on the next production, “Waltz- time in Vienna.” It will open about the middle of October in. the Detroit Institute of Arts. Mrs. Arthur Dalby Honored at Shower Twelve guests gathered at the Premont street Monday. evening to honor Mrs. Arthur Dalby at a pink and blue shower. “ Those present were Mrs. George Hollis, Mrs. Lyndon “Davies, Mrs. Ralph St. Amant, Mrs. John Pi¢k- | ering, Mrs. Leroy Addison and Mrs. Arthur Robinson. Others were Mrs. Ernestine Den- nis, Mrs. Kenneth Hoard, Mrs. Mrs. Paul Hurst, Mrs. William Peterson and Mrs. Leah Dalby- French, assisted by Miss Potts. * * * Special numbers were sung by the quartet, Mrs, Kinsella, Mrs. Norma Bidstrup, Mrs. Lord and Mrs. Wiersema, who sang in the Michigan State Chorus at Lan. sing. Following committee planning sessions this summer, the first meeting in September will deal with these activities. Job’s Daughters to Attend Session Pians to attend the grand session of Job's Daughters June 23-25 in Muskegon, were discussed when the local group, Bethel Five, met Tuesday evening. New officers were elected at another recent gathering. They in- clude Elizabeth Rockefeller, hon- ored queen; Patricia Zielke, sen ior princess; Margery Seelye, jun You've ‘Héen the name én fine Que for years en ws now it's | Pr . Gold Stor Mothers |ior princess; Sue Elwell, guide a+ again available at Wiggs . . . fully translucent... smooth as F th D J 19 eR” eas and Virginia Sheehan, marshal. sitk glaze . . . vibfant pattems to make your téBle glow with | er Ss ay, une ta Visit n Flint Installation ceremonies will take ee. Plans to visit in Flint were! place on June. 18. a “This Is Real China This | Is the feal genuine Vviteifled Chine . next to impossible to chip... it will last for years... patterns are new . . . in style with latest design trends.” . hard 96 break . andthe Service tor 8 3 Handsome Patterns 5-Pc. Place Settings Carried In open mock + +» YOu may pha the place settings or a complete service .. . 5-piece place setting includes dinner plate, bread and butter plate, salad dr dessert plate, plus cup ond saucer, Easiest ey, ae / ‘to buy... Surest way to please... gift . .| Mothers, Chapter Nine, at a meet- ‘American Legion Home on Auburn made by American Gold Star ing held Tuesday evening at the. avenue. Ann Minnick, social chairman, reported that the group has com- pleted 2,100 cancer pads for the American Cancer Society. A day of sewing is scheduled for Junie 22, when members will gather at the Whittemore street home of Mrs. Henry Hight. Members have been invited to institute a new bethel on June 12 in Farmington. _ Philatheas Meet First Philathea Class of First Baptist Church met Tuesday for a cooperative luncheon in the church. Mrs. H. H. Savage gave devotions and Dr. Savage gave a talk on the couple's travels in ‘South America, pd agama Paahaibahinad cc come, * Seip germgpevacs a ee se “$ 4 @ 50 hie i Gp Cont ifecales gradation af oe = / Wonderful way to own ‘your fine China : . . get this com- plete service for only $49.50... . plates, salad plates, fruits, bread and butters, cups and saucers, creamer and sugar, platter and vegetable bow!, too . . . set in layaway or you may charge it. > best selection . . . and it would make a fine anniversary gift, too. anes includes 8 each of dinne put a But do come early for Open "til 9 P. M. MONDAYS and > FRIDAYS Takes but a scinaje ue No Appointment Necessary | IMPERIAL Beauty Salon 3 7 Le VERNON'S HWWerta Ve-piece Starter Set Open Stock List Price... . $22.00 SPECIAL RETAIL price ...51695 ... Sophisticated drama for your table A subtly shaded swirl pattern blending from an ebony border to a soft grey center, meng a pure white-line abstract floral and a scattering rs. Dramatic, different, IMPERIAL makes every meal you serve an occasion! P.S. This Makes a Lovely Gift for the June Bride on Your List OVENPROOF . .. idea! for oven-to-table service - DETERGENT-PROOF ... loves « dishwosher ... colors will not fode, mor or wash off with years of vse GUARANTEED for 25 yeors against crazing or crockling Weadertully chip-resistent Dixre Porrery 5281 Dixie Hwy. (Near Waterford) OR 5-1896 For Your Congenience Open Daily and Sundey. @. m. to 8 p. m. ¢ Run, Rush, Hurry! Big Bargains for ALL during Money Saving Dollar Days savings on summer-cool luxury LINGERIE |duster and navy accessories. She | 2 E. Pike St. FE 4-2878 also wore her bridal orchid. | 5 Mon., Fri. and 9 Set. to for > 5 / @Gowns, pj's, Baby Dolls @Can-Can petticoats Slips and oats with dainty trims, 32-40, S-M-L. Cotton, nylon mesh or taffeta can-cans, S-M-L. Shorty, . walts. or slipper length gowns, tail- wanted fabrics, 32 to 40. Baby Dell bloomer sets, sizes S-M-L. Keep summer-cool with = __ double panel Loomcraft —- SLIPS Summer savings now on smart GAY PLAYTOGS LS Sanforized, vat-dyed jeans in three styles: dun- garees, 38-44; Wranglers and Broncos, 10-20. Water-repellent poplin jackets, waist or hip length, 10-20. Proportioned slacks, 10-20, S-M-L. Wash- able summer skirts in many styles, 24 to 30. Save! Shadow-proof protection . in summerweight cotton They’re cheaper by the pair, be- cause you save so much! You get an absolute shadow blackout im sli poo ae wits Seirep ahockdiee for com fort. Summer-weight cotton, mn 8644 Sizes 46-52 .............. 2 for $3 Sh Bad Apres #- te Jou S100 Sot "1 youve Seke eee short at Leigh . cael mee. seam i sleeve, peasant sty, apn Sy , pa col- i LJ i * eoeeeees R < 39 .. ; denier 8 to iL or Sioa 1258 Bey ear Save Save! Reg. A5e 12¢ 7 19¢ | Reg. 50c ......-, 25¢. Rew. $1. Girdles and panties meek einen OD 39¢. Bra sale ............ wevek for $3 - Reg. 79¢ same ae: Rayon double back panties ..............2 for $1 "Mesh or mayen: betole eR for $1. if ent T FEDERAL att a THE PONTIAC PRESS. ° VEDNESDAY. JUNE 8, 1955 . eer enone ey : Famous LANE -CEDAR CHESTS Give the graduate one of SQ» | these famous, roomy LANE CEDAR CHESTS for a gift Were $64.95 ~ GE. and SPARTAN v4... they'll love it for stor- RTABLE RADIOS ing those school day mem- ories. sTomr Mon. end Fri. 9:30 to 9; Wed. 9:30 to 12 m. _ OURS: Tyes. ond Thurs. 9:30 to 8: Sat. 9:30 to 6 p. m. 3526 Sashabaw * OR. 3-1711 Plenty of Free Parking! — tina es ol @ Jewelry @Lingerie @ Ceramics . Infants’ Specialty Shop Gift Shop « FE 2-3220 . 718 West Huron CHOOL or Canina Come phone in person for Free phiet. PHONE FEDERAL 4.2352. te Curls that last with a Well Shaped Style Permanents .... «Fron $5.00. CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP ‘You Can Have Easy -° By MURIER LAWRENCE | Walter started acting up right -after_ lunch. His mother came | | downstairs from putting the baby’ | to sleep to find him engaged in an exciting game. | It consistedpf running round and _round the dining-room table and shouting something that sounded ‘like, “I'm a Woggle-Goggie-Mog- 4 gle, look out, look out!" on his outdoor clothes, he juat | ran faster and shouted louder. | Finally his mether slapped him. pushed him upstairs and shut him in his reom. He avenged himself on her for this treatment. Later, entering the bathroom, she discovered that he'd torn open her new, birthday box of ‘tents over the mat Instantly, into her mind came this thought: ‘‘What would Mother | | do in this situation?” | PANIC MOUNTS The thought brought mounting panic. For Walter's mother didn’t. a child's retaliatory action. As a httle girl, she had never gone in for it As a punished little daughter, . Walter's mether would never Indeed. she wouldn't have even dared to know that she wanted to_ take it. Thus, her mother had not. Elaine Grennier | Feted by Three | in Bridal Party Elaine Grennier, -bride-elect of, | Wayne Long, was honored at a/ | miscellaneous bridal shower given | by three of the attendants for her | | June 25 wedding. i * * The party was held at the Sasha- | baw road home of Mrs. Ear! Por. | _ter with Helen Coffer, Marjorie | | Porter and Mary Lou Kramp as Flaine is the daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. Frank Grennier of Mari- | smooth cotton broadcloth, . r a sporting summer, Comes in gay summer color combina-| Mrs. Clack has four sons, tions, too. va averue and the prospective bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Mae‘ Long of Telegraph road. Guests af the recent shower wera Mrs. Robert Gaines, Mrs: Thomas Gonzalez, Monica P lace, Mrs. Grennier, Mrs. Jatk | Porter, Sally Passmore, Rose | Maxim and Clara Isepy. — | Others were Mrs. Eari ae) | Mrs. Charles Carte, Mrs. George | | Perkins, Mra. Mae Long, Mrs. Ed- | ward Baker. Mrs. Nellie Long, | | Mrs. Claude Carter ang} Mrs, Lyon | Reene. | * @ | Mrs. Victor Coleman, Mrs. Ber- ‘nard Sinsabaugh, Mrs. Cledith 116 N. Perry St. Phone FE 2-6361. Opposite Hotel Rooseviet amen ener meee ee . com | Seets and Rosaline Isopy com: pleted the list. \ This Famed boning By: “ SEA’ COLE of “Florentine Floral’ Rom- per is inspired by a floral sketch made in Italy ex- clusively Makery’” meons it is a cotton with exclusive Crinkleastic back inserts for forrn-fitting flattery and has self-locking back zipper . beautiful by “adjustable tuck in for sunning. In two feminine color com- binations. 10-16. Other Swim Suits JANTZEN , 8% 22% youthful cotton for Jantzen! Jantzen ‘‘Shope- .. the bra is kept .. . double straps 295 NYMPH CALIFORNIA Park Free He wouldn't stop. Asked to put | bath powder and spilled its con- know how her mother would treat ” have dared te take such action. —-% * is the new “shirtible” in a modern fish print motif. | built up higher to cover more of Walton, Mrs. May Lamb arid Mrs. stration. of the proper adult reac- tion to a child's vengeful action. . So, Walter’s ,action appeared strange. and mondrous to her. Helplessly, his * mother thought, “Oh, what am I to do with this terrible child?" of on knowledg@, of ourselvés. on mother. | So, I have to say to Walter's” ALWAYS A PROBLEM mother that he enly appears as & ‘This is always the problem of. terrible child to her because she’s the dependent ‘person, regardless | got investment in forgetting of his age. Our revefigeful feel-| _ what a terrible child she was. ings toward some supporting au- | That is what happens to us She shrinks from realizing how thority must remain hidden iest when we have chosen to lean on often she wanted to attack her! the authority suspect our disloy- | maa alty — and withdraw his support. | Under such circumstances, the | self-knowledge essential to par- | entheed is impossibie. Today, everyone writes about the ‘‘whole” child. I'm writing | about. “‘whole”’ parents — people bfave enotgh fo recover those lost segments of childhood experience » that avere gouged from our mem-| é% |ories by fear of Mother's disap- .. prov al ‘ j . * * + an a ese Fc ae BA aap - SS ee Se % | coe - j Joe ae a : , emmy - - * When we've got our own whole- | | ness back, we can help Walter find | his. We can infuse our demand | that he clean up the bathroom with | the mercy we know we needed. | ourselves as a punished child. Raw Rice ls Baked With Milk | Mrs. Robie Clack Flavors. Pudding With Coconut By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Exllter Old fashioned baked rice pud | ding . .. when did you last have i this faverite dessert She dresses Can Aid F irst-Born'=: bag. when you re Bo their shape, whiteness and new ether people's guidance instead ‘mother because she still depends | appearanice lots _---—--—y Coo eee oOeeeeeceeceeeseceseeeeeeoeeee | Some? Mrs. Robie Clack of Dray- | 4 ton Plains has a good recipe for i ‘ —Keep gloves in @ plastic nt al ait od laundered after each wearing. wearing them, It'll help retain fa were scans woes 4Y 7 ordinary lead, pencils during a longer. Two pair! year. z _. PPYTTTTTT TTT The wee, custom-made_ PERMANENTS ll be amaszed when you see the hidden beauty in your hair brought to life with one of our very own custom permanents. Individual Hair Styles Created Just for You by’ Tony and Carl New Hair-Drying Comfort! Relax and enjoy new hair-drying comfort with our “Beautaire” atr- conditioned hair-dryer .. . like the sun and breeze on a summer day. : S Riker Bldg.—Rear of Lobby FE 3-7186 COCO COCO CEES EEOCOOEEEOEEEOOOOEEOOOOEEEOOOEEES $! “How to Make Your Wedding Go Smoothly ”’ Come im, write or phone for this booklet. There is no charge. Pearce Floral Company — 559 Orchard Lake Ave. Phone FE 2-0127 ; thers up with coconut Years ago, Mrs. Click sald, she had a cookbook that she tsed in a home economics class. In moving around she had to store her furniture for a while. Mice got into her things and ate | up most of the coofook. For- tunately, this recipe was-spared. | { one | A skirt that’s meant to have its shirttails worn outside In it's specially detailed for a 1\¢ | 16: a RUTH HAIGH CUSTOM LAMP SHADES PICTURE FRAMING — OLD PRINTS Pierce St, Birmingham MI 4-2002 if | Serving a tour of duty on a sub-| marine. She has always enjoyed catering to the appetites of grow- ing boys. The Clacks have been building their own home for sev- | eral ‘years. Mrs. Clack is Health| chairman for her PTA, also a Sunday School teacher. She loves to garden. COCONUT RICE PUDDING By Mrs. Rebie Clack 4 cups milk 3 tablespoons unconked rice ty cup brown sugar ‘4 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon butter PS % cup coconut %) teaspoon almond extract Wash rice and put into a flat pudding dish (ovenware) with the sugar, salt, butter and milk. Bake 1% hours ig a 300-325 degree oven. Stir occasionally. Remove from the oven and stir in coconut and flavoring. Bake 1%, ' hour longer. | Serve warm. Makes 6-8 servings. \ IF no longer yours 2 Life Stories Are Enacted | by Maple Leaf Forty-five members and guests |attended a “This Is Your Life’ program given by the Maple Leaf | Luncheon Club in honor of two of its members. + ¢. Honorees at the luncheon held at Rotunda Inn were Mrs. Nettie Hy- | mers and Mrs. Flora Laing. Mrs. Charles Lloyd presented the story of ‘Mrs. Hymer's life. The life of Mrs. Laing was fold by Mrs. Hugh J. Endries, Taking part in. the stories were | Mrs. B. B. Roush, Mrs. Simp- kins, Mrs, Alex Baldwin, Mrs. Frank Bruin of Chatham, Ont., Mrs. Edna Clark of River Rouge and Mrs. Fred Clark of Lincoin -| a lovely accent for spring tailored | | | | | Crocheting is a wonderful skill for | summer and spring accessories. A | flaring petal-shaped. hat and a |. |matching drawstring bag could be [| ry Summer Sessions Monday, June 20 Morning 8:00-10:45—Afternoon 1] :00-1:3 Evening, 6:30-9:00 _ Beginning or Advanced * \TYPEWRITING BOOKKEEPING ACCOUNTING SHORTHAND COMPTOMETER — CALCULATOR and OTHER SUBJECTS yment Service and Review Privileges ent Assets of All Graduates “ENROLL NOW - Free Em Are 7 W. Lawrnece PONTIAC Phowe FE 2-3551 Visit the scheel any weekday er Monday or Thursday evening. Fill-eat and retern coupon fer Bulletin. 5 il J Park. wear. | Others attending the recent event | —- Bleck broid and brief sleeves in ‘were Mrs. Charles H. Crawford, Mrs. Fred Raitzke, Mrs. John W. | Hune of Chatham and Mrs. John) | Gillespie of Highland Park. New | The day of te extremely point-- members are Mrs. Erwin Rogge ed bustline-is over. Gentler curves and Mrs. Earl Spencer. . * are built into swimsuits. They are. * * were Mrs. Charles corel pink, or glared cotton skirted swimsit dotted, achieve beach flattery. They reveal less. Hostesses the bust*ahd fhere are many more Earl Long, with Mrs, Stuart Town- skirt treatments for swimsuits —| send and Mrs, Edward Silk serving:4J wrapped and draped treatments. on the entertainment committee. E ; 7 (FSSYour Health Reporter B, ficient tm &-2- this normal L CONSULTANT yard fun GET READY ... they're SET to GO! Whether it’s off to camp . . . the family vacation or back- free feeling akout the togs that need so little care! ... you'll have a summer- = not be encroaching age which ia affecting your eyesight. And don't be too hasty in blaming vour giasses. Tt may simply be that for a long while you haven't been getting vour full. daffy vitamin ovota. Nutrition- al ectentiats teM os that vision ts a function Involving a body- chemical found tn the eve call- ed the “visual purple.” The vienal purple ts something Nke a photocranhic developer. As tt is need. [t hecomes weaken- ed. Normafliv. vitamin A con- stantiy “re-charges” the visual purple. keening ‘t ap to “full streneth.” But when we fall to get the proper amount of vita- min A this constant restora- tion cannot take place. and our t ; trepat . At night, while driving. or a busy street on foot, Vitamin B-2 (ripofiavin) ts another vitamin which plays vi tn vision becavse a3 4 Ff i g ; : $ s : i : i r sie ii ; iil 3 = a 2327 chemica) process cannot take place. Scores of tiny blood ves- sels yaad into the cornea so that, in this abnormal way, the gas can be disposed of. The eyes’ “bloodshot” and irritated. ‘teh and water excessively; are abnor- ficiency conditions. However, it Is difficnit. {f not impossible. for the average person to tel! which of these two vitamins mav he. tacking. Recently a new product has been developed which makes it unnecessary for the layman to Summer Sets in no iron plisse that boast a strip top with solid shorts. Sizes — 2 tO 8 neces Wine S10 fie See siasic «we he: $1.98 Woven Seersucker checked set with a white shirt top, im sizes 2 to 4 secslene tees eeence ee eee eeeenee $1.98 CABANA SETS In gay prints over solid shorts or plain shorts with your choice of Navy, Charcoal or Brown, m - Striped shorts. Sizes 3 to 8...... $2.98 m/\ CATALINA SWIM TRUNKS xb) In sizes 2 to 12 — $1.29 to $2.95 _ SUMMER SHIRTS In cotton sheers, plisse and rippletone * In boys’ sizes 4 to-12............. $1.98. — Others to $2.98 < of gloves will permit one to be. : The Margaret Ann_ eI ape fs sini lls aici ainda Oleg ‘oahecle ee ‘Eormality _ Criticized | in Name Use ! Should’ve Used | His First Name, Says Husband F Matinee Group of Musicale Has day Musicale. - * s * Miss Putnam was elected presi- dent; Joyce Li one, vice pres jdent; Tom McGra and Carol Nicholle, treasurer. Mrs, .Donald V. White an- nounced winners of the point sys- Mrs, John J. Brown and Barbara Griffin. Takin, part in the program were Karen Bronoel, Miss Nicholie, Sue Ann Hathaway, Suzanne Larkin, Miss Livingstone, Jeanne Salathiel and Hillis Scribner. . ? * | Others were Mary Shadley, Carol Wargelin, Diane Woolcock, Pam- ela Griffin, Sharon Snyder.. Ms. Louis W. Snyder was accompanist. | Serving on. the social committee | fora picnic enjoyed following the meeting were Mrs. Glenn Griffin. . Larkin and Mrs. Modern Women Are “Light: Headed” Beauty Clinic by Edythe McCulloch — iH i ih j tf tei fa58s i bak ae! a yy a 3 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 “Ready Tonite at 7 — THURSDAY ~ and- FRIDAY! 1662 S. TELEGRAPH RD. PARK AT OUR FRONT DOOR! A sweeping Clearance! Spring Coats! Toppers! Dresses! Raincoats: Bags! Skirts! ~ Early” Summer Dresses! Jackets! Shoes! Phe seen a | AT GIVEAWAY PRICES! COATS f VALUES TO 59.95 22°36 | including sportlengths and fine cuddle coats! TOPPERS - VALUES TO $45 18°22 — i i tweeds - hopsacking - orlons! | _ Cashmere Coats | Were 99.00 . r 100% imported cashmeres. $O 4 Natural, white. . & ' f i REDUCTIONS to ' OFF! | ww. Better Dresses | _ formerly sold to 49.95 15 20 25 Prints! Light and dark colors. Navys! Silks! Silk and cottons! Jacket dresses! Sheer wools! Summer Dresses _ Including better cottons _ coe formerly sold to 34.95 Summer sports! Casuals Afternoon dresses! Linens! Jacket dresses! Silk prints! Light colors! Dark Colors! Open Every Night ‘til 9 - - -.- - - Saturday ‘til 6 19 | Ho Values to 29.95 ~ _ TREMENDOUS SAVINGS! BAGS. Black patents, navy and black failles ‘3 Leather Bags Red! Navy! Avacado! Beech! Coffee! Frost! Ginger! Black! were 5.00... SALE! a alc SL i i i cl a acl il a as i lai were 7.95... SALE! FEE ARNE NE Ne a $ | were 10.95... SALE! 7 . | | were 14.95... SALE! ; | Every New Fashion Bag! . | _RAINCOATS 15°22 Separate Jackets Rayon linens, cords, blazer stripes! Were 10.95 ‘8 ~Can-Can Petticoats | Special ‘Group Were 5.95 ‘3 Cotton Pajamas Were 4.98 and 5.98 Glove Sale! Woven cotton in white, mauve, avacado, ‘blue and gold. | _ Were 3.00 9) ink, / $ 3 | i / } es ASAP EP ES ca ho! Andrew Gellers... Bare foot Originals .. Jolene - Carmelettes... Capezios... Debtowners aati Kickerinos and Others ga eae en ae 5 ‘ | e Special Group Mesh Gloves : : i : Navy and black,'and iA ei eo a, ‘skaaea \. 2 o e " ne A sweeping: clearance of spring and early summer footwear! Dressy, tailored, casual types! Broad range of patterns and fab- tics! Suggest early shopping for best selections and savings! “wl ¢ i Values to $24.95 6" 8" 10" 12" SALE of SHOES 2 DAYS ONLY! THIS MOST TERRIFIC BARGAIN EVENT! THURS! FRI! =, (te Wome ae & “ _ ; 2 : i ‘ ° « & | .. ALL SALES FINAL! NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS! i a i chad Ae a ee y » e Vy . : y ue ote j ce = / phe 3 ie . 1 ' 5 4. i ; ‘ \ = ‘ ‘, } es PrN oe 8! wee eo 4 3.98 Cotton Slips—Now. eee ee eae $2 ~ Summer Suits Tropical weight, linens, two and three piece navys and pastels. Sizes 9 to 2214 but not in all colors Famous makes!, . Were 25.00 Were 39.95 | 15°25 Flannel Skirts — | Spring Pastels |. ‘ Were 9.95 - Were 16.95 [ $ : . t $ 4s * 5 , Se oo : : i 2 ‘ 5.98 Waist-cinchers. eodeeeton see Ee La ek | : [Star-kist TUNA 2 Cans Chunk Packed..... WRIGLEY'S .3ii3 WHAT A PENCIL! THE AMAZING N EW @ LIQUID LEAD, Here it is! The first real improvement in the lead pencil in more than 200 years! Writes se smoothly, 20 effortlessly, and rids you forever of all the headaches you've ever associated with the old-fashioned -wooden —_. or with even a ome only $3.95 MYER’S Graduation WRK and Father's Day WATCH SALE! Netlonally Adv. Price $4975 "Any Old Weteh Is Worth $1500 ‘34” _ Netionelly Adv. ‘Price $5950 é sald Old Wetch Is a SPECIAL GROUP of @ BULOVA @ GRUEN @ LONGINES @ WITTNAUER / You Pay Only Shop at TEL= HURON THE.PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JUNE 8, 1935 BIG FREE PARKING ot the door of 15 stores and shops. You will find every need here in huge stocks of new merchandise . . . Most stores are Air-Conditioned! . SHOP IN COMFORT, TOO OPEN THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY NIGHTS to 9 P. M. ywvrwvvrTrevewyvYTwTwYwwwewws an ll i i Nl i ln Ni i i Mie i in i tina Breezy, Ventilated SEAT BACK pwwwewwe* i A tie Soft, and REG. CUSHION § Vit: This spring filled, fibre silows a free circulation of air under you, and®behind you, at all times Perfect for your automobi!e cushion Self-Serve ‘_wwrwerevrwrerwrvevwrewewewwevwvewewrv@ye«’TTe@Tw?* i i i i i i i ti i ti i i hh hi i th aah hl Ni Nn i hn ti tie tin ii tt i i i i i al a i i i i i i i hh tt ‘wwrrwrweyTYTTTTerT ee Tee eS rrr eee eer Covers, that are cool, washable and comfortable wer bathing suits Large assortment ot colors HOT WEATHER SPECIALS TERRY CLOTH AUTO SEAT COVERS water absorbent Terrycioth Ideal for summer use won't ru a 333" CUNNINGHAM 'S ‘Pic-‘n’-Pay TEL- HURON SHOPPING CENTER -PATHER'S DAY Special! REGULAR $14.95 SLACKS pinecones WOOL TROPICAL i and +. WOOL & DACRON TROPICALS Beautiful, fine - Tropicals in browns, tans, ee or hcorpe nee Continuous Waistband. pleats; Talon textured $7 0° 2 Prs. For $21 roomy wired fasteners. OSMUN’S Tel-Huron Shopping Center rwwwweewewwrwvevYTVvuewvTvTveTTeTrrTeeeTee il lll i it i i in in i i i Ni i i i Nn i de i i ti ‘ OSMUN’S TEL-HURON STORE will be $ » OPEN EVERY NIGHT, for your shopping ‘ } convenience, ‘til Father's Dey! 4 Tweweetrte=tT,TTt'T""T'TT'TT TTT" "'TTTvTT"'"Tv"7rT?yTw* _eerrrrrrrrrrvrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrY rrr YS abit Mla tn tht w HERE'S the IDEAL GIFT for DAD! rwvyryYYVwYwYeYYewewewrwrervrTVTerTerTrreTreTT Tees _erereerrewerrvrvrrvrwervrvrvvevvYYVwwYwVVVTYTTY®T. Men's Cool, Plisse NO-IRON > > > d > é > 4 « 4 a > » a > » » . > > > > » > a > > » > a » a , > a 2 » > SHIRTS * White Only ¥% Short Sleeve % Sizes Smail., Med., Large rwwerwvvevewvevevvyYYTYTVvVeTVeYTreTrTr TT Terre m“ewrwrweeererrrrrrrvrvevrvvrvrevrveeeYTYTYTYYYwTY et bp bb be fn hn bo bn hb i hi i bb bb i i i A Ci A hi Dh hi hi Me Mi Bi he te Mt ma ‘ PwvvvvevvreCe CeCe CCC VC TCC CTC CCC C CCC CCC CCC CeCe Open Friday and Saturday Nights ‘til 9 P. M. KRESGE'S -SELF-SERVE Tel-Huron Shopping Center Only | i tt i i i i i i i i i i tt i E-4 | You Med 39° : : Netionelly Adv. Price $7]50 | . a 4 en $ 00 3 Cottons and kids Just g0 lagether ju ‘eur ‘variety of prin i. =end plains for the small fry Prints are prettier than ever RAYONS— ; 45-inch widthe....ccseccegcees v4. € + ] FABRIC Sew ’n Save ‘sir __TEL-HURON SHOPPING CEN’ Fisbe Bad Cotton € CREASE RESISTING — 36-inch Prints, Regular 69c...., Yd. SALE! -WONDERLAND “WEEK-END SPECIALS Great savings on new Summer Wear tor Tharedey. Friday and Saturday > > Special Purchase! | % Values to 3.99 Bays’Girls\) gs ‘SWIM es ai New ect style nylons offons swimsuits fer gir lastex boxer and for boys Sizes 2 to 1.99 Nees lestex oe on - vet trur 1°) GIRLS COTTON See At One Low Price Smart new cottons, be- *] 88 | lero, sigeveless styles Reg. $3.99 Sizes | ito 2 Ot. S A LE! GIRLS’ COTTON SKIRTS Gay cdlorful prints 44 Sos fee dtd Op Reg. $3.99 —e ee eee eS ee ea ee a or oe SALE! one sae tons, plisses, nylons Sizes 2 to 8 at... ae ewe awa nw ewe eC EEE eee eee eee ee ee SALE! aon man Davy picture. Sizes 2 to 8 at iii SALE! mons rea blouses, shorts “Best for Children” Tel-Huron Shopping Center Open Thurs,, Fri.. Sat. ‘il 9 P.M. “FE 5.9955 aN ‘Special! canine Thursday 9:30 a.m. matched. separates 5 usually $8.95 . The costume idea in lustrous, - washable fabrics ~ of acetate- cotton pongee prints and solid color nylon cottons! Blouses matched to \\ skirts and " mixable with your a“ 1 other J seporates). | A big - collection at savings! , Special $5 TEL-HURON SHOPPING Open ore Until 9 P. M, ro nemo ohrm m rg 2 Se : A\ COME StE | | COME SAVE at A&P & OUR FINEST QUALITY—AGP BRAND ‘Pineapple Juice ~ 4 99: | Orange Juice 4 | joes wi > $.. Kennedy said notices will go out : r = $ 95 = 16 to the 300 raijroads vite at ne ae That | © GUARANTEED > GUARANTEE! | ° am | ¥ will be refunded , , . | which the Breteerboed molt P| Wick the baich wes opened. FIRST QUALITY within "69 dave if you are at 4 | | ‘The demand will be ‘‘across-the- | Chief Berry stepped into the sub = pletely ) > ; . PAIR board” for all classifications un- from the bell and reported for CHOICE OF STYLES en ee : = | der the union's jurisdiction, Ken- : duty. i nedy said. These range from pas- | . | ex brakemen currently earn-| Fur-hke fleece of the vicuna, | ing $13.45 per day to footboard rare and elusive animal roaming | | yardmasters at $19.07. the towering peaks of the Andes, | “The nation is experiencing = known as re softest and finest M 1 N. | great over-all prosperity,” said|® ®"Y amimal on earth, | cCandless. Perry | Kennedy, ‘‘and it's only fair that ° . - _railroadmen share in it.” } | = ; _HARDWARE . BARDWARE © COAL 6 ahi... 1... ' Dick H Fil } , ae TT OAR a ee weer UES tc Choate Tesey Want to watch the HOLLYWOOD uw — Singer Diek | Haymes, recent victor in a suit to escape deportation, says he Since “1911 ee wit c,. { plang. to file for U.S. citizenship as V/s y4) oO b 2? 5 | today in Reno, Nev, Haymes and | . il D Vi . | his wife. Rita Hayworth maintain | . } ' ‘legal residence at Lake Tahoe, Junenal Home | Nev, Haymes was born in Argen- age, | ome Go . . == ~ . ae = = | ° - PHONE Feder! 24732 || senda that be had made hima —— ae aed wontlerful what Uniable Pith Faopellors : . brings: this two-way magic to the And with it goes the might of record- BALLOON TIRE STYLE of To get. off the ground, of course, the mosers plaoe is trad oreo hs — ne ae level luxury | | pilot needs plenty of accéleration, for | twenty propeller-li whirli of Baitk'es ing ri the | BUNON SIZE SPITFIRE |< | to soos SALE sages | Sexcazicun SoMergericy nel theDreatow ni." po emi of Bac ted E | _ . . Reg. $4695 ‘SALI 5 ]| —_—s must “bite” into air at acertain angle Just by pressing the gas pedal wa nteriors—and the host of other BOYS’ 20-INOH SIZE... . Rr. $4195. SALE $9g9s J}. for utmost pérformance. down, you switch the pitch and get ¢cvanoed features that add to Bui’ ; aries | ee But the plane i = i. instantaneous getaway response or ‘ . ma MANY OTHER SCHWINNS and ENGLISH BICYCLES IN STOCK! tude, great power acceleration is no safety-surge acceleration. SF ee ever Fee Pins. lt ull Moncks an Balance ' longer needed=fuel efficiency is. So Just i , you = | Easy Terms—A Small Down Payment onths on Balance J| | - the pilot switches the pitch of his pre. - by easing up on the pedal you —_year—and see for yourself why Buick change the pitch to high- sales are soaring ! seller peller blades to high-economy angle saglecand get nen ont tear tes ad po | —— —and gets a lot more mileage from _ mileage in all n dciving cad | ee the fuel in his tanks, , crtlaing ne ME soe On k eeked os Rin tnd |p REBUILT 27 Boys’ Bicycles* 2° $1195 u TV BICYCLES tice Gitls’ Bicycles 2+ $1795 | | + WE SERVICE. WHAT WE SELL! P Trwif of the year is Buick Spe Keep : a ‘sharp ey e for value: : r : STOREWIDE, genie DAY EFEES . wi 88 8 * : ‘ CHASE & SANBOR as | BLOCK EAST OF TELEGRAPH OF sc ‘ New Special Blend | GRINDS TOM’S COFFEE OPEN 9 9 , ) CUSTOM AM. 'Til P.M. T LB. ) ce } bay CAN | Nira, OD | mt Q un 5 A.M. "TH Pa Sunkist Lemon Juice soto 12* MONARCH > We Revere the Right fo Lt Quant Dixie Salad Dressing an = FANCY SLICED “2 PRICE SALE Of Jiffy Biscuit Mix t0cn'box 39° SHORTCAEE Fireside Marshmallows = “town's, 19 PEACHES Welch's Fruit of the Vine “Yo: cu. 29 Pfeiffer’s Concentrated ae Loganberry Punch 12 08, Bottle Males 60 Ounces 19° MUSSELMAN'S FANCY am, APPLE SAUCE ooh JARS 029 GUNSBERG'S Famous Delicatessen Style Boneless Brisket at a Special Low Price! yy’ Ground Beef : POUND ... seossestsestune wo FRESH YOUNG TENDER 2 : vc 5 ae , ~ . Ly < Sf SLICED BEEF LIVER ta wo » ~ ~ ¢ Si ICED B fA CON ARMOUR'S BANNER BRAND 39° 3x . SUGAR CURED ° “ 69 FLORIDA SEEDLESs _ LIME ES 19! OC Our A U.S. CHOICE Quality STANDING — Rib Roast} / }2 | of Beef Tender, Juicy, Delicious | Famous HORMEL RATH'S Black Hawk Canned Picnics LEHUNK STYLE, SI P A M | aan so” : ee UNA Just Slice and Serve! / EASY TO SLICE 43/4-LB. CAN PORK BUTT. ROAST . Practically 39%; \ TUNA CAN | Boneless PORK STEAKS uae, 491. —upeys TALL Me | : _ FINEST CANS | 3 wan di rpAnus | ses BUTTER| _ CHEERIOS FRANKS Sieg anmour’s OR LARGE SLICED OR. PIECE Z CLOVERBLOOM 59| _: Made from Nourishing cats! B ° L °o G NA > 1 LB. PRINT 7 Your tig Margarine « NU-MAID 2: CTNS. —— Fi ‘ te “ te Se 3 . tN i ¢ Bey ya ¥ - ye “ PINCONNING MILD OR : : : | ‘ ona ese . ‘ P rae j f i ee ¥ Hal Boyle an from a touring notebook: daughter. I) — ; oe . =e al % | a ¥ NARAD AA} 0606404 (6.399 >. ax, xx! WW 3 1x AAA ‘ Petey are Wy i ee ry +, WW + eave } f ’ oo : “NEVER VARIES, = = NEVER SMUDGES!