| The Weather Tuesday: Fair Details page two =a ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS. Home Edition. With YEAR * xx PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 19583—80 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE Te. Police Link Gir’s Attacker to Sex Slaying Here ‘Cut Weeds in Search for Death Clues > ys Russia May Join Peace Talk “ — LONG AWAITED REUNION—The Jack C. Gun- thers of 750 Lounsbury Dr. were getting acquainted | China in 1947. year separation. Mr. and Mrs. Gunther. were married in Canton,|of red tape. Here Exploring Marvels of New Land Choice 5 Left The Lieutenant was called back to | again Sunday with their 11-year-old son after a five | America and could not bring the boy, his wife's son | by a previous marriag®, until he had cut five yea » From Formosa to Pontiac Bes to Communists by Australia | Participation of India| | in Korean Conference Less Likely | UNITED NATIONS, N. | 'Y. (AP) — Russia appeared |assured today of a seat at ithe forthcoming Korean | political conference—if her satellites North Korea and | Communist China want her | there. India’s chances of | being asked to the parley |'dimmed, however. ' Diplomats, gathering for | ithe U. N. General Assem- | | proval of a carefully worded | Western resolution tossing | the issue of Soviet partici-| |pation to the Communist | Side. Two British Commonwealth countries—Australia and New Zeal- and—came up with this formula | yesterday to patch up part of the split between the United States and | | Britain. Both agreed to support it. | The Anglo-American differences | over the proposed inclusion of In- dia at the conference table, how- | ever, remained as great as ever, and it was doubtful whether India could win a two-thirds majority in the 60-nation Assembly, U. S. Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. said frankly yesterday that the United States would not vote for a British-sponsored resolution to include India in the | conference. | miei Lodge insisted Indian member- Pontiac Press Phote! chin would not be in accordance agreement, which, in the U. S. | view, calls for representation only of fighting participants in the | flict. India had only an ambulance | unit in Korea and has frequently | claimed neutrality. Richard examines his first TV set. | G.M.'s Parade’ | Some diplomatic quarters pre- dicted that India might withdraw ws + oe a a SIFT FIELD FOR CLUES—City employes and, |bly beginning this after- | Pontiac police are shown searching -he field near} used in mowing weeds in the field. Others are (left to| Jan. 2. inoon, freely predicted ap- Baldwin and Beverly Aves. where the body of Mrs. |right! Patrolman Lon Peters Jr., Detective John | Hallie Perkins, 55, was found Saturday afternoon. |DePauw, and Patrolmen James LaPonsie and Gérald | ae 9 > es ee, ee , ae R, é ty James Beeler, city employe, is shown on the tractor | A. Navarre. Faith Pays Off for Kalamazoo Business Places KALAMAZOO (UP) — Trust the customer and he will repay you, with more trade, four business, con- cerns here report. | A bank, restaurant, flower shop | and parking lot let customers make their own change or pay their own bills without a supervising cashier. Miss Marian Smith, manager | of the restaurant, said that ex- | cept in the busiest periods of | the day she does not bother with a cashier. “My customers pay their own bills and make change out of a bowl on the counter. The books! fled to neighboring Iraq Sunday in his with the terms of the armistice, balance every night,” she said. plane after The bank put out six dollars in a bowl for quick change two years ago for motorists wanting nickels and pennies for parking meters. There still is two dol- lars left. { | Embassy | ment today about ithe pre 9 Years of Waiting Ends as Lad Reaches New Home her name in view of the strong U. S. opposition. Indian delegate V. K. Krishna Menon already has declared his country is not a ‘‘can- Soviet Suggests. Coming Aug. 27 Huge Traveling Science | Show Will Be Here Four | overcome five years of “red Days, Admission Free When 11-year-old Richard ress, — a huge traveling science | show — will appear in Pontiac, of 750 Lounsbury Ave., h for four days beginning Aug. 27, political maneuvers aime ents arms at Willow Run Airport Saturday night, he had |'7,000 mile plane ride to happily end a drama which General Motors Parade of Prog- | began in war-ravaged China in 1947. Meanwhile, his parents, Lt. and Mrs. Jack C. Gunther : 1 at obtaining permission for it was announced today by R. M. Richard to’come from Taipeh, Formosa, and join them didate’’ for a place at the con- ference. Federal Printer dentified asRed Fellow Worker Names Hwang rushed into his par- tape’’ and completed/a lone suffered through countless Critchfield, general manager of here. the Pontiac Motor Division and | After the war Lt. Gun- chairman of the Pontiac’ General| ther was employed by the Motors Plant City Committee. The| United Nations Rehabilitat parade will be set up on the; tion and Relief Administra- grounds of Washington Junior High! tion in China as a Diesel School and will show daily from 2’ engineer on a relief ship. to 10 p. m. Admission is free. Another UNRRA worker, whp Non-commercial and educa- | Gunther knew, had married a tional in nature, the Parade of | Chinese woman. Through them the Progress offers two hours of | lieutenant met Irene Chow, a Sia- sparkling entertainment with 26 |mese national who had come tp major exhibits and a stage show. | China after being driven from her | Most-of the exhibits are housed | homeland by World War II fight- in Futurliners, large vans unlike | ‘"® anything else in existence. They They were married at the are gleaming red and white ve-| American Consulate at Canton, (Contintied on:Page 2, Col. 4) | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) [po . ° * pone the reports. | Reds ; Death List Brings - The Syrian sources said the re. | Grief to 2 County Families The Korean prisoner-of-war accounting which has sent. joy into hundreds of American homes brought grief this weekend to a Pontiac family and Hazel Park wife. Prisoners listed by thre Reds as dead are: Pvt. Frederick J. Hapgood, brother of Mrs. Stephens, 257 Seward St. ” Robert Cpl. Charles L. Riley, ee husband_of Mrs. Charles L. Riley, 81 Shasta, Hazel Park. A government telegram brought the news Saturday to Mrs. Ste- phens’ home. “We hadn’t heard anything from Fred after the U.N. forces with- drew from a forward position in November of 1950,’’ ‘Mrs. Stephens said. “We knew there was something wrong. We waited and waited and didn’t hear any news of him, so we called Washington ip April, 1951. They checked and reported him missing, All the records had been lost at the front.” Pvt. Hapgood, she said, came here from Newfoundland in April, 1948, to make his home with Mrs. Stephens, He was first inducted (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) PVT. F. J. HAPGOOD } , | ' | bg f] | nated in Damascus, his capital, but | the Iraqi foreign minister in Da- ; nouncement on an event of this | Rothschild as One-Time Party Member WASHINGTON (# — A Govern- Syria's Chief Reported Slain sixvcirves. us. es | Rothschild, face-to-face today as But Government Says a onetime member of the Commu- Rumor Is by Enemies of ( ° | . y | James Phillips, a bookbinding President | machine operator, told Senate in-| | vestigators that Rothschild has no BEIRUT, Lebanon & — Uncon- |direct access to secret material anon today that Syria’s President : ; but could easily get such material Adib Shishekly had been assassi- from other workers. Phillips confronted the slightly built, pipe-smoking Rothschild | at a~hearing by the Senate in- ports were part of an organized vestigations subcommittee, which campaign by enemies of the Syrian is lapking for evidence that se- | president. cret material in the government | (The Syrian embassy in Cairo. printing office has been leaked and other sources there, said they to the Communists. | lacked any news of the reported Phillips testified assassination. Rothschild in 1938. authoritative’ Syrian sources hefe first met identified he He wt Pied | hina set te Rothschild as one of 25 or 30 per- said it had heard a round-about | 4. who attended a meeting in a report, broadcast by the Near East . res radio at Nicosia,, Cyprus, that Deviate: hore > Srganiee & Soe : see - “ munist cell in the Government President Shishekly had received , Printing Office. Lat@r, Phillips said, Rothschild and a Fred Sillers approached him | Jerusalem made no mention of the On the street and asked him in a| reported assassination. | ‘‘threatening and belligerent’’ at-| (This dispatch did not disclose |titude whether he was for or | the source of the report of the | against their efforts to organize assassination. News usually seeps | Such a cell. quickly over the Syrian-Lebanese Phillips said he thought it over border, though an official an- | and gave them their answer by going before the House Commit- tee on Un-American Activities, then headed by Rep. Dies (D- mascus at noon. Afternoon broad- | casts from Damascus and kind might be bottled up in Da- mascus for several hours.) ’ | Tex) and testifying about the In Today's Press | whole attair. Birminghom - : Phillips also testified he once Counts News tS") saw another fellow worker, Bertha Davia Lawrence. .............+:. § Lomax. try to leave the Govern- De) Geeree Creeeis sc cssee te cen. 6 | - Editoriats © 0... cece ee eeuees 6 |ment Printing Office with secret ia te ‘| material in her pocket. | Markets 23 That employe continued to work + aati aia ‘1 33 at the printing office for three, T-V Radice Programs 18 Want Ads 25, 26, 23, 28. 29 . Women's Pages 16, 17, 18, 19 =| Phillips said. United Germany Proposes Big 4 Parley on Peace Treaty Within Six Months MOSCOW (UP) — Soviet Russia advocated today formation of a provisional united German govern- ment and a Big Four conference on German peace treaty within six moths. The Soviet Union also called for Free German elections. without foreign supervision and reduction of Germany's World War II debts. | These Russian desires were made known Sunday when the Soviet government handed notes | to ambassadors of western na- tions. | The note argued that four-power | preliminary talks should begin im- mediately with the Germans sit- | |firmed reports circulated in Leb-' jn the government printing plant ting in on the conversations. It also proposed that the East, and West German Parliaments | should get together and organize | a unified provisional government | which would participate in prepa: ation of the peace treaty and draft an election law. | The Big Four conference on the treaty should be held within six | months, the note said. ” Sted a . sf we ? Brew 6 Pontiac Press Phote Mossadegh Plans Regency lo Replace Deposed Shah (From AP & UP Dispatches) TEHRAN, Iran — Foreign Minister Hussein Fatemi said today that Premier Mohammed Mossadegh intends! who saw Mrs. Hallie Perkins, the to set up a regency council—with members of the royal| victim of a sex-slayer, after Aug. Mohammed Reza Pahlevi. | family excluded—to take over the duties of fleeing Shah | Search Spurred by 2nd Attack inNeighborhood Warn Women-and Girls Against Being Alone on « Streets at Night Police warned women and children in the Bald- 'win-Beverly Ave., area to- | day to stay indoors at night \for fear that a demented | sex slayer who killed a Pon- |tiac woman and attacked a |teen-age girl will strike |again in that neighborhood. | . Meanwhile, the hunt for |the slayer of. Mrs. Hallie | Perkins, 57, gained momen- tum when Detroit Police in- |dicated they would enter |the investigation to deter- ‘mine whether the slayer |may also have killed JoAnn |Gillespie in Detroit last Armed with the descrip- tion of a 200-pound man who raped a 16-year-old girl ‘nine hours after Mrs. Per- kins’ body was found Sat- |urday afternoon, police launched another house-to- house hunt for clues in the | residential section. | The teen-age girl was attacked } at the same time police were | | | Police Seek Tips Pontiac Police urged anyone 2 to contact them at once. They said even what appears to be insignificant information at this At the same time Fatemi said that the Shah’s court) time might later help solve the ailing Mossadegh. The 38-year-old Shah and his beautiful Empress Sorya supporters quashed an at- tempt to oust the premier. At Bagdad, Iraq, the Iranian asked Iraq's govern- ce in Baghdad of the Shah. : It was not known in what ternis the embassy put its request, made verbally, and whether it had pro- tested Iraq's reception of the mon- arch. The Shah and his rived unheralded at the Bagh- dad airport and surprised an official party waiting to wel- come King Faisal on his return from a visit to Jordan. When they recognized the Iran- ian couple, officials offered them the use of a government guest house. Reliable sources said the Shah had no.-plans to leave Bahg- dad immediately. |. In announcing the plan to form a regency council, Fatemi said that Mossadegh does not intend to set up a republic. Mossadegh charted ‘his course of action at a secret cabinet meeting. Police fired over the heads of Iranian mobs who demonstrated | against the Shah today and tried | to demolish statues of him. As usual, the demonstrations took a strong § anti-American turn. The demonstrators blamed the United States for playing a behind-the-scenes role in the young monarch’s attempt grab control from Mossadegh. They posted “Yankee Go Home” placards throughout the city. It was reported that Mossadegh, Continued on Page 25, Col. 4) _personal Mossadegh’s* New Zealander | | Minister has written a letter blaming the monarch) “anton slaying. | directly for an abortive attempt to overthrow the aged, | searching a field only two blocks away for clues in the brutal sex- murder. | The hands and legs of the mur- | der victim were bound by pieces | of her clothing, and the hands of | the rape victim also were tied | securely with one of her stockings. This led police to believe the same man is responsible for both crimes. | | Capt. Clark M. Wheaton, chief of Pontiac detectives, cautioned Killed in Sleep Hunt Escaped Prisoners | women and children to stay off the streets. in that area at night i unless accompanied by a male wife ar- | to | | for Night Assassination of Isle Commissioner WELLINGTON, New Zealand ? '— C. H. W. Larsen, New Zealand resident commissioner of Niue, in | the Cook islands, was slain in his sleep last night by three escaped prisoners. His wife was badly in- jured. The Larsens and their two young sons were asleep in separate rooms at the residency when the slayers entered. The children were un- | harmed. Practically the entire island | population of 4,500 participated | All three were natives of Niue. The island, 2,400 miles due south | of Hawaii, is a dependency of New Zealand. Nearly all the islanders are Poly- nesians, closely related to the New ; Zealand Maoris. | Gives Up Last Chance DALLAS, Tex. (UP)—Police re- , ported that a burglar early Sunday |tried to pry off the door of a, liquor store but finally gave up ‘and abandoned the job. It was the | ‘last chance”’ liquor store. today in a hunt for the criminals. | | escort. Pontiac Detective John DePauw said the girl's description of her attacker is the first real lead to the murder of Mrs. Perkins who had been missing 11 days from the home of her son and daughter- in-law, Mr. and Mrs. David Per- kins Jr.. 76 W. Longfellow Ave. Mrs. Perkins’ body was found about 1:15 p.m. Saturday about 150 feet behind a gasoline station by Jesse O. Young, 32, Thomas | Scott, 29, all of 53 E. Fairmount | Ave., who were hunting crickets for fish bait. | The men found Mrs. Perkins’ | body under rotting lumber in a field at Baldwin and Beverly Aves., only four blocks from her home. The victim’s legs were bound by a piece of her slip and her | arms tied behind her body \v ith |a blouse. She was gagged with heavy cloth. Pontiac Policewoman M. P, Sweeney and Detective John Wil- /son said the girl told them she was walking home from the bus stop at Baldwin and Strathmore Aves. about 10:30 p.m. when a | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) AP Photographer POW Tells Experiences : tproporea nat cermny FREQ Prison Is Cruelest Form of Torture cease making reparations pay- ments on Jan. 1, 1954, and that all of Germany's }postwar debts except those made in_ trade agreements be canceled. Occupation costs should not ex- ceed 5 per cent of the combined East and West German budgets, the note said. Monday morning newspapers said the Soviet Union has invited an East German government dele- | gation to visit Moscow. The note to the Big Three am- bassadors said the provisional gov- | ernment should discuss ‘‘barring the inclusion of Germany in coali- tions and military alliances direct- ed against any state “which took part in the war against Hitler's Germany.” Pleasant Weather fo Continue Here Another cool night and pleasant | day-are in store for the Pontiac | ing to the U.S. Weather bureau. ( (Editor's Note after more than 32 months as a@ prison- er of the Chinese Reds in North Korea | Now tm Tokyo ‘for medical and dental | treatment necessitated by his long cap- | tivity. Noel has collaborated with AP correspondent Olen Clements to tell of some of the things he and his fellow Americans saw and endured as prisoners of war. This ts the first of three ar- ticles.) By FRANK NOEL TOKYO (#—Life as a prisoner of the Chinese Communists was a thing of doubt and fear—doubt of what our captors would do to us next, and fear that an in- cautious word might be overheard by some fellow prisoner who had become an informer. There is a strange thing about all the Communists I have met. They trust no one—especially their fellow Communists. Somehow, they managed to in-| still this same feeling of distrust | into their prisoners, even though | those prisoners had fought bravely months after she was caught,’ area tonight and Tuesday, accord- | Side by side before being captured. Some few men turned inform- Frank Noel, Assoctated | Press photographer, tg a free man again ers. --Others, in the constant | questioning by the Communists, said things the Communists did not like. As a result, lots of us went into the ‘‘hole,""—a cell in which a man could neither stand nor stretch. One particularly bad hole was reserved for prisoners the Reds hated most. When you went into that hole, you stayed for weeks without ever leaving it, even to go to the latrine. filth. In winter you froze, day and night; in summer you sweltered. A little food was thrown in once in a while, and a Chinese guard was on duty at all times. Many of us spent days, weeks, months, in the hole, simply as punishment for not thinking the way the Communists wanted us to think. A Red prison is one of the cruel- j You sat and slept in your own, 4 Ever Devised by Man, Says Frank Noel ,est forms of torture every devised | by man. There are still Americans. up there—some of them driven insane . in prison. I am sure there will be some of them there when the Chinese say repatriation has been finished. These men will be a club which the Reds will hold over our heads in the post-armistice political con- ference. * * — I was captured Nov. 30, 1950. In tthe early days of my imprison- ment, the Chinese took some Amer- ican officers into Antung, Man- churia. I know of one who said the people on the streets there were very friendly. So far as I know. all of these Americans were soon returned to North Korea, but there are other Americans today in Chinese ter- ritory. They are the ones who swal- (Continued on page 8 column 5) a TWO Birmingham to Consider for Fourteen (From Our Birmingham Buress) mitting it to serve as a main east-west artery for the area. The program has been under discussion since 1946, and City Manager Donald C. Egbert will ask that the city request the coun- ty road commission to take ac- tion to ob a right of way for Fourteen e, between Southfield and Cranbrook Roads. He will further recommend that the city secure cooperation in the project from the Oak- land County Read Commission and Oakland County Planning Commission. - A hearing will be scheduled on the presently tabled amendment to the zoning ordinance, which would limit residential derfsity in business zones. . A letter from the Troy Town- ship pervi will be heard, stating that consideration will be given to Birmingham’s School Board and the owners of property in an area north of Derby Road, in Troy Township, requesting sani- tary and storm sewer relief. The possibility of other areas being included in a _ sanitary drain down Coolidge to the sew- age disposal district will be’ re- viewed occasionally, the letter states. A communication from the Oakland County Road Commission, indicating that they will partici- pate in the cost of the 1955 project of improving. W. Maple, will be heard, and a delegate and alter- nate will be appointed to the South Oakland Planing Council. Birmingham National Bank will request that one lot at Woodward between Fourteen Mile and Bird be rezoned from residential to parking district, and another from residential to business. The bank and Standard Oil Company plan the er@ction of new buildings there. Other items on the agenda in- clude purchase of election equip- ment, stop’ sighs at Melton and Sheffield, revision of the parking meter zone on the west side of Brownell and a zoning map change at 595 S: Bates. + bd s Rev. Howard Allwardt, minister of Our Shepherd Lutheran Church, has announced that the church hopes to begin an additign this fall and contemplates completion in January or February. The extension will be added east of the present structure, Rev. All- wardt said, and will house the in- creasing Sunday school unit, which |. has grown in two years from 170 to 287, - . > * * Members of the American As- sociation of University Women now are being contacted by Mrs. Richard L. Brown and her com- mittee for contributions to the annual AAUW fall book sale. ‘Because the book sale benefits the entire community,”’ said Mrs. J. H. Van Doren, publicity chair- man, “we have tried to appeal to everyone to contribute. We need all kinds of books—old, new, poet- ry. fiction, picture, juvenile, scien- tific, factual and frivolous—if the sale in October is to be as colorful and exciting as the past’25 have been.” Also needed, she said, are month- ly magazines, toys, records, sheet Birmingham Girl, 17, Injured in Collision Two Detroiters and a 17-year- old: Birmingham girl were treated at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital for injuries received ina two-car collision Sunday night on Adams road at Big Beaver road, accord- ing to Bloomfield Township police. _A car driven by Walter Leader, 59, of 14190 St. Marys, Detroit, hit the auto of Rolland E. Garn, 2798 S. Boulev>rd, Birmingham, police reported. Leader told police Garn ran a stop sign and drove into the path of his car. Leader received cuts and bruis- es, while his wife Alice, 53, was reported in fair condition in the hospital this morning with bruises. Nancy Petrak, 17, of 1595 Melton, Birmingham, is reported in fair condition with cuts, The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Fair and cool tenight. Low 51 te 55. Mostly fair and pleasant Tuesday. High 78 to 82. Light variable winds tonight becoming, mostly east to northeast 5 to 10 miles. Today tm Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 am. 54 At 8 a.m: Wind velocity 9 mph.; direc- tion north. Sun sets Monday at 731 pm. Sun rises Tuesday at 5 42 am. Moon, sets Monday at 10:50 pin Moon rises Tuesday at 2:48 p.m. Downtown Temperatures OB. M.Loccoses 54 Lies Te aecee 47 7 @. Bh.ccce 4 MSE cece eeeaees 69 8 &. M.nccece oo 62 Wop Mc cecseos 70 O R Mccctccse. Ge -— a oer 71 OES SAS Agoesac 66 Sunday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown) Highest temperature............... on | Lewest temperature... .ccescccrescces 54 Monn temperature. .6c. 5 ccccccccccece 66 Weather—Partly cloudy. One Year Ago in Pontiac Mighest temperature. ..cccccccsessnces e Lowest temperature.....ccerccceseaess 60 | Mean tempersture........cseeeseneees 7 Weatner—Pair. Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date in 81 Years 96 im 1950 48 in 1879, Sunday's Temperature Chart Alpens 70 48 Houghton 65 47 Battle Creek 78 50 Memphis 99 72 Bismarck 37 #55 Miami 83 73 Brownsville 93 77 Milwaukee 7 56 Buffalo 76 #ST Minneapolis 78 58 Cadillae 72 36 New Orleans 89 73 Chicago 83 60 New York 86 69 Cincinnati 90 62 Omaha 83 590 Denver 81 56 Phoenix 105 79 Detroit 61 56 Pittsburgh 83° 60 Duluth 15. 47 St. Louis 75 65 ad TT 49 Washington 87 69 Commission Through Cut Mile Road music, games, patterns and pic- tures. . Proceeds go toward scholar- ships and educa:‘onal grants and anyone wishing to have materials picked up may contact Mrs. Reb- ert L. Garrison, Mrs. Charies D. Moore or Mrs. M. C. Dietrich. Ralph Hunt, senior warden, at St. James Episcopal Church re- ports that damage still has not been estimated for the fire on July 29 which destroyed the church sanctuary. The fire will mean a setback in present building expan- sion of from four to five months, Hunt said. The church is nego- tiating with a local school for a temporary location for services. s * s Circlé IT of the Women’s Fellow- ship of the Congregational Church will meet .at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Joel Riley, in Royal Oak. The group will work on cancer pads. Board of Deacons and Deacon- esses will hold an 8 p.m meeting at the W. Maple home of Mr. and Mrs. H. 8. Roberts. s s s . Wew officers of the Moms Club take office with the first fall meet- ing Sept. 14. Mrs. Ralf A. Cookston was | re-elected dent, Mrs. Bruce D. Strieb is first vice-presi- dent, Mrs. Frank Smith, second vice-president and Mrs. L. J. Vici, treasurer. sponding secretary, Mrs. Manson Hiliman as chaplain, Mrs. Charlies Thomas as historian and Mrs. John Martz and Mrs. Eari H. Cunningham as directors. Chairmen are Mrs. Wilbur John- stone, program and United Na- tions; Mrs. Norman Porter, hos- pital and social service, with Mrs. Howard Estes as co-chairman; Mrs. William Morrision,. member- ship; Mrs. Clay Johnson, tea; and Mrs. -arold Corson, legislative. The Lions Club has no program scheduled for Wednsday’s noon luncheon at Devon Gables. Plans are underway for a Ladies’ Day celebration Aug. 26, however. William C. Knight Service for William C. Knight, 1420 W. Lincoln, will be at 11 a.m. Thursday from Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., with burial at White Chapel Memorial Cemetry. a Knight died Saturday at Point Pleasant, N. J. He suffered a heart attack while on a fishing trip with Detroit friends. Knight retired five years ago as president of Knight Screw Machine Products Co. of Detroit. Born m Kerwin, Kans., he had lived in the Detroit area 45 years. A 1906 graduate of the Engi- neering College of the University of Michigan, he was a member of the football team and later officiated at Big Ten football games. A member of the U of M Alumni Association, Knight was also a life member of the Detroit Boat Club and a member of the Highland Park Rotary. He was a Mason and a member of the Detroit Ath- | letic Club where he was active with the DAC Beavers. Besides his widow, Dorothy N., he is survived by. four daughters, Mrs. C. H Wells, Mrs. Frances Wibel, Mrs. Harry Bailey and Mrs. John Rogers; and a sister, Mrs. Mabel Fox. Magnus M. Burgess BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Service for Magnus M. Burgess, 56, of Country Club Drive, will be 2:30) p. m, Wednesday from Christ | Church Cranbrook, with interment at Woodjawn Cemetery, Detroit. The body will remain at his residence until 11 a. m. Wednes- day. Arrangements are by Bell | Chapel of William R. Hamilton | Co. Mr. Burgess died Friday at | University Hospital, Ann Arbor, after a brief illness. | He. had been president of the Sheller Manufacturing Corp., Port- land, Ind., manufacturer of auto- mobile parts. Born in Detroit, Burgess attend- ed the old Central High School. Active in amateur baseball, he was the first vice-president of the Detroit Athletic Club, past presi- dent of Oakland Hills Country Club, , THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1953 Death List Brings Grief to 2 Families (Continued“'From Page One) el Bs Fy : z aEReLe Care sate j 4 i gq PEE, fl = = Pontiac Deaths Edgar W. Braddee Service for Edgar W. -Braddee, Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, with cremation in White Chapel Cemetery. He died Sunday at Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, after a six week illness. Born in Fairchance, Pa., the son of William and Marie Braddee, he married Violet ‘Turner in Port Elizabeth in 1953. He was a field service engineer for the export di- vision of Chrysler Corp. Surviving besides his widow is one daughter, Mrs. Wilson Harb- age, Birmingham, at whose home he died, two grandchildren and three sisters, Mrs. Ruth Rauscher, Charleroi, Pa., Mrs. Clara Steven- son and Mrs. Edith Gales both of Niles, Ohio. Gerald J. Holsworth Services for Gerald J. Holsworth 5, will be Tuesday at 2 p. m.} at Weslyan Methodist Church, the | Rev. C. D. Friess officiating. Gerald, the son of George T. and Norma J. Huston Holsworth of 299 Auburn Ave., died Saturday at Pontiac General Hospital after an illness of four years. Surviving besides his parents are one brother, George Jr., and one sister, Sharon, both at home. The body will be at the Pursley Funeral Home until Tuesday noon. Burial will be in White Chapel Cemetery. . TRIBUTE TO DEAD—Brig. Gen. Lester J. Mait- land (left) and Brig. Gen. William E. Carraway, pause after Sunday’s Victory Day service in White Chapel are buried. G. M.'s Parade of Progress Coming (Continued From Page One) hicles which resemble big vouses. They have dual front wheels and are equipped with automatic trans- brakes, automatic light dimmers and are air-conditioned. Animated exhibits are built into their large cargo compartment. The Futurliners were built at the GMC Truck & Coach Di- vision here. ° The Parade's Aerodome tent has no poles or stakes — no obstruc- tion of any kind inside. It con- | sists of a framework of aluminum beams from which its plastic-im- pregnated canvas ‘‘skin’’ ig sus- pended. The tent seats 1,250 per- sons, A stage show is presented six times daily in the tent. Shown are such scientific oddities as the making of synthetic rubber in a pop bottle, cooking on a stove that never gets hot and the transmis- sion of sound by micro waves. The parade shows how scientif- ic research and engineering have improved the American standard of living. General Motors put its first Parade of Progress on the road in 1936. It visited 251 cities Mrs. Mary Jane Leach | Mary ‘Jane Leach, 91, of 765 | Alberta Blvd. died early this| morning at her home after an! illness of one year. Mrs. Leach was born Aug. 31, 1861, in Ontario, the daughter of William and Hanna Goatby Mor-' ris. In 1903 she married the late | John Leach in Birmingham and) had lived in Pontiac Township | since 1918. Surviving are four nephews, George Morris of Pontiac, Howard Morris of Pontiac Township, Nich- olis .Albers Morris and Walker Retan Morris of Drayton Plains. | Service will be Wednesday at! 1:30 from Huntoon Funeral Home, with burial at Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mrs. Haltie Perkins The. body-of Mrs. Hallie Perkins, | 57, of 76 Longfellow Ave. has been taken to Meeks Mortuary, Muncie, | Ind., for service and burial Wednes- | day. The body will be interred jin | Elm Ridge Cemetery, Muncie. Mrs.. Perkins who died Aug. 3, | was born in Frankfort, Ky., the | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John | Osborn. She came here from Mun- | cie five years ago. Surviving besides her husband, | David of Muncie, is one son, David Jr., of Pontiac, and one sister, Mrs. Unice Livingston, of} Aurora, Ill. John M. Schaeffer Service will be Tuesday at 2) p. m. from Mervin A. Schutt Funeral Home for John M. Schaeffer, 54, of 1191 Parkway St. who died suddenly at Pontiac Gen- | | | | throughout the country and was seen by 12% million people. It appeared here in 1937. The new parade has _ toured Kentucky, Ohio and Indiana. It is now showing in Flint. From Pon- tiac it will move to Detroit, then swing east. Reds Release 3 More POWs From Michigan FREEDOM VILLAGE, Korea (UP) — The following American prisoners were released today: Michigan Cpl. Bobby Perry; friend, Miss Norma Lentz, Benton Harbor. Cpl. John M. Schemer: mother, Lottie R. Schemer, Detroit. Cpl. Howard Waters Jr.; mother, Jennie M. Confer, Battle Creek: Alabama Cpl. Harold £E. Fowler, Manchester; Pfc. Kenneth Tate Pittman, Grove Oak; Cpl. Harold J. Rawis. Brilliant. Arkansas Cpl. Thurman R. Jones, Waldron Califernia Cpl. Daniel Arellano, Gardena; Sgt. Blythe I. Berkheimer, Los Angeles; Cpl. Frank Borelli, Ban Prancisco; Sgt. Al- fonso Estreada, Cula Vista; Cpl. Prank J. Jones, Oakland; Sgt. Thomas T. Sukki, Mountain View Delaware Cpl. Charles W. Jewell, Washington; Pic. Robert T. Walton, Wilmington; Illineis Cpl. Charles L. Bedwell, Lewistown; Cpl. Joseph C. Johnson, Godfrey; Pic. Leslie G. Kolb, Bast St. Louis. Indians Cpl. Lawrence Bailey. Claypool; Pfc Jackie D. Blair, Bloomington; Cpl., Mil- ton F. Gifford, Aurora; Sgt. Carl R. Head. Evansville; Cpl. Martin 8. Moore, Indianapolis. lowa Pic. Irvin B. Elsbury, Sutherland: Cpl Ralph H. Fisk Jr.. Ottumwa; Cpl. Donald W. Petersen, Des Moines. Kentucky Pfc. Dewey A. Brewer, Corinth; sgt. Ear! R. Smith, Corbin. Leuisiana : C Cpl. John J. Leidenheimer, New Or- eral Hospital Saturday morning. | !##"5. ] Maine Mr. Schaeffer, who was born} Pfc. Joseph A. Bourgoin, Waterville. in Frankville, Pa., was the .son/| Massachueetts of William and Elizabeth Schaef- | fer. In 1925 he married Gladys Ethel Thayer in Highland Park and came to Pontiac two years later. Here he was employed at the, Whizzer Motor Co. Surviving besides his widow are |and a member of Question Club, Grosse Point Yacht Club and Chi- cago Club. He was also active in the Boys’ | | Jenn project as a member of, } Indian Creek Country Club, Mi-| | ami, Fla. | Survivors include his widow, | Blanche. Reynolds; a daughter, | | Nancy Irene; three sisters, Mrs. | ,E. L. Hagerkorn, Mrs. John Sei- | | bert and Miss Lucile Burgess; and | a brother, Robert W. Chisox, Braves to Play for ‘Runner-up’ Title CHICAGO (UP) — The Chicago White Sox and Milwaukee Braves | | have agreed to play a post-sea- | son game for baseball's “runner: | up’’ title under sponsorship of | the Chicago Daily News, it was announced today. The game would be played a€, Comiskey Park the ‘night of Sept. | 28, the day after the season ei. the News announced. Receipts would be split between the play- | ers and the Daily News Veteran , Fund. two sons, Richard and William, | and two daughters, Mrs. Margaret ers, Charles of Arcadia, Calif., | Robert of Detroit and Clyde of, Pontiac, Sgt. Calvin C. Hansen, South Braintree; Pfe. John Lee. Springfield: Cpl. James P. McInerney, Fairview; Sgt. Donald F. Ryder, Harwich Port. Minnesota Pfc. Julian K. Drange, Hazel Run; Pfc. Duane L. Johnson. Minneapolis. Missouri Pfc. Loren D. Bryant, Cowgill; Cpl, Herbert J. Gulley, Mayview; Cpl. James D. Hargiss. Quiin; Cpl. Ira J. Obenauer, Bonne Terre North Carolina Sgt. Herbert Costin. Goldsboro. ‘Larsen, and Mrs. Virginia Reiche,| cp pernara 1 Brae, Lakewood all of Pontiac. ei siciaci New York Also surviving are three broth-| sation Lope} OSnninh Huntington | Nerth Dakota Cpl. Martin Dol Jr: Almont Oklahoma Cp). George L. Brown, MeCurtain:; Pfe | : j George V. Cowe klah ty Burial will be at Roseland Park! gun's. Easiey Prose OY Met Cemetery. Oregon Cpl Charles O Brooks Jr.. West Linn William M. Sykes Service for William M?’ Sykes, 65, of 145 W. South Blvd. will be Tuesday at 2 p. m. from St. John Methodist Church. Mr. Sykes died at his home Friday after an illness of eight years. Born in Murfreesboro, Tenn., he married Susie Ann Wade there and came here from Nashville 35 years ago. Mr. Sykes was last em-| ployed by the city and was a. Pennsylvania . Pfc. Mickael 8. Levycky, Philadelphia; Sgt. Prank J. Page, Kingston: Cpl. John P Paulina. Clymer: Sgt. Louis Joseph Pichelli, Midland; Pfc. Prank J Reichl. Copley; Pfe. Oren Dean Shaffer.’ York; Pfc. Andrew Sub Jr., Lyndora; Cpl. Ken- neth D. Veidheffer, Hyde. Rhede Island Sgt. Joseph R. Leveeille, West Warwick Seuth Carolina Pfc. Jessie L. Long. Rock Hill. - Sewth Dakota ( Paul V. Stauffacher, Canton. Tennessee Sgt. Joe C’ Callaher Waynesboro Worley Cutshaw. Greenville: ard N. Vinson, Big Sandy. exas Cpl Rex Modge, Clute: ‘ : Cpl. Alfredo Z. member of the Miller Burial So-| Humada, Corpus Christ! , ciety Virginia . Cpl. James T. Bryant. Newcoms. Surviving is one child, Suzanne | of Detroit. The body may be viewed this afternoon at the William F. Davis ' Funeral Home. Burial will be in| Oak Hill Cemetery. West Virginia Estly L. Cooper. Winifrede: Set Homer A. Dahlin, Charleston Sgt. James D. Plowers. Charleston: Sgt Kirk, Homertown. Wisconsin Cpl. Richard L. Delaney. Necedah Marcos Martinez, Waukesha; Pic. M. | Park Pallas. Pfc ; Cpl. John i| Cherrylawn. Other men Leopold L. Howard, Pringle; Pfc. Victory Day Service Seek Moral for Strength An estimated 500 Gold Star mothers and wives yesterday heard Orland K. Armstrong of Missouri call for a rededication to moral principles at the fifth annual Victory Day service in White Chapel Cemetery. at the Four Freedoms Memorial where 350 American dead of World War II and Korea are buried. ‘‘Moral and spiritual strength is essential to the fundamental strength of the country,’’ Armstrong said. ‘‘We need a rededication to County Sends /0 for Induction Nine Volunteers Also Included in Group From Boards 65 and 67 Seventy men called up by Selec- tive Service Boards 65 and 67 left Pontiac early today for induction into the armed forces at Ft. Wayne, Detroit. Board 67, which covers most of the county except for Pontiac and | Royal Oak, sent 50 men, with Bruce O. Bradley of Drayton Plains as leader. The 50 included four, .volunteers: Frederick W. Meinberg of Birmingham; Fried- rich of Warras, Farmington; Rob- ert A. Capron, Ortonville and Marshall Blake, Wixom. Also inducted by Board 67 were: Arthur Hocking Jr., Farmington William £E. Boettcher, Birmingham Haines P. Walmsley Jr., Birmingham James R. Gellatly, Birmingham Barry T. Parsons, 2964 Old Orchard Dr. John B. Beresford, Bloomfield Hills Jerry W. Turner, 1425 Glenwood Ave. Gerald W. DeLoy, ag re pte Irvin G. Sutherland, Birmingham Robert W. Putman, Waterford Russell W. Leyland Jr., Birmingham William C. King Jr., Clyde R. Hobbins Jr., Farmington David P. Somers, Birmingham ¢ Richard M. Butler, 2689 Silverside Thomas C. Morgan Jr., Birmingham Jack W. Emery, Waterford James H. Wernig Jr., Birmingham Donald H. Kevern, 23 drill Ct. Richard D. Hindley, Birmingham Robert L. Schuster, 4075 Motorway Dr. Roger W. Hanson, Walled Lake Gerald A. Bullivan, Walled Lake ‘Alan M. Hessell, Clarkston W. Jens, Ortonville Gerald D. , Ortonville Thomas G. Thompson, Walled Lake Roy J. Whelpley. Oxfosd Teddy R. Landrum, Lake Orion Thomas J. Augustine, Milford Stanley C. Lendzon, Bloomfield Hills Delton D. Morse. 7656 Barnsbury Donald H. Barrett, Milford Arthur W. Witt, 22 Hazel St. Ano H. Olson Jr., 3911 Walnut Lake Rd. Robert W. Clark, Farmington Thomas L. Luscombe, Birmingham Lemuel A. Chaffin, 7172 Banks Bt. Everett T. Mero, 4406 Homesite James K. Dooley, Birmingham Italo V. Berra, Farmington Douglas J. Thompson, rmingtan Eric A. Wild. Ypsilanti David R. Henke, Oxford Volunteer F. Warren Rice Jr., 106 Florence St., was named lead- | er of Board 65’s 20 Pontiac area | inductees leaving today. The group |included four other volunteers: Ralph E. Grubb, 53 Gateway; Richard L. Courteau, Clarkston; Ronald W. Grover, 71 Oliver St.; and Anthony F. Schneider, 1257 leaving for induction today included: James M. Nieba 380 Third Bruce A. MacKenzie, 79 N. Edith Ronald P. Parsons, 17 Illinois Everette D. Lafner, 364 Raeburn Robert J. Bower, 117 Summitt William J, Richardson, 36 Putnam Kenneth A. Orr, 674 Emerson Wallace G. Tatro, 61 W. Rutgers Robert C. Brooks, P.O. Box 1282 Walter T. Ritlaw, 3200 Giddings Rd. William J, Klinert, 571 LeBaron Ronald L. Frier, Evansville. Ind. James H. Mclireth Jr., 11 N. Shirley James R. Peterson, 31 Belmont Roque L. Bosa, 72 Clovese | Three Detroiters Hurt in Pontiac Trail Crash Genera] Hospital after a two-car crash Sunday on Pontiac Trail west of Haggerty Road, according to Oakland County: sheriff's depu- ties. A car driven by Wayland W. Binder, 34, of 7717 Detroit Blvd., Detroit, collided with one operated by Woodie McClendon, 27, of 1111 Seminole Ave., Detroit, Deputies said. All the injured were riding in _Binder’s car. His wife, Juliette, Cpl Rich | 34; son, Daniel. 6; and daughter’ of his Army commission. Irene is | Diane, 3; were treated for cuts | and bruises. In 1820, when a salt well, locat- ed where Pittsburgh now stands, | was deepened, natural gas was |for the gas and the well was | capped to prevent its becoming a nuisance, 4 ® ge ki gee eptyt bed i ei a Sir} 2nd Assault Spurs Search for Killer (Continued From Page One) man approached her and asked directions to Columbia Street. The girl said she gave him the information and hurried away along Fairrfiount avenue. Sudden- ly the mam placed his hands around her throat lifted her into the air and dragged her to the lot. “I couldn’t scream or even talk because his hands were tight around my neck,” she told Miss Sweeney. After tying her hands behind her back with one of her stockings, he attacked her. Cemetery. to salute the Four Freed where 350 American dead of World War II and Korea: The service is held each year} Mothers and wives they. deserve Three members of a _ Detroit: family were treated at Pontiac | Pontiac Press Phote iloms Memorial '| identified, Rededication of Country moral principles. The world cannot endure half slave and half free.” Brig. Gen. William E. Carra- way, Ass’t. Commdr. 3ist Infan- try Division recently returned from Korea, told the Gold Star the respect of all Americans. “You hold this celebration as a victory, not as sg Carra- ay pointed out. ‘Your patriotism is deeply unselfish.’ at the foot of the Four Freedoms memorial. Rep. George A. Dondero, (R- Royal Oak) acting as director of ceremonies, called for a constant awareness of the objectives of World War I, World War II and the Korean war. Freedom is not free,”’ Don- dero said. ‘‘To such Americans as these men, the flowers and flags we place here will be noth- ing unless we remain true to their spirit, » ‘May the historian of the future | write of us, ‘They also kept the | faith.’ " ; Other speakers included Mrs. Elsie Neilsen, national president of the Gold Star Mothers; the Hon. John Fisher, representing the Brit- ish consulate; the Hon. C. W. Hooper, representing the Cana- dian consulate; Troy Tonship su- pervisor Norman Barnard; Detroit Common-Council president Louis C. Miriani; and the Rev. Charles W. Hughes. The Tenth Air Force Band from Selfridge Air Force base played during the ceremony. Flies From Formosa to New Pontiac Home (Continued From Page One) China, in December, 1947. Irene had a son by a previous marri- age, Richard Hwang, then six- years-old. . Lt. Gunther was called to the United States. He coiid bring Irene as his wife, but not the boy because of his Chinese ancestry. The couple decided Irene would follow her husband to America and acquire her citizenship. They thought when she became a citizen The attacker was described as being about five feet, eight inch-- es tall and weighing about 200 pounds. He had brown hair, a heavy beard and was wearing a dirty T-shirt and grease-stained, rumpled dark trousers. Henry Manz, of 17 Fairmount St. who found the dazed girl on his porch untied her and called police. The girl was treated for shock at Pontiac General hospital. The body of Mrs. Perkins was about an hour after it was discovered, by David's wife, Ruth, 34, who was attracted to the field by the crowd. Hearing of the woman's body she told detectives that her mother- in-law was reported missing on Aug. 10. Showing her a wrist- watch and a wedding band lying near the body, she sobbed, ‘‘That’s it . . . Why? Why? She was an old woman. It doesn’t make sense; I don’t /understand.” Detectives DePauw and Lt. Walt- er Krause confirmed Mrs. Perkin's identity by checking the serial number of her watch. against rec- ords in a Pontiac jewelry store where she had the watch repaired recently. ~ Police had the field mowed and found one of Mrs. Perkin’s shoes about 30 feet from where the body was found and the other 90 feet away. Her red wallet containing $12 and her social security card also were discovered nearby. After finding the wallet, police discounted robbery as a motive and said the position of the shoes indicated the victim had been dragged from the Baldwin Ave- nue sidewalk, just south of Bev- erly. ~ = Dr. Richard E. Olsen, St.‘ Joseph Mercy Hospital pathologist, said his Saturday night autopsy indi- cated that two of Mrs. Perkin’s ribs had been broken after death. He said she apparently had been strangled after she was raped. Police at first thought the body | had been burned, but an autospy | of the badly-decomposed body fail- ed to show any burns. A potato bag covered the upper part of the body and a man’s size 40, brown coat was draped over e women’s legs and hips. Police said the coat had been purchased in a Pontiac store. Mrs. Perkins’ husband, who op- erates a cigar store in Muncie, Ind., has come to Pontiac to claim the body and tak@ it back to Mun- cie for burial. Mrs. Perkins had been living apart for about a year. Mrs. Perkins, who did house- work, last worked for Mrs. Wal- lace R. Williams, 291 Tilden St., according to police. Mrs. Williams told police that Mrs. Perkins quit her job at her home July 29 when she back. She said Mrs. Perkins was sup- posed to return to work Aug. 3, “but I haven’t heard from her since.” Police said ‘Mrs. Perkins also worked for Mrs. Harold P. Chap- man of 390 Tilden St. from July 20-25 and July 27, 28. They report- ed that Mrs. Perkins went to Mrs. Chapman's home about noon Aug. 3 to collect $14 for two days work. According to Oakland County Prosecutor Frederic C. dZiem, Mrs. Perkins lived with her son their son’s admittance would be made easier. It wasn't. jIrene had gained citizenship in | | two years. But three more years | | were consumed in cutting through | the “‘red tape,”’ and only now with assistance of Michigan Sen. Homer | Ferguson has the long prayed for reunion come about. Meanwhile Richard stayed with his aunt Julia Hwang on Formosa. She sent pictures and corresponded constantly with the Gunthers. The lieutenant expects Richard to make a rapid adjustment to Pontiac life. He has been attend- ing an American school in For- mosa and speaks and writes both English and Chinese. They plan to enroll him in Lincoln Junior High School this fall. The happy three will be sep- arated again in a few days when the recently commissioned officer departs for Fort Leonard Wood, |Mo. “There's a lot of difference between a few hundred miles and 7,000 though,"” Gunther observed. “We've had many. worries these five years,"’ he said. ‘‘We were never certain the law would allow us to bring him at all. “Again, there was always the threat of an attack on Formosa by the Chinese. ‘‘Without- the war though,’’ he pointed out, “I never would have met my wife or Richard.” Gunther has been employed at Fisher Body up to the time Working constantly | | employed by the Social: Security | Administration in Pontiac. | The Gunthers aren't exactly sure what Richard's status is, but they ‘think he automatically becomes a citizen. ‘We've got him now John A.| tapped, but no use could be found | though,’’ Mrs. Gunther said, “and | after the obstacles we've already | overcome any future ones oe | and daughter-in-law, Ruth, about seven years and, occupied a small room upstairs. © Ruth told Ziem that Mrs. Per- kins and her husband lived withg them until about a year ago, whén he -went to Muncie after quarrels with his son, David Jr., complained of a_ sprained |; Both Ruth and her husband, David Jr., told Ziem they didn’t missing until Monday, Aug. 10, as they thought she would return from one of her Ziem said Ruth told him that Mrs, Perkins had received a letter f: »m her husband the Saturday be- contents. Police also learned that Mrs. Perkins had a private mail] box at Pontiac Post Office. Following Saturday night's at- tack police made a_ house-to- heuse search for a suspect. Capt. Clark W. Wheaton, chief of detectives, said his department would appreciate any tips which would lead police to the slayer. DePauw said he would recom- mend that all lots and fields in the residential-industrial area be mowed for further evidence. Grass in some of the fields is growing as high as 4% feet. Police said they have received numerous tips from residents ‘in ‘the area. Tips which may aid the inves- tigation should be telephoned to FEderal 2-0171, said police. Besides her son and husband, Mrs. Perkins is survived by a sister, Mrs. Eunice Livingston of Aurora, Ill.; and four grand- daughters, Gwendolyn, 17; Elaine, 16; Nancy, 14; and Sharon Ann, 10; all of the Longfellow addreas. Planning a “BIG” WEEKEND in Detroit ? and do in Detroit—the Edison In- cal Park . . . and all the shops and theatres. But there's one thing to be sure to do. Stay STATLER on your big weekend! Everything is within easy reach of Statler. And Statler’s tuxu- rious rooms and special services just can't be beat. Delicious food, too. Be sure to stay Statler ! ‘ HOTEL STATLER Fecing Grend Cirevs Park DETROIT fore she left, but didn’t disclose its (Adertisement) MAKE YOUR JAMS AND JELLIES WITH CERTO PECTIN! @ “FLAVOR-QUARDED” for rheheny fresher nature! fret fievert @ EASIER! No dissolving . . . just pant Navid Certo (« notere! frut pectin’ product) late fruit mixtwre! @ FASTER! Tokes jue 1$ minutes aftee frvit’s prepored! HOMEMADE JAMS AND JELLIES TASTE BEST— COST LESS! A Product of Genera! Feoos Sif The elder Perkins returned here | once asking his wife to return | with him to Muncie, but she re-| fused because she said she had | become too attached to the chil-| dren, said Ruth. Mrs. Perkins was | the grandmother of four children. | Ziem quoted Ruth as saying | that Mrs. Perkins lived a seclud- ed life and would stay away from home as much as two or three days at a time. i She told the prosecutor that, Mrs. Perkins bought her own food and stored it in her own ice-box. While away. Ruth continued, Mrs. | Perkins would block her open, cur- | tained door with-a dresscr. According to Ziem, Ruth said Mrs. ‘Perkins left home early in the morning on Tuesday, Aug. 4, and never returned. She said her mother-in-law told | Buying: SCRAP IRON and METAL Selling: Structural Steel I-Beams—Channels Angles—Etc. S. Allen & Son, Inc. 22 Congress FE 5-8142 COM PLETE FUNERAL SERVICE William F. Davis Funeral Home FE 2-0652 costs no more! the BEST... _ THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS. MONDAY. ‘AUGUST 17, 1953 THREE oy MON., FRI. & SAT. STORE HOURS nme § French Papers |'ndians Don Costumes/ssaoi nme Bees Mo pe for Trinket-Selling Blast ax eee te te "SAM wore TONITE | a If you want = Join In Strike | assoanxo, owe ace eam «tl mse of ie oa ve eve Geta tra Shopping Hours to be a. wow of a pow-wow! tepees. Robert Goombi, exposition % SIN Evide of B ok An estimated 25,000 Indians have | President, said all the Indians Si Fo Your I and Extra Values, too! % 2 re] idence ‘Brea . | bring their own tents and cooking MMS r es lenty of honest-to- . * Site of tic oubeyied “Tadie tts || BEST Possible PICTURES ||P (er_sre,shars plenty of hoestte Seen as Work Tie-up skirts of this self-styled “Indian | Utensils for the week out Capital of the World” hoping to | °P&®. extra shopping hours to make it possible Ree hag uality Jeans ON STORE | has them! Enters 12th Day garner a trunkload of the white * + 6 for every thrifty shopper to share in man's da ny wampum during the| There are Pueblos from Jemez, them. PARIS —The French had only | 99ng annual American Indian Ex-|N. M., Hootahs from northern a few provincial newspapers and | position. . : the Englishlanguage European; And the peace-pipe smoking red- - edition of the New York Herald| men apparently are willing to for- ®@ Standard Pharmaceuticals whic read today | Set that their white brothers shy- © 5 Registered Pharmacists mee seat ™ ext locked their ancestors out of Man- ® Savings 10% to 40% about the nation’s continuing crip-| hattan Island for a piddling $24 pling strikes. in trinkets. Most newspaper workers joined maa * *# — for one day in the walkout. in|. ves, squaws papoos- staterun communications and|¢s have neatly folded their over- transport fields. Some out-of-town | alls, business suits and two-tone BS aae c Rad Washday Bargains — Tonight and Tuesday! ‘Wetherbee’ Quality . 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Demand PRUVO, accept no sub- /}tablets containing the new won- | many cases, curb swelling and contains no dope or habit-forming Ask your druggist today for 4 stitute. Lae eR ER fa ih es Exactly as pictured Simply attach Handee mitt to your garden hose, 10 flash bulbs, 2 batteries e turn on the water and you'll) have pee 8 roll of film. (Camera e| the cleanest car on the road. Handee mitt is ideal for washing screens. { windows, ‘etc. = z 75 TABLETS $450 : only t e : SIMMS. E AESIAMS.8 ee : BROTHER s a seat " ; ; mS 98 N. Saginaw—Main Floor °| 98 N. Sagi —2nd Fl , RE Re ey APRN Ree Ny Seay Tee See ad 98 N. Saginaw —Drug Dept. Cccccccccccccccccccees atcha ‘ waa | 98 N. Saginaw St. “| ; } ‘ 4 \ ‘ ° ‘ BROTHERS Open Tonight ; a ne me rowa | __ FOUR THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1953 Birmingham Blvd., Oakland Coun- ty sheriff's deputies said today. Michael was riding in a car driven by his father, Ralph R. Mc- Gaw, 22, when it hit one driven Boy’s Bruises Treated After Auto Accident Michael L. McGaw, %, of 1792 Bandbury, Birmingham, was treat- ft Quotas ed for bruises at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Saturday after a two-car by Lynn Griem, 14, of 724 Wil- liamsburg, Birmingham, according Three Persons Hurt crash on Fourteen Mile Rd. at to deputies. Thatcher, Patterson & Wernet SS Pontiac's Oldest Insurance Agency 2=== 609 Community National Bank B idg. FE 2-9224 (Advertisement) (Advertisement) Science Shrinks Piles \New Way Without Surgery Finds Healing Substance That Does Both—- Relieves Pain—Shrinks Hemorrhoids New York, N. Y. ¢ F }=— For the first time nee as found a new healing substance ‘with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids and to stop bleeding—without surgery. In‘one hemorrhoid case after another, “very striking im ment” was reported and verified by doctors’ observations. , Pain was relieved promptly. ‘And; while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. ' And most amazing of all—this improvement was maintained in cases where doctors’ observations were continued over a period of - many months! In fact, results were so thor- ough that sufferers were able to make such astonishing statements as “Piles have ceased to be a problem!” And among these suf- ferers were a very wide variety of hemorrhoid conditions, some of 10 to 20 years’ standing. All this, without the use of narcotics, anesthetics or astrin- gents of any kind. The secret is a new healing substance (Bio- Dyne®)—the discovery of a world- famous research institution. Al- ready, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the body. Now this new healing substance is offered in ointment form for hemorrhoids under the name Preparation H.* The price is only 98¢ a tube including an appli- cator. The name to ask for is Preparation H—at all drug stores. And remember—if not. entirely satisfied—your*money will be re- funded promptly. Trade Mart, (Advertisement) Free Booklet * (Advertisement) Reveals Why Loss Of Hearing Should Be Checked Immediately CHICAGO (Special)—Does a hearing impairment become pro- gressively worse? Are persistent or recurring ear noises a sign of deafness? Does lost hearing cause other complications? These and other important ques- tions of vital interest to the 15 million eereeae in the United States who are hard of hearing are answered im aa authoritative new illustrated booklet, “How You Can Help Yourself to Hear Bet- ter.” It is now available to the hard of hearing readers of this news- pa without cost or obligation. o obtain your free copy, which will be sent in a plain wrapper, simply send your request to: Elec- tronic Research Director, Beltone Hearing Aid Company, 2900 West 36th Street, Department 526-A ——_— in 2-Car Collision | BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — A two-car collision at Adams Rd. and Big Beaver Rd. last night sent three-persons to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Walter E. Leader, 59, of 14190 St= Mary’s, Detroit, driver of one car, .was treated and released for head, shoulder and arm injuries. His wife: Alice, 53, is reported in fair condition today with frac- tured ribs and other possible in- juries. Under observation for shock, Miss Nancy Petrak, 17, of 1595 Melton, Birmingham, is in good condition. She was a passenger in a car driven by Rolland E. Garn, 18, of 3798 South Bivd., Birmingham. Police ticketed Garn for failure to stop at a stop! sign.” PHS Driving Instructor to Teach at UM School Arthur Tyrrell, Pontiac High School driver training instructor, will teach road work in a Uni- versity of Michigan driver training institute this week. The special school, sponsored by the university, Michigan Depart- ment of Public Instruction and the Automobile Club of Michigan, will | train driver training teachers for school systems throughout the state. List Property Sales at Waterford Office WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — To insure that tax notices be sent to the proper persons, all who bought or sold township property during the past year are asked to contact Mrs. Helen Reese, township treas- urer, at her office, 4995 W. Huron St., Pontiac, immediately. Mrs. Reese said tax files are being prepared so notices can be mailed on Dec. 10. She said anyone not sure how their property is listed should contact her for veri- fication. SMOKE CAMELS See for yourself why CAMELS lead all other brands! : 3 Michigan Gls Listed by Reds With Escapees WASHINGTON (# — The De- fense Department released today the names of 33 American sglidiers “purported by Communist forces to have escaped while in their cus- tody in Korean prison camps.”’ The department emphasized that in no case have the Communist reports been verified. j “Not one of the men listed has ever returned to United Nations’ lines,” the Defense Department said. ‘‘No determination of of- ficial status will be made by the military services pending a thor- ough analysis of all available evidence, including statements of returned prisoners.” An list contained 36 names, 78 more to be earlier leaving Reds claim escaped. All the. following are Army per- sonnel. Michigan Mr. and Mrs. Wesley A. Swinson, Port Huron. Mrs. Nora Bailey, St., Holly. Pvt. Jack R. Zoller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond born. Alabama Pfc. Charles Willis, North Birmingham; Pfc. James E. Tennille, Eugaula. Arizona Ogt. 1C. Billy W. Anderson, Phoenix. Arkansas Cpl. Ployd &. Brown, Little Rock; M. Sgt. Marvin E. Tomlinson, Barling. Califernia Sgt. Richard A. Woodworth, Lomita. Florida Ist Lt. John J. Brockman, Tarpon Bprings. Dlineis Capt. Douglas R. Anderson, Rockford; Cpl. Ellsworth L. Anderson, Chicago: Pfc. David F. Blosser, Chicago; Maj. Frank M. Brown. Chicago; Cpl. Harold M. Welker, Sterling. Maryland Pic. Robert L. Galt Jr., Baltimore. Minnesota Cpl. James L. Ballantyne, Austin. Mississippi Cpl. Charles M. Bevels, Houston. Misseuri Pfc. Andrew B. Brown, Mountain Grove; Cpl. Lee R. Cawley, St. Joseph. New Jersey Cpl. John R. Sweeney,- Berlin. New York Pvt. Thomas A. Cammarano, Brooklyn; Pfc. Louls Cheff, Niagara Pals. Ohie Cpl. Joseph C. Brown, Briggsdale; Cpl. Charlies C. Campbell, Hows Pennsylvania Cpl. Charles W. Adams, Blandon; Pfc. Herbert L. Allen, Philadelphia; Cpl. Ward M. Breen, Altoona; Cpl. Walter T. Stoe- ber Jr.. McKees Rocks: Pic. Walter R. Young, Glenside; Pic. Howard W. Win- rader Jr., Butler. ‘ Texas dy Baldomero Ansaldua, Raymond- ville. Vermont Richard H. Wagner. Vergennes. Syracuse Drivers on Wildcat Strike SYRACUSE, N. Y. (#—AFL bus drivers struck without warning to- day but despite huge traffic jams and taxi shortages, early reports indicated most stranded workers reached their jdbs. Spokesmen for the Amalgamated Association of Street, Electric Cp! | Railroad and Motor Coach em- ployes said the strike had not been | authorized, and urged drivers to return to work in this industrial city of 220,000 persons in central New York. The huge General Electric Co. | electronics installations said only | a few workers were absent, | though some were tardy. The Car- al- rier Corp., mnufacturers of air- conditioning equipment, reported only about 50 late. Most workers got to their jobs | by car pools, taxis or hitchhiking. ‘Condition Called ‘Fair’ ‘After Auto Overturns identified from a list of 147 the, Pfc. Phillip F. Alcorn, son of! Sgt. Charles V. Bailey, son of} Deaths in Nearby Communities 208 Clarence | Peters, Dear-| MYRA MERRICK Mr. and Mrs. Charles Merrick | of 352 Church St., Ortonville, an- | nounce the engagement of their | daughter, Myra, to Robert Flem- ing of Drayton Plains. the son of Mr. and Mrs. Mural Fleming of Rose Mound Street, Drayton Plains. Their marriage will be solemnized Oct. 10. Robert is| Johnson of Gaylord, now stationed County Farms OK Wheat | PATRICIA LEE BALLARD Mr. and Mrs. Ezra G. Ballard of | Royal Oak announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Patricia Lee, to Airman 2C. ,Forest H. at Davis Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona. Forest is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert C. Johnson of Gaylord. Rev. Ezra A. Cross ROCHESTER — Service for the Rev. Ezra A. Cross, 93, retired | minister of Fair Hope, Ala., will be Wednesday at 2:30 p. m. from Crosby Funeral Home, Highland Park, with burial in Woodlawn Cemetery. He died Sunday at his home. Well known in this area, he was pastor of Warren, Troy and Big Beaver Methodist Churches. Surviving are two sons, Merrill of Detroit, and Dr. Hildreth Cross of Upland, Ind., and a daughter, Mrs. Ethel Smith of Almont. Also surviving are. three grandchildren and five great grandchildren. Mrs, Mary A. Wright ROYAL OAK Service for Mrs. Mary A. Wright, 76, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow from Kinsey Funeral Home, Royal Oak with burial in Oakview Cemetery. Formerly of Royal Oak, she died Saturday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Keith Kennedy of 5295 Middle Belt Rd. Mrs. Ida May §Roulo ROYAL OAK — Service for Mrs. Ida May Roulo, 83, of 515 E. Fifth St. was to be at 2 p.m. today from Sullivan and Son Funeral Home with burial in Cemetery. She lived here for 22 years and | died Saturday. Mrs. Lela R. Schick LAKE ORION — Service for Mrs. Virgil (Lela R.) Schick, 45, of 349 Broadway St., will be 2 p. m. Wednesday at Mabley Chapel, Oxford, with. burial in Eastlawn Cemetery at Lake Orion. She died Sunday in Detroit. Born in Onaway, she had lived in‘ Lake Orion for the past 20 years and was a member of Lake owner of a super market. Gus Pappas SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP— Service for Gus Pappas, 69, of 21130 Seminole will 2 p.m, from Thayer Funeral Home, Farmington, with burial in Oak- land Hills Memorial Cemetery. He died Sunday in Art Center Hospi- tal, Detroit, after a brief illness. A resident in the county for 35 ' years, he is survived by his widow, | Hattie. John Henry Lewis LAPEER — Service for John Henry Lewis, 90, of Thornville, will Holy Sepulchre and Son Funeral Home, Ferndale, with burial at Port Huron. He died Friday. ROYAL OAK — Service for Stanley M. Newton, of 3114 N. Main St. will be at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow from Schnaidt Funeral Home with burial in Woodlawn Cemetery, De- troit. He died Saturday at home. New Trial Denied in Southfield Suit A motion for a new trial was denied former Southfield Township Supervisor Dudley P. Frame today in his $200,000 libel suit against Township Clerk Fannie Adams and the owner and publisher of the Four Corners Press. Oakland County Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland denied the request, filed Oct. 15, 1952, because ‘“‘the issues were well and thoroughly tried.’’ Judge Holland was referring to the original 12-day suit heard in Circuit Court September, 1952, in which a jury returned a ‘no cause for action’ verdict after deliberating only an hour. The suit was filed by Frame against Fannie Adams, Betty Lewis and Marion White because of an “open letter’’ to township voters published in the Franklin weekly in 1951. Frame charged the ee (Adertisement) AMAZING NEW PAZO ACTS TO REDUCE SWELLING or simvtt PILES... 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Get fast relief | Ask r own doctor about it, Suppository form or in tubes with per- forated pile pipe for easy application, All druggists have new stainless Paso, *Pas Ointment end Suppestiories® TRICKLING - - - NOISY Challenged ballots will be opened and returns for Oakland County in the wheat quota refer- endum will be reviewed tomor- rew morning, according to Wal- ter Cook, County Production Marketing Administration chair- man, The ten challenged ballots for | the county will be opened at 10) a. m. in room 320 of the Hubbard Building in Pontiac. The public is invited to attend. Most of the challenged ballots, Cook said, were questioned be- cause some farmers were believed unable to plant over 15 acres of wheat as required for eligibility to vote on the referendum. Voting in the eight county pre- cincts was as follows: Holly and Rose Townships — 24 yes, 2 no and 3 challenged. Highland, Milford, Commerce and White Lake — 24 yes and 4 no. WATE MASTER AMERICA’S LARGEST SELLING TONLET TANK BALL Noisy running toilets con waste over 500 gallons of water a day. The amazing patented Water Master tank ball instantly stops the flow of water after each flushing. 7 5c at hardwore stores EVERYWHERE (Advertisement) WHEN KIDNEYS Worktoo Offen If you are embarrassed and bothered by Getting Up Nights (too frequent, burning or stinging urination), Backache, Bladder - Cramps, Strong Cloudy Urine or Pressure over Bladder, due to minor Kidney and Bladder Irritation, ask your druggist about CYSTEX. Such symptoms may result in loss of sleep and then you can't help feeling tired and depressed. Popular for 25 years, CYSTEX frequently brings delightful, soothing relief through its action as a uri- nary bacteriostdt (non-specific germ inhibi- tor) in acid urine and as an analgesic (simple pain reliever). Over 900 million CYSTEX tablets used ghey enduring de- mand. Ask your druggist for CYSTEX today and discover how this popular medicine may prove a dependable friend and aid to you. Satisfaction or money back guaranteed. STEERING SERVICE The John Bean VISU- ALINER shows YOU Lyon and Novi Townships — 17 yes, 5 no and 1 challenged. Groveland and Brandon Town- ship — 13 yes. Springfield and Independence Township — 6 yes. —~ Oxford and Addison Township— 9 yes, 6 no and 4 challenged. Oakland and Orion Township — 4 yes, 8 no and 2 challenged. Avon, Pontiac, Waterford, West Bloomfield, Bloomfield, Troy, Royal Oak, Southfield and Farm- ington — 20 yes and 10 no. TB Sanatorium Head Takes Jackson Post Dr. George H. Phillips, who has been op the staff of the Oakland County Tuberculosis Sanatorium since April, 1950, and medical whether your cor needs superintendent the past year, has fs A d tendered his resignation. effective steering sqrvice an Sept. 1. He has accepted the posi- helps US a faster,’ - more accurate job of correcting the trowbte. tion of Superintendent and Medical Director of the Jackson County Tuberculosis Sanatorium. His suc- cessor here will be announced in | a few days. med injured his reputation. William J. Beer, attorney ‘for Frame, said Frame had authorized him to appeal the case to the Michigan Supreme Court. Orion Women's Club and the co-| be Wednesday at! |ing Arthur B. Hodges of 20000 Inquest Into Shooting Opens in Royal Oak An inquest into the death of a Detroit man killed by a Royal Oak Township policeman while running from_a crap game Aug. 8 opened today in Royal Oak City Hall. Dr. John D. Monroe is conduct- ing the inquest which was ordered by Oakland County Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem shortly after the shooting. Patrolman James Gatewood said in a statemant he was chas- Ohio, after surprising him at a Brother, Sister Hurt in 2-Car Collision Patricia A. North, 18, and her brother Wilford North, 21, both of | Brown City, were treated for cuts | and bruises at Pontiac General | Hospital after a two-car collision | on Perry Street Saturday, Oakland | County sheriff's deputies said. Donna R. Howard, 24, of Mar-, lette was treated for head and neck | injuries. She was riding with, War- ren B. Howard, 22, of Marlette when he collided with a car driven by Kenneth B. Morehouse, 27, of Los Angeles, “alif., with whom the Norths were passengers, said depu- ties. Howard told deputies he halted for a stop sign and Morehouse hit | the rear of his car. | NO CHARGE FOR ANALYSIS wee rrr WHEELS BALANCED EXPERTLY $2.ea.—Includes weights B. F. Goodrich 111 N. Perry St. FE 2-0121 The Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac Famous Names — Lowest Prices — Eosiest Terms | be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Mrs. Marjorie S. Vance, 19. of, Phornville Church with burial in 5655 Oster. St. was reported in the Thornville Cemetery. Arrange- “fair” condition in Pontiac Gen-| ments are by Baird Funeral Home, crap game near 8914 West 8&Mile Rd., when he stumbled and fired his gun accidently. About 15 witnesses will be call- New Holly Schools (Advertisement) Now Many Wear Fabulous Allowance... eral Hospital after her car rolled over this morning on Airport Road at Elizabeth Lake Road, Oakland County sheriff's deputies said. She suffered a concussion, and | Lapeer. He died Saturday. Born’ in Elba Township, he lived in Thornville for the past 25 years. Stanley M. Newton Roy H. Dell ed today, according to Chief As- sistant Prosecutor George F. Taylor, including Gatewood, Det- roit ballistics experts who. analyz- ed. the fatal slug, and a number of Not Ready to Open HOLLY: — Some of the Holly! 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Dell, 68, of 806 South Marias hospital officials. | St. was this morning at Spaulding witnesses who were watching the crap game when the shoot- ing occurred. June will not be ready for use next plumbers and other workmen is Beautiful Formica Tables made to size or shape, round, square equipped with ing leaf. styles. “SIZE 30x38x48 All’ chrome ts triple plated, including copper, nickel and chrome. _ FORMICA SINK TOPS tn, 399" ODD CHAIRS Choice of Colors ONLY $62 FACTORY SHOWROOM 4436 North Woodward, near 14 Mile Road . HOURS: 10 9. m. te 8:30 p. m. — Sun. fa { \ order, any including 95 and oval. 26 colors and patterns to select from. Tables are and op Chairs upholstered in heavy-gauge Duran and Comark material — 84 colors and patterns — 16 different METALMASTERS MFG. CO. 12 te 6 p. m. SEE OUR CLASSIFIED AD IN TODAY'S DAILY PRESS! given as the reason. Only the new classrooms at Davisburg will be ready for the opening of school on Sept. 8. A Dinettes buildings in the area is being ar- ranged until the mew ones are ready for occupancy. Hospital to Open Drive PETOSKEY (UP)—Little Trav- erse Hospital will launch a fund drive to obtain $175,000 for a two- story addition, John. B. ford, president of the board of trustees, disclosed today. ° , self-stor- month. Scarcity of carpenters, | temporary schedule for the old | ) fort, just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your plates. No gummy, gooey, pasty | taste or feeling. Checks ‘“‘plate odor” (denture breath). Get FASTEETH | any drug store. at You Get A Cleaner, Warmer ‘Home with Leonard Fortified Fuel Ow Call today ... Call now... and solve your fuel of] problems, HUMMEL & KNEALE OIL CO. Lessing St. & Andersonville R4., Waterferd—OBlande 3-1260 sreparation? SIZE 42x54x72 Lincoln 1-0050 THRIFTY DRUG Try In-Flam-Go today "°™* ™OP? beck. VARICOSE VEINS LET US TELL YOU HOW TO RELIEVE PAIN . are you willing to try our entirely different a miracle after one application, don’t However, repeated appli- many sufferers. mown for years of the beneficial effects of d Iodine with all the eut lightly. As ‘penetrates the color “Three stores to serve you well” Ad ~ ~ Save the cost of new clothes DRY CLEANING Is an investment AN Geney Dry Cleaners Pick-Up and Delivery Service 12 West Pike Street Phone FE 5-6107 USED APPLIANCES IN OUR TRADE-IN DEPT. WE HAVE— Good Washers at $14.95 Refrigerators at $59.50 Ranges, Electric and Gas, at $19.50 Television, 10 to 16-inch, for $39.50 The Good Housekeeping Sho of PONTIAC FE 4-1555 Commies Free 400 U. N. POWs American Total to 1,105 Out of 3,313 Held PANMUNJOM (®—The Commu- nists freed 400 Allied war prisoners today—73 of them Americans—and the Korean POW exchange for to- ing. 7 Americans. of Americans returned to 1,105, just have said they held. The Reds also freed 75 British, 250 South Koreans, f Japanese who had served with U..S. forces as a houseboy, and a Japan-born Ko- rean who said he served with South Korean although he was re- leased as Vilian. * * * The Americans and British jumped briskly from the Red trucks that rolled them down from the Red grouping center at Kaesong. They laughed as they moved into theAllied tents. They appeared in good health. The sun shone brightly as they We Sell ~ @ POLIO INSURANCE INSURANCE HERE! See or Call Maynard Johnson General Insurance 807 Comm. Nat’! Bank Phone FE 4-4523 BLACK TOP @ DRIVEWAYS © PARKING AREAS FREE ESTIMATES—EASY TERMS ASPHALT PAVING CO. 2010 Dixie Hwy. FE 2-2227 G: stepped into trucks for the ride south to nearby Freedom Village for processing. A total of 5,177 Allied troops | have been freed in 13 days of the | exchange. The Reds have said they held 12,763. *, * * As the Allied prisoners were | handed over, truckloads of Com- munist POWs rolled north, singing loudly. said four ships carrying 2,400 Red prisoners to the port of Inchon from Koje’ Island were forced back by typhoon winds. The POW Command said the de- lay would not affect Tuesday’s de- livery but may reduce Wednes- day’s shipment to 600. The UNC has been sending back about 2,400 Reds at Panmunjom daily. * * * 75 Returned Gls Bring 9 morrow—450 Allied captives includ-| 4 Today's group hrought the total | over one third of the 3,313 the Reds | t THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1958 oes promised their biggest shipment of | *.... | ‘HELD’—W ilbert Coffin, 37, Gaspe prospector, is being held at Quebec City, Canada, in the grisly bush- land slaying of three Pennsylvania hunters in the Gaspe wilderness, Quebec provincia! police said. Slain | men were Eugene Lindsey, his son, Richard, and Fred Claar. Coffin was arrested in Gaspe this week after police reported a break in the two-month-old slaying. Navy Yard Blast Knocks Out Wall, Meanwhile, the POW Command | Killing Two NEW YORK ® — An explosion | | blew down the wall of an officer's | home at the Brooklyn Navy Yard last night, killing two men and in- juring nine -others. | The blast victims included civil- | ian Navy yard firemen and the duty officer who had been sym- moned to check a short circuit in the frame and mortar house. While looking around they were caught | by the explosion. The Communists said their big) Degd were two firemen, Francis | shipment Tuesday would include 75 | Conklin, 50, and Frank Licotta, 55,. British and 300 South Koreans. Cmdor. George Greer had called They usually have been sending them to investigate faulty wiring in back about 400 Allied POWs a day. | his hotise. He and his wife and son, There was no reason given im-| George Jr., 19, were standing out- mediately for the stépup. | side when one side of the building | Akihito in Sweden STOCKHOLM, Sweden # — Con- tinuing his European tour, Japan’s Crown Prince Akihito arrived here ' by plane from Oslo last night. blew up. The Greers escaped seri- | ous injury. . * * * | The explosion, believed caused | by gas that leaked from a water | heater, tumbled the wall of a first) ! floor room. during yan The following Stores | will be closed Wednesday Afternoons — August BARNETT’S LIBERAL STAPP’S DOWNTOWN CALBI’S McNALLY’S © STORE . DICKINSON’S MILLER FURNITURE STEWART-GLENN DIEM’S SHOE STORE MODERN FLOOR TODD'S © ECONOMY FURNITURE COVERINGS UNION STORE GILLIES OSMUN’S WAYNE GABERT THE HUB . PAULI’S SHOES APPLIANCES , | HUDDICK’S RAPPY’S WYMAN FURNITURE LEWIS FURNITURE STAG SHOP STORES summer In order that their employes may have an afternoon of liesure during the- warm have decided to close Wednesday afternoons during August. months these stores for value and quality! for everything hew! for famous brands! FIRST at WAITE'S! Wrought Iron SHELF DESIGNERS WAITE’S Exclusively! Pincers Tagauy in practical... pretty CHECKS Choose: red, blue or black. checks! for toys, books, for garage or work- for pantry or bulky storage shop storage at98 49 98 B. Cc. Ea. Pair Pair 4-shelf double sided 3-shelf floor ends, 4-shelf floor ends, unit, 36 inches high 26 inches high 36 inches high © 11 inches space be- tween shelves and accommodates 91/2 inch width shelves ® Center rod prevents books from slipping through © Angle shaped brackets cover rough lumber ends Now you can build a beautiful book- case, design your own wall unit or create qn interesting room divider with these versatile frams and your favorite wood, cut to size and shape by your own lumber dealer. Arrange them wall to wall or stack them up high; ready drilled holes make them a snap to assemble. Complete with rubber tipped legs. Call or hurry in to Waite’s today! CALL FE 4-2511 TODAY! Designed: to lead a busy life . . . smart solid color trim _.. self belt .. . roomy pockets. Button down front... guaranteed in every way. Sizes 12-18, 1612-2412. 278 Waite's Cotton Shop—Third Floor Call FE 4-2511 Today! Please add 3° sales tax on mail orders. | pick eTRAct DOROTHY GRAY 3 tonc-LasTING Super-Stay Lipsticks IM A MIRRORED RED PURSE-POUCH TRICK "N TREAT by Dorothy Gray, tucks three creamy, non-drying Super-Stay Lipsticks into a purse-pouch ... at a price that treats your pocketbook | Two Trick ’N Treat color combinations: Fer Biondettes— Siren, Pink Crocus, Queen's Taste. Fer Brewnettes — Portrait Pink; Right Red, Red Trey. See lipstick magic im your Thick ‘n Treat mirror — -~ Waite's Stationery—Street Floor Waite'’s Cosmetics—Streei Floor —_- ~ — ee STX THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1958 THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS | Pontiae 12, Michigan Reg. U.S. Patent Office Dafly Except Sunday Published from Taz Powruc Damy Parss Building Hanotp A. Frrzeeratp, Publisher Comnad N. Cruacu Horace P. Broo Bassett Editor Advertising Manager Russer. Ba: Nat'l Adv. Mgr. Bntered at Post Office, Pontiac, Mich. as d class matt MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS to the use - The Associated Press is entitled exclusively in this news- for of all local news printed paper, as weil) as all AP news dispatches. Tus Pontiac Press is delivered by carrier for 40 cents @ week; where carrier service is not available, by mai) in Oakland and adjoining counties it is $12.00 a year; else- where in Michigan and all] other places in the United States $20.00 a year. All mail subscriptions are payable in advance. Phone Pontiac FE 2-8181. ’ MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS 2. MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1953 Tito’s Guarded Optimism In an exclusive interview with AP Correspondent ALEX -SINGLETON, Yugo- slav dictator Tiro yoiced some opinions of vital interest to everyone who hopes and prays for peace. _ Though he disavowed any claim to being a prophet, the Marshal views the prospect for peace with cautious optimism. In answer to a question, he called the purge of LAVRENTI Berta “an internal matter” and hence not a factor .in what Russia is likely to do. * * * Similarly, he believes that it isn’t a question of whether Mal- ENKOV or the Red army present-- ly controls Russia. “The Russian leaders,” he said, ““. . . are going back to something that once was, and the. Communist party is get- ting the leading role again.” After saying he believes STaLin’s death has decreased the danger of war, Tito warned against attempts to spur revolt in Russian satellite countries. “There should be no interference in the internal affairs of these countries,” he said, “because I think the desire of the people in them for more and more in- dependence will be growing. “By a correct attitude toward other " small countries, the Western powers will. stimulate aspirations for independence among the satellite states.” * * * While Tito believes the Korean political conference won't solve all problems in Asia, he does think it will be a means of avoiding further conflict there. Like many , observers, he also looks for Red China ultimately to become wholly - independent of Moscow influence. x x * Finally, in speaking of his own coun- try, the Marshal had some reassuring words for the West. While Yugoslavia has no intention of joining NATO, T1To made it clear that his country never again would submit to Russian domina- tion. He added this significant state- ment on Yugoslavian determination to remain independent in all its affairs: “I think we: Rave enough men and ma- terial to stop any single attacker.” / \* * * Yugoslavia is far from a full fledged ally and it still is a Communist state. Nonetheless it is comforting to know that Tito has aligned it toward the West and that he should be in a position to evaluate changing conditions in that part of the-world. Money Can’t Buy Friends Thanks to the courtesy of a reader, the impressions of an American busi- ness man gained on a seven weeks tour of Europe have been brought to our attention. The tourist is Louts E. LEVERONE, 1904 Dartmouth graduate and a delegate to the convention of the Federation Aero- nautique Internationale at The Hague, © in May. Other cities he visited includ- ed Paris, Rome, Lucerne, Brussels, Amsterdam and London. * x * What struck him most forcibly was that our foreign aid, instead _ of making friends for us, is cre- ating resentment against us. “We are not giving money away,” he wrote, “but in Paris and in Rome, even to a greater extent than in London, we are just throwing it away. The extrava- gance and absolute waste on the part, of our own representatives was appalling and we are not being thanked for it.” * * * Mr. LEVERONE is not the first to dis- cover that handouts won't buy friend- ship. The waste noted is but one of the reasons Why our Administration million dollar cut in foreign aid. It is also behind the determination of both that this program should be reduced gradually until it no longer is necessary. President Lauds Ferguson Senator. HoMER FERGUSON, newly elected chairman of the Republican Policy Committee, has received well de- served praise from President Eisgn- - HOWER It took the form of a letter thanking our senior Senator for his excellent work in piloting the $34.5 billion defense budget through the upper House with- out amendmtnt. The letter reads: “Dear Homer: I am much aware of the tremendous effort you expended on the national defense budget, and I also was much impressed by your parliamen- tary handling of the measure as it pro- ceeded through the Senate. I think you did a thoroughly outstanding job and want you to know of my personal appreciation.” Senator FgrGcuson was floor manager for the bill and chair- man of the subcommittee which devoted weeks ’of intensive work and study before it could be brought to a final vote. “THE State of Michigan is stocking streams and lakes with a type of fish © that are harder to catch.” — Press re- port. Shame on you, Michigan, for contributing to the delinquency of liars. CJ THERE is no substitute for thinking, but a lot of people try to make talking serve in this capacity. : The Man About Town Some Kind Words Oxford Village President Justifiably Proud of Town Daffynition Friend: What if you give advice or lend money you'll lose. A letter just received from Village President Ted Pearson Jr., of Oxford, thanks this column for compliments given that village. He also proudfully draws at- tention to Oxfords many advantages, including the fact that it has no bonded debt, closes each fiscal year with around $40.000 in the village treasury, and has just completed a new water supply. No wonder Oxford people are such boost- ers for their home town. Joy and sorrow came to Holly within the space of a couple of hours last week: news of the re- lease of its first POW, and the Communist report that one of its sons had died as a POW. Nobody was happier about the selection of - Miss Marilyn Voorheis as queen of last weeks 4-H Fair than her grand- father, cs James Welberry of White Lake. who this week celebira nis eighty-sixth birthday Another ‘‘first in Michigan’’ comes to Oakland County. When Henry L. Trombley was recently named as the new postmaster at Farmington, it is claimed to be the first appoint- ment of the kind that the Republicans have made in -the state in 20 years. ‘ “Tf Russia had the H-bomb they would keep still about it,’ thinks John P. Niggeman, who feels that the statement that they have it was made to bolster up the unrest among its own people and its satellites. ‘ ’ A few of the Calorie Charts are still available at the Pontiac Press office. They are given free of charge to al who write or apply at the office. Apple and pear trees can he grafted on each other and two kinds of fruit raised on the same tree at the same time. However, Elmer Cottrellson of Drayton Plains has a tree that alternates in production. One year the apple side grows fruit, while the pear side is idle, and the order is reversed the next year. ‘ > ‘What has become of Oakland County's huckle- berry swamps”’’ wonders . Jake Lambertway of Waterford. A check shows that drainage has ‘silled many of them, and the invasion of the outside, cultivated berry makes most of the others unprofitable. A Pontiac factory a few months ago sold some of the material which it manufactures to a Detroit plant which makes parts for a Chicago corperation that is an assembling plant for a Milwaukee concern that has just delivered one of its machines to the Pontiac factory—which recognizes its own material in it. I like that slogan of the Michigan Truckers Association: “If you got it a truck brought it.” Verbal Orchids to— J. Henry Wood - of 27 North Shirley St.; eighty-fifth birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Butts of Rochester; sixty-sécond wedding anniversary. Mrs. Dwight Fisher of. Clyde; nintey-fourth birthday. Mrs. Joseph Mier of Auburn Heights; seventy-fifth birthday. Mrs. Mae Duffy and Congress have agreed on a multi- ” o¢ prayton Plains; seventy-fourth birthday. / , me The Bitter With the Sweet Voice of the People ‘Careful Driver’ Says ‘Cannon-Ball’ Has No Respect for Rights of Pedestrians (Letters will be con~ensed when neces- sary because of lack o: space Full name, address and telephone aumber of the writer must accompany letters but these wil} not be published if the writer so requests, uniess the letter ts critical tp its nature) > The fellow who signed himself ‘‘Cannon-Ball’’ should have signed himself ‘‘Screw-Ball.”’ “Speed is not to blame for ac- cidents. Speed in itself cannot be dangerous,"’ he said. Speed was meant for speedways and even then some get hurt now and then. I am a driver and at times a pedestrian and when I’m a driver I try to respect the pedes- trains. From his letter it seems that Mr. Cannon .- Ball respects so others’ rights and when he comes up the street everyone else is on his own. As for drivers that have béen drinking moderately and know enough to take it easy, I would rather take a chance with them than with some speed-happy, ir- responsible hot-rodder with 150 horsepower that doesn’t know how to use it. Careful driver Urges Mothers to Help End Slaughter in Korea Recently I noticed in the Press an article regarding an agreement between John Foster Dulles and Syngman Rhee regarding our boys returning to Korea. . . but that it would be subject to the Sen- ate. So. mothers who value their sons and grandsons, let us pepper every congressman with the fact that we want: no more of our boys to used for cannon fodder and brutal abuse. Don't let one mother be guilty of. this neglect, write... don't put it off! One of F. D. R.’s suave prom- ises was not one U. S. boy would* be sent to fight on foreign soil. Edith Hartland Milford THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Then said he unto me, Son of man, these are the men that devise mischief, and give wicked counsel in this city.—Ezekiel 1 We s . Mischief and malice grow on the same branch of the tree of evil. —Aaron Hill. David Lawrence Says: Military Should Present Honest Advice, Not Be Hamstrung by Fear of Ouster WASHINGTON —Something more than a mere change in per- sonnel is dramatized as Admiral Radford, chairman, and an entire- ly new Joint Chiefs of Staff take over from Gen. Bradley, chairman, and the three service chiefs who held their posts under the Truman administration. 7 For the change is one of mili- tary philosophy toward civilian control. It can be of profound im- portance to the security of the United States. * * » Under the Truman administra- tion the military chiefs were tools of politics. They couldn’t say pub- licly what they thought without fear of reprisal — as happened to Admiral Denfeld, chief of naval operations. What they said in the open was usually dictated, therefore, by po- litical considerations. Speeches de- livered by some of them were often made to fit in as replies to political attacks on the admin- istration.’ Though such motivation was always officially denied, the rec- ord shows an oft-repeated coin- cidence of military pronounce- ments that suited the political whims of President Truman or the pro-British point of view of Secretary of State Acheson. When Gen. Bradley, just a few weeks after the dismissal of Gen. MacArthur, couldn’ t remember who in the White House telephoned him to summon the joint chiefs to consider the future status of Mac- | Arthur, almost everyone was sur- prised at his poor memory. = * * But when it was discovered later that the joint chiefs — our Ssu- preme military authority — had not initiated or recommended the MacArthur ouster to the Presi- dent and only had concurred when the word was relayed to them by Gen. Bradley as to what the President wanted. people on Capi- tol Hill, including the late Sen. Taft, were chagrined. From that time on — as the speeches by Gen. Bradley seemed to be political expressions ordered by the’ administration — the late Republican leader declared pub- licly he had no confidence in the then-existing Joint Chiefs of Staff. Gen. Bradley was an excellent soldier in the last war in Europe. He has a |ikeable personality and has many admirers as a mili- tary man. But his judgment on global strategy has been subject to public criticism by many other prominent military men. Thus, when he told a House com- mittee in the autumn of 1949 that America could dispense with large aircraft carrwrs and he openly disparaged the concept of amphib- ious warfare on a large scale, he didn't realize that within eight months one of the largest amphib- jous operations in American his- tory would be carried out on the peninsula of Korea or that, without aircraft carriers, the fighter planes of the U. S. Air Force could never have been transported to Korea in time to meet the crisis of the early days of the war. Every military commander ~knows that ‘the kind of war waged in Korea under*the Joint Chiefs of Staff of, the Truman-Acheson administration was not the kind of war that :should have been fought. But the military chiefs never said so for fear of being summar- ily dismissed; as was Gen. Mac- Arthur. The basic principle involved here is the forthrightness and indepen- dence of the military. It must always be obedient to a civilian decision, but im fur- nishing military advice it must not adulterate its thinking on mil- itary questions to sult the po- litical purposes of the adminis- tration or to appease allies who transmit their views to our state department. Refusal of the joint chiefs, for example, to support on paper con- fidentially or before Congress sub- sequently their December 195¢ view that bases in Manchuria should be bombarded and a naval embargo placed on strategic ma- terials destined directly or indi- rectly for Red China is a sad ex- t ample of how the military for- feited its independence of judg- ment under the last administra- tion The philosophy of the new per- sonnel on the Joint Chiefs of Staff is different. It was expressed by Gen. Ridgway, chief of staff of the Army, when he took his oath of office last week. . He pledged himself to preserve thedemocratic institutions of America and to “maintain the in- tegrity of the military profession.”’ Gen. Ridgway said this means presenting ‘‘honest, objective, professional! views up to the point of decision by civilian authority, and then completely loyal execu- tion of that decision.” ee' No better creed could be pro- claimed for the entire group of new service chiefs: The function of Admiral Radford, as chairman of the joint chiefs, should not be to make public speeches, however great the temptation to uphold his boss in the political arena. It should be to, furnish the best military advice possible and when called upon — to tell Con- gress frankly what that advice was so that the legislative branch of the government may in due time pass judgment on the efficiency and effectiveness of the military service rendered by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. (Copyright 1953) Case Records of a Psychologist Comic Books Encourage Young Children to Read What’s your verdict regard- ing comic books for children? And do you think the strip comics in this newspaper en- courage your child to read? Use this Case Record for dis- cussion at your P-T-A meet- ings. I wish every school had an entire shelf full of comic books, easily accessible to all pupils! By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case H-361: Frederick L., aged 42, is principal of a large Chicago high ‘school. “Dr. Crane. what do you psy- chologists think ebout comic books?’’ he asked me at our luncheon. “Some of my teachers make a fuss when they catch @ stu- dent reading a comic book. “Then they send the boy or girl t my office, expecting me to handle the matter. So what should I do?’’- Comic books are really mis- named, for most of them are not “comic” or funny. They are sim- ply picture books of dramatic stories. ‘ Some parents object to them when they deal with crime and war topics. Indeed, many people think they will actually incite more de- linquency in America. Thus,. an editor of my acquaint- ance once dropped a comic strip from his daily newspaper because From Our Files 15 Years Ag CHARLES AND Ann Lindbergh greeted by enthusaiastic crowd in Moscow. HEADLESS BODY is found in Lake Erie as police probe 13th torso murder. FORMER GOVERNOR Com- stock accuses Gov.* Murphy of spending mtuney too lavishly. ‘ 20 Years Abo PRESIDENT MACHADO of Cuba ousted as Manuel De Cespedes takes his place. ITALIAN LINER Rex sets ocean speed mark. MAHATMA GANDHI begins fast to death; seeks to obtain rights of political prisoner. Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER Let's look at that neutral strip. It might as well be bacon. , Each army pulled back a mile- and-one-quarter. Record for the course is three years. It’s truce that raises your sights . i without lowering the tension. There’s two-and-one-half miles between the south Koreans and | the Chinese strollers in the north. We said before the Chinese had invented gunpowder and the re- loading armistice. It was a United Nation victory believe it or Ripley's marching Chinese. Proof is the 38th parallel is still in the same palce. We have heard from American . towns on, the” same parallel. Sacramento, Carson City, Den- ver, Topeka, Cincinnati and Baltimore say they will defend their share of it. Doc Rhee says he will hobble his yaks for 90 days. He wants the meandering mandarins off his private peninsula by Oct. 27. Why doesn't he start a game we used to play when we were kids? Last one off the peninsula is a China- man. Doc Rhee is going about it hind part foremost. The Persians un- der Xerxes or somebody had in- vaded Greece. For some ‘réason Xerxes got the wind up and started back across the helles- pont. . The Greek emperor was Von Aristoddle or something. His proti- co cabinet hepped him that Xerxes was lamming and urged an attack. Von Aristoddle refused. He said, ‘‘When thine enemy is leav- ing your country build him golden bridge.” We think that’s the policy of American diplomacy all along. We'll make Doc Rhee bridge, tender. a crime had been committed in that city which closely paralleled a recent murder depicted in the comic strip. But we need to use “horse sense’ in such matters, Almost every child in America of read- ‘ing age, avidly reads comic books nowadays. So if the books had a very strong effect in promoting crimes, don't you think more than one editor would need to cancel his comic strips or veto comic books in his area? Remember, there are over 25,- 000,000 public school children, most of whom devour comics. If the latter promoted crime, wouldn't we have thousands of such evi-e dences, instead of a few isolated cases? As the father of five children, I have seen our home deluged with comic books—good, bad and indif- ferent. And I can’t see where even the so-called ‘‘bad”’ comics have harmed our youngsters. Besides, Mrs. ‘Crane and I read them ourselves: whenever we have a spare minute for such enjoy- ment, So I have come to the conclu- sion, both from our own family experience and that of thousands of you who have given me your opinions of comics, that they don't harm children if the yougsters live in an average type of home. By “average,” I refer to a home where the parents try to teach their children respect for law and where the youngsters are sent to Sunday school. se ‘And for every instance that might be cited where comic books might have done some harm, I can give you hundreds of cases where they have definitely helped children. For example, comic books en- courage children to read. And in this age of. spoken langu- age, as on TV, radio and the talkie movies, our youngsters don’t get enough emphasis on reading. So a half a loaf is~ certainly beter than none. I’d rather see my { children read comics than not read at all. And thousands of comic books are so good they*should be in every school library, freely acces- sible to all the children, For instance Classics, Mlus- trated, is the name of a set of over 100 comic book portrayals of the great pieces of litera- ture, such as “Ivanhoe,” “Tale of Two Cities,’’ “Uncle Tom's Cabin,” etc. American children would never be familiar with even a dozen of those famous books if it weren't for comic books. And many other comic books depict teen-age’.moral and dating questions excellently. (Always write to Dr. Crane in Care of this newspaper, enclosing a long 3-cent stamped, addressed envelope gud a dime to cover printing and typing costs when you send for one of his psychological charts.) (Copyright, Hopkins @yndicate Inc.) Portraits - By JAMES J. METCALFE Invoice An invoice ‘s no silent voice... Despite its printed form... And when it ts not promptly paid... It can create a storm... An invoice is a statement of ... The goods dispatched to you... The kind and quantity and of .. . The payment that is duc... . It'may present a discount good . .. In 10 or 30 days... Or else demand the money now... In no uncertain phrase ... An invoice is a memo that . . . Is sent to let you know . .. Your credit will be better if . .. Your payment is not slow... It is a piece of paper that... Reminds you of your debt . . . But when your check is on its way... You have no fear or fret. (Copyright 1953) ' For That Old Mean Chronic Leg Ulcer, Dr. Brady Would Use Daily Diet of lodin By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. In the pamphlet on Varicose Veins and Varicose Ulcer, avail- able on written request (clipping will not’ suffice) if you enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope. I say: In many cases (of ulcer) it has seemed that a suitable iodin ration has improved general metabolism so that old chronic indolent ulcer has finally healed. A medical colleague told me about this ‘away back, and said that his father, a doctor, had prescribed minute doses of lodin with success in the treatment of leg ulcer for many years. Anyway, it can do no harm, no matter whether the ulcer is of six weeks or six years standing, pro- vided you follow the instructions I give in the pamphlet The Iodin Ration, which is also available on written request if you provide stamped, self-addressed envelope. For both pamphlets enclose 10 cents additional. Most open sores, raw places, ulcers on the leg are due to varicos| (swollen, enlarged, prominent, weakened) viens. My colleague’s father was an avowed ‘homeopath, so it is likely that the good doctor administered only minute quantities of iodine or iodide, perhaps as much as nv- trition authorities today consider Here let me say that one of my Seven Keys to Vite, (25 cents) is total abstinence up to the age of 25 years. After that, temperance commends itself without difficulty. So, if you indulge in alcohol before you have cut your wis- dom teeth, don’t waste your time or mine on the cultivation of vite. It isn't for wishy-washy charac- ters. Without mentioning causes of leg ulcer other than varicose veins, suffice to say that eating an ade- quate ration of iodin daily the year around as every man, woman and child in the country should—tends to prevent development of external ulcer of whatever cause and, if ul- cer is already present, to promote . Signed letters, not more then one or 100 words te per health and h oa will be Dr. Brady if « stamped self stironel envelope is enclosed. OO OT EE eo aah ho Se ee eee \ India Will Attend Only if Wanted NEW DELHI, India ‘#—Prime Minister Nehru said today that India has “no desire’ to attend the Korean political conference un- useful function in the interests of s s > In a foreign policy review «to Parliament, heard also by visiting Pakistan. Premier Mohammed Ali, Nehru said India’s custodian force assigned to guard prisoners of war at Panmunjom would begin leaving Madras by sea tomorrow. less the major parties at the parley table want her and “unless it is clear that we can perform some Within a few days, he said, 4,000 Indian soldiers will be en route to Korea. Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimaya, India’s representative to chairman the Neutral Repatriation Commis- sion, will leave the first week in September, the Premier added. Hemingway Honored PONTREMOLI, Italy w—Ernest Hemingway's latest novel, ‘The Old Man and the Sea," was award- ed Italy’s 1953 Bancarella literary award today. The reindeer is the only deer which has been domesticated. Stewardess Hurt by Boat Mishap in California LAKE ARROWHEAD, Calif. 7— A young airline stewardess was) in a critical condition today after | being mangled by the propeller in a fall from a speedboat owned by hotel owner Conrad Hilton. The stewardess, Miss Boni Bueh- ler, 25, of Hollywood, was pulled ____THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 19538 from the wafers of Lake Arrow- head yestérday by Geary Steffen, ex-husband of actress Jane Powell. Steffen was water skiing behind the boat when the accident oc curred. . . . At Santa Anita Hospital doctors said her left arm was cut off at the shoulder in the accident. Her left leg was mangled and last night it was amputated. ~ 7 * Sheriff's deputies said the speed- boat was being driven by Quay Sargeant, 35, owner of a Los Angel- es music concern. Sargeant said he did not see Miss Buehler-fall out of the boat but felt something hit the propeller so he stopped the motor. Also in the boat at the time was Florence Beck, 20, of Tarzana, Calif. Sargeant said the four of them had borrowed Hilton’s boat. Official hottest-in-the-world out- door temperature is 136.4 degrees once recorded in Libya. enna to Tour Posts in Alaska and Pacific WASHINGTON (UP) —Assistant defense secretary John A. Hannah will leave Monday for a two-week tour of military installations in Alaska, the Far East and the Pa- cific. The Defense Department said Hannah will pay particular attention to morale, education and’ recreation programs for American forces stationed in Korea. Hannah's itinerary includes stops SEVEN ee eee at Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska; Tokyo; Okinawa; Manila; Guam; Wake Osland and Pearl Harbor. New York in Hole NEW YORK @® — New York City’s gross funded debt reached an all-time high of $3,412,752,649 as of July 1. The goose is belived to be the most ancient of farm birds, SHOP ON CREDIT! BUY NOW! NO MONEY DOWN It's easy ta buy appliances at Federal’s! Even if vou’re short of cash, you can buy any of these Admiral refrigerators with NO MONEY DOWN and pay for it later on easy terms arranged to fit your budget! Inquire today at Federal’s! Air-Conditioned For Your Summer Comfori fs: al side ' Shop at Pontiac's Thrift-Center.... SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC 4 7 P note be Be eE Tere “ etter tire a ert j | 9 Fri.-and Sat. Nights refrigerators Save as much as $100 on these brand new Admiral refrigerators! Trade in your old refrigerator now during this special sale! ee : : i Pe i 5 ; 3 $7 See & ge es Sine es ; z ; F eae . og “ ms prea YS RW NY ew a, = 9 Sencar homoge Saetae . s ‘ — a > ab ? . ants De id ‘ FEDERAL dept. stores. 9. "Sf EIGHT THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1958 Zemo Grea? For Athlete's Foot ! Zemo, a doctor’s formula, promptly relieves itchy soreness of cracked peel- ing toes. It kills om contact germs that usually cause athlete’s foot. Zemo helps heal, clear; prevent reinfection. Buy Extra Strength for stubborn cases. Claims Barefoot Boy: Doesn't Belong in City LOS ANGELES —The city is no place for a barefoot boy, says a prominent chiropodist. Dr. Stewart E. Reed of Des Moines, Iowa, new president of the National Association of Chiropo- dists, told delegate to the associa- tion’s convention yesterday that feet are not meant for barefoot city but barefoot fields. Zone, is one of the strongholds of the peripatus, a primitive worm- like animal. WILL THE WORLD BE DESTROYED BY FIRE? STARTING AUGUST [9"* (wecrescy END om \) \ BY KENNETH HEUVER-FAMOUS ASTRONOMER THE SUN EXPLODES - THE MOON BREAKS UP - PLANETS COLLIDE fanciful and Epciling Foading BUT IT COULD HAPPEN ltalian Cabinet Assumes Office Political Crises Eased as Giuseppe Pella Sets Up Interim Governemnt ROME w— A new cabinet of Christian Democrats led by Gui- seppe Pella was sworn in today, giving Italy a breather from polit, ical crisis. President Luigi Einaudi admin- istered the oath of office to the 51-year-old premier, a financial ex- pert, in the presidential office. Other cabinet members were The new cabinet will go be- fore the Chamber of Deputies Wednesday. It seems certain to win a ‘vote of confidence. The only parties pledged to vote against it are the Communists and Pietro Nenni’s party-line Socialists, who between them control only 218 of 590 seats. . Pella’s new cabinet is made up of veteran administrators, ll members of his own pro-western and middle-of-the-road Christian Democrat party. Pella himself is known as a firm friend of the U. 8. and a believer in the Atlantic Alliance. Casting a shadow over today’s ceremony was the fact Pella is taking the helm of government only temporarily and can push no major policy measures. !taly’s bickering center parties agreed to accept him on condition he remain prime minister only long enough to pass a budget and straighten out the government. Flint Man Pipe Champ FLINT (UP) — Max Igree, a ‘jowed the Communist line and chose not to come back with the rest of us. Not all of them, however, are there of their own volition, I am sure. I know of one man among seven who left us at prison camp No. 5 when the armistice was signed. Just two months ago this man and I planned a new escape attempt. I have saved and some food, about 10 pounds of hard candy, 5 fountains pens and a wrist watch. The pens and watch would have served us better than money if we had gotten out. They were given to me by some of the sick and wounded Ameri cans who were exchanged last April. Our escape plan did not jell because the armistice came be- fore we were ready. Yet this man who planned it with me did not come back with the rest of us. I will never understand why. “He must be under some form of pressure from the Communists or from the ‘“‘progressives,’’—as the turncoat prisoners were called. I personally spent many dreary thonths as a prisoner in Pyoktong, North Korea. s s * It was there that I saw two Russian pilots who had been shot down in fights with American jet planes. Russians* were flying MIG jets against the Allies all through the Korean War. Besides the two \that I saw, I heard from reliable sources—Ko- reans who hate communism—of at least three other Russians who were shot down in combat early this year. There were many other Rus- sians engaged in the Korean War. Russian engineers, Russian in- telligence agents, and a head- quarters that the Russians main- tained in Chonchong. The Russian language is taught as the second language in North Korean schools. I know seven American airmen who were questioned by Russians | I saw Russian truck drivers, | —six officers and a sergeant —| PW Says His Red Prison Cruelest Form of Torture (Continued From Page One) | to steel them, and they quietly fixed bayonets. . A Chinese called out in English, what they wanted to do. “I am willing to stand here and die if you want,” he said. “You are not going to live for- ever, There is no ammunition and no help coming.” The men took about five minutes to talk it over. They voted to sur- render if the Chinese would promise to leave the wounded to be picked up by Americans later. The Chinese agreed. They were combatwise veterans and so far as I could determine, they kept their promise. We wrapped the wounded as best we could in sleeping bags and blankets and then surrendered. Most of the next day we were kept standing on a frozen creek beneath a cliff to avoid detection by American planes. We had started on a tiving hell. We hiked for months after that. Finally, after about 700 miles of captors took us to prison camp No. 5, outside of Pyoktong, on the Yalu River. There began for all of us a life of starvation, torture, illness and, of course, death for many. Now I have survived and am free again. My wife met me here in Tokyo. We have an air-condi- I am an out-patient of the Tokyo Army Hospital. I have just had eight teeth extracted, and am to go on anti] all are removed. For lunch I had scrambled eggs, soup, two pieces of meat loaf, two piece of apple pie. If anyone had told me 1 could eat a meal like that two hours after tioned room in the Imperial Hotel. | brought glasses of chocolate milk. and a| “ , having eight teeth extracted, I'd have said he was crazy. I not only did eat, I have stuffed myself every day since I got out —and I'm still hungry. (To Be Continued) (Advertisement) “Monthly Pains” stopped or amazingly pri Pinkheam’s helps te ‘‘quict™ uterine contractions that often cause menstrua! pein! First ¢ Hour 2 MONTHLY In and Out Privileges ANNOUNCEMENT... Reduction in Parking Rates at Hubbard Bldg. Garage, 16 South Perry Joe™=90e Inside Parking . . Heated Garage . . Is Protected from the Elements! ; All Day or Night Where Your Car RATES $14 Outdoor Parking Sale. 1953 ‘Ss FLOOR AMPLES KITCHEN free Press Readers are better informed and entertained FOR HOME DELIVERY after their capture. One of them, | a captain, lost two teeth when a/| brutal Russian intelligence officer | knocked him down. It was about a year ago that 1| puffer supreme, held the world pipe-smoking title today. Igree, a Flint furrier, won the International Pipe Smokers Association contest Saturday by keeping his pipe going RANGES ' Call Charles Scott . -801 first saw a Russian flier. After I| 13 Orchard Lake Drive FE 5 80 Z pai ra 2 ripen and 30 sec was permitted to take a few pic-| onds without reloading. tures in prison, the Communists | kept me away from the other pris- oners. ; On this' occasion, I was sitting Just look at thse BARGAINS! Brand new 1953 models we've shown on our a Bien te ia it Ra oa ania RS eee E. ¢ beside F road, snowing the warm floor for a few weeks. Not damaged, not even marred . . . but because Re sun and pretending to read one 4 st tex Coemmanist peopacants we have used them as demonstrators you GET THE SAVINGS! books. A jeep came along. In it was NO DOWN PAYMENT ane 24 MONTHS 10 PAY ; a Russian flier in uniform. The ; 5 Keep your Travel Funds on the SAFE Side | aide of his taco was blecding. PPiGeN SAT ie ie Egucte tt £ iy | He apparently had been injured | ; | when he was shot down. I was Only 2 $ : about 10 feet trom him and could SAVE $ 1953, Reg. . % | not have been mistaken. $239.95 Kd , | ' { . ‘ | The setond Russian pilot that I saw was about two manths later. | ? Only MOTOROLA 21” NOW $249 1 4 He too had been shot down by an Reg. 299. 9SCONSOLE TV Floor Sample Vacuum : ; American Sabre. : Cleaners : When I was in Chonchong on a ont 60.20 TOASTMASTER ELECTRIC ® : . picture-making trip, I saw the Rus- Gallon WATER HEATERS $] 49 Hoover Special sian headquarters. Reg. 189.95 (stight crate marred) These are some of the things I | Installation Free en Detreit Edison Lines oO saw and experienced in the long q A W h $919 20 % Off months of captivity. 