| Ss * The Weather « ., Sunday—Partly Cloudy ' (Details Page 2) 112th YEAR ¢ . mt THE PONTIAC PRE xxeewke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, Sen. Flander a - Doctor Charged | Protests Arrest ~~ Sheppard Held in Jail on Ist Degree..Murder | Warrants; Hearing Set | BAY VILLAGE, Ohio| (AP)—Maintaining his in-| nocence and complaining ‘that his arrest was unjust, Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard was jailed last night on a’ warrant charging him with) the murder of his wife. ? After pleading innocent in Town Hall, the tall, 30- year-old osteopath was led in handcuffs to his cell. —| “IT didn’t think it could| happen in this country,” he remarked about his arrest. Mrs. Marilyn Sheppard, | an attractive, 31-year-old) expectant mother, was found in her bload-soaked | bed the morning of July 4,- her face and skull bashed in by 27 savage blows. Since then, Cleveland police — - in Wife's Death, | ‘ ae » + j J Will Leave aoe Charge Mayor With Negligence “in Phenix City About Arrest of First Public Official BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) | | roused from his sleep, in-a | Birmingham hotel early to- ‘day and arrested—on a charge of wilful neglect of |duty. . + The warrant was served *on Mayor Reese by Lt. Col. 8 Jack Warren. military Resigns Post |sheriff of Russel County ieee Lt nes rohan ; aw Cc S failed i Agricultural Worker Phenix City the pest nine Will Return to MSC | days. was charged The city for Graduate Work | with permitting the operation of Subject to the approval of the | slot machines Michigan Board of Agriculture, Ed- | mond W. Alchin has resigned as | Oakland County agricultural agent. the warrant and then drove 150 to return to Michigan State College | miles from Phenix City to Bir- for graduate work. | mingham to serve it. Waking the: Granted a fellowship from the| ™#yeor, he instructed him te United Health and Welfare Fund, EDMOND W. ALCHIN County Agent official Cel. Warren himself swore out Mayor Elmer E. Reese of} |Phenix City, Ala., was) dress and return to Phenix City > officially invited into the case only Inc. Alchin leaves tis county aft- | last week — had urged the arrest|er serving as agricultural agent of her husband, a well known fig-| for “five years. He also was here ure both socially and professional-| in 1946 as assistant to Kari D. ly in this swank lakefront suburb. | Bailey, county agent at that time. Sheppard is charged with first Alchin went to Cheboygan in 1948, degree murder; authorities claim as agricultural head. the slaying of his wife was pre- | meditated. | pervisers met Thursday te ap- | Miss Susan Hayes, the pretty 24-| preve the resignation. year-old laboratory technician who | His successor has not been formerly worked in the same Bay named, but John Bray, former 4H Village hospital as the doctor, Was | acent for Oakland County, has | in a downtown hotel today, | heen appointed assistant agricul- watched over by a policewoman. | tural agent She is a possible witness who | During his service here, Alchin voluntarily returned to Cleveland | expanded the cra and livestock to tell investigators of her associ-| program for Oakland County farm- ation with the osteopath. County | ers and developed an educational | Prosecutor Frank T. Cuilitan said| pian to help city and suburban | Wednesday she signed a statement ul owners beautif ir | telling of intimacies with Dr. Shep- | home. yards and gardens. wer pard. At the inquest he had flatly hichin bas a micuuhce ot a | denied he ever was intimate with - her the Oakland County planning Commission and has participated | in many other countywide civic | activities. Mr. and Mrs. Alchin and their four children will make their home in Lansing after ‘Sept. L Detroit Pro Leads’ ‘Michigan Open ‘at Halfway Mark ; Reggie Sauger, assistant pro at. Mrs. Sheppard's interest in golf| Detroit's Beverly Hills Country has given police an idea for find-| Club, held the lead among early | ing a murder weapon. She played finishers today atthe halfway | Her golf ba no longer contains a| mark of the Michigan Open golf (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) | tournament at Lakepointe, 1,200 Airline His story—repeated a week ago in long hours of testimony at a coroner’s inquest-gias been | that he fell asleep on a down- stairs couch, awakened when his wife screamed, and ran upstairs. He said he saw a “white form” and immediately was knocked out. He recovered, grappled with a bushy-haired man on the nar- row Lake Erie beach back of the Sheppard home, and once again wa. knocked