- a Le WRITES: a CLEAN = SERASABLE:LINE — : Drow ‘ ie ke er ad one . eet: ano i | . Please send me 7 y . New-Porker @ LL LIQUID LEAD Pencils i 1 at $3.95 each. j I : I To Nome Chy ____State___ Color: [J turquoise, (Red; [) Purple; [) Gray, ie C) Block. Oo Check or M.O. ()Cherge Se Many a Park Avenue father) jheaves a- sigh at the cost of | ‘throwing: a debutante ball for his! | first jet transport designed for pas- | | Senger service. He said it would | |earry 80 to 125 passengers at top | hour | an hour faster than the propeller /company to enter the jet transport Light Winch Proves | weight midget winch, especially ¥ ' But he'd break down in tears ty Apa hes have themselves a bal! ihe had to.foot the bills for in- troducing her to society on an | echoes off the mountain. The “Coming of Age Ceremony’ of an Apache miaiden, usually hele Apache Indian reservation. A debutante bali lasts only a single evening under the white man's wan idea of what makes a }good party The Apaches have a more muscular and red - blooded | SoEreen: - * When an Indian father an |mnounces Me has a daughter who is ready to set up tepee-keeping | it isn't just a shindig for a few | lclose friends of the family. The whole tribe shows up. And thé | feasting and celebrating goes on | four days and nights. When the i) ~ Douglas Plans Jet Transport New DC8 Will Cross, U.S. in 442 Hours, Span) Atlantic in 6'2 Douglas Aircraft Co. plans a jet; \transport designed to cross the United ,States in 4% hours and span the Atlantic in 6': hours The jet-powered DCS will be in} the air by Deeember 1957, Donald | lw, Douglas, president of the’ com | pany. said yeste *rdav. tle said de | liveries to airlines should begin in | 1959 t ” * * Douglas termed it America’s speeds in excess of 550 miles per The DC8 will be nearly 200 miles driven DCT Seven Seas model Douglas is the second American | field. Boeing Airplane Co., of Seat- tle, flew its jet transport, the. 707, last July. It was designed as a| multipurpose tanker-transport. in } tended for commercial as well as | military use. | Aid for Paralytic TULSA, Okla. (UP)—A_ light- designed for a Tulsa polio patient, may provide relief for helpless victims everywhere Claude (t:_Ramsey, head of a worldwide winch firm, byilt the, aluminum. alloy medical Wit or | Betty Morris, e-l-year-oid pelo \ stricken graduate furse. Bett).s,|" parents wanted a device that! would facilitate moving her from _her almost completely paralyzed They couldn't afford a $1,500 hydraulic rig. Ramsey built the bantam metal workhorse free for Betty, and said he can market the lift for about $300. - Although it weighs less than five pounds, the lift can hoist 200.4imes its weight. Operation is as simple | as elevating a hospital bed. tee the Desert Inn last night be- | fore a celebrity-studded audience ‘elinies, roads and drainage sys-| Noel Coward Opens | | ‘Stint in Las Vegas cE AS V EGAS Nev: i- Noel | | Cowart opened his four-week stint including Judy Garland and -Lucius | Beebe. It was the Brittsk arier and en- | tertainer’s first U.S. night club ap- pearance, He. sarig his way through two shows for thébeginning” of | what was described as 9 $40,000-a. | week a ath si Tachen Refugees | Get $1 Million in U.S. Aid | TAIPEI, Formoga (—An Amer lican aid check. for $1,291,000 to- | day launched a pregram of com i munity settlement and self-help for ‘the 18, 505 persons evacuated. from the Tac hen Islands ‘in February. come to Chinese Nationalist Feo mosa rather-than stay under Com- munist occupation of the Tachens will be resettled in houses which | they will help build themselves, | | announced the U.S, Foreign Sri tions Administration. Projects include wells, schools, tems, : | ___THE PONTIAC PRESS, _ like to bounce some in the old days was a time when the nomadic tribes fulfilled their religious as well as social obliza , dering groups togethe: an occasion tq swap tall tales of the hunt, exchange gossip and re mutual performance of mtuals In the simple past when buffalo were plentiful the warriors in the found it reasonably’ easy to pro-; vide meat for a. four-day But with the price of beef what daughter's debut ringer at this year’s annual festi * As of old, she will t ceremonial tepee. Her hair will be SANTA MONICA. Calif. —The| ~ , - . WEDNESDAY, JUNE. 8, 1055, Apache Debutan te’s arty Really Expensive MESCALERO, N. M. ie—Leaves , Washed with vucca reet suds. {will wear a buckskin dress and | two tail feathers trom a female | w her entrance in- If she itches she a wooden scratcher she musn’'t during t days scratch any part of her with he She thy sk¥ -or be disobedient in’ any WhY, clpuds. To assure appetite td wild fruit marked with a cross | f yellow pollen | ahfointed with the eagle, signalizi to wor nahood! fmriust Use The diress bells | dances ingide audience cor close frie _ fous tribe Lact pertort 1 th 2 the During th lIvy, | dignified 1 | particularly jlaughter, “ ‘ = OL ae sN ‘€ .too much laughing premature wrinkling, cues that now also seems pre- valent among many lady palefaces who never saw a reservation. In other days at the conclusion | of the ceremony the happy father | presented attendants and medicine valuable gifts — male horse, a saddle, rifts will probably be dif- i ferent now. Many , among the hardest-riding of Indian , tribes, no longer would know quite prefer to ride herd on their ¢ Not Youth, Germs PITTSBURGH fh residents of the Nerth Side section a members of the It was proudly la- beled the Steel City'’é Fountain of | Yoyth, But it has been closed. The ‘state department of health found have a the water is contaminated. entire period little 2 EP WE EE OE OWE wa. - Am ae ~~ - & - 4O~ ~~ ~~ ~~ _~_2> aS Pé™M eg pw." hy 4) ab - oe The 5,017 families who ctiose_ to |. ax ae a ~ Reds Buying Drugs | TOKYO ®—The economic news: paper Nihon Kezai said today, three Japanese ~ drug firms had! contracted to send Red China| three million. grams of streptomy- cin, T (navertisement) Happy Is The Day When Backache # Mark Ba neche Da 901 when a snowstorm caught _ wt y | ‘citizens with sparse Yood_reserves.” GLENN ® — hamlet There was little to eat but pan. -brates Pancake Day every year. It is a memorial to a day in cakes until roads were cleared, ‘ Advertisemegt) (Advertisement) 1 CAN WALK GOOD AGAIN THANKS TO. O-JIB-WA BITTERS| “It sure is wonderful to be able Mr. Frank White ~ to walk again without stumbling Route “4 Roscommon over everything in my way. ; had arthritis in_my legs andl. try it. I didn't know how . t fknees so ; Se ak jt|much good it would do, as I had 3 tried about everything else with- i i ‘out success, but was determined pty penta to give it a good trial anyway. Well, I am ‘glad to say that O- feet toi BWA showed me results in pwalk, andi iwo weeks. The stiffness started gmany times'iy leave, and I could actually it caused valk again without falling over me to trip'things. My knees sometimes and fall. I pother me a little yet in the morn. —— hadto cross ings when I first get up, but Mr. F. White ever some nothing like they used to. I wish railroad tracks on my Way 40 everyone felt as good as I do work, and I just couldn't seem now. I recemmeénded that ail to step over them, as I tripped! people suffering With rheuma- over them every time. It was|tism or arthritis, get the big the same story when I tried to| pottle of OJIBWA BITTERS, climb stairs, so it's a wonder I'and give it a fair trial. It’s the didn't break my neck. About pest medicine I know of.” two years ago, I read about O- JIB-WA BITTERS, and decided| AT ALL DRUG STORES _ a er rt pe / (_s= “See “7, ~o 7, = \/ ~ 9, \/ \/ ~~; - Je Jr = \ — oO ~ C) “7 — — — se V- Vr Vr -— ¥. Ve ie I e- - Ve * - eal aagwing b see with that you are miserable and Kg out because | irritation, by | djvreti¢action fon tioeagnieehstoese eter Lary soy br action, by their sooth> wy Be to increase the output of the is idmey a Goes Away...» ‘orte, Down’ vars pine A ~~ fe Va VS a & Pepsi-Cola Deeleii in the tiac. Area Are Serviced by NY, 922 OAKLAND. AVENUE. _ SPADAFORE BEVERAGE COMP. . Phone: FEderal pated an ‘gee Ao Rae ee a : RE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESD AY. JUNE 8, 1955 | Have ‘Gar Checked Before "You Start Favorite With Kids lewis on «3¢-mte tan | on Vacation to Avoid Delay on Highway DETROIT (UP)—Vacation time | would -be a much more pleasant, y time for a lpt of people if they had their cars checked thoroughly -before leaving on long trips, the emergency service manager of the Automobile Club of Michigan said today. Robert Nisbet, the service man- ager, pointed out that “the, mechanical condition,of the family | car can mean the rence be- tween a pleasant vacatian and a nerve racking one.” Nisbet warned that tires, | brakes and the cooling system are the most frequent causes of , vacation trip troubles. : “Driving on ‘stin-baked@ roads at high speeds is tough on the best of tires,” he said. “When tires are in poor condition, you're ee inviting a blowout.” ' CHECK TIRES . He : suggested that tires be: checked for cuts and. bruises‘ be- _ fore starting on a long trip and those which show signs of wear | should be ‘replaced. Nisbet said motorists should always be property equipped for a fiat. Jacks should be checked and a strong wood bleck carried as a secure jack base. Cooling systems should be checked for hose and connection | leaks and flushed and cleaned. * * * “Hot summer driving also means a more rapid water evaporation,” he “said. “Keep an eye on the engine temperature gauge and check the water level of the radi- ator frequently.” GOOD BRAKES VITAL He noted that brakes that are adequate for normal city driving are often dangerous -for high-speed travel on unfamiliar roads. Thus, | brake linings and the cylinder’ should be checked with repairs necessary if any of the brake parts are less than perfect. Nisbet sald ofl is a frequent source of trouble. Oi! filters should be changed if the oil is dirty and ont made along the way to make sure the oil supply in the crankcase hasn't dwindled. He also advised a pre-vacation general tune-up with emphasis on lubrication, voltage regulator, lights, battery and spark plug condition. * ¢ @ “A short time spent on pre- ventative maintenance before the trip starts can often mean the _ Minnesota Needs - * Cheaper State Flag ST. PAUL (UP)—Most Minneso- | tans wouldn’t know their state flag if fae saw it. many have seen it and prob- | ably won't unless the legislature | does something to bring it within | financial and physical reach. The | flag is too expensive to make and too heavy to fly. | The legislature is thinking of | setting ". an interim commis- to Coi up with a new | flag in time for the ‘state’s cen- tennial in 19538. Lawmakers feel that a flag cHeaper to reproduce would get school children and the . public better acquainted with their 7 flag. The flag, adopted by the 1893 legislature, has two layers of thick | ‘cloth, one side white, and other | blue, A 3x5-foot reproduction costs | about $65, Bantam. Rooster Survives Round of Hard Knocks HILLSBORO, Ore. (UP)—Poppy Red, a tough young bantam « rooster, struts happily about the home near here despite enough rough treatment to kill an ox. Poppy Red is owned by Mr. and | Mrs, Clarence Nelson who operate | a service station and tourist cabins | on a busy highway. According to the accounts, , a Red was walking across the highway recently and was — struck by a truck. After flop- ~ ping about he lay still, A witness, not wanting to see | Poppy Red suffer, wrung his neck. | Two boys, who were fond of the | rooster, hit him with an ax handle. | | | | Gad aged Be: Hak Fz 39 7 j i fa! i if ! af = if There are four principal types of cultivated sheep: Merino, or fine wool; Southdown, or medium wool; Cheviot, or long wool; and HEAR HOW! New . 8-transistor “Royol-M™ ms SMALLEST, LIGHTEST ‘WEARING AID IN seni Histonye children on the Clifton Yorge-Hot | —saseye saving of many hours on the high- | trouble on a vacation trip and the Springs line. He makes it a habit | The original meaning of ‘ ‘carol” C. C. Lane, a 50-year Chesapeake | one to each child. He values a With Only Writeins & Ohio Railway conductor, has an | “thank you". note from the chil enviable ‘ reputation among the | dren among tis pee trophies. ay,”’ Nisbet said. ‘‘Nobody wants | ‘best place to avoid trouble is at/ io have’ a supply of lollipops on | was a ring dance, and the carolers somebody else for-his job. to be burdened down with car) home—before starting the trip.” |hand. Whena teacher took 32 first danced as they sang. & skill and Merit--Fun and er or a Blackstone automatic dryer. BIG LOCAL CONTEST nen on a 14+ mile train trip, | Beats Official Nominee | gate and polled 66 votes to zl, his 33rd one-year term as mayor joe this has wl (pop. 400).. The of- |. ; didn't hurt, Mayor Willian Frude | £°t 40 votes. iwhen the ’ Republican party cau- | | cus passed him and nominated Colorado is . known as the _ Frude ran asa write- all candi, ‘admitted to the Union in 1876.* Profit- A Contest Of Skill and Merit You Can Solve This Contest! Rules of Contest 1. Any person may enter con- 2. Answers must be mailed be- tere midnight Sat., june 18, 3. Only one solution from a family will be accepted, and only one prize will be award- ed te any one family. 4. Only one first prize will be awarded. . tn cases of any ties originality, neatness. skill, ttractiv of and entry will be deciding factor in awards. in the space pro 7. We vessrve the right te give additional awards for original- ity and neatness if the re- “| sponse_warrants’ it,” 8. Ne entries will be returnéd and contestants must accept the decision ef the judges as final. MAIL YOUR SOLUTION AT ONCE . . CONTEST CLOSES AT MIDNIGHT SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1955. tion, sign your name plainly . eeenrewonnee seen eneaeen ts 5 HOW TO DOIT Place the figure 15 in the center square, use any num- ber from 1 thew 27 inclu- sive, and arrange them in the other squares so es to total 45 herizontally, ver- tically and diagonally. Do not use 2 number more than ence. i Don't delay. Mail your solution at once. Don’t Delay—Enter Today! & Blackstone AUTOMATIC DRYER a —— “Centennial State” because it was | " Resinol—the -Enter At Once! ‘A BRAND NEW CONTEST WITH ALL NEW NUMBERS © NO OBLIGATION - NOTHING TO BUY- SOLVE THE PROBLEM | . : We are able to bring this sensational contest in co-operation with some of the world’s leading home appliance manufacturers. Your chance to win absolutely free, a Gibson electric range, a Gibson refrigerator, a Gibson home freezer, a Blackstone automatic wash- Neme@ . oc icces oss sceueees ; We he City *_e *# @ @ ** * @ * ** ee * DON’T DELAY- ENTER TODAY! Contest Closes June 18, 1955 Blackstone AUTOMATIC WASHER PLACE AN (X)—Select Any One of the Above Models You Would LIKE TO WIN...Up to *10,000 In Additional Valuable Awards Ld P ‘ON = wera * OPEN EVERY EV ENING EL Ee ~ Gal ua a te ebro Shopping Oa) eer eeeneeeneeeeennes neat oN iA THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 3 8le County Calendar i ie. Ghuny hoe oa will hold their ‘ annual pienic at 6: . Frida: = the ‘Floyd Pulke boon home on pert MARILYN D. TAYLOR The engagement of Marilyn Doris Taylor has been announced |: ' by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy T. Taylor Sr., of Romeo. Her fiance is Dale E. Cunningham Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale E. Cun- "| ningham of Portage. A June 25 ™ | wedding at the First Congrega- tional Church is planned. Building Boom - Shows May:Dip Twenty Less Permits in Waterford Township Bring Decrease be, WATERFORD TOWNSHIP 214 permits at $1,533,377 compared & c = £ & County Births tem ne ae fore end Mrs. are - |e parents of «. new oo“ bra ¥. Mr. * eenere ere an- nouncine 4 birth of @ son, en, been to Mr, and Sera. Martin Learmen. Reds Blow Up Train KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya — Communist blew up an ‘nest W. Gray, 796; J. Wesley Smith, 735; and Elmer Lowe, 713. * | ship Clerk Fannie Adams led the Voters in ii ice to the proposal a large vo the c In Southfield the measure of ap- | proval was smalter, but still. enough to insure the negeens | of the inéorporation process. Resi- dents there voted 3.17% to 2,130) for the switch. A small section of Southfield Township, Bingham Farms, voted in fneorporate as a village, This was approved, 121 to 16. z Voters in Madison Heights, a new city forming in Royal Oak Township, turned down the pro- posed city charter, by 82 votes. The ballot talley showed 1,758 votes against the charter, and-only 1,676 for it. rs, Virginia M. Solberg, secretary of the charter commission, said today that the charter commission would recon- vene, unless petitions against such a move were circulated. In Commerce Township, the an- nexation of Oskiey Park. to Wol- ‘verine Lake village was soundly defeated & - Commerce Township voters op- posed the move, 284 to 6, and Oakiey Park residents followed | ca with 171 against it, and only | 7 for the change. A close vote of 53 no and %4) yes in Wolverine Lake Village itself was recorded. ~ Named to the charter commis- sion in Troy were Fred W. Hilde- brand, 1,439; Clifton Truesdell, 1,408; George W. Ford, 1,083; Roy L. Duncan, 80; Norman R. Bar- nard, 831; Frank Costello, 798; Er- There were M candidates for’ the nine posts. : In’ Southfield Township, Town- field of 38 candidates for the nine charter posts. She polled 2.747, fol- ?| junetion te halt the Troy vote . Monday, brought by the Vickers Corp. _ Attorneys for the firm which is building a $2,0000,000 plant in the township said the area incorporat- |. ing does not meet the state re- quirement of 500 residents per square mile. this report: 2s Judge Holland denied the injune-| A raccoon was sleeping in the | pened tion, but allowed Vickers’ bill of | top branches. it to stand. This apparent- ly leaves the way open for further legal action by the firm. Fenton. Youth Injured. i When Car Le@lvet Rogd Frank E. Geyer,-1T.#of Fenton, was treated for a chest injury -at Pontiae General Hospital la st night after his car ran off Grange Hall Road in Holly Township. , Geyer told Oakland County | Sheriff's Deputies he lost control of the car on a curve near Crotched Lake. Dems Break GOP Rule - PROVIDENCE, R. I. (®#—Demo- erats overturned Republican town rule in Lincoln by electing all five members of the ‘town council, solidly Republican more than half a century. The Democrats also carried the biennial town election in South Kingston, for the seeond consecutive time, Until 1953, South Kingston had always voted Repub- 118 Charter Commissioners Named in Two Townships and Southfield Township approved | wane gaiproeaes yes at the polls and elected .nine mem poet Belg Despite threatening weather and court litagation which may void the election, Troy residents turned out . |here are wondering whether the la tree in her front yared and | Baker; Mrs. George A. Dean, and Mrs, Veda Montgomery, Mrs. | Charles Matson, Mrs. measure of approval. The was Pe 11Tf for the incorporation, with 254 opposing change to city status. *—+—_—_-_——- | Oakdale Project Has Dedication | Down Payment. Made: by Residents Yesterday in Royal Oak Township -ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP — The Oakdale Gardens housing project was officially dedicated to its resi- dent-owners at 2 p.m. yesterday. With the signing of the papers, a check for $109,120.92 as down pay- ment on the $1,443.985 purchase price was turned over to the gov- ernment. * The government returned to the township $75,655 held to be used immediately for repairs, and to put the project in good | shape. The move has been hailed as one: ‘that may change the political coni- | Plexion of the turbulent George | Washington Carver school board. Prior_to this sale, there were only a small number of property owners in the school district. Only property owners are eligible to hold office on the However, with phany residents | acquiring the sfatus of property| owners with the purchase of the project, the field of potential can- | didates will be thrown open. Coonskin Cap Up Tree Is Real McCoy for Once MOUNT CLEMENS @ —Police ‘coon skin cap craze among small- fry hasn't gone to far. Two patrolmen were summoned Monday midnight to the home of a woman who reported a in a brown sweater and wefring a Davy Crockett hat had climbed hadn't come down. The policemen calied up the darkened tree. They got no res- ponse. They summoned firemen. A fireman climbed a ladder to the top of the tree. Down came the cman with Art Show Scheduled IMLAY CITY — The Village! artists show will be held in the | p.m. Thursday. dancing, Troy, Southfield ‘Approve Incorporation WINONA A. CARLSON Mr.’ and Mrs. Lee Carlson of Southfield Township have an- nounced the engagement: of their daughter Winona Annefie, to James Edward Blacklaw. He is |the son.of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Blacklaw, of Inkster road. date has been set for the wedding. | Square D Dancing Held at Children’s Home Boys and girls of the Oakland County Children’s Home were pre- vided‘ with an evening of square last night. Harold Duggan, recreational di- home on an average of once every three weeks during the past few months. Every Thursday, the children take over the facilities of the | | YMCA for swimming and once a/| month roller skating is held at) the Nolan Roller rink, Lake Orion. | Last evening's entertainment was | Prov ided by Lee Fox and his Zero | Valley Boys. for Thursday Meeting WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — An agenda which will include a varied | number of program helps will be. presented to PTA mental health chairmen when they meet at 8) p.m. tomorrow at the Hudson Covert School on Scott Lake Road, | Viruses vs. Deadlines All Children May Not Get Polio Shots This Year, Scheele Reports to Nation — WASHINGTON u—Surgeon Gen- eral Leonard A, Scheele confirmed last night that it probably will not “Making and testing vaccine is a difficylt and delicate process,”’| Scheele said in a nationwide radio- televisiog report on the Salk vac- Cine sitWition, “You cannot make viruges..jeet deadlines. You can- cine prodicers, and continued: “The manufacturers have as- sured me that they can and will preduce vaccine under these re- to produce h vaccine to im- munize all children this summer.” Expressing anew his confidence in the safety and effectiveness of | the Salk vaccine, Scheele said that with safety, Skits, films, recordings, and personnel .and material resources | | will be presented by the leadership | group of the Program Planning Committee and their advisor, Frieda Huggett. Start. Industry Drive BATTLE CREEK # — A $200,- 000 driye to promote industrial de- —s in the Battle Creek area Tuesday with $51,000 of the goal already pledged. The pro- rgram is being conducted by the Battle Creek Area Development -|Corp. It will attempt to bring new | dated industry to the area, promote ex- | | isting industries and sponsor civic development projects. Money will | high school cafeteria from. 7: ates expended over the next three request for a réduction of gas de- years. not force scientific work to meet dates on a calendar. And it must be kept in mind that the entire | process of mapufacturing a batch of vaccine takes Rorsioe 90 days. “This is a reason why we can) give you no precise estimates of | how much vaccine wil] be avail- able at any given time.” Stressing policy is ‘safety, not speed, ex- No| cept as the latter is compatible, ” Scheele told of the | | studies which led to adoptjon May 27 of revised manufacturing and testing standards. _ © 6 --* He said these standards require some changes in the operating procedures of the six licensed vac- Says Judges Restore Revoked Licenses rector, says that he has been able | = to arrange a social evening at the; LANSING w — Circuit judges | are restoring 80 per cent of the driver's licenses revoked in Michi- | gan for bad driving recotds, Sec. ‘of State James M. Hare estimated | today: Hare told the State Safety Com- mission he would appoint a. com- mittee this week to study the prob- | lem. Conceding that accurate data was lacking, motorists who come before them to seek restoration of their li- censes, Gas Users May Get Refund on Charges DETROIT @® — A three miillion dollar refund will be divided among Michigan Consolidated Gas | Co. customers if a- government! examiner's ruling stands. Company officials said today the | refund would follow from a find- ing that the Panhandle Eastern Pipeline Co. overcharged its whole- sale customers a total of more than 36 million dollars during a 26-month period ending last April 30. The examiner's finding must be approved by the Federal Power Commission. Panhandle Eastern supllies gas to Michigan Consoll- The commission ‘said {t has af- firmed another examiner's ruling which denies a Panhandle Eastern ‘liveries to Michigan Consolidated. Residents Form Civic Concert Group By JANE WINDELER Press Correspondent WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — A group of twenty residents meetin cided to daunch a program of bringing outstanding musical con- certs to their part of Oakland County. Mrs. Irma Davis, of Civic Con- cert Service, Inc., explained the music plan for communities. _ As the Waterford Township Civic Concerts Association, the group elected Kenneth Young, president; “Charlies Pappas, who will be co- chairmen of the organization eommittee; and Mrs. Lois Tif. fany, arrangements, Those appointed to the board of were Mrs, C. N, Koester, Mrs, F. H, Williamson, Mrs. G. A. Mrs, John Williams. Other board members will be Bruce Gorte, Mr. and Mrs. A..E. say In selecting the programs, At least three concerts are guar- anteed, The series is determined at the high school last night de-| sold. either the Waterford Township High by the, number” of memberships| School or Isaac E. Crary Junior | The concerts will be held in * ‘High School, Nuptial High Mass Weds Couple in Morning Rites ORCHARD LAKE — Delores E. Baker became Mrs. James Victor Pickrel in a Nuptial High Mass - ‘}at 10 a.m. Saturday at Our Lady of Refuge Church. ~ The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Douglas S. Baker of Park drive, and D.:S. Baker of Tacoma, Wash. Mrs. Theodore 0. Sellman of Kanorado, Kan., and the late Victor T. Pickrel are a of the bridegroom. A gown of lace tnd tulle over satin was the bride's choice for the ceremony. Mrs, Douglas S. Baker, sister- in-law of the bride, was the ma- tron of honer, and Geraldine Bum- pel, Martha Jean McMaster, Carol McDonald were the bridesmaids. Douglas S. Baker, brother of the bride, wais the best man, and John Moore, Dr. Richard James and Dr. James Comrie were ushers. MRS. JAMES PICKREL A reception was held at Our northern Michigan trip, the coupe .| Lady of Refuge Hall. After -a will live in Chicago. that the government | Hare” said that a/ | method must be developed to make | certain that all circuit judges have ; available the compete record of ‘Plan Varied Agenda | Schools Holding Commencement Troy, Avondale, Oxford p Seniors Set to Receive Diplomas Tomorrow Commencement ceremonies for 226 seniors in Troy, Avondale and Oxford High schools will be held tomorrow evening at the schools. The traditional address from schoo! officials, and valedictorians _| and salutatorians, will. precede the final diploma. For the 81 seniors at Troy: Township high school, the 8 p.m. program will. begin with the -graduation,march, te “Pomp and Circumytance. i The Rey. -R. S. Hocking of the Big Beaver Methodist Church’ will give the invocation. Supt. of: Schools Stuart K. Beker will make one. award, and assistant superintend- ent William H:. Schroeder will in- troduce the speaker, the Rev. | Walton E. Cole, of the First Con- | gregational Church of Detroit. His topic is ‘Realistic Cour- age.’ Board of education president rites of receiving the diplomas. Selections by the school glee club will be heard during the program. Dr. Wilbur Moore of the Cen- tral Michigan College will be the guest speaker at the Avondale High schooj rites, : Seventy-seven seniors will cipate in the 8 p.m. program the school auditorium. - —' and the} “Blueprints, Blue Blood, eeah | Blue Ribbons” will be: the apeatr er’s topic. - Grant Graham, president ‘of the Avondale school board, will award the diplomas to the graduates. Dr, T. Luther Purdom of the The. service is planned, for 8 p.m. in the school auditorium. The high school glee club will sing several selections, Board of Education president Carl Buechler will present the diplomas. Frank Costello will \present the, “experiance indicates, however, . that there will be scattered local epidemics, and some may be se- vere.” , * * s Introducing Scheele on the broad cast, Secretary of Welfare Hobby Said scientific processts* are often chard for ghe-layman to understand, but that people should make the > effort “so that we can be intelli. gent in making decisions about our | children.” | ~ County Deaths Louise Jean Coster DRAYTON PLAINS — Private service for Louise Jean Coster, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard | C. Coster of 2079 Briggs St., will | be held at the Brace-Smith Fu- neral Home in Pontiac. The infant — was dead at birth yesterday in | —e Beaumont Hospital, Royal — _ Peter J. Frisch MILFORD—Service for Peter J. Frisch, 71, of 121 Bobolink, wij] be — held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the — Richardson-Bird Funeral Chapel, Walled Lake, with burial‘ in Oak — View Cemetery in Royal Oak. He — died Monday, | Surviving are his. widow, Isa-_ bella; a son, Mark W. Cook of © | Detroit; a sister, Mrs. John Kop- plen of Arizona; two brothers, Chris Frisch of Saginaw and Wal- ter Frisch of Detroit. Mrs. William -L, Young -| AUBURN HEIGHTS — Service for Mrs. William L. (Doris Mae Cooper) Young, 35. of 3782 S. Boule- vard. and her infant son, will be held at 1 p.m. Friday at the Manley “Bailey Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Cem- etery. They died Tuesday. day H. Fenner IMLAY CITY — Service for Jay H. Fenner, 63, will be held 2 p.m. Friday from Muir Brothers Funera] Home, with burial in the _| Imlay Township Cemetery. He died | Tuesday. \ IMLAY CITY Service for ig Hammond. will be -held 2°. th. Thursday in Springport. She died Monday. Surviving are two sisters and two brothers. Mrs. Néttle Dodge CASS CITY — Service for Mrs. Nettie Dodge, 80; will be held 2 p.m. Thursday in the Litfle Funeral Home and burial will be in Elk- lan Cemetery. She died Monday. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Harold Evans, and Mrs. Ed- ward Noonan of Birmingham, nine grandchildren and eight great- ‘| grandchildren. bee ook Sundays 5 P, M- 12:30 A. in. CLARK'S GIANT MALTS . SANDWICHES Open 7 Days A Week . Scrib's @ re] _ DRIVE-IN hf 120 $. Telegraph DRIVEN RESTAURANT 0: 47%,,, SODAS = “T PIZZA PIE A Treat for the Whole Family mae, 1S VARIETIES TO SELECT FROM tasty — feeds prepered fer you ~ de's Famous Spaghett! House tone West eres St. . Gems 6 95-6 Suc =ech. bu Gace ee DINNERS Drive-in Service t Lunches Home” Orders a Piro edhe arp Catering to Banquets and Private Parties PURE FOOD RESTAURANT and BAR EL=-MAR os Saal Restalrant . Se eee er bee Dick & Tim ne Rick LS as Ween tae — Seo a jae PETE F. “pel - Airs” fer dancing and entertainment E’S Entertainment Every Night of the Week AL LAMANO Our own ‘find’ In an- other great week of popular songs and nov- elties, Heve fun in Pontiac's newest! en- “300° tertainment club... Lounge. musi Every Night Esjoy Yourseli in Our Air-Conditioned Club . , =» [DANCING | nist civi) patrolman. BICMAR INN | ALL NEW. Biemar Inn KOSHER RR CONDITIONED SANDWICH BAR CORNED | BEEF 94 w. Heron ¥ ™ A A Box Office Opens 6:30 P. M. Show Starts 7:45 P. M. Phone FE 4-4611 Drive-In Theater 2150 Opdyke Road oe ee ER eeetaiend Did He See . awWMurder Committed? Cc Cry, fs JIMES OE REAR» Reds Deny Murder ~ of Two Koreans TOKYO w@-—Peiping radio today contradicted a United Nations Command report which said the/- Reds shot and. Killed two South ly the two were shot -“without warning” on the Allied side of the demilitarization line and said one bedy had been dragged to the Communist side. : * * * Red China's official radio said ae Hollywood Headlines Jane and Bob Are Hiring Russ-Field pictures. They've signed the two Korean victims were among ‘“‘more than 10 agents of | Big Stars for Their F ilms Hollywood in shorts: 7 special invitation was sent to Jack Webb and Dorothy to attend Julie Lon- don ebb’s) tomorrow night ‘et John Walsh's 881 Club: Whatta bet they don’t show? > * George Gobel is at Cal-Neva Lodge getting away from it all. Cleo Moore is back in Bur- bank Hospital and her friends are worrted about ber continued loss of weight, Dana Andrews’ 20-year-old son, David, a piano player in a night- Parsons tion wil be pes ‘ten by Dorothy Manners) HOLLYWOOD (INS) — Jane Russell and Bob Waterfield weren't kidding when they said they want- ed top stars for their independent Richard Widmark for “Run for the Sun,” a high tension thriller by Robert Wilder. 