3 tin orge Auto. Washer / One of the things I have With Old Washer ‘ learned at my presént age, 48, is | Oni v Da \ ‘a | that a man can endure almost "t eluxe Ses | Save 580 Electric Range . *189 : The facts of my capture are Res. poy 4 95 a pretty well known. It was on the ; : speridable, bs road between Koto and Hagaru, on $189.95 MAYTAG WASHER +159” zs a the coldest night of my memory. Aluminum tub, slightly marred SAVE 5 O NATIONAL CITY BANK : me ee ones oe Ne, 2 ’ 1950, and we were taken prisoner | wee 7 iecclite alla bifeaetar oon *239” 2 Only Automatic Defrost : . next day, Nov. 30. The date is not . ' ‘TRAVELERS CHECKS important. It was long time |] With old washer ehOsey $939 t x before any of us remembered it. | $118.00 SPEED QUEEN WASHER REFRIGERATORS When you travel — the satest way ls to put your money ° ’ I was with some American| (208 CRUE) ee ccecciccerce ae: ; i 3 Marines, British Marines and in- | into NCB Travelers Checks. Hf they ore lost or stolen, -you $ |fantry of the U. S, Army's 2n4 | ‘ : : f do not lose. You get prompt refund. Spendabie everywhere ‘ | Division, They were going up to ; — for anything — cost 75¢ per $100. In denominations of ‘3 |help the U. S. 7th Marine Regi- : ; $10, $20, $50 and $100. Good until used. x 4| ment, which I had left a short . | time before to replenish my film. The beet thi ao ‘ : | fone a Neen in & Jeep with Maj. = . P al og you know, wherever you go. ; | Jone J. McLaughlin of Savannah, | Your Electrical Appliance Specialist ri ; |Fla., when the Reds ambushed us 121 N° Saal Ph FE 5-6189 q 3 as (a } on a narrow road. ° aginaw St. one ; ‘ | We were pinned down all night Be cxcscae csvanmnmecirnssmiass: OEE a ER ecm aera tg es ‘ naull ° Lean--Meaty ! The Communit National Bank ' bb. of Ponta Michigan | Spare Ribs 29 , With Branches at Fine For Stuffing Fresh, Lean N. PERRY at GLENWOOD W. HURON at TILDEN GROUND VEAL Out of City Branches BEEF | BREAST WALLED LAKE KEEGO HARBOR Cc | c DIRECTORS | ] tb ‘ Irving A. Babcock §_Harold A. Fitzgerald H. ward W.Huttenlocher —-Victor E. Nelson | ° Director end Consultant Publisher P Riad Daily HH. Huttenlocher President Universal Ot! Seal ress VARS CASH MARKET 78 N. Saginaw St. Lean, Blade Cut PORK CHOPS 35: Tender, Blade Cut CHUCK ROAST 35: 4 M facturi Co. Agency FS President Baldwin l L. H. Cole Oi Co. Alfred C. Girard Harry J. Klingier “Rubber Co, ninja poe : This Valuable C President Community Vice-President and Dtrector | 1 ts Valuable Coupon W. Russell Eames —- National Bank of Pontiae nest ae eee a, | VEAL SHORT ; Eames and Brown Erecutive Vice-President 1 Entitles the Bearer Community National Alfred R. Glancy, Jr. Bank of Pontiac President A. B. Glancy Cc 35: ito o 1-Ib. limit MILD-CURE Goed rae STEAK 3 a ISLICED , | ; ; and WITH ANY PURCHASE Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 39: i BACON ee We. ™ H ANY PURCH | = on eeeewevenees—weeunaeee | er) 4 4 ( \ 7 { ’ ? | ~ . een J i THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, ‘AUGUST 17,1958 NINE _ Snake Cultist Bitten, |. snake-handling. cult’s religious pec - — ‘ ene 6 | service h last night. in Critical Condition | Police eke him from his hom Sus 1 Foul Play the site of the services, an|‘ GREENVILLE, S. C. w—Eari|Rear the site of the services: 8] in Icabox Deaths Eugene Canada, 27, was in critical over the protests of a prayerful condition after being bitten during! crowd of cult followers. WEST MEMPHIS, Ark. ) — A} deputy sheriff says a man recently | twice threatened the lives of five children found dead in an old ice | box. ' ae Deputy Gladstone Williams said, | ‘We plan to do a lot more check- | ing on this point.” He declined | to identify the man. ‘ | * * HAVE YOU TRIED OUR 4 HOUR SHIRT SERVICE Leave ‘em in the morning— Pick ‘em up in the evening! Earlier yesterday the father, 34- | | year-old J. A. Hallman, told news- | men he was sure the children were | ‘‘murdered’’’ because there were too many ‘‘funny things” involved. | | His wife agreed. | Said Hallman: “I may die before | \I find out. But I'll never believe | those kids crawled in there by themselves. I think they were| 5 SHIRTS...5909} J" * 6* * “°° T And his wife: ‘I think they were | Cash & Carry—24-Hour Service put in there." Crittenden County Coroner T. H. McGough said the children were apparently playing in the box last | Wednesday when .the lid, which had been tilted back against the | wall, flipped shut. Death was at-| tributed to suffocation. | 4 Hour Service at the Main Office VISIT OUR NEWEST BRANCH, 397 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. Across the street from Thrifty Drug Store , HURON CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDRY Main Office and Plant—944 West Huron FE 2-0231 6 NEIGHBORHOOD STORES TO SERVE YOU! Seagoing Animals | Feel Fine in Storm NEW YORK (® — It was a rough | crossing from Liverpool but that didn’t seem to bother a party of four zebras, five mongooses, three vultures and a hyrax. The 13. 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Solid con- struction includes: metal rivets, bar tacked, and double orange stitching! Zipper fly, and 4 roomy pockets. PENNEY’S BASEMENT “PENNEY’S SECOND FLOOR ett ee Twin Brother ATTENTION! We Are Now Payi TOP PRICES” FOR JUNK CARS SCRAP IRON Saul’s Hobby Is Avoiding People Who Sell Hobbies | ball-bearing power saw, with ay be ,true. But I'd rather try| it’s like trying to irrigate a de- to work out a negotiated peace! sert by wetting your head. with my own natural habitat and| What does it profit a man, mar- let the yellow-bellied sapsucker ried to a terrible shrew, if he con- quer the whole world of butterflies? |He's still married to the same | wife. Why doesn't he try to find in Curio Shop WINSLOW, Ariz. #—‘‘That man looks exactly like my twin broth- er,” Mrs.. Dick Jansen remarked as she entered a local curio shop. “But it ean’t be Bill, because By SAUL PETT (For Hel Boyle) | miter gauge and splitter, or by a NEW YORK (—My hobby, if! one-rupee uncancelled stamp from anybody cares. is avoiding hobbies. | ihe Maldive Islands. he becomes To be more precise, miy hobby is | an evangelical bore about the whole envy me. But, of course, birds have more geuneeteneeeneee STEEL and WASTE MATERIAL CO. 135 Branch St. FE 4-9583 » BERBER BER EERE case, asking haven't?” It was Mrs. Jansen's twin broth- er, Bill Kelly of Peoria, Ill. WRIG LEY’S “Who says’ I! cape,. relief from frustration and | the commonplace. Baloney. ff I want to be dull_ and unhappy, that’s my privilege. Leave me be. Anyway, I have my doubts about the enthusiasm of new hobbyists out on the stump. I mean those hobbyists who live and breathe the stuff all the time. You know the kind. The hobbyist | |he has never been in Arizona,’ | avoiding people who insist I should | thing? "DHEGMN: she added. try their hobby. It will change my | The man twirled around from whole life, they say, give me new | He pounces on his friends, where he was standing at a show- | perspective, added freshness, es-| neighbors and relatives as though he just found a cure for the five per cent -mortgage. They, too, he argues, must try this hobby and ascend, with him, to the bright and glorious plateau of a new life. I wonder. Why is he so anxious to convince us? It is because down deep he is still a little uncertain about the wisdom of a grown man spending so much time and energy on a sense than to take up a hobby of people-watching. I'm sure it will alarm nobody if I happen to. feel that this whole business of making a hobby the be-all and end-all is a dangerous mistake. It tends to lead people in the wrong direction—away from them- selves and the reality of their own | existence. If they are bored or op- | pressed by their home life or job, | is there nothing they can do about ___ TEN ’ THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1953 out what she’s mad about? Seems | to me he might do better to stand up to her and sound off than to | stick pins in poor butterflies. California uses about 16 per cent of the hired farm labor in the United States — more than any other state, reports the Twentieth Century Fund. 1 BED WETTING RA OS ge PSs No Appointment Necessary ONE PRICE | TO ALL... ce ve M iddieman " and his wife will drop over for | new weapon for etching in leather? | !* Dut creep into an esoteric base- | STOPPED Profit! a drink. He will reamin glum and, poes he need the moral support | men silent during the small talk about) of imitation to fortify his expendi- | operations and jobs and the way ture of money and passion on a| Bileceis ané Special Frames Only $3 More NU-VISION OPTICAL Cd. Open 9 te 5:30 | 15 W. Lewrence St.|| Friday ‘til 9 Rooms 3&3 _ DOCTOR DEVELOPED AND APPROVED For Free Intormation Call or Write THE ENURTONE CO. Instead of trying to fertilize their barren acres, this over- emphasis on hobbies persuades them to take up something else three nights a week and all day on week-ends. Is this really enough to satisfy? Seems to me DISPENSING OPTICIANS polio is going around. Then he finds | new soil tickler? ; | an opening and wham: There goes) J have heard it said that you | | your evening. ‘can achieve new peace of mind by | Why is it that the first time aj observing the yellow-bellied sap- man is seduced by an eight-inch | sucker in its natural habitat. That Phone FE 2-2895 TEmple 2-4100 What causes FUEL KNOCK’? What harm does it do? Fuel knock occurs when gaso- LEONARD: i & line cannot withstand the ae increased temperature caused a 3X ; by high compression in the «AN combustion chamber of your automobile engine. DOLLS of all LANDS WITH EVERY $35.00 IN CASH REGISTER RECEIPTS. 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The formula for all Leonard X-tane gasoline is changed to conform not only to the seasons, bue at least eight times a year to match actual Michigan weather conditions. Evaporation never gets a chance to rob it of the power molecules blended im at the refinery. Located right in the center of Michigan at Alma, Leonard Refineries de- livers its gasoline to service stations after a short trip. Leonard X-tane is not pumped, piped, and poured so many times that evaporation steals its power. How does SUPER X-tane beat “FUEL KNOCK ? Octane measures the ability of gasoline to withstand pres- sure and heat; and to burn evenly. With the Superior Oc- tane rating of Super X-tane es Spa ae the chance of fuel knock and > * wee oF . power loss is reduced to a ate : minimum. NO LIMIT TO NUMBER. OF DOLLS YOU MAY GET ON THIS OFFER! line + Distributed by Hummel & Kneale Oil Company, Waterford, Michigan SOLD IN THIS AREA BY AMY & NELSON | Henderson’s Leonard Service 117 N. CASS AVE, PONTIAC 4795 DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON PLAINS Phone OR 3-1260 This Bonus Offer Good Only At— - 59 S$. SAGINAW & 398 AUBURN] / OPEN THURS., FRI., & SAT. ‘TIL 9 P.M. 125 W. HURON & 536 N.PERRY OPEN THURS. ond FRI. ‘Tit 9 P.M j 4 ( t t ( : THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1953 ) ELEVEN Birmingham TRAVEL SERVICE For Your Convenience Phone Mi 4-5711 Tickets, Reservations to Anywhere Grace Plummer Reilly 379 Hamilton. Birmingham é DO YOU WANT * |) MORE MONEY? Train now: for a good job \ in Television. Remain at your job while training. Call o: Write ELECTRONICS INSTITUTE 21 Henrv Street Detroit 1. Mich WO 2-5661 | : er TV REPAIRS | Work Guaranteed! HAMPTON TV 286 State St. FE 4-2525 —~ gg a ——————_—__ For The Family's | AMERICA’S Adult Mothes-and-Child Aspirin /)FAVORITE Needs . aly 2 Flaver sen uais 40: * Doctor Approved Stdoseph | )-—- ASPIRIN, FOR CHILDREN COCKROACHES One Full Year Guarantee From Houses, Apartments, Gro- cery Stores and Restaurants Re- main out only three hours. No signs used Rox Ex Company 1016 Pont. St. Bk. Ridg. Caught With BERLIN ® — The Soviet zone is mustering its provincial Com- munist press in a drive to shame East Germans who come to West Berlin for American food parcels. Throughout the zone, newspapers printed names of persons caught with the packages containing lard, sugar and milk they were unable | to get at home. Those ‘singled out for the public attack were assailed as ‘‘weak- lings’’ willing to beggar themselves for ‘‘Ami food.” One paper printed the picture of a woman with nine food par- cels and said she owned a farm, four cows, two calves, 25 pigs, two horses, three sheep and nine chickens. At the same time, the Commu- nist police turned a few more screws in an effort to discourage the trek of East Germans who have picked up 2,575,126 parcels in West Berlin since the campaign instigat- ed by President Eisenhower start; ed July 27. The first pnase of the give-away ended Saturday. During the’ next two weeks, West Berlin food sta- tions will reorganize but will con- tinue to distribute parcels to So- viet zone,.residents from outside Berlin. | Thé distribution will be extended to East Berliners again Aug. 27. | American officials said last night it would continue through Septem- ber at least, despite British and French coolness toward the plan. New measures taken by the frustrated East German regime against the campaign include 150-mark .fines for persons Who give up their identity cards to friends daring enough to come to West Berlin and get food for . them. The fine amounts to two weeks pay for most workers. To get around this new danger, Easterners are substituting notes and letters from paStors, charity organizations and other groups declaring their urgent need for food. West Berlin authorities are recognizing these notes as valid enough to warrant |issuing extra packages. East Germans arriving in West Berlin today reported that confis- cations of the food packages by The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP NOT OLD MODELS BUT BRAND NEW 1953 DRYERS 51 W. Huron St. Famous Brands—Lowest Prices! SAVE Whintpoot! Automatic Electric Clothes Dryer Regularly *219.95 $169" INSTALLED FREE ON EDISON LINES It’s the large-size deluxe, fully automatic dryer with tempered heat control and satin-smocth dryer drum, assured safety for the most delicate fabrics. Hurry to save —when they’re gone, The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING’, of PONTIAC Open Daily 9 to 5: LOW FINANCE CHARGES 90 Days Same as Cash they’re all gone! 30—Friday 9 to 9° Phone FE 4-1555 Red Press Raps Germans| Sire tect te wer sn wen |Public Warned Granted vew Issues of food =| TJ seq] 3D Glasses Contents of confiscated packages . Food Parcels @e showing up on the Commie Spread Infection ives, especiall | ing. East Berlin. Red officials have ad-| WASHINGTON (UP) — Officials The more ‘doughty who lost | mitted harvest difficulties in their|of the U.S. Public Health Ser- their parcels demanded receipts | zone. vice said today widespread eye in- fections may result from careless | outright ban on re-issuance of used (Adertisement) rome ot plrind gases tor 20/00 eames, |” TASTHMA COUGHS “They said local health authori-| have acted on their own to avoid on Gasumine dhs ts romnitine: spac om ties in several cities already have | the risk of infection. They sell or ph yng ruin sleep 4nd enerey © seaat ereste received complaints and some are|five their customers plashic or | ana remevs thick, strangling mucus, Tae taking vigorous steps to meet the | paper glasses which can be thrown | allays coughing and promotes freer b the board of healt sa ecamed a | Woes twece ot Sa eds tk ean tree re = SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO. baked enamel finish. Save at Sears! Water Regularly Priced at 114.95 ment Plan! SEARS EASY PAYMENT PLAN Enjoy Hot Water... When You Need It! Bamanneeeshanmatanntice HOMART 40-GALLON GAS WATER HEATERS Only Sears could offer you such a dependable gas water heater at this low, low price! It’s fully automatic with a snap-action thermostat and safety pilot! Thick Fiberglas insulation reduces heat loss, saves fuel, 3ath Ensemble cuts operating costs! Tank is thoroughly galvanized inside and out to resist rust and corrosion. One year guarantee! Heavy brass drain cock Also Sold on Sears 95 for flushing tank. Convenient access door. 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The “Challenger” is a masterpiece of quality and value . created expressly for this 40th Anniversary Celebration. Normally it would sell for a much higher price. Its sensa- eS ‘tional $40 price is so far below rie real worth of the mattress that it must be withdrawn immedi- ately when this Annivérsary Celebration ends. BUY NOW —at the greatest savings in 40 years! , Suffering from M.B.A.? (Mattress Back Ache) | The RESTOKRAFT “Spine Supporter’’ ; i. es coun by 4 Soo sell or Sgpiag Sadivoad ‘\¢ LOOK for this LABEL! it’s Your GUARANTEE of the FINEST QUALITY Mattress at the GREATEST SAVINGS in Restokraft’s 40 Years! FASY PARKING Convenient CREDIT TERMS al FURNITURE CO. FF 361 South Savinaw Streat wo |Palomar, Calif. stopped here briefly last night en route to Korea for the American- Korean Foundation for emergency aid to Korea. ~-” Van Fleet in Hawaii HONOLULU @®—Gen. James A. Van Fleet, former commander of S. 8th Army in Korea, GET MORE FOR YOUR 51 New Tremors Do Little More Damage Where 600 Died In voaaeesr a In eS eas, Wannrence By ALLAN JACKS FRANKENMUTH AUTO INSURANCE ARGOSTOLIQN, Greece H—New earth tremors including one rated as a strong earthquake wrecked the stricken Ionian Sea islands to- day as officials estimated the toll from the week’s devastation at some 600. dead and 700 seriously injured. es Fifteen new tremors were rec- orded during a 12-hour period last night and today. They heightened the islanders’ near-panicky desire to flee their homelands but other- wise could make little difference on the three islands, practically leveled by the past week of up- heavals. * s * The new casualty estimates ‘DANIELS INSURANCE 8452 W. Huron St. * Ry é tcp Asphalt Paving Because . . . @ Economy @ No dust—no oiling @ Easy to clean @ Long life @ Easily maintained @ Applied to most bases Call Today for Estimate MAyfair 6-2647 Ph. FE 4-7644 quarters of Gen. Dimitrios Istrides, who is directing the Greek rescue work. Previously it was feared more than 1,000 persons had been killed. The new figures were based on |of Ithaca and nearly complete re- ports from the other two stricken isles, Zakinthos and Kefallinia. | Three hundred of the badly in- and plane to Athens. The others have been hospitalized in Patrai. * * * > Fears of a typhoid outbreak still hung over the devastated area to- day, and one case of smallpox had been found. Naval ships of five nations con- tinued to pour in thousands of tons of emergency supplies in an effort to feed nearly 120,000 hungry and mostly homeless islanders. Semen’ ASPHALT PAVING. UC Oakland County Yard The California Institute of Tech- Society are making a sky survey with a 48inch telescope on Mt. . MA6-2647 Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday at PEOPLE'S HUNT'S FANCY Whole Unpeeled =, APRICOTS in heavy syrup T oF DELICIOUS SUGAR WAFERS PRUNE JUICE ote 29S FRESH CREAMERY BUTTER 5G. FRESH WHITE BREAD All Popular Brands BLACK PEPPER ets IS eat 40x. Pks. 59° SUN FILLED, CONCENTRATED wat eoneee GRAPEFRUIT JUICE... =] 0: 6 oz. can PTT TIITIIititiftitititiitiiiiitiii iii ii tiryryrrprpry yyy | PC Cn=-C=M Ar SULTETP=MATT ET No. 212 Can PEOPLE $ ral —— ——__— —$__— ee \ THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1953 . THIRTEEN Rambling, Pungent Herb Shriner --Today’s Television Proarams -- Chatinel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 1—WXYZ-TV TV HIGHLIGHTS 6: 30—(7)—"‘Liberace.”’ Piano im- pressions. (4)—"“Bob and Ray.” Comedy. (2)—""News.” Doug Edwards. 6: 45—(4)—"‘News Caravan.” John Cameron Swayze. (2)}—"TV’s Top Tunes.” Helen O’Connell, Bob Eber- ly sing ‘“‘A Fine Romance.” 7:00—(7)—"Talent Patrol.” Armed forces review talent. (4)—‘Name That. Tune.” Musical quiz with Red Ben- son, Harry Salter. (2)}—“Burns and Allen.” Gracie Allen doubts good intention of store manager. 7:30—(7)—"20th Century Tales.” Film drama. (4)—“Voice Program.” Mil- dred Miller mezzo soprano sings ‘“{t’s a Good Night for Singing.” (2)—‘‘Talent Scouts.”’ Ar- thur Godfrey reviews tal- ents of singers, comedian. 8:00—(7)—“‘Wrestling.”” Film. ()—"Juvenile Jury.” Young panel reviews little problems. (2)—"‘Racket Squad.’’ Cap- tain Braddock investigates ‘Impatient Heir,” benefici- ary plots early death of youth. 8:30—(7)—"‘Jimmy Fund Bene- fit.” Ed Sullivan is host. (4)—"‘Robert Montgomery Presents.” John. Newland, Margaret Hayes, Elizabeth Montgomery in “Pierce 3101” plot to dispose of wife almost perfect. (2)—‘‘Masquerade Party.” Douglas Edwards host to celebrities in disguise; Ika Chase, Odgden Nash, Buff Cobb, Peter Donald. 9:00—(7)—"“‘Hot Rod Races.” Fred Wolf describing races from Motor City Speedway. (2)—"‘Studio One Summer Theater.’’ Gene Lyons, Bet- sy Palmer in ‘Sentence of Death.’”’ Girl witness to murder from phone booth. 9:30—(4)—"‘Who Said That?” Newsquiz with Bob and Ray, June Lockhart, Wal- ter Kiernan. 10:00—(7)—**Stage Seven.’’ Lynn Bari in “I'll Never Know When” woman hires killer to murde® herself. (4)—** ec Court.” Judge Watts presides at a re-en- actment of court cases. ° (2)—""News Roundup.’ Earl Hayes. ~ 10:15—(2)—"‘Sports.”” Ed Hayes. 10:30—(7)—""Tales of the Hawk.” “Toying with Murder’’ film | drama. | (4)—"‘Man About Town.” Bob Maxwell with music. (2)—*‘So You Know Sports.” Ed Hayes with quiz. 10:45—(4)—"‘Time off for Sports.” Bill Fleming with latest sports news. 11:00—(7)—“Say There Neighbor.” Betty Clooney has a date with Eddie Jerome. (4)—"‘News.” Paul Williams. (2)—“Telenews Ace.’’ Ken 11:15—(7)—“‘Film Theater.” Ed- ward G. Robinson in ‘‘The Red House.” (4)—‘‘Weathercast.”’ (2)—‘‘Weathervane.”’ 11:30—(4)—""Monday Theater.” Joan Maud, John Stewart in ‘“‘The Temptress’ fea- ture film. TUESDAY MORNING 8:00—(4)—Today (7)—W. M. Kelly 8: 45—(2)—News 9:00—(4)—Playschool (2)—Arthur Godfrey ’* (7)—Coffee ’n Cakes 10:00—(4)—Hawkins Falls (7)—Playhouse 10:15—(4)—The Bennetts (2)—Baird Puppets 10:30—(4)—Steps to Heaven (2)—Strike It Rich 10:45—(4)—Follow Your Heart 11;00—(4)—Glamor Girl (7)—Charm Kitchen (2)—Bride and Groom 11:15—(2)—Love of Life 11:30—(4)—Movie Quiz (2)—Tomorrow Search T1: 45—(4)—News (2)—Guiding Light 12:00—(4)—Ding Dong School (7)—Comics (2)—Murphy Calling 12:30—(4)—Cinderella (7)—Lanker Show (2)—Moore Show TUESDAY AFTERNOON 1:00—(4)—Jean McBride (7)—Theater (2)—Freedom Ring 1:30—(4)—Cooking Show (2)—Houseparty ~ 2:00—(4)—Break the Bank (2)—Big Payoff 2:15—(7)—Pat 'n’ Johnny 2:30—(4)—Welcome Traveler (7)—News (2)—Afternoon Action 2:45—(7)—News 3:00—(4)—On Your Account (1)—Hometown Hoedown (2)—Ladies Day 3:15—(7)—Tune Parade ; 3:30—(4)—U.N. Gen. Assembly 3:45—(7)—Songs and Sonnets 4:00—(4)—Atom Squad (7)—Cowboy (2)—Theater 4:15—(4)—Gabby Hayes 4:30—(4)—Howdy Doody 4:45—(7)—News 5:00—(4)—Beany Time , (7)—Auntie Dee 5:15—(4)—Scotti Show (2)—Cartoons 5:30—(4)—Adventure Patrol (7)—Rootie Kazootie (2)—Sports Spotlight 5:45—(7)—Cartoons . (2)—Lady Dooit TUESDAY EVENING 6: 00—(4)—Music (7)—Det. Deadline (2)—Kit Carson 6:15—(4)—News (7)—News 6:30—(4)—Eddy Arnold (7)—Beulah (2)—Doug Edwards 6: 45—(4)—News (2)—Summertime U.S.A. 7:00—(4)—Theater (7)—Motion Picture (2)—Blind Date 7:30—(4)—Break the Bank (2)—Dotty Mack Show 8:00—(4)—Nothing But Best (7)—Strange Fiction (2)—Follow the Leader 8:15—(7)—News 8:30—(4)—Awards Dinner (7)—TBA (2)—Suspense 9:00—(4)—Judge Yourself (2)—Danger 9:30—(7)—Name’s the Same (2)—The Unexpected 10: 00—(4)—Storybook (7)—Theater (2)—News 10:15—(4)—Meet the Artist (2)—Sports 10:30—(4)—Travel Unlimited (2)—Into Night 10:45—(4)—Time for Sports 11:00—(4)—News (7)—Say There (2)—Telenews ‘11:15—(4)—Morey Show (7)—Film (2)—Theater 11:30+(4)—Movie Date - -- Today's Radio Programs - - Programs furnished by stations Hsted in this column are subject to change without notice. CELW (308) WW (850) WCAB (1130) WXYZ (1270) WIBE (1490) WIR (70@ WJBK, Rise and Shine 12:30——-WJR, Helen Trent CKLW,; News MONDAY PGR WCAR, Coffee With Clem WWJ, Cindrella Weekend WJBK; Headless Horseman 6:00—WJR, News WXYZ—Music WCAR: News, Ballads WWJ, News by 6:45—WXYZ, News, Wolfe CKLW, Your Boy Bud True bl Sia Wattrick-McKensie 7:00—WJR,| Dick Burris WCAR, Club 1130 6:15—WJR, Clark Quartet CKLW. News, eo WIR. 1 WJBK. Hors r 12:4S—WJR, Jack White WWJ, Budd Lynch WCAR, News. Ballads WAR’ news’ Clem WXYZ, Talk WXY2, Lee Smith 6:15—WJR, ark eres 1:15 WIR. Musie Hall TUESDAY AFTERNOON WCAR. Sports Www, Bud Lync c goo WXYZ, Leo Smith any. 1 1:00—WJIR, Road of Life | ¢:se-wwy. Bod Reynolds Soar. felk aports. xva. "sted Wolte” Saas te er WWJ. Fran Pettay ihn . . WwXxyYzZ, arm Time WXYZ. Ed McKenzie WJBK, Gentile and Bingo CKLW. News WOAR, ‘Henry Taylor 6:30—WJR, Bob Reynolds 1:45-WWJ, News WJBK, News, McLeod | phe Lae WCAR, News, Club 113 sakes. ‘Mesa whan WXYZ, McKensie WCAR, Ballads Bounce 6:45—WJR, Lowell Thomas *wwd, Nation's Busjhess wd 7:00—WJR, Family Skeleton WWJ, 3 Star Extra CKLW. Fulton Lewis, Jr. WJBK, Tom Geofge WCAR, News, Music WJR, Guest House WXYZ. Dee: Show World CKLW. Guy Nunn 7:30—WWJ, Morgan Beatty WXYZ, Lone Ranger CKLW. Gabriel Heatter 7:45—WJR, Ed. R. Murrow WWJ, One Man's Family CKLW. 3 Suns 8:00—WJR, Crime Classics ww). Railroad Hour WXYZ, Your Land; Mine CKLW. The Falcon WJBK, Murphy Show 8:15—WXYZ, Sammy Kaye 8:30—WJR, Talent Scouts WWJ, Votee Program WXYZ, Symphony CKLW, Fantasy Hall WJBK, Bob Murphy 9:00—WJR, Summer Theater WWJ, Telephone Hour CKLW, Rep. Roundup 9:30—WWJ. Band of Am. WJBK, Gentile CKLW, On, Off Record 10:00—_WJR, Walk a Mile WWJ, H'wood Searchlight WXYZ, News CKLW Edwards 10:15—WJR, Bob Wyatt WwW4J, Cassidy; Forum WXYZ, Top of Town CKLW. Fran Warren 10:30—WJR, Wizard wwd. WxXyYzZ, CKLW, WWJ, Utley; Stars WJBK, News, Geor . ge 4:45—WWJ, Woman in House Wwxyz. we Hill WCAR, News, Music CKLW, News 10:45—WJR, Adams, Music 11:15—-CKLW, News 5:00—WJR, News WWJ, Paris Stars WwW4J, Plain Bill WXYZ. Top of Town CKLW, Quiet Sanctuary CRLW, 11:00—WJR, Ne Wws, News WXYZ. WJBK, News CKLW. News 11:15—WJR, Bob face WWJ, Enchantm WJBK, WXYZ, Top oe a CKLW, Music 11:38—W. Believe, Music CKLW. With Music cKLW. WJB TUESDAY MORNING WCAR. 6:30—WJR, Parm Forum WWJ, Bob Maxwell WXYZ, Fred Wolfe CKLW, CKLW, News WCAR, j j 8:00—WJR, Jack White WWJ, Minute Parade WXYZ Dick Osgood CKLW, News, Toby K, News, WCAR, News, Clem 8:15—WJR, Bud Guest WXYZ, Fred Wolfe WCAR, Coffee 8:30—WJR, Music Hall 8:45—WCAR, Radio Revival 9:00—WJR, News WWJ. News, Maxwell WXYZ, Breakfast Club CKLW, News, Music WJBK, News, McLeod WCAR, News, Rhythm 9:15—WJR, Pioneer's Sons WWJ, Bob Maxwell CKLW, News, Crosby WJBK, News, Don McLeod 9:30—WJR, Mrs. WWJ, Bob Maxwell CKLW. Kitchen Club 9:45—WJR, Pete and Joe Here's the Answer CKLW, Good Neighbor WJBK, News, McLeod WCAR, Temple Academy 10:00—WJR, Arthur Godfrey WWJ, Welcome Traveler WXYZ, My True 6tory CKLW, Homechats WJBK, News, McLeod WCAR, News 10:15—WCAR, Temple 10:30—WWJ, Bob Hope WXYZ, Whisper Strings WXYZ, Mary Morgan WCAR, Harmony 10:45—WJR, Marriage Pays WXYZ, Girl Marries 11:00—WJR, Arthur Godfrey WWJ, Strike It Rich 11: ay we Grand Slam Phrase saat Pays 11:45—WJR, Rosemary WWJ, Second Chance 12:00—WJR, Wendy Warren WWJ, News, WXYZ, Turn to Friend 12:15—WJR, Aunt Jenny WWJ, Fran Harris Gentile WXYZ, News, With Clem WWJ, Dial Dave WCAR, Sports Page WCAR, Club 1130 4:00—WJR, News WWJ. Backstage WJBK_ News all Curtain Calls Ladies Fair CKLW, Queen for Day Double or Nothing “News WCAR, News News, McLeod WXYZ, News Bart ww, Curt Massey News, George News TONIGHT ea ea: News News News Noon Caller 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins CKLW, All Star Baseball 1:36—WJR, Dr. Malone McBride WJBK, Tom George 1:45—WJR, Guiding Light WJBK, Tom George 2:00—WJR, Mrs. Burton WWJ, News, Mulholland WXYZ, Paul Winter WCAR, News, Club 2:15—WJR, Perry Mason WXYZ, Auntie Dee, Winter 2:30—WJR, Nora Drake WXYZ, Paul Winter 2:45—WJR, Brighter Day WWJ, Ross Mulholland CKLW, Cashur Antell 3:00—WJR, Hilltop House WW4J, Life Beautiful WCAR, News, Rhythm 3:15—WJR, House Party WWJ, Road of Life 3:30—WWJ, Pepper Young WXYZ, Paul Winter CKLW, Eddie Chase 3:45—WJR, Gal Sunday WWJ, Rt. to Happiness WXYZ, Ed McKenzie WCAR, News, Ballads 4:15—WJR, Deland Show WWJ, Stella Dallas 4:30—WJR, Bandstand WWJ, Widder Brown WXYZ, Auntie Dee, McK. WJBK, Don McLeod WXYZ Wattrick, McKen. Eddie Chase WJBK, News, McLeod 5:15—WJR, Music Hal) WWJ. Front Page Farrell WCAR, Ballads, Blues 5:30—WWJ, Lorenzo Jones 5:45—WJR, Curt Massey WJBK. Ed Murphy warn Wattrick, McKenzie WCAR, Ballads 1:00—WJR, City Melodies WWJ, Three Star Extra CKLW,. Pulton Lewis WCAR, News, Magic Music 7:15—WWJ, News Parade WXYZ, Auntie Dee CKLW_ News 7:30—-WXYZ, Fam. Skeleton WXYZ, Starr of Space CKLW Gabrie) Heatter 7:45—WJR, E£E. R. Murrow WWJ. One Man's Family CKLW Three Suns 8:00—WJR, People Funny WWJ, Eddie Fisher WXYZ, 3 City Byline CKLW. Hammer Man 8:15—WWJ, R. Clooney WXYZ, Sammy Kave WJBK, Tiger Talks 8:30—WJR, The Norths WWJ. Fisher Award WXYZ, Discovery CKLW. High Adventure CKLW On. Off Record WJBK. Tiger Game 8:45 WXYZ. Literary Greats 9:00—WJR, Johnny Dollar WW4J, Baron. and Bee . WXYZ, Town Meeting CKLW Pight’ for Life 9:30—WJR, 21st Precinct WWJ, Stewart Orch. CKLW, Btate of the Nation 9:45—WXYZ. BE. Canham 10:00—WJR, Parsons WWJ, Two For the Money WXYZ, News CKLW Frank Edwards 10:15—WJR, Michi Jonlh 2000AD WxXyY ; Z, Top of CKLW. June Christy 10:30—WJR, Wisard of Odds WWJ, Cassidy, Kenton WXYZ, News CKLW. Girardin WJBK. Gentile 10:45—WJR, Milt Herth WWJ, Stan Kenton WXYZ. Top of Town 11;00—WJR, News Ww, News WXYZ, News CKLW News WJBK. News Houseparty 11:15——WJR, Bob Reynolds Stars on Quiz Show Still Will Play Old Harmonica Folksy Kidding Around Gets Him Discovered Time and Again No matter how often you've heard Herb Shriner tell about the folks back in his home town, you never grow tired of hearing about them. » The star-of television's ‘‘Two for the Money” will say in his easy-going, matter-of-fact style: “You couldn’t help but tell I was a Hoosier. There’s something about a guy from Indiana, I don’t know what it is. , . Well, I know what it is, but I'd rather not think about it!’’ With this sort of kidding around, Herb Shriner has man- aged.to get himself ‘‘discovered’’ about once every year or so for the past several years. Herb started in show business playing a harmonica and every now and then he'll trot it out and go through a few fast cadenzas just for a change of pace. Shriner devotees will tell you he’s not a | comedian, pointing out that he | doesn’t tell jokes or string gags | together. They say he’s a humorist | and just rambles on, making com- | ments about American ways. He'll look down at his shoes, run his hand through his long, blond hair which always seems to be get- ting in his eyes: ‘‘Gotta get a hair- cut—than I'l] be able to hear again.” In this rambling but pungent style, Shriner manages to en- compass a great deal] of territory and to kid a number of people without being snide or hurting anyone. And he never gets too far from his home town, which must, to hear his description of it have the strangest collection of people. “The fellows back home,” ac- cording to Herb, ‘‘used to have a lot of fun, They'd collect around the barber shop on a Saturday night and watch haircuts. And they'd do a lot of other things— | dotted they’d smoke. Nobody even cared if you inhaled. That's the kind of crowd it was, Shriner's description of the local | medico’s system for operating de- | serves re-describing: “The doctor would lay out a pattern on a pa- tient that looked like a dress pat- tern, with ‘kidney,’ ‘liver’ and ‘ap- pendix’ on it. Then he would take out his scissors and cut along the line. Everything usually worked out, unless you were a dif- ferent size than the pattern—and then there was maybe a little trou- ble.” With this sort of nonsensc, Herb has been weaving his way into the living rooms of the nation via television. Although he once declared that a performer should not appear on television more than twice a month, he has man- aged every week to keep his au- diences happy with ‘‘Two for the Money,” from which he is cur- rently vacationing. When faced with this apparent contradiction, Herb blandly replied ‘Well, I never had so much fun making a liar out of myself. That's the truth.” It’s Still Embarrassing TAMPA, Fla. (UP) — Robert B. Lane, district supervisor of the State Beverage Department, re- ported that an illegal whisky still had been uncovered. It was found on his own property 20 miles south- Colorado, with an average alti- tude of 6,800 feet. above sea level, has the highest altitude of the 48 states. IT’S MAGIC! | | | CLOTHES CLEANED LIKE NEW! Clothes look cleaner., ARE cleaner and |8st longer when we take care of them! Fax Tj ORY CLEANERS if 719 West Huron Phone FE 4-1536 (Advertisement) Fiery, Smarting Itch of Common Skin Rashes Don't stand —* torment any longer! ust smooth Resinol Ointment on your ted skin at once. See how quickly its medically proven ingredients in dapolia bring restiul, long-lasting relief. an 4j | paring to jump. HOOSIER HUMORIST — Herb Shriner, the epitome of the shy country boy taking a first look at the city, is a far cry from that disarming description. The home- spun comedian, who has_ been frequently compared with the late Will Rogers, has a TV show, radio affiliations and is currently star- ring in his first motion picture. DP Leaps to Death; Wife, Police Look On DETROIT W—A 36-year-old dis- placed person from Germany, leaped into the Detroit River from the Belle Isle Bridge Sunday while his wife and police were rushing toward him to hold him back. Joseph Skiba had left his home during the morning, seeming de- pressed his wife, Elizabeth, told officers. She said he had been brooding because fellow workers at a Detroit auto plant tegsed him about his German background. Mrs. Skiba said she remembered his threats to jump into the river and hurried to the bridge not long after he left his home. At the same time, ‘police were summoned to the spot by a passerby ho said he saw a man on the bridge pre- Skiba saw his wife and the of- ficers and shouted, ‘‘Stay away | from me.” As they edged toward him, hele plunged into the water. Gratitude Brings End to Thriving Business WOLCOTT, N. Y. Hh — Willie Redding asked for money and got | it by showing A deaf-mute’s card, | police report, until he spoiled his pose by saying ‘‘Thanks.” | Peace Justice Carl L. Katz sen- tenced the migrant farm worker to | 90 days in a penitentiary on a dis- | orderly conduct charge and 30 days | | of the President and put it on = wall. on a public intoxication charge. 'Paul got | Shook my hand,”’ ‘Bigger Than Hoppy’ Ike Visits Dying Boy, 6, After Reporter's Appeal DENVER (To 6-year-old Paul Henry Haley, who is. dying of cancer, President Eisenhower is a bigger and better man” than Now, tb those who aren't parents of smal] boys, that may sound incredible. But ordinarily a president| deal doesn’t cut much ice when chil- dren match him up with Hopalong. Not so with Paul. Dwight Eisen-|. hower is the hero of his tragically foreshortened life. That's the result of a surprise visit the President paid Paul yes- terday. * *«¢ *& It started when Eisenhower picked up the Rocky Mountain News before church. There was a picture of cowboy-outfitted Paul, his arm around his mother Jean. The story was in the form of a letter by reporter David Stolberg. “I'm writing this story to you, Mr. President, for a young fellow who hasn't learned to write,'’ it said in part. ‘He wants to see you, Ike, and although he doesn't know it, that’s his dying wish. . . .He may live as long as two months, at most 18, doctors say.”’ The reporter said Paul is ill of cancer. Eisenhower decided to see Paul. And he did, unannounced. Maybe there has been a more astonished man than Paul's step- father, Donald- Haley, when he answered the door wearing dun- garees, but it’s doubtful. As Paul, wide-eyed and unbe- lieving walked into the living room, the President flashed his smile and said, ‘‘Paul, I understand you wanted to see me.’’ Paul was flabbergasted. » s s They visited, Paul and the >resi- dent, about five minutes, Then to inspect the. presi- dential limousine. The President told him he had a grandson about Paul's age — 5 year-old Dwight David Eisenhow- er, II. Afterward, Paul talked about the elt was nice and eool,”’ he re- ported. ‘‘There was something to put your feet on, and there was a chair, I think it was for a baby.”’ Mrs. Haley wasn't home when , Eisenhower célled. Later, she! said | “enough: ad- | jectives to describe how grateful | | there just aren't we were.’ “The President came Paul said, .* smile on his wan face. “I'm going out and buy a picture | “T’ve got pictures of Roy Rogers and Hopalong Cassidy, too.” Later Paul went on the radio and paid Eisenhower his supreme tribute: ‘‘He’s a bigger and better man than Hopalong Cassidy.” . The President, if he were listen- ll must have liked that a great 500 Entrants Expected _ in. Model Plang Contest DETROIT (UP ore than 500 enthusiasts from the United States Canada are expected to par- ticipate in the seventh annual In- which opens Thursday. Selfridge Field will be the contest site the first two days and com- petition will be switched to Belle Isle Saturday and Sunday. The con- test, sponsored by the Plymouth Division of Chrysler Corp., will include competition for radio-con- trolled planes for the first time. To Film ‘Oklahoma!’ NEW .YORK (—The authors of “Oklahoma!” have announced their world famous musical, now running for its llth straight year on the stage, will be filmed with a new wide-screen movie process. ternational Model Plane Contest | Pilot Bails Out, Dies En Route to Hospital TOKYO w— U. S. Air Force pilot today bailed out of his Thun- derjet off the coast of Hokkaido and was rescued from the water, but was dead on arrival at a hospital, the Air Force said. His Name was withheld. Far East Air Forces said the jet crashed into the sea south _ of Chitose Air Base on Hokkaido, Japan’s northernmost island. An Air Force amphibian rescue plane picked up the flier within an hour. FEAF said the F-84 Thunderjet was on a routine training flight. Comptometer Students Wanted to take short... inexpensive Comptometer Course; classes day or eve- ning. 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Rhee Declares U.S. Will Fight Robertson Earlier Had Said America Has No Concrete Plan WASHINGTON Ww — President Syngman Rhee of South Korea said today he believes that if the Ko- rean peace talks fail ‘‘the United States will resume the. fight to accomplish the common objective’’ of unifying his embattled country. His statement, made in a copy- righted interviewed with the maga- zine U. S. News and World Report, eame in the wake of one by Walter S. Robertson that the United States has not mapped out a specific course of action if it is necessary for the Americans to walk out of the peace talks. * * * Robertson is the assistant secre- tary of state who, as personal representative of President Eisen- hower, persuaded Rhee not to ob- struct the truce. He agreed that this government will quit the peace talks in 90 days if it appears that | | | | the Reds are not negotiating in good faith. * * * Robertson, in an NBC television interview yesterday, said the United States has not agreed with Rhee to help him in resuming bat- tle unless the Communists break the peace first. left by the earliest civilizations. | Geese appear in the 3 Both For 912° ; | Matching Wedding Bands, - handsomely tailored bands in 14K vellow gold lewelry Department ; (Adertisement) Quick Relief for HEADACHE '. NEURALGIA Test STANBACK yoursel/i .. . tab- lets or powders... against any preparation you've ever used. cat - ” » & Swap Bock ane VEN LTE | next song. The Record Shop Music Official Bombarded With All Types of Songs By RICHARD KLEINER NEW YORK — (NEA) — Every Wednesday is publishers’ day at Capitol Records. That’s the day when song writers and publishers play their latest creations for Sid Feller, Capitol’s A & R man. That means “Artists and Repertoire.” He tells which singers to sing what songs. I sat with Feller, a big, good natured man, during part of one publishers’ day. With him, | heard the songs—the good songs, the bad songs, and, by far the greatest number, the in-between songs. Most of the men adopted a} jittery air of bravodo. *‘Here’s the first piece of junk, Sid,” one said as he pulled out a) demonstration record. “I’m afraid to say it’s a hit.” Feller played the record, fol- lowing the sheet music as he listened. The man was right; it was junk. Most brought records, but a few played the piano and sang. There were some awful lyric (horrible example: ‘‘The whole world smells like one big rose’’) and some poor, trite melodies. But Feller, who admits it took him a while to learn how to say no, can turn down a song with great kindness. ‘I don’t think it’s smart enough,”’ he told one writer, ‘“but» that’s - personal opinion, of course.” Most of them took the turn downs as strictly business. ‘‘This | is real bad,” Feller said to one man. “Yeah, it stinks,’’ said the man, unemotionally. And he reached in his brief case for-the| On an average Wednesday, Feller will have 30 or 35 appoint-| ments, and listen to perhaps 100| songs. Out of this, maybe he'll get} a half-dozen worth hearing a sec- ond time. Some publishers come every week, others wait until they have | something “‘sure-fire’’ to show. In an effort to sell their song, some publishers will snap their fingers and clap their hands | while listening to the song, pretending the melody and | rhythm are so infectious they | can’t help themselves. It's a pretty futile effort; Feller is completely detached. It’s! equally futile to high pressure. : “That is a great song,” one | man said, after playing his | number. Feller gave him a long look “When are you going to record it?’’ he retorted. . But always he is helpful and kind. He often made constructive technical musical suggestions. And with one man, he sat NTR ti. oe SPEED | ’:| QUEEN WASHER is a brand new, model 58 Queen with pressure wringer safety release, aluminum proof agitator, 108 NORTH SAGINAW peed capacity porcelain tub, adjustable with instant tangle- 1953 full Phone FEderal 3-7114 SAVE © WASHER | Prado, RCA). and IRONER TRADE IN YOUR OLD WORN-OUT WASHER Here's How You Save: SPEED QUEEN - | Model 40 Washer Regular Price $ 99.95 SPEED QUEEN Model BP-5 lroner Regular Price__.9 69,95 TOTAL VALUE $169.90 YOU PAY $149.90 You Save $7 0 _ ? Chair and Stand Extra 1953 moude!i speed Queen, mounted on sturdy chrome base with gies | casters. A_ beautifu appliance, fully guar- anteed. Open Friday Night ‘til 9 down and outlined a complete new lyric treatment for a par- ticularly inept effort. After he was gone, Feller said, sadly, ‘No talent. Nice guy, but no talent.”’ ‘6 That’s the way it goes every week, on publishers’ day. *. * .* THE POPULAR SIDE: Every- body’s ‘“‘covering,”’ as they say in the trade, the sudden zoom of “God Bless Us All.” Newest en- trants: Capitol’s Molly Bee, Mer- cury’s Baby Pam. Now you can play games on your record player: Mood Records has disked ‘“‘TV Rhumba’ with Bob Bacheldér and orchestra rhumbl- ing around with the theme songs from 12 TV shows ranging from Dragnet to Mr. Peepers. . > * ONTHE CLASSICS: First time on | records is ‘‘The Faithful Shep herd,’”’ Handel's rare tHree-act) opera, an August Columbia release. * . s POP SINGLES: ‘San Antonio Rose”’ (Joe ‘‘Fingers’’ Carr and his ragtime band, Capitol); “The| Story / of Three Loves” (Jerry | Murad, harmonica, with Richard Hayman and orchestra, Mercury); “Till They've All Gone Home’”’ (Gisele Maskenzie, Capitol); “It Can't Be Wrong” (Billy Ek-| stine, MGM); ‘‘Just You Just Me’’| (Barbara Ruick, also MGM); “I Love You'’ (Broc Peters, Colum-| bia); “Jazz Me Blues” (Peres) POP ALBUMS: Wally Rose,| playing ragtime piano pieces in; a nearly forgotten style is as authentic and realistic as the pro- fessor in oldtime honky-tonks and | as precise as the down-front ivery beaters of silent movie days... It’s a Columbia LP. CLASSICAL: Five piano trans-| criptions of notable Bach organ) compositions, by Gregory Sandor, | for Columbia. On the same label, a Strauss) treasury, with Eugene Ormandy | about, Scans Weather ar Into Future ‘ 81-Year-Old Forecaster Yoke a Big Plunge to| redict for 1976. WASHINGTON W® — A veteran weatherman took the plunge today. He predicted the weather not just for tomorrow or the next five days, but for 1976. The forecast: A dry spring and summer in the Southwest, with per- | haps a worse and longer drought | than the one this year. Dr. Charles G. Abbott, 81-year. | old former secretary of the Smith- sonian Institution and one of the world’s foremost authorities on solar radiation, made the long- range forecast in summing up | his weather studies over more than half a century. In a publication issued by the | institution, Dr. Abbott said he be- | lieves ‘‘a definite relation between sun and weather must exist, even if it cannot as yet be adequately} explained.”’ Dr. Abbott said his observations have shown that, roughly speak- ing, the weather repeats itself in cycles of 22% years, in rhythm | with changes in heat energy com- | ing from the sun. | The veteran scientist empha- | sized that ‘‘even after 50 years of | | observations—some of them among | the most delicate ever made by | astronomers—the threshold of this | tsolar radiation) system of meteor- logy has just been crossed.” But he said there is evidence that ‘“‘a trend in the heat radia- | tion of the sun is attended almost | invariably by a trend in terres- | trial weather.”’ ‘In some unknown and perhaps | unknowable way,” he said, ‘‘the| changes in solar radiation act as triggers to set off forces that bring | for instance, a dry July} and a wet October or a cool June and a warm December.” On the basis of his cycle theory, Dr. Abbott predicted that by and large, this year’s weather will re- | peat itself, so far as general trends conducting the Philadelphia Pops| are concerned, in 1976. Orchestra. Although auto traffic deaths re- main at peak levels, the killing of | pedestrians by cars in the United States has been cut from a peak | of 15,500 in 1937 to 8,600 in 1952. | Foreseeing important economic results from his studies, Dr. Ab- bott envisioned a time when a map of predicted weather 10 years in advance might be avail- | able to the whole country. | “Then farmers, oil men; resort’ Geese were considered sacred at some times and places in ancient | Egypt. keepers, everybody, could prepare for wet and dry, hot and cold sea- sons long in advance,”’ he said. 7 4 EXPERT CLEANING and FREE MOTHPROOFING proof your cloties AT NO EXTRA A COST. Re. rocess means cafe. rs Fig ee | ring your clothes in today for beautiful moth-proofed cleaning. ° FATHER & SON CLEANERS rns the Accordion? Gallagher's Take Advantage of Your Leisure Vays. Learn to Play This Popular Instrument. OUR METHOD IS QUICK AND EASY Accordion Furnished for Eight Weeks (No Obligation to Buy) 1g HOUR PRIVATE LESSON EACH WEEK FROM ONE OF OUR STAFF OF QUALIFIED TEACHERS Our Students Are Reaching Higher Levels of Musicianship and Attainment ONE HOUR OF BAND PRACTICE FREE EACH WEEK INCLUDING BAND MUSIC (Equal te at ledst twe lessens) Our Band Director Is Certified by the State of Michigan with a Lifetime of Teaching and Directing. We invite you to visit our band sessions held every Tuesday and‘Wednesday evenings. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 18 EAST HURON, PONTIAC FE 4-0566 | e * Get an Electric Alr Drier Hot under the collar because rust makes your favorite saw bind, makes drills seize and chatter, makes tool calibrations hard to read? Excess moisture causes the trouble. Dry out the air with an electric dehumidifier and that basement workroom, or any other trouble spot, changes from jungle-damp to sunny-dry. A dehumidifier’s thirst is enormous. from damp It removes as much as 3 gallons of water air every 24 hours. Electric dehumidifiers are compact — easily moved from one trouble spot to another. They plug in, just like a floor lamp. (Dehumidifier) Mest eir driers ere under 25” high; weigh under 80 pounds. in ee ee el THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, .MONDAY, AUGUST 17,:1953 Bloomfield Hills Rider Cops 1st Place at 4-H Horse Show <— oo “ys Pet s CHF.CK-NG SCRIPT — Nancy Wonnberger gives script once over with her father and student actress Barbara Reynolds at Cranbrook Summer Theater. ? “ et ‘€ , During winter, summer theater girls cooperate with Cranbrook boys in producing stage and radio plays. Bloodmobile Visit Asks 250 Donors Call for volunteers went out to- day as Oakland County Chapter, American Red Cross, prepared for this month's ‘‘Bloodmobile’’ visit to Pontiac next Monday, Aug. 24. The mobile unit will take blood donations at Pontiac Elks’ Temple, 114 Orchard Lake Ave., from 2 until 8 p.m. next Monday. “‘We hope anyone who can give blood will call the Red Cross of- fice, FEderal 43565, any day this week between 8:30 and 5 p.m.,”’ said Mrs. N. E Durocher, Red Cros blood donor recruitment chairman for North Oaklanc Coun- ty. “We need 250 donors to fill our quota Monday. We'd be glad to make appointments for even more.”’ 600 Lyrics, Songs: Summer Theater Coach Busiest Man at Cranbrook Summer at Cranbrook brings out blooming gaydens, shady nooks, drama students and a man who hustles from place to-place revi+- ing scripts and musical scores as he goes. The man is Carl G. Wonnberger, head of Cranbrook School's Eng- lish department and director of the Cranbrook Summer School of the Theater which closed last week. | and music for some 600 songs, composed several instrumental quartets and symphonies, written dozens of original plays and adap. ted countless others and written books and articles on drama teaching. cil of Teachers of English seven And he’s apt to be found rewrit-| times in his 25 years at Cranbrook.| Glen U. Crawford, 57, a Kalama- | M€ws conferences—an average of) ing a musical score or drama lines wheréver he can find a bat- tered pidno or pack along his portable typewriter. Drama and music study, early acting experience with professional theater groups and singing with es of the Philadelphia Orchestra and Boston Symphony stayed with A prolific author and composer, Wonnberger has turned out lyrics Henry. 22 t us station. Wonnberger. In Cranbrook summer drama school, founded 12 years ago, he has supervised more than a thous- and students in plays and musicals for stage and radio. Under Wonnberger’s direction, some two dozen assistants—in- cluding his wife—help students from nine years old to college age rehearse and produce plays and musicals. ton trapeze) wheel across 3,200-foot Hoellental Gorge in Bavarian Alps on 800-foot-long stee! cable. “hey are traveling from the of Zugspitze, Germany's highest peak, to a mountain weather This summer, more than 125 plays were given at the school, including four major productions open to the public. Mama” and ‘‘Dear Bruius,”’ were wel-known Broadway dramas. The Has Forgotten,’’ adapted by Wonn- berger from a fairy tale, and ‘‘Star- dust,’”” a musical for which he wrote script and music. Are Threatened in Casablanca CASABLANCA, Morocco (® French soldiers and police kept an uneasy watch over the main cities of Morocco today, seeking to avoid new outbreaks of violence over re- ligious leadership of the North African protectorate. Thirty-five the weekend. |The fighting followéd a procla- ation Saturday by some 300 Ber- ber chieftains and the Pasha of Marrakech, Thami el Glaoui, that the Sultan of Morocco, Sidi Mo-| hammed Ben Youssef, no longer | was the religious leader of the | Moslem country. | They named as imam—‘‘leader | of the faithful’’—the Sultan's uncle, | Moulay Mohammed Ben Arafa. | They back down, however, from 34 | previous decision to install him ds the new sultan. | The sultans previously have been | considered both the temporal and spiritual rulers of the country. The move “against ‘med touched off rio® in Marra-' kech Saturday night which claimed \ seven lives. : _.,United Press Phote RIDING. H'GN—Tight-rope artists Alfred Traber, 47, and his s6n, Two of these, “I Remember other two'were ‘‘The Princes Who | | Queens. | The veteran’s two sons, Bobby, New Outbreaks | persons died in bloody riots over | Traffic Kills 17 Over Weekend State Toll Includes Two Teenagers and Seven Children Under 10 (By the Assomated Presse) . Seventeen persons were killed in Michigan motor traffic over the weekend. Seven of them were children under 10 years of age. Two were teenagers. A man and woman from Bay City suffered fatal injuries early Sunday when a car in which they were riding went out of control on a curve at the northern limits of Bay City. The victims were Mrs. Dorothy Turner, 26, and Phineas Farrand Jr., 29. Farrand’s wife, Lorraine, suffered critical injuries and Mrs. Turner’s husband, James, was slightly hurt. Turner was driving. Eari Olney of Dewitt and his 4-month-old son Terry died early Saturday after a two-car collision north of Lansing. Two young Vandercook Lake boys, 9-year-old Keith Rowan and Hadden Roney, i0, were killed Saturday when a car struck them while they were walking home from a fishing expedition. A car that ran out of control and struck a tree in Melvindale killed the driver early Sunday. The victim was Jesus Castillo, 28, of Lincoln Park, Three-year-old Margaret Kath- ryn Jorae died Saturday afternoon of injuries suffered when she ran into the street in front of her St. Johns home and a car hit her. Charles E. Woodruff, 16 months, of Averill, was killed Friday night when an auto driven by his father, Kenneth, was hit by a truck on U. S. 10, in Midland County. Martin Hayes, year-old son of Raymond W. Hayes of Rochester, died Friday yight an hour after his father’s car backed over him in the backyard of their home. A 9-year-old Fenton girl, Karen Rising, suffered fatal injuries Friday night when she fell from the open door of a car driven by her mother as it turned a corner in Fenton, Richard Jones, 16, and George Butcher, 15, both of Gillett’s Lake near Jackson, were killed Sun- day on U. S. 12 east of Jackson when a car went out of control and hit the motor scooter they were riding. Harold Wakeman, 24, and Don- ald Miller, 23, both of Jackson, suffered fatal injuries early Sun- a tree. Mrs. Rosemary Hill, 35 of Caro was killed Saturday. She and a friend were struck by a car on ! Known also for his ability in the} U. S. 10 north of the Saginaw- | | instructional field, Wonnberger has | Genesee County. line. Her friend, | been president ai Michigan Coun-} Mrs. Dorothea Aikin of Clio was | | Seriously injured. ' zoo construction worker, was killed | Sunday in a two-car collision that left his 55-year-old wife in serious Harvard Glee Club and the chorus- | condition. Police are holding Helen | E. Kreling, 26, of Kalamazoo for in- vestigation. | a oan First State POW ‘Lands in America “Operation Big Switch’ ended Sunday for one Michigan service- | man and his joyful wife at an/| Air Force base near New Y9rk. M. Wilkins, a | 27-year-old former auto salesman from Detroit, and his wife, Ottilie, held a tearful reunion when Wil- kins’ plane landed at Mitchell Air Force Base. The Detroit serviceman was the firs’ of 46 Michigan prison- | ers of war released by the Com- munists, to be returned to the | United States. | Wilkins was taken fromthe air base, by ambulance, to a U. S.| | Naval hospital at St. Albans,,| Robert S.. Sgt. 6, and Gary, 242, did not see their father. MRS.Wilkins left the chil- dren in Detroit when she went to) New York. day when Wakeman’s car ee | Sought by Adrian Police | Arlow Renner of Onsted for $60 at | today. FOR HUMANE HANDLING—Robert Dudley, 13, of 4510 Charing Cross Rd., Birmingham, was tops in the condition class by the Oakland County Animal Wel- s fare Society at the 4H Fair. Mrs. left, of the Grosse Pointe Hunt Club, presents the award. as ontiae Press Photos Loceal Lambert, ke Cuts Down Press Meetings Usual Two Conferences Per Week Drop to Less Than 1 in 2 Weeks WASHINGTON (UP)—President Eisenhower has made it plain dur- ing his first seven months in office | that he does not feel bound to | follow the news conference tradi- tions established by his Democratic predecesors. The late Franklin D. Roosevelt, who made the White House news conference a Washington institu- | tion, met with reporters twice a | week—on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Former President Harry §&. Truman cut that schedule down | to one meeting a week, usually | on Thursday. He alternated be- | tween morning (10:30 a.m.) and afternoon (4 p.m.) sessions. Mr. Eisenhower, since his _in- auguration Jan. 20, has held 14) | |less than one every two weeks. | | The last one was July 22. Reporters for morning newspa- | pers have complained about his | obvious’ preference for morning | sessions. of his conferences to come in late afternoon, so that the head- Hines, would still be fresh for their papers. | Mr. Eisenhower had_ his first press conference on Feb. 17, ex- actly four weeks after his inaugu- | ration.: That was aTues. He ex- perimented with having them on Thursday: mornings for a while. But in mth weeks, before start- jing on the Colorado vacation, he | called them for Wednesday morn- ings. Gas Station Robbers ADRIAN # — Three men who held up gasoline station attendant a station northwest Df here Satur- day night were sought by police Renner said the three ap- proached the station on foot, pulled guns and then ran off into the darkness with the money. Police thought that they might have left Sadie. . Ce ae TET Me TWO-TIME WINNER—‘‘Lady Phara”’ repeated her 1952 victory again this year at the Oakland County 4-H Fair by retaining her championship horse title. Owned by 16-year-old Frances Spencer of 555 Hickory Grove They would like at least half | pq Bloomfield Hills, “Lady Phara” is known in the family circle as Mrs. Robert Dudley of 4510 Charing Cross Rd.,- Birmingham, | directed the horse show for this year’s fair. Life in a Red Prison | FREEDOM VILLAGE, Korea (®)—Some American captives were | marched aimlessly about North Korea for almost a month in the cold | winter of 1950-51 ‘‘to show us off for the civilians,"’ a New Jersey soldier said today. ‘ a getaway car nearby. ‘The people went wild when they saw us,”’ said Cpl. Bernard Berman, of Lakewood, N. J., after he was freed at Panmunjom today. “They looked like they wanted to strangle us. “About half way up they crammed us all into a train and we rode the rest of the way. “It was a good thing because the guys were in bad shape and a lot of them never would have made it walking.” The welcome sign definitely was not out for Communist newsmen who | showed up at North Korean prison camps to lecture American and other | Allied POWs. Cpl. Milton F. Gifford, 22, of Aurora, Ind., said today after being freed that when Red newsman Alan Winnington of the London Daily Worker appeared, he was greeted by a sign which read: ‘Go home trouble.” By FRED SPARKS (NEA Stas) Correspondent) fiance, the men gathered again in| a lonesome part of the camp and) with no formal training presided over clandestine gatherings while INCHON, Korea (NEA) — They|held a service without audible friends kept watch for English- _ tried to deny God to our young men | in Communist prison camps, but | they didn’t succeed. In secret meetings recalling early Christians in Roman caves, American soldiers in Red custody displayed their faith with none of the comforts offered the occasional Sunday church-goer back home. In an ugty Chinese compound at Pyoktong one Sunday, a group | gathered to sing ‘‘Onward Chris- | tian Soldiers.’’ A Communist guard approached, fingering his pistol, and as War-| rant Officer Dwight Coxe of Fres-| no, Calif., remembers it now: “I never saw a man so furious in my | life. I thought sure he would shoot idi Moham-/| us: He screamed at us like a hys-' died under terica]*animal.”’ . * * * Later, in a strange form,of de-| words, looking at each other with; moving lips as they read from tat- tered Army Bibles hidden during} their capture. As Americans released from Communist cells pour into this port city after hasty greetings at Pan- munjom and Munsan, they tell endless tales of religious convic- tion made stronger by denial. Coxe told of two chaplains, one Catholie, one Protestant, who suf-| again ahd again to hold proper) services. The Reds accused them) of being agitators and propagan- dists. . Both chaplains, under 35 and strapping physical specimens, | strange reum- stances. * * = After the chaplains died, Gls, 3 t. , speaking guards. Men would stand around on Sun- day mornings as if they were hav- ing a bull session and sing in a sort of whispered mumble: “Holy, Holy, Holy, “Lord, God Almighty, “Early in the morning “Our soul shall rise to thee.” It wasn't until after the truce talks began that the Communists stopped trying to block religious | fered countless privations to try| demonstrations. They gave the prisoners no material aid, but al- lowed them to gather on holidays for prayer. s s * Among the lay preachers who arose in this strange situation was | Sgt. James Davis of Mullins, S. C., who will be known for all time as ‘Brother Jim.” Gls Worship in Prison Camps Despite Commie Threats lines on a stretcher, a sick youth, but until his collapse he not only presided at services but also would be called from bed at all hours to visit the ill and de- pressed. 2 Brother Jim had a magnificent way of praying with stricken men, ‘| giving them something to hold on to. After weeks of pleading. he was Equine Judging Climaxes Fair County Humane Society Gives Crop, Grooming Kit to Condition Champ Lady Phara, alias ‘Sadie’ and her young mistress, Frances Spencer, 555 Hickory Grove Road, Bloomfield Hills, rode to top place in the all-day 4H Fair horse show Saturday climaxing this year’s five-day event. ° A junior at Bloomfield Hills High School, Frances took the grand championship for the sec- ond year in succession. She is. the daughter of the Floyd Spencers. Under the direction of Mrs, Robert Dudley of B.rmingham, the full-day horse show saw win- ners in all classes of both Eng- lish and Western horsemanship. Prior to the formal opening of the events, the Oakland County Anical Welfare presented a crop and ‘a grooming kit for tops in the condition class. Robert Dudley, 13, of the Avon- dale Horse Club, was winner in this division. Presentation and judging was done by Mrs. William Ferguson, humane director of the society and Mrs. Loceal Lambert of the Grosse Pointe Hunt Club. Other winners in various class- es saw Barbara Groom take the award in western model class at halter with ‘“‘Golden Sunset.’”’ In the western pleasure class Margaret Davis won with ‘‘Trig- ger,’ and she also won on the same horse in the stdck horse division. Tops for western beginner's horsemanship went to Don Burns with ‘!Dream Girl,’’ and foal, in model class, was won by Marilyn Engell with ‘“Whirley and her colt.”’ John Donnelly and “Tinker Bell’’ won the brood mare class ard Robert Dudley on “Lady Pamela” took the model yearl- ing. “Mars,” ridden by Virginia Dudley, won the two year old class and for model pony under 56 inches and David Brendel scored with ‘‘Daisy.”’ Judges for the horse show were Johnny Wallace of Northville and TLumas Tait of Allen Park. Emceeing the entire show was Mrs. Charles E. Haynes of Farm- ington and Mrs. M. W. dames of Pontiac served as clerk. Assist- ing in the ring were Floyd Spencer and Charles E. Haynes. Young Cecily Donnelly took top award in the pony pleasure Eng- lish division on ‘‘Softy.”’ Larry Moore with ‘“‘Smoky”’ won western and for the English model class at halter, Francis Spencer topped with ‘“‘Lady Phara.” Riding to first place in the English pleasure class was Barney Noyes on “Horace.” Hunter hack was taken by Fran- ces Spencer again on ‘Lady Phara,"’ and in the saddlebred and walking class, Sue Braid won with “Topper.” “Gypsy” with her young mas- ter, Jim Perry, took the walking horse division and Barbara Groom was victorious on ‘‘Golden Sun- set’’ for western parade. In the experienced horseman- ship class,.saddie seat, Barbara Groom rode “Shady Lawn's Spice’ to the head of the divis- ion. Francis Duffield placed highest in the English experienced riders hunter's seat with her “Little Brown Jug.” Cynthia Gates and ‘‘Nuffie’’ took tops for western horsemanship in experienced riders. POWs Report New Red Jet Plane Types FREEDOM VILLAGE u—Three returned American prisoners told today of seeing a new Communist twin-engine jet fighter-bomber at an airbase near the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, only two days ago. | The prisoners also told of seeing |new swept wing fighter jets over North Korea. “They were smaller, than MIGs” said Cpl. Frank. Borrelli, | 26, of San Francisco. Cpl. Charles W. Jewell, 23, of Wilmington, Del., said he saw nine Red jet bombers flying in formation as he passed through Pyongyang on his way to ex- change. Jewell said he thought the Reds were ‘‘showing the peo- allowed to go outside the barbed wire to say a few words at the| shallow graves of tye too many) young men who succumbed to dis-| eases they could not battle on the meager prison diet. It was not a polished text — Brother Jim spoke, but he al- | ways plugged the line of hope. | | He talked one day in an open | field in sub-zero weather about the | resurrection of the Lord and how ithe hungry, shabby Americans ‘could come back to a new and) | He came back to the American | greater world. \ id ple what they had.” Cpl. Michael A. Giannini, 22, of Huntington Station, N. Y., said he saw three twin-engine jet bomb- ers over Pyongyang escorted by a dozen MIGs. The MIG was the standard Red Jet fighter. There have been oc- casional reports that newer-type jet fighters were sighted. About the only bombers the Reds used were the light, single- engine propeller craft that at- tacked Seoul in South Korea in the last nights before the cease- fire. + SIXTEEN Lad Skilled at Making Good Fudge ' Richard Thibodeau Blends Cocoa and Peanut Butter By JANET ODELL Time was when a young woman was considered accomplished if she could make fudge: Nowadays, even the boys can make fudge. “ Today's contributor, 13-year-old Richard Thibodeau of Sugden Lake, is a master of the art of fydge making. Richard is by no means a sissy. He’s a normal teenage boy who just wants to be sure he gets the candy he likes and isn’t sure his sisters will make it for him. An eighth grade pupil at Walled Lake Junior High School, he en- joys all sports. COCOA PEANUT BUTTER FUDGE By Richard Thibodeau os cup cocoa cups sugar \, teas salt 4 1% cups milk 4% tablespoons butter or margarine 1 teaspoon vanilla 3 tablespoons peanut butter Mix cocoa, sugar and salt. Add milk and bring to a boil, stirring frequently. Cook until the mixture forms a soft ball in cold water, or 232 degrees om the candy ther- mometer. Remove from heat, add butter and peanut butter. Cool to luke- warm (110 F.), add vanilla and beat until mixture thickens. Pour into buttered pan and cut into squares. Soap Grass Stains Remove grass stains with hot, soapsuds and a brush. Follow with’ a bleach. Models above give lesson in art of wearing jewelry which most flatters types of necks, jawlines and arms. At left, model with rounded jawline and short, broad neck flatters herself with waterfall earrings and a necklace with small beads that gently flows below her throat. Her fairly broad arms are made prettier with matching bracelet with a delicate look. In center picture, same model surveys her- self in a different type of earring. It’s large but not heavy. The airy, delicate filigree work counterbalances her too- Costume Jewelry Can Minimize Face, Figure Faults. By ALICIA HART Costume jewelry can light up your. beauty as well as your costume. But you’ve got to know the rules of this little game to play it well. Here are some of the ins and outs: e If the imaginary triangle that lies with its base stretching from ear tip to ear tip, with its third corner nestling in the hollow -of deli bu your throat, is a slender tapering saris cre benuttics dot seed triange, here -are your tricks: | Her necklace might be a long dang- wear chokers mixed or matched and bold, chunky earrings, allow at least an inch between the tips of your earrings and your choker. The girl with a short, squatty imaginery triangie tends to nave a short neck and roundish or squarish face. She can wear slen- der waterfall earrings, but never . a ball or a hoop. — | Modern - II g (a WIRE 270 ling strand of pearls, knotted just | above the waist. A choker doesn’t | belong in her jewel box. If yours is an ideal triangle, with all sides even, you can wear | what you please. But that’s not all about jewelry |and faces. Magnificent earrings | and necklaces can call attention away from facial irregularities. For instance, jawlines are soft- ened, noses seem more elegant when bold, curved lines of jewel- ry are placed nearby. Going below your throat now: | You can make your figure pret- tier with jewelry. For example, an overly generous bosom is beau- tified with an angular, delicate pair of pins, worn off center. Not so with a large, roundish pin, especially when plunked’ in a Living + | : ... furniture of your own design the middle. Thinner girls, however, | and materials, beautifully, durably can wear huge sparklers as they constructed ... guaranteed... wish. - il easy credit terms. A tiny waistline is flattered with | a fob, a clip or a large m on | at the belt. IAM WRIGHT ||" a'treceaistea gt, tower, Orchard Lake Road | wears jewelry at her midriff on : a narrow belt and she places the ae | | Minute Potatoes” Here’s all you do! Just toss Minute Potatoes into salted boiling water... add butter. a wink you’ve got the creamiest, smoothest, fluffiest mashed potatoes ever! And what flavor! They’re wonderful-tasting! But no wonder! For Minute Potatoes are plump,firm Idahos . . . brought to you in tender, pre-cooked shreds. Try Minute Potatoes the next time the temperature soars. And when you go camping or to your summer cottage—take several packages of Minute Potatoes along. You'll find them a boon then... any time! MINUTE eo A new product from the mukers of Minute Rice Why slave over a hot stove when you can make delicious, creamy-smooth mashed potatoes in 2 minutes with . NO MASHING! rie *® met. mm ror0t lee? ' heavy jaw and neck lines. Notice that her pin is worn well below base of her throat. An opposite type, the tall, slender, bony model at right, can wear a choker on her long, thin neck. Her earrings are large with circular petals. She wears two wide, closely fitting bracelets. To sum up lesson in a few words—rounded, closely fitting, big pieces are for the slender, while angular or vertical pieces in a smaller size | with a looser fit are for girls with more rounded proportions. lets nicely, wide and closely fit- ting, sometimes on two arms. at once. If your arms are very long, don’t wear above-elbow bracelets, no matter how much the rage they are. For broad arms, wear no more jewel, a largish one, at the cen- ter, A tiny, subtle pin ‘gets lost’ on a tall, skinny girl or on the girl that’s plump. Each of these girls wants to wear an important pin or a grouping of small ones. If the large girl is overweight, not merely big-boned, she must avoid the round pin and let it be angled, An overweight girl does well to keep her pin away down from chin and shoulders. Your arms and hands may be | slender and tapered or plump and | ff. There’s a bracelet i flatterer for you in either case. | > life and your beauty } | and never mind what “everyone’’ Slender arms wear many brace-! is wearing. than two at the same time, on one arm only. Wear them low, loose and slender. This firm suggests that you BmKuL Bogueny aote Box TwaTce® Peation of Lowen SHOU 048s UP wre EAD AKRD Fear wesiv€ C. A. BIRO eS tt... VWRUNED PRGES FOR SCETCHES CT ae Try It *-11 Keep a Nature Notebook Many of you will be thinking | fun with and one which will please about starting notebooks for school | your teacher. This idea is one for your nature classes, so here | which will help you remember all One well-known jewelry firm has | a wide range of styles available | | to which new ones are added each | season. choose jewelry to suit your clothes, is an idea which you can have of the interesting things you see in i nature. ’ | edge off her hospitality by apolo- |right in your pocket. MAKE FRIENDS lined so that you can make | sketches of the things that you will Mrs. Jones worked hard to have | see. a nice party. But she took the | The one | Now don’t say that you can’t aie : . draw! These sketches are not | gizing for everything all evening ,upposed to be for an art show, | they are just to help you re- | member what you see. They will also be a great help to you in | identifying birds and plants | which you do not know and | want to look up. To get the best knowledge of na- | ture you will have to take some hikes out in the open spaces around your qjty. Walk slowly and quietly so that animals will not | { | It is best to use a small note- | | book, for then you can carry it | sides Saturday late. Take a chance | Monday to Friday. long. The meat wasn’t as tender as usual. She was afraid her guests weren't comfortable. The living room was the warmest room in the house. If you want to put your guests at ease don’t make so many apolo- gies they spend their time trying to convince you that ‘you’re wrong. run away..Jot down what you see. | Prevents Burns ° Hot fat hazard in the kitchen can be lessened if you avoid letting drops of water fall, into the fat or using too cold a batter. Coldness added to the heat causgés sput- tering. .. beat... and quick as POTATOES jf ~ Coll for Core ful Dan the Pontiae Laundry Man Just Call for Careful Dan, the Just Call for Careful Dan, the Pontiac Laundry Man, FE 2-8101 Pontiac Laundry Man, FE 2-810] CAREFUL DAN’S AUGUST CLEANING BARGAIN BLOUSES 69° Send your prettiest, daintiest blouses, and they will be carefully dry cleaned and expertly finished to satisfy - the most discriminating. ; We are the only cleaners in the community cerfified by the Institute tor Maintaining Dry Cleaning Standards! PONTIAC LAUNDRY & CAREFUL DRY CLEANERS THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1958 Girl Carries Friendliness Bit Too Far by Going Out With Beau’s Best Buddy By ELIZABETH WOODWARD “Dear Miss Woodward: I'd been going with jack for several months when at a party he introdticed his friend, Mark, to me. After that, every time I spoke to Mark, Jack got jealous. “I can speak to other boys with- out being afraid of starting some- thing — but with Mark it’s dif- ferent. Once when Jack turned down my invitation to go to a party, I asked Mark and he went |" with me. “Since then everybody thinks I'm going steady with Mark, which isn’t true. And Jack told me We were all) washed up and that he didn’t care about me any more. “I think he’s just jealous. When I see him he just ignores me, and it hurts. So what should I do?”’ It sounds as though you laid that ‘“‘any friend of yours is a friend of mine’ stuff on a bit thick. Too thick for Jack’s comfort, any- how. He blames himself for in- troducing a disturbing element into his relationship with you. And you have yourself to blame for letting Mark disturb you. . When you saw what even talk- ing to him did to Jack, you should have adopted the very light touch with him. Taking Mark to the party was too big a play for safe- ty. Maybe if you admitted your mistake to Jack you'd get things squared away with him again. Tell him you mistakenly thought that such a good friend of his would be a safe playmate for you when he was unavailable. Admit honestly that he’s the only play- mate you want, and see what he says to that! “Dear Miss Woodward: I've been going with Tom for a week now and he has already asked me to go steady with him. I know it’s too soon, but I want to very much. “ ‘He has just broken up with the girl he used to go with and that’s what worries me. He said he likes me very much, but I’m not sure. “Could he be trying to make that other girl jealous so he cam go back to her?”’ That's a bit hard to tell. And maybe even Tom doesn’t know. One thing is obvious — you're the new love on the rebound. And it’s much too soon to take it seriously. Answer that steady offer with a light and casual, ‘‘Let’s get ac- quainted, first — then we'll both know whether it’s a good idea or not.”’ “Dear Miss Woodward: For three months now Jim has been picking me up after I get off work on Saturday nights — that’s all I ever see of him. He never asks me for a date. “He told me to go out with other fellows, but when I do I don’t have any fun, so I’ve stop- ped going with anyone else. I know if I keep on going with Jim I'm going to get hurt very badly. What would you do if you were me?” Take a chance on getting hurt. Take a chance on asking him over to the house some other night be- on teasing him gently into taking | which I have shown here is. un-/ you somewhere you want to go—a | real date. Try to convince yourself that Jim doesn't matter too much one way or the other. That light touch may be your insurance policy. PETUNIA! My eyes are plumb Worn out from sitting All the afternoon And knitting. \ S o (& yor Make yourself a dark green apron, Petunia, and wear it when you knit or crochet. The color will be restful CO YOUF CYES. a ienow-seacuen | 7 Stenciled Designs Mean More Interesting Floors By ELIZABETH HILLYER From historic old houses comes a new-old idea for interesting wood floors. Now that so much wood floor is seen again, waxed and gleaming, the art of floor stencil- ing is being revived. One wood stain is contrasted against another in geometric pat- terns, the natural wood shades and 2—10 Easy? 1-2-3, and you have her new school wardrobe finished and readyt o put on! Jacket, blouse, jumper—1-2-3 parts to mix and match a dozen different ways for Make it in | corduroy, cotton, or wool. Pattern 4621: Child’s sizes 2, 4,6, 8, 10. Size 6 jacket, 1% yards 35-inch nap; jumper 2% yards; blouse, 1 yard 35-inch. | This pattern easy to use, simple | to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- | plete illustrated instructions. | Send 35 cents in coins for this | pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for first-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- 'tiac Daily Press, Pattern Dept., | 243 West 17th St, New York 11, N..Y. Print plainly name, address | with zone, size and style number. colors with perhaps black for an ebony effect and white for limed effect. The old wagon wheel pattern comes back, plaids and borders, to turn the most ordinary floor into a conversation piece. Because interesting wood floors are especially liked for contem- porary rooms, the stencil idea is bound to catch on for them as well as. for Early American rooms. David Erbe, specialist on floors, says stenciling isn’t difficult for the do-it-yourself enthusiast. Actual stencils can be used, or masking tape to lay out squared, striped or border designs, and the other materials needed are aniline water dye, a stencil brush which can be an old shaving brush, cut down, and paste wax into which color in a peir of extra chairs, pillows for the sofa and perhaps a few decorative ob- jects. What color should it be?” Yellow, green-yellow, melon shades or either a violet-blue or a sky blue can be added to these colors successfully. Touches of brightness are needed in metal, brass or silver, and it will be well to provide the empha- sis of black, although this should be limited to small areas such as a lamp base, picture frames, a little black in a fabric pattern, small tables. Mrs.*R. McK. M. — “A blond table we have had about 12 years has gradually darkened and js now rather an unattractive color. ‘Will it be necessary to refin- ish it completely to change it to a better, somewhat darker color? How can this be done?”’ The present finish must be re- moved before a new stain color can penetrate. The fellow who isn’t in shape te be a soldier probably isn’t in to be a civilian either. | SEE US FOR QUALITY DRY CLEANING Your garments are safe in our expert care! Care- ful spotting, pressing and expert handling of the new fabrics assure your satisfaction. | Call FE 4-2579 Today for Free Pickup and Delivery GRESHAM 97 Oaklend Avenue CLEANERS - Phone FE 4-2579 - v4 SALE Both For Necessary SAVE $5% Permanent and Haircut Cold Wave ........ 8.50 Styled Haircut .... 1.50 wee. 10.00 | Complete .. Appointments Not 41 N. Saginaw St. SPECIAL! —_ Mezzanine FE 2-8101 —Call— FE 2-8101 FE 2-0531 ee 2 = a camel y % _ THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1953 i | SEVENTEEN | Mid-August Means Wedding Time for ‘Three Couples Sunday Rite Solemnized for Couple Mary aoe Wed to William Coulacos at St. George. Before an altar baitked with white gladioli and palms, Mary Garyet became the bride of Wil- liam V. Coul Sunday evening in St. George Church.’ .The Rev. Soterios Gouvelis of- ficiated at the 5 o’clock ceremony and Mrs. Gouvellis performed: the exchanging of the crowns for the Greek Orthodox rite. The bride, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Konstantine Gar- yet of Baldwin avenue, chose French silk Chantilly lace for her wedding gown. The dress was _ re-embroidered with silyer and was styled with scalloped neckline and cathedral train. A satin bow at the waist highlighted the dress and fell into streamers down the train. A small cap of rhinestones and seed pearis held her floor-length veil and she carried a white Bible centered with an orchid and steph- anotis, with ribbon and ivy streamers. Mrs. Chris Garyet of Denver, Colo., was her sister-in-law’s ma- tron of honor and the bride’s sister, Theodora Garyet, was her maid of honor. MRS. WILLIAM re ‘COULACOS Married Sunday evening in St. George “NS Church were Mary Garyet and William V. Coulacos. Mr. and Mrs. Konstantine Garyet of Baldwin . avenue are the bride’s parents, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Coulacos of North Quincy, Mass. Their gowns were pale yellow | tile with off-the-shoulder lace collars studded with rhinestones. | Reveals Plans Smatl matching face veils sprinkled with rhinestones and white satin parasols covered with sweetheart roses completed their ensembles. Betsy >and Ann Coulacos of Quincy, Mass., the bridegroom’s sisters, and Martha Savas. were bridesmaids in similar gowns of aqua. Gail Gouvellis and Gail Gaffney performed the duties of flower girls dressed in sleeveless organ- dy dresses with matching velvet sashes in yellow and aqua. Each carried a small basket of flowers. Spero Coulacos of Holyoke, Mass., was his brother’s best man. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Coulacos of North Quincy, Mass. Groomsmen included Chris Gar- yet of Denver, Colo., brother of the bride; Sam Cosmas of Pontiac, Spero, Tasseris of Detroit, and James Iakovides. Nile green chiffon and lace was chosen by the bride’s ‘mother for the occasion, and she wore match- ing accessories and a white orchid corsage. Mrs. Coulacos wore aqua lace with pink accessories and a white orehid corsage. After a reception at the Park Shelton Hotel in Detroit, the new Mrs. Coulacos changed to a coral linen suit trimmed with touches of white for the wedding trip. With it she wore navy accesso- ries and the orchid from her bouquet. The couple will reside at Silver Lake when they return from a honeymoon trip to Canada, Maine, Massachusetts and Niagara | Fi alls. Parisian or Italian Boy Cut . which ever you choose, you'll need a basic Permanent to keep your short curls in place. From No Appotntment ‘Necessary IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON 20 E. Pike St. FE 4-2878 CURTAINS BLANKETS—SBAG RUGS Cleaned Like New by the latest modern equipment at low cash and carry prices. AUTOMA $. S. LORY. FE 5-6804 HURON AT TELECRAPH RD. 25—Noerth frem Oerner |R. Elliotts of ‘Chippewa road Big Free Parking Let AQUATIC GARDENS Trepica) Fish & Suppiie> 57 N. Min St. > (im Bear of Pontine Goetel) to Become Bride BIRMINGHAM — Mr. and Mrs. T. Norville Hubbard of Dorchester road announce the engagement of their daughter, Susan Speed, to Loren C. Spademan Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs. Loren C. Spademan of Warren court. Loren attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology and was| graduated from Dartmouth Col- | lege and the Amos Tuck School of | Business Administration at Dart- mouth, Susan attended Smith College | and was graduated from the Uni-| versity of Michigan. She is a mem- ber of Sigma Gamma and the Junior League. Dodge Family Has Reunion, Election Vern Dodge of Oxford was elect- ed president when the Dodge fam- ily reunion was held Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Dodge of Silver Circle drive. Other officers elected were Paul Dunlap of Brown City, vice presi- Zonta Club Meets in Bloomfield Home Bloomfield Hills home to members of the Zonta Club Thursday for the monthly business and dinner meeting.* In the business meeting conduct- ed by the president, Mrs. Adrian | Ish, the annual budget and the service committee budget for as- sistance in Pontiac Day Nursery projects were passed. Mrs. Fotis Takis opened her! Wanda Ogg ls Married at All Saints John Maturos Jr. Are Honeymooning in East, Canada Enjoying a four-week wedding trip through the Eastern states and Quebec, Canada, are Mr. and Mrs. John E. Maturo Jr. who were married Saturday evening. The Rev. C. George Widdifield officiated at the 7:30 o'clock cere- mony in All Saints Episcopal Church. For the occasion, the bride, the former Wanda June Ogg, chose a gown of imported Rose Pointe lace over nylon tulle and satin. The dress was styled with tulle pleating at the deep neck- line and a row of tulle pleats finishing the bottom of the skirt. A tiny cap of satin and match- ing lace trimmed with seed pearls held her fingertip veil and she carried a cluster of glamellias. At her throat she wore a string of knotted pearls, a gift of the MRS. JOHN E. ¢ PES "s After a four-week honeymoon, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Maturo Jr. will reside in Connecticut. They were married Saturday evening in All Saints Church. The bride, the former Wanda Jurie Ogg, is the daughter of the Harry Oggs of Stanley avenue, and Vr. and Mrs. John E. Vaturo Sr. of Hamden, Conn., are his parents. ter of the Harry Oggs of. Stanley avenue. Mrs, Edward Davey wore a wedgewood blue waltz-length gown of nylon tulle for her duties as matron of honor. A matching jack- et covered the strapless bodice and a blue satin sash ended in a bustle effect in the back. She car- ried a cascade of variegated pink glamellias, In similar gowns were the brides- maids, Mrs. John Kennedy and Pat Colpus. Anthony Maturo of Hamden, Conn., was his brother's best man. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. John Maturo Sr., also of Hamden, The bride’s brother, Donald Ogg, Edward Riefel of Ann Arbor and Donald Weston of Albion seated the guests. Receiving guests in the Rose A letter was read from Jutta Forwerk, who is en route to her cided that regular meetings would resume on Sept. 17: ‘Apply Protectors to Furniture Legs Make a resilient floor covering — cork, rubber, linoleum, asphalt, plastic — last longer by protecting against indentations from furni- ture legs. Glass or rubber protectors should be applied to the latter. Wash Sunglasses Plunge sunglasses into luke-warm | Kneale Room of Stevens Hall fol- lowing the ceremony, the bride's home in Germany after a year of | mother was dressed in a na vy study in the U. S., and it was de-| biue dress with navy and white accessories and a corsage of pink rosebuds. Mrs. Lucian Addario, the bride- groom’s sister of Hamden, Conn., wore a navy and white dress with matching: accessories and a cor- sage of pink rosebuds. Following the reception the bride changed to her traveling costume, a navy dress with navy and white accessories and a cor- sage of white glamellias taken from the bridal bouquet. After the wedding trip the newly- weds will reside in Hamden, Conn. She attended Wayne University dent, and Mrs. Annabell Kelly of | soapsuds often to wash off the dirt,| and he received his master’s de- | gree at the University of Michigan. Lapeer, secretary-treasurer. sun oil, and cosmetic stains. Couple Wed. in Ceremony at Rochester Honeymooning in Northern Michigan are Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Powell Elliott who were married — Saturday evening in St. John Lutheran Church of Rochester. She is the former Joyce Elaine Rathka, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Rathka of Rochester, and the Allen are his parents. At a candlelight ceremony Sat- urday evening in St. John Lutheran Church of Rochester, Joyce Elaine Rathka, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rathka of Rochester, became the bride of Raymond Powell Elliott. Ray is the son of Mr. and Mrs. | Allen R. Elliott of Chippewa road. For the 8 o’clock ceremony the bride wore a gown of Rose Pointe lace with a portrait “neckline and an overskirt of nylon tulle over slipper satin. She complemented her gown with a single strand of pearls and car- ried a bouquet of white roses and lilies-of-the-valley. Lovely Cold Wave ..........$7.50 Permanents, Silver Oil .....$6.50 Also Eugene Fredericks—Helene Curtis and Realtistic Permanents Annaliese Beauty Salon - FE 2-5600 8014 N. Saginaw St. Next to Bazley Market (Over Tasty Bakery) MRS. RAYMOND POWELL ELLIOTT Joan Ritter was maid of honor wearing a gown of rose taffeta with a rose nylon overskirt. She carried a cascade bouquet of ma- roon carnations. Barbara Rathka, the bride's sis- ter, and Kathleen Ellictt, sister bridegroom. Wanda is the daugh-+ matching that of the honor maid for their duties as bridesmaids. Richard Lewis was the best man and Roy and Ray Rathka, the bride’s brothers, were ushers. Mrs. Rathka chose a dress of light rose lace with navy acces- sories and a white rose corsage for her daughter’s wedding, while - Mrs. Elliott chose a teal lace dress with black velvet accesso- ries and a white rose corsage, After a reception in the Fellow- ship Hall of the church, the bride changed to a navy rayon suit with white accessories and a corsage of white roses for a trip to Northern Michigan. The newlyweds will reside in Ann Arbor where Ray wil! con- tinue his studies at the University of Michigan. Feted at German Shower Honored Friday evening at an old-fashioned German-type bridal shower were Joan Frederiksen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Frederiksen of Baldwin avenue, and Raymond Bell, who will speak their vows Sept. 5. He is the son of Mr. and Mts. Gilford Bell of Elm street. liam Graff was cohostess. To Save Nylons Nylon stockings last so much longer if they’re never allowed to Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Lobb were) jie about soiled. Wash them out| hosts at their home at Williams Lake. Their guests included Mr. and Mrs. Frederiksen, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Lobb and Myrna Lobb | of Fenton; the Rev. and Mrs. Rich-| ard Lobb of Grand Blanc, Mrs. | Mary Parkinson of Lake Orion, Mrs. Oren Shelly of Flint, and Cathy, Fred and Leslie Lobb. Miss Frederiksen was also hon-| ored at a miscellaneous shower Wednesday evening when friends Coming Events Women of the Moose will meet this evening at 7:30 at 350 Mt. Clemens St American Gold Star. Mothers, Inc., Chapter 9. will meet this evening at 7:30 in the American Legion Home on Au- burn Avenue. MOMS of America, Inc., meet Tuesday at 12:30 for a cooperative luncheon at the home of Mrs, Frank Puller, 5200 Pine Knob Rd. Pythian Sisters Sewing Club will meet Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the Temple Hall. 18% W. Huron 8t., for a coopera- tive luncheon and sewing of cancer pads Better Home and Garden Club will meet Thursday at 12:30 for a cooperative picnic at the home of Mrs. Alfred Rotb- weller, 159 N. Genesee Ave. Zone 8 Past Presidents Clu> MOMS of America, Inc., will meet Thursday at 6:30 for @ picnic at the home of Mrs., William 3126 Washington St., Auburn The husbands wil) be guests. LEE’S Cleaners 47 North Perry St. Across trom Pontiac Hotel Unit 2 will Buredorf, Heights FE 5-2683 Men‘s Suits ......... $1.10 Ladies’ Plain Dresses . $1.15 Men’s Pants and Sports Shirts ......... 55¢ immediately after wearing. PROF’S BOOK STORE AND LENDING LIBRARY 9 W. Lawrence FE 2-8432 7 W. Lawrence St. Helene EE COLD WAVE Special Permanent Wave PARISIAN BEAUTY SHOP Above Old Prof's Book Shop wh $500 | FE 2-4959 of the bridegroom, wore gowns Helene Curtis Dutchess Creme Permanent Machine or Machineless or a- Famous Cold Wave Including Haircut, and Hair Style - SENSATIONAL SUMMER SPECIALS! 315% Permanents »-- 310 $1259 Permanents ~~$ 8 Open Wednesday All Doy—Friday ‘til 9 P. M. No Appointment Needed! jnmediate Service! Andre Beauty CSalon Bank Bidg.—Ph. FE 5-4490 2nd Floor Pontiac State For only a few pennies a week, you KNOW your toilet bow! is sanitary and the hid- den trap is cleaned when Sani-Flush | § | and co-workers gathered at the} i home of Mrs. Patrick Daly on| “% West Rundell avenue. Mrs. Wil- & oan "rd with a Stole See 119.00 The reversible stole, lined with black velvet, emphasizes | % the exciting style of this magnificent original by Dan Millstein . .. enhanced by the tiny velvet buttons... pin. Done in fashion-famous Mayflower flannel. Black Misses’ siz&. in black 6r brown velvet trimmed yoke the perky ballerina magic oxford, oxford brown. ie 48 N. Tectia St. z BATAR CORONET iM, Dn a odeiinaded Snipes’ Dek ge i thi aaah eel Bh abs hiss wee MAGICAL ANILINE CALF! The most lustrous, soft, custom-made look ever... in Briar, the new woodsy tan that’s spice for every color you can name! In Risque’s so individualistic wedge styles for everything from sport to dress wear . . . made with the foam-cushioned Airsol to keep you light and bright on your feet from morn ‘til night! EO OO EEE —e ee EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1958 s. Use of Skin Lotion Assures Truly Fresh Looking, Clean Complexion IF small woman— The 38-inch coat odds up to toll, long lines without swamping your tiny figure—less bulk than the full lenath coat in fur. Mrs. S. W.—Fashion plus prac- ticality expresses the importance in furs this fall. The influence of suburban living where a fur coat serves casual as well as formal seasonability, gives the shorter coat fresh styling: Use Plastic to Tighten Screw Hole iz By HUBBARD COBB Several h wood screws go into the a house but the ones Now a screw that is properly installed seldom comes loose ail cause it has been removed and re- placed so many times that the hole in the wood become en- larged or it gets because it has been subject to too much back in. Sometimes packing the hole with plastic wood won't do the trick and something more drastic must be done. Using a longer screw often works and so will using one with a wider diameter than the old, In some cases, especially with doors, the wood around the hinge screws is so badly cracked that it can’t possibly hold a screw regard- less of the. size and length. The best thing to do here is | to carefully cut out the damaged ' wood and glue into place a wood patch Inrge and thick enough to}! hold the screws. | hand, Speedwriting, 7 West Lawrence Street ‘ENROLL NOW | for the FALL TERM Day, Half-day, or Evening » INTENSIVE TRAINING | | INDIVIDUAL ADVANCEMENT APPROVED for VETERANS | Secretarial, Accounting, Business Administration, Bookkeeping, Gregg Shorthand, Machine Short- Typewriting, and Calculator, and other courses. These skills lead to good opportunities in business. Advancement comes to those who are prepared. | Graduates are assisted in securing positions. CB Ginustilils Call. Phone. or Return This Advertisement for Information | | PONTIAC 15, Comptometer Phone FE 2-3551 MICHIGAN smart colors. REGISTERED JEWELER AN ENTERNATIUNAL ORG | A Parker “51'" Would Make an Ideal | GOING AWAY GIFT! | new Parker '5!’ —the world’s most wanted pen For this pen he or she will discard all others. New "'51” promises years of superb writing ease. Ink is metered in a skip-free line. Oversized long- life Pli-glass reservoir holds rubber parts! Luscraloy or gold-filled caps, 7 Convenient Terms at No Extra Cost! JEWELERS CERTIFIED GEMOLOGISTS 16 W. Huron St. AN. WW L\NIZATION OF DEPENDABLE by itself. It gets loose either be- 4 , ig Divorcee Tells Woes mA ‘Wate In-Law Mothers Urged to Heed This Story of Broken Marriage “ By MURIEL LAWRENCE It goes on endlessly, it seems. It was at a large dinner party. Highball in hand, a beautiful young woman sank down en the settee “You drinking Coke? How come? When I drink, I drink. Especially tonight. This is the secondeanni- /| versary of my divorce.”’ As I didn’t know what to say, ‘‘How nice,” I said. ‘‘How’s she || taking the s€cond anniversary of the divorce?’’ my beautiful neighbor ‘She lives with my par- ents. I work. You can’t work. and with my parents. “But she’s happy. I'm the one who isn’t adjusted. Amy never mentions her father. That means she’s adjusted, doesn’t it?”’ “I don’t know,’’ I said. ‘I don’t know your little girl.” The lovely, slightly unfocused blue eyes moved away from my face to the glass in hand. For a moment or so my neighbor just stared into the clear golden liquid it held as though she were searching it for some clarifying, precious meaning or message. Then, as though she hadn’t found it, she took another long swallow. ‘My child's a lamb,"’ she ‘said. “Really a sweetie. I like her. She looks like her father. He’s awfully *” | good-looking. I like Amy, but I'm Use a skin lotion after tissuing off your |the skin. There are two kinds of this lotion: cleansing cream. It will help you have a|One for normal, dry or sensitive skin and truly fresh looking, clean complexion. Pat|one for an oily complexion or for the per- it across your throat and face to stimulate |son who likes more zip. BY ANNE HEYWOOD Recently I received a letter from a gentleman who could only be described as irate. ‘‘My daughter,’’ he began, in part, ‘‘reads your column, s0 occa- sionally her husband and I take a look at it, too. “I notice that you are contin- ually talking about ways women can make money at home, or about the many young mothers e ink etsibly. No -~ 5] 5°° penci > 2229 Set with matching ‘'51"' AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY EY JEWELERSHEEE who need to make extra pin money. “If you want to know -what 'I think, I think this is a lot of nonsense. What is wrong with the , good old American virtue of thrift? “Why can’t these young flibber- | tygibbets knuckle down and save Grandma’s Type of Thrift Doesn't Suit Modern Life some money at home, instead of dreaming up ways to make more and spend more?” He went on to describe the hab- its of his beloved wife, long-since deceased. ‘‘She walked blocks out of her way to get potatoes a penny a pound cheaper. She made over all the children’s clothes, cutting them down to fit the youngest child. “She made her own bread which was cheaper and better than what you could buy. She worked the clock round, stretch- ing each penny, and we raised a good healthy family on less than it takes some of these molly-coddles to raise one ehild.” I couldn’t help thinking that per- Strapless Acetate Satin Contourette Nylon-lace cup insert .,. detachable garters. Size 32-36A, 32-40B, 32-40C. White only. $538 Bobette —_——, ad 14 N. Saginaw GODDESS Bra and Contourette Hosie Cet Shop Longline | Longline strapless of acetate satin. Sizes 32 to 386A, 32-40B, 3242C. Black and white. $395 “D-Cup, 32 to 44.. .$5.00 | FE 2-6921 haps one reason his beloved wife died so early was that she had | worked such incredible hours. However, I simply pointed out to the gentleman that nowadays | bakery bread, frozen fruits and vegetables, cake and muffin mixes, and all the many aids for the young homemaker are actually cheaper in most cases than going through all of the time and energy- consuming process of making everything from scratch. Needless to say, we have a different kind of economy today than we used to have. American know-how has worked miracles. Young women who make their own soap today are not saving money; they are doing things the | if all | hard way. And _ further, women took such a job on them- selves, a lot of the workers who) now make soap for the big com- panies ‘would be unemployed. Modern standards of what con- stitutes thrift are not what they were in grandmother’s time. I repeat this because so many women have written me that their husbands have the same com- plaint, and they have asked me for a concrete answer to that old | one: “What do you want to make | spending money for? If you'd econ- orhize the way my grandmother used to...” etc. etc. (Copyright 1953) not ga-ga about her, you under- stand. Definitely not ga-ga. I do not ooze devotion. “I don’t go all mushy when I show people her baby pictures. I don't look ‘at my ¢Ghild the way you look at your husband on your honeymoon, That I really don't do."’ ‘‘My ex-husband’s mother looks at him like that,’’ the beautiful young woman said. ‘‘She adores |him out of this world. She went right on buying all his shirts for him after we were married. She took all his socks home to darn. “Why couldn’t she adore her own husband instead of mine? Why did she have to do every- thing for him so that he couldn’t even hold a job long enough to pay our obstetrician for Amy? Tell me that, will you? You can’t, can you? Not at a party, any- VitA aod & “It might spoil the fun, mightn’t it?’ she said, getting up. ‘We don't want to do that, do we? No, of course we don't. I think I need a refill. Mothers of boys, hers was the ' second such confidence I listened to this week. Are you listening, too? Cut Flowers Early to Assure Freshness Best time to cut. flowers is early in the morning while the dew is still on them or after sunset. Cut at these hours, they absorb water |more readily. Use a sharp knife or shears and | absorption area. (Adertisement) LiQui CREAM DEO A outmodes too!” To be liked . te No messy fingertips % No dribble or waste fA Product ef the lode OF DEODORANT APPLICATION This most pleasant and conveniem way touch this wonderful new deodorant. Just a few gende touches of the soft Golden Sponge Applicasor place the satiny liquid cream just where you wish, and assure you “Bath-Clean” freshness all day long, Many have said: “T like i beter than any other I've ever used.. oe 8 oe ree % Wonderful for men, too LYKET TE D DORANT GRAND NEW METHOD others. Your never . wee LYKETTE % Dries quickty % Safer for clothing at Cempeny ° etrese - a “Oh, marvelously, simply mar- | £ | velously,”’ ‘| told me. take care of your baby at the, % same time, can you? So Amy stays | | 15 Pree cut on the diagonal to assure large | 18 Dough strips is LISTEN, LADIES! .How about those gals who love to wear jewelry so much that they can’t even leave it off when they’re at the beach! (Funny part is—you babes need no such adornments! Friend Very in Referring By EMILY POST A letter explains: ‘‘At our bridge club the other afternoon, one of the members referred to a neigh- bor as ‘‘that Smith woman. She said it in a tone that carried neither contempt nor dislike, but never- theless it suggested a very uncivil attitude toward Mrs. Smith, and several of us questioned the pro- priety of such a phrase. “In my opinion, it was an ex- tremely rude way to speak of Mrs. Smith. I would appreciate your commenting on this.’’ Answer: To speak of anyone as “that Smith woman” is very disparaging. Dear Mrs. Post: My brother has Bonk ¢ Fayht eae — ' a W THER = CRFOCTE Foo. = La —_ f Live a ear BA4T HOLDE! ~N0ER t= a CLASS” ars = v ie —_ eel - Le Q ° ers Ns - i ¢ ce oon Li wet UC ee, 49 Ratcy 5(eCR he ‘ ae ‘ Disparaging to Neighbor as ‘That Smith Woman’ just recently married and is living in another city. My mother thinks that it #s no longer correct for any of us to write to him alone that all future letters should incl his wife. I do not agree with her on this and think it utterly ridiculous not to be able to write to a member of one’s family alone. Not that we have anything to conceal from his wife, but one does write a little differently when writ- ing to one person. What is your opinion? Answer: Very definitely it is not necessary to always include the wife’s name if you write very often; on the other hand, if your write very seldom, then I think she should be included. Dear Mrs. Post: The company for which I work is going to give a large cocktail party this fall to celebrate its 25th anniversary. In- vitations are to be sent to a long list of clients. Some of these are men, some women, in some cases married, others not. It would be impossible to find out about each one. How can the ivitations be ad- dressed to include all three po- siblilities. Is there a word we can use to denote husband, wife or friend? Answer: The usual word fs “‘Guest.’’ Write Mr. John Smith and Guest’ or Mrs. Samuel Brown and Guest or Miss Mary cles ude and Guest. cabbage 12 Exclamation 13 Individuals 14 Always SB A OR 16 Abating 20 Veins of metal 21 Middle (prefix) 22 Old French 3 § # 4 Bloodlessness 35 Reviser 36 Legal matters ¥ 37 Belves 39 Skin (prefix) | 40 High cards 41 Pronoun 42 Intelligence 45 Repeat 49 Harassments $1 Tilt 52 French river 1 Donkey 8 Gambling “DOWN ames ® er @ co 10 Unaspirated 11 Work unite 3 Dwellera im 17 Evaded 60d 19 Cotton fabric 23 Grants 24 Persian poet 25 Scandinavian om 4 Lounges 5 Arrow poison € Disorders relatives 33 Document addition 38 Egyptian god 40 Property item Indian (Advertisement) oem “You look pretty wern out, Doc. Vv. A. NYE DAIRY DELICIOUS BUTTERMILK?” For. Home Delivery Phone FE 2-6786 Why don’t you try a bottle of Fa] PF] COE, THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, ‘AUGUST 17, 1953 *: a ae ox Sed ae at EM MAXINE LEZIUS APPEL At a family dinner in their home Sat- urday evening, the Walter Orchard Lake announced the their daughter, Maxine Lezius, to Charles Fisher Delbridge Jr. He is Charles F. Delbridges of Grosse Pointe. D. Appels of engagement of the son of the Maxine is a graduate of Finch Junior Col- | lege. She attended Vassar College and is a | member of the Junior League. Walter is a graduate of Dartmouth College and the Uni- versity of Michigan Law School, Kirk Festival to Include Famous Artists Among the many famous artists entering the Kirk in the Hills Outdoor Art Festival to be held from 1 to 5 p. m. Aug. 27, 28 and 29 will be Joan Junyer. Mr. Junyer, a widely known innovator, has created quite a stir among art circles. ,»A well-known magazine says, Joan Junyer is a painter who paints no pictures, a sculptor who carves no stone. He molds ab- stract shapes of wood and plaster, paints them with wavering, rain- bow strokes of cool color, orna- ments them with bold patterns, simplifed human figures and shadow-casting bumps and cutouts. “Results: A new kind of fluid wall decoration which revives, in a modern idiom, the painted sculpture of the ancient Egyp- tians, Syrians and Greeks.” “Spanish-born Joan Junyer used to paint conventional pictures, showed them for 10 years running at Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Interna- tional Exhibitions. “After Franco took over Spain, head on. Italian Noblewoman Finds Success Through Knitting Since the beginning of time, women of thé world have used many vehicles to move along the road to fame — but the knitting machine probably has been a fair- ly unusual mode of transportation. In the village of Galliate, near Milan, a handsome Italian noble- woman, the Marchesa Olga di Gresy, has been knitting her way to fame with beautiful couture sweaters, coats and ensembles that are fashion news on two con- tinents. Early in September, she will leave her Italian village bound for the United States, for Dallas, Texas, where she will receive an award “for distinguished serv- ice tn the field of fashion’ at annual Fashion Exposition Sept. 7 and 8. Marchesa Olga Cisa Asinari di | Gresy e Casasco belongs to that very scanty category of women, a group particularly small in Italy, who have ‘built up step by step, first a small firm, and then an industry, finally . reaching inter- nationally confirmed success. Born Countess Rey di Villarey, she appeared destined to lead the tranquil, unadventurous life of an Italian gentlewoman. Destiny de- cided otherwise in her case, oblig- ing her, to rely only on the re- MRS. RICHARD B. SMITH sources of her good taste to solve the problem of existence for her- self and for her children. Opposed by her family and by those forming part of the society in which she lived, Olga di Gresy started a small business — a shop. In 1932 destiny placed Olga di Gresy on the road which led her to her present-day success. In Rome she met an important jer- sey manufacturer who -offered her a job as artistic director and designer in his Milan factory. ., There followed many years of | hard work, severe discipline, bus- iness problems and relatively few rewards. tile manufacturer had terminated, Olga di Gresy decided to design | |own. She bought her first knitting | |} machine which she had installed | | in a small plant in Milan and be- | | gan work on her initial collection. This collection met with immedi- ate and almost overwhelming suc- cess. Her first ‘‘commercial child” was caled ‘‘Mirsa,’’ a combination of the names of her own two chil- dren, her daughter, Mirella, and son, Sandro. This is the name that fashionable women of Europe and America wear with justifiable pride on the labels in their fine sweaters and couture knits. The war forced ‘‘Mirsa’’ to evacuate its Milan premises. With the help of women workers, she dismantled each knitting ma- chine piece by piece and took them to the little town of Gal- lHiate nearby, where she and the women painstakingly reassem- bled them. In 1949 Olga took samples of her | by the boutiques of Christian Dior, Jacques Fath and Anny Blatt. | An American buyer saw and |admired the Mirsa designs at Hermes and set out to find the; designer of these wondrous knits. | He found her and Mirsa now ex- ports in volume .to American) | ee Regularly, Marchesa di ,Gresy | starts her day with her workers, ‘lives the life of the factory, con- |siders and solves the thousand | problems that arise when creative- Yvonne J. Stodgel, the daughter | ness is being pu into practical of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Stodgel of Hatchery road, became the form. | Because the world of fashion is bride of Richard B, Smith Aug. 8 often a frantic one, now and again in the Chapel in-the Garden, An- gola, Ind. He is the son of Mrs. Helen} Smith of Williams Lake. Attending | the couple were Mr. and Mrs. Don- | ald Cameron. The newlyweds will | she retires to her little house hid- ;den among the Portofino olive trees. There, in the middle of a dream-like landscape, she gardens | and regathers her resources amid | her flowers, her friends, her | family. reside at Maceday Lake, NEW SPEED WRITING CLASS (The Shorthand Written With the ABC's) TONIGHT Shorter — Easier Free Demonstration — 6:45 P. M. (No Obligation If You Do Not Enroll) THE BUSINESS INSTITUTE 7 W. Lawrence Street. Pontiac, Michigan Phone FE 2-3551 for Information or Visit Class So he turned to sculpture-paint- ings, which are made to fit odd corners as well as flat walls, can be seen from different angles, in changing lights, with an almost unlimited variety of effects. Each angle and light shows a different facet of Junyer’s work.” Artists from the 48 states, Holland, France and Japan, many Junyer came to the U. S. and | earned a new reputation as an} innovator. Pictures, he decided, are | too limited because they have to| be evenly lighted and looked at | When her contract with the tex- | and manufacture fine knits on her | ! | | | of a more conventional school, | have entered their works in the Kirk’s 1953 Outdoor Art Festival. Prizes will be awarded in four classes: Water color, sculpture, graphic arts and oil painting. All works exhibited on the Kirk's grounds, located on West Long Lake Road, will be offered for sale. The show is open to the| public. Hostesses Give Crystal Shower Arizonans Entertained by Frasers Former Residents Are Honor Guests at Open House Coming from Phoenix, Ariz, to visit with Mr. and Mrs. George Fraser of West End avenue were Mr. and Mrs. William Tsakalos, former Pontiac residents. Mr. and Mrs, William Cheal got together with the Frasers Satur- day evening to honor their guests | at an open house in the Fraser home. Joining with them were Mrs. Theodore Wiersema, Mr. and Mrs. George Berz, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ellis, Frances Durkee, Betty Gid- dings, Mr. and Mrs. George Mar- kee, Mr. and Mrs. S. Willard Sovey, Mrs. Henry Carlson, Lois McIntyre, June Newcombe and Betty Bryan. Visiting at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Nick Pavlinac of North Paddock street and Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Fullner of Keego Harbor are Mr. and Mrs. Ernest M. Full- ner and family of Baker. Ore. * * * and sons, Gordon and Gary, of |North *Lake Angelus road are spending the week at Log Lake in Kalkaska. * . s Suzanne field Hills received a master of arts degree from Middlebury Col- lege, piste EY Vt., on Aug. 11. | . * Six of the 2 students who wt receive degrees from Michigan | nine-week summer session Friday are from the Pontiac area. These include James G. Aldrich of Dwight avenue, Richard K. Allen of Cleveland drive, Frances C. Holland of Going street, Ber. tram Lowenstein of Franklin, Thomas C. Moreau of East Iro- quois road and Nellie F. Rayner of Monterey boulevard. * * * Kenneth W. MacQueen of Pon- tiac is one of 208 students enrolled | in Duke University’s summer ses- sion in Durham, et GC; * * Mr. and Mrs. anne Baldwin Jr. (nee Lue Wilkins) of Tawas City announce the birth of a daugh- ter, Catherine Lue, Aug. 6. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Lake. Mary Sue Cloonan, bride-elect of | William J. Dean Jr., was honored | Tuesday with a surprise crystal road. Minerva Sloan and Marian Hough. | Guests included Mary Sue’s fellow | workers from the birthday club in| her office. Betty Odden, Donna Herbert, | Phyllis Smith, Viola Serafin, Kaye |Moreau, Ruby Owen and Evon) Ebbee attended the event. Mary Sue, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Cloonan Jr. of Cherokee road, will speak her vows with William on Aug. 29. He is the son of the W. J. Deans | of Ottawa drive. Rosary Society Lists Chairmen committee chairmen for the affair. Mrs. Earl McHugh is in charge of tickets; Mrs. refreshments, and Mrs. Joseph McCarthy, decorations. Mrs. Allan Neville and Mrs. James Clark are directing tallies and tables; Mrs. Earl McJunkins, prizes, and Mrs. Arthur Perrin, cleanup. Called to Nebraska Mrs. Solon Groff of Dixie high- work to Paris, where it was im-|W4Y has been called to Freemont, mediately bought by Hermes and | Neb., due to the illness of her hus- shower at her home on Cherokee | Hostesses for the occasion were | for Mrs. Wayne Miller and Mrs. Sam! Hoffman, cochairmen for the St.| Benedict Altar and Rosary Society | card party and fur fashion show) to be held Sept. 15, have announced | Margaret Hall, DRESSES to | SCHOOL” All Colors Prints Plains Plaids Sizes 1-10 $ 2” Up ORLONS—NYLONS COTTONS Many New Textured Fabrics Mr. and Mrs. Francis E. Oak | E. Vanacker of the | Kingswood School faculty in Bloom- | State College at the close of the | Fred C. Wilkins and Mr. and, Mrs. George Baldwin of Orchard | | | | | 6) 22 E PIKE ST. PHONE FE 5-8415 PONTIAC, MICH Lo William K. Cowie Custom Upholstering 21 Yrs. of Practical Experience 378 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 4-2587 Se | hand. With tiers of waves deftly cut hair fashion . weather-resistant, 306 Riker Building THE ITALIAN BOY LOOK waves and half-curls are cut into place and supported by a firm, all-over permanent. Ladies, you'll love this much-talked-about hairdo. Styled at BETTY LeCORNU’S STUDIO latest word in The design is and molded... . . adored by the style wise lady. FE 2-5221 ele lle, pie Ee ee fl (2) and up efficient, so easy to live in today ... enjoy the,fun of mix-matching with pas- “tels, vivid shades, shock colors, black, white, beiges, greys, browns. Misses sizes 10 to 20. Now you can have more than 100 exciting, different mix-match combinations in the three skirts and little washable wool jer- sey shirts we show here! So enormously at college, at work . .. so easy to care for. The Tailoring is Sacony- perfect. And the fabrics... they’re plueperfect. Come in | You Saw itin... + ’ <.. Mademoiselle, too! at home, heathery master -blended tweedy skirt 14.95 ’ pure wool washable wool } flannel skirt lersey shirt A 10.98 7.95 ‘: VU Waite'’s Sportswear pure wool —Third Floor— flannel skirt 10.95 32 to 40 in regular or tall lengths 32-36 in short sizes White. for the student body beautiful. Dorm-adorable Slips ” ob Dad all nylon acetate no iron BS plisse Imagine! Now you may have the softness of fine crepe in this wonderful new nylon acetate plisse that never needs an iron! Washing is so simple and they dry with a freshly pressed air that remains caressingly soft year in—yeor out! Hurry in today for yours or call FE 4-2511 today! Waite's New Lingerie Department—Second Floor yoke of Gowns... Se _NINETEEN _ THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS. Leh Ee AUGUST 17, 1958 Finish Pipeline TWENTY ‘The annual surplus of births over deaths per thousand of pop- Friday, in similar fashion. Talbot Duffy Barrow, 42, a Norfolk county policeman, was killed when he came in contact with a high-tension lation in the U. S. rose ‘from five in 1936 to nearly 16 in 1947. ‘Guard Troops Begin BLUE SKY Es WARNERGOLOR ViNCENT PRICE FRANK LOVEJOY - PHYLLIS KIRK @® PLUS and Silvered Screen! On Our Newly Enlarged Nt took a Efizaberh yaar” TAYLOR Fernando LAMAS Witiam POWELL Fabia GURL feel like o womon! JAMES WHO HAD || Te ERYTHIN AD wn YOUNG - WHITMORE CONDITIONED * LAST TIMES TONIGHT ON THE debts SCREEN! TECHNICOLOR e ” “PLUS a ON THE REGULAR SIZE SCREEN! | WATERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATER THE FAMILY DRIVE Cor. Williams Lk.