out. morning to post a 72-70—142 for 36 | holes. Pontiac's Lloyd Syron, ama- | teur playing out of Pontiac Country Club, put a 75 to his Friday round | of 72, to card 147. Gene Woodward. Lakepointe Pilots Walk Out | amateur who paced yesterday's) 4. | first 18 holes with a 66, wasn't Flight Schedule Dispute a to tee off until after Prompts Strike in 91) = ——____— | Cities Across Nation ‘June Arrests 10,337 CHICAGO — Airline service, LANSING (UP)—Michigan State | was curtailed today in 91 cities| Police made 10,337 arrests during | across the nation as some 1,200 | June. the department's monthly ac- | AFL pilots struck against Amer. | “ity analaysis showed today. ican Airlines in a dispute over flight schedules. The Detroit office of American Airlines said about 50 flights would be affected daily at Willow Run Airport. The airlines strike which began midnight last night (local standard time) will force cancel- | s-hools. I like the people I've lation of all American’s 970 daily | | met. They give the impression this pees on thne) aaee ot rome jis a dynamic place.” By PATRACIA A. WOOD “I like the town. I. like the | Schools.” with him. Reese was in Birmingham as a spectator to attend today’s meeting of the state Democratic Executive Committee at which an attempt was to be made to nullify the nomination of three Russell County officials because of disclosures of fraudulent voting in the recent Democratie prirjary The Democratic subcommittee voided the nomination ef one mem- ber of the legislature in the same | primary and recommended that the full state committee take simi- lar action in the other county races. The charge of willful negiect | of duty against Reese resulted from recent gambling raids by | National Guard troops in Phenix City which yielded virtually - every form of gambling device | ranging from slot machines--te | lottery tickets, some of the latter dated as recent as iast week. Conviction under the charge is punishable by a fine up to $1,000 Reese is the first public official to be arrested during the investi- | gation of gambling and vice which grew out of the June 18 slaying | of A. L. Patterson, the Phenix nated as Alabama's next attorney racketeering throughout Alabama. | Drop in Temperature fo Follow Showers Showers today followed by partly cloudy and cooler weather | tonight and tomorrow is the fore- cast for the Pontiac area. The U.S. Weather Bureau pre- dicts a low tonight of 62 to 66 rising to a high of 80 te 84 Sun- Yesterday temperatures ranged | from a cool 68 at 6 a.m. to 92 at | 3. p.m. in downtown Pontiac.’ Rainfall -was .12 inches. i By 11 a.m. today another .18 inches of rain had fallen. The) thermometer at. 8 a.m. read 70) degrees and had risen to 79 at| 1 p.m. ‘shows great confidence in Pontiac | P = * “There's no question as to the need for extra buildings,"’ he to List Definite M’ | | i \f a Beatings Bring Police Warning City Detective Captain Issues Edict on Teen Gangs in Pontiac Area Reports of two beatings in Pon- tiac last night and one in Orion Township early today brought a warning from Capt. Clark M Wheaton, chief of Pontiac detec tives, that Detroit-type hoodlum ism will not be tolerated here Victims of the assaults were El- bert D. Neely, 37, of 2776 Dearborn St., Auburn Heights; Danny Em- ory, 15, of 185 N. Perry St., and Gerald Williams, 28, of 3534 Clif- ford Rd., Clifford Neely told police he ws forced to the curb by a car carrying five | City lawyer who had been nomi-| youths between 16 and 22 years | old, at about 10:30 p.m. on Sagi- | general on a pledge to wipe out | naw street near Lawrence street. He said one of the youths jumped from the car, pulled him out and slugged him several times in the face before they fled..-Thejr car had a Flint license plate, police said Emory said he was slugged several times by a youth about 18 who, with several others in a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Writer Gives Outlook on Fishing in State After a week's tour of northern Michigan and nearby Canada dack Patterson today sums up | his trip and offers some hot | tips on where the fish are biting. | If you are going north and want | to fish read today’s final story. | in the sport section of the Pon- tiac Press, | | at Midway Ave., E. Wilson Ave. at |Sanford St.. Saginaw at Wilson, | New Pontiac Superintendent of Schools, Finds the City and Its People Dynamic | this year—twice as many as in | ~any year for the past six-years."” | Whitmer’s ‘‘go-slow-’til-you-know- what-you're-doing” philosophy” has | for Tuesday's primary election are displayed at th@ Pontiac city