1 As Widmark is getting 530 per eent of “Backlash,” the movie he's - THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8. 1955 Navy Seeks 5, 000 Reserve Officers WASHINGTON ® — The Navy said today it will. accept up to 5,000 qualified reserve officers for limited tours of duty starting July I. This number is double the quota during the current fiscal year. The Bureay of Personnel said |the duty tours will be three or four years and that the number actually accepted will de- pend upon individual qualifications and Navy requirements for vari- ous kinds of specialists. Slow poke Cited. for two, hose life in Red China, talked fresly with re porters about his prison camp experiences aad tapeciaily shout beautiful Tanys Gayten. .. the American side’? who sneaked | just starting at Universal-inter- into the demilitarized zone with! national; Bob and Jane must be a truck and wounded one Commu- | paying fancy prices, too. With i Clark Gable signed for one of their Then, Peiping said, Red Chinese | films and now Widmark, they're | civil police counterattacked in self. | batting in the big leagues. defense and killed “two of the in-| Ty, SUSAN TEAMED vading agents.” . It's hot for Susan Hayward to | be Tyrone Power’s co-star in ‘“The ANCE [then D | ying ra) le oO wife WITH ME TONIGHT who died. Susan and- Ty are old Music by the teammates from 20th and the part is a natural for her. KIM-TONES Around MGM where, she's cur- . W. Huron at Eliz. Lk. Rd. | rently working in “I'l Cry To- jmorrow “there’s nothing but praise for the way Susie is co ‘operating. Previously known as a gal who could blow up a storm now and then, Susan's been noth- ing but an angel since her recent headlines, PERC AIDS BETTE Bette Davis, who wouldn't even put on lipstick unless her pal, Pere Westrnore, advised her, gets him to do her up as the mousy li- | brarian who turns spunky ‘in ‘The | Library” at Columbia. She also promised Perc that she | will be mistress of ceremonies at | | the makeup artists and hair-styl- } ists ball, a big event at the Pal- ladium, in September. It's about time someone gave | taiented Pat Crowley another good | break. This girl was hot a year ago| and was allowed to codl off. But it’s practically set for Pat to be Tony Curtis’ leading lady in his next, ‘Square Jungle,” and | if she doesn't have the part how | come she’s in wardrobe every day at U-I having fittings? | The pictures won't start until the | end of the month to allow poor Tony. who hasn't had a vacation in months, to spend some ‘‘free itime” in the dentist's chair. New Lake Theater 420 Pontiac Trail SIGN OF THE PACAN with Jeff Chandler —AaLso— MELL’S OUTPOST With Red Cameron, Joan When You See the Big Clock —lIt’s Time to Stop for a /DRINK at the AUBURN BAR 378 Auburn Avensie: Beer and Wine to Go LABIES*® NIGHT [EVERY WEDNESDAY) at the New Ciob Tahoe 3412 Dixie Highway Music. b roel the “3 Little Words” There., Pri, 6 Sat. and Sun. * LIQUOR ‘\& BEER * WINE or COVER Phone ‘OR 3-9754 TONIGHT—2 FIRST RUN WARNER Bros CINEMASCOPE - ALL COLOR , ‘S oneeene : || Cor, Williams Lake-Airport Roads — Box Office Opens 7:15 P. M. WATERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATER WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY VIOLENT AS THE WIND- SWEPT THE FREE-SWINGING DEACON AND THE KNOCKOUT GIRL! Predicts Dem Ss: ssssmr eve om } Victory in ‘56 | bomb shelter during a civil mad * test starting late today. as Road H azard- Same as. Speeder| BOSTON (~The general man- ager of the Automobile Legal Assn. club, makes his Movie debut with | Dana in ‘‘News Is Made at Night,”’ | playing a piano player in a night- | club, | ‘ | | | rea a menace on the highways than the speeder or reckless driver. Philip C. Thibodeau said in -a | statement last night: Governor of Tennessee ‘The driver who travels at a much slower than the nor- | ‘Pledges Support for | mai slow of trattic, ‘and who forces | f ; . |cars behind him’ into taking Party s Candidate | chances out of pure frustation in order to get by, is the real men- CHICAGO w—-Gov. Frank G. ace on the roads and should be Clement of Tennessee predicts a dealt with as severely as the sweeping Demecratic victory in| speeder or reckless driver.” | 1956 and says ‘‘I'm one Democratic he favors a minim governor who is going| to support Fad pahplivay _ the party’s nominees —- whoever they are.” 5 . 7 He told an’ estimated 2,340 § WE PAY CASH for: diners at a $100-a-plate Democratic Hi ypug sory, SECRETS, TRUE ROMANCE MAGAZINES, ETC. Piper's Magazine © Outlet fund - raising banquet last night | SS Avbere Ave. that President Eisenhower ‘‘pre-| fers government by delegation of | | authority’’ and has shown ‘‘aloof- | ness to the people." The 35-year-old Tennessee gov- | | ernor told Chicago and Cook Coun- |ty Democratic organization work- | ers and boosters that all local and | regional elections since 1952 point | to “a landslide victory on a na- | jtional level for the Democratic | party in 1956; and over anybody.” | | Another speaker in the spotlight as a possible 1956 candidate was| Adlai E. Stevenson, the 1952 Dem- | ocratic preidential nominee, who | has not said whether he will run again. Stevenson, asked by newsmen) before the dinner if he cared to say anything about whether. he | would seek the presidency next jyear, replied: ‘‘Only this; ~ that when I have anything further to say, I shall issue a written state- ment.” Stevenson, in «4 brief address at the dinner, latded the accomplish- ments and appointments of Chi- cago’s Democratic mayor, Richard J. Daley, who was elected in April. Clement has been mentioned by some party leaders as a possible vice presidential candidate next year. However, he made no ref-| erences as to his availability for | the race. WED. and THURS. Broadway s Hit Musical Hits The Screen | DECK M-G-M ‘When ~ : FRANCIS. FOSTE rut BAMBOO PRISON ER aye 'f You Meet ‘AT—12:38 - 2:00 - 6:80 - 9.68 RICHA Rf 000 PETERS STARTS SUNDAY! 2—BIG ACTION SHOTS—2 Family Will Spend 3 Days in Shelter HOUSTON, Tex, ®—A man, his wife and two children will live for three days in an underground -H- Mr. and Mrs. John R. Christ. | mas, their son Stanley, 13, and. _daughter Mary Lou. J], were, ;ampng 200 families v@lunteering | |for the experiment. Christmas is | a %-year-old machinist and World | War Ii Air Force veteran. The circular shelter. has 5 square feet of space, with a ceil-| ing from six to nine feet high. | Their only contact with the gut-| side will be an intercommunica- tion system for emergency use. Balks at Soft Chairs for Fire Inspectors OMAHA (%—When Omaha Fire | Commissigner Simon A. Simon got | ja bill yesterday for $59.50 each) _for two upholstered chairs for two | | of his inspectors, his reaction was | to explode: “One inspectir on his feet is worth two inspectors on their seat.” He refused to okay the bill. A few hours later he relented to the extent of saying he'd buy two chairs but ‘at about $22 each.’ SSEEEEERE Nationally Advertised eel alata . WHERE ed “BATTLE GROUND” > —Ané— “THE ASPHALT JUNGLE” ALWAYS COOL DOORS OPEN o AND — 10:45 A. M. COMFORTABLE -- STARTING TODA On Our Gient Screen! PER as White Hat, the Magnificent Gambler ys RGMA is on i ops «HAL B TEEMING WITH) SAM WO0D ==<="= ‘menam HUMPHREY OGART LAUREN PRAIRIE! a GOOD A ® 7 IN FRIENDS Ws : oe = a IS MEET NE . i — . v \ © BEER \ H e ocken & Turkey . a inners a]. en NE « Detciows specoti § B : : a N: LUNCH—DINNERS 5 } COCKTAI 4 ae Q| \ . Open Every Day! : one : vi LIBERTY Np “rm f bs ~ % COCKTAIL 4 . 1 Seamat teen to THEI 7 N LOUNGE N ® Socccccesoocsoooces e = a i %, ‘85 North Saginow on Wane iad pAOOAAORADAAAANNOODAAAOAAHN rome ncn WOO OOM a ¥\ Nnnussnnsene 1% J THE PONTIAC gets tired ‘of reading the same, thing all the time;” he added. “ “T never look at it. as a ‘jinx’. Ever since I've been in “I'm not trying to make any. ex- | cuses, but there's a difference be- | tween playing for a team which wins 100 games and one which loses 100: | league, the Yankees aiways have | ‘| had a strong club. And I've yet to, once in 1948, and now has a life-+ ‘|play on a ist-division team. Brave Before yesterday, Garver's last | victory over the Yanks was when drive land in the seats,” Garver he was toiling for the Brownies. said. “It had been a long, long thé Back on Aug. 31, 1949 he beat time. Yes, a them, 10-3. He also beat them. time mark of 3-16 against them. * * * “The reason. you don't beat the Yankees is because they've got a good ball club," Garver continued, “I'd say they're the best hitting club in the league—better than Cleveland. They have more truly good batters plus a good bench. They're always tough.” % dinx or no jinx, Garver had te work harq fer hig victery yesterday. He outlasted four Yankee pitchers and finally won eut when Hatfield lined his éth homer with one away in the 12th. The Sturdivant, who had taken over at the start the 12th. “I can’t remember whe. I-‘fit ——— PRE victim was rookie Tom | _ punch of their own. Jim Delsing . # f Soke . ee 33 - arver Beat NY . as good as when | saw Hatfielfi's | long, long time... .”’ * * * Hatfield said he hit a fast ball. “In late innings like that, you've got to be looking for a fast ball,” he said. “He threw me one—too low—then he threw me_ another. It was a good pitch, all right, but I got in front of it.” So Hatfield beat the Yankees at their own game. Earlier, Eddie Robinson and Joe | | Collins had hit homers to send the | | Yankees 6ff to a 30 lead in the. |5th inning. Their blasts gave the | | Yanks 17 homers in their last 7. |games, and also made it 16 suc- | , cessive runs which resulted from | homers. = | | run | ; * * * But the Tigers had a home f slammed a two-run homer in the Tth to help tie the score, then L ‘ NEW YORK u—It may be too late, but the corpse is beginning to | move. The ‘dead’ Milwaukee Braves, rated a strong. National League pennant contender before the start of the season, have won five of their last six games and today held down third place for the first time since they started to nosedive three weeks ago. * Manager Charley Grimm isn't s0 jolly these days what with rumors | _making the rounds that he's on his way out. 2 ° * The Braves still are 13 games| off the pace. “But we're not giving up.” he said with a wry smile. “We still _ _ 4” Whrephote the hitting may be coming around, ; too, | ! i | Grimm's woes have been many) since hostilities began less than | two months ago. * * * Who would have thought catcher Del Crandell would. be sputtering | along with a .184 batting average | | | | 1 { | at this time? The Braves figured “ed the Braves wouldn't win the | he would be as effective as Roy | Campanella of the Brooklyn Dodgers. i SS, WEDNESDAY. JUNF &, 19 en wing Lif eee * Hatfield—hitless in 11 trips to! the plate—socked his game-winner, nx i ee "Collusion: Charged — : Probe of Johnsons ‘KO’ Proves Little PHILADELPHIA ~The Penn-, repercussions in the boxing world sylvania Athletic. Commission has of Pennsylvania. Am other re- ana RH == — x wound up its probe of the Harold sults, Governor M, Leader Kuent, ss $0 1 Noren, if § 0 @| Johnson-Julio Mederos fight. And suspended all state boxing for 9 nee - 43 ; Bena: > ‘ H H the big question is—~now what? days. . ee Pain ib) 4 1 1 Mantle, ef § 1 1! The strange fight with its strange Hatfield, yo 4 1 t Comment’ $ } Mending last May. 6 had serious) Mederos was awarded a techni- cet Se moet Ss ——— cal knockout when Johson col Garver, @ 0 Grim p- 3 . lapsed after the d. round. “= Morean, 4 te ° ale ior later said Johnson was Kenstanty. peso on asl 10 | “drugged” by a barbiturate, The eee nd . ‘probe never did develop who 2 Sturdivant, pees | useed — how Peds 347 8 was adMinistered. 43 Howard popped out for Morgan ip 10t Skowron hit imie force play for Kon- stanty in 12th New York... Detroit E—Hatfield lins, Fain Kaline Hatfield 8&— Pain Robinson; Malmberg and Fain. New Yore~@ Detroit 4 HB— Mergan 1. Garver 1 BO=-Gaerver 2 HO—Grim 4 in 6 (faced 3 batters’in Tth), Morgan 1 in 3, Konstanty 1 in 3, h RBI—Robinson 2, Delsing 2, Hatfield DP-—McDougald and Ceft-- Sturdivant 1 tn ‘sy R- rim 3-3. | Trouble Making Welter Morgan 0-0. Kotistanty 6-6, Sturdivant | ~ % ic 1-1. Garver 3-3. HBP—By Garver; Limit of 147 (Berra). Balk—Garver. W. arver (5- 7° ~6L. Sturdivant (1-2) U—Rommel, | Papreiia. Honochick, Ument. T—2 40. | A—5.259 . Adcock. a late-season flash last -| year, has given the league pitchers i } no cause for worry. * * * Ready for Title 2B | . Battle Friday HR—Robdinson, Collins. Deising, | | _Johnson, the top-ranking light- ‘heavyweight contendér, said he didn't know how. or if, he had been drugged. He stuck to his story that an orange given him by a stranger tasted bitter gnd was "| probably the cause of his illness. * 7 * - The ‘commission_ charged John- son, matghmaker Pete Moran and four: other.persons with participat- ing in a ‘‘sham and collusive’ con- test for failing to report that John- son was ill before the fight. Boxing promoter Herman Taylor, *.. Neither. Boxer Having SYRACUSE. N.Y. ih—With two | days to go for their title fight, | welterweight champion Tony De- emiet a ‘challenger Gurmae angrily defended his reputation in Basilio were well within the 147. the business. He said he = - pound limit and faced only with wonderful reputation” as a fight the ble keeping theirsPromoter for 51 years and said he be Tinor protiem af! keeping vaever ‘put on fake fights. | edge. j | Both finished their boxing drills. At present, Moran is under ar- Tuesday for the 15-rounder in the "est charged with lying while tes- War Memorial Auditorium Friday | tifying at a committee hearing last night. \ week. When called to the witness _ Finally, Bob Bub] and Lew Bur- | dette have been ineffective on the | mound, This was not totally un- expected in neutral quarters In fact, many observers who predict- | DeMarco, the squat, 23-year-old Bostonian. wound up his sparring by going three rounds with Irvin Steen in a brisk workout. “Tony's ready to go now.” said | trainer Sammy Fuller. q former welterweight boxer. “He's going to win—and by a knockout.” DeMarco weighed 145, just about | Ln perinant based their reasoning on the potential unsoundness of Buhl and Burdette. what he expects to scale for his first title defense. He hit the beam at 145% when he stopped, Johnny Saxton in 14 rounds April 1 to win stand yesterday, Moran declined to answer many questions on. the ground of possible self-incrimina: tion. * Questioned about his connection with the International Boxing Club, Taylor admitted the IBC was co- promoter with him in many fights Taylor said that in the 1952 heavyweight championship bout between Rocky: Marciano and Jer- sey Joe Walcott in Philadelphia he ‘Arcaro, With Nashua, Sets 3rd and when found Ferris Fain, Tiger Ist sacker, with the ball Robby attempted to return to 2nd vii man of the board. triend, Bernard Gimbel, as chair- | parting,” Gimibel told me last night. , a “1 always have loved sports | and boxing, particularly, ever — since I boxed in college and have | enjoyed my years of association | with the members of the Garden board and with Jim. Norris. In this shake-up in the Garden board of directors, which involves. resignation of five other di- East Links Ti had her eye.on setting a new S| hole record for competition in the : } fly f Sa =| i mf Sf, i My a We F aH 3B é i i il i i los Fé 4 Mary Ann Downey Eyeing | | derworld boxing -figure have a chance.”’ Well, then, what has been the between him and 2nd. He was out as he tried to “uble with the Braves? | i rele around Fain. a f . “T can’t get a team intact, for. ————~ one thing,” he said “Injures | have hurt us badly -Now it's Joe | ! Writer Reports No Friction Involved in Gimbef’ s Departure From MSG Board time ago to reduce the size of the board from 15 members to nine, Norris’ “captives.” The story, of the Garden, succeeding Kil- patrick in that position. man who owns the store is taking | charge of it. The Norris interests | of the Garden stock for, several | years. - “captives.” The story - “Sit -was understood” also that their action was influ- enced by Norris's sworn testimony | before the New York State Ath- jetic Commission admitting he knew Frankie Carbo, shadowy un- tle, Record the rest of the field in the 49-year-_ (Old tourney, —— “I .was mighty lucky out there yesterday,”” Miss Downey said, “and T'll have to be awfiilly lucky to win the tournament.” “If Miss Downey continues- the { f =i * \aeg } i Te Soe 3) vs. 3 ’ imere Le» wi Shc Paar gBret | of our anti-trust suit.” - * * for 20 years.) =| I then asked Norris if this change. indicated a change in -Garden policy in connection avith boxing, which might lead to the dissolution of the International Boxing Club. “Well,” replied Norris, ‘I guess, that will depend on the outcome | resignations from the Garden con- direcorates. Be very sure that Bernard Gimbel resigned in no, protest again anybody. Nor in the faintest sense because of a break with Norris. County Legion Baseball Loop Season Starts Oakland County's 18th District American Legion baseball league Season gets started this evening with 3 games slated for the junior nines something."’ Adcock and Andy’ Pafko Before it was Bobby Thomson and Eddie Mathews, All year lon ° * * But Grimm wasn't through yet “T can't blame it all on the in- juries," he said. ‘‘To tell the truth | | the guys who haven't been injured | among modern day riders of Bel- have been hurting us just as much. * * * te | “They weren't hitting and they weren't pitching. Now at least the What this means is that the pitching seems to have squared | away.” Judging Conrad Rated Title Threat Tries Hand Tourney King in French PARIS (®#—The French Amateur golf championship_got under way today with defending , champion Henri de la Maze facing a strong American challenge, i *. * * Joe Conrad of San Antonio, Tex who won the British Amateur last week js the big threat to De La Maze, who has won his country’s title five times in the past. | Ld * * Also on hand from the United States are Walker. Cup Captain Bill Campbell of Huntington, W. Va.; Den Blispinghoff of Orlando, Fla., and Bruce Cudd pf Portland, Ore. a * * * ss If Conrad, a quiet little lieuten- the championship, he will be the across the Atlantic. He also would titles the same year. _ * * *@ Elm turned the trick in 1930 an@ Bobby Knowles in 1951. Judy Reynolds Defends Spring Lake Crown SPRING LAKE # — Judy | Saturday with Nashua. g it's been - The 39-year-old Cincinnati boot-| on the Belmont main track Mon- | er needs another victory to tie him | day morning. doesn't think he'll | three rounds against two sparring McLaughlin, the old | have much to worry about in the | partners, Tony Percey and Hafty.. by last’ nights 13-4. _ have owned upwards of 60 per cent slaughter of the New York Giants, 7 George P, (Maj.) Odom, trainer™ ant in the U.S. Air Force, wins | eighth American to take it. back | be- the first player in history to| New York win both the British and French Twice before, American Walker | Cuppers have won it, George Von}. NEW YORK w—Eddie Arcaro, | who has ‘ridden more Kentucky Derby and Preakness winners than any other jockey, will take dead | aim on his sixth Belmont Stakes | i with Jimmy | timer who won six Belmonts in a | big event Saturday. . period from 1882 to 1888. Sights on 6th Belmont Win Al L.. finished second to Go Lightly | in the Gotham Stakes at Jamaica in April, . * e¢ *@ Arcaro, who sent Nashua through | a dazzling mile and a half workout | Arcaro is tied with Earl! Sande mont..winners, and the Belair Stud’s Nashua is expected to be a heavy odds-on favorite in the 87th running of the 3-year-old classic. * * * f The Belmont Park management | is having a time trying to deter- Pontiac Boy Is Doing OK in Texas Loop. Oertel Among Top 10 Hitters, Boasts .318 broadcast (CBS) 3:30-4 p.m., EST. At the latest count, it seemed as three or issue by Sw: Kentucky Derby, hen broke the Pimlico track rec- pa in winning the Preakness May _ The probables are headed hy 'Hilton A. (Rabbit) Dabson's | Nance’s Lad, who aging | Boston | Doge his first defeat in the Swift “Stakes, then copped the Peter Pan Handicap last Saturday. * Ld bd ~ of Laudy Lawrence's Jabneh, says he will be a starter with Hedley Woodhouse in the saddle. Jabneh ‘didn't run in the Derby or Preak- ness. Other possible starters are How- ard Weinstein’s Mr. Al L., and Fly- ing Fury, from the Cain Hoy Stabie of Harry F. Guggenheim. Flying Fury ran sixth in the Derby, fin- ished in the Peter Pan, and may make a better showing in the long- er distance of Saturday’s race. Mr. League Leaders AMERICAN. LEAGUE BATTING (based on 125 at bats)—Kaline.° pares. Find bs 2 a -Power, 311: Lollar, Chicage , - RUNS—Mantle Cleveland, 46: Ki. 3 York, St: ~ New Smith, _Detrolt and Bauer, * Detroit New York. a ansas City ‘| was voted the best pitcher. -| the most valuable freshman can- Average Charlies (Ducky) Oertel, former athletic star at St. Frederick High School in Pontiac, has moved among the top 10 hitters in the Class AA Texas League. Oertel, 2 Baltimore Orioles “farmhand”, is playing the out- field for the Missions and in 56 games has collected 64 hits in 201 trips te the plate for a .318 average. His hits tmelude 8 home runs | and he has driven in 28 - runs. | “Ducky” spent the spring train- | ing campaign with the Oriotes - before being sent out to their number,one- farm ciub in the Texas loop. Meanwhile, Savannah. Ga., of the Class A Sally League has re- turned the contract of Jim Engle- man of Pontiac to Birmingham of the Class AA Southern Associa- tion. “3 MSC Honors Sack as ‘Most Valuable’ EAST LANSING ® — Jim Sack of Grand Rapids has. been chosen for Michigan State College's “most valuable” award in base- ball. : Sack nosed out George Smith of Detroit and Chuck Mathews of Rosebush. Bob Piwell of Flint. was voted. by the MSC coaches the most improved varsity-player and Dick Idzkowski of East Chicago, ‘Ind., Bob Bird of Romulus was voted | weight when he fought Kid Gavi- | received 30 per cent of the profits, * «© @ the IBC 70 per cent. Basilio has been weil within the ee Se Jaycee Tennis Tourney Plans. Are Announced @ Deputy, the local pride and joy Mineweaser Chairman sealed 145. * : This fight is a promoter’s dream for Singles Event in June 18 the crown, lan for the title on Sept. TB. 1953 The 28-year old ex-Marine from nearby Canastota floored the Cuban, then champion. and lost a disputed 15-round decision, * * a After finishing his boxing with All Norm Rothschild had to worry 2 Classes, about was the fighters’ health. The . - ae . pane tagirraprelpeeican Bal aly Plans have been announced for ing Club, had a 9,400-crowd, $115,- the Pontiac Junior Chamber of 000 sellout shortly after the bout Commerce 1995 tennis tournament. was announced. : Activity in 2 divisions is scheduled | There will -be a coast-to-coast for the Oakland Park courts on Sat- | broadcast and telecast (NBC, 9 urday morning, June 18. j p.m., EST) with Syracuse and a Co-sponsor with the city Jaycees 150-mile area. blacked-out of the in the affair is the Pontiac Parks TV. . . -| and Recreation Department. Chair- ~ Basilio stil] held firm as a 17-10 man of the event. from. the Jaycee favorite. chapter is Dick Mineweaser. Divisions for play are the Jun- jors for boys 18-years of age and ; under, and the Boys group, for players 15 years and under. En- trants must not have reached the prescribed age limit before Old Model Show Set Tonight at ‘59’ Oval is . Old model stocks-make their 1st | 2*"- 1 of ttle year appearance of the auto racing sea-| All play will be singles with son at the Pontiac Speedway to- trophies going fo the winner and night as the track's mid-week Tunnerup in gach division, The | series of races begins. Time trials4 top players in each division will are at 7 p.m. with the Ist race Teceive expense-paid trips to. the at 8:20. _ | state age es pees at Kal- Joy Fair has been established | #™&Z00, July T)-1). | as the favorite in the 2lap fea- | Members of — and Bir- ture event of the basis of his ™ingham. High School papal recent feature win in an old model | ¢*Pected to be am ph £ en- show at Motor City Speedway. | ‘Ties and the coaches of those prep However, he has not yet been ‘e@ms have application blanks. ~ able to win this season at the; Blanks also are available at the M59 track in his hardtop | Pontiac Chamber of Commerce of-~ ae : is on tap, | ce. parks and recreation depart- with many of the familiar hard. | EM and from Minewenser. xpected No entry fee is required and om coniat sioche arta the deadline for applications is Friday, June 17, at noori. Cards Sign Ulrich ‘Field Workers to Meet ce eae. hae uianed. hi’ tong | Lansing June 13-15 LANSING (UP)—The conserva- * the National Football League an- | t it 40 | -nounced today, _| workers from all parts of Michi- Ulrich, an outstanding player at| gan will gather here June 13-15 Hilinois in 1951, had an excellent | for a conference on hunting regu- season with the Cardinals in 1954 lations. as afreshman, - _ The department said each repre- Head coach Ray Richards said | sentative will summarize conditions the 25-year-old Chicagoan will be in his area and recommendations didate. -one of the finest defensive tacfles will then go to the conservation in the league this year, ’ |commission for consideration, : Eddy Raps Legislature for Failing fo Extend Conservation Comm id « Sion’s anthority for two more years ission Control of lature to extend. the commis- ipl 1 ~ * . { 38 = * * * the gent who owns as-- Louis victory. On May 27, the day he started his current upswing, Stan had 2-for-3 as the Cards beat Cincinnati 7-4 and ‘jumped to * = * Then on May. 29, once again in sixth, the Cards pulled back into And voila! Musial -| while the resurrected Milwaukee Braves knocked New York's Giants out of third 134. * * s In the American, the New York Yankees panained 4% games out smacked 3-for-5, drove in three runs and: scored; himself in a sm triumph over the Phils. ’ "That eased the Cardinals ars a| fifth-place tie with Cincinnati after | the Redlegs had been blanked by | the first-place Brooklyn Dodgers | P40. Brooklyn stayed eight games = as the runnerup Chicago Cubs | came from .behind with four runs in the sixth to beat Pittsburgh 4-3 ~~ VICTORIOUS REPUBLICANS — Don't let appear- ances fool you. These jubilant basebal! players may of his teammates is Rep. Glenn R. Davis (Wis.). look like World Series winners, but they’re not. They're happy Republican congressmen who last ers, Rep. William Ayers (Ohio), 25; unidentified, and night won the annual Congressional baseball game, _ Reps. William Cramer (Fia.), nee eee Riding the shoulders | and Thomas Curtis (Mo.). Hoisting him are cen: ne ree ee | | AP Wirephete | (left to right) 2 unidentified play- Bruce Alger (Tex.) | 7 Yachts Start Saturday in N ewport-Sweden Race NEWPORT, R.I. —Two Amer-# —— ican and five foreign yachts are scheduled to start Saturday on a 3.450 mile race to Marstrand, Sweden — first such transatlantic test since 1935, That year the race “went from | Newport to Bergen, Norway. At stake will be the King of Sweden Cup. Boats will receive _ time allowances, according to size, ‘ under the Cruising Club of Amer- captured the Class B prize in last year’s Newport to Bermuda race. | The other American entry Richard S. Nye’s 54-foot yawi Carina,. out of Greenwich, Conn., a new boat which was built in Ger- many. She has the same name as Nye’s smaller yaw! which won the 1952 Bermuda race. The most colorful entry has been ] forced to back out. Chow of Keelung, tered a 70-foot Chinese junk. A succession of troubles plagued the | craft on leaving Formosa earlier | this year ‘and she had to be towed , into Okinawa. Michigan Counties Share in Land Sales LANSING (UP) ‘— Thirty-eight | Michigan counties will divide $60.- 000 collected in recent conservation | is | | department land sales,. department | officials announced. _ A total of 1,812 acres and 558 platted lots were sold in recent public auctions, | BRAKES gates a ee aa Pose eR SS gS = “® COMPLETE BR MARKET 77 W. Huron St. 3-for-5, i a ee Bee ee | SPECIAL. Ford, Chevrolet, Ply- ~COMPLETE JOB 3 mouth ... complete | i brake relining. First $s] 4s E Quality. Fully Guaran- : eA. Open “9 to 9” - TUESDAY'S ¥TARS PITCHING — George Busce, Red Sox, | gave us just three hits in 6 1-3 reliel © innings to beat the Cleveland Indians $5. | BItTIvG ~ Gian Masti, Cordnel, ox including « two-run run-ecoring rite to: bes beat Philadephia ee RELINED Parts and Labor ° AKE SERVICE * TIRE CO. FE 8-0424 WE INSTALL |° PONTIAC PISTON. SERVICE CO. . Corner’ of Cass and Lawrence Free Parking in Rear. -eredit plan. FE 2-9111. <— DRIVE A SAFE CAR ON VACATION! “BRAKE RELINE SPE AL FORD or CHEVROLET... /...312.95 PONTIAC or PLYMOUTH... /.... pgrtelany~bewer Ancgenp rege $14.95 /Drive in for Free / Brake Inspection — We are an official Brake Testing Station. | Sweeping a | lies ; “Klaas, tint cep trent while -losing to Paine 4-3 in 12 innings, The Chicago White Sox—rained out in their game with Baltimore — slipped into. second | place .005 percentage points ahead of Cleveland as the —— lost | to Boston 9-5. * 6 * The only other AL action went to Washington, with the Senators | twi-night twinbill at) Kansas City 3-2 and 7-3. Brooklyn missed hitting a home run for the first-time in 13 games, but the Redlegs managed just five hits off Johnny Podres, who won his sixth. Frank Kellert had three Dodger hits, Milwaukee clpbbered the shamp:< ing Giants’ with six runs in the | second that sent Johnny Antonelli to his seventh defeat. The Braves, | who now have won five of six and are above .500 for the first time since May 19, got five more in the ninth as Chet Nichols wolf No. 5~ with help from Warren Spahn. The Giants, now a half-game ‘back of the Braves, lost shortstop | Al Dark Dark for an _indefini ite period | Republican 9 Scrambles to Win Over Dems WASHINGTON (®—The Repub- licans scrambled to.a 124 victory at Griffith Stadium last night to, break a seven-year Democratic winning streak in the Congression-_ al baseball series Scramble is a fairly apt word: | The Republicans had the benefit of six errors of record and numerous others that didn't go on.the official scorecard. Additionally, Rep, Tor- bert MacDonald of Massachusetts and his successors on the mound for the Democrats gave up nine bases on balls. TUESDAY'S HOME RUNS The Associated Press Collins, Yankees: Detsiny field. ers; Aaron, Thomson ray Leckman. Giants; Ennis, Greengrass. Phil. ed Sox: FitzGerald Senators, iy Robinson. Zernial. Attietics we | Carina four runs ig the fourth off loser ee when Tay revealed a pair of bone chips sufféréd when he was hit on the left hand by a pitched ball Sundog. * * * va as Ted Williams hit a two-run double, But after Cleveland tied it at 3-all in their half of the frame |to chase Me] Parnell, Boston got Art Houtteman to win it for George Susce. * * = Three runs in the ninth — with Bill Wilson’s’ three-base error let- ting the lead run score—broke up Alex Kellner’s shutout and won for | the Senators in the opener at Kan- 'sas City, Mickey McDermott gave 13 hits and walked six in the night- cap, but hung on for his fifth vic- | tory,” ; * * i Carlos Paula, Washington out-. fielder, reached across and hit a> sacrifice fly in-the second game as rookie Art Ceccarelli attempted to give him an intentional — Speiser Flattens Miamian in Eighth | Season in left field prior to Ted Speiser, 168, Detroit, knocked out | | Andy Mavfield, 165, Miami, in 1:18 (of the 8th round in a scheduled /10-rounder at the auditorium last | night. * . » Speiser, ex-collegian and two- time NCAA lightheavyweight box- | but began to find the range in at Mayfield until he caught him | with a right flush on the jaw in | | the 8th. * 6 @ | The fight drew 1,792 which paid ,a gross gate of $3,560 It was Speiser’s 9th straight win and 15- wins against two losses as a professional. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. uw — Chuck | ‘ing champion, started cautiously third baseman Ray Boone has been the 3rd and kept whittling away | of possible Sox bartering. Cronin Shows With Sox, Stirs Talk of Swaps Rodkie Herb Score didn't survive; Boston Has Displayed | the first inning against the Red Sox | Frequent Interest in. Bengals’ Boone | ¥ CLEVELAND «—The surprise | appearance of Boston Red Sox General Manager Joe Cronin and outfielder Faye Throneberry in Cleveland to join the team has stirred speculation about possible trades, * * Cronin denied there was any deal brewing but it's no secret Boston would do business if the right | opportunity came along before the June 15 trading deadline. Throneberry’s return came soon- | er than most, observers. had ex- pected. The kid who started the Williams’ return suffered.a shoul- der separation trying for a diving eatch against New York May 7 and has been sidelined since. Throneberry’s return gives the Red Sox. five first line outfielders with Williams, Jackie Jensen, Jim ‘Sai Station E quipr --@ Blackhawk Porto Power @ ProtoTools @ Globe Hoists @ Champion Air Compressors @ Bink’s Spray Equipment . @ ARO Lubricatoin Equipment @ Atlas Lathes and Saws @ Chicago Pneumatic Tools ~ @ Heinwerner Hydraulic Jacks - PONTIAC MOTOR PARTS “Parts Headquarters for the Doctor of Motors” Automotive Parts and Equipment ry South = St. Phone FE 2-0106 Piersall and Gene Stephens plus Karl Olson and Sam Mele. * * * As for trades, Cleveland Mana- ger Al Lopez commented “T can’t say what we need be- . cause it doesn't help a club to talk | positions. But we'd be happy to | talk with Joe (Cronin).” f. | Cronin safd he would stay with | | the team the rest of the-trip-which includes a wisit to Detroit. Tiger | mentioned frequently as the object r Davey in Pontiac Chuck Davey, who may be mak- ing a professional boxing come- | _ back in the near future was a guest | at today’s regular weekly meeting of the Pontiac North Kiwanis Club | KELLY’S HARDWARE 3994 Auburn at Adams—Auburn Heights |at Puff's Midget Grill. | There's Nothing ol Fashioned but the Sentiment About our re ~ GTS fr FAY ER Even if he remembers the Wright _ brothers’. first flight—Dad is young — at heart and modern in outlook. That is why contemporary clothes like Dad! these are so sure to ring the bell with him on Father's Day. We've a store full of bright, smart ideas from which to choose’— ideas to satisfy piggy- bank budgets as well as the more op- . ulent. But most of all, gifts to satisfy * Donegal SPORT SHIRTS Keep Dad cool and © 49s : stylish. From ...... ' : RELINED sae Voor McDONALD, INC. FE 5-6136 or FE 5-6137 Piers or Plastic, Alt 1904 cent covers, while they inst. ‘BERMUDA SHORTS eo), aloe I lec secen ne nacre AO: Ale, a * eles A wonderful jacket that is le —from oe ee LE f . Py K. eo Jantzen SWIM TRUNKS Arrow & Hathaway Shirts A fine gift for his va- §95 For the MAN on the 395 Newest modern. tie 15° White Arrow Shirls:...° 3.95 cat aquntS ...... Beach. . From sivies 2.2 sae: Hathaway § oan 5.50 : ‘ f ; * . ® Bantamac Windbreakers ° i if ‘Sthres in eee a "PONTIAC and UNION LAKE. NLR A ee a ;- FENE 8, 1935 veer ope and Nashua, the No. * * today negotiations were under way oe 5 eee Ee Deel Oreos Park in August, oe 1 and 2 ao eee | * The Tribune said the leading’ | pionship may meet at Washington | The Biggest Thing in COLLISION Automobile 9 When a member of the Automobile Club of Michigan, insured with this Exchange for oe insurance, accidentally collides with another Exchange insured member, then all conditions as to who was at fault are nsurance and the collision insured member is paid in full for the car damage from the accident. If both are collision insured, both get paid in full. We believe it is the biggest thing in auto- mobile collision insurance. Detroit Automobile ‘ [mter-Insurance Exchange a Attorneyein-jact: Ralph Thomas ** : Charles L.. Wilson Rey M. Hood Robert G. Jamieson, General Manager VISIT OR PHONE YOUR NEAREST OFFICE FE 4-1496 FE 2-9255 R. A. Warken, FE 2-020 &. G. Tynan, FR 4-780) vi Keener, )} MElpese 1-7453 -at Antemebile Club of Michigan waived, the deductible amount. is voided, ~ | | | | The youngster is Dave Utley, ! £. CAR SERVIC es eee ‘Firestone | BRAKE. 4OB \* terove Fr Front Wheels ond Inspect Broke Drums ings. 3. inspect Grease Seals. 4. Check end Add Brake Fluid if Needed. 5. oe Shoes to Secure Full Contact With 6. Corefully Test Brakes. E SPECIAL 2. = Inspect and Repack Front Wheel Bear- ~~ 3% Firestone Here’s What We Do... 1. Correct Cotter. 2. Correct Comber. 3. Correct Toe-in and Toe-out. (Above ore chief causes of tire weord 4. Inspect, Tighten, Adjust Steering. Firestone —~ ae _ WHEEL BALANCE Here’s What We Do... 1. Precision Dynamic Bolonce, Lf 2. Precision Static Balance, : L_3- Install necessory weights, | WHEEL ALIGNMENT \lieve Van Patrick and Ol’ Diz are at the ball park long before THEM WUZ THE DAYS original football coach, visits — Amos Alonzo Stagg, 92, center, for a baseball game between varsity and alumni. Left is Jess Narper, Tl. Stagg coached Harper, who coached Knute Rockne at Notre Dame. Marooh —— copa One AND enneael® h Broadcasting and Tiger baseball games is not as simple a task as many fans be-| also doing television. complex than broadcasting. the game begins. /to be in harmony. We have Starting line-ups must be «oo tained from home and visiting team managers. Cards have to be compiled on individual batting av- erages and defensive positions. Note must be made of visiting dele- gations for later acknowledgement | down from the second to select which of three pi Van's description. checked before air time: Moreover, as Ol Diz shutties about gathering data, I'm stopped by fans who want to say hello. Net that I-mind. I love to chat with the fans, but it dees cut into my time, so I try to arrive at the Same. ball pill with the players at _ 10:30 a.m. ‘Heather Belle Wins Several mornings a week Ol’ Diz | $2, 500 Cadillac Trot, pitches batting practice to the Tigers, thus sparing a pitcher for afternoon duty. have a locker in the clubhouse Shafter, Calif., and my old uniform, number 11. | Cadillac Trot in As for the broadcasts, Van‘ and it. tinue that way as long won night. She paid $4.40. when we're only on radio, ot from' I have separate microphones, When I do the “‘color’’ between innings, I take neer Howard Stitzel, handling Tigercasts eight years,| ture for 2-year‘old_ fillies. JOE 32 .. Saginaw St Camping Lavéat development tn camy com. fort designed es aoity for the Socata! ; man and camper who demand plenty” 4f room and jots of light and fresh / elt. Extra living and @ining comfort is also provided with, the full tent width awning extensi¢h, protected on ali sides with Robbingt netting. Entire body, roof and awnifig extension made / of heavy quality 7/68 of. per sq. yd. / Arctic Bay treatet! khaki color ten drill Inside fJoor protected wit 7.44 of. per sq yd. heavy duck Arcfie Bay treated. 18x18" Bobbinet. ae windows a4Px36" front win @ high door+al) provided with ace : flaps that can be closed “ *froyh the inside, All seams are tlap- teljed and double ‘“Ststeched with genuine’ “Hick- ory” thréad “for longer we: Rein- forced fhroughout with do le goods, Complete with ptke jointed Ateel poles, stakes and adjustable ropés. sm _ 105 K2327 , Finished Size 9'4'7 x 11°8"; Cen- fer 8’; Front Wall 6'; Rear Wall 3° Bobbinet front ani side curtain (com- enclosure) (for Ki2R2? Available, pute ncorerg tor Kent Avani. / _ WALL ‘TENTS | ean : 9'/,'x10’ Army’ Wall Sazes| Tent $44.95 _. $56.95 | Car-Lean-To .. $19.95 7'x9'/. 8'x10' . 9x1 aan 12x14" ee ee ee Sheped Canves | KIDS’ Metin 58eWd ‘Boat Covers pibicdig Repellent, 3 for 25¢ 12-fL. $11.95 | Kapok Fitea | ce Bones... $3.95 14-ft. ..$13.50 Swim Masks .. .79¢ 16-ft. . $17.25 $2.95 ow rete Foe ral é i | ie the Chicago stadium bearing his name telecasting | | producer Ralph Rust when we're Telecasting is considerably more The picture and. Van's. narration have a.TV monitor in our booth, which hangs deck be- tweeri home and first, to help us. | But producer Rust is kept hopping | on his big monitor best fits in with | Rocky Mar regular | DETROIT w — Heather Belle, I still | owned by William = ae of 2:26 A-5 over Haze] Park, owned=.by track / cue from engi- | President Donald /D. MacFarlane//7 p.m.; KC vs. Ashland, 8:30 who's been | was 2nd in the Grand Circuit fed-| p.m.; At Northside — A crowd off 3,068 bet $170, 9%2. savy SURPLUS Your One Stop Headquarters 7x9...... 8219 9x9...... $3695 KIDS’ PLAY TENTS. _ Tepee Tents ... $3.95° “Wall Tents. os. $8.95 GASOLINE STOVES oes eee SILOS up GASOLINE LANTERNS .... Sd 1.95 up Gib Heads - Group Leaving Official Family | Boxing Shakeup NEW nard F. Gimbel and five they are “captives” | Herald ——— anid eth Chrysler Jr., berg, William M. Noyes and Stanton Griffis. the _ ss Norris was unavailable for com- Gen. John Reed Kilpat- | ment and rick, president _ would say only: of the Garden, ' ation.” resignations. The Herald Tribune said the six world figure who is reputed the fight business, letic Commission. * * has been turned into a studio” \ing Club, progidted | heavyweight , Van, who possesses an excellent | San foes. on the air. Voice levels have to be vocabulary, stumps me once in a| | while. But I look up the word in my | pocket dictionary and remember However, I'm still a man of simple words“ and intend to con: as I'm broad- casting the Hickory and Horsehide the’ board. Norris’ partney. jinterest of the Chicago , and Detroit Olympia. | Softbgfl Washed Out: / Tonight’ 8 games: ' At Beaudette— vs. Shaw's GMC, 7 p.m.; Giles vs. (Girls), 8:30 p.m. FE 2-0022 UMBRELLA TENTS Pup Tents ..... $4.45 Umbrella bier $8.95 New York Paper Says 1 Carbo and TV Caused ~ YORK wW—Chairman Ber- other members. of the board of directors ot Madison Square Garden have offered their resignations because of boxing pro-_ 'moter Jim Norris, the New York Greve, Jansen “I'd rather not discuss the situ- A special meeting of the board of directors will be held in the Garden tomorrow to discuss the members were displeased by the | admission’ from Norris that he | knew Frankie Carbo, an — have a major say in the doings ot Norris - made | the admission during hearings con-f ducted by the New York State Ath- The members also wer® said to, be annoyed because the Garden “television drawing only small fight crowds and the fa¢t that Norris,/ as head of the Ipternational Box-4 the recent’ aanoDon Cogkell | ampionship beut in| dent gf the Garden and the latter woujd take over as chairman of Arthur Wirtz, Also is on the board of- directors. / Together they 4lso own controlling Stadium Tuestlay night's city league soft- fhe BAM. ball Schedule was washed out by heavy rains. A full slate of games muddy track at Hazél Park last is/listed for tonight. Biemar, vs. Shaw's _ sion over =a Meo: Outdoors: Pressure LANSING (UP) —Fhe St. Law- renee Seaway and the Straits ot | Mackinac bridge promise to create | | @ growing demand on conservatign | resources in Michigan, *state con- servation department officials pre- | dicted this week. Department workers sai | areas and will facilitate transpor- tation in these areas. “Conservationists are particu- ington last night, eked out a 3-2 ninth- | inning victory over Kansas City in The Athletics pounded out 13 hits | | the first game of a doubleheader, | off Mickey McDermott in the sec- iand kept right on in the second | | pnd game while the Senators got 8 The Herala Tribune identified: game with a 7-3 decision over the other board members who ten- | young Art Ceccarelli. dered their resignations as Walter Sydney J. Wein- scored in the ninth inning of the k the | by the engineers to provide a min- bridge and seaway will increase | imum depth of 27 feet in the St. jthe need for public conservation Mary's, St. Clair, and Detroit riv- | connecting links between the Great larty | sence with how the ' Lakes | is about u feet at present Nats Solve Kellner, Win Twin Bill From Kaycee KANSAS CITY u — The Wash-|on Tom Umbhlett’s Jine drive to Senators finally solving -center let in the winning run after Alex Kellner’s southpaw delivery Bob Kline had doubled to drive in | | The three runs the Seustars | the young lefthander by driving in | opener were the first: they had. scored off Keliner in his last 17 | innings. He shut them out in Wash- ington last month, 1-0. A three- base error by Bill W ilson Ezzard Places Future on Line : Against Holman TV Bout, Tonight, in Cincinnati, Is Return Engagement CINCINNATI (Up—Whether mer ‘heavyweight champion zard Charles is to figure any long- yer as a topflight fighter may be for- ¥, determined tonight when he meets | Johnny Holman, Chicago, in a re- turn bout scheduled for 10 rounds. | The contest will be felevised na-| | tionally (ABC) and will begin at The Herald Tribune also said it 19 p.mi. EST at Music Hall Sports | was untitrstood that Norris would | ‘replace’ Gen. Kilpatrick as presi-_ Arena. Holman scored a_ technical | Paula reached out and hit a wide | pitch to Bill Renna Ez- | | knockout over, Charles in the nizith | round at Miami Beach, Fla., April 27. Charles, although down in the first round, had come back and was ahead on points until Holman battered him into helplessness and the bout was stopped. e * ? | i | It was only the fourth time in 15 years of ring baftle that the Cincinnati belter had been stopped. Lloyd Marshall scored a KO in| title in 1951, and Rocky ‘Marciano | did it last .year. 1947, but his record was not too | stopped several times, | Bob Satterfield. —| A terrific puncher, he knocked [out the tough Cesar Brion in four Boston ‘rounds this year, and followed it” Caseieed ‘with ‘the Earlier he won vietory . over Charles a 10-round deci * 24 Both men Nee athed hard for = City tonight's it to go the distance. Despite his . _loss to Holman in their first bout. | | Charles rules a slight favorite to! | Kansas, | turn. the tables. -“T'll be going for the knockout | Chicago 1943; former champion Joe Wal- "| ores cott did it te win the heavyweight | sing, ward | mark, He walked six. | lett doubled in all of the tallies. | fifth and the Nats added another | 1 Bridge and Seaway Promise to’ Create '' Demand on Conservation Resources Actual dredging operations are not. expected to have any majer | affect on fish, waterfowl and fur- bearers but the dumping of the | dredged-up bottom material could ‘present a serious conservation | problem. . Conservation officials said the “spoil” which must be disposed of could ‘seriously damage’ water- ' fowl installations if it is dumped in marshlands such as the Erie | Deepest spot in some of these | narshes. If dumped in deeper areas of the lakes, it can create _a pollution problem and endanger fish. Widening and éotgiuing ot channels also will drop lake lev- els because of more rapid drain- age. This could damage water- front installations and widlife marshes if proper compensating structures are not constructed, conservation workers said, Department authorities also | pointed out some of the beneficial effects of the seaway and bridge | projects on state fishing, hunting and recreation. They predicted an increased util- ization of the public land,. partic. ularly ‘in the Upper Peninsula. Former Golf Pro construction projects are carried | out and have requested hearings with the army corps of engineers on dredging operations for the seaway. Channel work will be carried out i ers. and the Straits of Mackinac. the tying runs. | off southpaw Ceccarelli. | Carlos Paula further humiliated | Mickey Vernon from third base in the fifth while Ceccarelli was try- ing to give him a base on balls in right field and Vernon scored aft@r the catch McDermott. although he was er- ratic, struggled through to his | ' fifth victory of the season and Fac .) entenc pulled his record up to the .500 The Senators took a lead they never lost when they scored three | unearned runs against Art Cecca- rellj in the second inning. Umph- Ralph Yankee Pleads Guilty to Manslaughter in Traffic Death Ed FitzGerald homered in the | DETROIT uw—A former Detroit golf professional today faces sen- tence -for manslaughter in the au- | tomobile death of a pedestrian. Ralph D. Yankee, former | at the Country Club of Detr pleaded guilty to the c har ne yesterday. Traffic judge George T. Murphy set sentencing for, duly 20 and released him under \ $1,000 bend. ' Maximum penalty for man \ run on a walk, Roy Sievers’ double | and a sacrifice fly. Their final tally was singled home by Runnels in the seventh. Bronco Nine Heads for NCAA Title Series KALAMAZOO \w—Twenty ers on the Western Michigan Col lege baseball squad leave by school | | bus today for the NCAA baseball], play- | championships at Omaha. | slaughter is 15 years imprison- The Broncos, winners of the Dis- | ment. Yankee said he had made a trict 4 (Midwest) title, meet the, University of Arizona Friday in ‘'$17,500 settlement with the wife thé Ist round of a double elimina- °f Robert J. Hamilton, 28, who was ‘tion tournament. .| Struck and fatally injured last | Sept. 29 while crossing a street. L Mrs. Hamilton, an English war bride, was walking with her hus- band and suffered leg injuries. Police investigator Joseph Grif- Line Scores NATIONAL LEAGUE 006 004 o—4 to 1 fith said’ Yankee was drunk and Pittsburgh 160 O20 060 » ; . Hacker, Hillman (6). Jeffcoat (7) Pow speeding when the couple was hit. (9) and Chiti: Surkont. King (6). Pace Yankee resigned as a golf pro 147) and: Alwell, W—Hacker. L—King \ = | . \.after the accident and now is work- St Louis 206 110 010-5 12 8, : F Philadelphia 902 000 0004 6 2| Wg as an oil salesman. Haddix, Smith (8) and Sarni: Simmons.| _, : = (bp, beet, a and Seminick, | Haddix, L—-PDick Gees a asain Ennis, Green. | R A C | N G —s 164 100 0035—13 17 I 282221 STOCK CARS Nichols, Spahn (7) and Crandall; Anto- , Relli, Giel (2), Wilhelm (8), McCall (9) ; Holmah has been boxing since | impressive until] this year. He was | ——— twice by | fight and neither expects ner, Sain (9) and Astroth i | aid. ‘and Westrum. W-—Nichols. L—Antonelli Home rufis—Milwaukee. Aaron, Thoms TO N | G H T New York, Lockman. | \ : ’ | TIME TRIALS 7 P. M. 000 oof 000-0 5 1 620 000 20x—4 10 6. | | Podbielan, Nuxhall (7) Minaretn 7) 1ST RACE 8:30 P. M. Freeman (8) and Burgess; Podres and 10—EVENTS—10 Campanella L—Podbieian , AMERICAN LEAGUE PONTIAC ‘SPEEDWAY 301 4007019 8 8 tt A St. 30 000 0025 6 2 te 8 Parnell, Sus (1) and White Score Chittren FREE with an Adult Mi (S). Market : " boctterreas s a _— a a 3 Miles W. of Airport Home run—Boston, Klaus on M-59 “Firat Game 03-3 8-1 3 600 900 000 100 100-2 4 ual, Stone (9) and PiteGerald: Ke!l- W—Pascual Auto Safety Glass Replaced Properly, Quickly —¥FREE—1 Lb. COFFEE With Windshield or Door WwW Washington! L—Sain wath ton a Game . 030 620 101-7 8 6 OO 010 100—3 13 2 Glos Seplacsment Insurance Claims Honored Harrington (s rand w Sha ~ ars ‘ relli, yes as_Weakingnen Piscer. | Hub Auto Glass Co. | 129 Oakland Ave. FE 4-7068 Kansas City, Zernial, early,” Charles said. Just look below fer a partial listing of the sensational savings offered. Then . . . look for the big, money-saving "Counter display at your dealer's, You'll save and you'll get the best shave of your life with an Eversharp-Schick ~Ki mnee tet ces your whiers «not yoor Sooe Vii} ony gage You Only... 7 Get sensational savings . . . up to 50% - - - on nationally-advertised fishing tackle! EVERSHARP-SCHICK RAZOR KIT This is no fish story! Anni savings on -nationally- advertised fishing tackle are yours when you buy either the regular Eversharp-Schick Injector Razor. Kit for only 984... or the Deluxe Hydro-magic Kit for only $1.89! ‘tes tong- handle, non-slip grip Eversharp-Schick Injector Razor. Plus 12-biade Injector in handy travel case, only 98¢ All-new Eversharp-Schick Hydro- magic Anjector Razor... cleans - automatically with flip of a lever! Plus'24 electronically-honed “Gold” blades in compact $189 Mavel case... only } s — won ple” Daly...» asseaten went xr Retail Price. venewes $6.95 Costes You ts gh ees ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8. 1955 zt area lees then & day's drive from | what Pontiac. A country of rocky hills, forests and sparkling lakes, typical of the Laurentian Shield, the dis- trict fs owned in large part by the Algoma Central & Hudson's Bay Railroad. The company has leased, for purposes, Or he could pick a “railroad camp” like the one at mile 90 ‘rout Trip to. Ontario's Ss. - Algoma Region Productive where Ralph Austin, Mead Myers and Dr. re ee wat too with trout, they knew * Or be might try a dtterent place (or so it seems). He could go east to the Blind River area like Tom Whitfield, Norm Pattison and Walleyes Are Puzzle BY MORT NEFF Fish biologist admit they're playing a great big guessing game much of the time fn trying to pry into the private lives of Michigan fish. It’s little wonder that the fish division of our Conservation Dep- artment is considering the use of an aqua-lung in an effort to get closer to the subject! Neither one of these activities can be efficiently carried on with- out a good deal of knowledge of | a fish’s private life — a subject %, which is attached a fot of mystery. Lake Michigan fishermen—both sportsmen anglers ‘and commer- cial netters — were: gravely con- Aqua- -Lung May Aid Fisheries Research ‘ “Plant more walleyes!"” was the plea to the Conservation Depart- LAKESIDE LUNCH — A pair of hungry Pontiac trout fishermen on Kwagama lake in Ontario, stop for a lakeside lunch. In the picture Bob Oliver (left) and L. H. Cole enjoy some fresh caught trout. Note Cole's fly net. There wege plenty of the pesky insects, reports from the ment and to the U. S. Fish and) Wildlife Service ‘who controlled | ithe waters. Meanwhile, from the | million pound harvest the net op- erations dropped to only a little more than 20,000 pounds. aa something happened. For no obvious reason the wall- eye had a big spawning year in 1952 and 1953, and by the time May Zist (opening of the walleye sea- gon) rolléd around in Bay De Noc this year the waters were alive with fish! If the spawning habits of the walleye pike. were better known ito man—if biologists could learn what conditions produce a good spawning year — the management of this highly valued food fish would be far simpler. So maybe it's a good, idea: ‘Man the Aqua- | | Lungs! Let's get the story straight from the fish!" One Lot — Slightly Soiled Values ic _ 40 $2.45 Se eapeeramnerarcs ae ‘Posture Foundation . Canvas with gum "jabber soles ... $6.95 value. SPORT SHIRTS i Hoo SPORT SHOES 3 oom Mi. 7. he Oa 9.8 Ont Comet teaver on™ eee ie | party say. Kwagama is in the famed Algoma district, anglers’ : paradise. * Canoeists Gird for Paddle Push More than 150 ‘canoeists are en- tered in Sunday's 4th annual Pad- die Push, nation’s biggest canoe race, on the Huron River from Milford to Kensington Metropolitan Park. Starting time is 2 p.rh. A large crowd is anticipated. Vantage points are the Milford bridge: where the racé begins, the river banks pear General _Moters and Dawson roads, and carted ‘parking areas af Kent Sunday's racing course aus the lake and ends at the boat-launching area on the southeast shore. Dedline for eiitries is sean. In- terested candidates should contact the Detroit-American Youth Hostels: ‘at 4864 Woodward by calling Tim- ple 1-4800. Owen J. Cleary, of Ypsilanti, former Michigan secretary of state, will be chief judge. Kenneth L. Hallenbeck, director fo the Huron- Clinton Metropolitan Authority, is general chairman. Nine will be awarded by the Milford Board of Commerce. See how much you can seve, Allstate is famous for low rates and fast, fair claim settlements. That's why Allstate sold more auto in- surance in 1954 than any other company based on direct writtca ; premiums. Today over 2,750,000 car owners ate getting the really better value you'd expect from the company founded by Sears. Ask - your Allstate Agent about the easy payment plan, prompt friendly _ . service throughout the U.S. and Canada, and many other advantages. @ | that tells you exactly how to get the most for your sute insurance dollar. \ — Detroit *, Michigan “er (oem st oy Se ne Behr on Mame. Phone Me, i i s. aussnut J, BOUSHELL and ROSS LEAHY / J (Sears, Resbuck end Co. Bldg. - ye Me Saginaw St.— Ph. FEderal 5-0461 You're in good hands with... ‘ Oeics See cata la pehe ‘proeK ae eee Y, FECTION Feended ‘ a fr poocl SierbitHhan the pe on Oakland County 5 discovering | Each Take Two Tests; » | Club for the benefit of underprivi- children. 4 ing hunter class went to Mary Wins Honors at | Northville Show Three Area Exhibitors Solunar Tables Show the Best — Fishing. Times By JOHN ALDEN KNIGHT Girl Nat'l Qualifier A i was | the sponsored by Northville Optimist E EEE | H ; F AM. PM. Hills won hunter horse- & today ee iets ae a6 or dividend FET individual jump-}e Fa Be Ee ae Kien domes of tirmgm (2 fe «OSES eee | See FE 4-2505 won the 2nd harness race with is wea. 12:48 ties rr} H~4 Mr. Yonkers na qualified tor Roy C. p | Ti national finals ew . s Madison lane Garden with her Smallest Muskrat oy ll ver ire Co. duals ‘etunacs dy Hi from Plymouth | rounds at the Olympic Club in San als ating vay champions on | prancisco, scene of the approach: annual National Golf Day. ing National Open. "~~ Area golfers, many of them sad __Qut-—of 37 courses in Oakland ploying club “handicaps as their’ County, 29 participated. Although chief weapons, formed only a tiny! reperts are‘ stil incomplete, 1,964 j segment of a nationwide effort to| limksmen recorded scores, a fig- ure already well in excess of last | * Deal involves Groth, Courtney # and Chakales Lane Sends’ Trio to Washington to Get Outfielder CHICAGO w—General Manager Frank Lane .of the Chicago White Sox pulled the sort of deal yester- day that many clubs would like to make in acquiring the services of ‘| a player previously traded off. Lane brought outfielder Jim Bus- by back tothe Sox in a deal which sent outfielder Johnny Groth, catcher Clint Courtney and pitcher year. The total is expected to Indecision Gives | sss sures the 2.000 mars. Information regarding areal |~ Sarni Pop Double | ‘irsinsumes of tie seseaarst Detroit. -| ST. LOUIS, Mo. — Catcher Men golfers Bill Sarni is laughing to himself were IOVS QuCciEs | ful in beating Furgol; who shot 72, about the short double he smacked ‘an te in against the Pirates. in Busch women were in besting sentatives, Stadium. Miss Berg's 77. On a national : in a battle with a black bass at bss cee the ball high in the |1Veb am estimated 12 per cent Bob Chakales to eae be , 3 USO ur ave tame plate bat Pte ede oping Foret, at hele, rexel ihe, Bos : catcher Jack Shépard and 1st base- sougpeseed “makers a very 4 Jy in 1952 fo t- fish surfaced and was plainly seen man. Dale Long: permitted it to low percentage. Oakland County Washington early in ir ou by the speaker and his companion, land untouched a few feet in front | * Comparatively equal with a con- fielder Sam‘ Mele, no longer with apy er A OUT OF THE PAST — Golfers wore knickers wheri Gene Sarazen| 0! the plate. Sarni raced to 2nd | S¢rvative estimate of 200 winners. ee ee ’ after successfully battling a Texan | ¥®5 winning every tournament in the world for which he was eligible ped and was credited with a Rigen cogs tig sen will Busby, 228, currently is batting © —and it was, and the Little Roman doesn’t let the current field forget it. That's Dr. = SWEET PEAS — 2. Bers 29 - mr yy P a 4 HEE —_Avendale Brand. Tope in Quality—Low in Price! Paria outta GREEN BEANS 3m 26° | Buy Em By 7 ar forargpteare-st al Reg IVORY SOAP | —— ase , Personal Size : E AV e Pen ic AVONDALE C 4 uw 23 STOCK UP! Cream Style ORN | ae a or" Soup 35 k + consi BUY PLENTY! Get One More For Only Bath Size « 225. ie PORK & BEANS .-:"" 9 OXYDOL STOCK UP: Kroger Brand in Tomato Sauce. ot Cae ee ar OO Large Pkg. | 29° aan KROGER MILK LUX 2 apa E UY PL EN TY! "sie Saily Bape! Get sa More ae Only = 37 Se GELATINS =. sai boas , STOCK UP! 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" ‘ ae. | == Rp Musinooms 29: Vie Gee fas city for tees oo eae BUY PI LENT Y! = eee 2 Get One More For Only = ARMOUR CELLO WRAPPED. owt. | ~ SMOKED : _29° wey | Err 2-23: | y prs a et meer 2 Giant 37 oe ee =n i, priced ...~ Shop Kroger. : : ter 37° || Lb. ve oe | Palmolive Soap} - Ride hoe Magu sie [Ope Ribs . » 49: Ground Round == 69 Beef Sew uhQc! | 3 ws 26: Small, lean and meaty barbecue sire 1 6 4 ss. , Wonderful tor outdoor grilling.» + +++ se ees Lean and tender bite size Tendéray 5 oe ee ee OF [Palmolive ve Soap] Ground Beef 3 Lbs. $1 English Roast . 49: : Boiling Beef ye 4 " Fresh ground. wcll cat Lb. 3e wf. ww ws _ Or Round bone. U.S. graded Tenderay . . ~~. ++. . Ideal for braising. Lean plate cuts oa eG. + ie . 26 25: | , _|KARQ syrup Strawberries =. Red Radishes : 22: Roane ewont Sy TEAae WOM 2 os oto 8 sf Ideal for salads. Wonderfully crisp . . . os, Uae want es a Cauliflower ‘Barge Package | \ ae 3 LINIT ST! Ts — 19% aa, SS ee = — 3s : ae et 3 Fe —_ 4 - . eee 4 “ | = ; a of an ee 7 ee % = 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 Ce ne eee ¢ 2 x 7 ; ng Wee THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 I ss) . * . f | : Fo agg dig enn Blind Girl Teaching | NICK HALIDAY oe By Keats Petree / | on a donation basis. Its first in-/ Music; Works by Ear THEM BOve GOT MEBBE Th’ [habitant—< small fox—has omendy| LANCASTER, Ohio When 23- BIGGEST BOOTLEG SET-UP caused great excitement, Civic | oreld Georgie: Griffith gredo- IN THESE PARTS--AN minded officials hope that this is a THEY AIM TO KEEP IT. (UP)—A. “pet | sign of future success. ated last June from Capital Uni- THe . ' is ex ‘to be in full! versity’s School of Music, she | thin a short time. | ps Ls planned to teach music to the WITH US. Youngsters with an interest in Pick‘ Wrong Targets blind—because she herself is blind fauna wil alegre bed ‘for Scatter Shooting But there were no positions for would a gel have access © . MYSTIC, Conn, (®--Bullets whis-| her in that field. So she began to | @alamanders, squir-/ led over = olny me | instruct pupils who see. When be- ; ‘ , snakes | when two youths enga in ran- . ae _ white mice, opossums, snakes dees sorent dating i the weed ee how = tell The only stipulation for this); The men, Groton police chief when their fingers are held incor. lend-lease program is | Peter Donahue and fish and game rectly over the piano keys, she that an must accept respon-| conservation officer Louis M. Bay- | replies: sibility for the borrowed animal. (er collared the youngsters, both, “It’s very easy to tell .. , the <9 The “library,” which will pro-| under 16, and took them home for | notes do not sound as they should; vide instructions for the care and | a lecture on gun safety. haven't you noticed?” % ; OUT OUR WAY | | NANCY THEY. FINALLY BETTER Y yy : GOT GRANOMA / GIVE HER YY” Y NOTHING WI INTO MODERN TH’ BLANKET SPECIAL--- 7 o STYLES, BUT ¢ QUICK, BEFORE OH, NANCY-=-- , a = 4 4 /\ ye SHE'S LETTIN’ | SHE PANICS 1s IT $e yg TH’ NEIGHBORS OEMS AET, (IDLE 4 Ty NEIGHEC RAINING _ § ie ae ee Tt MEA RUALLY! veRY HARD } ] Pha chit Grete | ON YOUR Yj it ry | STREET 2 | AIA =i ¢ HE} a ==! \ / p == IU), shed d : 4) Whi: ——— by 8 ph oad / EP BASH 1 Efe By John Morris | 2 AAN Bea ES At tas os oy ay ~ atin | OF MILLIONS ivf GAs sins: tm MS Dial FE 2-8181 ‘ * ° td . oneal: Meh! is s NL J muwe, 1 ’ _ BORN THIRTY YEARS TOOSOON = ,.EBBpetrecs. gs DIXIE DUGAN By McEvoy ‘and Strieber Let, * 4 GZ > zg a ae ri as A, Y A ee Z 1 Es ! EF. | ) a: me G : | . \ j SAID & TABLES, AND & JUSTICE ¥ PINNING oy = =6WAS THe ZI , an H \Y Bont Brits SS oe ee Will there be anything else besides the counter, sir? oneness + You'll Find . Every Jn the Pontiac 3 Press Want Ad Section : Take advantage of this to Gains Oi veut tairiny ane calle By Carl Grubert ing problems. To Place Your On). Beers WANT. AD sO ae i, DIAL FE 2-8181 iy | a » it jo |, “Don't rush me, T hiaven’t finished licking the pan yet!” - a Bas tess } 3 . : : | : Fae {~ ‘ | 4 ————— “Now I'd feel ing new writing ia- — than 7% million oil burners in use for central heating. eee - FOR SALE— a | Surplus Equipment Hospital Furniture and Equipment. OAKLAND COUNTY BOARD OF AUDI- TORS—For call Mr. J. Talley, FEderal 5-341! IDEAL GIFTS FOR GRADUATION FATHER’S DAY. @ RING BOOK ZIPPER CASES and BRIEF CASES in Tufhide and genuine leathers . . $3 Large Stock to Choose from. _ @ Complete line of BUX: TON BILLFOLDS for _ men and women. $1 .00 Your Name in Gold... at No Extra Charge @ BAROMETERS @ FIELD GLASSES General Printing & Office Supply 17 W. Lawrence mi J Steady . in Light Trade pounds higher. Corn and rye slipped slightly but oats gained minor . fractions. Wheat was virtually unchanged. Near the end of the first hour higher, July $1.9842; corn was % to % lower, July $1.42%; oats were “% to % higher, July 66%, and rye was % to % lower, July CHICAGO GRALY CHICAGO, June &. (AP) —., Opening grain: Rye July ....000e 198% July ........ 