-Airport Rds. IN Box Office Opens 7:15 LAST TIMES TONIGHT SPECIAL LAUGH ATTRACTION! Susan HAYWARD Robert PRESTON \ Technicolor TULSA 3rd ATTRACTION THEYRE OFF -SPACE G. Mennen Williams reaffirmed | his stand Sunday night that jbingo is a ‘‘local’’ problem. | |-governor,”’ fireman in the past two years Across Straits | | Deepest Underwater Oil | Line Completed in Week | After Starting Date | MACKINAW CITY uw — A giant | pipeline, 20,000 feet long and 20 inches across, now lies under the deep and turbulent Straits of Mac- kinac to carry oil from Canada's and eastern Canada. The deepest underwater oil pipe-| line ever attempted was complet-| ed Saturday evening, just a week after workmen launched it at St. | The pipe, in eight 2,500-foot sec- tions, was pulled across the water | ! Next workmen will shove a four- | St. Ignace side to suck out all the | air. Then they will fill the pipe | with water for testing purposes. | ' the line into its channel at the! | bottom of the Straits, pontoons | | which have held it six feet above | 'the bottom will be released. In a month, the whole operation | | will be duplicated when a paralle! | pipeline will be pulled across the | Straits just east of the present | one. The underwater lines will form | part of project to link Superior, | Wis., and Sarnia, Ont., with oil | | pipeline. Another line already has been laid from Edmenton, Alta, to | Superior. ‘Bingo Problem Local, Not State, Says Williams | MACKINAC ISLAND (UP)—Gov. ee ; | Williams -was interviewed on the program ‘‘Sounding Board’ by college students working in this area during the tourist season. “There is a state law which forbids bingo,’’ said Williams in | answer to a question by James | Hildebrand, a University of | | Michigan law student, when - I begame he said, ‘“‘my police commissioner (Donald S. Leonard) and I decided that each locality should, handle its own problem. | That is the way the problem should be handled.”’ ; Williams did not. mention Leonard, now Detroit police com- missioner, by name. However, he referred to him as “the police ‘However, / commissioner who would like to) be governor.”’ Williams ducked a question about whether he plans to run | against Sen. Homer Ferguson | Rescuers See No Sign (R-Mich.) for the U. 8, Senate. “That's a good state and fed- eral question,’ Williams told the | student. ‘I don't know which I'll run for. But thanks for the’ plug anyway.” Brooklyn Fireman Plays Stork for Third Time NEW YORK (UP) — Bernard Morris. an expectant father, pushed into a Brooklyn fire station Sunday and asked for help. His wife's baby was due to arrive at their home a few doors down the street Fire Lt. Edward T. Dunne went to the Morris home and delivered a baby girl to Mrs. Morris—the third baby he has delivered on duty as a Albert Fields to Southern a | Ignace across the Straits. that divides Michigan's two penin-| sulas. It was the longest water | crossing by the pull method ever completed. As the weight of the water pulls | Hope, and August Ulfig, } | | ——_—____—_- Starch Blaze Injures Three Huron Milling Factory in Harbor Beach Is Hit by Flash Fire HARBOR BEACH (B—A °5-year- old Huron Milling Co. employe lay critically burned today, victim of a series of explosions and flash fires that ripped through the big plant early Sunday. Bernard Franzel of Harbor Beach and two other workers were taken to Harbor Beach hospital He suffered burns over most of his body in the blasts. Clarence Friedland, 45, of Port 40, of Harbor Beach, had less serious injuries. Company president . Robert M. Farr said the damage might run to $500,000 Machinery in the grinding room of the plant, largest industrial con- cern in the Thumb area north of Port Huron, was blasted by the first explosion. A few minutes la- ter another blast roared through the roll room Both rooms are used to process starch adhesives, “such as all paper paste. Several. flash fires broke out, but were kept under control by the sprinkler system at the plant until the Harbor Beach fire de- partment could extinguish them. Firemen said an electric spark or starch dust may have touched |off the blasts. The plant, whigh has 500 employes, operates around, the clock. of 2 Detroiters’ Plane SAULT STE. MARIE. Ont. — American and Canadian pilots reported no progress today in their search for two Detroit brothers whose light plane is believed own in the rugged bush country north of here. The brothers, Walter and Harry Butler, took off against the advice of airport officials last Wednesday for Jamestown, Ont., about 120 miles north of here. Pilots said the rough terrain made an air search difficult but they planned to recheck the thous- ands of square miles along the plane's flight route in an effort fo spot wreckage PONT DRI CA Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Block North of Telegraph IAC * VEIN: 2 RE ‘armage’ FE 5-4500 } LAST TIMES TONIGHT | cone mcTU Thi ENEMY A-BOMB SMUGGLED INTO U.S.! TOMO 3 DIMENSIONS: RES presents RROW y 2 LUCY’S FAMILY ARRIVES — Desi Arnaz and inch line through the pipe from the | Lucille Ball are greeted by E lizabeth Taylor as they |. (UP) | John Huston Finds Money Easy to Get By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD — John Uuston | breezed into town for some ready future pictures and |}money for breezed out again. and unpre- John, the brilliant dictable son of the late Walter Huston, reported that money 1s amazingly easy to find. There's no should be amazed. His last two releases, ‘African Queen” and ‘‘Moulin Rouge’’ made a mint for everyone concerned. reason he 1 cornered the director writer in his hotel room during a rare moment of relaxation during his whirlwind visit here. He was having a highball with John Dierkes, the craggy-faced soldier of Huston's “Red Badge of Courage.”’ Hluston was his. usual bu:morous expansive self. Jn his shirt sleeves and wearing a bow tie and fancy suspenders, he stretched his gangling legs and puffed on a@ tiny cigar. Occasionally’ he said some- thing he thought was funny and ‘his wild, graying hair would flop as he shook with laughter “Why do I stay in Furope?”’ he “If you could see my place at St. Jean de Luz in the south of France, you would know. There is hunting in the hills of Spain nearby’ There is deep sea tuna fishing in the Atlantic. I can keep my jurfp- ing horse not far away. At night I can go to the casiho and lose my money, if I so desire. said “Yes, I made some money on the 18-month tax deal, but not as much as you might think. I | would have stayed in Europe anyway, and I wasn’t at all dis- turbed when the law was changed. I can't say the same for some actors I know. Alan Ladd is signed up for .a number of pictures out of the country and he hates being away from Hollywood. “TI like making pictures out of the country. Most of my Hollywood pictures have been made largely on location: I like to operate out of the studio. 1 don’t like inter- ference “My staying overseas happened accidentally. I went over to make ‘African Queen’ and one: picture led to another. It wasn't because [ was disenchanted over the failure of ‘Red Badge of Courage.’ “What happened to ‘Red Badge’? I'm not sure. Perhaps it was not right for the time. People didn't want to see war. I know when I see pictures of Korea in the paper, I skip over the page. I’ve had enough war. | “I don't blame it on the studio. I saw the cut version and I think they did a good job. I also was at the first preview of my version and I saw the people get up and march out of the theater. It was like the retreat in Italy. I had the feeling that if you tried to stop fhem, fight. It was experience.” Huston recently the Devil” with Humphrey Bogart and Jennifer Jones. He said the picture presents a problem. a very disturbing finished ‘‘Beat “It has the slimmest, sparest, most wasp-waisted, pusill-gutted story im the world,”” he re- | ~ marked. “It is not intended to | be anything pretentious at all. | The trouble is not with the pub- lic, but the critics. After ‘African Queen’ and ‘Moulin Rouge,’ they will say that it’s too trivial. “The picture isn't intended for Academy Awards; I never make} pictures with that in mind, any-| | way. Perhaps it would be better if! |My name weren't on it. But then | | people would say I’m ashamed of drive 45-foot trailer on Hollywood studio lot. Trailer even has children’s nursery. | the picture. I’m not. | coat, they would have put up a! Two Weeks Training GRAYLING w# — Michigan Nat- fonal Guard troops a two- | week field training period today at Camp Grayling. Top ranking state guard officers and Fifth Army officials welcomed the more than 9,000 guardsmen to Camp Grayling yesterday. Maj. Gen. Ralph A. Loveland, of Ann Arbor, warned the civilian soldiers,'’ The peaceful settlement of many problems and difficulties that stand between our way of life and that of the Communists seems to be a long way off. “We still have no guarantee of | world peace. Because of this we must be ready ourselves as fight- ing men in a fighting unit to de- fend democracy if called upon to | do so.” Artillery and infantry units of | the State Guard forces will train at nearby Camp Grayling during the two week exercises. The Mich- igan Nation Guard air arm will | train at Grayling Air Force Base and anti-aircraft artillery units will train at Camp Claybanks near Muskegon. It’s just de- signed for pure enjoyment.”’ Huston said he would be leaving shortly for his. seaside paradise | in signee There ne will work ¢ Storm-Cut Wires "Real Ireland” 0 Take Second Victim “The Real Ireland’ or an adven- ture in India for Bogart, who af- fectionately calls Huston “the, NORFOLK, Va. uw — Hurricane monster."’ Barbara claimed a second life here His secretary then told him it Saturday—a day after it had roared | was 4:21, and Huston grabbed his, past the Virginia coast. slapped a cap on his head) Joe Lane, 55, stepped out of his | and was off to pick up some more garbage truck to pick up a wire | money with which to make movies. Which had been knocked across the | road by the hurricane winds. The | wire turned out to be an electric U of M Publishes | power line and Lane was electro- . cuted. It was his fi day on his Pamphlet Series new job with the ‘Princess Rie on Family Life County sanitation department. ANN ARBOR—Two new booklets wire while answering an emergen- cy call. \ Chhahhahad®: \ New Lake Theater \ 420 Pontiac Trail WALLED LAKE Keego Theatre AIR-CONDITIONED . “Come Back Little Sheba” With Burt Lancaster and Shirley Booth —ALSO— “Sword of Venus” With Robert Clark and McLeod USED TV et HAMPTON TV 286 State St. $10-$15 Down — $5 per Wk. WE BUY AND SELL USED MAGAZINES, TRICKS, JOKES AND NOVELTIES Piper's Magazine Outlet 35 Auburn Ave. FE 3-9869 -. Norfolk's first hurricane victim | died on the day of the big blow, | designed to help parents with var- | ious family problems were — pub- lished recently by the University of Michigan Extension Service. The insuien are first in a series of pam- phletx which will be published from NOW THRU FRIDAY! " time to time Parents’ Exchange’ in the Family” are and “Life: composed of ideas and experiences contributed A hurricane's by Michigan parents, and are be- tro ghee ing distributed to provide a means blind hate at of exchanging solutions @ prob- his back, And lema encountered by parents of all a bayou ages and families of all nizen Some, of the ideax prenacd In claanen and the tM bxtenaion woman in his blood! . ere ©x Institutes aponnored by Services Namen Of bewkn written by qualified adviews on how to urctter- tand and treat citroen are listed Parents Baxi hange The the Var. Comaimts tA “When “When Bad later Singie or muupie copes of the pamphlets may be dbdtained for a small fee by wnting the U-M Extension Service. 424 Admunis- tration Building. Ann Arbor | oh . veal por JAMES STEWART inant in Lise og tree leaflets Yorke w Ly ars (yr Childd Seerrs be ptdished A w, far twyg There « V carr Y (Ags Otnert wll os ‘ eeenre © joes DAN DURYEA Frosted Feline Survives Night in Refrigerator SALISBURG, Md. wW When Phillip C. Widdowson of nearby Princess Anne opened his refrig- | erator door, his cat fixed him with | an icy stare and leaped stiffly from | the box | Widdowson said the cat apparent- ’ Features ci— ] :97 — 3:10 — The Mighty Story of Steve Martin! GILBERT ROLAND HOUNDEP Bay £. eatniCioR * “ 4 The Brawling. Mauling Story of the Biggest Bonanza of Them Ailll on <4 + \\ » . UE t “a 5:13 — 7:16 — 9:20 lv had remained in the refrigerator all night. He thawed out after ao few hours in the sun. Extra! Tom & Jerry Cartoon e_ Late World News — - —— FAGLE AIR-CONDITIONED COOL STRAND OPEN 10:45 A. M. Today and Tomorrow So ADVENTURE INTO * TOMORROW! Have You Ever Had It Bad? Well See Th It's Closer Than You Believe! Ecward L. 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EE eee ALWAYS COOL ODAY AND Their Funniest TO TUESDAY | ese Two in CORNE! WILDE - SMITH —"“S At — 12:30-3:48-6:50-10:05 5 \ i tan ee i i THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS. MONDAY, ‘AUGUST 17, 1953 TWENTY-ONE — Coopers 6/ a ad i 4 honors Sunday in the annual Pontiac Kennel Club’s all-breec dog show, in Wisner Stadium. The King had to top one of the finest fields ever to take part in this fine show. More than 500 dogs were entered, represent- y Waterford Nine Wins 'B Test D & W Team Defeats Ferndale at Drayton for MSA Crown Waterford’s Dick & Wes Sport- ing Goeds won the Michigan Soft- ball Association’s Class B District tournament at Drayton Plains Sun- day. D & W and Ferndale advanc- ed to Sunday’s finals after win- ning thd and 3rd round games Saturday. Ferndale won the Ist game Sunday, 2-0, to force a 2nd contest. Final game went eight innings before the Waterford team pushed across a single run to win, 1-0. |. Dave Ruelle singled in the 8th, advanced te third on two straight walks and came home on Nelson’s single. Pontiac’s Stadium Inn was elimi- nated by Ferndale, 2-0, in semifinal P * * Ch. King Peter of Salilyn, a springer spaniel owned by Mrs. Fred Gasow of Birmingham, won the Pontiac Press’ big best-in-show trophy Sunday at the Pontiac Ken- nel Club's annual all-breed show. A crowd of nearly 600 gathered at Wisner Stadium for the show, which attracted a record entry of 573 dogs, representing 61 dif- ferent breeds. Mrs. Gasow’s entry also finished 1st in the sporting group. Judges for the show were Dr: Stanley E. Ochsner, Hales Corn- ers, Wisc.; Mrs. Marie B. Meyer, Milford, O.; Mrs. Stella Quick, Vy Pi i P Paes o Jae, , gt £m BEST IN SHOW—Mrs. Fred Gasow’s CH. King Peter of Salilyn, | ing some 61 breeds, and giving the club its biggest show. The Gasows handsome springer spaniel (above, with handler Dick Cooper) took top| are Birmingham residents: The King won his owners the beautiful Pontiac Press trophy, shown at left ship rosette. Birmingham'S paniel Takes Top Spot in Big PKC Show Brighton; Frank J. Ward, North Webster, Ind.; Perry Killian, Flint; Richard H. Bones, Toledo; Fred Schwalk, Detroit; and Frank J. Mayville, Olmsted, O. J. P. Hac- kett judged best-in-show. Group winners: Houné—Ch. Agilita of Gera, smooth- haired dachshund ewned by 8. P. Click- ner of Detroit. Tecrier—Ch. Bursche Von Hessen. min- fature schnouser owned by Mr. and Mra. Edward Leche, Glencoe, Ill. Toy—Ch. Pugvilles Mighty Jim, pug ewned by Pugville Kennels, Croton-on- Hadsen, N. Y. Workin nt. Ch. Jede Ven Liebe- straum, rman shepherd owned by Dr. and Mrs. George Richardson, Ann Arbor. Nen-sperting — Ch. Williamsdale Den Juan, daimation owned by Mrs. Jean Zimmerman, Chicago. Sports Mirror Today a year ago — Frank defeated Ken McGregor 6-3, 6-2, 12-14, 63 for his second straight Newport tennis title. Five years ago — The Indians blanked the Browns 8-0 behind the four-hit pitching of rookie Gene action Saturday night. Bearden. Net Fans Want Showdown With Aussies’ Star Pair BROOKLINE, Mass, (# — The 72nd National Doubles Tennis Championships open at Longwood League Leaders (By the Associated Press) AMERICAN LEAGUE aaah Page —y borage i Minese, Longe ; Resen, veland, .380; Mantle, New York, .300; Bauer, New Yerk, .307. RUNS—Minese, Chicage, 87; Mantle, Nek ‘Xork, 83; Vernen, Washington, 78; Yost, Washington, 76; Rosen, Cleveland, | m4. RUNS BATTED [N—Rosen, Cleveland, 381;| Showdown in the men’s final be- | the Wimbledon crown and doubles today with the spotlight on the) U. S. Davis Cup pair of Vic Seixas and Tony Trabert and the nine- times-winning team of Mrs. Mar- garet Osborne du Pont and Louise Brough. * * Tennis fans are rooting for a tween the American Davis Cuppers and Australia’s 18-year-old stars Lew Hoad and Ken Rosewall. Philadelphian Seixas, holder of winner here last year with Aus-! tralia’s Mervyn Rose, is seeded! with Trabert — ex-Navy man from | 101; Minese, Chicago, 86; BOONE, DE- TROIT, 83; Vernen, Washington, 380; Berra, New York, 79. HITS—Kauaenn, Detroit and Vernon, Washington, 155; Phi , Philadelphia, | 141; Rosen, Cleveland, ; Minese, Chi- | cago, 138. | DOUBLES _ Vernon, Washington, 3H; | Kell, Beston, 32; Jensen, Washington, 29; | Goodman and White, Bosten, 25. ' TRIPLES—Rivera; Chicago, 10; . Boston, 8; Fox and Minose, Chicage, BOONE, .DETROJT, .MeDougald, New | York, Philley, Philadelphia and Vernon, Washington, 7. nOMe. RUNS—Resen, Cleveland; Zer- nial, Philadelphia, 29; Berra, New York, 320 BOONE, DETROIT, 19; Gernert, Bos- ton, and Deby, Cleveland, 18. . STOLEN BASES—Rivera, Chicage, 19; Mineso, Chicago, 18; Jensen, Washington, 14; Philley, Philadelphia, 11; Busby, 1. WerTCHING—Lopat. New York, 12-2, | Wimbledon Cincinnati—in the opposite half of the draw from Hoad and Rosewall. | All the tennis world’s top stars, , including 18-year-old National and | ampion Maureen (Little Mo) Connolly of San Diego, | Calif., move tojhistoric Longwood's grass courts affer competing in the | men’s tourney at Newport, R. L, or the women’s matches jn Man-| chester, Mass. | Seixas suffered a twisted right | knee in the third set against Tra- | 357; Ford, New York, 14-4, .778; Brown, Boston. 11-4, .733 Trucks, Chicago, 15-6, bert in yesterday’s Newport Invi- | tation final after winning the first, Venetian Night Plans Completed by WLYA Commodore Jim Parshall’s ‘‘Tar Baby,”’ skippered by H. Gillen, took 1st place in the Thistle Class Sunday in Watkins Lake Yachting Association racing. Glenn Fries Jr. won the Light- ning Class in his ‘Jo Dee,’’ while Sheldon Covert finished 1st in the small boat class. Plans for the WLYA’s annual “Venetian Night’’ were complet- ed Sunday. Event will be held Aug. 21, starting at 6:30 p. m. Decorated boats’ will be towed around the lake, led by the ‘‘Queen Mary,”’ with an orchestra aboard. Baseball Results BASEBALL RESULTS (By the Associated Press) AMERICAN LEAGUE w L Pct. GB New York........... 77 #37675 _ Chieage ....cccccces 7@ 46 603 8 Cleveland ..ccccece: 640 58tC«CSSS I 13 Boston ......eee00-: 65 55 542 15 Wasbington ........ 48 60 492 21 Philadelphia ....... 4 6 O67 417 2's Petrelt 0. veyscsens 42 73) (365 B5 4g St. Louis ; AO) Hie” ieeet. J TODAY'S GAMES, PITCHERS New York at Philadelphia (2), 5 p.m. and 7 p.m.—(Ford (14-4) and Kusava (3-3) vse Fricane (6-6) and Coleman (1-1), Only games scheduled. SUNDAY’S RESULTS New York 8-7 Philatielphia 6-3 Boston 4-4 Washingten 1-7 Detroit 3 Chicage 2 St. Louis 7-7 Cleveland 6-5 SATURDAY’S RESULTS Philadelphia 9 New York 8 Detroit 5 Chicage 4 Washington 5-4 Béston 2-2 Only games scheduled. TUESDAY'S SCHEDULE Washington at New York, 7:30 p.m.; Philadelphia at Boston, 7:30 ag ve- land at Detroit, 8:30 p.m.; St. Louis at Chicage (2), 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE w L: Pet GB ‘114; Shea, Washington, 10-4, .714. . . Brooklyn .......... 17.37 .675 . STRIKEOUTS — — fg be ae; | two Sets and then limped to defeat, Milwaukee ||... )., 71 47:62 ks, Chicago, 117: Parnell, : . | Philadelphia ...... 62 5? 544 15 CRAY, DETROIT, 98 Wynn, Cleveland, | Trabert winning 5-7, 0-6, 6-4, 8-6. st Louis.) ae 88S 01. But Seixas came back with Tra- = York. ........, a ee ee) —_—- = } Cimetmnati .........: eS 65 449 6 NATIONAL LEAGUE bert to win the doubles crown from | Chicago... 2.. 1) laae OSS BATTING—Irvin, New York. .338: Fu-/ Hamilton Richardson, Baton Rouge’ Pittsburgh 38 8S SIL 4 TODAY'S GAMES, PITCHERS rooklyn, .336; Kluszewski, Cincin- Hori S31 Sehoendienst. St. Louis, .330; , Brooklyn, 5 BAUND_ Dark. New York, 91; Gilliam and Snider, Brooklyn, 90; Musial, St. Louis, 89; Rebinsen, Brooklyn, 86. RUNS BATTED IN—Campanella, Brook - lyn, 111; Matthews, Milwaukee, 105; Hodges, Brooklyn, 98; Klustewski, Cin- einnnatt, 93; Irvin, New York and Ennis, ia, 91. — Ashburn, Philadelphia, 148; Kluszewski, Cincinnati, 148; Leckman, New York, 147; Schoendienst, St. Leuis, 143; Bell, Cincinnati, 139. DOUBLES—Mausial, St. Louis, 38: Sni- der, Brooklyn. 30; Baumholtz, Chicage La., and Bill Talbert, New York, shape for the National. | In yesterday's concluding play at'| Manchester, Miss Connolly won the singles for the ghird straight year, Puertas Is Victor and Bell, Cincinnati, 29; Robinson, Broo fyn and Dark, New York. Si. TRIPLES—Fondy. Chicago and Bruton. Gilliam, Brooklyn, 9: Phila- Pitts- Milwaukee, 10: Thompsen. New York, Ashburn, delphia, Bernier and O’Cennell, and Hemus, St. Louls, 7 STOLEN pases —Bruten, Milwaukee. | °3; Reese, Brooklyn, 16; Giliam and Rebinsen, Breeklyn, 14; Snider, eee i earch ette, Milwaukee, 11-2.) 946; Ree, Brooklyn, 8-2, 800; Spahn. | Milwaukee, 16-5, .762: Haddix, St. Louis, | 15-5, .150; Erskine, Brooklyn, 14-5, .737. STRIKEOUTS — Roberts. Philadelphia, 146; Erskine, Brooklyn, 137; Mizell, St. Louis, 114; Haddix, St. Louis, 106; Paha, Milwaukee, 96. in Mid-season Event Pontiac’s Joe Puertas won the 40-lap feature event Sunday night, ; in the mid-season championship | -i/ races at Chief Pontiac Speedway. | ’| Puertas also won the trophy dash. | scoring last season with 60 points. | Pittsburgh at Brooklyn, 7 p.m.—Lindell | 6-4, 6-3, 6-3. Seixas said he'd be in’ (5-13) vs Podres (8-3) Philadelphia at | New York (2), 12:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. —Miller (5-5), Hansen (0-1) vs Gosle (3-9) and Corwin (5-2). Only games hedules. “SUNDAY’S RESULTS Brooklyn 3-9 Pittsburgh 1-5 New York 8-4 Philadelphia 13 Cincinnati 3-2 St. Leuis 2-6 Milwaukee 4-6 Chicago 2-2 SATURDAY’'S RESULTS Brooklyn 14 Pittsburgh 6) New York 4-2 Philadeiphia 1-5 Milwaukee 2 Chicage 6 St. Louis 10 Cincinnati 4 TUESDAY'S SCHEDULE New York at Brooklyn, 7 p.m.; Mil- | waukee at Cincinnati, 8 p.m.; Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.; Chicago at St., Leuis, & p.m. Kicking specialist Pepper Rod- gers led Georgia Tech's football | * . ° “_ , ° 4 P.ue o? Sp te , } ud < , a ‘ (Me \ aid 4 + hg f- “s re, it 4” K4! ‘ ¥ ors 0 b/g a * + . Py Yy , a A 4 us vy pws rte + 4 4 ‘| of Brighton Sunday. “° | shall, Bill Dillard and Willcutt. y 4 } p ’ * ah 4 # - Kk rs i <3 ot b> hed “vay % te + ¢ , “a 4 ae a ste ros if? Wt i if ," , with the big blue-ribbon champion- Pontiac Press Phote GMC Split 4-Game Card Beats Muskegon Squad in Two of Four Tilts Over Weekend _Pontiac-General Motors split four games with Muskegon’s Continen- tal Motors in National Industrial Fastball League play over the weekend. GMC won the Ist game of Sat- urday night’s doubleheader, 3-2, but was blanked in the night- cap, 2-0. Pontiac nine bowed, 4-1, Sunday and then shut out Mus- kegon, 2-0, in the final contest. Feature game of the weekend card was Sunday’s 2nd tilt, in which the teams managed to col- tect but a single hit apiece. GMC scored its two-runs in the 2nd on a walk, two errors and a hit by Mullins. Coachers resume NIFL competi- tion Tuesday, when they take on Detroit Briggs in a doubleheader starting at 7 p.m. at Northside Park. — 1 [Katlin and Fair Feature Winners at M-59 Speedway Mickey Katlin of Howell and Joy Fair of Pontiac took the week-. end’s feature races at Pontiac M-59 Speedway. Katlin finished ahead of Fair and Wayne Bennett of Troy Satur- day night, while Fair was first ahead of Bennett and Bill Smith In addition to a third place in the feature Saturday, Bennett won a special ‘‘wrong way’’ race and | the Australian pursuit. Harmon | Willcutt of Troy won the semi-final Paces Medal Qualifying Test +> Pontiac Match Play Champion ls 2 Under Par Total of 22 Linksters Qualify in Weekend Test at Municipal Butler Cooper won the City Match Play title last year and he served notice Saturday at Mu- nicipal Golf course that he in- tends to make a strong bid to add the Medal Play crown this week end. Cooper paced a field of 54 in the Medal Play qualification rounds by firing a two-under par 67. Twenty-two players qualified with scores of 78 or better. Cooper was exempt since he finished among the top five last year. Glenn Vallance and Harley Hyatt are other automatic qualifiers. They played Saturday, scoring 71 and 74, respectively. Cooper’s 67 matched the total posted in the round by Ed Wasik last year. Cooper was the only player to break par over the city course. Joe Gaines was one-over with a 70 and Pat Hal- verson and Ron Rothbarth matched Vallance at 71. Qualifiers play 18 holes Satur- day and Sunday for the crown. . Qualification scores: Loss of Mays Hurt By GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK It is difficult to and argued far into the night that Durocher was blameless for the plight of his team. When it came down .to either expressing an opinion or getting out, we were forced to side with the latter forces. We know his faults, but believe he is as good a baseball manager as there is in the game, not excepting Casey Stengel and Charlie Dressen. It is true that Leo made a grave mistake in the spring, when he believed he had a pennant winner, but that is not necessarily a rap at his managerial ability. The quality of a baseball club, which is made up of a carload of young men of varying ts, is a very elusive thing to calculate, and Durocher will not be the last manager to be misled. All it takes is for one or two stars in whom a pilot has great faith to fall down on him, or for a small spark of dissention to ignite a de- featist complex. Our own feeling has been that the question of Durocher’s con- tinued tenure at the Polo Grounds never would have arisen if a young Negro named Willie Mays had been playing center field for the Giants the past two seasons instead of being in the service. Playoff Needed to Settle Title at Fort Wayne Middlecoff, Wall Tied at 265 Over Regular Distance, Sunday FORT WAYNE, Ind. —Veteran Cary Middlecoff of Memphis and Art Wall Jr. of Pocono Manor, Pa., played an extra 18 holes today to decide the chamiponship of the championship of the Fort Wayne Open Golf Tournament. First place was worth $2,400 and second $1,800. The two matched 65s yesterday. to finish the 72-hole distance in 265 each, breaking by four strokes the’ tournament record set by Jim Fer- QUALIFIERS Gaines oer ee eereeeeeeeeeeeoeceee Timely Blows Help CHICAGO @® —Even when he doesn't hit home runs, Eddie Math- ews delivers timely blows. The slugging Milwaukee third basemen, who leads the National League in homers with 37, drove out a two-run triple in the eighth inning of yesterday's opener againt the Chicago Cubs. The blast sent in two mates, and gave the Braves an uphill 42 victory. | SMOG COOmer 5 iss oivncccccetiteveee 67 | *Glenn Vallance...................... 71| hole that dropped for Wall and Ron Rethberth. 2... 0IIIE | didn't for Middlecott threw the Norm Craven. oie ieeeeeceieeeeeseees 72/ tournament in.a playoff. Wall had Nick Berson........................, 33| Chipped in for eagle deuces on-the D. a mebertven SOO CSE CORA DOOEA BSC RR Ber 33 3rd and 17th, each 275 yards long. ‘Harley Hyatt........................ 44, Wall, 25 years old and in his Columbus Bertem..........csseeeeeees 74) second year on the tournament Kea Oppencer.........cc.csscssssssc, 73) Circuit, never has won a major a Dono lb lbademeaasauialea - event. ‘ G Johnson..................0.0...... 6 Jack Burke Jr. of Kiamesha Teall meg ie tcreanariersemcxness 77| Lake, N. Y., who had taken the R Belncelman.... ee... eit 2” 54-hole ce ong Nala a 64 Satur. Dick DeWitt....0.0...0000 TIED a, Gay, turned the front nine in Stan Savage... i... ec cL 3 and was well on his way to victory Bin Pittman. 220000728222 LErTIt ag, until the 13th. His ball moved and NON-QUALIFIERS he stopped his swing, incurring a Be 'Barnem 2.20... LLIB, two-stroke penalty. BD, Ma meee 56sec sian ds 00s ove aceon ee. 79 | * * * G. Mammiee 00ST s9| Burke finished with 72 for 270 A Pettiterd diesicisiaieie eee daieeeleieiemiee'eielatetels se to tie for sixth place with Marty J. MOss...........sssssecseeeeseseeee, #1 FUrgOl of Lemont, Ill., who_ had = re roomed seseeneeesseasesseneeees es shared the lead the first two N. MeDewell.................c......, ag, Pounds but finished with 71 and 68. Dick Ayling... sbeeeeeeeeeeesseeeenees $3) Dave Douglas of Newark, Del., R. Jacobson. ©.....0..222.000,2/22 1 a3 | took 68 for 267 and third money of Ss Gah eerrenes 37, 31,400. Jimmy Clark of Laguna J. Monti... III as| Beach, Calif., shot 67 for 268 and M. Merce. 2.200 0S) fourth place, worth $1,290. A. Bari sMesetivnesssesesessaawessecs Ol Ed (Porky) Oliver “of Palm B. MacDonald... ....0.00000.2/22 ot | Springs, Calif., matched the win- Be, Wome oo ets ieee: 101; ners’ 65s on the final round and fier of San Francisco in 1951. Birdie putts on the 450-yard 18th took $1,000 for fifth place on 269. The swimming speed champion |of ocean fish is generally regard- |}ed as the wahoo. Howeyer, mack- erals, dolphins and marlin are also regarded in the top hit-run class. The San Francisco 49ers will make their only New York appear- )ance this year when they meet the football Giants in the Polo State's Skeet Title Captured by Detroit Man Confer’s 840 x 350 Is Best in Overall Total; Hamp Curry Runnerup Top honors in the Michigan skeet championship held at thé Oakland County Sportsmen’s Club over the weekend went to Detroiter Howard Confer. alil-gauge class with 99 the .23 class with a 98. Hamp Curry, of Caro, won the all-gauge event by breaking 100 targets and scored 336 to finish as runnerup in overall standings. Florence Schmidt, Detroit, won the women’s crown with 94x100. Ken Sedlecky, 12, of Baldwin, scored 96 to take the junior title. Other champions include W. G. Tomlinson, Detroit, who scored 47 x 50 in the .410-gauge class and Jenkins, who has 99 in the .20-gauge event. Oakland County winners includ- ed Vi Vandewater, Waterford, with 81x100 in women’s novice class and Bob Thiefels, Pontiac, 97x100 in Class B. Other classes: Women's .20-gauge — Jeanne Shields, Grand Rapids, 921100. Nevice—Clair Purdy, Ithaca, 880x100. | Twe-man team — (.20 gauge)—Jenkins and Confer. Two-man team — and C. Crites. Five-man team — (.12 gauge)—Cerry, Cenfer, Jenkt Temi and Crites. | Several From Oakland County in GR Tourney A strong contingent of Oakland County golfers will be playing in the Western Amateur Golf cham- pionship. Qualifying rounds for the tourney start today at Blythe- field Country Club in Grand Rapids. Heading the County delegation is Chuck Kocsis of Red Run. Includ- ed on the list are Phil deBeaubien of Orchard Lake, Tom Draper, Ed Flowers, Lloyd Martz and Dick Whiting of Red Run, Ed Ervasti of Royal Oak, and Art Olfs of Oaxland Hills. Top names in the field are Jim McHale- of Philadelphia, Harvie Ward of Atlanta and Frank Stra- faci of Long Island, N. Y. (.12 gauge)—Carry Ten years ago — Arne Anderson lowered the worlds 1,500-meter Leo continued to drive himself | * Re-signing of Durocher as Giants Pilot Arouses Controversy; Writer Backs Leo Jones Cracks Medley Record in AAU Meet Pontiac Swimming Star Breaks Own Mark With 3:46.2 Effort By DALE BURGESS INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. “—Men’s National AAU swimming and div- ing championships produced one new American record and tied two AAU marks at big Broad Ripple pool over the weekend. Diving, both 3-meter _ spring- board and 10-meter platform, set a new quality standard for the meet but there are no records in these events. Burwell Jones of Pontiac, a University of Michigan product, set a new American record of $:46.2 in the 300-meter individual medley Saturday. It was his own 2-year-old mark of 3:52.2 that he rubbed out. He has won the AAU medley title three times outdoors and three times in- doors. Both Richard G. (Dick) Cleve- land of Honolulu and Olympic champion Lt. Clark Scholes of Camp Atterbury, Ind., tied the AAU record of 57.5 seconds in the 100-meter freestyle Sunday. Judges . unanimously named Cleveland the winner in the foaming finish that was a dead heat by the timers’ watches. Cleveland set the record in 1951. He also holds the American record of 56.4. Scholes’ Olympic record is Kya John Dudeck, 19-year-old Michf- gan State sophomore from Detroit, Saturday tied the AAU record of 1:08.4 in the 100-meter breast- stroke, set two years ago by John Davies of the University of Mich- igan. Ohio State’s Hawaiians won three of the last six events Sunday. In addition to Cleveland’s 100-meter freestyle triumph, Yoshi Oyakawa took the 200-meter backstroke in 2:29.9 and Ford Konno won the 400-meter freestyle in 4:39.8. Oya- kawa had won the 101-meter back- stroke Saturday in 1:06.8 and Konno won the 1,500-meter free- Grounds on Sept. 17. track record to 3:45. style Friday in 19.20. By JOE FALLS DETROIT ® — Detroit Tigers haven't improved much since the start of the season — from eighth to seventh place — but manager | and the fifth heat. Other heat! Schultz, Dick Price, and Joe Doyle. | Heat winners Sunday were Carm Ragatz, Chuck Paterilo, Butch Mar- Partello won the pursuit and Dil- lard the semi-final. George Rog- ers of Pontiac and Katlin joined the Upside Down Club. It's Time Out! — cy ef | Phe v } 4 A Sh ae haw ea on ) feck Li's i be wii ri | . oe | —= Aa “We don't have a ball club this” Fred Hutchinson thinks his team | winners were Rusty Kelly, Bill ,is stronger in at least one respect. | “Our bullpen is stronger now than it has been all year," said lanre impossible by inept relief pitching. “In the first few months,” Hutch explained, ‘our bullpen. was simply awful. We kept ex- perimenting with different relief pitchers, looking for one who could help out in the late in- | nings. e | ‘We had hoped Ray Herbert hasn't worked out.” In the last few weeks, Hutchin- son has been using some of his Starters, especially Billy Hoeft and Ned Garver, in relief. This, {plus the fact the newcomers Al | Aber and Bob Miller have shown |steady improvement, has made | the Tiger bullpen a help instead 'of a hindrance. Ralph Branca didn’t need any Hutch, whose job has been made / would be the one . . . but that! assistance in taming the Chicago Roberts, ‘Campy’, Trucks, GMC, Union Meet in Girls’ Playoffs Playoff action resumes tonight in City Girls’ Softball League, with one game on schédule at North Side Park. General Motors and Rosen MVP By OSCAR FRALEY (Onited Press Sports Writer) NEW YORK (UP) — Race for most valuable player honors was CIO No. 653 tangle at 8 p. m., with! wide open today with Robin Rob- the loser bowing out of the com- petition. Tonight's winner will face Shaw’s Jewelry, winner of two straight playoff games, in the finals Tues- day night at Beaudette Park. Tuesday’s {game is set for 7 p. m., with a 2nd game (if necessary) slated for 8:30 o'clock. Kazoo Team Sets Pace KALAMAZOO (#—With two days to. go, Kalamazoo’s tennis squad is leading the Western Lawn Ten- nis Association’s junior Davis Cup playoffs on the Stowe Stadium courts today. With points figured on a.team Leroy Fauble, Pontiac, won the|He kicked 39 extra points, five year, but the management's deter-| basis of one point for each indi- 2>-lap semi-final, while Bruce King finished 1st-in the pursuit event. Heat winners included Tom Jack- son, Elmer Ferstle, Tom Fitz- patrick and Art Costello. field goals and scored a_ touch- down. | In the North Pacific is the | largest living star fish. It is the| recent pay raises to Rip Repulski, | kee trailed with 8. ——- to give you fans some- | thing!” Twenty-lap old-model stock car | Sunflower Star and reaches a dia-| Ray » Jablonski, Harvey Haddix | feature was won by Jerry Davis. mejer of two feet or more. and Ferrell Anderson. { vidual victory, Kalamazoo had 16. Southwestern Mic was second with 14 tied with’ Chicago. East-| Minnie Minoso, while Rosen also! And its likely to be the same The St. Louis Cardinals gave|ern Michigan had 10 and Milwau-|is pressured by teammate Bob story Saturday, when the grey son Others: Detroit, 4; Cleveland, 4; Toledo, 2; Indianapolis, 0. , |‘sttineay enough, the Americ |erts and Roy Campanella appar- |ently holding a ‘slight National League edge and the chief Ameri- can League candidates Al .Rosen and Virgil Trucks. The fact remained, however, that a half dozen players still were “alive” in each league's chase for the award and any one of them could move front and center in the final month of play. } Roberts and Campanella will re- ceive their chief opposition from Gil Hodges of the Dodgers, War- ren Spahn and Eddie Mathews) toga. Springs was his 17th in 18 CHICAGO of the Braves. Ted Kluszewski, Starts. But Vanderbilt, trainer Bill the Reds and Red Schoen-| Winfrey and jockey Eric Guerin of i dienst of the Cardinals. Trucks could get opposition from | two teammates Pilly Pierce and | Lemon as well as mickey Vernon of the Senators. | 000 Chicago’s Washington Park. Candidates | {League leading Yankees appar- Tiger Relief Work Improves White Sox 3-2 Sunday. But if he had faltered, Hutchinson had Hoeft, a starter, and Herbert, a reliever, ready to go in. Branca pitched out of a jam in the ninth to hang up his third vic- tory for Detroit against two losses. He pitched a four-hitter. With one away in the ninth, White Sox put the tying runs on second and third. But Branca got Tom Wright on-a bouncer, one run scoring, and then induced the dangerous Bob Elliott to hit a game-ending fly to deep right. Tigers gave Branca a 3-0 lead after four innings. They scored once in the first on singles by Harvey Kuenn and Johnny Pesky\ ently have no one in the race, al- though Whitey Ford and Ed Lopat | have won a staggering percentage | of their games. Still, the Yanks | have no great standout. ‘Dancer Wins 17th Victory in 18 Starts NEW YORK (— Alfred Vander- bilt has proved it’s more profit- able to own a horse than bet on | One — especially when the horse is Native Dancer. ~The Dancer's easy victory in, last Saturday's Travers at Sara- | |Probably are the only ones who have fattened their bank accounts to any great degree. of Polynesian goes after the $75,- added American Derby at plus a double-play ball by Ray! Boone. They added two more in the fourth on a double by Boone, Steve Souchock’s single, a stolen base, error and ground ball. CHICAGO DETROIT AB RH ABE GA Car’seuel, ss 4 © © Kuenn, ss 44a Fex, 2b 3 @ 1 Pesky, 2b 4et. Minose, If-3 2 @ @ Beone, 3b 411 Mele, rf 4 @ @ Drepe, ib 3 @ 1 Boyd, 1b 3 1 6 Souchock sz 11 Rivera, cf 31 2 tts, ¢ 3¢e@ Wilson, ¢ 3 @ @ Nieman, ff 361 Krenich, 3 2 @ @ Lund, cf ze1 Keegan, p © © @ Branca, p 3¢e Wright, f 2061 Johnsen, p 1 06 6 Stewart, If 2 6 6 Fornieles, p @ 6 © Elliott 1¢6 3o 24 seo 37 ‘ eit grounded out fer Johnsen tn th. Wright singled fer Krsenich in 7th. Elliett {lied owt fer Fornicles in 9th. DETROIT E—Krshich, Drepe. RBI—Wright 2, Seuchock, Nieman. %b—Beene, Lund, 3b—Rivera 2. 8B—Seccheck. §—WIi- sen. DP—Carrasquel, Fox and Beyd; Beene, Pesky and Drepe. Left—Chicage 7, Detreit 3, BB—Branca 3. S0—Jehnson 2, Keegan 1, Fernieles 1, Branca 2. HO— Johnsen 5 in 4, Keegan @ in 2, Fernicies 2 in 2. ER and ER—Jehnsen 8-2, Keegan @-@, Fornieles 6-6, Branca 2-1. HEP— Branca (Boyd, Fox). WP—Branca (3-2). L—Jehnsen (1-3). U—Paparelila, L&Kin- mney, Henechick and n. T—1:68. A—]9,575 ae 4k 4 c- THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 17. 1958 McHale, Ward Rated Favorites Youthful Texan Top 153 Field Bi ls Favored in in Western Test Jaycee Tourney at Grand Rapids Rex Baxter Choice of With Stranahan Out, 220 Players in Ann Veteran Pair Rated Big Arbor Test Chance to Win ANN ARBOR # — Teenagers |. GRAND RAPIDS (® - The Sist from 43 states and 5 foreign coun- Western Amateur Golf Champion- tries tee-off today in the National | | ship, a rugged seven-day grind gets underway today at Blythefield —- | Jaycee Junior Golf Tournament. Country Club with Jimmy McHale | *¢ ° . of Philadelphia and Harvie Ward — bind a. all 1 P| of Atlanta, Ga.. sharing favorites’ role. Tuesday i the _ survivors ; E ii to the 72 hole cham- With defending champion Frank Stranahan sitting this one out, | pionship play starting Wednesday. McHale and Ward, a pair of tested Rex Baxter, 17 year old Ama- veterans. get top billing in the | illo, Tex., youth, reigns as the field of 153 golders. | favorite in the meet. Baxter has Both have been finalists but | already won two national Jaycee have yet to taste victory in this | crowns and a Hearst title. tournament which dates back to | ° 1899 and generally is ranked second only to the National Am- ateur in stature. Ward, winner of the British Am- ateur, went to the finals last year but was trimmed by Stranahan, who won his fourth Western crown with a 4 and 2 victory. McHale, former Walker Cupper, also waded through a large field and reached the final round in 1948. He was defeated by Skee * a ee te we a ~ - ew Michigan’s five-man team in the ‘ — was changed over the | #* s | weekend by the decision of Steve a e ac $: Nation of Detroit to play in the National Caddie meet at Columbus, All Tires Sold During This Sale are BRAND NEW i Ohio. Another Detroiter, Bill Teitke, FULLY GUARANTEED DAYTON First Quality mm“ “°*“ oe Tires! Other Michigar team members ° are: Fred Micklow, Hillsdale; Bob 1 | Zimmerman, Jackson; John Shu- No Seconds — No Tread Blemishes — No MR es sin Morzan, both of Changéovers . .. BUT Brand New Fully Guar- 9 Detroit. i He ae = anteed First Quality DAYTON Tires! | * ¢ 8 John Garrett of Houston, Texas, Pontiac Press Phote All players will shoot two 18 | _ hole rounds of qualifying today 'won the long driving contest held| LUNKER LAKER — Twenty-one-year-oli Bill Van Wagoner of 312 S. : Here's Your Chance to Buy DAYTON Thorobred Sunday as a preliminary to the| Broadway, Lake Orion, proudly holds the, 23-pound lake trout he landed and Tuesday. with 64 low scorers dvancing t tch pl limina- Tires with a 30,000 MILE, 2 YEAR WRITTEN (Mf |Jsvcce meet. Garrett topped the | during a trip to Grand Marais last week. The big lunke: measured €2) fon, which runs from Wednesday teenage drivers with a shot of| inches in length and 26 inches in ‘irth. Bill was fishing with his parents, | touch Sunday. ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE at the LOWEST | : 7 | 237% yards. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Van Wagoner, and his 17-year-old brother, Bob. Goitinals cans Hanis Wil be it Prices We Have Ever Offered! — | 36 holes. So it's possible that the winner may have to play 180 Kiner and Musial Face Touch Battles in Bids ou AT THIS GUARANTEE yi. i ; Stina Tile and Then LOOK at the UNBELIEVABLE Low Prices! Or National League nome KUN, bd IQ VITIES) me, wars ane mrt, shot for their first title, 63 year old By GRANTLAND RICE Manas fico with crouble Ta hot vege faa Haw Geen tse es eae : . seek his ninth championship. It's UNCON DITIONAL WRITTEN GUARANTEE: NEW YORK - “The time has come,” as the|on the field a lot when he should have been in a unlikely he'll get “ie ie fact walrus almost said, ‘‘to talk of inahy things in con- | hospital. that he is till playing tournament nection with a waning baseball season.” ° ° ° olf ts a story in itself |. means that these tires are guaranteed unconditionally against all possible damage, such as cuts from glass, ; 4 ry . . an Musial ight members h Campanella, Mathews and Gil Hodges are in a . bottles, bolts, breaks, curbs, rocks or any other road hazard. Unconditionally means what it says! There are Stan Musial has at least eight of his ss - g Evans, grandpappy of the am own league barring the road to his 7th National} bot scramble tn the runs batted in department tm | ateurs, won his first Western title no exceptions. Guarantees i good anywhere in the U. S. Teague batting championship. He must beat out the National. Rosen of Cleveland has a big jump | jin 1909. He repeated in 1912-14-15 | "rvin, Schoendienst, Furillo, Kluszewski, Frank) on the field in the junior circuit and isn’t likely | 29-21-22-23, making him western 444 j JAPA ARS a" $f é é A, SZ, « :™ | Baumholtz, Hank Thompson, Jackie Robinson -and| to be caught. kingpin. Ist LI iN E Ist QUALITY | Richie Ashburn. They have been in front of him all _ f 8 ; season. In the games-won-and-lost section and the earned- Go ] f C li . W | Ralph Kiner also has a tough fight ‘ lead his | run department there is still a wild scramble. Robin 1nIc: B LACK ALLS ROAD KI NGS | league in home runs for the sevent! successive | Roberts should give the 30-games-won mark a brave ; time. He has Mathews Kluszewski, Campanella and | battle, and te hes a _ wood chance. Here Ss How e e ‘ @ Atlas oe a eee E ——aawm pace worn old teee | from your car—pay us list price for 3 new @ Porter-Cable |) ycck ot cent a eo TIRE | ReguiSuR ties |andpayfor Stree) x a — ) eeemmemnal | Socedmane (re size aor | __ 96020" _| tires’ — you get 4 new coon/vear DELUXE pee maric He already has oe ays 16.00 x 16 00" | 63.00* TIRES hi | marks this year — including the rT 84. _— e stan yesterday — . 5 5 * O DeWalt Sows | cree nal Sang) | [848218 9820" =a you pay nothing more: @ Shopsmit ee ewer i) en Zs 97.80" yer ~ 7.10 x15 ssn0 | _74:40°__ | © Goodyear DeLuxe Tires are on more new GLENN WING |p rious LEADERS 6.50 x se 07.00" | «80-25 cars than any other kind! | BATTING—Kuenn, 206. 60 x1 . 88.05 . . rome ner | Bort z arr 117.40" 51.95" @ More people ride on Goodyear Tires Five Moons Morb of temo BA |) HOMERENS sone, 9 ; 122.60" | than on any other kind! 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Cass—FE 5-6123 TERMS CAN BE ARRANCED FOR ALL WORK MASTER’S K-F SALES COOK’S SHELL SERVICE BURLEY MOTOR SALES RAY’S SHELL SERVICE BODWELL SALES & SERVICE 1675 Highland Road 3055 Highland Road, Milford 144 $. Center—MU 4-57 ie—D gton—Ox. F | RESTON E STORE OR 3-2791 MU 4-5085 Highlond, Mich. me + alae 8 ane erry Ferd . ROY C. PULVER CO. SMITH’S MOBILE SERVICE JEROME M AL 146 West Huron St. FEderal 2-9251 25 Pine St., FE 4-2505 ‘ Phone MU 4-6572, Highland, Mich. en's te te anal \ Ch heh ak hhaadada’ Waa aaa aaa aa. (AknAAAAAAAAAL LL LL LA TWENTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1953 ‘I Can’t Cry Now’... by Addie McElfresh wood and «7k. The garden tools were store. there, too, and the lawn mower, und Chris had ripped Katy Is Warned by Major; |x x2 ausiased +t411s sna] wou be sities, She Dashes Off in Terror CHAPTER VII Agnes Jerome wouldn’t have known the path through the woods + feeling that Dave was right, so right. Even if Agnes Jerome had known | Beside her, Major stirred, and a growl began deep in his barrel chest. . . Was there a movement, out there? There was, Katy knew, although she didn’t see it. Major’s back- bone seemed to rise, sharp-ridged, Freed Gl Heads for Girl in Tokyo was there! “Did she know about| about the short-cut to mailbox, | through his coat. She thought KY American the path, Katy?” Deputy Sheriff | which Katy doubted, she would not) «He's come back—the killer has eunt oy ee bina out of Red Dave Argus asked. have been familiar with! come back!” , Katy Elmo shook her head. “I don’t know. She might have t known, I suppose. “Of course she could have known the rough path to have risked it in the, darkness. Dave Argus was right, Katy rea- sored with herself. If Agnes had been followed, she would have had She ran through the house, to the front hall. Ted’s number. . . her mind groped for it as she snatched up the telephone. captivity, gave up his quick trip home to come to Tokyo to look for a pert Japanese girl who waved goodby when his outfit was shipped to Korea three years ago. CISCO KID Ted had said the killer might} “I came here to get married,” come back. After an eternity, she | Said Sgt. Robert E. Moats of Mor- realized what was happening. She | antown, W. Va. = was ing absolutely nothing but; Her name is Noriko Hamatsu, . a yeti THAT BRANCH a chance. . . but the killer had been waiting for her. He had come... and killed. Here. I'VE GOT TO BUILD UP MY RESISTANCE --~ TO SPIKE DUFFY'S LEFT HOOK waited. ... | 4 must have been!’’ it seem like you did it!” Then, “I won’t have it, Dave. You let Katy alone!” Dave Argus didn’t even bother to laugh, but there was a twinkle deep in his voice. ‘‘Come out of it, Ted. Nobody’s accusing Katy of anything.’’ “Of course not, Ted,” Katy tried to sound as if she believed it. Ted growled, ‘Just see that you don’t.’’ He felt for his pipe, found it on the mantel, leaned over to tap it on an andiron, and then _ tamped fresh tobacco into its fra- grant bowl, all very deliberately. When he finished he could say quietly, ‘‘Sorry, Argus. But I won’t see Katy pushed around.” It was 10:30 when the two men left together, Dave to ride with Ted as far as the highway where he had parked his own car when he stumbled in the dark along the path which he said Agnes Jerome had not taken. And, later, as she stared wide- eyed into the darkness of her bed- room, she had the uncomfortable Katy sat up in bed, suddenly | her own frightened breathing. No weak. The palms of her hands felt clammy-cold when she press- ed them to her face. ~~ “Where does that leave me?’ she thought frantically, almost wishing that she had taught crimi- nology or something ipstead of En- glish Lit ond Composition II and IV. Maybe then she would know if she were more suspect than ever despite Dave Argus’s assurances . . -Sometime, somehow, lulled by .the comforting rhythm of Ma- jor’s breathing on his rug beside her bed, she slept. Dawn was becoming mauve and pink and crimson out her east window when she awoke, as tired as if she had not slept at all. “Monday,” she thought, ‘and what a ghastly hour, Especially when you have nothing to do... no school to go to.”” That was what hurt so, of course. What she missed, next to Chris. She flung back the covers, swung her legs over the side of the bed. She frowned, Major wasn’t there, his thick coat tickling her bare feet. She pulled on her robe, found her slippers. It wasn’t like Major to leave her. She found the dog in the kitchen, sitting on his lean haunches at a window overlooking the stairway and the barn. He thumped the floor with a wary tail when she spoke his name. “What is it, Major?’ She went out to look out, too. The barn looked as it always did, only perhaps a little more sforiorn in the gray light of early morning, Through an open door —should that door be open? Per- haps, she thought. Ted might have forgotten to close it when he got the wood last night “live” sound of an open telephone line, no operator, nothing! ‘‘Major!’’ she cried then. ‘‘Major, come with me!” Halfway to town, with Major erect in the seat beside her and the road unrolling behind the car like a dirty gray ribbon from a runaway spool, she realied she could not go to Ted. Not looking like this! She was wearing her chille robe and scuffed bedroom slip- pers and no make-up but her terror. Going to Ted like this was impossible. Heavens! she thought, Mrs, Por- Moats said, ‘‘and I’m going to find her as soon as I get out of this hospital.” , Moats was exchanged at Pan- munjom a week ago. He was slated to be sent home from Inchon by ship but appealed to a chaplain who arranged the trip to Japan instead. Moats has sent letters and tele- her. He said they exchanged many letters before he was captured, but he got only one letter from her while a prisoner. He said he last saw her July 4, 1950. GRANDMA by Charlies Kuhn GEE, THANKS, YOUR HONOR!!! AN’ HERE'S ANOTHER Two BUCKS... IN CASE I CAN'T RESIST TH’ JUDGE /! —she could see the ricks of apple DONALD DUCK | pe re UNN NAME. \ | Lee OWw! WONDER WHY THEY teRUD’ PLUNKY CLANK i, SSAA AR \S en ‘ \N \ s\\ nA) SASS | BRIGHTEN your OUTLOOK}| Your Problem Enjoy good chewing Want to feel happier? Chew Wrigley’s Spearmint Gum! Cives you a nice little lift. Helps time pass pleasantly. No Matter What May Be A Quick Action WANT AD Can help: you solve it. | _ DIAL FE 2-818) Ask for the Want Ad Dept. ai ston le 3 cios® keep a package handy in purse or pocket WRIGLEY'S CHEWING GUM AG299 CTA =] Uae ss BOARDING HOUSE WHATS THIS . ful Aeoure A a me 26 Pe QUESTIONS !C MON, GET GOIN’/! GOOD HEANENS, PESO PAUL !P 15 THIS THE ONLY PICTURE 72 YOu GOT OF MY ROPE - " TWIRLING PERFORMANCE Z — DASH IT ALL / THIS 1S OUTRAGEOUS — IT MUST THAT'S HOW L FIGGERED, << MASOR /~ CONSIDERIN' ALL A MY TROUBLE AND p> EXPENSES, I KIN — eZ LET YOU HAVE THE NEGATIVE FER 8/00/ « | grams to the girl but hasn't located IS JUST RIGHT EEE O_o -ERN& BUSHA LL Fe, . By Carl Grubert ANO HIS TEETH ANO HAIR FROM COMING OUT / = rth of i > ; «As. - FEN Nis \ Sass Sk. SN \ PA oe DuOLey EVEN THOUGH L THINK I COULD GET TO UKE You! BY WA ~ ; Capr. 1953 by MEA Services, tas. T. Mt. Mag, U. & Pat Ot WELL WF STEVE TW : Wheat Showing Gains Today CHICAGO # — A strong burst} of buying at the start propelled | Corn. wheat up for gains which could | not entirely be maintained on the | board of trade today. Initial prices were ahead as much as 6 cents: when compared with Fridays close, which was be- fore farmers gave their emphatic endorsement to marketing quotas for the 1954 crop. In subsequent Local Markets Farmer to Consumer = 1 gee Trot ee ° 3 A quart euerwes 0 } Raopberries. quart shioonsies $0 reen pepper: oe .. pSoergggy Se 6 es eiieie eats -25 dozen ...... cone 50 a ok quart ..... ews 25 POP COCR ie science 1.50 String beans, quart ..... -20 Radis benes) 3... 10 3 for ....... ce eeceagee: 25 Carrots, bunch ......... 10 3 for ........ S00ROooG0r .25 bea yr DERCR ..ccccoes | reise bushel ........6. 2.00 Cabbage, head .......... 15 Pples, bus! woccecee 1.00 to 2.00 Celery. bunch Sib 60 KER & 18 Eggs, desen .....,....... 65, .70 and .75 Poppers. bushe) .......... 3 Flowers Carnations, dozen ....... ‘ 1.00 Geraniums, dozen ........ 1.00 Gladiolis, bunch ............. 35 and .50 dealings, wheat fell back, but still held fair-sized gains over Fridays finish. Other cereals, with the excep-| tion of soybeans, duplicated wheat’s action. Corn and oats had gains running to around a cent at the start. Once the weekend ac-| 3.50 cumulation of buying orders. was out of the way, however, these cereals fel) back. CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO ‘AP)—Opening grain: Wheat. Dec .. we 1:28 Bent oc occdes 1:91 Mar ...... 1.32 rae ecee Lae May... 1.35% | Mar ...00... 2.05 Soybeans May ......0. 2. Sept .. 46% Corn WOW) Giccesue 2414 Sept .ncoee ) 1474 a Jan ......506 2.84 se66° 1.367, Mar oes 246% Mar ......0. 141% May reas. 240M MAY ieeesss 1.44 Lard Oats Bept 13.35 BOM: veces 78'. Oct avewr aero Dec coocee «18% Nov .,... 11,35 | Mar cose .78'y Dec ; 11.25 | May .. vee «116 Jan 10.92 Ry Soybean Oil | Bept ......-...1.22 Oct 10.55 Foreign Exchange NEW YORK (AP) —Foreign exchange | rates follow ‘Great Britain in dollars, | others in cents) Canadian dollar in New York open Market 1 3.16 per cent premium or 101.184, U.8. cents unchanged Europe Great Britain :pound $2.815s unchanged; Great Britain 30 day futures 2.81 7/16. unchanged; Great Britain 60) day futures 2.81 3 16. unchanged; Great, Britain 90 day futures 280 15/16, un- | changed: Belgium franc: 2.00'4, un-, changed; France (franc) 285s of a! cent. up .00 1/16 of a cent: Holland) (guilder) 2634 unchanged; Italy (lira) | -16's of a cent, unchanged; Portugal | f(escudo) 3.50 unchanged. Sweden (krono: 19.35, unchanged: Switzerland | franc) ‘free: 23.34%. unchanged; Den-| mark (krone: 14.52, unchanged: | Latin America: Argentina ‘free, 7 24. unchanged; Brazil (free) 2.65, unchanged; Mexico 11 65, unchanged; viseensta | (bolivar) 30.03, unchanged. Lavatories Complete with eon oping chrome faucets. $24.50 value .. . $14.95. Slightly crate marred. MICHIGAN FLUORESCENT 393 Orchard Lake Ave. | | ee eee They wanted to see one of those ROY DPORRIS & SON. Realtors’ Hemes that's being shown. FE 4-1557, 752 W. Huron. ) 1-11.25 bu. | Tomatoes. | topped. No. 1. | 64.75: a Wholesale DETROIT PRODUCE DETROIT (UP)—Wholesale prices on the farmers public market: Fruits—Apples, Duchess, No. 1, 3.00- 350 bu.; McIntosh, No. 1, 4.00 bu.; Transparent, fancy, 4.50 bu.; No. 1, 3.00- bu. Canteloupes, fancy, 4.00 bu.; No. 1, 3-3.50 bu.: cherries, south, No. 1, 5.00-6.00 24-qt. case. Blackberries, No. 1, 7.25-8.00 16-qt. case. Blueberries, No. 1, 4.00-5.00 16-pt. case. fancy, 4.00-4.50 bu.; . 1, 3.25-3.78' bu. Plums, 5.40-5.00 42 bu. Water- $0-3.00 bu. .10-.90 doz. 1, 1.25-1.75 bu. .; No. 1, 2.00- green, flat. No. 1, green Roman, No. Vegetables: behs ; beets, rh bage 250 : jeans, 1.25- 145 bu.; beans, 1, 300 bu, beans, green, round, beans, wax, No. 1, Kentucky Wonder, ; beans, Lima, fancy, 4-450 bu. Cabbage, No ; cabbage. standard variety, 7 .25 bu.: cabbage, curly, No. 1, 125- 1.75 bu.: cabbage. red, No. 1, 125-2.50 bu: cabbage sprouts. No. 1, Carrots, No. 1, .55-.75 doz. behs.: carrots, topped, No. 1, 1-125 bu. carrots, No. 1, .55-.75 doz. bchs.; carrots, ores, Bg 1, 1,50-2.00 bu. Cauliflower, VV, 2.00-2.50 doz. Celery, No. 1, 2.50- celery, No. 1, 1.00 doz. bchs. Corn, sweet, No, 1 1.35-1.75 5-doz. Cucumbers, slicers, No. 1, cucumbers, dill size. No cucumbers, pickle size, No. 1, Dill, No 1, .75-1.00 doz. bchs Eggplant, No. 1, 2.50-3 bu; eggplant, long ty No. 1, 2.00-2.50 bu. Kohirabi, No. 1, .75- 125 dog. bcehs. No. 1 25-1.75 doz. bchs Okra. basket. Onions, lb onions, behs.: 1, 70-.90 doz. behs. 1, 2.50-300 bu ppers. 