blacked out for more than | this morning when a short-circuited | the pole burst into flame after the ; > atl CLERKS DISPLAY BALLOTS—Both sides of the official ballot | clerk's office ‘by ‘assistant clerks Mrs. Helen Brosted (left) of 92 | S. Francis St. and Mrs. Olga Barkeley of 554 Lenox Ave. Republican candidates are listed on one side of the ballot and Democratic office seekers on the other. Electors may vote — candidates on only one side of the ballot, the party of their. choice. | fou cannot split the ballot in the primary election. Polls will be open from 7 a. m. until 8 p m, Pontiac voters will use paper ballots like those shown above, although majority of the county voting precincts now are eo. »ped- with voting machines. Rhee Flying to New York for Big Reception, Parade From AP and UP Dispatches NEW YORK—Syngman Rhee, the dynamic president | of the Republic of Korea, becomes a regular commuter teday on the Washington-New York run. Rhee will arrive here from Washington today to at- tend a reception in his honor tonight at the Waldorf- Astoria Hotel. _ Sunday he returns on an overnight trip to Washington | before returning here Monday for New York's traditional | ticker-tape parade up Broadway. = —————* A statement jointly issued | ‘by Rhee and President | Eisenhower last night made | clear that the Korean lead- | Blaze Blacks Out Six Traffic Lights cy hag met eats Six Pontiac traffic lights were| talks here for his proposal | 2 hours|for a militant campaign | jagainst Asia’s Red rulers. | z es : If was reported unofficially, how- high tension wire set fire to a util prec tat Hees pak Elctaowet’s | ity pole assurance of American aid, to The short, caused by the rain, | build up South Korea's military burned through only one wire but forces to meet the growing power extinguished lights at East Blyd. ‘of Communist forces in. North Ko- rea A diplomatic informant, asking net to be named, said the planned buildup—to be discussed in further detail in followup staff talks continuing in Washington— would involve boosting South Ko- rea's reserve army force and giving her naval craft and jet planes. , Rhee's congressional speech and | his talk before the Overseas Writ- |ers here yesterday, however, left | ino dowbt of his intent to rally all | — | Saginaw at Park Ave., Saginaw at Raeburn St., and Saginaw at Rapid | St. , Consumers Power Co. workmen | were slowed in their repairs when | first fire had been put out by Pon- The signals were | 20 until 9:45. tiac firemen. @ out from 7 Beauty Contest Tonight Unless Rain interferes | |that if Asia is to be saved action | The Miss Fontiac beauty coniest | ; : finals and the selection of the win- cae faa taken against ner of an all-expense trip to Miami | The joint statement brought to | will be held from 9 to 9:30 p.m. | an end the week-long round of con- | tonight at Tel-Huron Shopping ‘ferences which Rhee and other | says, “There are new homes for | won respect from school employes. | Center at Telegraph and W. Huron | South Korean officials have held | 100 families being built in | “Any changes in Pontiac's school | St. unless rain interferes. In case with President Eisenhower, Sec- —Pentiae fttes Phete 4 — - The | il | y | possible support for his conviction | Foreign Aid Bill Vote Is Delayed: Sen. Measure Gets OK WASHINGTON «® — Majority From Critics Knowland Calls | Halt Until Appropriation | | rT S ae ae 7 SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1954 —30 PAGES” 7 AssOClATED FRERG |, UNITED Panes Senators Asking Mee Specific Points Censure Move Brings “Out Crowd of 600 With Hisses, Laughter Heard WASHINGTON (UP) — Sen. Ralph E. Flanders.said today he may revise his resolution “of censure ~° against Sen. Joseph R. Mc- Carthy to answer criticism that the proposal is too vague. As the Senate- resumed debate on the proposed rep- _ x —— told.a a r he e aia ta the fonetat an. increasingly strong move to sidetrack it. Some senators have called for..inciusion of a_ bill of ticulars against Mc- arthy. Sen. Guy M. Cordon (R-Ore) was | Before Leader Knowland (R-Calif) ap- | Plied the brakes in the Senate to-| day to prevent the cart Tom get- ting ahead of the horse on the ad- ministration's multibillion - dollar foreign ald program He asked the Senate Appropria- | tions Committee to delay a sched- uled vote on actual funds for the global program against commu- nism until the Senate could com- plete pasage of a required sepa- rate“authortration bill, The authorization sets a ceiling for the funds figure so should be passed first, but it got side- tracked before a final vote last night when debate erupted over a move to censure Sen. McCarthy (B- Wis). Chairman Wiley (R-Wis) ‘of the Senate- Foreign Relations Com- mittee wag ready to act “but we'll hold up until we get'the signal.’ At least one major Senate fest remained -for the authorization bill: an effort by Sen. Long (D-La) to chop $1,033,000,000 off the $3,100,000,000 ceiling for this year voted by the Foreign Relations Committee, The Senate made two changes in the bulky bill during debate which lasted from 9 a.m. until early evening: 1. It approved 86-2 an amend- ment by Sen. Smathers (D-Fla) to add 10 million dollars to ‘a 23% million dollar fund for technical cooperation in Latin American na- tions. 2. Sen. Malone (D-Nev)” upset {Continued’on Page 2, Col. 8) Flees to Czechoslovakia important ' and (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Man Slightly Injured in Leap From Train A Detroit™traveler, who decided he didn’t want to go to Chicago after all, jumped off a speeding Grand Trunk Western passenger train early today and suffered only -~ minor cuts and bruises, Waterford igo to Chicago | return to Detroit. + " as | U.S. Scientist on His Way to Asylum Behind Curtain LONDON (AP)—The Polish freighter Jaroslav Dabrow- . The tine ts the nation’s largest | That's how Pontiac looks to Dr. domestic carrier, handling an Dana P. Whitmer, who swapped | Pontiac in the schooj district | setup will come only after discu- | of rain, the program will be post-| retary of State Dulles and other |ski carrying American scientist Joseph Cort to political estimated 20,000 passengers daily, | the assistant superintendent spot | in Gary, Ind., school system to sion with teachers, principals and the school board,”” he says. “I ‘asylum in Czechoslovakia, lifted anchor in the Thames poned until further notice American leaders. The final talks | ; River today and headed for the open.sea after 13% hours were held at the State Department | Company officials said service | will end today with 32 flights by | pilots returning to their home| : bases, The AFL Air Line Pilots Assn. called the strike to enforce its de- mand that pilots on American's transcontinental flights ‘shall not be required to fly more than eight | hours continuous flying time in one day. Cats Wipe Out Rats; Now Too Many Cats | MOULTRIE, Ga, ® — William ‘Raiford was plagued by rats. He got a couple of cats and pret- ty soon there were no rats. But at last count, there were 14 cats. “You can't win,” says Raiford. Uemen’s Tews & County, Tel-Heree | ship here in Pontiac,” Open every sight “til & p.m. become superintendent of Pontiac Public Schools on July .1, The 4i-year-old scheolman, whose wide grin and easy man- ner have won him a warm wel- come from teachers and busi- nessmen alike, hopes to move his wife and two children te Pon- tiac by September, The Whitmers have bought a home at 43 N. Genesee Ave. “There seems to be good leader- Whitmer says, ‘People are interested in improving the city and its schools. So mdny towns have no leader- ship. So .many places just accept their problems and live with them and do nothing about them.” The new superintendent feels Pontiac’s approval of the special tax for building $9,000,000 worth of new schools and helping tc = day-to-day operating - costs 4 don't believe in making changes until you very, very well or- fented. Anyway, though, I haven't any big master plan that's going | to be settled down onto al] Pontiac | schools." » Dr. Whitmer is impressed with the good morale and “team spirit’ among lecal teachers; and plans q democratic adininis- tration, “I believe teachers should be changing curriculum, setting up . tenure, and \ other_ large-scale plans,” he says, “In rewriting courses of study and changing cur riculum, their ideas are very valu: able... They're in the front lines “They see students’ reactions t _ various courses, books and visua aides. ‘And they're the ones wh) have to use the curriculum.” _DR, DANA P, WHITMER included in ‘big things’ such as) yesterday. Open Safe Foils Thug SAN LEANDRO, Calif. (UP)—An | Polio Increase Slows industrious burglar spent most of oa the night in ah ynsuccessful at-| LANSING (®—Only 78 cases of tempt to crack a safe. Police said | infantile paralysis were reported today he could have..opened it|in Michigan last week, a total merely by turning the handle termed ‘‘very encouraging’ by the | State Health Department. The 78 leases comared with 95 cases in the same week last year and 159 In Today’s Press Birmingham “ t. |in the corresponding week two, Caine Matiny ef. | Building News 1S.thee th | YEars ago | — News ; re Seer ad } Seocenaaneiaseanensncenlameaeaes } * . 