1.06 Sep ...... o- 100% Gep ........ 1 O94 Dee orvee 2.08% ‘ . bias Mar eee 3.01% Soybeans May coos 1.06 Old Contracts Corn July .. ..... 243% duly cere Ln) bo) oeabooce 2 20%, | Sep oe.. 14% Nov EOE + bral | Dee we. 134% Jan 231%, | Mar - 137% "New Contracts | | Mov ,: ....- 390%] July ..... 6% Mar%....... 2% | Bep secess 06% Lard Dee sees «668% July 12.18 + Mar eee -10)) Sep oe. 12.90 OWN .-....-- 12.32 | * | Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DOETROIT, June & (AP)—Hogs salable | 00 No early sales. | Cattle salable 550. About 80 per fresh receipts cows; Poors Ue Plenty md yearlings siow, steady; cows active, fully steady; bulls strong at 23 cents advance; stockers and feeders nominal; few sales good snd low choice fed steers 1 00-33 00° high choice and prime ab- | sent; utility and Mar gdh wons steers 14.50. | 18,00; bulk utility and low commerctal } cows 1300-1450; sisable-lot at 14.00 and Haged few high commercial cows up to 13%: canners and cutters mostly 11.00- Paper ian utility and commercial bulls Calves salable 175.. Market about y with Tuesday's close; good de- mand for lightweight vealers war kinds er 210 Ibs very draggy; most sales Fa and qhoice vealers 17 .00-23.00, with 225-250 Ibs offerings most- 96; few choice around 225- | 750 Ibs — mostly around 20.:.; few high choice to me igo sround 175-200 tbs up to ; and commercial 14.00-17 90: panttering! culls 10.00-1 | Sheep salable 150. Market fully ey om meager supply: one lot mostly good 89 Ib shorn lambs No. 1 pelts 2154; util- | ay to good 7@ Ib shorn lambs 18 00. | | CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, June 8 (AP)—Salabie hogs 9.000; fairly active, very uneven; gen- erally steady to 25 higher on al! hogs: | most chotee No. 1 to 3's 190-220 Ib il sasereee 19.25-20 00; deck choice No. 1s | > 620.15; and small lot 15 head | 20 25; most choice No. 2 and 3s 230- | 250 Ib 18 25-19 25: — mixed chotce “1 tried EO “1 liked it enough to buy it... LOST without my... ‘Taha. © That's ine usual story with this amaz- strument! People try it out.for the thrill of writing with this © POINT CAN NEVER BREAK! + jambs and utility wheat was unchanged to %% cent) Gos behs bundred pounds higher, July $12.17,| = ‘Gfain Prices CHICAGO. i; A i tire i! sf oF Hy et iy A: ; ° # # 3 Fstit : & :: z i ¢ 8 3 s Greens: Cabbage, 1.25-1.75 Ast Col- lard, .75-1.26 bu. sorrel. 1.00-1.25 bu. Turnip, .75-1.00 bu. Mustard .75-100 bu Spinach .75-1.00 bu. Lettuce and salad ma: Lettuce, bibb, 00-125 pk basket. Lettuce, head, 3.50-4.00 3-dos. crate; head 1.50-2.00 bu.; ft, 1.00-1.25 bu, Romaine lettuce, lea: 1.00-156 bu Eggs: Lar CHICAGO POTATOES June 6 [Red eae ar- stock supplies erate, deman erate and mark slightly weaker for whites, about steady for reda: cari track sales, new stock: California long whites $450-4 75, bakers $5.40, round 40-470. | reds $4 40-4 DETROIT EGGS DETROIT, June 8 (AP) — s, fob Detroit, cases included, federe!-state grades Whites—Grade A large 44, medium 37; grade B large 34. Browns— se «| A large 42, medium W; grade B large Wo cereal: Son! graded: avs A jarge 39-40, medium 38; tahoe B large 32. A extra large 39,- large 37, medium 33; e B ge 31. Market rey nd o firm. Supplies mod- erate with the better quality packs short of full needs. Trede just fair. ——e CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO, June 8 (AP) —_ Butter 1,775, 161; Se reeerin cee tens. 86.75; i 64.5; 68 C 52.5; cars 00 B 65; Eggs steady we os receipts 23, 106; wholesale buying ces unc Us. large whites 60-69.9 r cent A's 37: mixed 36; mediums ; Us. standards 31: a checks 24.5; current receipts 28 27.8; Poultry DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, June 8 (AP)—Prices paid per pound f.o.b. Detroit for No. —— live poultry up to 10 am. Heavy hens 26-29, hens 20; heavy bretlers or fryers ia “i Tbs.): whites 32-33, Oray Crosses 32, Barred Rocks 32-33; caponettes i3tart's tos.) 34-35 (5-6 Ibs.) 38-40; roosters 10-12; ducklings 30 Market steady on good quality hens under @ Ibs. with light supplies short to a fair demand. Balance of offerings barely steady and supplies fully ample to the slow trade. Market in general lacks confidence. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO, June 8 (AP)—Live poultry steady on hens and young stock, weak on caponettes receipts in coops No. 1 and 28 230 th és high as 19.75:| [PSaey e711 coops, 84.931 Ibs): f.0.b mast 260-290 Tb 17 75-18 25:°0 few 300-| Daying prices unchanged. heavy hens pee al ar lt art amc Correct at) melee] “BAT § ight hens 163-11; broflers or enter $- : few choice - ‘ 5 Th 16.80-16.75; bulk 400-800 Th 13.80- | {TYer® 20.33; eld roosters 13-128; capon- 14.50: larger lots up to 606 lb down to 12.50. 2 Salable cattle 15.000; salable calves 400: yearlings and live steers fairly active, steady: heavier weights siow, steady to 25 lower; high choice. and rime heavy hetfers 25-50 lower; other elifers steady: cows moderately active, steady to 25 higher: bulls fully steady; in 0 ision ere vealers steady: a few loads of mostiy prime steers 25.00-25 a. gre choice i and prime steers 23.50-24 75: bulk choice “ £ steers and yearlings 22 00-23.25; good to Two motorists were injured low chates 18.00- oi ares mets 9 slightly Tuesday when three cars chote. me ers an food to hien chotce heifers 18:90:23 90; | aNd a semi-truck collided on East weility and somineretal cows 11.75-14 50; utility and commercial bulls 14 50-1650; ood and choice vealers 20.00-25.00; cull commercial .vealers 10.00-19 00 1,000. 25.50: atility to low good spring lambe 00-22. load around 102 Ib a and chotee shorn lambs No. 1 pelts deck choice and prime 117 Ib ods lambs No. 2 and 3 peits 20.00; part deck mostly one 94 ib shorn No, 1 pelts 20. smal jet = shorn trans 14.00: cull pre good shorn sluaghter ewes 380. Vanderbilt Miece Wins Divorce on 4th Try . LAS VEGAS, Nev. (®—On the fourth try, Mrs. Gertrude. Vander- bilt Whitney Henry Gabaldoni, New York heiress, has won a divorce from Peruvian diplomat- journalist- Luis Emelio Gabaldoni. Dist. Judge Frank McNamee awarded Mrs. Gabaldoni, 30, a decree yesterday after a jury up- held her. contention that Gabaldoni deserted her three years ago. Boulevard near Mt. Clemens street, Pontiac Police said. Treated and released by Pontiac General Hospital attendants were Harold Lane, 27. of 511 Granada |°! Ct.,.and Robert D. Marlow, 20, of |c Detroit. Both suffered bruises. Gilbert. H. Paschal, 31, of 464 Auburn Ave., the truck driver, | Cont said his northbound trailer ap- parently jackknifed as he at- tempted to stop for a line of cars on East Boulevard and struck Marlow’s southbound auto. | Det Edis The truck and auto struck Lane’s car and one being driven by Kern E. Brewer. 18, of Rochester. Pas- chal and Brewer were not injured. Garden Clubbers Meet ._ JACKSON @® — The 24th con- ference of Federated Garden Clubs of Michigan opens a two-day convention here Wednesday. More than 300 delegates are expected. @ Smith-Corona, Royal, Remington, and Ger- man Olympia PORT- ABLE TYPEWRITERS -. . guarantee backed Sap aloaety by our own expert © ERASes Service Department. CLEANLY! © WRITING @ Beautiful line of STA; canrt sam TIONARY, and NOTE Piaciryon gl PAPER... for men’ | To Ownt Qh ‘ and women. . — @ DIARIES G TRAVEL Bay it out sco. today at ; ' - @ SCRAP BOOKS and “ - We Stock # Complete Line of PHOTO ALBUMS. | PARKER PENS and PENCILS. a : |: Algo "Sheatfer, Esterbrook, i _Eversharp and Waterman Factory Trained Pen Man w Seger ¢ pe ee Here's Some Fine GIFT SUGGESTIONS For: FATHER’S DAY and GRADUATION tn wood or stat, everthing from Ash Trys tothe Heat Type 4 compres- ‘| sion have been de- Labor Peaee By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK ® —,Ford’s labor pact should have cifhred the way otiering of Ford stock Compression Ratios Rising Efficiency = Pha le sccdat anpounshdies: Along with the development will come still higher hersepower output. These atrences ‘immediately suggest higher quality fuel. That, too, is in prospect, However, step- ping up the quality of automobile fuel is an expensive operation. Some sources have-said that add- ing a single octane number near the present top involves a billion dollar investment in added facili- ties by the petroleum industry. Se the men who make the in- dustry’s engines are trying to in- ereate what they call the octane of the It is achieved chiefly through improved ignition control, valve timing, carburetion, engine-trans- mission relationship and combus- tion chamber design. In simple words it is designed to get the most out of every-day auto fuels. FUEL WASTE tremendous waste in incomplete fuel consumption. At the same time they say combustion — and fuel consumption—is substantially better than it was in prewar days. If you want to argue that your car mileage per gallon is little, if any, better than it was before the war the experts have an answer for that, too. * * ® They say that in modern day traffic there is vastly more stop- and-go driving than ever before and that you get no mileage at all waiting for traffic light changes. Top compression ratios in this year’s models is 9 to 1 in a limited number of cars. There will be several more in the 1956 models, Compression ratio, roughly, is the space in the cylinder at the bottom of the piston stroke in relation to the combustion chamber space. at the top of the stroke, A gaining with its employes over The engineers say there still is | Now at Ford ( Clears Way for Stock Sale The Ford stock offering was held up by the Jabor —— because before a public stock can be made Ford must ey nish the Securities and Exchange Coamiee with its financial -fig- ures. Ford has never made these public and certainly couldn't have been expected to while it was bar- how much it could afford to pay them. * s * bought by its promise to set up a 5-million-dollar fund out of which to give laid-off workers part of their customary pay, Ford is now in a position to go ahead wid calo al a stuck 0 tee, pablle: s = * Actually, the stock to be ‘sold is that held by the Ford Founda- tion. The nonvoting shares are carried on the’ foundation's books at $135 each. But Wall Street fig- ures that Ford's assets are just therefore, the foundation’s shares have an asset value in excess of $500 each. * * . Since $500 a share stock isn’t popular with the general invest- ing public, the expectation is that Ford will split the stock at least 10 for-1, and perhaps more, be- fore making the ware offering. Union leaders made it plain that they rejected .Ford’s offer to let employes buy stock at half price primarily because it was put for- ward as a substitute for -unem- Lodge Calendar With a three-year labor peace | 1 » and that, | ( under two billion dollars, and that, | Co., East Peoria; Panhandle to Boost Winter Gas Capacity WASHINGTON Eastern Pipe Line Co. today noti- fied the Federal Power Commis- sion that it planned Special communication Cedar | Lodge No. 60, F. & A. M., Clarks. ton, Thurs., June 9, 1:30 p. m. |Work in E. A. degree. Richard Snover, W. M. —Ad News in Brief Mrs. Amos Vanbuskirk, of 2% Fairmount Ave., reported the theft of her son's bicycle from Wever Junior High School Tuesday, Pon- tiac Police said. After pleading guilty to reckless driving Tuesday before Waterford Township Justice Donald White, Raymond Prusakrewicz, 21, paid a $30 fine in lieu of spending 20 days in Oakland County Jail. If your friend’s in jail and needs bail, Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031. —Adv Rummage sale: Clean clothing, toys, household goods,. etc., from fine homes, Sat., June 11, 9 a. m to 9 p. m. 4 South Saginaw (at Pike). Adv. ~ Some industry engineers have Rummage sale: Rechester Meth- odist Church at Plassey’s Ga es later the waiting beabend_—wte had not dared to turn on his TV set—was hearing the lovely word _ “henign. ” “The show - and for all its real- ism it was a show—was staged at Walter Reed Army Hospital and the Armed Forces Instityte of Pa; It was sponsored and produced tories of Philadelphia, in coopera- American Medical Association, as the last im the spring series of SKF’s March of Medicine peonrars LJ The stars were the carci wife of an Army doctor; Maj, Ed- ward S, Bres Jr. of Silver Spring. Md., a Walter Reed. surfeon; and Army Capt, Claude W. Delia of the AFIP whose new atom _bomb- proof building occupies a hill site more than 2,000 feet from the hos- pital where last night’s surgery took place. Calumet Will Press Suit Against USW HOUGHTON — A Calumet & Hecla, Inc., official says the firm intends to priceed with its 3% million dollar damage suit against the CIO United Steel Workers. A. S, Kromer, general manager said yesterday the firm will press for an early trial of the case. Federal Judge W. Wallace Kent Monday denied the company an injunction against a strike at its Calumet Division and an injunction to regulate picketing at its five’ copper mines and smelter, One of nine civilian job-holders in the U. S. works for a govern- predicted—some—oft—the more ex- pensive cars soon will have 10 to 1 compression ratios. That tun- doubtedly is one of the goals of the engine designers, but it does the 1956 models. A few’ engines with 9.5 to 1 are ‘more likely. 12.5 TO 1 TRIED The industry has tested engines with ratios considerably higher than the present top. Charles F. Kettering, famed engineer - sci- few years ago with 12.5 to 1 com- pression ratios. They required a type of fuel that even today is commercially impracticable to produce * * Ld * However, Kettering believed he proved the practicability of higher compression car engines and that they yielded greater mileage per gallon of fuel. There is a limit, of course, to how bigh compression ratios can be attempted in gasoline power plants. Somewhere in the 15 or 16 to 1 ratie area the diesel type of cémbustion is reached. In this field the fuel is. detonated by the heat developed rather than by a timed electric spark. Some sources say next year’s cars will include several with 300 horsepower engines. Chrysler re- cently announced one with that power capacity and Packard cur-. rently is building a sports model velops 275 horsepower. Toledo Plant Will Make Rescue Boats for Navy WASHINGTON (® — The Navy has awarded Ray Greene Co., To- ledo, Ohio, a $65,790 contract to build nine: 19-foot plastic rescue boats. i not appear te be in prospect _for+ entist, built a couple of engines a | § car called the Caribbean which de- |” They are to be flat bottom, blunt- peresen © Fifth to 6 p. m. Home made ice cream social a Covert .Methodist Church. 2775 |Pontiac Lake Road. Serving 5:30/| 4 Pp. m., June 11, —Ady. Rummage sale, Youth Center, Lake Orion, Pri. & Sat. 9 to §. —Adv. NOTICE OF ELECTION — SCHOOL DISTRICT OF THE CITY OF PONTIAC To all qualified electors of Y the School District of the City of Pontiac, Micht- an, notice is hereby given that the Annual Election for the purpose of electing two members to the Board of Education for a term of four (4) years each, said terms ending June 30, 1959, ble be held: Monday,- June 13, 1986 from O Lynn D. Allen Jr. CJ Monroe M. Osmun C] J. Allen Parker Cj ‘Theron T. Stickle Setine Rooths, Ballot Boxes, D—Balley School, 81 Florence E—Lincoin Jr. High, 131 Hillside FP—Owen School, 43 E. Columbt G—LeBaron School, §95 EF. Beverly H—Emerson School, 859 Emerson Be 40 E. Howard J—Longfellow School, a N _— 8—Daniel Whitfield. 2000 Orchard Lk. BOARD OF EDUCATION. LOLA B cy NOTICE OF INTENTION TO* FPORECLOSE LAND CONTRA To Norman Wybrandt, President Nor- ————— Inc, a Michigan notified that a ain date se § z F i z 4 i *| Southwest to Michigan and a tries in Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, | Minois and Missouri. The com- |pany’s three main parallel trans- mission ltnes_ stretch sidiary, Trunkline Gas Co., draws on gas reserves along Gulf Coast, fetds into the handle system at Tuscola, Il. Thé four Michigan a are the Consumers Power of Jackson, Citizens Gas Fuel of Adrian, Michigan Gas Utilities of Coldwater and Southeastern Michi- . Secre : June 8, .. “1058 gan Gas of Port Huron, Business Notes. For the past 2 years, Mr. | Bohmrich has been associated with © -|the A. O. Smith Corporation of Milwaukee, He served as General Manager of three divisions, . ace " aay to 8:00 pm. Eastern Stand: ti R Candidates nominated are narcotics agent who posed : Por four year terms ending June 30,/88 a dope peddier. Attie went to ieee: Lebanon in the Middle East-where known the VFW a ° : 3 * ~~ ” : : = ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955 —- Ae __ FUNERAL HOME Sihatenes Deze, & lane or Motor Donelson-Johns DESIGNED. FOX. nt : ‘Monuments 4A BUY. DIRECT AND SAVE jac Grant: & Marble’Company — "Robert d & George E Slonnaker’ ae ¢ Gakiand Are. FE 2 “BOX REPLIES” At 10 am. today there were replies at the Press office in the following boxes: _4& &, 12, 15, 16, 25, 28, 78, 104, 107. ee. Wanted Male _ 6 * gran to now “ wee re pool Ben for Pr, ‘na iene hie Brew. p.m. BY Ly $500 paupere makers Be i pal E Wes OY MENT | ARE YOU SATISFIED WITH YOUR PRESENT EARNINGS? oe SS cf eits Sena tae aon 1064 W.. teal oay oe ewets hours of 16 a.m, and ASSISTANT MANAGER. FOR) ing , lots park 5 garages. Start- - tng salary $75 per Week with good oppo advancement. Age 18-30. cate re- quired. Apply Wayne 68. be- tween 3 and 4 p.m. ONLY tf you are ye = ’ ‘Epes AUTO SALESMAN - Voodhese Siple EXPERIENCED to sell new and used cars Drawing allowance ot $125 per ow eek against commissions, Write te box »26 Pontiac . Press giving .txperience and - qualifications in reply. eel PAINTERS BIR- Cal evenings. m: -MI Ex. perienced in Frosen Custard +, 163. _ LONG AB NTOWN - dealer require, a qualified sales- man 3S for retail floor, Permanent work and far better ihan everage income. Per son we want ts ne deubt em ployed sow but tnterested im im rovement Write Pontes _ Press ox ft “MAN 2% TO 36 FOR “HARDWARE and 'umner vard affice Onlv those 1 eaperienre ceed app! aie) jake Ra Pontia: ro WORK supply store... Must be aperi- pene Pium bing Posed 100 8 Saginaw, MAN FOR GENERAL L CLEANUP and mn MAJOR AND om for ap- NEcHANIC sadly wot DATS, OR oleh ery N After 5 pm PE & | AUTOMOBILE | | SALESMAN IN PLU MBINO ’ ‘TRUCK DRIVER WITH GOdD _ tere wl Poet stee! haul Call after 6. PE + -TRACT OR | IMPLEMENT DIV ISION FORD MOTOR CO. BIRMINGHAM NEEDS NTANTS ACL OT PINANCENM ANALYS ' | PRODUCT DES PRODUCT DETAILERS PRODUCT._ ENGINEERS RESEARCH ENGINEERS Ge ar Ura ‘ ALCOUNT CLERKS “ BLUE PRINT MACHINE” OPERATORS APPLY FORD MOTOR CO. 2500 E. MAPLE RD. @ TO 400 DAMLY phone ie Man 9 tome Corp. wn ‘Orchard Lk REAL ESTATE need 3 clean-cut a -reastve oe imjiediateiy o handie our new We - 7 m me TE SAL ESMEN bat mayb nN or oo me salesmen 2 CHAPIN. BIGELOW . BROKERS & BUILDERS yA orchard Lake A od reel 4 or PE 6-045 RELIABLE MAN—PoR OUTSIDE Bathing’ beach and boat livery. East p ls beach. Walled REAL ESTATE SALESMAN BEAUTY | OPERATOR. . ExXPERL { @need * 1 TO *9PM THURS MECHANIC AND MECHANIC'S ——————— EE sepia || helper wth tools tm per | WALLED LAKE MAN ABO Or 35. sop. Kego Sanr and Service for genera] work in fruit ‘market Fart a 7 days week. 50 brs, $62 0. MA FERM ANENT POSITION FOR | *123! moroings only tint Ex- ANTED: ORIVER SALESMEN ease not pecessary - we Prefer ° some experience. FE a TS commission Car tee: | WES ORDERLY LP ERNOOR ary com miss ‘ar fur- Se en aneree See | ae. 3100 1 = Gut ined geen] ¥ r, emena, e be j Maple, Birm — nenmery 2 Telegrope Me PLANT aw. Writ | WANTED MEN, 18 to 45 FLINT TOOL @ co PREPARE FOR BETTER PAY Hadley &t wy M = = key jobs tm ‘Anduatry 407_Had' 2 Holty, eh MEN iL DEA het ge TORS Hlowzna, M, MACHIN hinds TOOL 4 No previous expe 1 Hadley 6t.. Holly. Mich | ence nor special education nee- free. information. Pontiac Press. | a a a opers' ust WTD: A AND owe | be ful — anitor § and peint with }own tools strong and willing to work. Ail 4 @ B Auto. SePyice 43575 Eliza must be OU 8 citizen. bring proof _beth Lake Rd. phone calls TOUNG LAP To HELP PAINTER. free roomy and board. pilus spend- tne mepry Yearis 2164'. Willow Beach after 6 p.m. Youn@ MAN AGE 48 TQ 25 te some mechanical aptitude or itv, sober and industrious. On- Portanity to learn a -ood business Sod advance Cell M Johnson EM 3430 o: FE $6771 YOUNG MEN 18-24 Need three, — to = West: . expenses advanced Haarr Waldron onth. See Mr | _Hotel, efter 2 to 6 PM SPA APA ALAL ALA AAAI A WOMAN WANTED, 10-55, GFN- HOUSE WITH MODERN cOoNn- VENI COOKING ENCES NO PE aia ROOM AND BATH Pike “BEAUTY OPERATOR - Full are Heys Main St. Roches-: «ter OL 2 BE AU ir ‘4 coeur we roP earnings experienced operator Air . d sa MI 42666. "Eas after Tha oe =M Brick with tandem| trucks wanted for haul- ing Ready-Mix concrete. A good offer for anyone willing to work. FE 2-3091, ask for Mr. Kent. BOY WANTED PICK” UP AND delivery werk Car necessary. Mileage paid. MI 44230 Can B ORIVERS ore Ae sTRADY idnight to oraing an ave Orchard } to 6pm. Comb. Bumper e Painter Lfberal non-financial benefits. Call Cree Smith, Service’, -Mer., CARPENTERS, PINTWERS AND Ts. sto’ work, union only. MArket +1160 Walled Lake. CA MU BE UN TON wanted. after 6 ; bt my Cal t om MY CARPENTER WANTED FIRST eo trim man. — eaten: Call $ pin 2-1986 after Ecrety City Treasurer of Pontiac Sts. Duties : Foo yl ip super. visine the collection of tayes_ and ascist In ki ateounts. Reé- Guiremerts: Peco erad- uate. 5 years exper @ re- Written: oxpengnrien. 0 9 om. oe Set. — re l Offic Larke before * HILTZ MUST | REALTOR _ re $4849 to | Ambitious and willing to prosper | BOOKKEEPER. Sere $360, work Saverterces oot , Rece: ptionist, ne exp. tiee | Foe Book eeper, Trainee ary FE 5-618] | seaical cert _ $260 - Help Wanted Male ot a Nese | IGNERS __ Help Wanted Female 7 Help Wanted Female 7 GENERAL OFFICE { | some typing prete: | t ARTHUR'S s_N. Saginaw. ,— BIRMINGHAM FORD MOTOR CO. Severa! attractive pesitions are now available om our staff offices for qualiiled ap- pilcasts Excellent working condition. Libera! employee benefits MAL MULTILIT OPERATOR MODEL NO 1250 NCR BOOKKEEPING MACHINE OPERATOR STENOGRAPHERS TYPIST ' 60 WPM REQUIRED tT TMP I Vo pou} % MEI FORD MOTOR CO. 2500 E. MAPLE RD. BIRMINGHAM, MICH. GENERAL OFFICE areaDy BO. sition for right woman. 5 dars & week Hrs Ham to4Mpm ¥ | CARNIVAL ; ‘by Dick Turner | = sami % Vw Beg U8 Pat OF I for t tu read the fine ~ ‘EPINED WHITE LaDY “FoR re a and baby sitting must BE HIG: UATE. Bloomfield Tae Shop | 1603. ® TELEGRAPH WALLED LAKE WOMAN ABOUT | 30 for genera} work in fruit mar- ays week 50 et aft evenin Ma ernoon _ $1231 mornings 0: wtp WOMAN TO MANAG dry cleaning branch, vicinity: of | Walled Lake and Millord. Cail | Sethe short hand Group benefits _Cal PE210830 0 |\GmRL OR WOMAN Tro CARE | for children while mother works. | Tues thru.Sat Stay nights $20. week. Phone EM 34719 Orr. ‘FOR GENERAL ~ HOUSE- work in Birm No cooking, mist stay cights Mi 46686 | ———- pone cea DEPT | da trnine ‘iline keep! caninosrans records ate) mise. clerical work M C. Manv facturing Co. 118 Indianwood Rd., _ ake Orton GIRL WANTE LIGHT housekeepin: Live bi) og of 3 _children__ re 42 or OL 23-1805 GIRLS FOR COUNTER WORK Apoly tm person between 12 and FOR & Beck Cleaners 332 N Wood- —werd__ Birmingham GOOD COOK, GENERAL S&sTAY in Good wages White Mi" 6 ——— Go HOME FOR Wit GtRL or middie aged ‘ady. assist family of More for home than wages ee a _ | GRILL COOK FOR DAYS APPLY. ie person K & B Cafe 6761 Dixie | wy. GENERAL HOUSEKEEPING AND ehild cere Excellent living com ditions Private room and beth 6 Weeks at Port Huron cottage. _Retgrences, MI 64-0831 June Grads June Grads| Your first 6B ts important! Get | the — a Listed below are “tiany interesting be- ginning Paco Wess evailabie. | WHITE OR COLORED WOMAN | Sxpertenced best deal in the state. Appiy \ — 10-13 am., 9 N. venous STOCK MARKER , ie prim 8B ABYSITTING ousewOrk L switchbos sires summer _ time pertenced anes IRONINGS Building Service q * 12! | ¢ MASON WORK | i fn types of foundations Block) ind brick —— pera ang ce- | MASON & CEMENT f WORK FREE stimates work ee | ter & Son. 30402. | R. G. SNYDER FLOOR arian. ing ang finishing, Phone FE a ESSE real Can 34870 _Beliding Supplies 124 A-1 FLUSH DOORS en a iil RCH $0.95 Exterior, At up ‘Seconds Hardjare trim Louvered doors. CASCADE DOOR CO Pett sabe te FE tuling PE3-1385. 150 Wesson. 1004. Fi Eves, OR ——— | - - 1. |) 6 BEDFORD MOVING PLASTERING u 28767 New and reneit specialty, OR _L0C8) & tong distance. FE Moving & Trucking 19) \ Wtd. Household: Goods 27 see CapracR 90, eI ue. L* i : NT AN sage hauled y Yea all rinds HACLING OF ANY KINDS REAS _sonahle FI S7 iNCINERATORS CLEANED, ASH - ——- hauled Clean up. FE cowr 3 1 RICE CLEAN- Trucks 16 Font Tages Taecrcee ariek lle Tom Stake wtes J ad ten: Trucks Pantae Pec, and Industrial Tractor Co. Let US BUY 7 on Averion Tr oe _you._ © Entire nome or 0d ota top dollar Wilt oo so it for La 8 Phone OR ne yeas To of furniture WANTED FORATTCRE if you have any teota™tervice abd the high- L& Ss SALES CO. OAKLAND, COUNTY bade boven. PE 2-206 es a uumern: Cash waiting. Wtd. Miscellaneou cous 23 a23 8. WOODWARD oes es . 2421! Jomm R. bet 6 and 10 Mile Oven Datly Including are WA \ N ! F D: BLACK & Open 86 Sun 161 LiIncein 2-7520 FE 40461 FE + DECKER VIBRATING “ORPUGATED fIBE S PAN. LIGHT AND HEAVY encaind ooo -— as = Cele for ating rarrorts and pea > Rubbish hauled Top sol wand SANDER. PHONE OR ings-all celots made te size _fieid dirt_ant cravel FE 21-6603 +401 Eliminate ee 34442) Fea- ont HAU:ING er 4--#¢ a era’ Reigtorced Masties _ a & Se ban truce | Ee 357 Se ST eee aren ae aa FLORIDA ROOMS Gai =AULIBG “ODD JOBB Wanted to Rent 29 ead Rec qeattonal centers All tvpes of | ar < ow Wak nl UPLE & Rosrnpenes WOULD. bal And doors to choose O'DELL. CARTAGE ne unfurnished opt. or house. frome -EE WEEDON Loca) and Long Distance Moving | Reasonable rent, L CEE heat : one PE 5-6806 MAJOR OFL Se eant REPRE- | 1661_8 Telegraph Rd FE 4-2608 REDUCED RATES s sative and wite posize sonst epart- BATIVE CUT sTONE FIRE- = jon aot meht with stove _places_@ specialty OL 1-647 Goris We ta forniehéd. — fersteh ve sooo Services 13 SUDDEN SERVICE - ASHES RUB | Can Bay “PE 20138 or efter 6 bish and light trucking FE 46078 | FE 4 _Mrs. Bojarskt. ; rat VOLLMAR MOVING AND STOR- Saws, Lawnmowers age. Agents for N. American Vas ACCURATELY SHARPENED Lines. Large rans anywhere in | SEEKINO CLEAN COTTAGE ON | PE 27680 18 CHAMBERLAIN .ST.| United States Quick service LAKE. A ROUGH ACE TREE SERVICE. REMOVAL. wa Get ow our bid PE 2-7188. A & R FRENCHING TRONINGS. GOOD liver _ $8562, 341_N. Perry Painting & Decorating 20 Cop 1954 by MEA Se ncg ne — ne water tile Fielt tile 4.) PAINTING WALL WASHING | . FE + ope and oeaper nancibe Free ont oa my contract” AAA i Ee NC HING CO MOUSE mutes OR 1-0326 : ! ‘ arc walter 4) ) DECORATING PAINFING hes ne} bia & gn ep anc anc wa . ne Cal for est 3 : nate PE 40233 - Help w anted f emale 7 Work Ww anted Female it ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS A bined NTERIOR’ &@ EX. ser ate Meaer Pari Siva a cB Nae TE Be gee Meee tae Serle eer ee SENIOR. EXP eat ins | rence Ot, Frese PE Paper removed. mate FE | en. office +918, _ Write Pos-| APPLIANCE Se [= Press, Box 102. Ws ccrvice ali qates at cormce falls Wall: Ww ashing HOU SEWORK, BY wae S DAY. EX- ators, wemnere, radios, cleaners. & Painting — Reasghable PE_2-7706 tyoes of sm JUNE §& — — FEATURING | meet ONE! ROY'S 06 Oanland Ave. FE 2-402) * Vithens Vans evens Baan. _day service. Ee 5-1471. ing _FE 6.7346. WORK. Fin- > r egy Oe A (PE s-o008 Ten Leo _tustig| Painting-& Wall Washing | fRONINGS wr. PICKUP & DE. | BLOOMPTELD WALL CLEANERS. —___Pree_gstimates. FE $-2211. _ FE + | Walls and window a ES PAINTING AND WALL WASHING | IRONINGS. QUICK SERVICE FR _Frree' est no obligation, FE 31051 —shean FE 5-873) ee | BEACH CLEANING | gy'paperne VIPERS | LADY Poa i HOME 5 |) ate ed on ede | Medea EM 320s | PROFESSIONAL PAINTER DE- Mrs. Goodwin, FE 20231 | WIATRESS BAY WORK. 734 GLEN- | wood | WAITRESS WAN. =D “APPLY sie _\oodwart Ave. | WHITE GIRL FOR OR HOUSEWORK Mote for home than wages. So6ea for genera] housework and bab’ sitting. $20 a week. Stay in. Ms WAITRESS For Bob Mprtle's Cafe. 14 East Bivd. Split shift WAITRESS, MUST BE EXPERI- enced peat for night shift, Restau:! and liquor bar. 613 _ Baldwin Ave _ WAITRESS, EXPERIENCED ON foed and cocktails FE % WAITRESSES AND CURB GIRLS” eel Tomahawk. 