2-2.25 pk. basket: peppers, 150-2 bu.: peppers. pimento, ', bu.: peppers, sweet, Potatoes. new, No potatoes, No radishes., white, No 1, AH 2.25-2.75 bu.; 2.00 ‘2 | behs. Squash. butternut, squash, delicious, No. 1, squash, Italian, fancy, squash. summer. No. 1. hothouse. No 14-lb. basket: tomatoes. No 1.75 pk. basket. Turnip. fanc behs.: No. 1, .90-1.25 doz. be 1.50-1.75 bu. Cabbage. No 1, 1.00-1.25 bu. 1, .75-1.25 bu. Kale, No. 1, Mustard, No. 1. .75-1.00 1.50-2.00 bu. sorrel, Swiss chard, No 1, .75-1.00 , turnip, Greens collard, No 1.00-1.50 bu. spinach. No. 1 1, 1.25-1.50 bu 1, 1.00-1.25 bu. Turnip, No. celery cab- Lettuce and —_ greens: 1, 50 endive. No bu.; 1.00-1 25° bu.: endive. bleeched, 2-2.75 bu. Escarole, No. 1, -1.00- escarole. bleeched. No. 1. 3.00 bu. Lettuce, butter, No 1. - lettuce. head. fancy, 5-6.00 3-doz.; . 400-475 3 doz.; lettuce, head. No .. lettuce, leaf, No. 1, Romaine, No. 1, 1 50-2.00 19.00-20 00 30-07 case small 15 50-16 00 No 1 125 bu.; Large. medium, 17.00-18.00; CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO—(‘AP)—Butter steady, re- ceipts 1,037,121: wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 63; 92 A. 90 B, 62; 89 C, 57.5; cars 90 B. 39 Cc 38 ards dirtées 28.5; cheeks DETROIT EGGS FSMN DETROIT ‘AP — | 8) — Prices takes into consideration size of loan, repayment amounts and date most convenient ‘for you: Friendly, neighborly service makes you feel right at home. Tide-over loans made cheerfully. Phone first for extra- fast service. Write or come in today. Provident Loan and Savings Society Get $25 to $500. on Signature Furniture or Auto @ Men and women — married or single — get a prompt “Why Cer- tainly” to their loan uest at Provident Loan. They will find here that every effort is made to fit all details of their loan to their indi- vidual needs. The friendly manager ayment il, system | of Detroit 2nd Fl., Lawrence Bidg. 7 WEST LAWRENCE ST., PONTIAC .- FEderal 2-9249 leans made te residents of al! surrounding tewns BIG TELEVISION SALE! See Generous Jim! HOMPTON’S Gaigh J. Austin ? Austin-Norvell Insurance Agency, Inc. 70 W. Lawrence St. Corner Cass FE 2- 286 State St. FE 4-2525 Open ‘ti! »v P M Exe Sat Masterpiece Moderne? PERHAPS . but very likely yOur stove and refrigerator are worth much more! Count up the dollars invested in furniture, clothing. If disaster strikes, your present insurance cover this value? Let’s make sure NOW. you've rugs, will 9221 Norvell Ralph T. ' | it tl ee se cei oe dl Mart Is Mixed, Mostly Lower NEW YORK wW— The Stock |Market was mixed today with a | a Admiral . 26.5 Kresge 88 .... 33.5 Alleg L Stl .. 32.6 Lag Glass . oe Allied Ch ... 684 Lib McN & Allied Strs 38.7 Ligg & My Sone 2 Allis Chal 47.1 Lockh Airc . 22.3 Alum Ltd 48.1 Loew's ....... 12.4 Alum Co Am 522 Lone 8 Cem ., 294 Am. Ailirlin 13.5 Martin GI .... 13.6 Am, Can 35.2 May D Btr - 30.1 Am’ C & Fdy 36 Mid Cont Pet.. 61.2 Am Cyan . 48.3 Mid] Stl Pd... 39 Am Gas & E] 305 Monsan Ch ... 86 Am ° . 15.2 Mont Ward ... 59.1 Am M @& Fdy 23 Mot Wheel... 24 Am N Gas... 35 Motorola o:- 0.5 Am Rad . 13.7 Mueller Br .... 25.4 Am Smelt 31.1 Nash Kelv .... 19.5 Am Stl Fd 32.1 Nat Bise ...... 33.4 Am Te) & Tel _—" Nat Cash R .. 55.3 Am Tob Nat Dairy . 62.6 Anac Cop 32.1 Nat Lead ..... 32.7 Armour 10.2 Nat Stl . 45.2 Atchison 946 Nat Thea ..... 6.7! Atl Refin 29.3 N Central ... 24 Avoc Mig . 6.7 Nia M Pw .... 27 Bald Lima 9.5 Norf & West.. “ Balt & Ohio 25 N Am Av ..... 175 Benguet. a1 Nor gue sa . ‘\ Nor Sta Pw... 13.2 Beth Stl - 51.2 Northw Airl... 121 Boeing Airp .. 40° Ohio O11 .. 57.1 Bond Strs - 143 packard 4.7 Borden 56.3 Pan Am W Air 76 Borg Warn . 706 B Param Pict.... 83 Brine My ak Parke Dav ... 14.2 Budd Co 133 geet He) +d Calum & H., 8 Pepsi Cola Con Dry 12 Phelps D . ; Cdn Pac 35.4 Phileo ....... 33 | Case (J 1) 17.3 Philip Mor 54.1 Cater Trac 52 Phill Pet 55 Celanese . 25.2 @it Plate Gl 50 Ches & Ohio 37.2 Proct Gam 64 Chrysler 69.4. Pullman: ..... 30.4 Cities Svc - 82.7 Pure Oi) .... 50.1 Climax Mo 39.7 RKO Pie ., 3. Cluett Pea 31.6 Radio Cp o. 28.1 Coca Cola 111 Rem Rand 15.5 | Col Gas . 13.6 Reo Motors .. 18.1 Con Edis 40.2 Repub 8tl 49,2 Con G-E 25.5 Reyn Met 50.6 Consum Pw 38.2 Rey Tob B 471 Cont Can 55.2 St. Jos Lead 36.4 | Cont Mot 8.7 Scovill Mf 29.3 Cont Oil 566 Seab Al RR .. 42.4 | Corn Pd .,... 73.2 ars Roeb 59 Curtiss Wr 7.4 Shell Ot) 15.6 Det Edis . _ 274 Simmons , 30 Doug Airc 66.6 Sinclair Oil .. 37 Dow Chem 36.3 Socony Vac... 35 DuPont 102.4 Sou Pee ....: 44.1 East Air L 24.1 Goa RY: cass 445 Eastm Kod ... 427 Sparks W . §.7 E] Auto L 436 Sperry ....... 42 ‘El & “Mus 1p 16 Std Brand ... 284 Emer Rad 12.3 8td Oil Calif 54.2 2 Std Oi) Ind .. 72.7 Erie RR 20 | Pireatone $92 Std Oil NJ .. 73.4 | Freept Sul 45 8td Oi] Ohio . 362 P . Studebaker ... 29.2 Gen Elec 6 {kB Gen Fds 552 Suth Pap .... 27.5 Gen Mot $81 Swift & Co... 39.1 G " Ry 8 oe 8 Sylv El Pd’.. 33.4 es xi re Texas Co ... $6.4 + of. t ee Gen T & Rud 288 qThomp Pda |. 802 Gillette --- 4 Timk Det Ax 22.2 Goebel Br . 7.6 mk R Bear 403 Goodrich 67.6 Tran W Air . 161 Goodyear 49.2 Transamer ... 27.2 ie ree . 15 Twent C Fox 17.6 | paid per dozen F.O.B. Detrott for case Greyhound " ate Un Gafmide'!: as lots of federal-state graded eggs Gulf Oil 478 Un Pac 107 Whites—grade A jumbo 72-74. wtd Hersh Choe’... 402 Unit Air Lin, 261 avg 72's: large 65-68, wtd avg 67; | 0) a te ee ee ee and F 2 144 Unit Aire ,, 284 medium 58-59, wtd ave 58: smal) 45:5! bo ae United C 4 B large 60-62, wtd avg 60'2 petra 33: cher von 36.4 Unit Pri Me 54.1 Browns—grade A jumbo 70-72, wtd an er Bl... . 58 Un Gas imi 333 | avg 71: large 65-66. wtd avg 65". med- oud Hersh ., 141 US Lines .... 205 jum 56-68, wtd avg 57. small 42-45, wtd | Hud Mot . 14 Os Rub 26.5 avg 43%; grade B large 59; grade C_ Inland 8:1 39.6 Gs Bterl |... 373 | large 40: peewees 33 Interik Ir .... 16.7 FQ wo ‘ott g + P ' Int Harv 1 US Tob 18.7 | Checks—39. Int Nick ay.) Watn B Pic . 141 | Int Paper . " $32 W Va Pulp 82 Int Tel & Tel 13.27 West.Un Te! . 47 nt Te e 2! Weste A Brk 255 Johns Man 616 Westg £! 46 Kelsey Hay 18 27 ’ White Mot al hl Hy 5 Woolworth 451 . Youn : W 27 Yngst Sh& T 391 oe ‘ STOCK AVERAGES NEW YORK—Compiled by the Asso- | | tendency to slide a little lower. Most changes in prices were in the smaller fractions. Trading was only moderately active. The market started narrowly mixed. As trading picked up, how- ever, more and more minus signs dotted the tape. Most railroads, steels, motors, and chemicals were lower. Plenty of plus signs were in evidence, but they weren't concentrated enough to pull the list ahead in any signi- ficant section. Chrysler was on the tape with a block of 4,000 shares for cash up 144 at 70% followed by another block of 4,000 shares regular way | up % at 69%. Lower stocks included New York Central, Baltimore & Ohio, Bethle- hem Steel, Studebaker, Kennecott Copper, American Cyanamid, Du- Pont and Philco. New York Stocks Figures after decimal points are eighths | Clated Press. RAYMOND M. FOLEY Opening of offices where he will act as consultant and Washington representative in housing and re- lated matters is announced at { Washington by Raymond M. Foley, former commissioner of the Fed- eral Housing Administration. Foley formerly resided in Pontiac. :/ Mossadegh Plans to Set Up Regency (Continued From Page One) Fatemi and former Parliament Speaker Abdulla Moazammi might comprise the regency council, with | the possible addition of others. Mossadegh seemed firmly in con- trol of the situation. | All opposition deputies were ar- rested during the weekend, in- | cluding Dr. Mozaffar Baghai, a | prominent opposition leader and a main witness of the murder of Tehran Police Chief Brig. Gen. Mahmud Afshartous last April. } | | American Point Four estdblish- | | | | ments were closed in fear of possible attacks on them by demonstrators. Mossadegh was reported con- | sidering an order to put an end) to all U. S. activities in | short of severing diplomatic re- | lations. The general belief was at 7 | least all Point Four aid activities | would be closed down perma- | nently. | Pictures of the young ruler and | his queen were torn down all over the country. Shops displaying royal | portraits were smashed by crowds : | demanding ‘‘Death to this traitor.”’ | News in Brief Lyle Lynn, 19, of 3080 Cass Ave. and Frank Baker, 18, same ad- dress, pleaded not guilty before Municipal Court Judge Maurice E. Finnegan Saturday on charges of unlawfully driving away an auto- mobile. They failed to furnish $1,000 bond and are in Oakland County Jail waiting hearing in Cir- cuit Court .Aug. 19. The theft of $120 from his apart- ment was reported to Pontiac Po- lice Saturday by Thamus Roberts ‘of 90 Oakland Ave. if your friend’s in jail and needs bail, Ph. OR 3-7110 C. A. Mitchell. Liturgical Conference Opens in Grand Rapids | | GRAND RAPIDS (UP) — The | National Liturgical Conference of ' the Catholic Church opened here today. The most Rev. William T. Mul- | | when they reveal a human touch. | 30 15, 15 60 | : ~—— Indust. Rails Uull, Stocks | loy. bishop of the Covington, Ky., Net change .,... - , - — 2! dj ; * secs ae “1407 866 ‘341 1p87| diocese, is president of the con Previous day 140 85.6 543 108.8) ference and presided at opening Jeek ago.......1409 867 538 109.0 Month ago......1383 868 524 1075, 4¥ meetings. is = REO. «sees 141.2 2.8 $3.0 107.2 | Bishop Joseph H. Albers of the h Mylceeeasc ke : 39. 116.3) * a = 1983 low cere. 138.2 827 503 1043) Lansing diowese will conduct a igh..t....1509 948 548 1157) mass at the civic auditori 1952 low.. ...,..131.2 66.7 507 97.0! : pone wonlleasi : which will close the conference DETROIT STOCKS | Thursday night. W. H. Protiva Co Figures after decimal points a eig toh igh Low Noon | Baldwin Rubber... 2 122 “AFL. ITU Hears Talk ‘i avigation ... ° 9 93 Gerity-Michigan 00. 37003733 by CIO President Reuther Masco Screw Souoco Sf 33 33 DETROIT (® — The AFL Inter- } st 4 ABCD bs 4 4 . . Tot ’ Rudy Mien tttts 3 $$$ national =Typographical Union's Wayne Screw * 15 16 95th convention returned to busi- *"No sale: bid and asked Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT. ‘AP)—(USDA)—Hogs — Sal- able 100. Barrows and gilts 160-240 Ibs | mostly 25 cents higher, not established on heavier weights: sows 25-50 cents ' higher: bulk 180-240 Ibs 24.75-25.50 several lots choice 1 and 2 200-220 lbs twenty seven head choice 1's 210 26.00: most 160-175 Ibs. 23.75-24.25; sows under 350 Ibs 21-75-22 25: 330-501 Ibs. 1925-2100; over 500 lbs | 18.00-19.25 | and commercial bulls 14 00-16 00: ——._..__ Cattie—Salable 2.300 market moderate- Ivy active. generally steady: bulk high good to prime fed steers and vearlings 24.00-27.00. mumerous lots prime fed steers 26 50-27 00 average and good short sales utility and low commercial grass- ers 11.50-17.00: most utility and com- mercial cows’ 1100-1350: canners cutters mostiv 9.00-11.50: bulk utility several lots good and choice stock calves and yearlings 19.00-21 00 Calves—Salable 400 Active top $1.00 higher: bulk high good choice vealers 2400-2800, most individuals 2900, practical top cial and low good 16.00-23.00 utility 10.00-15 01 Sheep—Salable 500 About steady with last Thursday: several lots mostly choice and prime 88-103 Ib native spring lambs uate a cull to choice slaughter ewes and commer- CRICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (‘AP)—Salable hogs 7.500: fairly active. generally Steady to strong on butchers and sows: most choice 190- 280 lbs $25.00-25 50: 160-180 lbs $22,50-25.00: a few 290-330 Ibs $23.75-24.75: most sows 400 Ibs and lighter $21.00-23.5@: bulk 400-600 ibs $19.00-21.50; good clearance Salable cattle 18.000; salable calves 700: Sloughter steers and yearlings mostly steady to 25 higher: steers below aver- age good slow: heifers steady to 25 high- er; cows steady; bulls steady to 25 Righ- er; vealers about steady: choice and prime steers and yearlings $24.00-26 25; few loads prime $26.50-27.25: good to low choice $20-23.50: commercial down to $16.01: choice and prime heifers $22.50- 25.75; commercial to low choice $14.50- 22.00: utility and commercial! cows $81.25- 14.50: canners and cutters $9.25-11.00; utility and commercial bulls $12.50- 16.00: commercial to prime vealers $16.00. | 24.00: culls down to $10.00 Salable sheep 2.000: native lambs scarce, steady: good offerings $22.00-24.00: latter prime top: receipts mostly vearling wethers. market notestablished on this class. sheep slow steady, slaughtes ewes 6440-624 slaughter commercial | fed and grassy steers | very uneven. few sales 18.00-22.00: early | and! strong, | prime | cull and | a few $25.60: most) to choice | ness today after taking Sunday | oft to enjoy the town. Delegates reassembled at Mas- onic Temple to hear a speech by CIO president Walter Reuther. AFL president George Meany, | who was to have shared the plat- {form with Reuther, | talk, He wired from Chicago that “press of union business’ forced him to stay in that city. The AFL's top executives have been in important session in Chicago. CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO ‘AP: — Potatoes arrivals 272: on track 277: total U.8. shipments Friday 540. Saturday 282 and Sunday 15. supplies light. demand moderate, market for best reds steady, white weaker; California Long Whites 3.10: Idaho-Ore- gon Long Whites $3.00-3.25 Round Reds $3.25: Russets $3.60: Washington Long Whites $3.00-3.15. Russets $3.50- , 3.60. Washington Round Reds washed $2.15-2.35 | DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (‘AP)i—Live poultry prices | paid per pound f.0.b. Detroit for No. 1 ‘ quality up to 10 a.m. | Heavy hens 26-27; light type 23-24; heavy broilers or fryers, mixed sized 31- 33; caponettes 35-36: nag hen turkeys 35-40; young tom turkeys 36; small type tincludes Beltsville Whites) tom turkeys 40. hens and . CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO ‘AP)—Live poultry: Steady on young stock. about steady on hens. Receipts 1.578 coops; f.o.b. paying prices unchanged to 1 cent a pound higher; heavy hens 24-26: light hens 22-24; fryers or broilers 33-34; roosters 18-20; ducklings 25 Deaths Last Night LOS ANGELES ‘AP)—Michael Gore, 77 movie industry pioneer and founder of the Pox West Coast chain of theaters BOSTON—Bradford C. Colcord, 56. @ | director of the National Association of | | Manufacturers ATHOL, Mass —Army Capt | Cloutman, 33. tamed for capturing 1.800 | Germans during World War II to have died a prisoner of the Commu- nists In Korea LOUISVILLE. Ky — Edwin Ideler i gil roy of the Louisville Orchegira end widely Knows ip miusis circles. cancelled his | , dent the new company. Harry | Fe n, chairman of the Fer-| guson organization, would be Rodney F Reported | were 6.2 |pounds heavier than their elder | 60. brothers were at 13 in 1945 says |most part, men who were tested Executives Are Really Human Says Press Agents Are Wrong to Show Bosses as Infallible By MERRYLE 8. RUKEYSER Business would enhance its pop- ularity as an American institution if public relations manipulators would cease and desist from the effort to portray management as perfect. To err is human, and top exec- utives would seem less like ogres to the man on the street if they admitted an occasional slip. In its application to contempor- ary big business, two true life incidents may help to clarify what I have in mind. While the late Edward R., Stet- tinius Jr., was still chairman of the United States Steel Corpora- tion, he told me that Bethlehem Steel had snatched an order from one of the former’s regwar cus- tomers in Rockefeller Center. He asked me to keep the infor- mation confidential. I did so, though I pointed out my dissent from his thinking. It Was my view then and now that it would improve the climate of public opinion toward bigness in business if the public heard of the leaders’ occasional misses as well as of their hits and successes. Episode Two: Meat packing, ever since the time of Upton Sinclair’s critical novel entitied “The Jdungie” early in the cen- tury, has been regarded by the uninformed as a monopolistic and profiteering industry. The record, however, shows that meat packing is low on the list of industries in respect to, per- centage of profit on sales, The ng is meager as compared with automobile industry, for example. ' The portrait of management in- fallibility which rporate press agents strive after tends to make the executive icially austere and machine-like. Executives would rise in prestige if the public knew. them as they are — for the on the way up in competition with many others. It seems to me that men rise in stature as well as likeability Theodore Roosevelt was wide- ly heralded as the hero of San Juan Hill in Puerto Rico dur: ing the Spanish American War, _ In an intimate talk at the Har- vard Club im New York City dur- ing World War I, T. R. said: “Certainly I led my men up San duan Hill, but I don’t mind tell- ing you I was plenty scared.” There was sound and patriotic psychology behind T.R.’s confes- sion. It helped young men fighting in the new war not to despise them- selves if they too felt a touch of fear at some critical time. Believeing that economics is something for our everyday hum- drum existence, Alfred R. Oxen- feldt, City College economist, has written a non-technical book en- titled ‘‘Economics for the Citizen."’ Professor Oxenfeldt, in connect- ing forced wage increases with price inflation, says that this does not occur if productivity rises as rapidly as wages. The author, it seems to me, here concedes too much to fallacious intellectual op- ponents. Forecast Michigan’ 5 53 Fruit Production LANSING (® — Michigan's crop of apples, pears, grapes and. red cherries is expected to be above last year, the Federal-State Crop Reporting Service said today. Production of peaches, plums and sweet cherries were expected to fall below last year. The service said that the apple crop is expected to total 8,094, 000 bushels, 47 per cent more than last year’s short crop, but 10 per cent less than the bumper 1951 crop. The service forecast the pear crop at 1,092,000 bushels, this would be five per cent more than last year and 98 per cent more than the 1942-51 average. A grape crop of 43,000 tons. nine per cent more than last year and 36 per cent more than the 1942-51 average. is in_ prospect, the service said. Implement Companies Reveal Merger Plans NEW YORK \# — Massey-Harris Co. Ltd and Harry Ferguson Inc.. makers of farm implements and tractors, have announced plans to merge. A joint statement, yesterday, said directors of the firms have agreed to the amalgamation, creating the new company of Massey-Harris- Ferguson Ltd. The agreement is subject to stockholders’ approval. The merger would pool five farm equipment plants in this country, four in Canada, and others in Great Britain, South Africa, France and Germany. James S. Duncan, now president of Massey-Harris, would be presi-|' chairman of the board. Boys of 13 in Glasgow, Scotland. inches taller and 2.65 1 &@ recent health report. ys THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST“17, 1953 TWENTY- ‘FIVE 20 ee Billion Detters 1S ~ ; : — 10 "SALES. "¢ rer ie at 5 . - pigs ix. 1939 41 4S SONS SSS CHEMICALS UP — Above Newschart shows how sales of chemicals have risen in the U.S. from 1939 to the present. Start- ing with a low of about $4 bil- lion in 1939, sales rose steadily | | only leveling off in 1952. It is! Hunger Forces AWOL Monkeys to Return Home DETROIT (UP) — Six monkeys who went AOL for the second time from the Detroit Zoo Sunday were back in ‘‘maximum security” cells today. After discovering that bananas don't grow on trees in this part of the world, the frisky fugitives returned to ‘‘Monkey Island’’ where meals are a bit more regular. Until they got hungry the mon- keys had an enjoyable day in tree tops and on building roofs to the amusement of thousands of zoo visitors. Zoo director Frank McInnis said the AWOL monkeys had escaped for the last time. “We've got them in cages now estimated that ‘he 1953 figure will! and we'll probably sell them to approach the $19 billion mark, high point for the period. e Dies of Heart Attack GRAND RAPIDS (UP) — Cor- nelius A. Hendricks, 51-year-old vice president of Applied Arts Corporation, died Sunday of a heart attack at his home here. | animal dealers or some other zoo.’ 'MOMS Meet Aug. 26 ORTONVILLE — MOMS Unit 14 has announced the postpone- ment of its meeting today to Aug. 25. The meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Stanley Solley of Oak Hill Road. Ontario Crash Kills | Royal Oak Woman ROYAL OAK — A Royal Oak woman was killed yesterday in a car-truck accident north of Alvth- ston, Ont. She was Mrs. Grant White, 20, of 3610 Linwood St. Provincial police said a car driv- en by Mrs. White’s husband ‘col- lided with a truck parked at the side of a highway. White suffered leg fractures and other injuries. Service for Mrs. Wanda Ruth ‘White will be 11 a.m. Wednes- day from Kinsey Funeral Heme in Royal Oak with burial in Oakview Cemetery, Detroit, Surviving besides her husband are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter. H. Harris of Royal Oak Township; two sisters, Linda and . Jessica at home; and a grandfath- er, John Harris in Tennessee. Mrs. Harris was formerly em- ployed at the Birmingham National Bank and at the Wayne-Oakland Bank in Clawson. About 70 per cent of the milk produced in the U. S. is used for the manufacture of various dairy products. Death Notices ee i i BRADDEE, AUGUST 16, 1953. ED- gar W.; Port Elizabeth. South Africa; age 55; beloved husband of Mrs. Violet Braddee; dear father. of Mrs. Wilson Harbage; dear son of Mrs. Marie Braddee, dear brother of Mrs. Ruth Reuscher, Mrs. Clara Stevenson and Mrs. Edith Gales. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, Au- t the Donelson-Johns e at 2:30 p. m. Cre- mation in White Chapel Ceme- tery. Funeral arrangements by the Donelson-Johns Puneral Home. HOLSWORTH, AUGUST 15. Gerald J.; 299 Auburn Avenue; age 5; beloved son of George T. and Norma J. Holsworth; dear brother of George Jr. and Sharon Holsworth. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, August 18, at the Wesleyan Methodist Church at 2 p. m. with Rev. C. D. Friess officiating. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Funeral ar- Yangements by the Pursley Fu- neral Home. where Gerald Holsworth will lie in state. LEACH, AUGUST 17. 1953, MARY Jane; 765 Alberta Blvd.; age 91; beloved aunt of George Morris, Howard, Nicholis Albers. and Walker Retan Morris. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, August 19 at the Huntoon Funeral Home at 1:30 p. m. with Rev. Andrew Creswell officiating. In- terment in Perry Mt. Park .Ceme- tery. Mrs. Leach will lie in state at the Huntoon Funeral] Home PERKINS, AUGUST 3, 1953, HAL- lie; 76 Longfellow Street; age 57: loved mother of David Perkins r.; dear sister of Mrs. Unica Livingston. Funeral service will be held Wednesday. August 19 at the Meeks Mortuary, Muncie, In- diana at 10 a. m. Interment in Elm Ridge. Muncie, Indiana. Mrs. Perkins has been taken to the Meeks Mortuary, Muncie, Indiana for service and burial. Arrange- ments by the Voorhees-Siple Fu- nera] Home. PAPPAS, AUGUST 21130 Seminole, 67; beloved husband of Hattie Pappas. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, August 19 at the Thayer Funeral) Home. Parmington, at 2 p. m. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Gar- dens. Gus Pappas will lie in state 1953, 16, 1953. Southfield; GUS; age Mrs. at the Thayer Funeral Home, Farmington, . Michigan. SCHAEFFER, ~ AUGUST 15, 1952, John M.; 1191 Parkway 8t.; age 54; beloved husband of Mrs. Gladys Ethel Schaeffer: dear father of Richard Schaeffer, Mrs Margaret L: nm. Mrs. Virginia Reiche and Mam Schaeffer: dear brother; of’ Charles, Robert and Clyde awe Funeral service wil) held Tuesday, August 18 ri the Melvin A. Schutt Puneral Home at 2 p. m. with Rev. Franklin A. McAllister Offjclating. Interment in Rose- land Park Cemetery. Mrs. Schaef- fer will le in state at the Mel- Vin A. Schutt Funeral Home. SY KES. AUGUST 14 1953, WIL- liam M.; 145 South Boulevard; age 65; beloved father of Suzanne Sykes. Funeral service wil) be held Tuesday at St. Johns M E. Church at 2 p. m._ with Rev Donald Morris and Rev Ford B Reed officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. William M Sykes will lie in state at the Wii- liam F. Davis Funeral Home ‘this _ Afternoon In Memoriam 1 PPB III II III IR nn ne IN LOVING MEMORY oF Dear Son and brother Russel! Sut ine ~assed away August 16, Gone is the face we loved so Dear Silent is the OCice we loved to hear, Too far away for sight or speech, But not too far for thought to reach’ Sadly missed by Mom. Dad, sisters and brothers Floris? s- Flowers 3 Or FLORISTS—FLOWERS 123 AUBURN ___ PE 2-3173 _ Ambulance ‘Service 3-A HUNTOON ~ Ambulance Service FE 2-0189 19 Oakland Ave. The Pontiac Daity Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to § p.m. All errors shoulo oe re- ported immediately Ibe Dally Press assumes oo re- sponsibility tor errors other than to cance) the charges for that oortion of the first tnaertion o!] the advertise- ment which nas been ren- Gered valué@less through the error When cancellations are made be sure to get your “kill numbers” WNo adjustments qil) be «given without {t Closing’ time vertisements con taining type sizes larger than reg- ular agate type te 12 o'clock acon the dav orevinus to oublieation Transient Want Ads may be cancelled up to 9°30 the day of oublication CASH WAN’ AD RATES for ada- Lines 1 Day 3 Davs & Days 2 $) 25 $1 68 $2.52 3 125 2.43 3.60 4 160 3.12 4.56 6 > 00 360, 540 6 240 4.32 6.48 1 2.80 5 04 156 LJ $20 6.75 8 64 ® 360 648 972 1e 4.00 720 8610.30 Birmingham Office Ph. Midwest | 4-0844 379 Hamilton Funeral Directors 4 Donelson-Johns PUNERAL HOME “DESIGNED FOR FUNERALS” Brace Funeral Home. Estab 1886 Distinguished Service Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service, Piane or Motor PE 2-8378 ___ Cemetery Lots 4A wNiTR OMAPEL, NEAR EN- trance 3 graves, $150, 6 for $290. Lincoln 2-2167, BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at the Daily Press office in the following boxes: 3, 4, 5, 8, 12, 14, 15, . 18, 23, 27, 31, 32, 33, 38, 52, 61, 69, 75, 78, 79, 83, 84, 88, 89, 90, 102, 104, 114. Wanted Male Help 5 Die Makers and Electricians Journeymen Only APPLY FISHER BODY DIVISION GENERAL MOTORS CORP. PONTIAC PLANT 900 BALDWIN AVE. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN ~ OPPORTUNITY — Representatives wanted for na- tionally known firm to place sure fire item in Pontiac homes. Lib- ra) commissions paid daily, Part time or full time. Wondertu) op- Spero for middle age end supplement income. See Gray between 2:30 and 3:00. Pa E Lawrence st FURNACE DUCT WORK, AND eavestroughing installers. Apply in pe~ on, 5904 Dixie Higway. SILK & WOOL SPOTTER FOR full time or part time work Ap- ply Pontiae Laundry & Dry Cleaners, 540 8. Telegraph Rd., near Orchard Lake Ave. . SHOE SALESMAN Thoroughly experiencea and in- terested in selling womens better fashion footware itn leading &p- pare) store. Permanent opening, work near home. G66d draw against top commission. week and péid v-ration Jacobson's. Maple at Birmingham M) 4-6900 ¢ EXPERIENCED MAN TO COM- pletely manage wholesale sport- ing Goods Store. Reply in detail, giving age, past experience, pres- ent employ nent and salary ex- pecte:. Al) replies confidential. Write Daily _Press_ Box 103. . MECHANIC WANTED is’ a@ «salaried job-as new car ‘Get-ready’’ man. Good work- ing conditions. including hospi- talization and paid vacation. Ap- ly Earl R. Milliman Co. 47 8 Saginaw Street. This SINGLE MAN FOR DAIRY AND general farming. 355 Letts Rd. 6's miles north of Rochester. - “ FOREIGN & DOMESTIC JOBS High pay to $14,000 fare paid. Alas- ‘a So Am. Etc. Stamped self addressed env brings reply. For- n Opportunities Code No 122 W: seca, Moon. . 7 PRINTER: OPENING FOR ALL- around print r; small daily col- \ece ci ¥ of .200-Plesant living conditions vood -hunting, fishing arca Work principally ads and makeup with 2 days on job prtg Mocern. « 1}! equipped shop. Con- tact Publisher. Times News, Mt Pleasast. Michigan RELIABLE MAN WITH CAR WTD. art or full time, to call on armers in Oakland County. Won- derfu' opportunity, .10 te $20 in ® Gay No experience or capital required. Permanent. Write today MCNESS COMPANY Dept A. Yreerport Ul! SHOE REPAIRMEN. CAPABLE OF manag. shot. Top wages, steady ea pieymest. Inquire 3108 Port m Keego Harbor — WANTED: A PRESS ROOM { FORE- man — a man who has spent most of his time in a stamping plan:. par 61 which was in “Al ervisory capac.ty. Age preferab 40-55 Good working condition, job- loying grayed ly 100 men Located thin driv- ing distarce o Fhiot. write Pon- ti ¢ Daily Press Box 1 ee ADVERTISING SPECIALTY MANUFACTURER . Needs seles ~epresentative ‘for re- markable uew exclusve process .or reproducing photographs on giass Complete .ines of special- ties, businesses gifts. calendars Prote-ted territory Earn $150 $200 per week or return line No sideline men. Norcra{t-West- ware, Inc., Cincinnati 9, Ohio. Is $210 A WEEK WORTH A POST- card to you? Then rush card for sp-cia’ FREE TRIAL PLAN that sells amazing new Automatic Re- frigerator Defroster ike ‘hot cakes!’ DeFROSTOMATIC. Dept 82-A, 177 W. Madison, Chicago CARPENTERS WANTED FOR trim. Inquire on job at corner bing shop em of Otlawa and Manitou. Wanted Male Help 5 Neat Appearing Young Man for DISPLAY ADVERTISING POSITION Experience not necessary but belpful, or tf you are bo map we want we will tra you. Write stating your qualifi- cations to Box ‘ontiac Daily Press. ; EXPERIENCED OIL L BURNER, stallation, and service man. Fawcett & Co. MI 4-6020. ‘ MECHANIC'S HELPER WTD. >. 3628 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FACTORY OPENING DIRECT P to service Oakland County live energetic salesman 25 or over with car. Excelient tunity for a closer Leads b a Zc those of other _fields. FE 44508 tor So SALESMAN To «ell glass and paint whole- sale. Call on established trade, hardware. ‘umber dealers, con- tractors € experienc nec- work desirable Pontiac, Salary Car —— 82 MYRA AVE ___ FEDERAL oe B , MUST BE_EX- rienced. Jenkins Auto Body, AUTO per __ 1304 8S. Woodward, Birm. SALESMEN Full and parttime Will train. Excellen' - camer in Pontiac's newest shoe salon. etn ane SHOES 50 N. SAGINAW ST, Attractive position for a middile- salesman witb ability to blic and take charge ales organization. Must furnish ‘eferences Cal! FE 68413 __for appointment PART-TIME MEN _ You can STILL RETAIN your dey-tine ‘ob, and earn $50 to $73 per week extra. Must be free from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., Mon. thru Fri. and have neat ap pearance. $1.50 per hr. guaran- teed. Call J. C. Chapman at the Waldron Hotel. Mon. only be- tween 12 m. and 5 p. m. LOOK MEN Xa salary povitica the year around, no layo paid vacation, hos- pital and life insurance benefits. No experience necessary we train you for the job. A chance to ac vance to manager to one of our stores Singer ewing Machine Co., 102 N Saginaw KITCHEN. HELP — Capable of becoming second cook. FE 5-8060. EXP BLOCK LAYERS, STEADY work. FE 5-3004 ROUTE SALESMAN Nationally: Known tood concern. ar furnirhed $300 per month starting s@lary. Give age, educa- = tional re€ord marital and military Boron phone number write Box A RARE SELLING OPPORTUNITY tor honest, Lard working man, 25 io 30 wit old wrogressive, highiy rated company Advancement for the right man Thorough training in field. Liberal Commission Car essential For personal interview. E 2-6889 between 7 and 8 pm “ TURRET LATHE OPERATORS ~ TOOLMAKERS Airway Products Ine, 4865 Highland Rd. (M-59) ~\E HAVE OPENING for neat appearing man to assist heating & air conditioning engi- meer Ng experience necessary, bu. wust be willing to work steadv for promotion. This is an ar oppo: ra for right man. N add WANTED EXPERIENCED BRICK- layers FE 5-3004 —— OPPORTUN ITY UNLIMITED! We need one experienced salesman to round out our eales force. Ideal working conditions including . hospitalt- zation and paid vacation yearly App at the Earl R Milliman Company, 147 South Saginaw Street. CARPENTERS WTD ROUGH & trim to work in Pontiac & Roch- ester area Must be good! OL- 2-753] after 5:30 p.m. MAN TC SERVICE SOFI WATER sorteners. Must be vareful driver ard econscientous! Salary per month plus honus Reference re- Guired Also man to regenerate water softening mineral No ex- snift $260. per month. Apply Michigan Water Softening _Srvice °58 Frank dt.. _ Birming- RECEIVING CLERK TYPING NEGRSARY. ere: OP. PORTUNITY & ORRIKG CONDS.. TOP RATE. DAY SHIFT PLANT LOCATED IN VICINITY EPLY WITH TIAC DAILY P2Ess Box 98. WTroD JOURNEYMEN eLectei: claps FE 5-843} GAS STATION ATTENDANT WITH mechanica)] ability I 48354 MAN FOR’ ESTIMATING IN small metal working plant who likes to work with figures afd enjoys detailed work owledge of higb school mathematics or higher will be age. work done. aducation end famite rite Box 105. Pontiac Daily EXPERIENCED WOOL PRESSER. Brown Cleaners 1794 W. Maple. Birm .MIdwest 4-2400. helpful Advise pay receiyed, Le] TWENTY-SIX - THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1953 Wanted Male Help 5} Wanted Female Help 6) Help Wanted == 7| Business Service 13 a WAITRESS WITH| ARE YOU A GOOD |™aux ay URRET CLUB OR ROAD- RECRUITER? _and Jaw statements, MM’ "4047. ‘T . | HOUSE EXPERIENCE, | Home, f tice, saleamanager will PLASTERING LATHE ae EEN mrs One management opt. wii SAWS, LAWNMOWERS APPLY. APPLY be filled in Pontiac this month. OPERATORS EERSON ON ee to recruit and. inapire be pie ‘and | MANLEY LEACH = 10 BAGLEY_ ER 5 P.M., N be Ma Fy ho BULLDOZING, FREE ESTIMATES. Set-up & Oper.| CALLS,” OLD MILL} brometln“tc'ate manseer. "Ae | LisB'or Peete OO FE Day and Aft. Good Pay—Overtime Steady Work Leading Engine 28829 Orchard Lk. Rd., Farmington MAytair 6-2581. . _ PAR ie yp MAN. MILLI- erty n’s 147 8. Saginaw St. OPPORTUNITY UNLIMITED! We need an_ experienced truck salesman to pl out ) BARBER APPRENTICE. Corner of Walton & _Perry 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. HAVE OPENING FOR 2 YX XOUNG Euese WTD. MECHANIC GOOD WORKER YEAR AROUND JOB Advantageous to @. M. Car ex- perience Jerome Motor Sales Co. 280 S. Saginaw. FE 4-3566. — MAN TO REPAIR VACUUM cleaners tp shop. Salary. No ex- Water. or po. PE 3238: ne” iad HARD WORK : BIG PAY Car necessary. Neat ap- pearance. Local area work. See Mr. Morse, 736 W. Huron, Tuesday, Aug. 18, at 10:30 a.m. or 2:30 p.m. PREFER MAN with y and liberal em- td fits. Write Daily Press x @ABINET MAKERS, EXPERIENC- ed preferred. — P. Bexell & Son, 2470 Dixie Hwy. fM TAKING “PPLICATIONS 1 FOR 2 men for routes opened Sept. 1st. To poante: 4 HB health, references and car, Mar- ried man preferred. $90 per week and e 3. Write Dally Press Box 102. _ _ I WILL TRIPLE YOUR LAST weeks paycheck for one days __Work, Interested, Call FE 45172. Opportunity Unlimited Truck salesman wanted. Highest commissions. Paid vacation, hos- ohana gg od at Earl R. Mu- an Co., 147 S. Saginaw St. WTD. YOUNG MAN BETWEEN 17 and 18 for general work, full time. Must apply in person. Prince Laundry Dry Clean- eis. 5 Glaspie Oxford, Mich. ROUTE MAN TO CALL ON 3,000 established customers, $100 to $150 Per week average $80 guaranteed f you qualify. Car and refer- 1AUTO SALESMAN WANTED. AG- gressive & ambitious salesman to sell the fast-moving Lincoln and Mercury line of cars. See Fred _ Foster at 40 W. Pike St. Die Makers Die Barbers DAY SHIFT, GOOD RATES, PLENTY OF OVERTIME, LONG PROGRAM. el working condition in modern ™“DEN-ARKi TOOL & DIE CO. 23311 TELEGRAPH RD. NEAR 9 MILE > MAN FOR LUBRICATION AND tire repair, Some mechanical ex- ae aa Night work. Apply 101 SALESMAN 25 TO 40, MUST HAVE previous sales experience. Exc. oppo: y. Permanent position. The Good Housekeeping Shop, sl Ww _W_ Huron. EXPERIENCED - WASHING MA- chine repair man. Steady work, top wages, vacation with pay. Must furnish references, Cal) FE _ ‘8413 for appointment. ~ Wanted Female Help 6 > TED'S Needs dining room waitresses, night shift. Must be 13. APPLY IN PERSON TED'S Woodward at Square Lake GIRL TO one FOR 1 old =e arents home 5 days a week e224 Monrovia, Drayton Pins. Call after 5, OR 3-8828. WANTED WOMEN FOR OFFICE work. Only those gesiring steady employment need apply. Pontiac Credit Bureau 333 N_ Perry CED FUR FINISHER BY large department store. good sal- ary, ideal working conditions, 40 br. week. PE 4-2511. WOMAN OR GIRL OVER 18 To assist with general housework on country estate in Oxford. Thurs. & Sundays off. good transporta- tion, must like children Refer- ences Write Box 83, Pontiac Press, for interview. OPPORTUNITY Represntatives wan for = tionally known firm to place fire item in Pontiac homes. Lib. eral commissions paid daily, Part opportinity for middle age group YR. to supplement income Bee Mr Slavens & 9:30 and 3:00. 23 wrence St. | EXPERIENCED ‘BEAUTY OPER- ator, part time or full time. rE or FE 47231. WOMAN WITH NURSING experience wanted for convales- cent home. MI 6-0864. ee STEAM PRESSER _ eins WOOL GARMENTS Ba de steady position. Ap- | py > D Cleaners. 143 W. SALES CLERKS, FULL AND PART pee Must be neat & ambitious. pn es and vacation if you rience in fine food will I Be. all for appointment Sa ap ea Markwood's ‘i Barn. 2700. On 4. 4 way pakcee Lake Orion & Oxford, ALTERAT'ON HAND, PREFER- ably one experienced tn coats & suits. Permanent opening, work heer home. pleasant working con- ditions, 3 day week. Apply Jacob- sors, Maple at Bates, Birming- ham, call Mrs. Peehan, MI 4- -6900. GE*“ERAL OFFICE CLERK, IN- teresting position with variety of duties. Typirg essential. 5 day wk, Great Lakes Tractor & Equip. Co 2100 E. Maple Rd. Birming- _ham MI 44700. ; renee ASEIST | Cpe “OF ¢c ren, meals and light ho work. OR 3-6294. oot Bouse GIRL SITE, EXTENSIVE BOOK- lo t & em men eharacter references. xf Starting salary 365 pe exc. rel for advancement A 4 uslified at 69 ayne sed 0 am. & 13 TAVERN HOTEL, 5838 DIXIE HWY., WATER- FORD. CLERK TYPIST, TIME, IN downtown offic: 44518 for appointment. Or apety 418 Com- munity Nat. Bank. CURB gare 18 OR OVER. AP- Red coe; and Toms, 00% e Ave. EXPERIENCED | SHORT - yey __.ook. White. Day shift. MI 49090 PART-TIME LA LADIES — If you are free from 6 p.m. to 9 Pp.m., Mon. thru, Fri., and have a meat appearance, we can train Zod you yen STILL RE Tr week. ere Mob. Pi 50 bh: aor e per hr. guar- aye ob J. C. Chapman at the Waldron Hotel. Mon, only between 12 m. and 5 _P.m. GIRL WANTED FOR GENERAL office work, typing esential, pay- roll and billing experience de- sirable. FE 44071. WANTED MIDDLEAGED WOMAN to do housework and care for children while mother works. Live _tm, Own room. MU 43601. WAITRESS oe 10 A.M. TO 6:30 p.m. Apply in person at 600 __ South Blvd. east ~ SALESWOMEN fo sel ladies ready to wear, van eae plus commission, vacations * day wk. Apply in wer Osmun's iCED WAITRESS. 20 years or older Day evening or night shit. Full or part time. Good pav and working conditions. Call PE 20135 after 8 a. m. GIRL TO RUN OFFICE, MUST be able to type and — books. Ortonville Tool and Milg. Co., Ortonville, Mich. _ WAITRESS WANTED, PART TIME 430 to 98:30, apply in person, Dixie Snack ry . 6738 Dixie Highway. MA 5-926 LADIES ed telephone work mes. Must have a aily Press. GENERAL HOUSEWORK. GOOD — in Birm Pvt. room & bath. Good salary MI 43470. UNDER GRADUATE & PRACTI- ca: nurses to register for pri- vate duty. 85 Auburn. SHORT-ORDER COOK, WAITRESS, nights, & kitchen help. Warren's ve-in, 4845 Dixie Hwy, WOMAN FOR LIGHT HOUSE- work & care of 3 children. OL __2-0100 after 4:30. TYPISTS, ADDRESS ENVELOP- es, compile lists. Spare, full time. Free details. ALLIED, Box 1149 A, Knoxville, Tennessee. MAID, COLORED OR WHITE. 30 to 45, ood cook. Light house- work. ery interesting opportu- nity. Other help. Must live in. Orchard Lake home. FE 17-9242. APPLY AT WAITRESS WANTED. 921 W. Bon breew MOTHER'S HELPER TO LIVE IN. Woodhull Lake Cottage until La- . Day. 4598 Hill Crest. Mrs. Yaffa. WAITRESS No aren - Sunday pp MACHUS 6 W. Maple, Birmingham RIENCED GIRL FOR _ Frestadran.. OR 3-9386 WTD. MIDDLEAGED WOMAN TO od = office work. Prefer living in —, of Webh ¢ Coal Co. Apply in Paddock. person. 351 8. WAITRESSES FULL TIME AND = time at Scribbs Drive In. pply in person, KITCHEN HELP pL ger ar ot vVecoming second cook. 5-8060. Sportswear Permanent selling position, better than average working hours, Sal- ary and commission paid weekly. Apply ARTHURS 48 N. Saginaw FoR DISTINCTIVE COPPER- eraft party plan in your area, selling range tes gifts of fine quality, Mrs. ecre 9 to ll a.m. Price Detroit, KE 4-0896 $60 EASY FROM XMAS CARDS! Sell only 80 EXCLUSIVE new $1.25 assortments. Make more money with Name-'mprinted Cards. 40 for $1 up; 200 other fast - sellers. Guarantee assures extra profits. Assortments on approval, Imprints FREE! CARDINAL State, Dept B-5, Cincinatti 14. DEMONSTRATORS — $25-$40 DAILY. ad lingerie, apparel style show- oiine are sensation of party plan Isabel Sharrow made $258 - il ‘aays sparetime! Free outfit. Beeline Fashions. 4145 H. L. Law- __Tence, Chicago 30 $100 MONTHLY FOR WEARING lovely dresses given to you as bonus. Just show Fashion Frocks to friends, No canvassing, invest- ment or experience necessary. Fyshion Froc pt. M-2736, Cin- cinnati, LADIES TO SHOW NYLON LIN- Bian 6 Children’s wear on Party 68 styles. Great Earnings e start you. THOGERSEN, il: mee Il. CHRISTMAS CARDS —- BIG CASH profits with wonder-value 2l-card Feature’ assortment — only $1— profit up to 50 cents. Also all parchment assortment and 40 other fast-sellers. Personals, Gifts, Samples on approval. WALLACE BROWN 15018-A, Grand River, _Detro.t 27, _ Michigan. CAB DRIVERS, FULL TIME. COM- pany paid insurance and hospi- _talization. 101 W. Huron. FANCY PRESSER ON LADIES arments. exp. preferred. Apply ox Dry Cleaners, 719 W. Huron. MIDDLE AGE WOMAN FOR light housework more home than wage... In country. Ph. OA 8-3240. ATTRACTIVE POSITION FOR well-groomed women, 25-45, who are not able to accept ordinary 8 to 5 fob. Car necessary. Re- putable company. NO COLLECT- ING OR DELIVERY. For ap- geal ty Phone M._ Green, FE 2713 Tuesday and Thursday be- fore noon BABY 5 SIZTING. STAY NIGHTS. _ FE_ 5-1143._ CURB» GIRLS | Night shift, Must be 18. Apply in TED'S Woodward at Square Lake Rd. WTD RELIABLE WHITE WOMAN. Housework and get boy 7 ready for school Live in 5 days a week OR 7-6300 after 4:00 GIRLS FOR CHECKING AND LIST- ing articles. Apply to Superinten- dent. Pontiac Laundry, 540 S8. Telegraph, nr. Orchard Lake Ave. WAITRESS, JACK & INA’S GRILL. 4668 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains. _ Plains. WOMEN OR GIRLS FOR TELE- phone work. Full or part time. Apply between 1 and 5. 7 W. Lawrence, Room 207. United _ Studio. __ WOMAN TO CARE FOR 3 SMALL children from August 17 to 21, while parents are away, refer- ences. FE 5-5549. WTD. MIDDLEAGED LA! LADY IY POR light housework-and ‘care of 3 _children. FE 2-582. 949 Boston, STENOGRAPHER Must be tops .n dictation & typin A’r-Way Products Inc. 4865 land R- -59 ae HOUSEWIVES-PONTIAC A AND SUR- roanding area -— Train now for fall rush. Sarah Coventry has few openings for Fashion Show “Di- rectors.” no Rm both or collecting, ear and one aecessary, if you can — 20 bro to cal TE and profitable wo 188 for appointment. or check stubs and write Pontiac Re a ee ‘epared to show us an asset to this 101-year-old company. MATCHES, SELL AMAZING DESIGNS! 20, 30, 40 and 240- light book matches. BIGGER CASH COMM.; Every busi- pore ® prospect. Repeats. Start erica, Dept. RF, Chicago 32. MAN OR WOMAN CHEP FOR country club. ery enclose ref- erences — Pontiac _Daily | 110 8. Mv isee PE A357TB COUPLE FOR DAIRY FARM, MAN must drive, voman to assist with __ housework, 4-6557. MEN AND WOMEN WANTED to be sold on credit, up to $150 r week. Apply Liberal nord, 6 North Saginaw . Instructions 8 ENROLL NOW FOR FALL, PIANO and accordion lessons in your by experienced teacher. 66. LEARN BARBERING! Write for free bulletin. Flint in- stitute of Barbering, 118% East _ Water St.. Flint, Mich. oie eee ee ELDERLY MAN WANTS PAINT- ing. Garages and small homes. _FE 56838. _ TRUCK DRIVER OR ANY OTHER kind of work. PE 5-1247. BULL “DOZING AND ALL TYPES of grading. Lincoln 1-1713. PAINTING AND DECORATING anywhere. 30 yrs. experience, guar, EM 3-8614 OUT OF (2) BOYS, 18, SCHOOL oo work of any kind. FE LAWN “WORK “AND HAND DIG- gn basement cleaning. lght ling FE 4-3284. YOUNG TERRES MAN WANTED year around steady job. Has driver and chauffeur license. Call _OR 3-0606__ FE_ 5-2765 3 KOREAN oo HONEST AND ; willing fesire any kind of work 3 Dp. mm. 6-8512 or FE FURNACE CLEANING-REPAIRING Let home owned company clean, repair your furnace, fireplace. a a Pipes installed etc FE P & B HOME SERVICE CO. WIN- _dow y & wall washing. ! PE 2-0515. ~ JOHN’S TRENCHING © Footings, water and septic and drain tile Hnes. PE 17-8643, SEPTIC’ TANKS, SOIL PIPE OR complete plumbing _Reas. rates. FE 5-2092, SUBURBAN SEPTIC TANK CLEAN- ers, Lake Orion. MY 2-2842. EXCAVATING, GRADING, BULL- dozing. road oldg. Ph FB 32-5422. FREE ESTIMATES ON NEW FUR- installing. naces, oil, coal, or gas conver- sions, repair and cleaning, OR 3-9593. ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN at our store. Genera) Printing & Office Supply Co.. 17 W. Law- tence St. Phone PE 3-0135. EAVESTROUGH _ — Ts. airs, cleaning. Novak Co. woves “RAISING, MOVING, Slock # orick w of all kinds. cement work 5-0424 ACB ASPHAL' Lag aed AND EX- Stan Pree, estimates op asphalt driveways. Parking @rea. Sand. gravel and fil) dirt. MY 2-162) MY %-3900. TRENCHING ting Tile CARTIER’S CONSTROCTION OR 37156 after 6 | FeasTERixa bD MEYERS. EM 3-8830 ACE TREE SERVICE. REMOVAL. Free est. FE 2-7188, OR 3-2304. EXPERT REFRIGERATION SERV- ice, all makes, reasonable. FE 23-1427. EXPERT TREE TRIMMING ¢ & e RE-, _moving. F FE 7- E7-6822, ~ STEAM | CLEANING Ali type am cleaning done. Ponting | Rall Industria] Trac- __tor _Co FE 4-0461; _FE 4-1442 Landscaping 113A SOD CUT EXTRA <;:0CK FOR ummer 14 sandy ground. No top soil needed. 40c yd. delivered. Comp'ete cera, gee ‘35 yrs. ex- rience. Whites Landscaping Co. PE 5-3140 ROTO TILLING Garden and lawn work. FE 2-563}. “ABINET MAKER & CARPENTER. Kitchens a specialty. FE 2-2532. Work Wanted Female 9A PABBA OOO ee NURSE DESIRES POSITION AS office nurse with M.D, 2% years experience as office — industrial nurse with X-ray and labratory. 5 years stenographic experience. Reply _Daily Press Box 26 WOMAN WANTS jronings done tn my home. Work guaranteed. FE 2-7775. _ SEWING, ALL KINDS, GOOD work guaranteed. FE 4-5232. MIMEOGRAPHING, EB baad themes, SEES NEES, secretari work. EM 3-51 IRONINGS OR “SMALL ” WASHINGS wanted. FE 4-0343 IRONINGS, , BABY ~ SITTING, FF 54520 5 COLORED WOMAN DESIRES “DAY work. $7 a day plus -fare. No Sundays. FE 4-7749 after 6 p. m. WTD, WASHINGS AND TRONINGS. FE 4-367 WaaeNG 7 AND IRONING PE 5-5988 ~ Laundry Service 11 = rT tania Pontiac Laundry, FE tice “CURTaINS, PLAIN OR 9 beautifully finished. _— aundry. Phone FE 2-810 Painting-Decorating 11A HOME DECORATING COMPANY specializing in removing wall- paper & painting os gta walls. No job too small oe or contact in person at wa __ basso, Walled Lake. WOMEN WANT WALL L WASHING, painting. OR J-2284. PAINTING AND DECORATING. Paper removed, free estimates. _ FE 4-6918. . PAPERING, PAINTING, WALL washing Paner removed. FE 2- __ 9192 FE 47790 ee WALLPAPERING AND PAINTING. Call for est. FE 4-0255. INTERIOR * EXTERIOR ‘PAINT- ing FE 17-6596. E 5-0242. PAINTING. INSIDE & OUT. FREE __estimates. FE 2-4137 Painting & Wall Washing Free Estimates Reas. FE 2- 2706 PAINTING, A-1 WORK, GUARAN- teed. FE 2- 4315 ee PAPERING. PAINTING. REF. FE §-4520 Wall “Washing | & Painting Free estimates. Reas. FE 5-2311 Moving & Trucking 12 Trucks for Rent CKS, TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT % Ton Pickups 1% Ton Stakes and Dump Trucks Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. _YE _4- 0461—FE_ 4-1442 INCINERATOR SERVICE, ASHES, rubbish. shredded black dirt. Peat _ op soil FE 5-0448 D & D EXPRESS CO. FE and _ truckin :. os kinds. (24505 or F LIGHT TRUCKING. enna 7 AND ashes. FE 4-2266. LIGHT AND HEAVY _ TRUCKING Rubbisn hauled FE 2-0603. MAN WITH 3% TON TRUCK WANTS __ work, Call any time. FE 4-8421. FOR FAS1L, EFFICIENT PICKUP & delivery and light hauling at reasonable rates call FE 17-0759 | _ anytime. VET WITH 2 TON STAKE TRUCK wants hauling FE 4-4088. | SUDDEN SERVICE, ASHES RUB- bish and light trucking. FE. GE 6079. SMITH MOVING -— Van. .or Pickup Service. FE 4-4864, ~ ©’DELL CARTAGE Phone FE 5-6806 age. Large vans anywhere in United States. Quick service. FE 5-8562. 341 N. Perry. 12A Garden Plowing — WTD. “PLOWING, DISCING, Dragging, leveling, hay & weed mowing. Jaycox. FE 4-9997 QARDEN “aND' YARD PLOWING, iscing, leveling Any place, any Ga. prom pt on” All power _litt equip. FE 43371. __ 13 Business “ea EAVESTROUGHING Bryan FP. French FE 5-6973 _Warm air heating & sheet metal, EXPERT TREE TRIMMING & RE- moval. Ph. FE 5-6593 or OR 3-2000. SAWS BHARPENED. 27 W PRINCE- ton. PE 12-6382 eves. and week- __ends. ____ | BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. | Walls and Windows Cleaned. ____,*&PCFE 2-163}. _ APPLIANCE SERVICES We service all makes of refriger- ators, washers, radios, cleaners and al) types of small appliances. | ROY'S, 96 Oakland Ave, FE 2-402! ELECTRICAL SEWER CLEANING Sinks Sun. Service. Ph. PE 4-2012. geo MOTOR SERVICE, RE- and rewinding. 218 E. Ph FE 4-3981. TRESTRIMOITN WASHINGS &, FOR FAMILY LAUNDRY SERV. |: Pick-up. and delivery service. Mov- |- | 2-5440. \ , Local and Long Distance Moving | VOLLMAR MOVING AND S8TOR- | ROTOTILLING FEC 5-7000 CUSTOM MOWING: LIGHT, MED- fum, beavy power equipment. Quagty work. General landscap- ‘ng. Ask for Ted at FE 4-0461 CRANE’S LANDSCAPING SERV- ice. Complete iawn building and maintenance FE 7-8333 ; PE 2-5034 SODDING - SEEDING - TREE | eee complete | an dscaping. \L, KENTUCKY bent ourser SUMMER SPECIAL Bwegrass or mix sod, 40¢ vard delivered. Lai smali extra State Ucensed.. C. Mills. FE 5-21900 ~ Upholstering 13C CUSTOM FURNITURB UPHOLSTERING WAHL UPHOLSTERING SERVICE FREE EST. PHONE FE _4-1959 SLIP COVERS,,URAPES & BED- spreads. Youf’ material, FE 5-5797. SIMPSON'S FURNITURE REFIN- __ ishing. Clock repairing. __ FE 4-0554. CUSTOM FURNITURE UPHOL- stering. Est. free. Don Eakle. EM __3-4639. MAKERS OF CUSTOM BUILT furniture; upholstering. 34 South Telegraph. Thomas Upholstering Phone FE 5-8888 CORNICES. DRAPERIES. S8LIP- covers, materials Beadle PE -1927 ~ Television Service 14A HOME SERVICE CALLS — $3.50 DAY OR NIGHT MITCHELL’S TV 109 N. Saginaw PE 2-2871 DAY, NIGHT-SUN. TV SERVICE, $3.50. FE 51296. FE 5-8390. _P. STRAKA _____ M. D. M. TV SERVICE. APTER 6 Dd. m. call PE 5-6727. FOX TV. & RADIO SERV. SERV. call $3.50. Cor, Hatchery & Aire port Rd. OR 3-1647. PE 71-7598. GUARANTEED TV REPAIR: ANY make.- FE 4-9736. ANDY CON- DON’'S Radio & TV Service. 15 Building Service MILLER BROTHERS, FLOOR LAY- ing sanding & finishing, 1" service in Pontiac. FE 5-3 ; SHEET ROCK FI'lING PATCH Olastering. FE Diastering and 403867 R. G SNYDER, | FLOOR LAYING sanding ‘nd finishing. Phone FE a 5 FLOOR LAYING, SANDING AND finishing. 16 years experience, Modern quipment. John Taylor, Phone FE 4-0424. PLUMBING HEATING REPAIRS, alterations, J. E. Wernet. FE 32-7840 CEMENT © WORK RES. AND comm., free estimates. Raymond _ Commins. | PE 4-9366. JOS. FLEMING, FLOOR LAYING, sanding a 155 Baigon. Ph. PE 2-4405. PLASTIC TILE LINOLEUM AND FORMICA counter top. Free estimates. FE 17-7234 TERRAZZO ~ RUBBER, ‘CERAMIC tile, flagstone. Commercial and residential F.H.A. terms. ELLIS BUILDER. FE 2-2671. CEMENT WORK, ALL KINDS floors, driveways, etc. Jensen FE 2-2340 ; oe _ MASON & CEMENT WORK, FREE estimates, our work guaranteed. OR 3- 9402 A. J. Webster & Son. CEMENT WORK _ BLOCKS. porches, fireplaces and ses-wal!s | FM 3-4879 FIREPLACES, STONE WORK, fireplace repair. FE 5-3026 after 6) "PLUMBING AND HEATING. H. 8. Compton & 6on. "hs -3767, FE) GUARANTEED ROOPS, ALL kinds. Est. 10916. J. A. Hugus, | 352 N. Cass. PE 2-3021, FE 2-8946. | FLOOR | SANDING, | LAYING, PIN. Hers al 491 Central FE COMPLETE REMODELING AND modernizing service. Attic rooms, recreation rooms, dormers. addi- tions complete apartment aitera- | -tions, custom oo F GLA. | financing. FE 454 | GENERAL Boia Na REPAIR, par stone *& cement work. FE EAVESTROUGHING Coal. oil & gas burners, McLain Sheet Metal. FE 4-5051. ROOFING. roof; repair, FE 46113. CEMENT WORK, BRICK all types. Reas, George Reid. EM 3-8258. COMPLETE. Pe ig A OF MASONRY. _ brick, FE_ 5-3004 CHIMN EY WM W VORK Let a reliable home owned r gas chimneys _ cleaning and ‘repairing. 5-3701. COMPLETE LINE OF MASONRY, cement & carpenter work, brick block laying. 1. POURED CONCRETE BASE- ments. Why build with blocks? Get our bid soo! Or 3-7184. SMALL CONTRACTOR beet organized crew would like unity to bid rough in jobs, rales or otherwise. OR 3-2183, or contact in person at 180 Wa- basso Walled Pare - CARPENTER & CABINET M/ wishes and remodel work. FE 40720. IMMTNG Pree estimate 4-8805. ve $-8628. wrt OR, repaired by factory trained men | BUILT UP ROOFS AND | SLICE OF HAM = Sat “Hurry. up! The engineers are coming back from lunch!” Building Service ROOFING All types. new & old. Free esti- mates Joy. Pennebaker, FE 4-0612 TES ON, SIDING, ROOF- work. | PLASTERING, PATCH | PLASTER- FE 2-8007. ESTIM ing, __ ing. __Typewriting ‘Service e 17 nd rep: 15 OR 30593. chine General Prin _ply Co., TYPEW RENTED © Mitchell's. 123 N. Saginaw St. Dressmaking-Tailoring 18 AND ADDING MA- repairing. Expert work. | and Office Sup- 1 W. Lawrence. EWRITERS RE REWEAVING EXPERTLY DONE. Suits superbly tailored. PE 5-3792. 20 Chiropodists MAURICE THOME, Ufs.c. 1203 ener a Bldg. 1 Photo-Accessories 20A PICTURES DEVELOPED a roll, full price. 71, Keego Harbor. “HAPPIEST ®AMILY MEMORIES n family ila LoPatin Lost and Found LOST = GREEN WALLET wire | w'iite please child LOST: Studio Mail to Box POR 35c +7301 21 | polka dots in Neisners, | return, it belongs to a FE 3-7313 MAN'S BILLFOLD, RE- | ard. OR 3-6762. LOST: 6 MONTH OLD BUFF COL- | ored by on 3-3334. Notices and Personals 22 | ~ ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, AUG. 14, 1953, I will not be responsible for any debts contracted to me other than by myself. Herman E. Bishop, 78 Court Drive, Mich. 8UMMER SPECIAL! COLD WAVE 50 E 2 STREAMLINE YOUR MID - 8EC- ‘or, Reducet? FE ¢ #862 ARE YOU TOO FAT? Reduce easy, lutely of today. arthritis, circulation, ete. Cocker puppy. e short ear. Dorothy 1244 for “appointment. - 100 WEDDING (NVITATIONS $6 50. Printed napkins, 3 day service. Sutherland Studios. mi) W_ Huron PE 56-6720. safe, drugiess FE 4-4131. Identifiable | Reward. EM fast. methods). methods are also wonderful relief rheumatism, Let us help you HORSEBACK “RIDING _ INS nN ‘t only. moonlight rides. FE 46196. YOUR Ki SHUT-iINS HAVE examined at bome. THE “PLANT Dr. Bussey, Optometrist. FE 4-5211. SCIENTIFIC SWEDISH MASSAGE. ELM 8. FE 4-285}. COKER Pontiac, Perry. poor INSTRUC- Bite} REAL estate and certain equipment be- | Jonging to Pontiac Sharp Freeze, Inc., baking concern. be operated have been sold to a local This plant will as a locker plant. All merchandise stored here | must be { removed by Oct, A. 19:.. The unused portion of the rentals will lockers are emptied and the key is turned in Freeze, Inc. 121 w. DAINTY MAID FOR SUPPLIES. Mrs. Burnes. FE 2-8814. 93 Mark. MA 4-4-1330. ANY GIRL OR.WOMAN NEEDING contact Mrs. a friendly advisor, Vernon Vie, Ph. __fidential. DAY FE 2-3700 for _you. OA 8-2681. WID APPROX. __ carpet. FE 17-0783. be refunded when Pontiac H FE 2-8734. Con- The Salvation Army. Wtd. Children to Board 25 is id CARE FOR CHILDREN IN licensed home. Vicinity Waterford __Township Hal. OR 31911. Wtd. Household Goods 27 APPROX. 9x18 RUG eed CARPET. 2 piece suite. LET US BUY IT OR AUCTION rr 9x18 RUG OR _2 piece suite. FE 2-3700 NOTICE — IF YOU WANT TO GET. the high dollar for your ture, we either buy !t or auction it for you. Call L & 8 Sales Co., Sharp uron turni- FURNITURE Entire home or odd lots. Get the top dollar. Will buy outright or B. Community | sel} 1t for you. B. Sales, Ph. OR 3-2717. WAN TED of furniture. NEEDED TO BUY ALL TYPES Ph. FE 25523 | Wtd, Transportation _ 27A | | GIRL WANTS RIDE FROM Dublin Schoo! near Oxford to Pon- tiac. Working bours 8:30 to 5: all EM 33867 RIDE WANTED FROM DRAYTON | | Plains wo Flint & days. OR 3-2343. hours Wtd. Contract Mtgs. 30 LAND CONTRACTS BOUGHT sure te Reasonable discounts. No hidden charges. We need land nee with 8 to 4:30. & SOLD UNLIMITED FUNDS to get PIFTY $2,000 to $5,000 b home. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 53% W. 41% Mortgages @ Modern re 56-3406 64773 | | te Huron Bldg our alance. | NICHOLIE AND HARGER CO. (Dotng Business as) Pan) NICHOLIE 33 W. Buron Ph Open #:30 “tu 8:30 IMMEDIATE CASH FOR YOUR land contract or equity in your & Working | | re NS | 58183 FE 2-6223 Wtd. Contract Mtgs. 30 CASH FOR YOUR LAND CONTRACT Ralph B. GARNER nvestm National aak “a1 OL 2-7611 CASH for CON TRACTS If you plan to sel) your land con- tract, phone us. e have plenty of funds at our disposal for con- . tracts at reasonable discounts. Bring your abstract and land CAMERON Realtor 1362 W Open-Eves. Huron PE 4-6492 WE HAVE For Rent Rooms 82 Rent Lake Prop. 37B For Sale Houses 40 West side, oe oer tony a employ References FE 24152. LARGE RM. fe ea ee EN- trance. near St. Joseph Hospital. FE 5-0040. ‘ 7 __' 2 LIGHT Hi G ROOMS furnished. 279 8. Jessie. SLEEPING PRIVATE EN- trance, close in, no drinkers, For men only. 165 8. Parke. SLEEPING soem FOR men, close r 6 ™ 41484. ROOM be dry privileges. Bus stop. w Huron. RM. FOR RENT OR BOARDING rm, 624 Markle. WATKINS LAKE week. References. FE 35008 0 or oR 3-2216. NEW MODERN CABINS ON THE lake oct per week. R & EK Cab- ins, OR 327000 Rent Houses Unfurn. 