38 -. ' c N ae ss Dovid, UnsTenc aes 5 Burned on Trolley | Gauri « | DETROIT (INS) — Five Detroit | sey Tg yy | trolley car passengers were ge Markets 4... ™ | ly burhed last night when a 60- oe 1 |foot length of streetcar wire Fheotors 12, 13 | snapped and snaked about the Wont nae Treereme, as. a6, 21, oa | Vehicle’g open windows. Wemen’s Pages 0, 11 Ty : . | “Ker what ts rigtit—Ged gives ts te) | Oxmen’s Tene ountry, Tel-Meren | see the right.” Zigmund J. Niparke, for) at Open every night ‘til 6 p.m, US. Cofigressman detention by British police. The ship was held up as \ police and home office offi- cials rangle@ with the Communist captain over a Polish stowaway who was feportedly seeking political asylum in Britain. British officials and police left the vessel, but it was unknown whether they had taken the stowaway ashore. Police on the scene re- fused to say whether any- one had been removed from the ship and said the whole question was under the con- trol of the Home Office. Cort, 26,.a i Boston, Mass., self-described as an ex-Communist, boarded the freight- er last night at the for his departure government States wants about his failure tary service *and , Puget semi Ts. — @ >.> * IAKE OVER PAGES a SS : 2s a SS . . tee Al nooner) mediately, « Although his night -and day to tree-killing Dutch Elm y Forester William Le- said yesterday the citizenry Gooperating the way it in fighting the fast-rising “Less than 2%. per cent of the in trees have had them rab ‘Lebold said. ~ - result. is going to be that We are Going to lose a large portion of our elm trees” he declared Lebeld..urged. al) persons hav- tag elm trees on their property Sheppard jailed | on Murder Charge | (Continued From Page One) No. 9 iron. the type used to blast gut of a trap. Detectives said the No, 9 iron was the sort of club that could have caused the deep gashes in Mrs. Sehppard’s head A hearing was set for a week from today. QGeveland Police Chief Frank Story sent two physicians — Dr George S. Greene and Dr. Spencer Braden — to cxamine Dr. Shep-! pard and said ‘We want to be sure Dr. Shep pard is normal and well when, we | ‘Elm Trees S City Forester Jrges; Disease Spreading - 4 From GG Birmingham Bureat }"to make arrangements imme- | Brake Promises Public diately to have the. DDT spplica- tien made. ; | ¢ . The forester reported that 70 of 80 samples sent from here to state }labératories in Lansing proved diseased, Birmingham's crews sprayed 4,000 city-owned trees since the 8th of this month, Lebotd said. Still be sprayed with the special DDT solution that kills the disease-spreading beetles are 3,500 additional city-owned trees “We are working with our hy- draulic wprayer 12 rs a day and with our mist sprayer 16 hours a day,” he said, The mist sprayer has a floodlight attached which makes possible the night. time spraying. “Wind conditions aré better at night,’ Lebold explained. ‘And be- sides, we just can't get the job done fast enough in the daylight hours."’ Lebold again reminded citizens; who thoroughly knows its prob- | that the beetles cgme from dead, | lems, as there dying and cut wood—and that pos-|in government matters."’ session of elm wood on property is a Violation of state and loeal laws “We haven't issued any tickets yet,” he said. “People cooperate when we tell them, ingham. People must take it upon themselves to see that elm wood on or around their property is dis-| haye gubernatorial primary candidate, | have ) yesterday |6f ® campaign tour of Oakland | | | | ; ‘ | ito get elected. “But we can't get all over Birm- | S County Backing Service as Governor ’ in Address Here D. Hale Brake. a Republican | told some 80 Pontiac area residents | that the state needs | someone ‘‘who will give them serv- | ice for their money’ rather than just a colorful governor. He- spoke at a luncheon at the home of Mrs: George Craig. 2680 | (Picture on page 4.) Pine Lake Rd. The talk was part| © County. The present state treasurer said he could work with the Michigan Legislature if elected, as he has won the confidence of | the lawmakers and knows his | way around state government, | He said Michigan needs a man | “can be no guessing |* Brake promised that he would | be on the job at all times and | “do the best I can.” He pointed out that he hasn't | made any comfmittments in order | | WHAT 18 IT?