2041 Auburs | WOMAN OVER % FOR DAIRY Work @€ pm toe 12 pm Aros Dairy OL 2-554] __ | WOMAN POR COOKING AND / ttehen work Apply. in person | Milly Acres Dairy 1466 W Mapie | _Birmingham _ WOMEN telephone qoaeggrdes m \ WAITRESS “"Experienced, stead~ and week ends. Morey’s Golf & Country Chub. Untog Laze Rd. off Commerce Rd, WANTED WHITE — WOMAN | FOR cooking. Refer. ate room f “MaAytair 6-200¢. _ - HOME AND wees to woman, 70 or over. EM Cashier . oe Secretary tor attorney ... $260 Dental asst . -. #4240 Figure girl mace $260 Personality recep 5 $50 Bookkeeper auto exp $280 Oper Saturday -TW2P. M Midwest Employment 406 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG PE S027 , MAID FOR GENERAL HOUSE- and cooking. salary, Priy erences re- _ quired. MI 6-3290 after 6 p.m. St rn AGED WHITE WOMAN SALESMEN REAL ESTATE ao Cs : eiert young xpertenc in selling. Plen- rag a ek. and contacts Earn- To Bell To Trad tings un oy UY IT-WE-LL INSURE IT MAHAN REALTY co REALTORS aid Real Estate Excnange Te YOU B JUNE ORADUATES corm pow for immediate place- BOND EMPLOYMENT . OVER ; OOD HOUSEKEEPING sHOP __ 83% _W Huron FE 44460 BEAUTY OPERATOR _Annaliese Beauty Shop. FE 2-5600 CAB DRIVERS STEADY AND part time Apply €38 Orchard _teke 3 fw tpm ROR: AND it Hy HELE sant ey: Golf & Ceruntr: 2280 Union Lake Rd __merce RY. Cink off Com- to case for baby and light house- MIDAVEST —— * We yecialise jobs with Pontiac Best Firms ~ JOB‘S FOR MEN — neers all tyoes $15 900 | Colleee Grad , eee $7000 | aManacers, exp vei. gs $1R000 ry Offtes 5 $350 OPEN SATU + Ti 2 PS Nidwest FE mnton ment (06 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG FE 5-0227 CASHIER EXPERIENCED ap. | FE 2-0263 Open Eves. ‘ti] 6: Sun. 14 1073 W. Huron BRANCH NEXT DOOR TO POST O “oe CK SALESMAN WANTED | Sears, Roebuck and Co. ts inter. ested in employing several qualt- fied men_ who are looking to the future Excellent starting wage and commission; many er vantages selling Sear's national! advertined ucts. Car essentia Sears. Roebuck & Co. are IN PERSON i 14 NC Saginaw ~ SALESMEN ~ A job or’ a career, which do . you want? Whieh do you have | flow? We are opening a lifetime selting career with a poteritial high level income We need 2 emeelves whether (hig fy career they want. For further a write Pontiac Presa ‘SERVIC STATION ATTENDANTS Have opening st new station for 3 .bonest. dependable men. Must - be capable of gree capesto Exp pot but good reference’ réqui Apply in mereon progressive On ce al 477 8 E {V SERVICE MAN. SWEETS RA- _aie_&@ Appliances, 422 W. Huron. TRUCK DRIVERS Experienced Delvewsy, tow bar, and saddle and individual z tractor brokers for over- the-road driving. Good working conditions, Sen- iority rights. Welfare in- surance, Mas vacation with. oat -Must ppl: at — house, * _ CARRIER Pension. An-} lv in person Jto Spm Kingsley | nn, Bloomfield. Hills | | HAMAR MAID WANTED. Wa- terford Hotel 5803 Dixie High- _Wav OR 37462 CLERK-TYPIST Detatied clerical work Prefer ex- perienced person for handling pur- ehase orders and invoices. Ac- curate with figures Apply Per. sonnel Office Pontiac General _Hospiter CLERICAL AIDS General clerical work Ne typing Rotating shift PreVious clerical experience require¢ Apply Per- sonne: Office Pontiac Generel Hospital COLORED ¢ GInt “SERVING ND kin Afternoons. 5 days. appiy Pontiac must ar in ey can gon Fields on Thurs rend ont ‘acer el. an el 9 pm. © ‘ontl Sendary or hal Walrntes, RO ran ave or ho! s. Birm am rill, 1 Woodwerd, Birm., ExrenienceD SHORT ORDER’ ook for afternoon shift. 3577 Ellrabeth Uk nd _FE S877, | EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. Mi 4-vOot : cca SPRsts o Seagal store Groeery for @torery aa tigers AGtrous nion Lak Rd start work at once yrs oof ere: Afternoon shift or / srt ee Fer interview rem Call RE _ 35 be- tween 10 a.m | ar EXPERIENCED NATIONAL CASH EXPERIENCED ence 9 ise TO:| NEAT APPEARING WOMAN. 25 or older. Apply at 369 Oakland Ave Dairy Queen after 12 noon. Openings for full or part time salesgirls for sports- wear or ready to wear department. Experienced} vrorina. preferred but not neces- sary. Peggy's, 16 N. Sag-| maw. 9 °° of NURSE FOR GIAL Scour CAMP. opening June ASth Room doeard and salary fa consider meth- er with daughter between 7 end Ca 3-ho08 $0 YRS or AGE, ie were See Mr. Lee. eT Who CAN append SALESW OMAN Permanent full tine sition available im our Ready-To-Wear ‘t attractive saiary and com- jon paid weekly, sales experience oreferred.- tut we will train a housewife who is fashion conscious and who would ike. to be an inpportant part of « smei select sa.en sta Please apply to our eee = Sadow for intervie . WINKLEM. AN’S Tel-Huren “Shoppine Center SEAMSTRESS. aaah Te MEFIELD SA you a B FASHION SHOP TED'S NEEDS CURB. GIRLS APPLY IN PERSON 9AM. to3 PM. ; iH elp Wanted | EXPERIENCE!) portation furnished . Tomahawk _ 2041 Auburn Rd DISTRICT MANAGER Here is a $6,000 to $8,600 position which must be filled immediately by alert, ambitious ~ be- iween 25 and 35 who is presentiy COOK, TRANS nap, AR PE MoM 2 Lovety and understanding care MI 43736 ‘ADY DESIRES DAY WORK. art te Sav relerences PE ceed. FE Situ or Par via Se A MIMEOGRAPHING, YPING, sEC- HIN retarial service EM 3-2842 (DRY WALL BY MACHINE PREZ | "ciatine OR 3306 or OR 30404 | — PLAIN AND FANCY SEWING FE smal! PADrTINO et eee 44-6825. Osmun. | EXPERT TREE TRIMMING & RB- FALLS pp REGISTERED PRACTICAL; moval Ph FE5S-6303 of OR _burse available. OR 3-294. 3-2000._ Physiotherapy 214A. WASHINOS WANTED Flectric—Sewers Cleaned) ~~~ AAR 24 br. service. Ho results, ne | SWEDISH MASSAGE & THERAPY. i FOuEN Wang wi: L WASHING hemically treated at a¢ ial foot techniewe. 72 Elm Pe ven Seer: Someen _St PE 42881. waroRE :E WOMAN WANTS 3 OR Roto-Re Sewer Cleaners+ — Television Service 22) Gays work baby —— > tren- Pp 8-13: 17 a wa | oc light cleaning. PAINTING SIDE AND OUT-| COPENHAVER’S RADIO & TV MIDDLE AGED ane woo | side. Get Gur bit EM 3-0087 revair $96 W. Huron. Night serv- like bad* <'ttine venin-s FE | | EXPLOSIVES ‘Ea CONTRACTING ALL ice calls FE 45607 32-6373 types of dynamite work: stumps | WIpow a eae WASHINGS "IN | her home. FE 2-960¢ WIDOW WANTS “HOUSEKEEPING | Certainiy needs Near bus | ine Send replies to Boz No 10, __ Pontiac Press ee ——— ____ Building Service | 12 “Nd CEMENT \i ORK LLOYD MONROE FE 4-6866 A Masonry Crew Available veing basement and cement work. L 5-0501 A-i CARPENTER REPAIRS AND alterations. Quick service. OR _3-2057_eves A-l CUSTOM CARPENTERS. _Rough apd figish. EM 3-800) 4LL KINDS OF MASON Sea Goa. satisfaction Eastab- _lished crew FE 56-0056 CEMENT WORK KEEGO HAR-! removed, rocky broken ap demo tins Results guaranteed. Free estimates Large or smal! jobs. Cail OLive 1-6645 after 5 p.m Septic tank: Cleaned. built end | repaired Drain tile instajied All work guaranteed FE 4¢-0619 | Orchard Lk Rd | ELECTRIC MOIOR SERVICE RE re rewinding 116 & Pise E_¢3081 ee LIGHT BULL DOZINO eiLt DIRT. topsoil] spreading ew equip ie service Reasonable FE eves. AYED As ML. REMOV. LAWNS SPRA sad (GUARANTEED 1 TV Er sires work you name it. I paint it Quickly and inexpensive FE ‘DAY OR RIGHT TV SERVICE | FE 5-1206 or FE 5-0390 r MP. STRAKA REPAIR ANY FE 48136 CONDON'S _RADIO. _TV. 12978 PARKE st _Typewriter, Service 224, LAA LM TYPEWRITERS AND ADDING Ma- chine re General _ply ies ’ RITE _ Michela} 1 Upholstering THOMAS UPHO! M_8. TELEGRAPH Expert work and Office Sup- .wrence RENTED _N. Saginaw ot __ 23 airing tnt ina, 11 Ww a SAWN ARP E NED. | sLiPCOvVERS. DRAPES * al work Ee iool or PE cat. serv’ | spreads, Your material e. Le Oe in DRAPES, Coie MATE CTAWN MOWERS HEDGE SHEARS. “;ia\, Readie. FE 5-1927. saws ete, tha & repaired. vs 34 hour tervire A wotk neers | ing dite Guay Lave A Gad S"ttecotn | Par sue" 3.2641 Free estimate. ALYMBING axD. SeeatinD a 4 rere re ey OR | Lost & Found 2 ——-| $oy , STs TYPRE- MASU*RY WORK WILL THE PERSON WHO FOUND Bric? venew and firentaces spe | PLASTERING & ee WQRE | a white purse at Jack’s bar please | ciaity. Free éstimates. OR 34749 Det Mevers FM 3-0 rewrn the keys and bilifeld. Tt BLASTING SERVICE | PRICE'S TRENC ano ) SERVICE. FE ‘Se Lest Thursday Stumps removed rocks broken up. | footings field tile poe at = 14 ——~ | Past safe inexpensive. Cail; [ines septic tanks ins LOST. BROWN AND WHITE COL: OLive 1-6645 after 5 pm. 31, or FE S706. = =e Male Name Prince Sat. Vi- + j FREE, TRIMMING AND REMOV. | einity of Watkins and Scott Lake. BU LLDOZINO AND GRADING. KO* Free esti ate id +6019 FE License No. 10742. UNiversity 4 {oo smail the hour or | 4 44897 Reward bs. i R 3-001) or MA A 54608. Wi ECISION MACH FILED | 7 xn ao FE 42687 | LOST: FAWN BOXER 1551 KES- suet Sylvan Lake FE 20093. Re- ! GIRL TAKE GOOD CARE OF IT REPERENCES IF NEEDED REASONABLY PRICED CAI! FEDERAL 5-6059 AFTER 5 PM." WILI THREE OR FOUR ROOM FUR- pish ed a prefer lower floer in 5 bidg with utilities fur- =e and private bath Mikidie aged business couple FE 2-2043 TWO CHRISTIAN YOUNG LA- dies desire three er four room furnished s — -eentraily lo io bus stop Ret- Write P. O. Share Liver Quarters 30 TO SHARE aTTRACTIVS _Mudio apt Private ts from town Only 87 per week Aveila- ble immediately Write tae _Press Box 104 " Wtd. Trensportation 31 LOL LOL LLL. re uDE FOR STOUPENT and Grand Bive “Dally, pasha 9 to 4:30. From Pontias Country Club area FE 20061, a a Na nl — | Wid. Contracts, Mtgs. 3 CASH FOR SEASONED com tracts on ern homes. savings & Loap Co. TW. Haroe Cash Waiting For good contracts. call or see Mr Johnson personally for quick, courteous ection. A JOHNSON, Realtor 1704S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 ~ CONTRACTS" WANTED Cash buyiry watt'neg Prompt courteous service -Get our esti- mate before 7 sell. a or call re Sout or PE 84 5-9975. Ask for ed McCullough. No obligation. [et HAYDEN 86 FE Walton Bivd, FAST ACT IONT = 5% MORTGAG ES ON FPARMS OR SUBURBAN from % acre with 100 ee RD or clos! CHARLES pas pe 1797 ge Telegraph FE 40821: e.. CASH FOR LAND CONTRARY. H. J. Vanwelt 4549 Dizle Hwy. OR 3-1355. WE ARE BUYING Tonay SELLING land eontracts — new for the aon mod fer of value quick cash ent. * = at ae and train a ~~ sell top quality, nationally adver- . ted “product on” Clun” Pian. BRICK AKD BLOCK LAYING. EX- — ‘. ered. Full eo and recruiting nee, ‘ >.. MY S00 Cas afer commission overw paid | weekly. Extra pay while building. BRICK, B AND . CEMENT No collecting or delivery Car and pstecloe — imneys. No job too a opers- | cal Ou commer. ;_ tion—desirable openings in many aranteed work. Ph. FE areas. Excellent opportunities for eapid advancement and increased tncome. For interview wire col- lect giving name. address, phone » fumber and brief outline of ex- perience to AN Rogers, Enrptre Crafts Corporation Newark. New York State MEN — WOMEN 38 TO 48 CAR! essential, Southefn Michigan ter- | ritery Guarantee, commission and expense bonus Vacation or | full time work Good personality | and-neat appearance @e must See Mr Aten aldron Hotel. Wed rs. ¢ pm ‘WOULD 1 LIKE A MIDDLEAGED couple or — to share 4 home — me. 1 in family. 9 UTORING, - READING, SPELL- fcs, arthmetic, ete. Ph PE 35085 TUTORING BY QUALIFIED ‘+ teaeher in primary and‘ elemen- _tery_@rades. FE 65-0825 after 4 __ Work Wanted Mate - 160 LPL LLL LPL Lh Ay cam CARPENTRY, PLASTIC AND _ floor Hie a specialty. PE 6-6054. BLOCK LAYING ee? 3 AND CE-. ment work. FE Witt BOY i7. GooD conan: an §-7103. | aaa BLDG REPAIR, BRICK WORK. Cemem work Plastering. Retain- ing walls. S 4-2290. , aLock residential and commercial FE , 5-q782__ | BRICK AND BLOCK ‘Outdoor firepiaces _fall evenings BRICK BLOCK AND >GEMENT work Pree etmatgs, PE 4032". BULLDOZING, I BASEMENTS DUG. rec sei sats fine ems: Dr LA¥inGe PE 2-2936 CABINETS DRA DOORS. _D. E. Cook. FE +4 se CEMENT WORK, FLOORS. drives, etc. Reas. Free estimates. Jensen, FE 2-230, CONCRETE € re SROKEN 81 By ee _of_job. Free estimates. FE 2-0077. :BRICK tivewa~* ent excavatine Addit'on. of ailtera- sons Compi-te Building -ervice Map mate workmanship OT GMiST so is OUR a SPECIALTY Floors. basements EM 3-489, _#o ing. FE $-11 ‘| CUSTOM M GARAGES work of eee OR +1676 i too = we Eves, on COMMERCIAL ART | cemene—wor TIAL Sy A Paras et aaa ee oes , paisting. 060 foes. ete. CUSTOM HOM ES | SEWING i MACHINE REPAIRING AND CEMENT WORK, | —*™ — ;* plowing, anne and also | a DOEING i |SUpLIs | CANDSCAPING com i a om MANLEY I LEACH SEPTIC TANKS _Reinforced cc concrete. FE _ 31440. ing 16A REPAIRING ANTIQUES A SPE. _cialty, PF $0162 >T332_ SAWS, LAWNMOW mel MACHINE SHARPENED andr Garden. Plowi ing 168 BAAS A ARR one A&t POWER LIFT EQUIPMENT. manure FE 4 GARDEN PLOWING AND SCRAP- _ing. OR_3-6633. GARDEN PLOWING AND y LAWS | _leveling_a speciaity, OR 3-4006.__ GARDEN PLOWING IN AND _sround Pontiac FE 2-7360. GARDEN N PLOWING DISCING. arad initvy of Pontiae Air- _ Bort. P E _1-0066. eas GARDEN draw’ PE_5-6850 ai N < te OR 3 288 0 89 or PE ve bie $1427 LAWN GRADING | AND ne mental ever ROTOPILEING nTaWR OAR 6 AnD Sises On 3.2900 ROTO-TILLING Lawns & gardens 7274 Allerton —Rc__FE_$1670__ _Laundry Service 18 CE Cust aine PL : RUF. rlanfinten ett e Pickin | G LAWN. yg work. ; = 5 ger Ge akOwn amp | ichohe & Harger Co. “black = paniel mongrel. | 33 W. Huron - Male Lone bairh Vieintty of Coo- | iMi@EDIA "s peti “Rewer qd. EM_ 3-267. : TIN 4 VICINITY OF LIv- ernols & 8 Bivd. Missing F seco I er LOST ENGLISH BULL DOG FIVE months old White around left eve. rest brown. FE 47311. -Good _Teward offered te finder. LOST: LADY'S PURSE ON” “WIL- Hems Lake Rd near Twin “Lake _Golt Club Reward EM _ 3-29%2. LOST ~~ ENGLISH — POINTER White with brown spots Male If anyone sees im, please call OR 3.0526. : LOST: ONE ENGLISH POINTER Liver and. white. liver hip, Nver head, one round liver spot above tail where it joins the body. Answers to the name Toy. reward offered. Call FE 4-91 iost me Se YOUR PET? WANT To ican aatmal Rescue Hobbies & Supplies 24a a TRAIN SET $190. ixas 4-0432 “than half price. FE LEARN THE ART OF CAKE DEC- — like a profesesional to foin Tuesd at class. Kitchen Hobby = E. * cee can Le : bv number sets $1.69 up (frames to fit) 3 Lawrence. 2-1414, BUY repair haeevater and soos ment. and retail — for ik end — Whole- VICE. 1058 W. _ Notices & Personals 2 Kt [. Templeton, Realtor 3339 Orchard Lake Rd. PE +4563 TO GET THE MOST FOR YOUR land sgocrsbecat Realtor hema ig the “bird” to see, 43 W. St. Phone FE 32-8316. WILL BUY O. LIST pce LAKE property Purchasers RF McKINCEY "=e ARO ie Porte EM "ysa11 uw 1-6 798 WE HAVE $200, t our disposal to oe nev ar paler cad < Tracts for our elients. —— me goon you sell. ASE-FO R BOB MAHAN. ; "on SELL-To Insure vou" B - WE'LL INSURE RE It , MAHAN . REALTORS Cc acs rth Rael Estate caaneas ] Event and Sund 1075 Huron Ph. re if citing reall meng atts eit R Art CO., . REA! Oo-cpers tive |Real * petate ‘Eachang Eeecan: back Fe ya 7 ‘BEDROOM MODERN Rd. Nea 5-4807. CENTRAL ATTRACTION Bieoetiee 3 bedroom cedar yard, ro owner. “ON COO- For Sale Houses #8 Sere es we ive, eat ish Shallow BUD" NICGHOLIE JACK - LOVELAND . PE 41661 ee ROCHESTER AREA use acres, $1,000 dp. Harold E. Weaver, Broker | 1448 E. Auburn Rd. Roc! er Bet. John — — Lake Rd.. Keego Harber MODEST MAIDENS and very attractive sister!"’ cw ~~ aN 10 rowstonoe ; by Jay Alan <¢mtemee sce — * “No, this isn't Gloria! This is Alice, her blue-eyed, tonsa: * 4 ley T B. Sana- Deq re 8 ul Dasement with new voaneled ~tortulh. Unier Lave orivileges OL 20821 Siheure 8 to 6 For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses 43) cro» Worth ol Char sor | Corner Williams Lake Road & Mie Feereation room and full shower ation. Inquire 7425 Cooley Lk. NEAR BALDWIN AVE. « ROOMS. | ~~~ ~ NO OOD, an So50 OR 3-1235 Office Oven 95 bath New ea. furnace’ and in- DORRIS & SON : 5 bath. basement. sewer water. 6 ROOM MOUSE AND SUN 3 BEDROUM COLONIAL. EXCE!-| Te G1 Move right in 2 ded | After § ral OR 3-7038 cinerator Side drive and earace | REALTORS CO-OP EMBERS (ROgM«E. a, a oO nett p EEK | gas Only ipaod pate Rose Melar porch Lot 109 $4000 cash. lent suburban location. FE 5-3023 | Sar Te ame o) forced air 2 ACRES A BEA OTIPULLY WOODED 1382 W. Huros \FE +1557 Hs omee) Vee _ty_ FE 231¢2 Can be seen shor $5 em Call bea ted a cle nia ty é . a a. ar —— FOR SALE bY OWNER MODERN OR 3.9860 Sold by cwner. Bald Are jw RANG Reverse Cuge.| Sate guess b Rome only ¢ mt west of Poise This LISTINGS WANTED _ beso ENGINEER, “WIPE, ONE country home, | acre, al) kinds 2 BEDROOM HOME. 3 ‘piece | Bak win Area | Ph Ortonville _132_ Reverse Une? | 96050 8750 . 28x52 ft. ranch home for spacious Farms, business and commercial, oi behaved 4 yt old and baby. | al Bo realtor. 30S Lesck| beth, basement, hot sir furnace. | 4 rooms and beth. new linoleum we WILL BUILD ON YOUR Lot HOME ON WHEELS | twine eseeptiodelly well built site or room | heel. Price $6°000, terms on e rs. near sc s 8 2 bedroom she ouse 7 dedroom s of closets a Re pada neg etal pce tg HS mooM HOME IN DRAYTON. 4| Suto. “hot water. paved street, | ‘ransvortation FA oil beat and frst vo: 84.108. $110 down. 845 | 7 cluding. hot" water Reater” Call cCdat lined J8 ft itvine room oy. Knauf, Real ae nceree Lane. East Lansing. Mich. " ,oom Fast side Suchy Realty. | Por information cal) Mrs. Spears, | euto. water heater A iitle work ; ino Se our model For addition | ton deters with fireplace. Thermooane pic. 1 ¢ eferences | 1 ne ia house, but the | i ontact ab- ie_W._ Bares Me a HOLLY. APT. HOUSE D RABLE | cf on ee RUSSELL A. N price allows for all. necessary re-— = omc er , ‘ | CUCG KL ER REALTY a Fue al costs less han $115 for ¥ Ren ME!- FOR BIRMINGHAM PROPERTY 170 W. Pike pairs. See it today. Red Horse 36 N PE 4-4001 entire veer Attached garage Al! WANT ACTION | ‘ety apet of ot BENJAMIN & STEPHENS _INC. | Co ryigw HOMES INC” LOW ie gran + oor SN \ . m com lows fo We're practically sold out of | MODERN 4 ROOMS AND BATH, | "URN. 2 BEDROOM. BUM ax FHA. terms. 662 Emerson. FE! (57 : soi Cass Elis ie 1s REMODELED FRAME PARM-| cary i pleco Bout mise this a! mec peel oe] pel Lee one es ee ese ce at waite twin Airport. | _-*#354 3 bedrm.. brick ranch tvpe homes as im | pouse, 92 years old at Silver, 817. urven ‘sreverty, Mave cir ¢ Snguire tet 8 "'OR 22041 pfter 3. | 3 BEDROOM HOUSE 10, BE Large 1én184 lots im an excelient | 3 BEDROOM. NEAR SCHOOLS. Lease, Living room 25x30 Hand BRICK INCOME eute waiting WKB cash give | pope 3 SaDAODNT Soar ~| moved. Full price. . FE 61456.) ‘oeati walls. select | Plants. stores. bus. On Ann Arbor | jogn peams from old ro. | Secluded Near Roosevelt Schoo! - us @ call Se orompt end Partially furn. auto heat & hot l, oak flocrs, full osmt. with St_FE 44301 Two fireplaces one Fires floor has elv roome courteous service water. Adulls only. Lakeville. OA SEE THIS eas | WILLIAMS LAKE: room one ip dining _ sun v + Room STOUTS ne tuc-| fSsunge inne Sometare come | $,ft0* lL Mm Ss ar" ach | op sacSce™*Bewngaie "pow. | Satie, net wert comers F. C. Wood Co. |" Room Aig MODERN a Fk P| Resin sh ame bem: | RRR ie Soca “eSOne | asian” ee reine jrety | Groen. age rete Prat | fecendtesg hae 2 staal a, Realtor TRoom louse seoRoOM | «=~ Rast Buys Fulldmine’— French: Gocts to _, Woh shedeg Seni thems cows. | Geer. Sitented oo Serve fom, met | sneae tiers ‘oe Content : rooms, ceramic . . Ca.) FE 4 sca Tees : : . SILT Us otes Ein ted ca |e DOYS |. ms iesteatammre te | JOHN K. Irwin | Pzsreit sn tet vase | EF seach ashe rs | fen Mpeg “bet “alll R Rent Apts. Furnished 33 Rent Lake Property 364 Today Peete! swear" stm “Sreece” ies meme wae ceaerocten, RSME, care L omeont tseroges treat | Oe SG DOWN , recreation rose “4 $6500. porch facine lake Open brick m on year © piesa in Garage attached, Full price $20-— 101") N fa pee Street cea ge tah tull price ethag, hom». Neer, 4conler Lake and. | or: 5 ~ 7 : % ¢ of dining and 1 ROOM AND re a) ocereoe THIS 1S SPECLAT 300. Call OR 3-9815. No realtors. | Phone ve FE 21804 | Call FE | \ < Aug 15 to Labor Day. Modern = ee | LAKE ORION FRONT itchen facing e fouple. ‘Aduite sno ae home on Case Lake Sate beach. | Located on the west side ~ $ rooms. 3 bedrooms, full bath. ee ee een On burner 'THELMA. ‘Mt EW OOD, A boat All conveniences. $100 week- | ina very quiet floors carpeted. furnished and the | with we' plot. | REALTOR Alberta Apts. iy PEC neighborh This home ts . ,host house is now re | Dog house and pen. Neer Silver 5145 cays Blizabet. Lake Rd nome AND KITCHENETTE. Socal worth more than the asking sessim at once $9000 full price. | Lake Goll Course. Lake orivileres | py $1294 FE 4.3844: Oven 9 to 7 private Bath. adults. 78 Norton \4 ROOM FURNISHED APART | rice $9 500. Very glean, | est of terms Gee this quick. | 822.500 Por further information 1 ROOM NEAR FISHER 2 BODY | | co pepe ore 7 m!. from 7 — t — ae room pome i | | Call MY ey call OR 3-1676 after 6 om. | s rm | a . . aon y~ inens PE! ye eal nat roped veer at $73. per mo. paved drive sendin toe ts OF neinen ranch type homes. | — L Dee | ' a soley ga a wy TH kren. | —° ear garage r uy wall oak floors, oi! | AW : “ 4 : Stoney Cree Tuan Tad private bath Aduits. | FURNISHED MODERN 3 8 ORES) Setar (snd enh terme. rane lange ture windows HEA | SAY] ORD: | A Home of Your Own | on, otoney’ \- re §-7884 and basement w 7 = res on Rutgers 5t., | “ noe een etoax ar. | Pontiac Lake. | are around home andl - UNBEATABLE city etnventenses. s —— | |NEAR EASTERN JR RIOR | Designed | by a jeading ar _Gentleman FE _5-1609 = tate eke vi YEAR MOUND MOD- We, believe ee a os Value be es todey. soe With commer oa mathe war now ts, Realtor 136 E Pike St i ae bedrooms full basement posi ot aes. =7 7 ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE. “orn 8 rooms. Oi] heater Wasb- Se cha ‘to best. te the & beautiful | Co-operative Rea! Estate Exchange | gas b ble setage, lar cons pledged Lpticinorene | _ Adults, 355 E. Bivd FE@0116 =| ing machine. Cuy water. Safe be had in its elass. er NOTHING DOWN G were BYLVAN. MANOR home situated | 4 BEDROOM HOME | front porch ONLY 69 500 wi | << th Conters tional 3 ROOMS DOWNTOWN. APPLY | beach Month or season. Hi, — white alow. with black mtr wall veo jn full in a lovely lake area. Moden véear round ice and | | ism Features such as tri- 1? Clark 8t. 18. 3% miles from Ambherstbur, shutters that greatly maak. s. ry ~ clean 3 large lots, Assortment of stx a aN level floor plan and aR NISHED APART. 80 Scott Dr el hacenere are fire foome 00 full price Boo od one wont OME srsee aoe AA) peteteanes: Cnty | With 3 bedrooms and bath. up eran -_ ae! was ment for Christian women. FE) prawood 6-218] Amherstburg. and . Attached garage. long, see vo ne full basement, auto, heat. Nee Biertmigeting buyer. Pub ——— LAKEFRONT APT. COMPLETELY Lovely shaded lot. Only 130 FT FRONTAGE Eastern Jr mmediate rice $35,000: terms. Show: {LARGE CLEAN wOows_ Pinat |“AREFROWT APT. COMPLETED” $7650 with terms. \s Room, red) walls, oat 5. tall | - P Zonee for 3} bedroom. | Dossession. Terms can't be beat. by appointment. abet Rds = mie Seat ail NORTH END paeement ool nee, me es | 3 aernaes igree chicken honeet | LAKE PRIVILEGES F “ we e' @ Just off i eS a oa! CABIN NEAR LEW. Four, bedroom home | just ion * ot oe will vamace plot | COMPLETE PRICE INCLUDING garden, a“ Booty Ladirerreyent beat ee pee ee J. A. aylor iston. 46343 after 5 with Le . \ J ROOM. SUITABLE FOR LIORT |, RESERVATIONS NOW. full baths suitable for two as as Term iXtE HWY CORNER rage. Asking 411.008 cos % | se0 On a ave sexeeping. | uffner. MCleen. moderu. cabins. ac ot vices to echevls and | ROUND »LARE FRONT. |‘ s Low - 220 ft. frontage on Dixie, gs ft. | :.500 down EA LToR- INSURA one DOuS AND BATH FOR LADY ke, $40 per week. R and EK bus line Let vour upstairs ear cound on good gravel road Old Nome. “vicrntry UNION LAED ee soap A 3 Sapored, Also > reome and bath aes ashes. tached cede son ngepiace, et $65 . 96.000. 1 000 down ey | Nea: and clean 2 bedroom home. ADAMS RD : rage. ADAMS ; Employed couple. AduitsApply | MODERN FURNISHED | LARS eee with terms shown anytime. Do d L der | 7.500 with best of terms. PER MONTH rothy oi er Lavender | ACRE oo _ Wilms &. _ $400 for season. 1. AUBURN HEIGHTS LOk reom ranch house. Bh spmypind } ROOMS AND BATH. PRIVATE d rm a is 3 j140 Hur |r OR COLORED ” entrance, ‘west iets, | ON BRAUTIECL Terence cabin, | tRe ance comer =| Russell Young >on TERA BME, ogg |__ Pe 2ati) “or EMT 339m | "Etowiitat fe” room trick ome | $08 aan =a mae ed, 812.980, ) ROOMS. PARTIALLY FUR-| furnished. good beach. steeps 6. lot just 2 blocks off Auburn NEW SHOPPING, CENTER \ phiciet, Plight ras edad FRONT nished. Private bath. Adults, day! 45 @ week FE 20731 Cee NEAR SCHOOLS Sy apeeeleetne eee eee , LA At eer ere, ne ee eee ct 401 N.| EWE LAKF FURN. 2 BEDROOM ment, ofl furnace and Oven Eves tl © Sun. FE 40612. , OTEK ES |. _ Oran] aa ra -_ clean and quiet. apt. Adults 490 season or veariv bath An unusual value at ee eT ae NISHED ees nice ~~ R COLORED WAT Ks, I a we Paddock. rates, Has everything, F< 23-8662. only $6500 with $500.00 Dn. A living room, dinin reom. ‘ Definttely the best buy tn town. wd ROOMS. CLEAN, MODERN. | GNION LAKE APART- bent a eh, Sn: | 2328 MIDDLEBELT RD. oo eee reem | freee Cesement, PRIVILEGES ; potted agparhnm apo oo peed ment, season or year — to OXFORD AREA ment. 1 car arage nicely NEAR ORCHARD LAKE- RD. . gaa beat. (éenhte {rooms foment re = Soe, Nosafsi img couple only. OR sete This, 3 ome lo- landscaped. ho down. 5 FOR BETTER HOMES ing ts believing. i wih eatee $2.000 | 812,300 ge tree WALLED LAKE LAKEFR: Ke wile spope pg ew og NEAR DRAYTON PLAINS down, uy 60 R A | Bedrooms Wee Mo. Seesca. 055 cide viene casmce: Lire with 3 bedrooms, «beautiful Organization Inc. “That nice tie fom medern hom WE BUY LAND conTha Pp : ‘BEDR MS 4o . H i nice 4'9 room m me ay bed m wn TERY nic 7 mo =D a take Brive ==: ‘Eitehen cupboards ‘oll heat bethroom, 0 bitches thet is = SAS 4.619 ! You hare bern Joking for Good | . ors Sa tietee trom eme anes : ‘ = w wal : | : > - Rec an arage. West side. - gar’ me. | ora’ cosmes. ee ‘mune. trede for 3 3 bedrooms home beautiful living oom with fire: one era : er vores on black ton street OES) ao AS LAK 2800 . after ace, dining 5 tach ROOM MODER: owner moving and w sacrifice | Open ¢ ROOMS. UTILITIES Fur- | _5 an 2 Py car uigereee See it today ess Lete Oren" en : Point for $8950 with wonderful terms. | 13 W Huron 8t —s- Ph_ ‘FE _5-8183 aved street, @ rooms, eedar_ nished. share the beth $70 Adults. 7 Edw. M. Stout,: Realtor $23 down. Purniture end business Evenings after 6. call Mr.*Diller’ OWNER. 4 ROOMS MODERN. shakes ‘2 cay garage, lovely oR ' For Rent Rooms _37 3 Evep ti 8 9 THERE ARE SEVERAL ER | overated from Ci pearrory My | FE 56787. basement. ‘2 acre, Auburn, ‘mall home. dows. 6% ments TROOMS AND BATH, BASEMENT. ee at eee oar ao TT N. Saginaw St. FE 6-816 show oe ins Y | 3.2883 oneer Chae Heights, PE 3-0678. iN- looking it. A ta. FE 5-1823. oKout 5 | é i : ° ,. _ Country ‘Club Estates over . ae 4 = | Leas FRONT a Oy IVATE BROKERS & BUILD BUILD NOW necting reuters ipa erg NORTH END m5 Baldwin / ieatete west NEW. MODERN 3 ROOM PRI rch, garage. ERATE a brifk ranch home fac- | 3111 Orenard ake Rd. Keego Har-| In our well restricted Waterford | $3 "Ncdroom t ~ 1 | Good location north of- Fisher's Cooperative’ Ree “Extate Exchange vate entrance. 2 adults. = “h aoe era ing Stiver Lake. Lake privileges. | ~ por, #1131 or $0045. | Hille Estates Estimates’ freely | 2,,Dedroom brick. only year = soe tne A references. FE 2-5003 IN CLEAN © SLEEPING Large living ‘ given from our pisns or ¥ _ old, out of.this world. seeing ts; © RS i ial CEMENT BLOCK BARN AND TWo er Sat. and Sun Croom. Men only. 46 Mechanic... Pull-dining - h doors to | 3Y When. HU °ON - GARDENS and F Yours: |” pelieving shown by appointment | fot oo pe ay pepee| bedroofm basement home with ARC PTs. LARGE CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM. tio, 2 large bedrooms, ceramic | Furn pe leaved lot, Hit: ERBERT C. DAVIS paid - eer ree bec ot r furnace Large 2 car earace bath, ‘on 2 fenced acres. Reason- 3 rooms, and beth 3 childrig | Gentleman onls, Near Pontiac | Tie e3, fled, ‘has gartuce die nicely “ndseaped. Ca Defer 8 $024 ‘Pintle Lake Rd. oP rin Sis nor week. CLsengueee | Ong, Goes Darment, NS Rove. permitted Motor. 496 Lowell a Pui by pe 0 week. 812.500, K. G HEMPSTEAD " A¥D Coot aie Pecreation room wi paleo’ = WIL RIFT ] with 600. ar a ras, frontage. | - “ nae : . ‘ r Lf . G. ° ; rE man. FE 30820. 41 Pine St. Garage attached. price $1000. DOWN on ema Ban er ne only 5 miles from Pontiac” Nice PONTIAC REALTY TON CED ARD: ALE 102_E. Buron = 40284 NICE. CLEAN R ROOM 1 FOR WORK-| $20,500. Call OR 3-9815. No real- |‘Located at 566 E. Second 8t.| on Elizabeth mies | #'_ Yoom home with basement 737 Baldwin FE 5-875 | / BASEMENT A ENTLEMAN |._!n¢ girl. Walking. PE_5-7406. tors off Joslyn. § room modern bun-| West of Pont. for si.0ee que? | and oil fymace also extra 4) /3 bedroom bungalow ‘All newly referred. Nice and clean, close| {00M FOR SINGLE "COLORED galow with full basem and PE 43046. ; room modern home that is rented. | 2 BEDROO) y decorated. 2 extra lots “pus, FE z before | man, FF 23180 s se automatic of] heat. — This is too good to last, so be | 3E OM - F HLA. fiminced. Offered for less p.m. or after 4 p.m. Room FOR POR QUIET GENTLEMAN. aN Substantial Home ae $600‘DOWN - first with’ a deposit Full basement. vs heat, screeneg| (Dao. 2s He gf talncement CLEAN, FURNISHED APT. WITH lose in. Call before 3 p.m. or wen $9,000. TERMS _ PHONE FE ¢1157 or FE 71-0006 Ae ot Then, see this new COUNTRY | Living be! Larrhiomy rid aie -wall to Bs Terms. Thig one is really nice. Private entrance and | _*Ytime weekends. FE 4-5040. a on north side 8 bungalow. with lake | with this 6 modern leg rpeting a room p ges Call for appoint ent’ 2 rooms. Private entrance pau =F room 8 home in fine _ privileges auto. oil heat and bot : Bh 68 O00 terms LIA) BREWER | ath. Employed coupie only. FE | ROOM FOR GENTLEMEN “AUTO- hie Sake Oak rs newiy sand- home near Domes! Park-No 4-| 5-3663. matic heat and hot water, Ga-| oa" modern decorations storm |° ons mance) 1yEs | * CAR |. oe Tite “Sore “ ee On de | lake privileges and only ts block NO ARKE _ IDEAL APT. FOR COUPLE, PART.| Tage Svailable Call efter 6:00) cash end screens. Oil heat, auto- window = ate RAWE ay. | from bus and stores owners mow | RTH END FE 4918), ir #7704 ly furn, near lake. OR 3-i706, P 3% re 8. matic hot water. Shown by ap- Ze eda oes! tion." so C ORD > “| ing and will.sacrifice for only 4 bedroofns. full. basemept with or OR 3-7 “s oh @ aves. oe AGENCY 87.500 with 82.597 down | gas heat. sedtBeee yerd/ paved ae THREE SMALL ROOMS "fet water, ps or tingle. bed Near Wisner School mia TWO | orrae omen ts (eae le a $ : Pe } inc oft skes tabe Raise |e Piss BL pies . TaKTe aT € a w. ‘ - y suited for family fust iNSO? J Hulbert ot, | SLEEPING) ROOM ON WEST) Ciowine un! 3 ‘nice BEDROOM A. JOHNSON, Reattor Maes weeome, FE vane. FERRED. PE. +045. pidge Goal eros oy Uae pare ; / SPECIALS! 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. SLYEI'YG POR B living ® : : OFFERS , - FE 4-2533 BARGAIN MUNTERS eo) Bee APT COUPE ae PE et isi dining teom and large Ritch. f Frome heme man In Oxbow * FE 5-5091 fie S- 9471 | ram: ne ne . eo en ae RONT 1344, on me ir, HEA 4 a : ving room. : : — > ’ “pen decorated fura, apts. Season SLEEPING ROOM FOR GENTLE | ANY WATER) Fenced rear Suburban — $00 Down Kitchen. full bath end tility. oti were Ge) See eatin aes ar n Oren a Evenings and Sum but must ‘hooked y i rence. : . vileces. © ’ : P 1 ery err — Rooms With Board g8| ii eltie tue ree Pain| fe Selves Yoarnig, fey | buy st Soca wih “oaiy “WS | Te have slams you may We. we | Coopefative Real Mata waite a om needs to be . . * one . Rent Apt. Unf Unfurnished 34) — PAAR ARAL a erat cmt cane 7 construgtion, modeis to show in| 3 BEDROOM RANCH HOUSE. AT-| {pee Qn" ARAN ERA nnn MAN. DAY WOR CRISTIAN Brick Beauty. lot f at Seve: Ga (WATER FR fait cai 1 a Ca ps once if interest- Witrinan ns phd rood down. 3 APTS. AVAILABLE, home. heer bes bus Sine. S, Jessie. | This lovely home has 20 much to = price. — Lo Lake. Situa’ quiet lecatien house in suburban area (ood gor Jcpoewatgot! nour, § seems ond bam iS ojos | Convalescent Homes 38A) offer, - LARGE rooms. mh plenty of shade. Solid con. 3 BEDROOM BUNOALOW $250 down. 2 room house out 725;7 jeet sromtage aioe we Ses beautifully decorated 3 bedrooms. d true roughout, Subdivision | Situated in town or west eubur. | Auburn lest et ae ae te _ano PE $-1173, : & kitchen you'll love to ni eld Highlan s water. Lake privileges $950 will || ban. cood family home. with px-| s¢ room house with basement. % | Only 1 Dlock from bus line. 3 BEDROOM MODERN APT. IN ag agg rs peed ELDERLY | work in. « mgs ynoeee sorcees room e with carpete handle down payment. Balance |” cellent floor lan full orice v0 boo acre on Hatchery Rd. $1000 down. Rochester, Call r 5, OL 2-6611. : adiotnipg, Gas heat too. Wonder- tae and tr s throughow onth. with $1,000 down 'GFO. MARBEE, Real h ealtor CLEAN AND NEAT. 2 bedrooms i : ENTRANCE H ed R 39| ful corner location. verdant lawn replace, chy oe! ae EAT BREE & GREGG a ros bined kit and bath. Redecorated. PE 2-7114. io Tg ol re a IS EL od ee Pa | WI! Ny & Al onsen ie Ra. Waterford and dining room full bath. wiley . . ‘LOG rage with ov 4 or ate posses- R ROS iT = ‘ ‘ 8 cee, Oe TE vesia eve. “HOTEL ROOSEVELT | "eee PGue® eee ee cet $15,750, terms. Daten babe Vilage ; item cenrtl meee aieee (aneee PE 8218. 