38 NEW 2 BEDROOM HOUSE, LAKE [egg arog . mo, Option to b mo. rent in advance. EM 3 BEDRM. HOME ON SILVER LK. 2610 Silverside. FE 44143 between GENTLEMEN, worker. Call before 8 p.m, 385 W. Huron, near bus stop. GIRL, PVT, ENTRANCE, NR. _town. FE 4-2847, SLEEPING ROOM FOR REFINED Lady. $6.00 per ae 145% Oak- _ land Ave. SLEEPING ROOM FOR 2, PVT. home. FE Wanted to Rent ¢32A PIB BB LIL LNRM RM MO} wera EMPLOYED CO ® ear old son wishes 4 or 5 room ip or around Good Tae call after 4 p.m FE RESPECTABLE YOUNG WOMAN desiree turn 1 2 rm. «6 Near —* ref. “Pontias se wo GENERAL T ioTORS RS JR. EXECU- tive desires to rent 2 or 3 bed- room unfurnished house or aon. Call FE 2-8111, ext. 638 M SLEEPING RMS FOR. CLEAN. | For Rent Store Space 38A REFINED DAY “~~ FOR ANY TYPE business Pull basement. Location $30 Mt. Clemens. FE 3-0682. FOR LEASE — EXCEL- LENT DOWNTOWN LOCATION. _FE 2-6820 SMALL STORE ON THE CORNER _of Joslyn & Montcalm. FE $8044. _Rent Office Space 38C iy bag bert OFFICE, of suite, munity National _ Bank Bldg + 21171, OFFICK SPACE OVER 6 W. Huron, FE +6829. — 39 __Rent Miscellaneous HOUSE JACKS, CRIBBING AND _tmbers, FE 4-6669. _ ae thru Friday. SERVICE ENGINEER, WIFE, 15 month old vaby need furnished unfurnished ee or ¢ by Sept 1. MY 3-3232. BUSINESS COUPLE WANT FUR- room for 1 bedroom rocm Near Auburn Boulevard. Can — good ref- erences, FE 30174 CHRISTIAN | FAMILY _ NEEDS UN- furn. house, Good references. FE 4-653 SEVEN OR EIGHT ROOM HOUSE or small farm. Urgently needed _to rent or buy, FE 2-0625. ; TO RENT, 1 OR 2 RM. furn. i or Ava with kitchen privile Christia: Mor man, non-d aber. Ph. FE 137 during the day or FE 49176 after 5:00. YOUNG MINISTER, WIFE AND child desire 5 or 6 rm apt. or house in or near ory Bent reasonable. Ph. FE 4-7450. $200,000 At our disposa] to purchase new or seasoned land contracts for our clients. See me cin you eel. ASK FOR BOB MAH MAHAN REALTY CO., REALTORS CO-OPERATIVE MEMBERS Open Evenings — Rg gh | 1073 W. Huron _ . FE 2-0263 $1 ‘Ou0 000.00 5% i) for new low-cost, easier, safer loans on farms and better homes from % acre witb 100 ft. front- age. No appraisal or closing fee CHAR LES REALTORS Y% W. Hu PE 4-0521 After 6 FE 4-6862 or FE 5-889) _Wanted Real Estate 31 Peddling Your Property? it doesn’t pay. Our method of showing only to qualified pros- pects saves you time and money, and itn many cases even the bDeighbors don't know it’s for sale. “Don't worry with Lookers.” Call us now. We seed your proper- ty. We handle all details for fi- nancing and elosing. To Buy - To Sell - To Trade YOU BUY [T—WE'Ls LNSURE IT MAHAN REALTY CO., REALTORS . CO-OPERATIVE MEMBERS 1075 W. Huron Ph. FE 2-0263 NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH Want to Sell? BUYERS WAITING If you have lake property or your home is tn the area of Drayton, Clarkston, or Waterford (call us for action). Immediate results. WHITE BROS. Open 9 to 9 for Your Convenience Ph. OR 3-1872 or OR 3-1769 5660 Dixte Highway Waterford WE WANT TO WORK We want action for our lively salesmen and we want give you action on the sale of your properties. We cap sell anything. anywhere: at anytime. Homes farms, bus. opp. commercial prop- erties, land contracts If we can't sei] them we will buy them ourselves Call now and cave a csalesmam at your viace tp 30 minutes. “GET RICH QUICK,” CALL Edw. M. Stout, Realtor n Eve til) 8:30 Tl N, Saginaw St. Ph. FE 5-8165 Johnson The big dane, is new modern up to date office an. needs all types of listings. Just phone and a friendly sales- man will cal) and help you with your real estate problems. We are still selling 95 per cent of ‘our listings A. JOHNSON, Realtor Ph. FE 4-2533 . Our New Location 1704 8S. Telegraph Rd., just south of Bloomfield Fashion Shop | TRY OUR SERVICE All we promise is good reliable real estate service. Let us in- | svect your property if you are thinking of selling. We need a Hal good homes and also a small rm I" H. BROWN, Realtor now in his | 3 OR 4 RMS. FURN, OR UNFURN. modern apt. or house in or near Rochester. FE 4-7546. GMT SALARIED transferred to Pontiac ear needs 2 bedroom unfurn. ren 1 child, Call Collect Detroit. TR- 22. COTTAGE FOR 6 MONTHS, NEAR Pontiac. Call VEnice 9-5224 De- troit. Write Box 2 Pontiac Daily ress. WORKING MOTHER, DAUGHTER and small son need 3 or more rooms. Good ref. rent pd. mo. in advance. Minor repairs and fixup labor free. Good care Guaranteed. Give us a chance. You won't be sorry. Box 69, Press. BUSINESS MAN AND FAMILY would like 3 or 4 bedrm. home. Furn, or unfurn., good references. Will lease. OR 3-7931 WOULD _ 3 BEDROOM FLAT, income ngle. Have children _ Call UN. "sant collect. Pay bonus. 5 ROOM HOUSE, 3 GIRLS. GOOD ref. No drinkers. Call PE 2-3796 after 5 p.m. URGENTLY NEEDED SMALL apartment for 1. Provate bath. 2642 Baldwin Rd. EMPLOYED COUPLE WISHES partly furn apt. FE 4-5396. _ FAMILY OF FOUR DESIRE 3-4 room apt. Reasonable. Call FE 5665500 _ MIDDLE-AGED COUPLE DESIRE $ room modern home or apt. Ist ae In or out of Pontiac. OR 9512 WANTED HOUSE OR APTMENT for teacher, reasonable rent References. Contact J. C. Cox, Ass‘t principal of Schools, Pontiac PIRM. TEACHER AND FAMILY desire furn. or unfurn. flat or house Furn. Rif. Soon as pos- dible. KEnwood | 4-1878 DESPERATELY NEED ¢ OR 5 rm. house. Furnished or unfur- mished. Near 8t. Freds. 2 chil- dren one 8 one 12. Call after 6 p.m. FE 5-8098. Hotel Rooms 32B HOTEL AUBURIN Rooms by Day or Week Also 1 or 2 Room Apartments Cooking and refrigeration unit 464 Auburn h. FE 2-9239 Rooms With Board 32D FO MEN. GOOD FOOD on rooms. 85 Auburn. FE 3-549 2 Rent Apts. Farnlsiedl 35 ATTRACTIVELY FURN. 5 ROOM, will rent for 2 a to reliable couple FE 2-84 2 CLEAN ROOMS” ‘LARGE KITCH- en cabinet sink, refrig., no drink- ing, adults only, private entrance. 36 Florence. 7 ; _ CLEAN 3‘ROOM, NO DRINKERS, steam heat, gas and light fur- nished. No chfidren, couple only. 470 Oakland 2 AND 4 ROOM APTS. 407 N. Cs Cass. MA 5-3095. 3 ROOMS, ONE SCHOOL AGE child welcome. FE 4-9167 BASEMENT APT., NO DI! “DRINK. ers. No children. Working couple preferred. FE 71-8331. LARGE S8LEEPING ROOM WITH kitchen. if desired, day workers, no drinking. Must be cean and « quiet. Near bus. 401 N. Paddock. FE 2-0054. 2 ROOM EURN. APT. 2 ROOM. FOR ADULTS ONLY. 80 Lafayette St. | SQUARE LAKE. 3 RMS, & BATH. _for adults, FE 17-7785. - _ 3 RMS FOR 2 WORKING MEN or 2 girls. No drinkers. Share bath. Kitchen privileges. $10 per wk. 89 S. Main, Clarkston. MODERN 1 BEDRM. APT. UNION Lk. Yearly lease adults EM 3-4285 FURN APT. CHILDEN WEL- come. Ph. Romeo 2360. 2 RMS., CHRISTIAN COUPLE. Fridg. pvt. entrance. 116 E. atch abies Rent Apt. Unfurnished 36 1362 W. Huron Ph. FE 2-4810 WTD. 2_ ws 3 BEDRM MODERN home W of Pontiac or 8 to Royal Oak. Will pay $2,000 dn No! Poids Write Dailv. Press Bos | WE HAVE BUYRS FOR GOOD} farm properties. Any location, also need smal) homes, with reason- able down paymens ROY KNAUF, Realtor 26% W Hu FE 27421 Eve “OA 8-333 3 BEDRM. HOUSE ON W. SIDE, $6500 cash or trade for income. _FE_ 5-7217. Trade or Sell 1952. Large down payments are scarce. Trades are made to satis- fy all parties concerned Call us Do not fee] obligated. DORRIS & SON 1332 W. Huron we a FE 4- _ WE BUY—SELL & TRAD | WILL BUY OR LIST YOUR LAKE property. Purchasers waiting. R. F. McKINNEY Office 8800 Commerce 8t. Phone Pontise EM 3-3-{) or Univ. 1-5708 — STOP! LOOK! Wanted to buy houses, barns, cot- tages, garages, chicken coops, other bu to be moved or tera dova. . Button, FE 5-312. NEW 1 BEDRM. APT. YEARLY leuse, adults only. EM 3-4285. PLEASANT 3 ROOM & BATH ON east side near GM Truck, for adults, $15 weekly and care for furnace. EM 34322. , BEAUTIFUL 5 ROOM APT. ON ‘ake near Pontiac, year around lease to adults with good refer- _ences. EM 3-4322. 2 LARGE ROOMS AND BATH. FE 2-3324, 74 Earlemoor | Blvd. Rent Houses Furnished 37 LL LBPB BBB ARO A _ DELIGHTFUL COMP. FURN. Eliz. Lk. front new home for dis- criminating couple. Available Sept. 15 to June 1954. $125, se- __ curity. Detroit. TO &-7363. 7 MILES NORTH OF ROCHESTER at Cr aberry Lake, couple only. Call _owner at Twinbrook 3-3870. GARAGE HOUSE FOR RENT, portly furnished. 9110 Pontiac Lk. ae NTIAC, L NT, bedrooms modern, very nice. Beptember to June ‘adults. EM- ya OWE REFERENCES RE- _ quired. Call after 3. 410 N. Perry. Rent Lake Prop. 37B MODERN CABINS ON LOON LE. THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1953 : ~* For Sale Houses 40 Sale Houses 40; For Sale Houses 4 MYERS | KINZLER | ANNETI . OFFERS Lake Front Sylvan Village "| Charming white frame 2 bed- =| Auburn Heights Area carpets s'pe™'indots, “ist | Sa, SORE, Mote trom, abd bah end wt ace, cheerful kitchen cup- marble sills, ca . Rear Gas Radiant heat. Lot galore Full base. rec- rch, Attached garage. Fine 652220, 1% oy arage. Close rea ig Page" Reagan geaty sass ment— ene heat and - to schools, § , terms. lent cond. "You'l) love ~| nicely landscaped, lots. err Near St. Fred’s a lash ga Pall basersaus, win ‘ots, boats and dock You must see it! Owner leaving state Terms. Hills € Family Home Seminole 4-Bedrm. 3 rms. down plus and appt 7 ROOM HOUSE BATH AND _ ito 5674 Aylesbury, FE $1,450 DOWN Kast side. 3 bedrm. home. Ga- rage, large lot. Newly nrcorated. $1,500 DOWN West side Cute and cozy bunga- low on 1-acre Has everything for comfortable living. GI RESALE Close to Pontiac Motor. Has all binge usual, features plus the ‘‘right rms VALUET Real Estate 222 8S. Telegraph GREEN 00 brick 912,000 fcr Restricted. LR. TRIPP Pioneer Highlands bedroom brick, this fin 1% tile A-1 condition. Fully insu- lated. $16,500, terms. Drayton Woods Delightful, 2 bedroom ranch home, all large rooms. Nice- ly decorated, Built in 1951. Full basement with oil AC heat. Attached garage, 80’x 290° lot. ae insulated. ph _ terms. urry on this Suburban—Lk. Privileges $1,800 Down Modern Nice Hv- ing room. Atsractive kitch- en. 1 large bedroom basement. Ot] heat, electric water heater. Pully insu- lated. 55%3'x230’ lot. Hurry on one! . Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 22 W. Lawrence 8&t. on, Eves. 5-8161 or FE 5-83 “EASY TERMS 4 rooms bath a ‘erry Ave. $40 mo. total price JiM W RIGHT 222 8. Telegraph. FE 5-0693 CUT TO $6,000 PRICE I8 TOO LOW but owner says sell 7 room semi-bungalow. on paved east side street. 1 bed- ?oom down, 3 up. Single, but now rented as 2 family. you have $3,000 you can make it talk here. A REAL GOOD HOME on paved Judson St. Now brings in $145 ex- clusive of owner's apt. Can be used ag single for large family. Tip top shape. New 2-car garage. $10,900, $2,500 down. . CHARLES Co-operative Real Estate Exchange 22'4 W. Huron 8t. FE 4-0521 Eves. FE 5-7145 or 2-1704 SCOTCH LAKE AREA , 2 bdrm home with basement, fur- nace, bath, attached garage. large lot. Lake privileges, 5,000, $2,000 “EMBREE & GREGG EM 34393 and EM 3-325] Matin Office 1565 A Lake Road Branch Office 4305 G Road Partridge “BIRD” ani ‘OLE eCLS = BRICK HOME Several thousand dollars worth of carpeting. drapes and extras in eluded in this 3 bedroont brick home. It possess all the modern comforts and conveniences of up- to-date living. It’s complet with veranda, breakfast room, 2 extra lavatories, maid’s roo or play rooms the basement Enclosed rear yard that’s completely pri-| vate and there’s an outdoor grill. too. 2 car gar. with full concrete drive. Just $7,700 down will han- dle. Make an appt, now. SPARE TIME “MEANS $$8$ FOR YOU Immediate possession of this 6 room bungalow that needs a little fin-, ishing NEW FURNACE. BATH AND kitchen !n 2 rms. have been added that need finishing. 3 lots, 2 car garage. lake privileges. Only $7,500 with $1,500 down. Much of the material already on hand to finish It. the least bit handy you'll soon have a 10 or 12 thousand dollar home. INCOME, 10 ROOMS, 2 BATHS, PAVED ST. A very handy location close in on ® paved corner lot 62x120. 7 rooms and bath on the first floor. 3 rooms and bath up. Separate en- trances. Owner occupies 6 rooms and bath and still has over $100 er mo. income, New $1,250 oil heating 8vstem. Act now to get this at only $12,150 on terms. WARD F. PARTRIDGE, REALTOR FE 2-8316 43 W Huron St. Open Eve. 7 to 9 LAKE ORION. NEW 2 bedrms, bath, utility, 1 acre. only $2,000 dr 4 ROOMS Utility, garage. 4 lots, lake acctess., $1.000 dn BUNNY RU LAKE. - Tile bath living room kitchen. blond furni- ture tmcludes television & auto. washer, $2,900 down WALTER GREEN Y 2-5831 LAKE FRONT IMMEDIATE POSSESSION This completely remodeled home has rooms, living room, bath. Nice rf front porch. Lot 50x200 with bonita ae shade trees, Full price ont ving Where Living Will Take On a New Meaning And how the children will love it. Built in 1952 on a large lot, (83x210). Modern in design, 4 bed- rooms, (2 up are unfinished). Extra large living room, with artistic fireplace and corner pic- ture windows Dining room and modernistic kitchen, full bath with separate showers. Oi] heating sys- tem and attached garage. is property has many features that makes it the outstanding subur- ban home of this district. Only 5 miles west of Pontiac. See it today and pay for it with rent checks. Full price $12.100 with te-ms. WHITE BROS. Open 9 to 9 for Your Convenience Ph OR 31872 or OR 31769 8660 Dixie Highway Watertord EQUITY IN & ROOM HOUSE, @ast side. by owner. FR 5-305, If you are; Pioneer Highlands Faultiess 6 room a Cod for similar home. Newer Home Near Pontiac You'll almost want to buy this neat and clean 3 bedroom bungalow on sight. Tile bath and kitchen. Gas heat Fenced and nicely land- scaped—some berries and fruit. New 1% car garage. Only $2,500 down. West Suburban 4 bedroom — in excellent —. 1 bedroom down and up. Lots/of closet mol Breezeway and at- tached garage, with 2 room . above, rge lot beau- tifull landscaped, Priced for quick sale with terms. 3 Family Income Well located on west side. msrictly modern with large room apt. down and 2 alee 3 room apts. up. include carpeting in apt. and 2 stoves and 2 frigerators in upper apts. 2 car garage Present rent $170 mo. Price $15,000. } | John Kinzler, Realtor | 6170 W. Huron St. Open Eves Co-Operative Realtors Exchange PRICED RIGHT TO SETTLE ES- tate, modern 8 rm. 4 bedrm. house. 45 Parkplace. Hot air fu some ie or rnace. Priced low for one. MA DORRIS | aiacnee 7 ma Mtl pecinl home. out, Lot 560x150. $1,400 d INDIAN VILLAGE BEAUTIFUL HOME Six lovely rooms, one bedroom down, bath uown, 2 bedrooms up, fireplace, beautiful kitchen, break- fast room, screened porch, garage. Owner leaving state. FOUR BEDROOMS $9,975 F.H.A. approved focation Two bedrooms down and two up, fire- Place, tile kitchen, good bath screened porch, A-1 basement, oil own, air-conditioned saan recreation room, 2 ts, garage and other outstanding features. Ex- ceptional buy. DORRIS & SON 752 W. Huron Bt. PE 4-1557 __ WE BUY, SELL AND TRADE $750 DOWN, Purchaser must be reliable. FE 46306. EAST SUBURBAN, 5 RM. BUNGALOW, LIV- ING RM. & 2 BEDRMS., CARPETED, KITCH- EN & DINETTE, TILE BATH, TWO CAR GA- RAGE, FENCED YD., LAKE PRIVILEGES. CLOSE TO CITY SCHOOL, 3 MINUTE DRIVE TO PONTIAC, $2,500 DN., OWNER WILL CARRY CON- TRACT. / FE 5-3458. ~ EAST SIDE RURAL ~ 3 rm. Water & lights. 2-car garage. 4 large lots. Near school. Price 250. Terms. NEAR FISHER tas $3,650. Term Russell A. Nott, Realtor 1170 W. Pike | FE 45905 5 ROOM HOUSE RANCH TYPE, ‘ood location, pri- ill consider late RANCH TYPE HOME Lovely 2 bedro6m modern, large living room, Streamlined kitchen, dining alcove, 2 car garage, base- ment, 5 tots, paved road. Only $9,050, terms. $1,350 DOWN 4 beiroom home, modern automatic oil hot water heat. Basement. Larye lot. Compiete price $7,000. Oniy 850 monthly. Hurry! $1,300 DOWN Year sround 2 bedroom modern home. Large glassed ey lovely shaued lot. Lake privileges. Quick sse sion an” other good buys im city and suburban properties See us before you bu: DOROTHY SNYDER LAVENDER "EALTOR FE 27-4411 3140 W. Huron -441) RANCH HOMES, SHELL* WITH rougb plumbing and wiring, lake privileges, SMALL WN PAY- MENT. Schneider, 924 Pontiac Trai hy Lake. OPEN 8UN.- __DAY __Phone — MA 4-1554 MACEDAY LAKE Large 3 bedrm. home on big lot. Beautiful shade trees and shrubs. Lavatory down, full bath up. $8,000. Terms | RANCH HOME Qnly 2 years old this. 2 bedroom bungalow is lo- cated on extra large lot, 80x260 ft, forced air oil furnace, hard-, wood floors, full bath, close to! school, bus line past the door. Located on good blacktop road | west of er eALTO $7 sy with terms PG Wood Co. 1725 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-1235 Office Open 9 a.m, to 8 p.m. BY OWNER. WEST SIDE, 2 BDRM. _ bungalow, $7,950, 85 Ww. End. YOUNG “LE BARON FARMS” A clean 4'2 room home built tn 2 bedrooms. living room . full bath with shower, oak floors and plastered walls, basement with oil heat. an unfinished attic for future expan- sion, cement drive. Nicely land- scaped. Call for an appointment today LITTLE FARM 4 room bungalow, full basement, 2 car garage, 2 acres of land with chicken coop and run, Variety of fruit trees, nicely landscaped with tots of shade. $6,950 with $2,000 00 down. Call today. LAKE HOME A nice 6 room home with one glassed itm porch and other tcreened living room 13x15, fire- place, 3 bedrooms, garage with cement drive Lots of shade. $8950 with $1,500 down. LAKE ORION A new six room, 3 bedroom home with full basement. H. A. Pur-| nace, oak floors. On one acre. $10,500~$2 500 down. Russell Young 412 W __Open_ Eves. 44525 ‘uh § MIDDLEBELT ROAD 3 bedroom brick modefnistie ranch | home. Many extra features. Own- | er will sacrifice on price just) reduced for quick sale K. L. Templeton, Realtor | $3!3 W. Huron FE 26223 _ "tin 9 Sun. | _— 43525 clean through- | good | 6 ROOM HOUSE.’ e as rm. Partly oe Nice | and like new, | oll conversion HA heat. 500, terms Business & Home Completely equipped and stocked up-to-date service station with modern 8 room house adjoining. Situated on large lot in center of thriv- Clarkston Area. ‘ 4 bedroom home situated on 2 lots 80x200. 8 miles north of Pontiac with lake priv- ileges and other nice fea- tures, Excellent condition. An unusual value at §15,- 000 with $3,000 down. Silver Lake Beautiful brick home lot 150x325, more than 50 large trees 2 blocks from lake. 2 bedrooms, tile bath, liv- in room with ane ae kitchen, Pima WR gee a: finished ns oe for ? bedrooms. ll base- ment, recreation space. 10 minutes from downtown Pontiac. Offered for only $16 200, terms. OPEN DAILY 4-8 P.M. - Bloomfield Brick Ranch Offering the ultimate in modern living with. country atmosphere, this beautiful 3 2 bath brick | bedroom and | ranch type home is situated | on a lot in exclusive Bloomfield Highlands. Some | of the features incude a tile stall shower bath, ma- places, recreation room area 16x30, gas baseboard radiant heat, and Crosley kitchen. Directions: Approximately % mile south of St. Joseph Hospital, turn right off Woodward Avenue to 170 N. Berkshire Road, Watch for “Open” signs. Roy Annett Inc. eral 3-7193 ‘Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 10 ROOM (HOUSE. 104 ‘FISHER. ‘Inquire 296 Blackwood Suburban Ranch Type This home featues 4 rms. dining L., utility. 2 car gar. 2% acres. Total price $10,750 with terms. Room Bungalow with full basement. newly deco- rated. Immediate ssession. Hurry on this one. ll price $7,950 @ith $1950 down payment. schaefer 975 Baldwin Ave. FE 2-4638 Office Open from 9 to 9 “MODERN, 2 BEDRMS. | Cr. location, stoker fed heat, ga- Tage in rw pe rs Priced at $6,- 950 with $1,850 d DUPLEX 6 rms. on each side, priced rea- sonable at $9,500 with $1,000 down. CUCKLER REALTY Eves. FE 2-8902 or FE 7-8119 236 N. Saginaw FE VACANT BRICK Nearly ne rm. with attic Gas heat corner lot in west side sub, $2500 down. YOUR OPPORTUNITY so don't miss this 2 bedrm. home. Livabie now, but some finishing to do Only $1100 down, $27 month 5 ACRE FARM 3 bdrm modern, close in. Fruit, berries, grapes. Better see it. $2700 down. CORT M. IMBLER 1111 JOSLYN FE 40524 CLARK DONELSON PARK. Rambling 1% story bungalow with breezeway and attached garage on lot 883x135 feet. Built tn 1952, carpeted living room, 2 large bedrooms, modern bath, streamlined kitchen, stair- way to attic, large basement with recreation space, oil forced air heat, auto. water heater. Priced right with terms. TRADE OR SELL. WILL TAKE i equity $3625, balance $75 aap 4 family income, 5) rooms living quarters plus income from 3 apartments. Phone for particulars. A real opportunity for you 20 ACRES. TRADE OR SELL. 1 room modern house, large barn, arage and tool shed 30x40 feet. ly $10,500. Needs some work Could be subdivided, 2640 feet road frontage by 330 feet deep Just a few minutes drive from Pontiac. $600 DOWN. $4700 FULL PRICE 4 room bungalow, screened front porch, stool only, water lIghts, wired for stove. A rent beater. Needs some. work. Nr. school & bus, lake privileges | $2,000 DOWN. $6800. FULL PRICE. 5 rooms and bath, oak floors, lastered walls good condition ake privileges. CAMERON H. CLARK Realtor. Co-op Member. Open Eves 1362 W. Huron &t. FE 4-6492 BEAUTIFUL LOT ON CHANEL overlooking lake. Lots of trees. | 268° dee 2 miles from city | limits. * 150. FE CITY NORTH 2 bedroom imodern home. nearly new. Kitchen modern to the min- ute. Full basement with hot air heat. Large back Rcd fenced. $10, with terms SO MUCH—SO LITTLE 2 bedroom modern, with living room and full bath lots of garden soil. Low taxes. Bont miss this one at only $6550, with $1500 dn CRAWFORD AGENCY | REALTOR OPEN EVES 2141 Opdyke 46617 | WATERF ORD D Lake front home with five rooms | and bath on one floor Living room 22x24 with five picture win- | dows Other rooms large with lake view. Lower level ; has spacious recreation room, ex- | tra bath and kitchen, utility and | storage rooms. and two car ga- | rage Automat! gas heat and | other s aes features Owner built | tm 1952 Large lot. $19,900 W take smaller home in trade or reasonable down payment with terms on balance. A real bar- gain * VEN tional terms. EST SIDE Four na? rooms plus utility, Armstrong tile ceilings. mirror like floors, lge. picture windows, colored bath. hot water heat, lot 50x150. This 1s ® beautifui brick home, ted near bus and sé price $10,500 K, G, Hempstead, Realtor | 102 East Huron Bt FE 48284 Eve. FE 271317 NEW 2 BEDROOM HOME, 24x30, Sheet rocked, basement, electric- ity, ater, school bus, large lot 140x875 ft. $1,000 down. Owner _ 4301 Joslyn Rd. $1,350 DOWN peat, lot, w. Kennett, Raeburn 8t., see this neat, clean 5 room. Gas heat, automatic water heater pr ae carage, hard seein | street PONTIAC REALTY 1737 Baldwia ing village miles west of Pontiac. To settle an es- tate 12,000 reasonable | terms, pleasantly | FE 5427) BROWN $8950. ond two bedroom medern constructed, oi) attached 3 lots. $7850. Near Eastern Junior, —— 3 bedroom modern home wi new siding. we can arrange con- venient s for you on this one. $7500. Exce x low. ll basement, furnace and 3 pe. Truly s wonderful value. 12,500 A good home and an in- come. 6 rooms and bath first floor, beautiful 4 room apt. up with strictly private en- trances rade, and automatic gas firec steam heat. oak Tloors, plastered walls, also enclosed front porch. “Upper will rent for $75." | | BEAUTIFUL HOME. With business frontage, located right on Dixie | close in large 145x507 ft. lot, | the west 250 feet of the lot is | zon for business. “Here is a |. for a motel.” The lake. ‘Beautiful 4 ranch bungalow.’’ Two fall tile sachs. attached gar., ra- diant heat and many er fine features. L. H. BROWN, Realtor 1362 W. Huron Ph, FE 2-4810 Member Co-op Real Estate Exch. BUILT IN ‘53-58 ROOM BUNGA- low. Ex attic, tile bath, full basement, ofl furnace, alum- in'm pegged and screens. $2,800. down assume F.H.A. mort- _ sage. | Sail PE 5-8763 after 4. STONE OFF JOSLYN | 2 very nice 3 bedroom bunga- | lows. Located on good north end location Full bath with shower. Full or gas heat, nicely landscaped NORTH *SUBURBAN 2 bedroom bungalow, on 3 acres of land Full bath, excellent kitchen, full basement, beautiful home almost new. KEEGO HARBOR Attractive 5 room home neighborhood, Fully modern, tai block oie seb Ma vileges, EAST SUBURBAN 8 room bungalow, 2 bedrooms 3 mee bath, basement, shaded lot. ose to school, stores and trans- tion. Peancs E. “Bud” Miller Realtor MEMBER a a oo ‘co-operative Realtors 919 Joslyn FE 2-0253 Customer Parking Space in Rear FOR SALE HOUSES FROM 4 TO 10 rms. also all kinds of fats and incomes. Real bargains. P. W. Dinnan & Son. 110 8S. Saginaw. $6;500 FULL PRICE 6 rms., garage, 8 acres 9 rm., mod acres. Double ga- rage, $2,000 down 42 acre farm, era, fruit trees, D.m Exchange barn, chicken coop, corn crib, 35.500 down. C. Pangus 9 M-15 191 Ph. Ortonville 132, reverse charges. 6 RM MODERN BASEMENT home, 158 ft. frontage, $1100 dn. $30 mo payment, Drayton Plains. OR 39767, between 9 am & 2 p.m. during week All day on weekends. O'NEIL MARK STREET -—- Brand new 5-room bungalow. Pop- ular cedar shake siding. full tile bath, gas a. c. heat in the full asement, select oak floors, plastered paint- ed walls, paved street. Be sure to see this one now. Only $3,000 down plus F.H. A. “mortgage cost. OAKLAND AVE INCOME Two 5-room apartments and one 3-room apartment. Oak floors, plastered walls, hot water heater aa ay water heater, laundry : Teese “io per Lot 58x230 Only $5,900 down This one_ won't last CALL NOW VESTIBULE ENTRANCE- to the 14x17 foot living room, dining room, kitchen, 2 master-sized bedrooms, fully equipped basement! Fresh decorations through- . out. Oh, yes, l'‘e-car garage and complete storms and screens. You'll like this one. $9,000, terms too NEAR WISNER SCHOOL — Certainly you'll fall tn love with this comfortable 2-bed- room bungalow Full tile bath; gas furnace, plastered Walls, pleasant kitchen with pager | cupboards. A buy at $7,350, RAY O’NFIL., Realtor 75 W. Huron Open 99 Phone FE 3-7103 or OR 3-1648 Member = Co-op. =—s_- Exchange EAST SIDE 6 rm modern. Large lot 80x150 Dear schools Price $5,800. Terms. SUBURBAN Srma. Partly :.odern. a garage. 4 lots Price $4,250. Term Russell A. Nott, Realtor 1/0 W_ Pike FE 4-5905 ADAMS UNFINISHED Complete this and have a home for only $500 down. The exterior is complete but needs to be finished on the inside. Full price $4500. new | 383 Auburn FE ¢3393 9a totp =m r 5 RM. $6.000. $4.150 DOWN. TAKE over bal $1,850 __ FE 5-6720._ . 418 Central St. HURON GARDENS DOWN has five rooms down. Due to owner's death upstairs was not finished, but it is. all Laces r and all the rough plumbing in. Just decorate and set in bath and kitchen fixtures. basement with new oil fired fur- pct Bee it today. Full price 7 L, DRAYTON PLAINS TWO FENCED LOTS A nice bungalow in perfct condi- tion. To be sold completely fur- nished. even TV and washing ma- chine. If you don’t want the fur- niture we Can still make a deal, wan today for . we have the key. PAUL A. KERN. Realtor 31 Oakland Ave “Real Estate E 2-9209 1919" . ite = ° ALUMINUM SIDING LEDGEROCK TRIM Situated on an extra large land- scaped orner—this 44 . nhear- ly new ranch home its beautifull esigned and tastefully decoratd. Rich carpeting included. Briarhill stone fireplace. Wonderful base- ment. of! heat. Double garage. Priced right at $15,300, terms. ATTRACTIVE BUNG. BIG GARDEN At. the edge of the city. bed- room bungalow in spic aa span condition Full basement, Delco ot] ee 1% car garage. $9,950. termé. Since WANTED — LARGE CATHOLIC FAMILY To enjoy the spaciousness of this big 6 room brick home and to appreciate that it’s only 1 block from St Freds New gas fur- nace & auto. hot water. Roomy walk-in closets, oak floors. Low Tice $7,9§0, $2,500 down. Buy now start the kiddies in school in | September. Co-Operative Realtors oo a N. Tele FE 27-0474 — — Fer Sale Houses 40 $2,000 Bullt as a two family this home | a® appointment CARNIVAL _ by Dick Turner | ae _ mate - ais jqaet gee en ( l —no TV for “Remember, men, on this hike we'll really be roughing it three days!” For Sale Houses 40 LAKE ORION © Here its val 26 ft. glassed ofl beat, 53x210 possession. Bee this aa porch, ft. lot. $3,500 down. week SPECIAL This immaculate 3 bed- room home can be yours for only $6,950 bedroom & bath down, 16 ft. kitchen with loads of eating space, utility room, 2 car —_ pew siding, close to it. Pred's — McConnell schools Better investigate 12 ACRES It's a perfect spot away from the hustle & bustle of view from the 33 ft. g lant & shower in . If you want se- Sun Bateman & Kampsen Ba Sunday a a 329 = Kes ‘ Co-op. aamtber __ Open Eve ‘til 8 OWNER —5 ROOMS AND BATH, r-rd. lake home. Garage and rge lot. Inquire 16 Lawrence. _Immediate possession. HAYDEN MUST SELL Owner eaving 5 — home with lake Mprivlleges a sulated, hardwood oors a shady ot, only $7350 terms. Be sure to see this you buy. TTLE FA rooms and bath 1st floor, of iiving o relsing your own food. y terms OFF SASHABAW 5 room mdern 1 year old, fire- place. full basement, ven. | blinds. sulated, 1 - $10,- 500 o¢ will trade for a |. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 26%. W Huron 8st FE 52264 Eves, EM 35042 or FE 1-7906 6 RM. BUNGALOW 31300 “DOWN, Full price, $6950. FE 4-3798. “ROCHESTER 4 AREA | 3 bedrm. home, bath, hot water. Well, all on one floor. $1,000 down. For appointment call OL 1-7511 4 rms. and bath. Good well, heat, close to pavement. Low taxes. Son .500 down. For appointment. OL -7511 3 and 17-10 acres, good location. wil make 4 lots 100x350 each. Water in at street. [ddan Olive 1-7511 to see - N this MAURICE W ATs S Rochester WE SELL THE EARTH | 428 W. Fourth cit —— FOR A_ BETTER DEAL, DEAL _ With Jim Dinkel, 3153 W, Huron. IRWIN | bf rc | BUNGALOWS A two bedroom bungalow with lots of eye _— Has kitchen large | enough for dining space. Auto matic heat. Plenty closets. Price is right with terms, Several to choose from. INCOMES A selection of incomes almost any price. Terms on all of them. A two family that is exceptionally nice. A three family that is a | ood investment. A five family | at is completely furnished. Call | for further particulars. INVESTMENT A north side two bedroom bungalow that is priced at just $3,000. Th can be made @ very nice bome with a little work. GEORGE R_ IRWIN, BROKER 269 Baldwin Ave. Phone FE 5-0101 & FE 23-8544 — OXFORD INCOME. 4 FAMILY, large lot, small down payment. Inquire eve. or weekends. 35 East 8t., Oxford, 6 ROOMS, “MODERN 3 ACRES, carpeting basement, fruit trees. 2 car garage. $10,500, $4,000 down. 201 Granger Rd. Ortonville Call EM 38149. (9 ROOM HOUSE | COMMERCIAL CORNER -Close to downtown, many uses for this property, large rooms. full bath down. 3 bedrooms and 4% bath up. | Lot 81x102. new pavement, oi! heat, carpeting and venetian, blinds On State Hwy. Only $4000 down. INVEST NOW. | r = - LAKE FRONT RANCH TYPE HOME -— All large beautiful rooms with carpeting and plant ed screened porc overlookin oe andi tenea yard and bedrooms and paneled Ls spare bedroom in basement plus 24x48 recreation room, bar and many more fea- tures to be seen when you make your appointment. C NOW. J. R. Hiltz REAL Complete Rea! 148% N Sa Humphries KENNEDY FE ¢0334 FE 56181 EVE FE 5-5435 LAKEFRONT IMMEDIATE POSSESSIO°° €EX- ; \ tra-large lot with big « ees | on water front Two 1 18, large living room with 1 ce Very clean inside and Ol heat and oil hot water eater and garage. Full price $8,750— with terms. SEE TODAY! WM. A. ‘ REALTOR sort we Hurog PE 4.2560 | For Sale Houses 40 A HOME OF YOUR OWN West Side Brick Truly a lovely home with all of the appointments that you've been w anting, Vestibule — sun room, large living with fireplace and peonebelves, full ining room, neat kitchen and breakfast whstairs v ory. Wall to wall carpeting, also stairway dad e room. f Double brick. garage. Ex- cellent fenced rear yard—a real kiddies playground. A real family home. Gladly shown anytime by apvointm ent $1,250 Down Keego Harbor Neat and clean five room frame home with 2 bedrooms and full bath. Bizable kitchen. Gas floor furnace, automatic hot water heat- ne uelghborhood. Fine on 5 price $7,250. Ottawa Hills Grand white frame colonial with en, lot, double garage. Three rooms and bath up. Vestibule, fire e, downs’ lavatory, full ment. A fine property. $16,500 $500 Down Three room frame on lot 100x300. aa Plains area. Full price Watkins Lake A lovely white frame home butllt in 194. A wonderfully conditioned property throughout. Two bed- rooms and full ceramic bath down and one bedroom (16x12) up. Car- ted living and dining rooms. reened summer por Land- scaped lot—75x136, car and a half Tage. Tiled recreation room. Sood ee ase Priced at $13,950 down. with bef os es AND af NICHOLIE AND HARGER CO. nics re a 1 33 w Huron 8t Me vr 5-183 Open 8:30 ‘til 8:30 _ 4 RM. HOUSE, PAVED STREET. Only $5,500. down ‘for colored. P. W. Dinnan & Son, 110 8. Sagi- _ naw WLrT SIDE SUBURBAN 8 rm. family home, 4 bedrooms, tlle bath up 4 rms & % bath —— attached garage, ful) base- of] ‘teaa heat. 2 acres hy —- landscaped, under ground sprinklers, a trees, Vec pone close school. A real ba $5.000 p An terms. _FE oe FAMILY HOME We mean large rooms, full din- room, fireplace, recreation room, music room. Extra large 2%_ car garage with storage above. All in new condition throughout and located on the edge of the city. away from traffic. Located tn Pontiac school district. The answer to your home hunting. INCOME age baer HOM Four 1 rooms and bath down, all oak con and plastered walls. Two room apt. renting for $67.50 per month and 2 sleeping rooms each renting for $15 per week (double). Good stoker-fed fur- oy — hot water. wn. | SPICE AND SPAN A quiet suburban home with a large lot landscaped beautifully, a nice arden spot, screened patio of] heat and automatic hot water, in @ dry basement. New arage and many other fine fea- ures, 69.700 with convenient terms and quick possession, BUILDER — is @ real buy if you want blocks high and with sub. floor located on two nice west sub- urban lots — best of all a nice 24x24 garage home with water and stool installed to live in while you build — Call today and will make you a deal. FE 4-9584 Son pens Sone ba OPEN EVE. 8U faatens w GAYLORD SaOperettes echoes Exchange HILLTOP LOTS ON PICTURE + ESQUE Carrol] Lake. 80 ft. wide. Safe sand beach. 2 — west of Union Lake. corner of Carroll - =e Lake Ras. Only $1600. e build. A 26x40 basement 11). Sele Houces 40} __Sale Lake Prop 41/_ For Sale Acreage 43 FRONT : we aaa, || & 2 Acres w modern ‘kitchen, bath, glassed & ' o— the “lake eed “fore Hitchman Ss DAILY 3-9 P.M. easy terms. SUNDAY 1-9 P.M. ‘ 316 MIDDLEBEL 3 T ROAD Directions : Orehare Lake Road % mile weet of Tevegraph Road to Middlebelt Read — turn left to mode. SEE THE LARGEST NEW HOMES FOR YOUR MONEY FOR THOSE WHO DESIRE GRACIOUS LIVING NOTE THESE FEATURES: 3 BTDROOM. FACE BRICE HOME Spacious, eye-appealing rooms. FULL BASEMENT - POURED CONCRETE Genuine stone sills. PLASTERED WALLS Gelect oak floors. INTERIOR SLAB DOORS Ceramic tie bath DOUBLE SINK - TILE DRAIN BOARD Cu -made, cabinet: DINING SPACE IN KITCHEN Built! benches FULLY INSULATED Paved solid drive. COMB. ALUMINUM STORMS & SCREENS. knotty pine kitchen Recreation space m™ basement plus pine ranelled lsundry room GAB AUTOMATIC FURNACE AND HOT WATER Que year written construction ruarantee PONTIAC SCHOOL SYSTEM $14,650 Complete “nr lots with 60 to ft frontage. This home with .ttached breese pin ise, and 2 car brick garage - MAHAN REALTY cv., W. Huron On. ws 2- ao o2es DOOR TO BRANCH POST OFFICE 1075 Homes & Cottages WALLED LAKE & VICINITY LAKE LAND REALTY CO. 924 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lr. : MA 4-1554 BY OWNER. 44 RM. BRICKETTE house. $8500 with $3500 down. FE- ELIZABETH LAKE Nearly new 6 rm. ranch home located on 2 well landscaped lots 65x193. lake privileges. Large liv- ing rm, gre rm., ultra modern kitchen, 2 large corner bedrooms & full tile on ist floor. Beautiful high fireproof bsmt. with Timken AC oil a 82 gal. auto. wtr. heater, laundry tubs, lovely recreation rm. & bedrm. in basmt., garage attached. A rea) home and priced right. Call. GI—LAST ONE Just completed, 3 bedrm home on corner lot 75x154. Aluminum siding, tile bath, utility rm, large livingrm with dining ell, nice kitchen, plastered walls thruout. oagls ae ol ad mortgage costs JOHN. K. IRWIN ALTOR 101% nN grid Street Phone FE 2-4031 Eve. OR 31411 electricity, over 1000 ft. frontage. tate Rd. On a “gees 6 for west of os FE © @ for motel business c 43408, GATEWAYS” tol” HAPPINESS Love—Contentment NEW RANCH TYPE Among the trees near beautiful Eliz- abeth Lake Park, well planned large 5 room home featuring a spacious living room with stone freplace. tile bath (colored fix- tures) fingertip kitchen with cus- tom-made cupboards, 2 large bed- rooms, oi] heat. Beautiful lot with privileges on Elizabeth Lake, of- fered at $12,100, $4,600 down. To Buy — To Sell — To Trade YOU BUY IT — WE'LL INSURE IT MAHAN REALTY CO., REALTORS CO-OPERATIVE MEMBERS Open Evenings ‘til 9 pinnaey 1-9 1975 W Huron PH. FE 20263 poor acl BRANCH GILES TENNYSON ST. $2.000 down will handle this cute 5 room home al) on 1 floor. If you want a house + with 2 bedrooms and a large dining room this is it.- Has full basement and a 2 car garage, all on aw double lot tha PE eis of landscaping AT T EXT. INVESTORS Here is a money maker you Just wt — to miss seeing. A large 9 room fur- nish: ‘tncome that has 4, 3 and m apartments. All bave rivate baths plus a '2 bath the basement. Cy in West side location eoent he income is over et > the month. Where se aees full price is only $9,800 and too! Established 1916 EAST SUBURBAN -—- aa ig modern &rm. home. 17 ft liv- ing rm., venetian blinds, full basement. aluminum - screens and storm sash Good school, aes 1 center and bus stop nea $0x200 ft., 950 with 33.500" down 3-BEDRM. BRICK — New in 1949. Modern kitchen, full bath with tiled features, full basement with gas heat. Combination screens and storms. Large lot. Close to shcool and bus. Now at $12,650. AUBURN HEIGHTS — 2 homes for e of 1. Zoned for business. our chance for home busi- ness. 5-rm. modern homie. also additional bidg. on rear of lot. 61 ft. on Auburn Ave. Present income shows good return. Price $10,000 with $3,000 down. SEMINOLE HILLS. — Fine home, good location and excellent con- dition. You should see this 3 bed home with 24 ft. living | rm. with fireplace and carpet- | tng Space for 4th bedrm. if de-| sired. Modern kitchen, full] base- eae with oil heat, recreation | ce, garage. Blacktop road. | all ae aR ga $16,500 witb FLOYD KENT, Realtor enin Open ee 24 W. Lawrence PE 5-6105 Next to Consumers Power 5 -_ Leora pal FULLY CARPET- auto. heat, base- ae Pike sateteren $2,000 down. Owner om 23-3685. a better investmen terms ! W. SUBURBAN $8,975 Here is that neat & room frame on almost 1 acre of ground that you have been looking’ for, It has a full basement 1% car garage and the Wer garden is in. There are more than enough berries for that deep freeze. So call for further details. GILES REALTY CO. REALTOR Giroux & Hicks 4380 Dixie OK Drayton Plains , $0701. L SECLUDED. 5 lake frost hed, erly acre, log, cabi 9054 __ Sher Dr. Call MA 5 LOT FOR SALE 50x200, BEAUTI- ful restric Mn GREEN 3. BEDROOM “down. Restricted. P LOTS ON ‘PICTURESQUE Lak & Cooley Lake Rds. Only $1600 Terms. _ BEAUTIFUL LOT ON CHANNEL overlooking lake. Lots of trees 268° deep, 2 miles from city limits. $2,150. FE 2-5685. 2 CABINS ON 50'x150' LOT. LAKE shag yy $2,000 cash. 410 Edge- wood ~ Brendel Lake 10 miles west of Pontiac out M-59 GREEN LAKE OFFICE RI 7070 COMMERCE RD. EM 38-4413 Line Prom Detroit—WO 5-1744 Rent Resort Prop. 41A LOT AND CABIN, m hunting in Clare Counts. Lake front cabin and lot $1.085. Lee Swallow, —— Lake George. Open Sun- ays MODERN COTTAGE, PONTIAC __Lake, .$50 wkly. OR-3-7301. 41B a ~ Sale Resort Prop. NEW MODERN COTTAGE, ON CAT 5 miles NE of camel . $4200. Terms. ~~ DEER HUNTERS 2 room log cabin sover to move into, sleeps 8, locat in finest = — Just off main high- CRAW FORD AGENCY For Sale Lots Building Sites DRAYTON PLAINS 100x150 ft. level sites, some on a bill. Easy to drive your own well] Good roads, close to bus line Low as $475 with $50 down. ACREA 1% Acres of exc. soil, some trees. $650 with Pi 5 ACRE RES sofl, Ideal trait £ a 8s, Good wel) drained. cellent building sites with some trees. $1500 wih $150 down. 4 ACRES WOODED Large fardwood timber on s road, beautiful sites to bu in the woods & have the seclusion you've always wanted $1800 with $180 down. 5 ACRES ws A rolling, good soil for farm- . Nice b site, $1750 with A large piece of land at eason- able price. Idea] site = a fruit farm, $2100 with 6210 down. DD LEVEL CORNER LOT. BUSINESS or residential. $50 dwn. $10 per __month. FE 4-3363 3 ACRES AT “WILLIAMS 26x36 basement is in. Ready to build on. Well trae level. Can be Linge 1 block from good beac $140 Cass-Elizabeth FE 5-128 FE ¢. perigee HAVE SEVERAL LOTS NEAR Longfellow School. — and up, $25 down, also some tn Nortb end off Walton Blvd. WILLI8 M. Roosevelt Hote) PE 4-518! Eves & Sun. EM 3-48098 $1,200 BUYS THIS — Big 7 ft. lot om one of Pontiac's best streets. Just off W. Huron ca to 32 Oneida. UNiversity 1 Ft. Frontage Cheap ely quiet district. Near ao stores, bus at door 8 Seer Marshal & O _ersity 1-3284 _ CRANBERRY LAKE This 100 foot lot is a small farm Beautiful high lot, with exc. view overlooking countryside Runs from M-59 pavement to lake, and has good, 80 ft. well at building site. $3,600 terms. MACEDAY LAKE - smun. UNI: We have sotiie selction of lots with at p44 gg priced from ocue 10 per cent ie ic Wood Co. REALTORS 1725 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-1235 Oftice Open 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. LEVEL, C CLEAN, HIGH AND DRY lot on N. Jessie $450. Take bids. FE 46118. 100x400’ LOT, ON BLACKTOP RD. Across from Williams Lake School, Terms. OR 3-6928. SEMINOLE HILLS of Pontiac's best subdivisions. All city improvements. Blacktop, city water, gas and electricity. 2 adjoining ots for only $1,000 each. Very reasonable terms. Cal) now Ww ATKIN S LAKE AREA able. Watkins Lake Road. $600 with 20 per cent down buy a lot. Your start to owning a home. Call for details. FLOYD KENT, Realtor 24 W. Lawrence Open Eves. FE 05 5-6 Next to Consumers Power 70° FRONTAGE ON CENTRAL AVE. _ near school & bus, MA 5-736] PITTLE FARMS Beautiful 77x320 ft. tracts right on paved road. Excellent soil. We only have two of these priced at only $695. $10 down and $10 per mon.b ae L. H, BROWN, Realtor 1362 W Huron . Ph. FE 24810 2 LOTS AT WILLIAMS LAKE. 60x300 each Good well 25x28 ft. foundation Full price. $1700 OR 3-6734 DRAYTON WOODS — Ranch homesites Some beautifully ed. $495 up. HOLMES-BARTRAM 4392 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1950; Eves. OR 3-8001 |CIVE IN THE COUNTRY NEAR =”, _— @ till ® rE 5-6176 the city on «a large restricted = a in Waterford Hil Es- ; PERRY LAKE tates. Convenient terms ar- > room |} ame tn Brandon} ranged. Por tnformetion caD OR Twp. Com oe with | _ 3-7614 anne electric oa tnd r rator. a — onl move take baat pee el e t go prepare | ————_ _____ oe LOTS OF LOTS WITH LAKE PRIV- your meal. $4500 with $1500 down. fleges et Upper straits Middle Straits and Union Lake CARROLL G. PORRITT)] Terms. “Senneider. 924 Pontiac 26% W Huron &t. FE 271% Trail, Walled Lake N- Eve FE 26194 DAYS Phone MA 4-1554. OPEN SATURDAY 9-6 P. M. BEAUTIFUL SUNDAY 10 A. M. TO 5 P. M. 4 room and bath. Not all finished,| 2 LOTS. 105x279. CORNER OF full basement, 18 lots. a good well 69 ft.;:coal furnace, new orchard, new strawberry bed, mostly black dirt. $8,600 cash 433 Whitehead _ St. Leonard. Mich. OA 8-2692. _Sale Lake Prop 41 CASS LAKE A good home, cheap. 5 rooms furn., full price $4,000. PFE 4-5289. CLEAR LAKE FRONTAGE ee LA- tots, §200 2% tales West Grukser and nd atlbere Rd. Oxford Stemhen Seber. er, reel AND WOOD 8T FE 5-2490 HITCHMAN’S SQUIRREL ROAD Sub. See announcement under for, _ Sale acreage. _ __ B8ALE LOTS Cass Lake Rd. N of Keego. on er to oo Se he sis0e: Pontiac. JODSON BRADWAY COMPANY 00 MAJESTIC BUILDING - WO 2-9700 Branch. Terese Feces Rd. ‘nr, Orch- ard Lake | LAKE also in. Nicely THELMA M, ELW dob Several %2 acre parcels still avail- Squirrel Road Sub. Only 2 miles from Pontiac, Fine building locations. High and dry. None traffic. Trees. prices, small down po ments, ¢asy mont terms. Open Sunday. Be first to get a choice site. Directions: Corner of Pontiac Rd. and Walton Blvd. (1 mile E. of Op- dyke) follow signs. OLive 6-2606, ORlando 3-0052. 31 ACRE WOODS, HIG ing site overlooking a Terms less for cash. Dillman, Broker, Rt. _ Mich. Tel. MU- 4-0572. 74 .CRES ON 3 RDS. MIL Lk. Eston Rd $7400 3, 6 10, ete. Orier & Clarkston. OA 8-3TTT. ACREAGE BUYS 1 road is needed to 75x190 each. It is } near the Airport This is a good buy for only $15,500 and M-15 with 120 ft. deep, $2,000, WHITE BROS. Open ® to 8 for Your Convenience Ph. OR 3-1872 or OR 3-1769 Located on frontage 1276 5660 Dixie Highway Waterford % ACRES ON PA - 625.00 down, $10 month. . W. DINNAR & SON 110 & Saginaw PE ¢-2671 PECs 2-11 ACRE PACELS ON rel Rd. 1-10 acre parcel on mons . 2-3 Shimmons Rd. @ per cent month ADAMS REALTY | 382 Auburn FE 43393 68 ACRES—PAVED RD, High class section with frontage on 2 paved roads. Between Pontiac and Roch- ester and adjoins the Dodge Estate. Excellent subdivision or for estate. Priced $600 per acfe. Any reason- able terms. , Edw. M. Stout. Realtor 71 N, Saginaw St. Ph. FE 65-8168 Open Eve, ‘til 8:30 ~ Business Property 44 out of town owner ill, must sell price reduced te $9500. Terms. PAUL M. JONES REAL ESTATE 832 W. HURON PH. FE 43508 M-59 FRONTAGE Choice, close-in West Huros St. (M-5S@) at Rontiac Lake R4., frovtage planned for age cial use a of 180 ft., aod aliey, prov’ the parking to- day's business demands, See & Bg con its Pret Sg 516 Pontiac State 4 Bldg. CARL W. BIRD, Realtor FE 44211 Eves, FE 5-1392 Sale Industrial Prop. 44A 2%, A. ZONED MFG, RAIROAD SPUR IN Near Pontiac Motor, 2% Acres storage bidgs., office, 6 car truck @rage, your own a. anda 32 amily home. Only $22,000. Terms. You ‘must know this low price means HURRY! WARD E. PARTRIDGE, REALTOR FE 2-8316 43 W. Huron &t. For Sale Farm Prop. 45 9> ACRES On pavement, 18 miles from Pon- tiac. Plenty of other good farms. P. W. Dinnan 5 : & B8on 110 6. aires. FE 4-257% ACREAGE OR FARM WANTED. Buildings not impo party iw ey all c East or South of Pontiac, Phone Valley 1-6673 evenings or write 7 Focade 1560 Fairview Detroit 4; For Sale Land Contract 46 20 PER CENT DISCOUNT New 3-bedroom home near $6200 Eliza.esh Lake. Sold Be ance owin-~ $5480 at $54.80 oe month at 6 per cen’ int. Cost to you &, 20 PER CENT DISCOUNT —New 2-bedroom Lg ed with full basement. “ Near Maceday Lake. Sold $5400. Bal. owin — at $49.00 per mon r cent. Cost te yor sse2b" © 1 :.R CENT eet -New 2bedroom cen. Lake Sold 94350. Bal. per $3750. at $37.50 per mon v per cent interest. Cost to you %3000. The above listed contracts gre all bono op pacman on we!l construc proper- ties. See them to-day. RAY O’NEIL, Realtor 75 W. Huron ° SS 7 or OR 3-7956 Exchange Phone FE 3-7103 Member Co-op $1,821 DISCOUNT ; 30 per cent off on new 4 rm, | 100 per cent modern bungalow $4,250 to handle. Write Daily Press, _Box 104 Business Opportunities 47 Partridge “BIRD” TALK To T THE RIGHT EAN wi YOU WANT TO BUY A BUSINESS 30 PATIENT CAP. CONVALES. HOME Only $6,000 for business, furnt ture and lease on this seclud | but well known convalescen home. Present owner not able to operate. A potential gross tn- come of over $3,000 per mo. Let us show you. GROC., $68.000 GROSS Only $2,500 down plus the stock. Beer and wine license and all angen pl It's a ae tion residence a aaa borhood It’s fosoie i JUST $6,000 DOWN. MAIN ST. TAVERN Right on Saginaw 8t. you can buy this straight tavern bar that will net you $1,000 a month or better. No food. 3 beer taps thet are drawing teer most of the time during the 9 a.m. to 1 houre rry see 1. today Present owner has made enough to retire on here —you can do the same. WARD E. PARTRIDGE | OFFICE OF NATIONAL BUSINESS BROKERS CLEARING HOUSE OFFICES PRIN / CO ‘AST. TO- “COAST "World's Largest 43 W. Huron Open Eve. FE 23-8316 GULE SUPER SERVICE tt vou fre interested tn e business of own. we have 2 good sta tor Nenee PL buy oni | Present operator’ 173. eve. | L_H Cole OU Co ves FE 2-5162. 2 e “hy | TWENTY-SEVEN _ our 2 Ce LOS TWENTY-FIGHT Business Opportunities 47 DOWNTOWN CAFE busiest Punt G teria ness that has all the best an the tront oor to the back. Pull the most — to e uet room for — t for only $16,500 price, (1393.) TAVERN—HOME Fh owe 10,000 down for prop- erty an dail. (1387.) STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 5 INC. PONTIAC veal CRLDO. Pontiac Office. J. asain canes Mer. CS FE 60878 | ~° If $300 additional monthly income interest you and you can sparc 8 hours nfl ee to service Egg route — immediately in- vest 9000-81. cash for equip ment, write to a Peatee Daily Press Boz . giving phone and address for personal interview only. -GIGAR AND NEWS STAND FOR lease. Call B. mnt Mgr. Hote) Pontiac. FE 5-6171. POOR HEALTH FORCES SALE. , Best vr.-rd business corner. on M-5@ Oas, mF hale soda bar and ith 3 bedrm. apt. Can support two families. “Take over with full stock, and no loss of time Show books to e buyer Terms half dn. Minns M . illman Broker. Rt. 4 Milford, Mich. Tel. MU 4-0572 TO BUY fro BELL, REALIOR Partridge (8S CHE ‘BIRD’ to eee Knudsen Going grocery and meat bust- * mess including stock and fix- tures. Only $1,500. Ask to see it now WM. H. KNUDSEN REALTOR 610 Pontiac _— — Bldg. Ph. 4-451 MODERN BEAUTY pa Te 20 Floor PER- ators Main Rochester OL __6-0011, DOUBLE STORE _ Out of town, less than % price, living quarters, solid brick build- ing, vpening for 8 different busi- ness. What's your line? Just think, _ $4,900 | Terms. Vincent, MI 6-2299. Johnson, OCERY AND 8. D. M, LICENSE dH spot for man & wife. This store now doing $45,000 pr year business, but with a little itiative, should do at least $75,- 090 per year. Owner interested in other business, and will sacrifice for only $6,000 with terms. The above price includes $1800 inven- tory. ould also consider land contract or smal] home in trade. . Eves. after 6, call Mr, Joll. FE 1-6610. . A. JOHNSON, Realtor Ph. E. 42533 . Our New Location 1704 8. Telegraph Rd. just south of Bloomfield Fashion _ Shop FOR SALk RIVE INN CHEAP 2134 Dixie ‘wy Grocery Store, Snack Bar Located in northern part of state in good deer hunting and trout fishing urea Completely peees. No stock to invento price $10,000, $3,600 ‘dow. Call for complete details. JAMES A. TAYLOR Real Estate — Insurnace 1210 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. PE 42544 Open Evenings Co-op. Member BEAUTY “HOP DOING GOOD ovsiness Retiring FE 43442. SALE STORE AND GAS STATION, beer and wine. FE 3-0754 days, FE 42639 night: CLASS “C” TAVERN Located on beautiful Torch Lake 280 ft. of frontage. Approx. 3 acres of land including 11 cabins, 3 cottages, and main tavern 35x65. Strictly modern also serving full course meals. Pictures and com- plete information upon request. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 53% W. Huron © _ 3623 _. Money to Loan 49 (State Licensed Lenders) CASH UP’TO $500 to finance your auto or other pur- chases; to re-finance for lower payments; pay bills; sickness or otner worthy purposes Prompt, Friendl Service OURS AT ALL TIMES Our business ts assisting individuals and families with their money problems op Fa bg ou Phone HOME. & AUTO LOAN COMPANY 407 COMM. NAT’L BANK BLDG. Leslie Fieisher. Manager Berkeley Voss, President Hours ® to 5 Sat. 9 to } - 4%% MORTGAGES ~ PAOL 8. KA 1310 Pont Bank Bldg _—FE 5-8406 TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 200% S. MAIN ROCHESTER, MICH. LOANS $25 to $500 AUTOS LIVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODS Pb. Rochester OL 6-0711 CASH PROMPTLY Get @ cash loan of 825 to $500 here promptly. Phone first for @ loan in ao single trip. Write or come in if more convenient. You'll like the frendly neighboply way we do business here. PROVIDENT LOAN and savings Society of Detroit. 7 W. Lawrence St. Pontiac 2-9249 SEE US WHEN YOU NEED MONEY $25 to $500 CAN HEL? YOU IF YOU NEED * WITHOUT ENDORSER AND RE- PAY IN SMALI. MONTHLY PAY LL YOU NEED Do Is Pars sOxe OR CALL AT fT oun oz STATE FINANCE CO. Ph FE +1574 T16 Pontiae State Bank Bldg. $10-$500° QUICE on aa tae SERVICE FURNITURE LIVESTOCK AUTOMOBILES BAXTER & LIVINGSTONE FINANCE CO. 63% W. Huron St FE ¢1538 Money to Loan 49 (State Licensed Lenders) =|MONEY | WAITING} You May Borrow 29-6900. _Today credit. Ge wo mo ign ge BUCENER FINANCE CO. CORNER NSA SAGINAW a BORON $25 to $500 Now! Bere is the cash — service you have been looking GET YOUR. ‘LOAN IN ONE VISIT On ‘46 to '52 —, cars. — your title Let Auto Accessories 52 CAR RADIO. WILL FIT FROM °41- 48. DODGE. $30. FE 5-4766. WREUKING FOR PANis, + CARS and up Buicks, Pords, Oldsmo end New rebullt starters. carbu 2539 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-3106 DUAL CARBURETOR-MANAFOLD for Cheve. 2780 E. Walton Blvd. CRANKSHA®1 GRINDING IN THE car cviinders rebored Zuck Ma- chine Shop % Yood Ph FE GLASS!—GLASS! We specialize in new safety auto- lass. [nstalied while you wait. ith your insurance al) you need is your signature AJ) wort guar- anteed. Hub Auto Parts Co. 123 Oakland Ave Pn PB 4-7066 RUBBERIZED ‘41 PONTIAC CON- vertible top. ‘48 Pontiac motor, fine cond. FE 2-5775 even. Y RACING car or consolidate meeps Dull and reduce your monthly pay- ments by as much as % Loans made, on furniture, signature, oe — Up to 18 months OAKLAND’ LOAN CO 202 Pontiac St. Bk Sidg. FE 2-9206 __Corner f Saginaw and wrence LOANS Community Loan Co. 30 E, Lawrence FE 2-7131 FRIENDLY SERVICE For Sale Housetrailers 50 Pontiac Chiet MOBILE HOMES 26 ft. ‘-es Ten seme eelliels tne years to You can buy a Les Hutchinson re- conditioned trailer as low as $100 down. Hutchinsons Trailer Sales 4615 Dixie a Ok Drayton Plains 1 3-120 Also saree 11 Mile & Woodward, 1] Oak, LI 5-2810 $100-$200 DOWN, GOOD TRA TRAILERS, Tental plans, move tp t diate- FOR SALE — MERCUR engine, Full norse OR }3-2004. Auto Servite 53 BUMPING REPAIRS, PAINTING FREF¥ hSTIMATE ALL MAKES OF CARS : AYMENT PLAN BRAID MIR SALES 30 Years Pair Desling Cass at West Pike St Phone FE 21-0186 MECHANICAL WORK WE ALSO specialize on car spring rebuild- ing Ph. OR 3-1663, 9 to 5 p. m. FOR COMPLETE COLLISION SERVICE —. lor gr aaaaaea Oliver Motor Sales cay a Phone RE 1-910) ___Wanted Used Cars 54 500 CARS WANTED BAGLEY AUTO PARTS Top dollar — wrecked & junk cars. Pickup. 170 Bag- ey St. FE 23-2544 or 4-35385. WTD WRECKED & JUNK CARS PE 3-9477 340 Baldwin Ave. PARTY FROM OUT OF STATE wants clean, late model car. All cash. Appreciate a call. MI 4-6898. See M&M Motor Sales tor top dollar on ta 2527 “Dixie d’wy ry OR si603" WE NERD 1946 TO 63 USED CARS Meso bate SS Uy Boece es So et uron one ly. Save rent. TRAILER EXCHANGE 60 8. Telegrapb Open Eves. SEE THE FAMOUS TRAVELO TRAILER Get the i. Poss t: years trailer —e-* * 451 S. Telegraph Rd, PE 6-175) 3 FT HOUSETRAILER. STOOL and shower: not water tank al) Modern 1320 Scott Lake Rd. NEW & USED, TRAILE JIM __Dinkel, 3°52 ‘ Hureo TWO BUNK —_ DEMONSTRA- tors 39° and 41° Save dollars. 28’ 1953 model ite adage batb with tub $2,495 includ: GENESEE SALES 2101 Dixie H'wy FE 22-8786 1948 Brenan 27 FT.. LIKE NEW Light grey aluminum exterior. Electr’c refrigerator & not water heater Apt size gas cook stove. New studio couch Interior has ust been varnished Trailer No. Huron Trailer Park 1948 25 FT PLaTt HOUSETRAIL er. $1200 2300 ‘Shimmons Rd 28° HOUSETRAILER. CASH OR Bald WTD. JUNK CARS & SCRAP IRON. FE 9582. Eves. after 5:30 and Sundays call FE 5-4839. . CASH YOUR CAR POINTE MOTOR SALES 171 S. __ Saginaw VIRGIN: 4UYER PAYS TOP dollar ior cieap 4) to 49 Fords. Pontiac Chevrolety & Buicks a.t 121 E Montcalm TEX.-CALIF, MARKET Top Price for Your Car AVERILL’S 2020 DIXIE HWY WE 0R7R FF 46R06 WTD SCRAP OR CHEAP CARS OR 31663 WTD JUNE & CHEAP CARS none FE 3-0467 CARS WANTED FOR PARTS 12) E Montcalm FE 48230 WANTED 46 TO $2 MODELS BE SURE TO GET OUR PRICE BEFORE you SELL YOUR CAR. B. J, VAN- WEL1 OR 3-1355 PER CENT BANE RATES. TRAILERS LOW DOWN PAYMENTS BALANCE LIKE RENT OXFORD TRAILER SALES PARTS & ACCESSORIES New Location: 1488 S Lapeer Ra , Mi 8 of e CASH FOR USED TRAILERS. _3im Dinkel 3152, W Huron 1943 m model, 24 footer. Can be seen at 137 Starr St. or call FE 4-9100. MOBILE HOMES, ALL SIZES. Jim Dinkel, 3153 W. Huron. _ Parkhurst Trailer Court and Sales now showing New Moon completely furnished apt. homes — 31, 36, 41 ft. Long term bank rates. 1540 Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion, MY 2-4611. "1 FT. ALUMINUM HOUSETRAIL- er used very little $1500 Mutual SMALL HOUSETRAILER. IDEAL fo- camping $300. Inquire at Dick’: Place, corner of Walton Blvd & Clintonville Rd. - ~ WANTED ~— 18 ft aluminum trailer, sleep 4. Reas A-l1 OR 3-7479 after 5:30 _pm. COSTELLO'S TRAILER SALES _ CASH for used trailers. Lake Orion MY 3-7571 TRAILER EXCHANGE ANDERSON PRAIRIE SCHOONER SKYLINE. ROYAL AND UTHERS 1 & 2 bedrooms: 16 to 40 ft.. over 50 floor plans, al) kinds of equip- ment, furniture. roof coatings, paints, touraids. nelper springs & complete Une of other trailer Darts and accessories. ped OUR STORB 60 South page ata Open Eventngs and unday pD. m. ‘47, 24° HOUSETRAILER, GOOD cond., newly decorated, FE 7-6833. SMALL HOUSETRAILER, SLEEPS 2, clean $275 cash. Phone OR 3-0577 ‘46 “© LCAR HOUSETRAILER. 8l_eps 6. Good cond. 2080 Gallo- __way Drive. Parkhurst | Trailer ler Court. and Sales See the Michigan Arrow with bunk beds and tub 26° Elcar with tub. 22” Richardson Vacationer. also several demonstrators and am 4.. used trailers 1540 Lapeer 246lt _ For Rent Trailer Space 51 al Ol lt _ Lake Orion MY PARKHURST LAKE LRAILSR » court. Sewer & water MY 2-4611. TRAILER SPACE FOR eer Trailer Camp. 3300 Elis. 52 ~~ Auto Accessories AUTO PARTS New — Rebuilt — Used OPEN EVES. AND SUN. Discount to al) GM &mployes Hollerback Auto Parts 340 Baldwin PE 3-067) | 4 NEW 700x16, 6 PLY TIRES. AUTO PARTS | New—Rebuilt—Used Open Evenings & Sunday Discount to All GM Employees MOTOR MART 21 E. Montcalm FE 4-8230 i WE NOW HAVE SEVERAL GOOD USED ] RENT. | ° terms 054 win Rd, in Oak-| TOP «* FOR CLEAN CARS OF wood au kinds %4 Auburn FE ¢32131. NEW GEN arts,| _ For Sale Used Cars 55 IRONWOODS SKYLINE & DE-| “““““~errrerrnr TR ITERS WE FINANCE AT Larry Jerome Rochester Ford Dealer ‘00 BUICK SPECIAL FORDOR RADIO, HEATER DYNAFLOW S195 Larry Jerome MAIN STREET AT THE BRIDGE Ph OL 1-9711 “FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS A GOOD PLACE TO BUY" _ OPEN EVENINGS BUICK 6. vi EDAN. ®ULLY equipped with tvna ‘ike new BUICK '53 SUPER REVIER. ¢+DR. Fully equipped tncluding power steering lleage 350. Best offer takes it."Can be reached by phone after 5:30 _PE 41368. BUICK ‘41 "NEEDS MINOR RE- Pairs $150. 