10 Bath $15 ee = ~ a ves > INCOME Real Estate 269 Baldwin Ave MIKES DtstRIcT full price. ape | Boome oe Foo- a) ae Seminole Hills Live FE 5-010] PE 28544° FE 2-216! 3 BEDROOM HOME $8950, hl Ri Stove, erator, util- Attrsettre 3 bedroom home heabesmecatic gon — 2 | Co-operative Real Estate Exchatige rood family hom- with “slz| FOR COLORED & rooms, 3 bed- it’ Gee. Saikevis wE| HOTEL AUBURIN’ | HUMPHRIES irecient condition, “Out | garace ang tun porch For owner ye en Ham Street, Saturday or week) 94 auburn Ph. ing featu 3 oom rents for $7. W est Side - ‘garage. Owneyt leavin state street. sidewalks, sewer, water te AND BATH UPPER. after_§:30 p.m. Cooking and ‘igeration unit REALTOR FE 2-0474 down. FE | 4 room bungalow in handy Hufon aud ges e v R AND BATH. : Room by Dav or Week oN. fT a ev +3 arden! Woodsaratrie | Greclace! . BEAUTIFUL BUNGA*OW $1850 down Private entrance. OL 62636 after) Also 1 of enta Sucserative Rect Oven ma Le . ROCHESTER - 9 bedrooms, piaatic tile bath, '% " RECREATION M OR m 6:30. Hl N src. car garage paved drive. At only y LARK igre meres j Rooms. rooms by day or wk. . ; s eect re, | Gh ees idown,, dene milse X. Calli]. Toe ety Ml ee ot Ge ‘attest 62 Ww: . ; Fa _2ems |— Ph. FE 20906 on 3 levels Radiant heat feat” 2 be Now. : #12 290, 40x32) on foundation with | seg, Freer FREE ass ROOMS BATH. Priv TE rooms. bath: \e so 5 v' m with entrance, wtilities furnished. OR | | % Rent Hares he ” gerege. basement Magy pbutit-| I:ake Privileges . place and carpetine master’ bed- Saw ° __ 31972, ™ “SL AVAILABLE . ina. ely On” beautiful Ritehbeth’ Lake room “11x13 ft. beautiful kitchen PEAKE FRONT 3 ROOMS AND TH. LARGE PDS. LA ound bedroom bungalow wit ar! . you have seen this lovely home ment, dil e and led Teation F write the beth, beat furnished. AD r ROR® Sitomatic "hot "water ce- ’ Tom sithestog! "wash bacin and | Srogaber' We “Pieweteeque’ everone: “4 indian Village ramic tile beth. all osk floors. shiver, end t could ing Sylvan Lake Su with site. aluminum . storms and © screens rent for $15 ner week Also at-| hea lawns. trees and shrub- efor be Pres, has Shel = to Built im 1953 it’ = avdandy. Make ‘ached garage and a fenced 602x120 ery. Large 8 room brick F } bedroom. 1% sto : paberel yl sau be ee by your appointment today. | ft lot home only & wears old, wick trepthon room. per: a 8 OFF BALDWIN witn ledwerect firevioco™ bie ce, : Biick R ‘h BUI ) BUNGALOW $1,500 DOWN / my E hte pie 1 ‘bedroom, den and tile tic anc / or smaller down’ -payment ind} with women fr not he addition bath down; 2 bedrooms up _ Ultra modern brick. ranch larger. monthiv_»a-ments. to master bedroom -there are 3 with meny «in fea- built 1 prices $6,850. Modern : two ed. other Wegreems & -enroom. Base. ’ room | oem ment with recreation room tures —, aie oe bo ssed i _TerBluren Center. = \ wanes Ciaed. Soom Ree}, Reiate and Insurance) ee theces) can oats rt fireplace. Gas heat, 2 car esa ss Cee | - 4 Mt. oe e \ Eve. A FE 3156 Sylvan Lake Village | as sak ae 3 meee oy ‘sees Ba | E | Lk/Rd wilege_@ Waite St - oon = rane: Crescent Lk/Rd. rooms, dining ; ry foom, 2 , . To { kitchen and " blocks. 2 car R See this attractive’ three | ce Fr ws |Roy Annett , en remanceOIRIGE see , : pes (eee ee i eee 2 ©. Wuron eral 39-7103 , ¢ Working couple, apse ill ‘Leslie R. i ‘ Realtor Open Evenings and 7 14 with plastered Its, sute- IMMEDIATE .. POSSESSION ee WEST we em, : Vv + YER’ = BUL DING yee ee | FE 44278 “JS 4 —“ “\ NEED A FINANCE-| Reoutihal 3 pedro With unfin- | La 3 poe me en; Paved aa ‘wn Price $4.000,terms. Oak floors. easement, gas m paved street. Priced to sell on lormation call Mrs. 5-8963 with ‘Lesement. new oil nice lots. immediate pos- Price with $1500 2 er weds for Fiint or vicin- . Painted walls, full’ base- | ment, automatic stoker heal, nice i bear schools. Has storm windows and scfeens, garage terms. 102 Pingree St. r¥ OWNER 3 BEDROOM — _— attached Prestered ivan bard’ wake orivileges. ow dow pov mend OR 3-2802 or 2-155" 1 apart lee Own an rooms” and om ‘oaths Ps nN Ra signs Wotears eo Watt, ‘Manuel & Snyder 298 8S. Woodward. Birm MI_4-6300 mile. onta genre -lor —_ SaM WARWICK HAS 4 zn OLD Warwick, rooms, “replace eon =e bee arene a: 5 Saco = Baan 100x173 let. On 500, $4,900 down. OR 3-0051. bath Rad. $7, MUST BE SOLD os 348 Gakiand Ave FE 50441 Co-operative | Real Estate Exchance Five room and —, oes reem — on ais io tors © 30013 after 6 I AKE pidteicr A very well located 4 bedroom out. 000 down or will trade for smaller home that is free and clear. JIM WRIGHT, Realtor BY < ‘bedroom near Cooley Lk Newly docovased heated garage. Lar fi ard. No. 22. — Press. $450 DOWN Large well built 2 ——— shell, with basement. on to WW acres | BOAT ENTHUSIAST rge fenced | ya Over 200 foot of water front- Em 3-0004 eit Macesay) tans Srank: M8 og Pe in baron beau- LOW ti sca"? Z ° can find plenty of time to +~ DOWN PAYMENT y. : ‘Home has 2 laree bedrms., eee ? —— Home. Laree. e vane room, ment. $6050. Price. Terms. with natur. of} te heat. wd soft. euler. and. extr ‘Taree, ul J.R.HILTZ FE 5-6181 ¥ iv cin iw han iret REAI ESTATE a 9 boards. This e is an ex- —— Sommers YOUR ME cellent and you . ee ON PONY spar heave 0 dav- sen v wt 21.808 with AWE DRIVE aaa to @ morteace. F.'C. Wood Co,| = matic off heat. oak. ficors. screened porch and two car warace 7 Priced at ‘only 50,100, wh. 8 vet cont down to Ot. finest bo aes in lovely _— Laree lot R. J. VALUET, Realtor 345 Oakland A * PE 5-060 ‘Oeagereirs ‘Real Estate Service tp excellent condi- bed me has m . tah —* . furnace, po reh, ar Pomal fr. idee” euitable for chicken house or work shop. Large hi eli-landseaped Furniture if Gesited, Immediate possession. $1500 DOWN for this reomy 4 j bedrm. home fear ra al ~ tiae’s east side. IM be full i basement with gas fom ‘Idea! fer ineome property. Also for business desired. Only $9 500. Call tonight to this new home 2 bed- rms livjng rm. with 3 large window walls, moderns kitéhen. fult tiled beth... pul heat MOVE RIGHT IN north-suburban 2a ft attached car port’ *y acre let. See this @ith 62.500 down. CHE ig ee HILLS. West subpr an bbedrm. home all on 1 ronal in ‘SL. T bath hower modern kitchen. full asement, ga, heat. A amas oe coca: © > Lear ga - loca! WEST pbco gy AI ph gee Al en 1 fir. = tai. new in 2 ft ae r ™ cupboards ot! — dcar . Over _ acre i with $2,500 down. sed WM, A. KENNEDY FLOYD KENT, Realtor 24W Lawrence FE 54-6166 open Next to Consumers Power 1 bd smal! house! ‘Only 1 bedroom, . large kitchen. itv room, utili room & bath. 2 lai “ 7. frontage each Only down os _ this @ year oid home. ROGER B. HENRY, Ine. S31 Main. | OL 16171 OL 19111 ‘CHARLES MERE? Tie HOME You wae, beak ill esagi A | ‘ests side apd out. $16,150 “an s1.000 PHA inc down. costs Where can you beat HERE'S A 2 — ee 4 bath. Attractive home for ie ‘8 with #1.800>, ¢own. . SERE's A BIGG: HOME room jot tats Pri - oe jot 161x Priced” low at $13,750, Tt HERE: 8 ULTIMA VING have some cash an en, if x, 3 car ga greenhouse, ‘ones 500. FE 4-0521 Sale ho: FE = bane : * Pia & 448482 1717 8. Telegraph Rd. Open Eves. egerstive — Estate Exchange: Oe i kd O ss) HAPPINESS You R FAMILY plan. oif heat, eo o atom water heater, storm Pocmalonr of Syst» sale, Shas, sir $1,278 OU WON'T BEAT IT. CHILD'S PARADISE arpeted - Sega 29-20 Ss at hese, te Meat 19 5 ie atten : a = space. enc’ enced . $3 oil ibeet storms end screens, Offered vit 12, a tas down. GOOD VALUE — ‘© Buy—To Sell~To Trade you BUY IT—WE’LL INSURE Ir MAHAN weary ee REALTORS Open Eves. ‘til 8: Sun. eerie - Real Estate = Huren + NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH = POST GILES ARE YOU A ” B. D. CHARLES, Realtor . WILL ENJOY THIS West side with priv: on Cres cent- Lake in a bea ‘a of evergreens, shade and b 6 room and bath-one floor = aa > ls ° f } THE ‘PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, J JUNE 8, 1955 Fe Sa fe L Pr Pair , : : ease pe 4 ‘eda by Hershberger Business Business Opportunities 51 51| Mortgage Loans 54 Household Goods 57 See Household | Goods 57 on = ¥ > nore foxes ~~ pe _ on zee Take, — . ; __ LOW INTEREST RARLy anwar MAPLE CUP. | - WAYNE GABERT rv - A Partrid e Cytinaes tents -— ottoman, tis, “barrel, Vack chal, APPLIANCE'SPECIALS : airy New subdivision, $f" sink “single drain boord. 66. Ew SAMPLES brs em beach : | G. PET bathtu ‘and 158.88 Bendix dryer . 138 way 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEB = N —— a = > S| 9180.95 Nor Va. g24, terms. 1310 Ponting en's fahing waders latee 6 Maytag auto. wa ae ‘A &2131 or MAY. - Phone or size No. 10 $8. A aw oe "95 Kelvinator ; : ; sees ROUND LAKE TODAYS SERCISS aps 55 ‘tis. con] chute door, #1. 4401 $aenss GB glee. venge ise 2 ederim | i case) cn tee | ‘ za | TOP NOTCH RESTAURANT tn | ~ i of ‘Auburn $509.05 Bendix gas dryer... $186 — Teermosns contestiod off tar. a> ; Pontiac grossing over $82.000 per MOVING NORTH, MUST SACRI- an | 08239,50 Kel 30 in range 8177 = nace, --steiniess steel sink with . BEG/N 7 | vr Seats $2, Lone lease. $10.800 | fice 9, Poodle ‘a rare show | ZLECTRIC R IGQERATOR IN any others : ' ” 3 lake bes Pre [eomniagear gooey | Ss , aN | full price? fen tant" uipment. 28 gal. —_ . Galy 615. FE Terms, Seve up to: 25 per cent on Par tridg © | nos esetices socry ff TONIGHT 4 ie anice,2 bar oxs srarson | tated Sp wader Ses o | PUOURAINE, ECRSEIG 900. R. Ste g_oape " Realty FE -6-3614.4 gas. $33.00 on - terms. eu | Ne rs Wb CON. tay “telee Ry Se 5 WHITER WASH 13 THE “BIRD” TO SEE Forest Lake Shores HOTEL COFFERS SHOP in 200| farm. or good ‘wcuse wan sere | ot: Magic Seal pressure cooker.) BRIGHTER FIXTURES CASS LAKE FRONT | Post rence hogs?’ ‘nedsoms- Ri ‘prices betel Seats @ $2:000 | eae 7s see Fon —asop—conot| LOVLIER HAIR Com: remodeled 1 room| Den. # tile bats finished rec- weed ease, 09 AW TENT. | TOR Stes Mange. double bed L lak home, Large reation room Extras, 1383 Club BUSY SMALL TOWN TAVERN + gwap for $75 or 13 | coll springs, mattress. Duo-Therm SOFTER SKIN valor io Sein wane picture | Dr. FE S196 =—— Be tall Gene” buen MY" saan. ¢ | @il burner, 3 50 gallon ol! drums | we ¢ you how it’s possible BaLst erin Se concen . Hive terme NN =| Su cepper tubing.” gecastongl | “aad halo yaar, mama Sy . ‘excell saney eects | | AKE FRONTAGE ONLY AAA NEW HOME FOR CAR| Sates Gres ater 2 23 oer pres information 00 ob- ‘ : TAURANT in ares wn payment on home GALS GUARANTERD bge WEST SIDE fishing. lake and. oo main, foad’ ENS | Year tts rc coe mais, ‘hichwar, | {0,82 or never qulomobile. This | WifSger washers .----. 4308® up a ROME ELECTRIC | Convenient location Just off Huron | fedvm "heme full bath apd t possible. Livin bungalow. have you. Clark | Spinner washers ...... soe.88 up severe at. Webs’ ath (sed seer oS = - er; 3 acuum cleaners $ 1.95 EAR OLD NORGE ‘ene cE re a = ee te retromee = car TO AS a See eee ae "Eatin 9 errata #. en Serms. | € ALL now ON THESE “ BOO ACUUM NEW pian, excellent co jon. co a) . > = . binati adi nd WARD E. ARTRIDGE pLOVD KENT, Realtor | ASO Ma Y"oritee choo | Swar OORO IML FOFTAC FOR | mete: "Se" arrears oar | giach eho" raatonane. otter re REALTOR FE 2-8316 é t Lawrence > Ae open eve | THROUGHOUT MICHIGAN | TkaOE YOUR LAND CONT denr _ used. 30401 43 W. Hurea 8. Oven Eve'Tto9 ‘Neat to Consumers Power - feraimare. epptiausce or aane tor |OME, Gate wee For Sale , Miscellaneous 00 - eaTRIGED Ca FRONT | | WARD E, PARTRIDGE, | eew ar. aseu food thermostat. side light fature, pd velo sepia mee eee -REALTOR, FE 2-8316 | oe Telegreps — and tank. Rater ye a \IR COMPRESSORS AND JACK = ates 9:8 of reek | © W_ tures 8. ‘Oven Eve. 110 9 | Sq ELECTRIC STOVE EXCEL satiate bee : saws, floor sanders, Tolar mow: ends. it TO BUY, TO s£LL SELL - REALTOR lent Wi} swan for AS i w saws, s owe ' ; - REA L condition. away bed and i. Chronie ers. Also conerete broken by job. KNUDSEN SILVER ia AND PINE ae “T thought we might Gal welll coal inlay pices Wie wt D’ re stove similar uf model. | dinette set ete, PE 5-2765. CONE’S RENTAL . ior ron PTOuA WASH Bald 3-007] Lake Front can tinea Este, eral oan | See Seer anes | Ma PSE GEER | Baty ol Fated | Sears att MILL LAKE ent. 5 3-7013. . ances at wholesale to all. Year round home on Pas ge oot os —s death, Be = os For Sale Lets _sedan dettvery, PE 3-2175. TRADE 1937 FORD aN LS IND PA GENERAL a coe roome, living room wie, fire. move im, Can deliver in 3 days. | ann o ei Rent-Lease Bus Prop 494 Sate Land Contracts 52 Lepr ~T outboard motor. at Jack's. 143 N. Perry, near mee Ky e and large basement with Suitable for young — House | cae en wterr | ce tara : aye mB ae side entrance. Gas heat 2| and extre lot a! viowed $6000. LAND | SUITABLE FOR SUBDI-| COMMERCIAL BUILDING. 15,000 TRADE EQUITY IN 100) CHEV 10 OOVER APARTMENT STZ | ag ing car garage. Good value at $14- Down vayment $1,000. balance i Lots for immediate buiid- | sq. feet. Suitable auto sales. re- | ‘ Pe tens. 2 dr. for clean — Ford.| washin dit ate _31308 wet ies cae 000 460 per month tncluding interest | ing “aties tor multiple commercia! | tail or wholesale store. ware-— CONTRACT BALANCE OF $5.950 van Secutfice for $60. Call after 4, OR | AIR COMPRESSORS MIXERS ; at 6 per cent Lake privileges. | ‘%27 idustrial use house. "parking lét. Downtown.) 8785 ¢ at $58.50 ver month Your ur awa GARDEN AID TRAC. | _}-0430. al trowel. 62 Montcalm. FE Wm. H. Knud Contents ot house all furniture. Inquire 204s Auburn PE ¢053¢ Cost 94.760 Located tp good west with 23 tn m aus sen tage curtains otc $780 cash ; AN NATIONAL CASH REGISTER SET pbareer: yecesion Boe 3 bedroom | Cy in sickle bar ea ase ne wey fee Pacelieet conaton 0, JACKSON'S RENTAL _& EQUIP, {f vou Nave thig amount suitable ; for ‘< ‘a asement | ‘sad eiihy worth $068 to | ended. TD < sig Pontiac. late Bank Bicr iG RENE 238) ORCHARD LAKE R iio o Robern aati ee r good Mi + AT BIG SAV INGS — Pune ease tn Eve 251% ret jeties out. Boraein veg ArMippiemetr | Saige Meare ca C. Wood Co. «ee CANOE EMILCS REPRIOETATOR | gerd wait oe umber 24 i rf Hw. ee "E 5-0418 eer | c axu6 - 2x6 - 2210 Lt H. BROWN, Agee Templeton WHY Te RE NT FOR : oe LOCATION, CORMER CAs corer Rulams ene Read & ce "Ee ae = ag Ey gS {IKE NEW IRONRITE CAN BE i erriveds a cer of meee ant 3-4810 LITTLE FARMS Good for any business. FE 5-240. OR 312 Offic ace Cal_PE_2-0635. | _seen_et 08 Porest._ $135. __ fiech aeor 80 Exch A SUMMER COTTAGE tool LULE FARMS |” scone nOOM In BOSY eHOP: | Atet_# call OR 3203, | WILL DO ELECTRICAL wintna |* FTO SkRiat PERFECT Windows made to yout order. ELIZ. LK. STATES when we can offer you a 2| fertile land & convenient loco. | pind c¢gater im town Idea) -for| 2 PER CENT OD elise joes AND | [SB exchange for pickup truck. Lt | os : Rock wool insula’ on Tée-bag. sare 4 Satna Spy, ut oom | Sey Ya roea aa ens | Soi wh me eta Mo | SBR Ste “Fetana | bP tacne eee | at FE ast eee ee | Seg tiving yoom. strue ce with access “A Uitle land & better living.” —— = eacincnaaes __ Fo 3-08) r: : : and p= Seite | ‘and to § of the best fishing lakes in| . 8Tu SORneS oo ARETE | Cell caiow with foot “= ul hing 56 13 : : or : : many meni. with low down pay-| Oakland Councy. About Jo mut TH. BROWN, Realtor | i Fr. STORE ROOM. soo Sh oo On Yan. | FORMAL SIZE 0. 00 EA. Market Lord's Tiras pers lead ee HURON GARDENS | wits it° Sraew 1963_we_Muron_ FE due} Fee oe ane beet RAY O'NEIL, Realt oii, my sees | Somoute jumber es 8 2 Dedrooms. full bath. op 4 gig, °° Parke |, , 19, PERRY PARE. 8 : F E Realtor Girl's or lady’s Weather t Eve, from tty toeeere we SURPLUS LUMBER fig ool mente : car tar ee: EM -s690 Pe csors| paler, gue. & y price esse witn | FOr Sale or xchange | 50 inane Fe is | Vane suit, worn twice, | Used eae sae ; gle oe ere? TES SE ps0. ron * a ed * . shopping, beak ne ® Lake Oakland Front Seer tenn est tao Eyorr? IN wIcR 6 nocM MoD. | 20 LAND CT i PER| Size 7, $10, like new. FE rd’s able a mre LE Say #200. down oo ern home. FE ¢0605, “M a 5-0469 Furniture and Appliances 976 gs. 4. Citatonville R, 8 aterford T 2 : 139 W. Huron +0883 sane ELE, ae! Sere eerie | ERTL”, 1 wom Basinese Opporteniien $1] __ tee zi 2, ee prec raoenergs| a utes See De Bay : at on forced air oft b th, Te 1801. Has tiled bath, tire: 40x}45 fest, $600 taNe. oy CAN FARM PICK UP y _Origsnai Cost, Fate. Celi Ml ¢4273. | "ST electrie stove encetiont com | ~ i heat. new egos . MILE GET CA a-ch tore con storm Soery and screens place. serecand terrace. .rec- AUBURN HTOS. lot sia feet, | route. 33 miles from start to SH QUICKLY | Sate H ation: Must sell. PE.0-0808 after : io a © house. Extra’ large | boat bouse 110 fect ef cana 3 rows ef pisces fala Weil “ss ones | tae ee ae U t 500 See Le ceeeets Gets ®? 57) _1:30 NG OFFER ~ft«. er scaping Mpa ready in Total pric | Seat ee oe Miltmavon $ MONTHOMERY WARD 3 OAT. Berry all vteel fully gu , pty — a Se 2 Fe PE nnn = ee $830 down, $10.00 4 oe SS sea soe 4 ACTION SALE oe lal anmaad Nosed] 8 ~G ompe o 4 NORTH SIDE rayton Mighiands, 3 lot toon | Brokers with tandem ie = hy =F ego mutes. Te x12 LINO RU ri Baber Fe 30203 : 190 4, $l ; ee = BERRY DOOR SALES : Pisaroome rooms Nandeood fh ig — 9 Troy Twp. @. é tote idea! tor vune-| trucks wanted for haul- 6 ft, Linoleum = eS oar} F ‘ oll fu: full bes , $1500 cash we R . Saat Reg $4.95 Paint. gal. | $1.98 ANCHOR FEN ~ . ~ Te complete urease, oa .| ing Ready-Mix concrete. ae LANE ros Tus” 2; le (% Fr re dows FHA 4. eat home with 2 lols. Pull price CLARK REAL ESTATE A good offer for anyone 8 Ft. Lincleums 60 per cent off | VINYL INLAID ULE O PRICE SRE boris res” ven REA! re aL K. L. Templeton, Realtor | #7 w. ely Sas 5 re BIR, Wvesings “b Ounaays willing to work. . FE LOAN CO Harold's Paint & Lino. | SYERs,_101_w. HURON, FE Artists’ supplies, hobby 2330 Orchard Lake Rd. PE Gag OT SMe eT os VER FE +4813) 2.3091, ask for } E ~ SWOWSER OP nnn RADIGA sig Fe OE ; ania Aer tito ane, “cl OR Se8 | Co-operative Real Estate Bithange | Five. Late tron -ldonaee gio 008 | See eee |" and_ponabies, PE b4t00, Crass Sia ap boOE cme. | TpPles—check our Clas, eee Tae anaemia Ss | gon per Math | FE, 2-9206 |*eahs Seren ee OE | cme reel rote ae_vg| Sunnie’ Netw : . round home, Modern con- | CALL Li $043 ROYAL OAK | Here , ter teras, FEM take beat tiota | pie ~¢s Ma; | Supplies” No. 24A. rate " ety fu rnished ROYAL O/ ee 2 se com! The 202 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDO by ter da gts sofa bed. Cie 36, le bedroom furniture $100. MI beach. Owner. WEbster 5-071 U.S bunt . complete 4848. : - For Sale Acreage 47 Below ren camlacement cost. Lon Bo Holly word bed frames. 8693. | GAPLE DROP LEAP DINING | APARTMENT SIZE GAS RANGE. ase at $2235 per month are ciatr $17.50. nev roor table condition, $35. tour burner $129.50 valasl 168 98. Williams Lake ava pe ne Sear ae ce tnven- = on I ae — FE 23-0505. > ee eats a ratched Alse several : Aha sige aos mf ews Late n Only ‘e mile off | ‘ade. ’ . a 95 up, lounge chair, | NEW WASHER. SCRATCHED, 088. | Gas at iaeney vel eee FOR Feady to ellent — . tonal rocker Chine cabinet, gan Plucrese: et chased, iors tsa" mae | Eres wasn? IA. Tarlor. Village T ) Ou Gon aah’ ® oe castenet bias. “ = ard Lake Ave ae THE “MACEDAY” r with small down| Realtor. PE on age avern Extra Fast + $24.50, apt. Sova, $9.30, | OLDER TYPE GAs STOVE. GOOD | SATHROOM FIXTURES YOUNOS\ is ACRES 6 ROOM NEAR CLIF- main busy to desks. chests, furnt- | cond, Double kitchen sink. FE Purnaces; ofl, . 3 BEDROOM Van Norman Lake, | _Suchy Realty FE tone) "= Bed, recogutsend: Locsy ‘cua get : rey i>) we OM LATAWAY | CooteroEP, ees ae aoe: = Excellent family home fust a a. MORTOSON Cours New 3 bedroom pbuncalow ‘with Suehy_Re ay $s per month and is now gross Ser V 1ce PLAN, VeRO Living Som hardware, eae mane off Huron my Ld Perimeter under floor beating. abe qetviecses seeel a "Ea 29 OR MORE oem 430,000 per’ year. "12.008 You can berrew PREE ARASH D petivany| leech wih tafer mate epvers. In| soil f range rom. Sue y pine kitchen cabinete with | Dest file path and laree ward- on signature car furniture PLAY LAKE (issiage aint wg OE rene Wecavare peel ogee “Sifoee Se ready to ans made without endorsers for | WE BUY SRL AND EXC EXCHANGE | cee and send $10: ne st ecttys Vy Bete Perry yes nd bath up. 8 aS ant ~wgp 2 bv toy nove with 62.600 - ACRES STATE-WIDE ony worthwntio perpess. Up to 59 2 ORCHARD LAKE AVE die, $5. FE $1054 ee tte with $3.08 aowe.” co rodRas ne Sn dachas an wun weg ie a NEAR “San’™ | USED Tv sere tees UP CLOSING OUT see PR HOUSEHOLD |aqece oun cermer| ““ARTEOR rye ei occ Ca are - w' et er 6 p.m. : : (-OaT MOTOR AND MARINE x1 DAVENPORT. 1 CHAIN. FE 2 NMOLEUM | .oesee- ire Pevyazatemeacrest | lien Soest alt | "acne ie apoce on: | Seeman Na taee| «= FINANCE, |Siantso8t 1 Siac ve rane. Or Somer | SAT THTS 357 Se up. na qming. [LA S m paved Brett acre | located onthe main art of the chard. Near Ortonville. By owe: ant ee coarere, ME 2 ™ - anes RADIO. (#7, REFRIGERATOR. #0 ati 2s S. Saginaw : room . St B+ ke and ! A w th Pont: a (with American steel cab- Pot. AY LAKES. | Cuiy Sites with el te dows.” | @ ACRES ON WALTON pivn. | Phone oa Peron or, OR 3-170, : Oven Eves 0 — wo fn store in- — for cash to $500 on your L AW AGnER 60. Arnason Plumbing Se i _ oe = LAKE COTTAGE | Sale Suburban Prop. 458A) Edw, M. Stout Realtor down: Stock tt inventory. "| 8 reparment, plan sued to your | (FE e-cai "ne Wood, Coal & Fuel 67 Clean dry kindling wood, cash and carry. Pontiac tiae Rd. _Plants, Trees, | Shrubs 68 ma | st | fieteln 3 vrs. a heory liken. TOP Plymouth °82, 3 ar, Plymouth 3. ¢ ar. Ford "80. 6 16, 20 Fr. boat trailer, Gore THE Oo ANDIN 8. TELEGRAPH. oes. Page home buy the vear. | Cir’ ae Wor 1 Wheel Mt ' 8. “MOBILE APARTMENTS GOTGHALK — Auctioneer - . Phone HOWELL, 1010. Sn Gee = AUCTION EVERY WEDNESDAY _hbam, after 4 o'clock. Rochester. et St" T*™: |For Sale Motorcyctes 83 PUBLIC AUCTION SALE Sat: June 1 at 1 p.m. lockted 401 | 1949 HARLEY DAVIDSQN MO- E. Laos J Bt., Milford, to settle toreycle, 6] ONV, extra con- the estate we will sell al] furni-| dition, call after 6 p.m. rE ture, rugs, linen, dishes and pace Aine ee 8 Gear and ete | ee ‘ahve eier Fr. car Beautiful home of 7 rooms, mod- ios. See : fo Ws eeepc HARLEY “DAVIDSON Ts VERY eC Columbia. 1947 qa DAVISON MOTOR bike. New saddle . MA 4-2365. FOR PARTS ean SERVICE ON r Ha see Harley Bavidsou Galse Con 372 ®. Sagi- naw, For Sale Bicycles PBPPBPPPP PPL LLLP AA AA = Bo COLUMBIA _BICY- Levon Dixie Bwy., Pontiac, row Boats & Accessories PPL ALUMA-CRAFT BOATS EVINRUDE MOTORS PENN YAN BOATS Michigan propellers,. ali marine ing and Prernishes. ‘ Boo chea RINE: SALES & SERVI > LARRY IEROME Used Truck Headquarters Best Selection of Low Mileage Trucks— All Weight Classes to Fit Your Needs! 1954 STAKES F-600 FORD, 12 FT. F-350 FORD, 9 FT. 1953 STAKES F-600 FORD, 12 FT.» PICKUPS 54 FORD, F-100 '533 FORD F-100 '$33 FORD F-250 SQ FORD F-2 ~ DUMPS_ 1953 FORD F-600 , “These are quality trucks, Quay | is alwsys a sare (LARRY For Sale Used Tracks 90| USED CAR This car i like new. today! $595 1984 Imperial 4 dr. — ing. power brakes, dows and seat. terior trim. beauty! 1980 Hudson 3 ér. $144 CLARKSTON Oper 8 am to 8 pm. WE BUY SELL AND MA 5-6141 | Guaranteed 1983 Chevrolet 4¢r.° tone brown, Bee it 199) Plymouth hard too. 1953 oa, * @e.- ney poe ~ one MOTOR SALES YMOUTH S — 1963 A | G A assume payments. 464 5. ward, Birmingham. Chevrolet 1955 ‘Demonstrators Officials Cars Courtesy Cars Bel Air 4 Door Sedans SPECIAL. . heer Spire geen w 4 dr., paint, white Seal sha 34 Buick Super Hardtop 34 Buick Century Fordor ......-.- ’54 Buick Special Ford), cn) | ’54 Buick Special (udor <...-..-- .’53 Buick Roadmaste 53 Buick Special $2 Buick Fordor Low price of.... 51 Buick Fordor Look at it....<. 30 Buick Hardtop Immaculate ..... plus 30 other fine Bufcks to choose from 30 Orchard FE 2-9101 BUICK Compare the following prices anywhere on this page and you'll plainly see why Oliver Buick is Pontiac’s busiest dealer. $2095 $1995 $1895 Fordor ........ $1495 Todor .....22-+ Si0ve $795 OLIVER BUICK Pontiac Buys lta Butcks wake Ave. r $495 $595 COME IN STOCK M "ou ANYTHIN S Rests sedan .sccessseee a Chevie sedan .. weeereerees oneeeeewes seveneeeeseasre eens S000 Rwe ne ee AND TRY OUR FRESH Bas Pi ati arene eeneserereeee tite |. Hardtop Coupes . re Bas SIXES AND STANDARD TRA * Take Your Don’t Delay — Act Today, HASKINS Chevrolet Oakland erie Soles s Fastest . pom ok AE; Bdge Baer : = ss SEDAN. 6088. 7c Goop RUN- ing condition $80 PE §5070 after isso CHEV DELUXE 6E- N, NO RUST. Compare the following prices anywhere on this. page and you'll plainly see why Oliver Buick is Pontiac’s busiest dealer. ’55 Chevrolet 210 Loaded $4 Chevrolet 2 dr. Low milea eee $1195 ’53 Chevrolet 2 dr. Deluxe model ... ‘$995 52 Cheereet 4dr Very clean eentee 51 Chevrolet 4 = Smart looki .. $395 SO Chevrolet 2 Real sharp vibeoe $245 7 | 49 Chevrolet 4 dr, FE veseceee $1@S pie aren aN Ss "52 Plymouth 2 dr. ~'49 Chey. Panel ,... ‘Matthews- : 0 W. Pine Bt. ee Win “ae | an a - THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY: JUNE ce 1955 CARKNER’S HOUSE OF GOOD USED CARS Birmingham MI 4-3410 H. 1 4 DR. $505, 2 tone blue automaiie trans- oe eld car down end a CH_VROLET i Mile NEW YOREER. YSLER 4 - $10 DN. iy ER, 8. Wood- MOTORS “SCHUTZ Pa woos TT" 48 Buick Conv't. .. *49 Ford 2 dr. 8 ..,..$195 $175 "49 Hudson 4 dr. .,..$145 _'°49 Chey. Conv’t. ....$395 '49 Ford Wen. ......$295 or 450 Buiek 4 dts . +$445 50 Pontiac 4 dr. ....$495 "50. Mercury 2 dr. eee $475 *50 Stude. Conv’t. ...$495 *50 Hudson Sedan ... .$285 *50 Stude. 4 dr. ws eee $295! "48 Chev, _Conv’t,. oon 51 Stude. Sedan ....$495| 131 Plymouth Cpe. .- $45 "51 Kai dr, eeeee *51 Ford Sedan v00e $465 *51 Packard 4 dr. ....$545 *51.Chev. 2d, coeee S475 "$4 Mercury 2 dr. ... $3957, *S2 Henry J. 2 dr. ...$325). 52 Stude. 4 dr. .....$595 . $595 53 Dodge S. Wen. $1095 *53 Chevrolet 4 dr. ..$845 °53 Ford 2 dr. ......$825 'S3 Henry J. 2 dr. .. $475 53 Mercury 2 dr. ..$1195 *S4 Chev. Sta. Wgn. $1545 "S4 Ford 4 dr. .....$1195 "34 Chev. 2 dr. .... TRUCKS "54 Chev. Dump ....$1895 "$4 Ford Pickup ...$1095 *52 Chev. Pickup ....$795 *51 Chev. Pickup ....$695 *54Chev. Panel ...$1095 52 Chev. Panel .....8695 *50 Jeep Panel ......$295 + $265 Hargreaves /*Your Chevrolet Dealer” 211 S. Saginaw St. FE 4-4546 Jacobson’s HUDSON & RAMBLER SALES & SERVICE PE 2-490 rifles, $395. No money down. CARKNER’S HOUSE OF GOOD USED CARS _ Birmingham MI 4-3410 For Sale Used Cho o| For Sale Used Cars le _ Sale Used Cars 91 “For Sale Used- Cars “91! and ~~ Bi Mi FORD 4 DOOR. “and heater wand overdrive, + mileage maker. LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES MY 23-2611 UH - | SJ Ford _sbape Phone _F "im? ford. cl cheap. 34238, Sa “\-tiee $10 DN pam yavense. 1 8 Wood- RADIO Good at Buckhorn is ill 9:00 5 FORDOMAT = oe FE ¢8728_ oe 6, 23-6250. prices page FORD SALE OLIVER BUICK Compare ~ the~ fol lowing _ anywhere on this and. you'll plainly, see why Oliver Buick is! Pontiae’s busiest dealer. | °S3 Ford 2 dr. 1 owner ........ $995 $4 Ford 2 dr. a YOu HAVE é te AND NEED good Pees call PE 46745 of 1 (st - | 1983 FORD |, e950 | | | ./ | FORD. 4 DR, 1983, RADIO AND feoker 4 exceptionally clean. Low —mileage, PE 5-06). ~~ 1954 FORD RANCH WAGONS FORDAMATIC & OVERDRIVE —. 1954 GHEV. 210 2 DOOR $1295 LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer PH OL 41-6711 “POR MORE THAN 30 YEARS A GOOD PLACE TO BUY ‘s1_ HENRY = $295 VERY 60D | condition name your own terms “NORTHWEST CHEVROLET Woovware ai 13 Mile Lincoln 05 ‘$i HENRY J 6 CYLINDER. LIKE | ud good ( “ARKNE yR’S HOUSE Of} Birminghana 32 HENRY J Goer condition do@n an $14 6-31929 __ 19st HENRY J 2 DR $10 DOWN and assume payments 464 §& Wood ward Birmingham _ “TOAST OF NICE LOOKING $350 cash or | nee month M A beauty ...... SI195 *§2 Ford V8 : Fordor Sedan... .$593 . ''53 Ford Coupe A real honey.... . $893 13 210 Or 1989 $1 Ford Sedan A sharpie ....... $395 'SO Ford 2 dr. Going at oeeeenee _ plus Prguerdloa icon Fords *” OLIVER BUICK | chard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 CONVERTIBLE LIKE new. 10 4 dows qeseme y- ments. “Woodward, ‘Bir. $1095! 18 A.M. The Cy Owens Your FORD Dealer E very One In | . FORD Family Is HAPPY... HURRY On A Good A-1 Used Car Al July Prices | During June 100 Used Cars 1955 Chev. Conv., ful red beauti- & white, liké new, fully equipped. Save plen- ty on this one. 1954 Olds 88 2/door. A real sharp low mileage car. 1954 Mercury Sun Valley,, has power brakes, power _Strg.. Merco. trans, R &! PA $195 | |- | 1 | | ' | | THE TOWN’ 7th BIRTHDAY SPECIALS GOOD. USED CARS) MI 4-3410, A agi phi! STATION. WAGON, metal body, 1 owner, % car = the full orice No money down. SCHUT z MOTORS DeSOTO PLYMOUTH DEALER $12 8. Woodward, Birmingham 1992 PLYMOUTH 2 DR. $10 bows ‘ and assume payments. Woodward Birmingham 1953 PLY CONVERT and assume paymts ward. Birmingham _ _ 83. PL mou RADIO AND good pean i $16 «6=DN 8. Wood- heater Ip ver LAKE ORION MOTOR M34 at Buckhorn Lake My 2-2611 tll 800 pm ‘99. P) YMOUTH .555-THIS CAR ts a steal for this orice. Fully | - equip bre ee HWESsT CHEVROLET Woodward «at 13 Mile Lincoln _5-1100 1583 PLYMOUTH CLUR COUPE. down and assume payments. a 8 "Woodward. Birmingham. New Credit Plan AAVE YOU SEEN TURNED EK! Y PAYMENTS LITTLE a8 65 No Co-Signers! OF a8 Immediate Delivery! Deal Direct! | -No Finance Co.! | Buy Here—Pay Here | Y’ALL COME | | Compare to 195 4 Beem ys alltypes. + , SAGINAW BF s low as 814 5 “NATIONAL | spociox | 1953 Mercury MOTOR SALES low €s .-...-.. 1095) 1952 Mercurys, | stat A coer: 705 | SPU LNCoTA SEDAN. ma | 1951 Mercurys, oe ee nee oe ee start at .. EG Meri Gayo 1950 Mercurys, oe Cincom _ $1100 start at ....... 205 | KELLER - KOCH Special Deals and Term On All Used Mercurys This Week CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY SALES, INC 47 W Pike at Cass FE ¢3985 Huron Motor Sales Ye 4 or" CATR HoDRE ¢ CARS. "$3 ChrySler 4 dr... .$£395 | ~ OTOR pea $3 Packard 4 dr.....$l 295) i? JEEP 69 cu. Pr amr com- | '53 Pontiac 4 Ao. $1295 presege laviatet fF tiie | °S3 Ford Rch. Wen. $1295 1982 MERC 2 DR si0 DN AND | '53 Stud. Regal Cpe. $1095 _ ward. Birml chem | 53 Ford 2 dr... wooo S895 isi a1 MERCUR Sh ecceerne sae | 53 Plymouth 2 dr... .$895 + EM 33044" ae aiter "i. "32 Buick Super ....$1195!. DECOY Seven | °52 Olds 88 4 dr.... $1195 ‘Take e MOTOR SALES '$2 Mercury H'dtop $1195 : °52 Ford Victoria .. .$1095 MY 9-261 ™. « pn tutte, 52 Ford Rch. Wen. $1095 sei aT E 16a. '5S2Chrysler 4 dr.....$995| % Radio. Heater Extras. Good coo: | °S2 Plymouth Wen... .$895 sate Nee col Mate Rae | plymouth H'dtop $793 And . assume Lay es ent “4 8. Moodwerd, Birmingham. H, almost new. | ~ Guaranteed 1954 Ford Conv., béautiful SHARP USED CARS witte exterior, trim in- ADD Mevee ene eee “side red & white, RAH, | Glenn S , 0/D. MOTOR SALES 1955 Plymouth Savoy 4 ror ieee a eats door sedan, RAIL. Save; parte, San ener Fe setsb on this car. ifs2 NASH 2 2 DR ge ON AND | assume paymts Woodward, 1934 Ford Victoria. .\ one! et Me ai ee GOOD TRANS- Owner has Ford-© trans, —oreees Gost aor Oe ee on thi 1952. Pr luxe 4 1952 St R&H, only 1950 F radio drive. w /walls, 1949 Chrysler dan, radio and heater, R&H., $ one. ontiac Chieftain De door sedan, Ilydra, w/walls, radio & heater, $895 udebaker Hardtop, O/D. A datidy ou $495 ord 8 cyl. 2 door.,, & heater and over- $295 4 oda af - A: good oné. $195 STATION WAGONS 1953 Ford, radio & heater. 1952 Ford, radio & heater! -1950 Ford, radio & heater. isa ‘Orps se 2 Cae, fio Y Bows Several Transportation Specials | From $50 up J Big Lots 150 809 S. Woodward Ave. FE 4-7; S. Sachaw St. FE 5-4101 =—OPEN— ” "TIL 9 P.M. Hurry! er damaged MA 6-2577 after 6 PM | 1983 NASH RAMBLER STATION _for Tow iE Wa Excellent condition reequity OR 34141 RIO- load- price NASH 1983 CONV, COUPE, 0 tna] finish, spotiess interior, ed with extras, $806 full Just your car down Haskins Chev. DIXIE e HWY. at Mis | MAple 8-807! $1 NASH SEDAN #6444 FULLY uarantee and fully equipped. ame your owF «m- . NORTHWES. CHEVROLET Woodward at 1) Mile Lincom 5-1100__ ‘$2 NASH RAMBLER STATION wagon ete heater and over- | 1 drive, FE 4 oie ¢. 2062 2 after Le 83. OLDS HOLIDAY 91784 atic radio heater, pow- ring power brakes, two en er st ne paint white wall tires, Like | “NORTHWES} CHEVROLET Woodward et 13 Mil __Lincoin 54-1100 : hte ‘so OL Ds 6 ROL DAY COUPE. beautiful condition. ail power equipment Will take older car in trade and vou assume payments Or $1,005 2875 Newberry Rd. oft _Ctintonvitie Ra ‘p82 OLDS a8 DR $10 D! Ge AND assume paymts. 464 Wood- ward, Birmingham assume paym “4 _ Woodward, ra. Birmingbass, DR. ‘ul hor rith ateh Suge co Ad m pases. | ‘One owner cars. $1. SGHUTZ MOTORS BE eae pe eae HELP! MUST MAKE ROOM Plymoute ‘82 Owb coune ...,.. 9008 Willys 63.9 Gr ...ssceeeseees. 0008 Cher. Badr ...... seeeser ss S008 Plymouth ‘3, hardtoe .1..0.... 878 Chrvste. "9 4 Gr. ceseeeee.. O08 Stodebaker ‘8! coune .......,. 0608 ‘ 1948 Hudson eeeeeeee 1948 Dodge 4 dr,.... .$195/ ® 1948 Chevrolt ...... $150): ‘1951 Bui NO_IF’S NO AND'S ~ NO BUT’S| Straight from the shoulder deal- ings with TRUE facts backed up by our reputation of fair dealing See these worthy buys today, end be assured of getting a good deal. $4 Chrys. N. Yorker $2195 | 54 Buick Sup. 4 dr. $2095) 84 Ford Cres. 8 4 dr. $1545! ’S4 Ford 8 2 dr. .... $1295 "51 Merc. Clb. Cpe... ’51 Chrysler 4 dr.... .$795 51 Pontiac Wen. .... 51 Chrys. Hardtop. . .$895 51 Plymouth 4 dr... .$595 51 Chevrolet 4dr... .$545 Keoqe ! are fist a few of or quality cars which are ‘all re- conditioneqd and carry our reli able guarantee = may TERMS -24 MONTHS DEAL oe ——— KELLER KOCH CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH —— BIRMINGHAM : reg! o4585 4108 N. Woodward at oe ile Rd. One Mile South of Birmingham WANT TO STRETCH THAT DOL- AR ON YOUR NEXT USED EAR? fone You pol 80. SEE 30B F $795 YOUR_ LINCOLN RCURY DEALER AT 850 8 WOODWARD _Rirmingham LOOKING For That 2nd Car? © for a ’ Low Down Payment? at These, Many of These Cars Are One Owners 1950 Chevrolet P.G.. .$395 1950 Dodge 4 dr... .. .$395 1950 Dodge 2 dr...... $295 1950 Plymouth 4 dr.. .$395 1950 Plymouth 2 di.. .$250 1951 Nash 4 dr.......$495 1949 Plymouth 4'dr.. .$195 1950 Pontiac 2 dr.... a 1946 4 dr. eaeee .$95 4idf. «00. .$50 Riemen- schneider 232 S. SAGINAW ST. n til 8 pm. FE2-9131 | pow - brakes white walis to, | heater and many other features. LATE 19 AC Rs deluxe Excellent —— Low tone 33 PONTIAC SEDAN Bhs, Side Used Cars ! . Radio "s3 "PLYMOUTH. TIER NEW. Only 10,700. One owner. Must “ancrifies Need money, In storage at 88 W: Mansfield 0 sea San STATION WAGON. Pontiac station wagon, bong let stee 9000 miles. Must sell to Close estate. Can’ be seen any time at) 2790 Syivan Shores Drive. 1953 | adio. heater. Oriainal owner FE "33 PONTIAC SEI sEDAN $305. YOU ft hes it Anv old car 1982 PONTIAC 2 2 DR. $i0 | DOWN Ley des eggy +64 Woodward. ‘Burm gham. 1980 PONTIAC DELUXE 2? DR. BARGAIN, $396 FE 3-7542. PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN 1954 2 tone, womens car 8 000 abate white side wall, hvtra brakes, spot light backup Rents, PL estepoo signa seat covers rE 5-66869 FE 4-197: “) PONTIAC SEDAN 8666 HY. dramatic raw epee Bags old car dowr $28.04 month ‘Est CHEVROLET ard rh a Mile Lincoln 5-1100 PONTIAC 1953 CATALINA HARD- top Ci radio and heater, Hy- ae. - loaded .. wery special at ce just your car dow Haskins Chev. | DIXIE HWY. at M16 MAple 6-807! 1982 PONTIAC CHFT DLX. 8 2 $10 dn and assume pay- 464 8 Woodward, Birminas- S117s Kidramatte radio teeter white wall res ae =. ear down and $33 ® NO" THWEST "CHEVROLET Woodward at 13 Mile Lincoln 5-1100 ror S83 0 DR HYDRAMA- xtras PE 2-1288 after 4, ao PONTIAC SALE OLIVER BUICK the following prices anywhere on this page and you'll plainly see why Oliver Buick is Pontiac’s busiest dealer. 53 Pontiac 4 dr. . Hydramatic .... $1095 52 Pontiac 4 dr. Hydramatic ..... $895 '52 Pontiac 2 dr; Spotless ......- - $895 ’51 Pontiac 2 dr. Check the price. . $545, 30 Pontiac 8 Station Wagon. . .$395 ’47 Pontiac 2 dr. Low price of...... plus 10 other clean Pontiacs to chovse rem OLIVER BUICK © 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 ) Pontiac 6 SEDAN O04 BY. 9066 = HY- Se - wae heater. Any old ear down « ont. NORTHWES? CHE vROLET Woodwar «i 13 “ile LIncetn 5-1100 PONTIAC SEDAN black, white wall tires radio and hvdramatic *5 or anv old CHEVROLET By, —_ WILSON GMC Pontiac's Only Excl usive Truck Sales and Service! | N 1955 GMC Bickup (DEMONSTRATOR) . 1951 Ford § Ton Stake 1951 GMC Pickup © prem 1953. Ford Pickup 1952 GMC Pickup 1954 GMC 161” Wheel- matic Transmission — Excellent Condition Michigan’ S Largest G. M. C. Truck Dealer WILSON G.M.C Ocdkland at Cass Ave. Open Evenings | | FE 2.9203 “FE4-4531 y 1948 GMC ? Ton Stake} 1954 Chevrolet Pickup | base, 8-Speed Hydra- eat HAPPY DAYS ' FEEL FREE TO DEAL NOW > at the => ‘Bright Spot Always 80 Extra Clean Cars At the \ 2 i! Bright Spot JEROME OLDS-CADILLAC -Cass at Orchard Lake | FE 8-0488 PE 8-0488 'S3 Pont. Ch. 8 4 Dr. Dix Heater .....6- $1099 52 Cad. 62) 4 Dr. Hydra. RW 1 $1,899 53 Pont. Ch. 8 Dix. 4 Dr. RB. NLD sees $1,199 53 Dodge Coronet 4 Dr. Heater ..--.--++-+- $999 "53 Chev. Bel Air Cl Cpe. R. & H. Whites ..$1.299 ’S3 Chev. Bel Air 4 Dr. R. & H. Clean ....-- $1,144 '53 Buick Riviera Super Dyna. R. & HI. .. $1,699 52 Pont. Ch. 8 2 Dr. Hydra. R. & H ..--.--- $044 | Less Than Wholesale "0 Ford Dix 8 2 Dr.R All ......--.- ... S344 "30 Olds Super 88 4 Dr tid bee _Ss4 "30 Pont Ch & Dix R & TL Tivdea a a "st Old s 8% Sedan ROA HY Pincha SH 51) Cade‘62)4 Dr R AT Uvdra : 1A) 1 Pont. Ch. 8 Dix. R-& IP Hydra 22...22 507? <1 Chev. Dix. 4 Dr. Sharp RA HP G S699 *S1 Frazer Wagon. Heater, OD ......---- SIO =. Cheapies '$6 Ford 82Dr ...395 “$8 Hudsan Com $195 ‘40 Ford 82 Dr....$95 48 Pont. Conv. , S35 '47 Pont. 8C: Cpe. $195 “48 Chev. A. Sed 2295 47 Pont. 8 Tudor $245 ‘$9 Ford Cl Cpe. $299 '47 Ford 8 C. Cpe. $245 49 Nash OU 2 Dr. $195 48 Buick S 2 Dr $295 °49 Mere. Cl Cpe $293 ese =n ame 7. a MORE and MORE BARGAINS GALORE A-] Buys _Cheapies ‘49 Ford 2 Dr. ...$144 ‘31 Lincoln 4 Dr. $499. *sa Pontiac 2 Dr. $244 VACATION SPECIALS SEE OUR “LIKE NEW" USED CARS 27D 1942 Ford tudor deluxe GOOD "RANSPORT ATION. “$495 "$0 Pontiac 2 dr SMOOTP RUN- NING-SMOOTH LOOFING. 1,495 1982 Pontiac station wWadcon 1 owner. A VERY FINE CAR! _ $1,195 1983 Chevrolet 2 dr. LIKE. NEW! $2,695 1es4 Bute’ Convertible =race BEAUTY $1,895 1954 Ponta. 2 dr rats Sor te COMMUNITY MOTORS | A BARGAIN! 1983 PONTIAC CATALINA. RADIO ang heater 14.000 miles Ver: 7 —o FE 22-7108. 166 PE 5-2125 48 PONTIAC tht ft ae spe tranesm «sion te Baa 3 AKER ‘ar ta a a nice EBAKER new, Fully gave at roast $1000; any “CARKNER'S HOUSE OF _GOOD USED CARS Birmingham _ ba 14- sel car - CARKNER’S HOUSE in | eescaelenienk Ps . | Saat ety eee rE eee ; ea ercr tee o> Pi e he Fs bL LARRY’S AUTO SALES | | 270 W_ Montealm OF GOOD USED CARS|} | ” ays :. Ne 4 i * Z és ee i its 5 % "$1 Chrysler 4 Dr. $499 ~ "50 Hudson 2 Dr. $144 *'50 Ford 2 Dr ....$199 53 Ford 2 Dr. 8 47 Merc. Sed. Cpe. ‘$99 34 Chev. Sta. ' Wagon . ...$1,344 52 Ford 4 Dr. ...$644 ’52 Stude. Hardtop $644 '$1 Ply. Clb. Cpe. $399 $2 Pontiac Dix. » $799 Convertibles 53 Ply. Conv’t. ..$899 '53 Chev. Conv’t. $1,144 *53 Ford Conv’t. $1,144 $1 Ply. Conv’t. ...$644 4 Dr. ....,...$699 bp tabs Conv’t. ..$499 => Ford Ranch : ’53 Hudson Conv’t. $999 ae agee "$899 49.0lds Conv't. . $199 51 Ford: Custom . 2 Dr. g52ca55- $299 Trucks ‘Si Nash Sedan ..$399 . be "$3 Chev. Panel ..$699 *'52 Plymouth 2 Dr.'$599 52 Stude. 50 Ford Express $399 Commander . $599 2 pore pee are $2 Nash 2 Dr. ...$599 Pickup eee $844 °53 Plymouth ‘41 Ford vs 4. Sta. Wagon . .$999 Pickup . .....:$99 $3 chee Dix. si; asec $999 $999 $999 Catalina . ..$1,299 1954 Ford Tudor ‘SI Dodge Coronet $499 Heater, Spare Tire, Your old car down and slightly higher pay’ts. SO Ford Crestline $644 "52 Merc. 2 Dr. ...$744 ’S1 Hudson Hornet $444 sO. ’52 Ford ‘Country $10 down and slightly Sedan . ......$899 higher, payments, Harold Turner, Ford. 2 BIG LOTS 7 : = 464 S. Woodward - 1314 Mile Rd. at Woodward Midwest 4.7500! > Liberty 9-400 low, m= tents hema ho Immediate “Spot” _'54 Ply. Savoy a 57 ? 46 Chev, Clb. Cpe, $99 2 Dr. ...... $1099 sg Chev. 2 Dr. ....$99 53 Ply. Clb. Cpe. Se 48 Willys Sta: : 53 Mercury Wagon. ..... $199 - Monterey . .$1,344 '$9 Kaiser 4 Dr. ...$99 "54 Ford Rancl ‘ "49 Dodge Sedan . .$199 = Wa 6 ne $1308 ‘4 Ford Coupe ...$99. el Sa 49 Merc 4 Dr. ...$199 5] Olds 88 2 Dr. $499 ‘49% Nash 2 Dr. .... - '54 Ford Country Sedan License ‘53 Chev. Bel Air $1,244 'S1 Stude. Sedan ..$299 $260. down & $29.73 mo. +} $1 Pont. Ch. 2 Dr. $544 or | , 54 Pontiac Sedan with radio. heater Hydramatic and white wails. $1695 "52 Pontiac - Station Wagon with radio, heat- er and Hydramatic. $1195 © 54 Pontiac Y Catalina With ‘radio, heater, Hydramatic, power steering end Lech aed power * $1995 34 Buick Century Hardtop with. redio end heater. - $2195 _ "$2 Buick 4dr sedan with radio - heater and Dynafiow. Mice car. $995 % -'§$4. Pontiac | tar sedan Logg roqpeiog heater and ‘other — "$1595. : 5 53 Pontiac PONTIA ‘ 4dr 7210" = sedan. You Can't Tell the QUALITY Of a Used Car by the - Price Alone! ‘The Dealer’s Reputation Has } — _ ~~ a Lot To Do With It, Too! "53 Chevrolet You can't afford to miss seeing thia beauty. $995 33 Hudson Hornet sedan with radio, heater and Hydramatic transmisston. _ « . $995 "53 Pontiac _ Convertible with radio, heater and white "esas Sumner special. * $1395 '51 Pontiac Hydramatic. Low mi! * Catalina with radio, heater and ileage. = sedan with radio, heater Hydramatic transmission. $1295 32 Plymouth 2dr sedan with radio and heater. - Here is real economy. | ~ — $795 an si4 95 $895 'S} Nash Statesman with radio and heat- er. Here is real economy. $495 $2 Pontiac 2dr sedan with radie, bh and Hydramatte. ‘Yates’ Proospoe $895 53 Chevrolet Seat pete th $1195 . ‘51 Dodge ‘ ret Ooty Stee eae ‘31 Mercury - ‘Qdr sedan with. radio, heater and Mere-O-Matic transmission. $645 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1955. Music Conductor Plans Revival of Radi -- Today's S Television Programas =< Channel 2—WJBE-TV Channel ~WW4J-BYV Channel 1—WXYZ-TV. Channel 6@—CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TY HIGHLIGHTS 6:00—(7) Kukla, Fran and Ollie. Puppet show. (4) Sonny Eliot. Variety. 6:15—(7) Dinner Theater. Little Rascals in “Little Papa.” (9) -Austin: Grant. News. (4) News. : pire Williams. (2) News. Ken Cline. 6:25—(4) Sports. Bill - Flemming. (2) TV Weatherman. Dr. Ever- ett Phelps. 6:30—(7) Disneyland. Fables|9 Disney, including award winning “The | ue “The Country Cousin, adventures. (4) Eddie Show. Songs. (2) News. Edwards. 6:45—(4) News Caravan. John Cameron Swayze... (2) Perry Como Show. Songs. :00—49) Million -Dollar Movie. Paul Henried in “So Young, So Bad." (4) Request Performance. Hans Conried plays. theatrical producer who searches for coat that is his good luck piece in “Otto and the Coat.” (2) Arthur Godfrey and His. Friends. Va- riety show. Don Cherry, guest. Low budget fashion- show. :30—(7) Mr. Citizen. Paul Lukas in story of businessman who helps Dutch hero of World War Il realize a dream in “The Friendly Stranger." (4) My Lit- tle Margie. Gale Storm, Charles Farrell star in “Vern's Winter Vacation.” Comedy of how Margie and Freddie trap Vern into changing his holiday plans. :00—(7) Masquerade Party. Quiz with disguised guests to stump} the panel. (9) Theater. Drama TBA. (4) Television Theater. Philip Abbott, Kathleen Maguire in ‘Someone to Hang,” drama of man who is mistaken for a criminal but is more interested in saving his double. than him- self. (2) The Millionaire. Girl completely changes her person ality after receiving gift million dollars in ‘The Story of Vickie Lawson,” starring Phyllis Avery. 8:30—(7) Penny to a Million. Quiz with Bill Goodwin, host. (9) On _ Stage. yaey show. (2) I've ~~? =! . Wwicke, Robert Douglas co-star. AGE enh com eet Com- 10:00—(7) Paris Precinct. Louis 10:15—(9) Yesterday’s Sicwuresd. 19:30—(7) Bob Cummings Show. 11:00—(7) 11:15—(7) Film Theater. Feature 11: 20—(2) gs 11:30—(4) ‘Heavyweight Bout: Exzzard Charles vs. John Holman. (9) ‘Theater. Drama TBA. (4) This ®: - Got a Secret. Quiz with Garry THURSDAY MORNING Moore, host. 7:00—(4) Today. (2) Morning 9:00—(7) Wednesday Night Fights.| Show. 9:00—(7) Todd Purse Show. 14) ‘Romper Room. (2) Garry Moore. :30—(2) Arthur Godfrey. Is Your Life. Edwards re- creates life of surprise guest. (2) |10:00—(T) Whde's Wonderland. CBS Drama. Geraldine Fite| (4) Home. ‘ gerald in “‘The Barretts of Wim- pole Street.” Sir Cedrie Hard- — (9) Chuckwagon. Variety |* with wegtern music. (4) Mr. Dis- trict Attorney. David Brian as ‘Mr. D.A. traps a psychopathic animal poisoner. Jourdan, Claude Dauphin in French mystery drama. (9) Na- tional News. (4) Amos 'n’ Andy. Kingfish sells Sapphire’s fur coat, then has to get it back without giving back the money. in “Society Party.” (2) I'm the Law. George Raft in “Firebug Story.” Films of past events. “Uncle Bob-Bob” finds his China Smith. Dan Duryea in Far Eastern adventure. (4) Traffic Court. Cases re-created before | 2 Judge Watts. (2) Sportsman's Holiday. Singapofe Joe Fisher shows films of African big game in “I Hunt With a Camera." . ate Soupy’s On. Variety, Mystery Theater. Edward Brom- comedy with Soupy Sales. (9) berg in “The Missing Corpse.” (4) News. Paul Williams. (2) News. Jac LeGoff. film TBA. (4) Little Show, Una O'Connor, Ruth McDevitt in “Buried Treasure.” (2) Fair Weather. Bette Wright. Fabian of Scotland Yard in “‘The &: oo Mouse”; Edmund Lowe “Murder on Diamond Row.” Tonight. Steve Allen host to Ravens, vocal quartet, boxing kangaroo, Alan Dale, comedian, — 3: 3:15—(4) First Love. 3:30—(4) World of Mr. Sweeney. Miss | 4: Nightwatch Théater. | 4: 10: 30—(2)° Strike It Rich. 11:06—(7) Story Studio. (4) Ding Dong School. (2) Valiant Lady. 11:18—(2) Love of Life. 11:30-+(4) Feather Your Nest. (2) |. Tomorrow.. Search for 11:45—(2) Guiding Light. THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—(7) 12 O'Clock Comics. (4 Maxwell and Hart. (2) Flame. Inner 12:15—(4) Way of World. (2) Road of Life. 12:30—(4) Hour of Shows. (2) La- dies Day. (7) Beulah. 4 x 1:00—(7) Charm Kitchen. 1:30—(9) Prayer, Sign On. (4) Jean McBride. (2) Linkletter’s Houseparty. 1:45—(9) Cartoon Time. 2:00—(7) Stars on Seven. (9) Mary Morgan Show. (4) Ted Mack's Matinee. (2) Tiger Game. : 2:30—(9) Toby David Show.. Greatest Gift. (2) Game. (@ :45—(4) Concerning Miss Mar- lowe. 00—(7) Hearthrob Theater. (9) Thursday Matinee. (4) Hawkins Falls. (2) Game. (2) Game. (2) Game. 3:45—(4) Modern Romance. 4:00—(7) Captain Fiint. (9) Let’s Make Music. (4) Pinky Lee. (2) Robert Q. Lewis. 30—(9) Howdy Doody. (4) Howdy Doody. (2) Welcome Traveler. 45—(T) Ricky the Clown. 00—(7) Auntie Dee. (9) Justice Colt. (4) Biff Baker. m Sage- brush Shorty. 30—(7) Action Theater. (4) Ten- nessee Ernie. :45—(T) Jumbo Theater. - WW4d, Dinah Shore XYZ, -- Today's Radio Programs -- Programs furnished by stations listed tm this column are subject te change without notice. CKLW. WCAR, News, Musie ai i Gliders: Dream Music WXYZ, Boxing Wan, (700) CKLW. (see) ww, case) «= WCAR, (1180, «WXYZ, (127) WJBR, (i690 © WRON, (1469) TONIGHT Ba Morgan Club | THURSDAY AFTERNOON 6:90 WIR, Hainiine CRLW. ures 1:00—WJR, Road of Life WWJ, Ross Mulholland Paging the New ie CKLW, Musical Airs WCAR, News, Music 16:30— W JR, = douse Rpt. WIR, Mrs. Paige WPON, News, Platter €:15—WJR, Clark Www, New CKLW, Good Net med 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins WwWJ, Bud Lynch CKLW, Sounding Board WJBK. Bob Mu WXYZ, Pau! Winter cRLW. Eadie "Chase : WPON, Os Game - | 045—WJIR, Lazy aa CKLW. Tex Benecke WPON. Idietime Serenade WCAR, Temple Acad. WPON, Eye .Opene: 14:48—WJR, Dance Orch. WPON. Goes Calling 1:38—WJR, Dr. Malone “Ww, Re Metholiand —_ = 10:00—WIR, A. God: CKLW, Eddie Canter WXYZ, Bill Stern i: = News -| WWJ. McBride. Peale 143—WJR, Guiding Light WCAR. Carousel wwi, Mayer - WXYZ. My True Story WPON. CKLW, rnene CKLW, Homechat 2:00—WJR, Mra. Burton . WJBK, News, T. George CKL Davi CKLW, Gey Nunn WJBK, News, Gentile - WPON. G WCAR Music Ww. vies —-#:45—WJR, Lowelt—fhomes—}— ame ae News, Temple WCAR, Tiger Game WXYZ. World of Speed 7 18—wiR News WPON, Tiger Game WPON, Art Van Damme Sportsmortem 16: a Wek Joyce Jordan 2:15—WJIR, Mason 7:00—WJIR, Guest House . Zee & Overille WPON, Pontiac Party WWJ, Plain Bil) WWJ, Three Star q , 30—WJR, Music 10:30—WWJ, Pran Harris 2:30—WJR, Nora Drake a Se tac MWxY2. News, Town WXYZ, Whispering Sts. WWJ, Lorenzo Jones WJBK. News jo CKLW.. Jim Dunber CRLW. Mary Morgan CKLW, Clubtime WCAR, News, Music “Here's to Vets WCAR. B’ha: w — WPON, News, Shaniey 10: tal a reat the Bank = THURSDAY MORNING ww, 5 best $40 WIR, Orghter Bey 1:15—WWJ, R. Mulholland | ¢.¢0—wJR, Vinall, Melody | wxyz. Poni Marries . ia Ww, WCAR. Tiger Game WXYZ News, Wolf 5 7:3 W. sabe 3 Serenade id 11:00—-WJR, Arthur Godfery | 8:00—WJR, News, Hymns WWJ, M. Beatty a Bare Fach WWJ, Strike It Rich WWJ, News, Woman a ‘suranee Heatter WCAR, -Coffes on cn Ways. Me pr eae WPON. News, Music CKLW. Florida, U.B.A JBK, McLeod WJBK, Gentile sal Aare voles —— Led icLeod Wrow. Tiger Game _ . News, 7.1 WIR ie ae “iat Mores wi Bee Marvel WPON News. Party 8:15—WJR, Rosemary CKLW. Les Pa oe ‘wews. binge 11S —WYZ, Curtain Calle | $:9—WJR. Helen Trent 820 WER, ro Peace WPON. Rise 6:45—-WXYZ, News ‘n’ Shine WPON, Pontiac Party 11:30—WJR, Make Up Mind WWJ, Phrase That” Pays maha —— eps | team, Gel Sunday CKLW, True 7:00-— WIR, eco — CKLW, Qeeen ter 2 Day ww. Right te Happiness 15—WWJ, Prank Sinatra wXxY¥Z, : WPON, ac Party 06--W. louse Party WXYZ, Show World CELW. Gey Ween, Dovid | 5 0—-WM, Second Husband | WW2. 2 wife WIBK, aol — 7:15—WJR, Music Hall WWJ, Second Chan pt Sg ne McKenazie 8:30—WJR, Pop Concert 1:0—CKLW, Terence O'Dell | 12:00-—-WIR, Jock whe WCAR. News, Music News S Were. Schn Vandercook 1:4 WW, gol ‘4 CKLW, News, 3 suns 4:15—WW9, Stella. Dallas CKLW. Sentenced ocaball egid one WAR, News 4:30—WJR, Muste Ball 8:45-WJR, No 3nd Chance | 8:00 WJR.-dack White Wron. WW3, Widder Brown WXYZ, Just Easy we News 13: ae wm. Pam Roundup le Ww, 3, Women ta Rouse | 9, rae mmm, fer Game | Bron, ewe SEM uate Great | (eae, wxY¥z, Kaye 8: 1b wR, Bud Guest y CKLW, Stem. st i WEAR, Cutten WAR on b Luncheon Musie 3, News. ‘De Deland 9:13—WJR, Bing Crosby mrdigeetty sieae am saw Time Out, Music] WCAR) News s Amos ‘n' And : 6:15—WJR, Scores, Musie ews f ng r 7 | 9:08—WWwJ, News Wax Your Boy Bud ww Thm Deland CKLW, Eddie Cantor WCAR, Radio Rev. acace sone — : 0:00 Tenn. Ernie $:00—WJR, Wm. Sheehan 45—WXYZ, Charm Lady :30—WJR, ‘Musie Matinee 7d M WW, Minute Parade WPON, Farm Mkts. WKYZ, News, McKenzie 58g et 3588 in f | Publisher’s Information Bureau. es- Gerald R. Doherty, Birm | Chartotte mM. tO * |Wants to Bring Sponsors Back New CBS Program Should Draw Others to Old Medium By WAYNE OLIVER NEW YORK @ — Conductor Percy Faith hopes to start a re- SS The Canadian-born composer and conductor isn't antitelevision by any means. He simply takes the- view that good music is a field in which TV has little if any advantage over radio. “And this is rea! old fashioned radio in a big way,” he says of iis Sunday afternoon show broad- cast live—something that’s becom- ing a novelty > Gat See A re corded. network radio “Radio has. to depend on mu- sic,” he declares, “That's the one to offer, aside . * 8 6 Faith says he feels music has rt received very much attention V. with a few exceptions, but even \so the chances of enriching music’ \with pictures are limited. Faith, says CBS statisticians have informed him 26 million cars with radios are on the highways at 1 p.m.\ (EDT) when his show goes on the\air and if he reaches a pretty good percentage of them he has a large audience right there. ro * * Ever wondér how the networks rank in total business volume? timates that for the first four months of the year it was ag fol- lows for the TV chains: CBS 62 million dollars, NBC just under 53. million, ABC a little over 14% mil- lion and Du Mont not quite 214 million. In radio it was CBS 16 milion dollars, NBC nearly 11 mil- lion, ABC nearly 9% million and Mutual 5% million. Overall, net- Marriage License Applications Pred L. Rubaleava, Birmingham Edith McCullah, Roya] Oak James E. McEwan, © June B. Hines, Mitera’ Roy E. Olson, 905 N Lake Ang¢jus Dorothy M. Terry, Clarkston Dean = land, Birminghem Joan G. Birmingham James W. Colmer. . 31 Stonewall Helen £E. Moffatt, 62 Oak Hill William J. Kramer, D: _ Patricia L. Billes, Ho hy on “M. Detiorr, aiinghan Walter L. McCarty, 1011 Meadowlawn Lots A. Bergesron, 133 W. Pairmont og Monti, 21 Wall Edier, C-07T 2. fturon — Royal Oak rk, Birmingham Robert C. Dianna M. — ¢. mete, Pairview, Pa. L. Brewster, Birmingham —— A. Reflly, nokeam org Amy A. Sherman, Birmingham Roger a Ww Mary £. ren ree Ww. Huron Ronald D. Conn 1476 Mer Barbara J. len hen oon Soe Alfred Wy Avery, Bt Patricia ia. Lane, Detret Ben Col¢, 102 Kem Mae Cole, 17 Clairmont Therese, Geter meek Rochester Douglas A. . Ww Bartere A vce lien fare Harold R. Helms, 362 N. Johnson Doris B. Spears, 860 Orlando Nell D. Batley, Mary L. Turner, meats Garchow, 798 Corwin Bo a et fee M. master, 20 Whttem 622% Baldwin Donald t ‘Thornton, Birmingham Ghirley A. Benwart, predro com Clifford 'B. Godfrey, essie rey 283 8. J rand Bloodshot (two jiggers of whisky to one of red wine) }dreamed about earning the salary they can’t get along on Is Eddie Singing Blues Over Debbie Reynolds? By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Now in the hot months when severa] night club opened. * * * When Eddie sang “Am I Blue?” ap You” and other such sincere: joined the Torch Club. “T'm: Walking Behind jyou wondered if he’s his heart stepped on, lately. (There's a good title for a song right there: “Quit Stepping on My Heart.”) “I never saw so many pretty wom- en in one spot,” re- marked Paul Suni of the Hensinki Pan-Am office, AUDREY _ JILL who’s kind of an authority, having been married four times. “American women,” he tmplied, “are prettier than Finnish women at night, but in the morning, when they get wp, Finnish women are prettier.” * * * * He was talking about the difference makeup makes—the Finnish beauties not using any, except a little lipstick. By American beauties I recken he referred to Audrey Meadows, Jill Corey, Fran Keegan, Baby. Shor, Mrs. Doug Watts, Mrs. Paul Winchell and Evelyn Keyes who said she was going to Paris next day. Her escort, Mike Todd, said she wasn't going to Paris then. “I'm just in New York to chance planes,” sald Todd. “I'm on my way to Belgrade. Rome Vincent headed the show in the long, attractive room. The scene was an island and Lou Wills Jr. arrived on it in the midst of a gonna-gonna dance with a ‘ 7 golf bag. “Isn't this the Westchester Country Club?” he inquired. “Are you crazy!” This is an island in (7 the middle of the ocean,” he was in- © formed. ; “What a drivel” he ee waving the golf club. THE MIDNIGHT EARL... SSSEenssersxss sescs bos clubs will be closing, ® funny thing happened—a new night PA "Twas La Vie - . » Operated by Monte Proser, one time | 42 Used : g* 5 z i i iE 8 ! bi 5 le : 8 part rt Heavy — boss of the Copacabana, before that a “pack rat” in Yellow-| 45 pee!” ne stone, before that a young hobo. iS i entry 4 x * *« * 8 Exe “You must be independently wealthy,” somebody said to! s Ralph's title FF him recently. AE _ ms se weights sete saninaainammeneieenmen — I'm better’n that,” Monte replied. “I'm independently broke. “ wasn: | 7 Weep oe Teensent a Talking Vire Eddie Fisher—whom Monte gave a job 9 years ago— — 5 eereoen Semen ~~~ was tHe star, and the news of pies © ¢ Seek cere ew. 3 825 West Huron Se P ~ FE 4-2525 ROK Planes Crash 3 SEOUL @—Police today report- ed one,man killed and three _in- Famous Make USED TV SETS Only $5 Per Week! HAMPTON ASO % W eres -PONTIAC'S FI RST TV SERVICE DEALER! Perle Mesta will do a TV sow from- DuMont’s Wash’n outlet (Ted Cott signéd her to interview Wash'n personali- ties) ... . Steve Allen’ll try to lose 10 pounds on his Monday show—from the Luxor Baths. i BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE Authorized Factory Service for 15 Different Manufacturers 3149 W. Huron FE 4-5791. Jack Paar the comic is having his troubles, but Jack Paar the horse just won its second straight race... Christian Dior got a $30,000 advance on his memoirs. Darryl Zanuck’s comment on “Seven © Year Itch”: “Marilyn Monroe will draw them in, then Tom Ewell will kill them” . . The Hotel Lexington’s under new | management, but its Hawalian Room still | offers such attractions as Loma Duke. Producer Gent Gaither signed a | $30,000 deal for TV rights to “Seventh Heaven” after its B’way run... Winnie Rockefeller took his fiance, Jeanette Edris, to The Patio. LOMA DUKE Margaret Truman, a backer of a soon-due ice cream parlor, will supply her personal recipe for chocolate syrup. x (Clk * x The Yankees’ Ed Robinson will marry schoolteacher Betty Furlow ... New cafe drinks: Red Eye (beer and tomato juice) Starlet Charlotte Austin’s hospita] visitor—in dark glasses and phoney mustache—was Marlon Brando. * * x * WISH I'D SAID THAT: “Twenty years ago a lot of people today.”—Wildrooter. (Copyright 1955, Post-Hall Syndicate, Inc.) " plane crashed and burned 10 miles west of here, The victims, all em- | ployes of the airline, included one American, the pilot, Phillip Shallo, 33, San Mateo, Calif. 5 Die in Plane Crash EDMONTON, Alta: ()—Five per- sons were killed yesterday-when a twin-engine Associated Airways achatn 199% Mechanics John J. Watetbury, 43 Mark Mary L. Laatsch, Clarkston Norman W. Sells, 169 Summit Virginia L. McNamara, 1613 partway metal titeth SiC lAle Se eee RIAISIRIE sie Aclelrier) AIR ITA te CILIEN Lad iSite to TV, Radle, Car Radio FE2-2976 46. NN. Hillldale ___ OPEN EVENINGS TOMORROW'S RADIO TODAY “Inasin! Som Gs kate ba 4 ectoay tiem eo teries. No tubes to burn out. ee _ fun in the sun.’ Picnics — boating — _ own ete gale | high school. ’ GIVE HER THIS DREAM! 2 Ope CURRENT RATE Our very worthwhile dividend rate (cur- rently 27% per annum) will help you reach your . savings goal quicker. Of course, all savings are insured up to $10,000 for extra safety ..%. and you can withdraw those savings whenever you like (without advance notice) for extra convenience. INVEST HER SAVINGS AT oa. Mirror her educational ambitions in a profitéble Savings Program at PON-~ TIAC FEDERAL, Make every payday a save day so you'll have her college . tuition ready when she — from ie = THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, J UNE 8,. 1955 Bie is enough to drive anyous to lik hs edt, Ligh oof 5 nancial obstacles have delayed the ‘l There are 72 mountain ‘peaks All Six Generations of Family to Meet NICHOLASVILLE, Ky. —Mrs. Elizabeth Walker hopes she soon- will see her great-great-great- grandson. The 91-year-old Mrs. her ~ great - , granddaughter, Mrs, « Ingles, of Kokomo, Ind, A six-generation meeting 1s planned by Mrs, Walker with him and -his mother, grandmother, a mee Carolina, great-grandmother, and - great- Walker has never seen the son of Wolkit kin’ Bob’ Resumes His Pushcart Express P, lisle. Citizens donated $15.8 to buy Bob a new two-wheeled, rub- ber-tired pushcart after the old | wheelbarrow ‘he'd _| years-collapsed. used for five Sih chien wovdle thy 10-nilep between the communities in five ‘merchants as he goes along. rides offered by passing motorists, saying, ‘‘No thanks. I'm in a hur- ry.” American railroads move ten tons of freight a mile a day for) each of the inhabitants of the, 4 He has beew known to turn down United States. ane Lear of you'll live with and love home-fashi AT ‘13 SAVINGS! the style, es, axe” "cco Trine” convenience Sned ‘tunities’ BIG 16 SAVINGS! _weat® USE SEARS EASY PAYMENT PLAN On Smell Nem Purchases Totaling $20 or More. Ash, Any Seiesperson- cameo oak finished 3-piece bedroom suites \, Bectutiful light finished panel, bed, chest and dresser Regularly. $179 with sturdy Sply oak veneers, adjustable plate Ss: 18 pl Sturdy walnut veneers and sclid walnut ae cvetiy. finished with ever-popular walnut. All drawers dustproofed and center guided for added caarens ence. Sparkling brass pulls on chest and drawer. Handsome full panel bed. ey fd Srdiunid oie widihale glass mirror. ate. completely dustproofed, ovetailed and center meee Chest drawer has Pla divider. © SAVINGS 31 S! You'll Feel Botter—Sleep Better on 4'-Inches of _ e Foam Bedding \YOu. PAY ONLY $17 DOWN! ‘© Regularly 109.50 ¢" 8 a + Down © Allergy Free, Odorless © Full Bed Size Take adtventage of this sale price! Buy your foam bed- one today! 4¥a-inches of cool comfort, freerfrom ‘dust. Mat- — 252 coil box spring. Both have smart cotton tick cover. Buy now — save 31.50! Bunk Bed Sale’ ‘Usually 99.95 Yes, get all 7 pieces at this amazing low price; two bunk 126-coil mattresses, two link . springs and a 4step ladder. This complete set can be — as-bunk beds or twin style. beds, two thickly padded warm walnut finished bed, chest, dresser we da ue ah 8 188 Complete Regularly $149 133 mc S oS Table Savings Usually 16.95—Save 6. ~ Popular knotty figure matched Honduras mahogany won cocktail. lamp tables. Heat, tops. Rosette trim shaped rails, brass tipped tee Se elegant look. Savel balls Reg. 9.95 Crib Pads.... Collapsible Aluminum Frame Sole Priced 11.88 Streamlined aluminum strol- ler. with adjustable back, foot quilted upholstery, sun | canopy, new side pocket. * rest, Big Baby Crib: Button Release Drop Side Reg. 19.95 | 22. 88 3.58 powN ale priced! Ruddy maple fin- hed hardwoed cribs with astic casters, wooden twirl . 6.88 Handy Strollers . 10" 07 stain resistant plastic Now's the time to shop Sears Outdoor Furniture for the finest selections. Young and old alike will enjoy the styles and comfort found in Sears Outdoor Furniture. ~ Enjoy the warm evenings this summer out of doors! Wrought Iron ners Bed A cool lounge by day . guest bed at night! White pe black frame with cushioned plastic cover. “47 $5 Down * Garden Umbrella 19% “9-ft. spread ‘Weather- jesis- tant springless steel frame. Save! / Umbrella Table 8 Metal Porch Chair 4 Cc fortabl Lustrous white baked ename! wei. bas saotal finish. Strong steel construc- hair has shaped tion. 34-inches round. Save! a with semi- 4* saddle seet. White with ™/ weave in all wool surface light and shadow Harmony House All-Wool Crestfield Carpet | ; 88 | Tat 7 Attractive Multi-level High and Low Loop Pile Brand fiew all-wool carpet in’ hoice of fo dtitetatiding col — at big savings! The: deep: sditde i va vee we A9.95 VALUE , 912A 5-ft, widths random texture of this velvet a eile ee ee pe : ee woven carpet with 9,216 tufts per sq. ft. See it now! Ez fect ail leat desi j Aluminum Chair 7 ea r. ~INSTALLA | Blgmle seat TION IF YOU wish a et eae ee | carpet at low cost, M you wish! fa; A 8.95 VALUE 9 and 12-ft. ~ Sale Priced—All- Wool Harmony House Carpeting ‘two-tone leaf design 99 Square . widths All-wool Wilton broadloom carpet at terrific savings . . through your home — and its two tone free flowing gn, carved effect with morésqued ground is ideal with any motif! It's tightly woven to insure scones wear; 9,900 wool tufts per sq. ft. See it now! . We'll Cut to Fit Any Size “aes we measure it! inane sesame esmomraes pole am mares meRmeBamen rine i we cut it! Yard . per