148 Wall. BUICK ‘Si RIVIERA, FULLY equipped, _ good cond. FE | 2-6337. BUICK $0, MUST BELL. 3 3201 Atr- port Rd LINCOLN-MERCURY IS THE BUY JACK ODGE [8 THE oie Salesman of new and used ca CENTRAL LINCOLN- MERCURY 40 W PIKE 8ST. Cass at W Pike gt. Bue Lilt 0187 Res FP 2-088) | BUICK °50 SPECIAL, GOOD COND. bak take trade in, 368 W. Ken- CONVERTIBLE, Wil) take trade SaprtLae 7 hvdra. WSW tires __Mapie_ 5-7490 CADILLAC ‘46, 4 DR. R. & H,, like new. 32.000 miles FE 5- 5649. CADILLAC ‘$1, COUPE DE VILLE 62 «ses Sha 21,000 miles. New tires electric windows. Rea- sonabe. 211 Linden off James K. $2.89. : SCHRAM AUTO PARTS} «:: THE PONTIAC DATLY PRESS. _MONDAY. AUGUST 17, 1953" FUNNY BUSINESS | “With this one you don’t have to count the cuckoos to get the right time!” Sale Used Cars 85 Bright Spot Orchard Lake at Cass 52 Chevie, dix, 2 dr, ’52 Ford 8, convert. 52 Cadillac, convert. ’52 Olds 98, 4 dr. 52 Pontiac, Chief., 4 dr. ’52 Plymouth, 4 dr. 52 Olds, super 88, 2 dr. ’52 Pontiac Cat., sup. dlx. 51 Olds 88, 2 dr. ’51 Pontiac, Chief., 4 dr. "51 Dodge, 4 dr. 51 Ford, Victoria 51 Olds, super 88, 4 dr. 51 Buick, super 4 dr. ’51 Buick, RM, 4 dr. 51 Buick, special, 4 dr. ’50 Buick, super, 4 dr; ’50 Olds 8&8, 4 dr. 50 Pontiac sedan cpe. 50 Olds 88, 2 dr. ’50 Mercury, 2 dr. ’50 Chevie, club cpe. 50 Pontiac, Chief., 4 dr. 50 Ford 8, 2 dr. "50 Olds 98, 4 dr. "49 Nash 600, 4 dr. "49 Olds 88, club cpe. ’49 Ford 8, 2 dr. 49 Pontiac, club cpe. ’49 Mercury, 2 dr. ’49 Chevie, Styleline, 4 dr. ’48 Pontiac 8, sed. cpe. ’48 Chevie, club’ cpe, ’48 Buick sedanette ’47 Cadillac 62, 4 dr. ’47 Mercury, 4 dr. ’47 Olds, club sedan ’47 Chevie, club ¢pe. ’46 Olds, 4 dr. sed. Buy Now at Our New Low Prices JEROME Olds-Cadillac Used Cars—Orchard oy at Cass Ph FE 4-5324 one New Cars 280 8. Saginaw Phone FE 4-3566 ~CHEVE. ‘49 R&H, VERY SHARP cond, Only $847. LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES DODGE-PLYMOUTH M-24 at Buckhorn Lk, MY 2-261) ’49- CHEVROLET 2 DR. DELUXE Radio and heater. Original through- out. Drive it home for only $595 Full Price MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BiG PAVED LOT ON THE = OF WOODWARD 3 ulLE ROAD FORD “40. FORD ‘41 ‘Good cond. PE 5-4047. _ 1952 CHEVROLETS “ 3-doors — 4doors Bel-aire coupes Station Wagons Low as $325 Or Your Old Car Down MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BIG PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND BI) MILE ROAD ROAD CADILLAC '52 60 SPECIAL FLEET- wood Low mileage, original own- er, like new. EM 3-4285. CADILLAC 49 CLUB COUPE, fr" Sonariens beautiful finish ust sel. CADILLAC 48 62, 2 DR. 1, & HL exc, cer 0. rE b 4-7452. 31 CHEV. 2 DR. naio and neater. Beautiful green inish. ONLY $250 Or your old car down. MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BIG Seen LOT ON THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD 1951 CHEVROLET fFLEE1- LIN@ 2 OR ORLUXE. RADIO & HEATER. $1100. EXCELLENT CONDITION CALL FE 56-0404 PRICED FOR QUICK SALE 50, °51, °52 CHEVROLET BEL-AIRS GOOD SELECTION POINTE MOTOR SALES 171 S. Saginaw St. 1950 BEL-AIR. EX. COND, BEST offer, FE 2-362, me EARL R. | MILLIMAN A FORD DEALER OVER 31 YEARS REMEMBER. All Our Used Cars Carry a 6-Month or 6,000-Mile Warranty 51 Chev. 4 dr. sed. ’50 Ford 2 dr. sed. ’50 Stude. 4 dr. ’48 Ford 4 dr. sed. 51 Kaiser 2 dr. sed. ’51 Plym. 2 dr. sed. 49 Ford 2 drs. & coupes}. SO Pont. 2 dr, sed. 48 Pont. 2 dr. sed, ’48 Chev. Aero sed. EARL R. MILLIMAN 147 S. SAGINAW Open from 8 a.m.-9 p.m. a PHONES: FE 54101—After 6 of 5-3588 For Sale Used Cars 55 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE GOODWILL USED CARS “Not a Name but a Policy” PROM POST OFFICE MT CLEMENS 6T. On BUY YOUR USED CAR FROM A DEALER YOU KNOW 1946 AND 1947 PONTIACS © 1948 and 1949 CHEVROLETS PONTIACS PLYMOUTHS '50, 'S1 AND ‘52 AND A FEW '53s CHEVROLETS PLYMOUTHS PONTIACS FORDS DODGES HARD TOPS CHRYSLERS ALSO A FINE aia F SEDAN DEI.AVERIES SUBURBANS ALL LIKE NEW SPECIAL! 53 CHEV. PICKUP LIKE NEW PONTIAC RETAIL STORE Factory Branch 63 Mt. Cleinens at Mill Phone FE 3-7117 1951 CHEVROLET 4 DR. SEDAN. Pully equipped, 15,000 mi. $1,225. PE 5-8489 after 6 p. m. CALL FE4-278 AND MAKE ME PROVE I CAN SAVE YOU MON. EY ON A USED CAR. LOOK THIS ONE OVER! 52 HARDTOP 8,000 Miles $465 Down Payment ymouth Cranbrook Convertible driven only 8,000 miles. belvedere blue with side wall tires turn sig- nals, and other extras. Looks and drives like a new one Try it on Down 1946 Pontiac Fordor......... 135.00 1947 Plymouth Fordor..... 166.00 -950 Pontiac 8 cyl. Pordor ... $275.00 1950 DeSoto Custom ‘Fordor 335 00 19 ©, Custom Pordor 395.00 1951 Chevrolet Styline ¢Dr 300.00 1 eo. Truiser 465 00 1952 Chevrolet 2Dr Deluxe Powerglide) 405. 1952 Plymou 5 senger Cranbrook (14.000 es). 405.00 ‘@ Ply 8p — 4 oor, 6 sratidieiaiere ars $196 ‘48 Chry 4 door. down ..... $195 ‘49 Ply Deluxe 3 door. down . $195 » door Pull price .. ._s sececccess: $195 38 Plymouth 4 lo Price . $135 ‘39 Chev. Tudor, Price eeeeee ee $100 40 Ply. Tudor PITTTITT TTT) oe $146 40 st ie $100 SALES DeSoto-Plymouth Dealer 30 Years Fair Dealing Cass at W. Pike FE 20186 For Sale Used Cars 55 For Sale Used Cars 55) For Sale Used Cars 55 For Sale Used Cars 55 ~ we Due to the h of last week's priced cars, GENERO offers a sale of 1949 FOR Radio, heater, good exterior and i condition. 1949 LINCO Radio, heater. and ever 1950 PONTIAC 2 Radio, heater, and hydramatic. V finish. 1950 MERCURY Radio and heater. 1951 CHEVROLET F Radio, heater and 1951 PONTIA Radic, heater, and leather tri 1952 LINCOLN r Wuft 1952 MERCURY Radio, heater, and mercuromatic. A Prices have not been quo the used car lots can onl of customers at one tim traffic problem on Cass a rather have you come in these cars, CEN LINCOLN- LOT PIKE an FE 4- edvy response HABE US WALT late model cars D SEDAN nterior finish. Motor tn yery good LN SEDAN drive. Very clean car. DOOR SEDAN ery good motor and shiny black 2 DOOR SEDAN A sharp automobile. LEETLINE SEDAN shiny green finish. C CATALINA m. A very sharp automobile. CAPRI 4 DOOR Bald. CLUB COUPE very clean and sharp automobile. ted on these cars because y handle a limited amount e. Rather than create a nd Pike Streets, we would TRAL MERCURY No. 1 d CASS 3885 For Sake Used Cars 55 Stop In For A Free Handshake Where The Cleanest Cars In Town Are Sold. Ask for Phil. 1950 MERCURY With R&H, metallic green finish. 1950 OLDS G.een finish with white wall tires and heater 1950 LINCOLN This is a sharp automobile throughout with yvran hydramatic, and white wall tires CLEAN 1950 HUDSON 2 dr.. super so, R&H, new seat covers SHARP 1951 MERCURY 4 dr., »rilliant yellow finish with R&H 1952 PLYMOUTH With RAH. This te really © nice TRANSPORTATION OFFERS 19446 CHEVIE Maroon finish. This is an ex- ceptional car for 1946. CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY LOT No. 2 749 Baldwin Ave. — One Block South of Fisher Body FE 47816 CHEVROLET, a. +0R. DELUX R&H, other accessories, Low mile- age, clean Pr 195. 590 Fourth after 5:30 p.m. gT) Ex’ 253 ‘dianieas Ave. cond. rE 4-4316, WE OFFER 53 Hudson ’53 Willys 49, '47, '46 Ford ’49, '48 Stude. '49 Nash 47, '41 Pontiac , 48, '47 Chevie. 53, ’51, '49 Mercury ’48 Plymouth clb. cpe. 49, 40 Olds ECONOMY USED CARS 23 Auburn Ave PD ¢313) STYLINE DELUXE. BES gayle. Bichon witter. "50 CHEV. 2 DR. Radio, heater, tires and motor, nice black {nish and clean ip- terericr. ONLY $175 Or your old car down MICHIGAN’S FINEST moon eS ELE nou For Sale Used Cars 55 NOTICE the Perry Street Blair’s Bargain Spot). After careful considera- tion and forethought, we is well known around the Pontiac area for his ability and integrity — RAY PIKE. He will ex- tend the usual courtesy and understanding which is a keystone of our sales force. LOOK for our opening day sale. CENTRAL LINCOLN MERCURY 66 S. Perry FE 5-8447 Was ft - 2e 1953 | DESOTO. . DEMONSTRATOR, low mileage, radio, Beater, fabu- on _—— steering. tremendous Call Mr. McNellis, MI omit * we A. Caltrider Inc.. 912 8. _8. Woodward, | Birm. DODGE ‘46, NO DOWN PA’ PAYMENT. LAKF IRION MOTOR SALES DODGE PL E YMOUTH __4 % at Bucxho-n. MY 2-261) DODGE ‘42, ¢75. 1016 Holbrook = Tildon. DODGE ‘523, 4 DOOR SEDAN. radio heater 12,000 miles A = car sharp buy Don't miss LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES DO LY * Buckhorn MY 2-261) NEW VW TIRES. CUSTOM DLX.. 61 2 dr R&H. overdrive, FORD ai 2 DR. RADIO, HEATER, oon condition, $975. MI, cond. EM 3- FORD 1951, Country 9a Suite Stat. Wagon. 12,000 Just like new. RA&H, overirite: Wohfeil Dee En 2274 +8. Tele- if ele ut ual N FORD MODEL A, CHOPPED DOWN ns model, good shape. FE 32-6128. CUSTOM “ave FORD ‘48 ENGLISH $120 TAKE erdrive M-50 Turn rt on to Duck Lake EXCELLENT CONITION of left to Dean Dr. 2723 Dean WE’TRADE MOTOR AND radio, neater. ition. OR 3-9648. ‘41 PORD A-1 SHAPE, NEW PAINT. Radio. neater. Corner Crooks and South Bivd. road ‘46. GOOD tires. ’49 FORD V-8 SED. ag — win eae — mee“ ONLY $495 MICHIGAN'S FINEST CBE BIG PAVED “3 ON CORNER 0} WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD FORD ‘82 CUSTOMLINE 2 DOOR 8, 2-tone green, R. & H., O. D, undercoat, seat covers, _sge, 1 owner. OR 3-: 1949 FORD 2 DR Custom 8. R&H . overdri rogpl Sv a Severe) ‘others WE BUY 6 WEST ‘SIDE USED CARS 923 W. Huron FE 62188 sale. of low to get the sale price of CENTRAL LINCOLN- MERCURY SALES an- nounces the opening of Lot (formerly known as have selected a man whaq|_FE3-7 priente ad ty 37 Bloomfield Ter- race O.K. ~ USED CARS POLICY You are invited to inspect our mechanical and. body department, exelusively for Used Cars. TWO ‘ol Chev. CLUB COUPES 2 Tones, Clean Cars Your Choice $1195 ‘51 Ford 2 DR. CUSTOM ‘8’ - Radio and Heater $1195 ‘D2 Chev. 4 door, radio, heater, pow- erglide, 11,000 miles. A very sharp automobile at $1595. ‘00 Plym: 2 Door, Dark Blue $845 ‘00 Dodge 2 Door, Fluid Drive $895 CUSTOMER CONFIDENCE SINCE’ 1920 THE WORKINGMAN’S LOT JACK HAB CHEVROLET S. Saginaw at Cottage PHONE FE 4-4546 CALL FE4-2780 FOR BARGAINS in new or used au’ 1952 FORD MAINLINE €DR., V-8, radio, eater. overdrive OA 8-2600 BARGAIN — SALE BELOW OUR COST Noo. 1% ’48 BUICK TUDOR $675 No. 188 °S2 CHEV, DEL. 2 DR. $1495 No, 170 ’5S0O BUICK SP. FORDOR . $1145 No. 189 '47 OLDS 2 DR. $445 No. 243 ’'50°BUICK SPEC. 2 DR. $1095 No. 68 50 PONTIAC 4 DR. $995 48 BUICK SUP. TUDOR $645 '46 BUICK SUPER 4 DR. $495 V3 DOWN—WE TRADE No Payments Until September 29th OLIVER'S 2 LOTS 115 S. Saginaw St. 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 '49 PACKARD SED. “Sparkling 2 tone beauty with al accessories Can handle for $250 or your old car down MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BIG PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD PACKARD ‘49 4-DR. R &H., O.D. $595 63 S. Perry St Phone FE 51 PLYM. SED. Radio and heater. Beautiful dark ST oe finish and is clean inside $995 MICHIGAN’S FINEST a BIG PAVED LOT THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD PLYMOUTH ‘38 2-DR. a Willes ‘40 2-dr. Cheve °39 2-dr. Terms if necessary. . 4160 W. ‘Watton PLYMOUTH '50 R&H, 4 DR, sedan me owner car like new. $925 LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES FORD ‘46, GOOD MOTOR AND tiree EM 3-238 HUDSON, 1949. 6, 5 PASSENGER | cpe., R. & H., good a $445. | 542. *50 HUDSON, N, CLEAR, LOW | Mie _ age. FE 4-5158. JEEP, 1946, 4 WHEEL DRIVE, good tires and motor. EM 3-4577 after 5. KAISER “$1, 2 OR, - R&H. 6 8. Perry Phone FE 54685 WERCURY. 46 CLB. UPE., GOOD cond 307 8 Paddock, FE 5-7129 ‘49 2 )OOR MERCURY CLEAN thruout good rubber. FE 17-8891. MERCURY ‘49. 4 DR, R. & B., spot light, good clean car, $100 & __take over payments. _35 Taylor_ St. "46 LINCOLN CL. CPE. Radio and heater —- nice, clean original finish, good tires and motor $295 Full Price MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BIG PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD ’°50 LINCOLN SEDAN Radio and heater — overdrive — sparkling black, whitewaH tires, really a beauty. Drive. it home for $300 or your old car down MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BIG PAVED LO ON THE RNE SF WOODWARD AND 12 MILF ROAN MERCURY ‘53. 4 DR., FULLY equipped, loaded with extras. Must eg Ee FE 2-8572 between _§ametpm FASr - CHEAP H PE /-9533 NASH ‘51 STATION WAGON, GOOD KIMBALL BROS., INC. YOUR NASH DEALER DODGE-PLYMOUTH M-24 at Buckhorn Lk. MY 32-2611 ONE OWNER PLYMOUTHS 1952 Cranbrook fordor, Sparkling black finish with sun visor, ra- ai heater and gleaming white walls 1951 Cranbrook fordor. Deep metal- lic green, sun visor, fender skirts, radio and heater. rfect mechan- teal condition and excellent tires. 1951 Cranbrook club coupe. A one owner beaut interior just like new. Radio, heater perfect tires, 15 000 actual miles. $1,245 FULL PRICE Inciuded tn above prices are all taxes and fee's and a 80 day guarantee. KELLER-KOCH INC, CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER 47 8 — oo PLYMOUTH ‘53 CLUB CPE. 1,000 miles. Fully equipped. FE 2-4446. CAR BUYERS PURCHASE YOUR CAR FROM PANCHUK MOTOR SALES 2618 DIXIF HWY AND GET al ATTENTION PONTIAC ‘68 Devondale after 5. Peterson 1951 Henry 1 2 dr. 195) Kaiser 2 Dr. ¢ 1949 Chevrolet panel 1§ PRE-WAR C 3776 40BURN AVE CHEV & H GOOD COND. Be-t offer akes it, Ask for at FE 440985 after 5: 30 PONTIAC, , 62 2 DR., HYDRA,, R&H OR 3-T306 after 5. PONTIAC “41. 2 DR. REAS. FE FONTTAG 6, ‘48, EXC. COND. Clean original owner. PE 2-7878 PONTIAC 6, 50 4-DR. HYDRA., R. & H. Clean. Exc. cond. FE 5- 1407. PONTIAC “3. FE 23305 AFTER PONTIAC, "48 & CYLINDER DE- luxe sport :oupe 44-0647. PONTIAC ‘47 eho 2-DR.. 8 8. Saginaw FE 41545 OPEN NIGHTS ~ NASH ‘47 AMB. R. & H. OD. GOOD | running cond. Best offer. FE __5-4656 NASH RAMBLER 8 STAT. WAG. — tom miles only. As new. scmne ‘or 4-5175 evenings, _ week end. NASH. 47 AMBASSADOR __tnstde & out FE 5-7090 OLDS, ‘47, R. & H.. HYDRAMATIC, { ns tires. best offer takes. FE CLEAN | OLI8 *& 47, HYDRA. R&H NEW. _'y_painted. FE §-7607 OLDS ‘49. 8 2-DR. NEW PAINT. | good tires. Also Pontiac 52 Cat. luxe, phene MY 2-3683. PACKARD ‘53 CLIPPER ¢DR. DE- luxe, ultramatic R&H, WSW. wind ie ene. undercoating. ghts. } lights. fen- Preigen sk as and mirrors. 5,000 mi Must sell dave $800 | E. Zang, 6959 Highland. OR 3-7244. . | PONTIAC Streamliner. R&H by owner FE 32-5819 PONTIAC-STATION WAGON ‘52 RROF, CUSHIONS DIRECTIONAL S8IG- BACK UP LIGHTS, WIND- SHIELD WASHER, LOW MILE- AGE EXc ND. PRIVATELY MOTOR CO. EX- ECUIIVE $2100 FE 2-837) EXT. 24 MRS. STICKEL. PONTIAC 8. ‘50 CLUB COUPE. standatd, clean, low milegage, 2- tone. E 444%. 'S2, “SUPER DELUXE Catalina, green ene ivory, hydra- matic. R. & oversized white sidewalls, dincional signals, easy eyeglass all around 6,000 miles. Best offer takes. Can be re after 4:30 p. m. 290 Dick e.sg Se as a ee TWENTY-NINE For Sale Used Cars 55/| — For Sele Trucks 86 Announcing Holdens Red ~ STAMPS NOW GIVEN WITH EVERY USED CAR PURCHASED AT. COMMUNITY MOTORS ‘92. CHEVE. 4 dr., powerglide, R&H, $1,5 ‘51 BUICK 4 door, super dynaflow, R&H, $1,695. ‘90: CHEVE. Sport coupe, $845. ‘51 PONTIAC *2 dr., hydramatic, R&H, $1,595, ‘ 48 OLDS 2 dr., hydramatic, R&H, $695. * ‘48 FORD Station wagon, $595. Good Selection of Used Trucks GMAC TERMS All Cars Guaranteed COMMUNITY Motor Sales Inc. AT _ THE NORTH END OF TOWN OPEN EVERY NIGHT ‘TIL 10 804.N. Main OL2-7121 ROCHESTER BONTIAC 4 DLX. ¢DR. BG. WSW tires. Low mileage. Loaded. OR 3-0204. BONTIAC ‘40°CHIEFTAIN DELUXE 2-dr., black clean and in bey 304 Union after 3:30. _ Milford, Michigan TRADE _ FOR LESS *52 BUICK SUPER 4 DR. ’*51 FORD VICT. CPE. 51 PONT. DLX. 8 4 DR. ’°50 BUICK SUPER 2 DR. ’°50 FORD CONV. CPE. ’47 OLDS 4 DR. SEDAN Anderson Pontiac-Buick 7551 Auburn, Utica, Mich. Ph. Collect, Utica 3001 WHY PAY UP TO $300 MORE ON a used car lot? A 1953 Pontiac 8, dix, Catalina, $1,995. 6567 Lan- man, Williams Lake, after 6:30. PONTIAC ‘51, DLX. 2-DR. HYDRA- matic, R. & H., very clean. $1,350. _ 6 Forest. FE 5-2287. PONTIAC ‘48 23 DR. VERY clean. 3810 sacunicat” ‘Dr. FE 17-7642. PONTIAC 1953 DELUXE, HYDRA- pg BS all acces. Will trade. c Dr. after 6:30. PONTIAC ‘49 CHIEFTAIN 2-DR. delux 24,000 actual miles. R&H, other accessories, clean, FE 5-47 51 after 5. 42: PONTIAC, $125. 6045 HATCH- ery Rd. OR 3-0628. , ’ , FORDS—CHEVP'S. Several = oa from, all bod and colors. A these, atte er ones you will be to own. Come in or call! as we will hh you a good deal! We also have a fipe selec-, tion of other cars on our lot, Huron Motor Sales 962 W. Huron FE 2-2641 PONTIAC ‘41, GOOD TRANSPOR- tation. FE 5-1390. SMART BUYERS CHOOSE SAFETY CHECKED USED CARS 195@ Buick, Super Riviera, 2 dr. R. & + good _ tires, mechanically tops. See and drive this car. al“ Chrysler, 4 dr., Windsor model. & H., automatic transmission. ep an 1 owner car. your car on this one. 1953 Plymouth Cambridge club cpe. R. & H., sunvisor and overdrive. A real gas saver. 1951 Chevie, 2 dr. R. & H., dark gray —_ clean inside and out. Selling or $1,150. 1948 Olds, 32 dr. R. & A. — matic transmission. This is a clean car and runs good. Selling for $ 95. We will take your old car in trade, | Clarkston MOTOR. SALES CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH Clarkston, Mich. Ph. MA 5-2921 Open 8:30 a. m. to 8 pn. m. Daily PONTIAC 8, ‘532, DELUXE 2 DR. Standard shift. R. & H., clean, 10, miles. Other accessories. SoNTIAC “al. (2 DR. EXCELLENT cond. R. & H. 4851 Payton, Wat- kins Lake. PONTIAC, 1951, 8 2-DR. DLX. R. & H. and extras. oward. 1947 PONTIAC R. & H., NEW — covers, good tires, good PE 4-1990. 17 a ~ "50 STUDEBAKER 4 Door Champ. RADIO, HEATER, TURN SIGNALS AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION Very Clean JACOBSON MOTOR SALES Your Hudson Dealer 68 W. Pike at Cass FE 27-8359 _For Sale Trucks 50 1946 STUDE. TON PICK-UP, 5 gear, good condition, $375. 722 Sterling St. 1951 PONTIAC SEDAN DELIVERY, low mileage. $896. FE 4-4279. , Trade | | ' Is | _ TRUCK SPECIALS ’51 CHEVROLETS Sedan Deliveries Choice of 8 Beauties LOW AS $695 ’49 CHEVROLET ¥,-ton Panel $495 (48 GMC Ya-ton Panel $345 52 FORD ¥%,-ton Express $1,095 ’32 CHEVROLET ¥4-ton Pickup $995 51 CHEVROLET ¥Y-ton Pickup $795 ’49 FORD %-ton Panel $395 ’49 CHEVROLET ¥%-ton Stake $595 20 MORE TRUCKS .TO CHOOSE FROM ALL PRICED TO SELL MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BIG PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD A-l A-l A-1 1947 FORD 14-ton Panel $695 EARL R. MILLIMAN 147 8B. = aw.Open Eves. ‘til 9 FE 5-4101, After 6 FE 52246 H OK. USED TRUCKS | Fit Your Needs and Your Wallet ‘51 Chev. Y4-TON PICKUP Good rubber, smooth run- ning engine, spotlight, heater & new paint. $845 ‘D1 Chev. PANEL DELUXE O.K. Condition = NEN CHEVROLET TRUCKS An excellent stock of pick- ups, panels and heavy trucks. Get on the truck trading train todav. — Dexter Kennedy, Truck! Mgr. THE THRIFTY TRUCKERS LOT JACK HAB S. Saginaw at Cottage PHONE FE 4-4546 CHEVE. ‘80 % TON PICKUP. FE _ $3911. WILSON GMC. CO. EXCLUSIVE G.M.C. DEALER 809 S. Woodward FE 4-453] USED TRUCKS 951 1% TON CHEVIE oop UMP truck. Low mileage Good _ chanical condition. S51. 8. ~ Paddock A-1 A-l A-l CHEVROLET %-ton Pickup 5 $79 EARL R. MILLIMAN 147 8. Sa Open Eves ‘til 8 _ FE 54101, aie i ox MP ~- TO 5 , best offer ae s oy riey. Motor Scooters” 58 & USED CUSHMAN sCOOT _ers. 12 8. Paddock. FE 4-4246. desea 3 WHEFL SCOOTER. transmission. Needs aL with 3 by 4 ft ulated _OR 3-6002 For Sale Motorcycles 59 1948 INDIAN 174, FULLY EQUIPPED, 12,000 actual miles, $400. 310 Rd., Lk. Orion. MY 3-3000. ‘$0 HARLEY DAVIDSON. GOOD cond. Loaded with — FE 2- 7519. @OR PARTS « SERVICE ON ON YOUR = Davidson, see Harley prow Sales Co. 372 & Gagi- USED MOTOR BARGAINS End of Season Clearance On Our Boats SLAYB AUGH'S S +0824 | 690 Oakland — 12” RD. BOTTO $ Johnson Mtr., $160. PE 17-6301. wae ROW BOATS, $40 AND UP. 7600 Elizabeth L Lake Rd. 'Y OUTBOARD MOTORS. Sales & Service. Terms to suit yeu. Shorty Hook's Place, 3730 Orchard Lk. Rd. at Pine Lake. FE 12-5260. 12 FT. BOAT WITH TRAILER FOR bocting and fishing. 2 Stout St. 25 H.P. JOHNSON ON 14 ft. Wolverine Super Deluxe mahogany runnabout. A well balanced fast combination. Both in new condition with Steering wheel and PE 2-2065 or OR 3-2216. $s HP ELON MOTOR. FE 44719 JOHNSON OUTBOARD M Starcraft boats. Grumnian ca- noes. Paes trailers. oar kits. Everything for y * OWENS MAR PLIES 396 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-8020| © NEED JOHNSON 32 PARTS? Johnson 32 model V 45’ Complete except fly wheel and magneto. $45 takes it. FE 2-2065. LARGE SF tt a FOR _ sailing, fine cond Y MOTORS, MOST M os aes —— for emer “GEN ESEE. SALES Le _ Dixie Hwy. FE 32-8786 OLDTOWN SPONSON SAIL- ae canoe, Bm ga with mast & 1. value. MaAytfair MARTIN 100 MOTOR, $220. EM 3-4609. GOOD 13 FT. BOAT. 845. PE 4-9495. JOHNSON 5 HP. 5g MO- tor, reas. Can seen at 263 __Pranklin in Rd. Rd. PE 48313. Airplanes 61 948 CESSNA 140 90 hp, complete cuca system full panel. eel ts, 2 way radio with V. H. Transm tter, speaker, 247 hrs. on recording tack, metal ‘4 large tail wheel, clock, dual brakes, Al- ways hanged. $2250. Licensed ‘til \5-24-54. M. Bowles. FE after 4 p.m Transportation Offered 62 2 RIDERS WANTED TO SHARE expenses to Searcy Ark., - way. aaa from 9 a.m. to 5 5 p.m. N GOING NORTH, PART load oither way. FE 5-6806. RIDER TO a OAK BY WOOD- ward, 7 FE 6-4492 after 7 p.m Swaps 63 5 pe HOUSE, BATH & UTILITY, floor furnace for small farm of will sell. Farm 3179M. SELL OR TRADE BEAGLE PUPS, AEK.C registered. OR 3-6840. $6 ROOM HOUSE EAST OF AU- burn Heights, will consider i fe down. Tota] price, $5,250 TRaDE youR OLD REFRIGER- ator or an of value on @ new Crosiey Shelvador, $190. terms, $2 per week. MY aula “XCHANGE pd BE sar’ (whe ve 4 [) erty) : late m foe oe & J VanWeit OR +13 SWAP GOOD electric water heater or apt, elec. stove 23-1469. TRADE YOUR LAND CONTRACT, smal) house, mortgage, equity furniture, autos, for new or wel) known wr housetrailers. TRAILER EXCHANGE 60 8. Telegraph Open Eves. APARTMENT SIZE PHILGAS stove new, tor same size electric stove or electric hot-water heater. FOR SALE OR TRADE —- ‘49 ton pickup. 355 W. GAUGE WINCHESTER PUMP, for good used 2 wheel trailer, or will buy. MA 6-3409 LAND CONTRACT-TRADE _ $4400 contract, payable month. : M. 8Tout, Saginaw 8t. Ph. 2% FT ‘52 MODEL ELCAR HOUSE- bere for equity in house. FE | For Sale Clothing 64 SILVER FOX STOLE. AND mink cape stole. excellent condi- tion, very reasonable. Also name suit & dresses size 14-16 303 Ottawa Dr t 4 chairs and table $69.95 value, ae a bare OO SIZE 12, $3995 These are brand new ned aim rs 1953 models Famous make. All BEAUTIFUL WOMEN’S. SUITS & popular colors. Come in, look, cocktail dresses. Size 16. Good comprre, and be convinced of _cond. Reas. MI 40253 ese extraordinary bargains. hard ~ Sale Musical Goods _ 65 a2 aan 393 Orcha werner OBIE OBEN NRNRMNM—a—rwnwnnrnr GOOD USED s PIANO. $25 Used T ‘rade-in Dept. _ MA Apt. size electric stove . $49.95 oo PIANO aren WITH | Table top gas range $39.95 option $10 monthiv Gal- | 6 pc. dining room $49.95 _tagher'e. 1° OW etees 2 Fe ae TOON) 6554455 ot i ACCCRDIAN 120° BASS EXCEL-| Large dresser sss. lent condition. Decorated for pro- | wood beds $12.95 fessional «suse Sacrifice value. | wood dinette . 95 _ Mayfair 62461. — | nae aoe payment, Easy terms. Sale Household Goods 66 WYMAN’S 18 W. Pike only WAYNE GABERT’S §x14 LIGHT GRAY BIGELOW pad. exc. | APPLIANCE SPECIALS a Norge gu* sanE®, amp & timer GE electric range with auto oven timer $68. Gibson refrigerator 7 cuble ft.. $79. Lad refrigerator, 8 cubic ft... $89. Maytag washer. A-l shape..... $39. Thor ironer A-1 Shape ...... $25. Bendix, auto washer, like new $69. Teletone, 17” TV console 399. Many others to choose from. Up to 24 months to pay. 5-6188. 121 N. Saginay | 8t. wl EXTENSION TABLE & 4 chairs; 6%’ double drain board FOR SALE — NEW 1953 | Tot Oe iy eed By Jay Alan may ALAN— “When I told your father about us he was fit to be tied!” Sale Household Goods 66 66 BELOW WHOLESA 3c W WALL TILE «ss "Ide 0x12 OLEUM RUGS ....$1.98 100 $x8 Asphatt ‘Tile ..); Site 00 Inlaid Remnants ...75c_ yd. $3.96 Dutch Paint... $1.50 gal. Dutch Enamel Paint .. ao 22,28 eal 12 ft. Linoleums ..... 60 pct. off Harold's, 140 S. ‘Saginaw Free Delive Pree DOUBLE RED STAMPS AY SOLID | CAE DINING RM. Orien ue with ot v rug, pad. IT DUNC PHYFE DRUM TABLE, oo A rig au a window axe. ound OR 30073, aNer q; @ IN, DOUBLE & drainboard. Glass doer metal _chma cabinet. OA SMALL FRIGIDAIRE. ¢ $50. xELVINATOR 2 REFRIG., WEST- - m stove, $50 for bot at MY RANGE SALE Deluze models = with clock and deepwell § Cree.eF . coccccccccccccse 9190.98 MODAred , cescesceccccesss SL19.95 Monarch _........... are 96 FRAYER’S 589 Orchard Lake Ave. FE ¢4702 Open Eves. ‘ti 9 p.m. BOTTLE GAS TNSTALLATION 1 Two 100 Ib. tanks $10 os ial gas a ee r cen Kenyon Fuel Gas Co. ‘oD Dixie Hey., ON yee” TILE 1O* Reon’ FLOOR SHOP 90 3. Saginaw St. NORGE WRINGER TYPE WASH- er with auto. oump, reas. 80102 = MAH. CHINA ' CABINET, LAMP table. 6x9 rug. FE 2-8471, dor. 18 McNeil St. FE 44418. PHILGaS RANGES INSTALLED for % day free trial. Sgn P eum Co 2625 Orchard e Ave. FE 2-0195. | LINOLEUM, 9x12. .$3.95 $4.95 outside aint. ara a JACE'S GINoLEbi ins RY DOUBLE B COMPLETE Rt. 4-out Baldwin Georgia Dr., otf Brown. rd QUALITY USED FURNITURE & lances of al) hora a refrigerators $15 anteed in workin Rd. 1 FE sold & 3 Sale mile Z. 17-0183 145. Auburn Auburp Heights. HOLLYWOOD BEDS, MATTRESES, and iaven mit as you! ght Hil _ erg, 52 Willidus E 5 CASH FOR | SCauTrURE ~ OR tools. Phone OR 3-2717, MALL 3 RADIO, $6. ALSO ONE $88. KENMORE WASHING MACHINE, Lavatory, kitchein sink, side arm = A good condition. Sas WASHERS, $35 & UP; USED elec. ranges $42 & up; used auto. Whirlpool washer with arantec. R MUNRO ELECTRIC CO 20 W. Lawrence 8t. FE 68431 REFRIGERATORS. LAST YEAR 1952 models Famous name brand. Perfect. ‘“i-w. Terrific value. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Or- Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orch- chard Lake Ave. CHROME DINETTE SETS. AS- semble these yourself and save. lock-weave ca t with cond "E 2-93 EASY SPIN DRYER ~ WASHER, deluxe iate mode regularly __ $219.95, now $199 95. MI 6-1300. 3 PIECE MAPLE LI G ROOM suite, reversible ges cush- fons and backs. Ideal with family with you.g children Only MA 6386s. - HOUSE SOLD MUST SELL Blond maple bedroom suite, com. with spr. and innerspr. matt., chest, van. 4 bench. $150. wei any sec. $75. Best of cond. 4714 W Lake Road, White Lx. Village. with mixer faucets. FE 2-0958. 180 8. Paddock, LARGE ROSE CLUB ‘CHAIR & footstool, $70; kitchen dinette set (red formica), $40; hand painted vanity with mirror top, $15. All _in exc. cond. MI 4-5509 EASY TERMS _ A adangar he apt. Mba $49 50 Norge 6 . cond. $59.50 Kelvinator 4 ae ‘ $69.50 ectric stoves —_...... 29.50 u Washing machines, ‘ - good cond. ., $32.60 Sealy mattresses, “9 50 value, sale ........... $27.95 Bofa beds, $140.50 va'ue, sale .......... $89.50 Many other bargains, small down payments. CLAYTON’S 7 IRONRITE IRONER, ~ FE 5-7810 LATE MODEL HOOVER WITH AT- tachments, excellent condition. Cost over $100, will sell cheap. FE 44460. FRIGIDAIRE, ‘47, 7 CUBIC FT. excellent cond. MI 43080, OAK DINING tag IS 6 CHAIRS, Walnut Buffett. FE 2-3698. WALT ON TV Table model $29 12h Table mode | wW $409 antenna $0.95 Seating’ tr Walton __ rE 32-2257 122%” AIR KING 7, CONSOLE model, ogo ong cabinet, Ve reas, PE 22854. 110 W. Runde ® CU. FT. CROSLEY SHELVA-| 9x12 RUG & PAD. BLUE 95 | omtone. 333 8S. rE Sale Household Goods 66 Have Sold Warehouse Must sell su stock. All new bedrom suites. Electric Ges ranges, refrigerators. v- ing rm. s v and cabinets. Box springs and innerspring = Up t 560 per cent sav 4 FT. REFRIGERATOR. EXC. condition. Ideal for cabin or res- _ tal nts WILL ADTs, working of not. not FE 5 GE PFREEZ 11 CU. Fr. In oes for Boe Baym 100 Hwy. NEW FURNITURE BARGAINS bed fram $8.05; bed ows, $2.95 pr.; cotton mat- o—all .06.; inner- sD mattresses, $19.96: unfin- ish dGrop-leaf tablea, $10.95; small ¢drawer ed chests 95; meta) $12.95; coil SBESE She Bear hl Ente sets, $49.95. for the home. Bank A _Bear Saginaw. FE 4781 eres PP esaee rTADLE cond. nr m _ Cheep. | Wa 3505 * _ “USED _ REFRIGERATOR . om Used) TVG sieciisccsiees $35 up New 30 in. amet range, was $229.95, now ...... dilusiee Gps $289.95 = RADIO & APPLIANCE ‘22 We FE 41133 ~ USED D TRADE-IN IN DEFL, to mag” chest full” aaize bed $49.50 gs ite $49.50 Ditsles! le, 4 yor table blond mahogany . $89.50 3 pe. sectional MANY ITEMS CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE CO. 361 8. SAGINAW ELECTROCHEF STOVE, IN GOOD condition. OR 3-1777. | _ REFRIG., FOR SALE, $15. FE <.) ELECTRO-MASTER ELECTRIC __stove, good cond. OLive | 1-4071, 2 PC. LIVING RM, BUITE, GOOD _ cond. FE 41208. CHERRY WOOD BEDRM. SET, box spring and matteéss, genu- ine green leather chair. % size electric range. Many odd pieces. EM 32548. Custom Built Cabinet Lom a Free Estimates OR REBUILT WASHING MACHINES. _FE 45100. NORGE WASHER, 1 YR. OLD. OR- 3-9024 POR SALE — 3 FRIGIDAIRES, one very large, one 9 —_ ft., and one a size. Also apt. _ size gag stove, MA 63900. _ 8 CU. FT. DEEP-FREEZE FREEZ- er. Use one yr. In’ exc. cond. $225. 3136 Caroline, Auburn Nw FREEZER SALE 14% cu. ft. Crosley, reg. F $439.05. now . $340.95 8cu ST ge Reg. $299 00 $249.95 ll cu, ft Interustione) # vester $44600 - now $325 00 13 fr perder r Frees, reg. FRAYER'S 589 Orchard Lake Ave. PE 44792 Open Eves Till 9 p.m. 8 PC DINING ROOM 8UITE, good cond. ; Hollywood bed and dresser, 825. FE 4-5169. TONE- Avery. 1-269. BEAUTIFUL chrome formica break- ad ord fast sets made to er. These seta cap ce made up ip al) colors cluding Yellow Blue Red, Green. and Tan. Chairs are up holsterea in Du mse terial. Tables cap be m to any size sha; save 33 Bo a! cent. Chrome chairs only TERS METAL MA MFG. CO. 436 N. Woodward bear uae mile rd. [4 1. to 8:30 aia vad mee tie 1-810 USED RUG. PHONE rE | 2 s eee LIKE NEW 10° RCA TV TABLE 7106 or can be n at 22 | imocel, 52431, Saginaw. _ 30 IN. GRAVITY HOT AIR FUR- 8 ING mace with ¢ conversion. FE | ; jit, TELEVISION inside aerial, $50. O JEWEL GAS STOVE ‘Goop COND. 639 E Pike [WIN BEDS COMPLETE, 2 CHEST of drawers, mirror, night table, WITH TABLE, R 3-0280, chair, gate leg table, 2 occa- sional chairs, lounge chair, fire- place set. 47635. ANTIQUES, PINE FURNITURE. Open evenings, 432 West Fourth, _ Rochester. FOR THE BEST SELECTION OF used appliances be sure and check our stock — we gre trading every- day and have: Washers at $14.95. Range at $19.95. Television at $39.95. Motors at $4.00. Refrigerators at $50.50. The Good Housekeeping Shop PE 41555 51 W. Huron PILLOWS, COMFORTERS AND linen, 859 Winding Dr. Eliz. _ Lake Estates. 6 CU. FF. FRIGIDAIRE. A-1 con- __ dit. vn, $75 FE 44085. 9 PC. WALNUT DINING ROOM __Sulte, good o 42 Carter. CLOSING OUT “PAINTS | "eae as RUBBER BASE PAINT, GAL — $4.95 eel enamel, : me: y Maid Inlaid til 4% ft. wall tile rn. : SYER'S. 141 W. HURON YE 4-3064 CU. PT., EX- condition ANTIQUE FURN LARGE SELEC- Sone MY. 9-908, working 61300. T FR cellent os. MI PIECE DIN ROOM SET riced for quick sale. Misc. pieces. Jeaa Ba Jdwin Road. DAVENPORT AND CRAIR, a a and electric stove. REFRIGERATOR BEAUTIFUL 14 cu. ft. } IN running order, 3 drs. 64x38 in. Midwest 44281. BEAUTIFUL BLONDE RADIO & record combination $125. EM 4-6728. 15 Baxter Ct LIVING RM. FURNITURE AND _ other H.H. goods. FE b 40131. STUDIO COUCH AND CHAIR. FE __ +6728. DAVENPORT & * fs EM tase wash- _tmg machine, GOOD USED RUG. SIZE 6x10. Can ‘e seen at 22 Dakota. BEFORE YOU BUY a Sewing Machine See the Necchi or Elna Home Demonstrations ery! Machine Sales Co. PONT RANE a 7 larty Eee tact ‘bow Sr ant Dries Your needs filled fast through Classified ads in Pontiac Daily Press! Phone FE 2-8181, Air Condition: Huron. CHANNELS, BEAMS. reinforcing rods, basement of structural Typhoon Co. 135 Branch St. (across from American Forging & Sock- _et). PE 4-9583. Mever's Jet cum Res 6 ere Free L KELLY’S HARDWARE Auburn st Adams _ auburn _ Heights, FE 28811__ ~ CLOTHES POSTS ~ COMBINATION N DOORS PICKETS PLYWOOD M. A. Benson 849 N. Saginaw PE 4-252! NEW SCIENCE STEEL SEPTIC tanks. Across from library. Geo. Por 62 Williams 8t. Ph. FE =ee gus eents L. f% 2368 & Gomplele time of Blog. material | Ip three different es. BLACKETI’S a Se 7 arasen W161 Diste ‘Anchor Fence Erected by factory trained men. PHA app. 0. no money down. Call estimates. 5 ROOM DUO-THERM. LIKE NEW, used one season. FE 5-0420. ALL 6IZES GAB “ELECTRIC heat and cook hates, full auto- matic electric ignition ofl fur- and floor rnaces, car- pated and parte for oi) burn- SS Aa gas tanks, hot lb gor = fittings Stee trailers PETRO HEAT SERVICE CO. Anomasee With Trailer Exchange 60 8. Telegraph Open! “pvenings & Sundays P.M. FENCING Residentia) and comm by rienced men. F age A. soproved OR 31458. a POST WOLVERINE LUMBER ; & WRECKING CO 300 & Paddock FE 207% New reverse trap unit SOLLINOSHEAD VARIETY STORE. 7 miles out Baldwin. Armstrong floor covering and Mac-O-Lac ints. We sell for less. GLIDDEN'S SPRED SATIN N. WAR- __Wick Supply. FE 4-5090. Draw-Tite Hitches The kind tmat bolts to the frame all cars "46 & later. F. E. How- land, 3245 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1456. JET WATER SYSTEMS WITH 18 tank $04.50 1%" 1%" LUMBER sn.0| BUILDERS SUPPLIES Plaster board 4x8z%, $1.45 Rocklath, 15x48" bd. Doors for your bome or store. Trim @ mouldings, clear white pine. nt pine and cedar paneling. wood, Plyscord Weldtex. dows and Windowalls. Piecrias. oak & Y. pine. Pains. redwood. red cedar. fir ' e. Lumber for al) your needs. Priced right. Call Now, EMpire 3-5259 for Quality Building Materials PAUL LUMBER CO. DEEP & SHALLOW WELL PUMPS, | CEMENT BLOCKS ~ Famocieeey a on — | 32-6401 FE 2-727 ee Lemos TALBOT $1 a bundle; 4x8 sheet No. 2 box legen > a ee Norte” ai bun : No. 2 in- eulation. 1025 Oaklan a oazs 4-2622. |USED AUTO GAS FURNACE FE 7 65-7433. | SAND floor . ing machines ers for rent We cl noons Barnes Ha: are. | 6120 Bogie Lake Rd. at Commerce | new and rebuilt Sales & Service, ler systems installed. d gg and fixtures. |, Lloyd '- ace, 32700 N. W. Higb- way. MA 6: H side and across top. $15; in. table model Emerson TV set with walnut case and . 67 Ellwood Ave. Ust OUR TOOLS, DO YOUR Own foe ce wiring, Fain ghee ple’ drain “ile Monten toate eeiaert ly ee Pa Montcalm. FE mitts) re Fri, thru. Wed. 9 50 Closed _every Thur. . § BABIES CAR seat, $3: Girl's roller skates, size 8 $11.; boys roller skates, ic. THOR WASHING MACHINE Nearly new. $70. OR 3-8470. NEW 16x24 MEDICINE Scag ‘x9 plain old rose rug cond. FE 5-4897. OPEN 8 A.M. TO 8 P.M. SUNDAY 10 TO 3 LUMBER 4x8 SHEET ROCK $1.35 PER SHEET 1x6, 1x10, Ixlz 1x12 W. P. boards (96 oq. ft 2x6 NO. 2 FIR . eto - ae ae oe $118. per thousand FIR Roxd eden 6c ft. gubiaa Beoaeh geome oo tag I a al. saa. eae ARE B ING A HO YOU ARE DND SAVE UP TO $500 ON ALL | MATERIA Make sure its Burmeisters Northern Lumber Co. 8197 Cooley Lake Rd. WE DELIVER With «tua leven You EM 3-4650 EM 3-3996 peer WEL ee ~ PUMP AND tank. 1210 0 Joslyn, near Columbia. ' Installation and remodeling serv- tee oe Call for free esti- me’ ERRY DOOR 370 «8. Paddock rs or 23-0203 TRAILER BOX FDR “CAMPING, stove. icebox other com- partments. Fits any two wheel axle. 1544 W. Hamlin Rd., 2 miles S.. 1% miles W. of ‘Rochester. SIMPLEX MANGLE, LIKE NEW. Singer Sweeper. OR 37624. HOUSES TO MOVE OR WRECK. 6375. Garages. $15 Detroit TRin- _ ity 1-6915 water HEIGHTS. SUPPLY 2685 Pe: 8t. . . Phone PE 4-543) VAN NORMAN BRAKE Drum No. 333. Barrett heavy duty brake reliner & grinder; Blace Decker super-service valve refacer. EM | 33471. USED FURNACE & HOT WATER tank, cheap. FE 2-0620. 4 RM OIL STOVE, FOLDING wardrobe EM 3-5880. LARGE QUANTITY OF NEW FUR- mace pipe and fitting. Cheap, if sold at once. 592 Mt. Clements after 5 ROCK HOUNDS Cabachons, mineralites, mineral & fluorescent s ens, silver, slabbing and ER mate AS Ss 63 W Guron st PE 5-626) SPRING SPECIAL Wood combination door .... $18.25 33x15 wood combination basements, 50, Sce yellow pages 103, 130 and 194. c 1661 E. Telegraph Ra. PE 4-2697 Sand, Gravel, Dirt 68A 8y.4CE a - = FILL SAND, pars FE erage. RAVE PEA rE “e-T914 RICH TOP SOI BAND & GRAVEL PE 3-060 LOADING & DELIVERING GRAV- ol. on sand, A fill Gist ost top soil. Shorty 4UN Mag E OIL ihe al yl cOM- pletel Cucomenie do, bumidifier, ofl home r by Stan Gar- “~~ MOW “MASTER ROTARY MOWERS AND LEAF MULCHERS LEE’S SALES & SERVICE 921 Mt. Clemens 8&t. FE CAST IRON APRON 7 righthand drain board and fi! Bize 52°’. Call ! FE 4-9235 after ry . ELEC. REFRIGS. AND washing machines. Guar- $39.50 up. Roy’s replace- ment, 96 Oakland Ave. ~. ‘TRENCHING _ Footings & field tile FE 58-8221 1892 ENCLYCUOPEDIA BRITTAN- icas, history, r encyclopedias, | EM 3.3510, JACKSON'S RENTAL Mixers, chain saws, Skilsaw, ele. hammer, pave. aind clay breaker. Pipe dies, etc. FE 4-5240 SPECIAL SALE BOILER BURNER UNIT, KITCH- en cabinets cf i vlaaes heater and 1,000 tt. pin Arbor 2-3518 — Mo ri oa UsED e., E. OW HOT WATER boiler used stokers. 80 _ fayette. vr 2-5781. A BARGAIN Belecved - Pine Panel fees a lo RE $16 M 1x12 D48 v acivins WP ibe L ft. 1x6 roof boards. D48 Fir $110 M 2x4 Random L. D48 Fir . 8c L ft. 2x8 12’ and 1¢’ Fir ..... 16¢ L ft 2x10 14° and 16° Fir ..20¢ L ft. 2-6x6-8-153'' Bir. Fil. Dr. $10.35 2-626-8-5%%'' Jbs. PG WP 1x34" R E Base ...... 10 L tt 9 oe bathren,’ seta: compe W aj t 150. | ree yea Ce wa eaters few menor tan oor, | ~=Lumber Co. & builders | 1 H H Walled Lak | fos, prumbing used. W We | rast Fined ST ves. Lt 2-5068 for _less | Sax “LOCHINVAR, 80,000 B.T.U. Oil furnace, complete with 1-3 HP blower motor and controls, $150. FE 46851. PLYWOOD — of various sizes, kinds and surfaces at lowest prices. Kitchen cabinet doors & drawers made to order. Also kitchen cabinet peal PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO FE 2-2543 1488 Baldwin REV SATIN LATEX PAINT. to apply. No painty odor. Dries in 20 minutes. Washable. Cheice | 21 colors.. Oakland Fuel & 436 Orchard Lake. FE WALNUT SHOWCASE SUITABLE fo Jeweiry, ete., locks, FE 45831. Plumbing Specials §2 GALLON ELECTRIC WATER HEATERS, INSTALLED myer ON SOL PIPE $89 ARNACON “PLUMBING Ph. Ortonville 130. “s a ae PROMPT DELIVERY BLACE dirt, sand, me Pn Mark. and _ manure. 4-6040. ‘REIN SORGES CONCRETE SEPTIC _ tanks Ph OR 3-7686 POSTS SET IN STEEL CLOTHES | cement, $16 pr. EM _35132, HEAT YOUR HOME Economically with H. C. Little, fully automatic furnaces. The one | that ights itself & burns No. 1 or 3 olf. No messy low sot fire. Floor furmaces a specialty. Demonstrations daily $ to $40) allowance for your old beater. No cash down, liberal terms. AT SERVICE CO SAND. GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, TOP soil, George Frayer, FE 56-4831. ROAD GRA DRI vs EWAY Gert ge ena gravel, fill sand. Tanner Band & Gravel N otice—Truckers Loading Orchard Lake _ Rd. near M Middlebelt Rd. FE 2-1440. BEST GRADE, TOP an SAND og & fill dirt. W. Kelty, FE- SAND, GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, TOP . soil, rock, FE 2-2817. FE $-2452. ot. oe Orchard LOADING OUT ND, Travel. “Adamson” 6335 Sasha aw, rkston. TOP 80: BLACK DIRT, PEET m fh dirt, sand dé gravel. ~ FILL SAND Band & v black dirt & aeaure? re’ neP, oat WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL fill dirt, road gravel, trucking cement and mortar. Pontiac Lake Building Supplies. OR 3-1534. SAND, GRAVEL, FILL DIRT & black dirt. FE 40172. CINDERS, TOP SOIL, GRAVEL. 9460. ‘| FE3- Sporting Goods 68B FOR SALE: 8 BY 13 FY. TENT. 5900 M-59 Hwy. Near Airport. Art Lawson Gun Shop EXPERT GUN REPAIR Rebluing, custom stoc«s, “te r scopes and access. Every ammunition. New and used ne, sale or trade. Shooters’ supp 455 Dixie Highway MA 51838 WANTED SHOT GUNS & DEER ing Manley eee 10 pale Y SUPPLIES ie iy ae Carland's ‘Oa p, across from Airport. URSRELL GUN SHOP, BUY. tg trade. 375 8. Telegraph. Wood, Coal, , Fuel 69A EASY | \ HEAT re Trailer Exchange . Telegraph Open Evenings and Sundays P.M. CHAIN BAWS — NEW AND USED. Hardie Garden and Orchard sprayers. Garden tractors — with reverse ear. Rototillers, large and small. Power mowers — new 1593 8. Woodward Ave. (north 14 Mile Rd.)}, Birmingham, phone Midwest 4-6009. Time payments wee ee We take trade-ins. TRAIL- ress, Furnace like | _new. Af 4-6068. i—8xi0 aD RUG. PHONE 2-7705 or can be seen at it 22° Dakota. Surplus Lumber & Material Sales Co. NEW & USED LUMBER .... 2x4x8 studs, each 1x4 maple Meee Aley good quality. 1x8 sheathing. —— assortment of used sash. MICH. WHITE PINE, 2x6, 10c A PT. Open 8 to 5:30 except Sundays $340 Highland (M-59) OR 3-7092 Learn at leisure about the many excellent bargains advertised in Pontiac Daily Press Classified ads. Toys or trucks — they’re in the Want Ads! AIR COMPRESSORS with t ers and clay spades for rent; other : CONE'S RENTAL bh LAVATORIES, COMPLETE WITH faucets, $24.50 value, $14.95. Also toilets bathtubs, shower stalls at terrific values. ese are slightly crate marred. Michigan Fluores- cent, 383 Orchard Lake )_ Ave. electric light fixtures for every room in the house in newest, 1953 designs. Terrific values. Bedroom, $4.50 value, $2.25; din room, $10.95 walue, $5.95; porch, $2.95 value, $1.95. Blightly irregular. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orcha: Lake Ave. KITCHEN CABINET SI sat Complete with faucets, $129.95 value, $89.50. Also wall and base cabinets at terrific values. These are slighly crate marred. Mich- 3893) “Orchard PUMP, GE ‘motor, $79.50 $41.50, slightly’ crate rd value, marred. Michigan Fluorescent, lS _ 393 Orchard Lake Ave _ SMALL WALNUT DINING TABLE, wardrobe trunk. FE 47084. CONSUMER POWER CO. AUTO- matic water heater, $8. 2 Stout St. AND HOT OT WATER TANK _\ arm heater, $12, FE GOOD DRY SLAB Ww wooD $8.00 ra 2 for $11.00 delivered FE | LARGE TRUCK SCRAP WOOD & lbr., $ in city, FE 43483, HARDWOOD SLAB WOOD, 2 CORD __Gelivered, $11. PE 2-1458. Dogs Trs Trained, Boarded 71 BURR- AT Mo- tel, — slipped. “ue &. | Tele- _€taph. . BOARDING ALL 5B A reas. rates, Modern kennels.” 1630 Grubb rd., High! U_ 46813 BOARDING, BATHING, & CLIP- Perry, FE 26113. _ Sale Farm Produce 1A ww SELECT YOUR OWN Delicious tree ripened PEACHES Red. Haven a=Gclden Tub Jubilee | or pdglts F shal 30] n — , Lake Orion. Between Orion Rd “and Adams Road MY 3-5401 PLACE YOUR ORDER FOR CAN- Sree one at Crisman Orchard. \ Fon =e ABOUT 1 FRYERS, 2 to 2% Ibe OA8-3637, HOMESTEAD O ._ ORCH- and Golden Jubilee Peach- es cep Dutches, Melba, and ae cIntosh. Howard & Don _ Green. _ ~PEACHES High quality — drive in and see us. 800 Grange Hall Rd., _ Ortonville. PEACHES. LuUSsCcIOUs RED Havens. Fine eating, canning and freezing. Please bring baskets. OAZLAND ORCHARDS, 2205 East Commerce Rd. Between Burns & Duck Lake Rds. Milford. | SWEET CORN. POTATOES. 4350 Morgan Rd.) FE 17-9004. PEACHES ARE on RIPE AT Suttons Orchard. 324 N. Lake _ Angelus” FE 5-1809. _ HUCKLEBERRY CKING. SAT., PI Sun. & from then on. 8705 Pon- tiac Lk. Rd be ayy 3 TO 4 LBS. Bg oy FOR db fine for bo freeze. Pad B. Wilcox, 10305 © hurst Rd., or phone Holly 5854. HOME DRESSED BEEP & PORK __ Opdyke Market. BURBANK PLUMB, D DUTCHESS A AP- rd‘s Orchards, 231 N. wtrrel PEACHES — PICK YOUR OWN, Red Haven. Ready NOW. Bring baskets. $1.95 bu. up. COLONIAL O2ACHARDS. 5370 Lake Rd mile sores For Sale Pets 71C PUPPIES TO GOOD HOMES. _FE me 3 ENGLISH SETTERS, BEST OF- fer. OR 3-7796. TROPICAL FISH 1 mies west, % of Clyde. 186 Btate FE 41873 somes senate ; Sale Household Goods 66) Sale Miscellaneous 68] Sale Miscellaneous 68) For Sale Pets = 71€ KELLANE BOTTLED GAS HOT! ROOFING SPECIAL REGISTERED COLLIE PUP- ae Sm parca sproem| CH LUMBER CO, PFS . , ru i w. Po. oa at 4 PE 2-0012 —_— —— RGUNDY ALL WOOL PERS Bun ¢ Open from * — with pi size swan SCREEN DOORS AD bolidays, from 1@ ‘tf 3 nl Pointers >. =e. c| oom Also 0x12 Armetrong lincleum $30 / s9°x89" w. pine door, 96.96 and New Years. Females. Fred Batcom, 6200 for both 961 Boston near Tilden. / 7x90" w. pine door, $6.96 CORNER KS & AUBURN R_R. 1 Lapeer, TFT. COLDSPOT, $80. 6 QT.| 32 'x80zl¥e ow. dD. $8.06 PE 2-614) Ree Lay Mirro-Matic pepsonre cooker, $12. DRAIN Lt lt SEW ware. __ TROPICAL FisH aKD FP Motorway * Elizabeth wane Lx. rapa, traps 10° size FURNACE keetsa 416 W Lane. Dodge Store Equipment 66B| $4.40, ir cise $5.68, 18° size 69.36, | cleanera. wall paper steamers for Park Noa Fm boo saa A Me tite, $13.22. rent. Oakia: el and Paint. 436 | PUREBRED GLE PUPS, NOT ICE CREAM MACHINE, $1,000. 60 CULVERT FIFE Orehard Lake. FE $-€156. ee, emales, $15; ‘males gallon hardening cabinet, s500.| CUoride for custy roads M28 ONE | AUTHORIZED REO LAWN MOW-| $2. Apply after ¢ p.m. 600 = & one i@-hole ice cream Mix Cement in colors. liver. OR soos. Pickup and de |__merson. GOOD USED DAYTON 24 POUND COAL & BUILDING SUPPLY CO. Overhead Garage Doors” TROPICAL FISH Se I 81 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 37101 wrop & see the only door with the | 3848 Beachgrove FE 2-1548 MISC. RESTAURANT EQUIP., ICE | ——— bilizing arm. No more scuffed |*# WE OLD THOROUGHBRED cr am gros Corey coffee.mak- side ja ° te, German pups. MY 2-384 FAP. dishes ots. Cheap, OR BARGAINS fully painted. Butlt to iast the onl 2 ba AK” WARDROBE life of your rage. No. 1 & No. PA CANARIES, C CAGES, FYLER DOUBLE DUTY MEAT| trunk, $12.50; small walnut stu-/ 2 doors available tn al) sizes. | _ 00d. Since 1927. 927. $84 Oakiand Ave. “AQUATIC GARDENS | TROPICAL FISH & SUPPLIES 67 N MILL 8T PE 4-2853 GERMAN SHEPHERD RD PUPS. AKC __Tegistered SPECIAL PARAKEETS $4.50 160 6. Edith FE 2-4025 PARAKEETS AND CANARIES, 2489 Autre Rd. pear Crooks FE is oan ~ DACHSHUND PUP- pies. FE 5-0866 GERMAN SHEPHERD ~ PUPPIES fe) v FORJAN KENNELS OR 3-0265. BABY PARAKEETS FE 3-3340 ‘191 Melrose. AEC REGISTERED DACHSHUND pcps. Reasonable. Stud ‘service. MA 4-1330. TROPICAL FISH & SUPPLIES Pincumbe's. 49 Park 8t.. Oxford. OA 8-2976 Open Eves. WHITE MICE, HAMSTERS, PARA- keets All pet Shop, 69 S. Aftor. E 46433. SPRINGER SPANIELS AT SACRI- fies. Overstocked kennels. Puppies so stock. Boarding. FE ___For Sale Poultry 72 ig Sg Ft snp GEESE, CORN FED. 30 HEAVY “ERYERE 4 TO & LBS. 40c ib. 3660 Giddings Rd. FE 6-6660. ~ For Sale Livestock 73 PRIVATELY OWNED S&POTTED ear stalli children, we 4H stock. 553 Bast Fi Lake Orion, Myrtle 34 MOVING AUG. 18th, horse. Saddle & bridle. 6475 Wil- low EB. J. Livernois stable. PRIVATELY OWNED S8POTTED . old. Art's Riding Stable, next to Pontiac _Siiport on M-60, Sat, LI 21815. CATTLE, ALL KINDS. FE 17-9058. __ Wanted Livestock 74 Ww. CALVES, LIVE- stock, Ph. MAple $-6731. Hay, | Grain & Feed 78 a, RYE, $1.34 bu. 2 Oxford. “Meyer's”, ease, WA CUSTOM CO and baling. Ph. MA 65-3502, STRAW IN . Mc PER BALE over ». tales. Corn, 70c per crate. MA 62996. Oa- a CLEAN T STRAW 40 bale also mixed ‘hay. y Calkins. WEW HAY p eel "7s ro oT 2 MILES 8. of Hadley, demonstrators sale. ‘4 Ford Fe tractor & cul- tivator, scoop tractor 3 bottom tractor plow, double ai S wae oe — or ve carpenter plum tools, welding sever rms. of an wrist- watches, 4 pocket watches, watch Sa ie at _E. A. Pritch, Oxford auctioneer. — Pins RL Re ee Ne Oe THIRTY THE adsl ES DAILY bah ela MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1953 SINUS TABLETS Immediate relief of digcumtfurt due to sinus condition. A real remed:. not fust a “pain killer” Bottle of 100 Tablets... $5.00 5 Otto’s Pharmacy Opes Daily 10 a.m. to 1] p.m. Closed Sundays 141 E Maple, Birmingham - Phone MI 4-2366 Kim I] Sung and Nam I] Only Aliases Editor's note: Bill Shina, the Korean- born AP correspondent who has re- ed — notable beats includ the ground of North Korea’s leader, Kim ham F aia @ swiftly By BILL SHINN SEOUL (®—Marshal Kim Il Sung and Gen. Nam I], the two men | who emerged as kingpins in the | | newly-purged North Korean Com- | munist regime, today were labeled ' “fantastic imposters” who _bor- rowed their names from well known North Koreans of years ago. Only today, Red China’s Peiping radio disclosed that Kim—one-time Russian army major—has_ been awarded the title of ‘‘Hero of the People’s Republic of Korea’’ by the standing committee of the North Korean Supreme People’s Assembly in recognition of his war- time leadership. The title apparently is an imita- easy te settle 367 E. Pike M. Lincicome Polio Insurance \Call or See BRUMMETT- om LINCICOME te Hard te proneunce, bat General Insurance with: FE 4-0588 M. Brummett (Adertisement) LOST 23 POUNDS 2 Top-Men in North Korean Red d Regime ‘Stole’ Names of Well-Known Patriots tion of Russia’s ‘‘Hero of the Sov- jet Union,’’ which makes the re- cipient in Rissia a virtual demi- me. * * * Information that Kim and Nam Il are imposters with bororwed names came from a highly placed South Korean intelligence officer with excellent connections in North Korea and access to top secret re- ports on the muddled situation be- | hind the Reds’ Bamboo Curtain. cause of possible retaliation against relatives still living in North Korea. borrowed the name of a North Ko- rean hero who fought the Japanese during the occupation of Korea has been known for some time. But for the first time it was re- vealed that Nam Il, chief Red ne- gotiator in the truce talks at Pan- munjom,..also borrowed the name of a prominent North Korean. * * ¢€ Here is the story as detailed by the intelligence officer: Kim's real name was Kim Sung »§| Joo. He was born 42 years ago in a small village near the Red capi- | tal of Pyongyang, the son of an | anti-Japanese Nationalist. | When Kim was eight his father was forced to flee to Manchuria to escape the Japanese police. Kim stayed with an uncle in Korea until he was 13, then joined his father. He became a member of the Chi- nese Youth Association of the Com- |munist party when he was 17. * = * At the age of 30, Kim became commander of the guerrilla corps in Manchuria. At about the same time Japan sent its powerful Kwan- tung army into Manchuria. Kim fared badly against the Japanese Slenderwise Thinking °°" °"""™ Will Lead ff slimming down 1s your problem and it you need help many products will offer many promises. Playing the field leads to regrets, wastes your time and paca Rennel is a quality prod- uct which has brough! results to thousands of Michigan users. Rennel is the di you must try and can afford buy. Mrs. Edw. Myers. Gobles, Mich. writes, “I have used 8 bottles of Rennel Concentrate and with * it have lost 23 Ibs. With the very first | i. To Rennel .3 bottles I lost 12 lbs. and it was just as easy as that. I bypass fatty foods | and sweets but of other foods I eat| all I want and I am holding my weight. | Before 1 weight I felt bloated and tired and out of breath at the least bit of exercise. Now the opposite is true and I feel like a new person for which I give the credit to Rennel.’ | bottle return it to the manufacturer for your money back. Price $1.40. If not pleased with the very first | During World War II Kim com- | nvanded a Korean army corp that fought alongside the Russians. In the battle of Leningrad, he won special recognition from Pre- mier Stalin. He was ordered to Man- churia to fight the Japanese in the final days of the war. However, by the time he reached Manchuria Japan as surrendered. * * Kim arrived at Nam-hi., his birth- place, in September, 1945, carry-| purge in recent weeks. His name cannot be revealed be- | Kim's. role as an imposter who | ing secret instructions from Stalin on how to communize Korea. He adopted the name of Kim 11 | Sung, a widely known Korean pa- | trict who had been fighting the | Japanese as a guerrilla in -Man- | churia. The real Kim Il Sung was then | about 53 years old, while the im- | | poster was about 34. | In October, 1945, the bogus Kim | | appeared. in public for the are time under his new name. On Oct. 14, he was introduced | as a ‘‘victorious general’’ to more | 'than 200,000 North Koreans as- sembled at a parade ground in| Pyongyang. . . The story of Nam I's life as | reported by the intelligence source, revealed that his real name was | Kim Chang Man. Reportedly now about 47, he was" born in a small village near Pyong: | yang. Nam Il was propaganda chief of | the North Korean Labor (Commu- nist) Party until he was appointed | chief truce delegate for the Reds | in July, 1951. That appointment was made partly because of Nam II's ability in negotiations and debate. | He was not a military general. 'He appeared at the Kaesong and | Panmunjom truce negotiations first under a title of lieutenant general | and later as a full general, pre- | sumably given him to influence the | Allied truce team. | * * * The real Nam II is a man about | 50, trained in Russia. He was pres- | ident of a Communist college in | Pyongyang and also an instructor | jat the Kim 1 Sung University | there. Kim Chang Man, the imposter | now known as Nam Ij, presum- ably took his new name because | the authentic Nam Il was more | highly regarded by the people. Like Kim 11 Sung, Nam 17 is) considered a pro -_Russian as | against the pro-Chinese and the | Nationalist Korean factions in| North Korea. This pro-Russian faction, consid- | | ered moderate rather than rabid | pro-Russian, now appears to have | gained control of the North Korean government following the sweeping | floor space. pounds. Save $20 today! SUES it Save $20 During This Sale! Big 11.1 Cu. Ft. Coldspot Freezer iz Regularly 9 3 329.95 $10 Down Delivers Here’s maximum food storage space at a minimum ct All four aluminum shelves are within easy reach and have individual, hinged doors. This eliminates excéssive frost, cuts power bills. Freezes and stores 396 Save at Sears. Saltsfaction guaranteed nr your mongy back SEARS i = E vet ~ SAVE. 40 Reg. £99.99 With this great 11 Cubic Foot COLDSPOT 299 dv ONLY $10 DOWN DELIVERS ¢ THERMOMATIC DEFROST MODEL width crisper, 50 Ib. freezer chest, top-to- floor storage and porcelain enamel interior, plus many other features. new Coldspot you get a full Buy today! pence te 1 w eilgertntseleet AAA IIE OD NIP @ $10 Down Delivers Now. price on this Buy Now You'll Save 35.95! 9 Cu. Ft.Coldspot | S244 . get amazing special purchase New Thermomatic Defrost Model! Appliance Department—Main Floor gleaming new Coldspot! “154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 \ ROEBUCK AND CO. 1 PRE-SEASON baie BUILDING MATERIALS ae ‘Round Protection a = Big 18% Savings! Aluminum COMBINATION DOORS —— Regularly 54.95... Now Only — 49> pees pee TTT 1014 TTTI1122 pec asecees sees: ee ++ sepeses Tri peeseereen' = Tt ; : - i SEARS WILL HELP ARRANGE INSTALLATION AND FINANCING OF YOUR BJILDING NEEDS Whether you're building your ‘’dream’’ home, or im- proving an older home . installation and financing, under FHA or Sears Easy Payment Plan! bso aes ee ig TTT TTT pesuaaa bh Steel Garage Doors Handsome, Vertical Panels 53.95 Reg. $9.95 Spring balanced .. . Swings up and in easily! 8x7-ft. In- cludes hardware, lock 16 x: 7=¢ Deer. . 22.55: 119.95 White Asbestes Siding pier ‘and Waterproof Reg. 4.59 4. 10 undle Covers 33'/; square feet. No painting. Won't rot or fade. Wood-grained design 30% Sat. Felt ...... 3.89 roll. Budget Your Purchase on Sears Easy Payment Plan! (Usual Carrying Charge) @ Adjusts for Snug Fit @ Piano-Type Hinges @ Many Sizes Available © Strong Corner Points Adds distinctive beauty to your doorway! Will never rust . . . never needs painting! Panels quickly changed from inside. Stops wintry drafts, cuts fuel costs! 5 % during Save 15 Yo let Sears help you arrange ‘s ~ iform thickness ove ray protection. Slate Citar ile suriace pure asp u coating. i c b. Roofing Nails .-- 25 | Save 10%! Homart Protective ure! INSULATING SIDING Regularly 7.89, Now Only Bundle @ Bundle Covers 50 Sq. Ft. © Wood Shingle Design Beautifies your home, as it protects and insulates! Homart insulated siding is easily applied. Aluminum color granules and realistic wood shingle design make it hand- some as well as practical! Buy now, during this special Padauiits...aSale at Sears! Aluminum Corners ..... . Rock Wool Batts Save Up to '/3 on Fuel Bills Utility Mixers For Hand or Motor Operation Stee] Jack Posts Relieves Floor Strains Homart. Reg. 9.20 7.49 Reg. 57.95 $52 Reg. 3.49 3.10 Supports heavily loaded Mixes anything! Does big New, paper. enclosed. Neater, beams up ta 20,000 pounds mixing jobs taster and with cleaner. 4-foot lengths for faster 5 ft. to 7 ft. 2-in less effort. 3 cu. ft installation Shortie Posts .........6.30 Orker Mixers 49.95 to an? 95 Rockwool Pellets, 40+ Bag 1.45 New Folding Doors Space-Savers With Many Uses Homart Roofing Roll Covers 100 Sq. Ft. Sidewall Shingles Genuine Top Grade ~ Reg. 2.19 1.99 Carton 12.79 Now Only 30.75 Quality felt base is saturated Shingles and undercourse — Homart folding doors are a and coated with pure for double-course installation new way of saving space! asphalt, thickly surfaced with Carton covers 50 sq. ft. With Steel frames vinyl covering mica! nails . 2'/2 to 6ft. 8 in Slate Surfaced Roofing. . 3.35 Metal Corners ..... 29¢ pach 3-0 x 6-8-in. ......... 35.75 Save Over 5.50! Classic Styled INTERIOR DOORS Populer Sizes, Now Only Reg. 12.50 6” Designed to look well in almost all types of homes. Grade A Douglas. Fir frame has 2 distinctive plywood panels. Sturdily constructed by expert craftsmen. . One-Panel Doors. . 6.95 * Homart Storm, Screen Window Aluminum Combination ] 5” Look at that low price! Look at these fine combi- nation windows! They won't rust, warp or shrink —never need painting. Use screen panel in sum- mer, storm panel in winter — you can actually save up to 20% on ra Size 28x55-inches. Buy now! 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 Reg. 17.95 Save 10% ry t ee