—Jogeph Kennedy holds the odd-looking particles which he said fell “lf that’s the way you have te get elected to the office of gover- nor, I don’t want it,” sald Brake. | °" his farm like falling stars They came down , ____ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 4 ras —— prayed Candidate Asks of Port Huron which are hard ’ tails flaming until they hit ground 81, 1954 | | | ' i } AP Wirephote Unlike meteorites, these are of putty-like and heavy | BLOOMFIEED HILLS — Police Chief Stanley Kevern - today er f ' | | | . | ] on Police Ferce ' | nounced the appointment of Walter Sluiter as lieutenant and Ralph Powell as sergeant, effective to-| morrow | Sluiter, 49, has‘ been with the department 16 years, is married and thé father of two married | children With the force 6 years, Powell is 32, and the father of a ‘young son | Sluiter was formerly a sergeant, | | Powell a patrolman. | Flanders to List : Definite Charges (Continued From Page One) had not been considered by any committee, he felt that al] mem- bers should have an opportunity to hear all debate. Vice President Richard M. Nixon, on Knowland's inquiry, ruled that the Senate at present is not con-| sidering the Flanders’ resolution it. | self but a motion to bring up the resolution for consideration. The pending legislation still is the foreign aid bill, on which debate was suspended abruptly Friday night, If the Senate agrees to take up the Flanders’ praposal _ fer action, the aid bili then will | |Bloomfield Hills | |Promotes TWo~. Blind Triplets Keep Dad Busy - Father Works 15 Hours a Day to Send Stricken Girls to More Doctors FLINT (®—A Flint father, whose infant triplet daughters afe fight- ing a rare disease that has already left two of them blind, says he's working 15 hours a day. to. send them to more doctors Eimer Price said “There are two more hospitals— Ford in Detroit’ and the Mayo Clintcc—I want to take the girls to before I give up all hope. “But we already have present doctor bills besides taking care of the rest of the family.” Price, who works eight hours at the Flint Buick plant and then work seven hours more at night in a service station, made the comment te a report that per- s0hs in Colorado Springs, Colo., wanted to help them. The triplets, stricken with retro- lental fibroplasia, have two sis- ters, one 3>-years-old, the other 2':. Specialists at University Hospital at the University of Michigan made the “diagnosis. Two of the eight- gy month-old babies are blind. The other has the use of only one eye. Doctors said the disease As in- curable. The Prices live in a four room home with one bedroom. Their home is. in the heart of Fiint's “I have come this far withou Lebold issued one last statement| premising a job to one person.” to residents Brake stressed the importance of lawyer, talked with Sig oe = “If you notice wilting or yellow. | unity in the Republican ranks and the morning and said ae d ing in your elm trees g@t in touch | 5.14 that no matter who wins he file a writ of habeas corpus a8: with us or a landscape forester | be backing him and ‘we'll | start quésTioning him posed of."’ _W. J. Corrigan, Obie criminal consistency Speaker Charges Pontiac like balls of fire. Kennedy said, with four-foot Pontiac Deaths | factory district They moved there Knowland said he planned ‘for | from a three room apartment when the senate to remain in session’ un- the triplets were born Nov. 25 til about 6 p.m. EST and t hen re- | cess until noon. Monday. Police Warn Gang be displaced temporarily. ing that he be freed. Corrigan | | will contended his client was innocent | and had been arrested Megally. He held the warrant was issued | by an unauthorized person. The warrant Was issued by~Acf.” ing Mayor Barber and signed by Bay Village Police Chief John P Eaton The doctor. wearing a pair of blue denim pants given him at the jail and a white T - shirt. slept soundly last night on a cot, said jailer Joseph Yusko Yusko said three guards turns watching the prisoner He was up at 5 15 am. break fasted on corn flakes and coffee and then went back to sleep, Yusko added Juveniles Attempt Burglaries in Night Pontiac Police blamed juveniles today for three breakins occur- ring im the city last night, accord- ing to Capt. Clark M. Wheaton, | chief af) detectives An atthmpted safe cracking was- reported. by the L. H. Cole Oil; Co., 392 S. Sanford St. and ‘the offices of the Kaiser Coal and Sup- ly Co.; 702 S. Paddock St.. and the Parkview Homes, a government houking project at 702 S. Padlock St., -were ransacked. Police said nothing has been detemined missing at any: of the three places where entry was gained by breaking rear win- dows. Wheaton said the theves were unable to enter the wall safe, used as a night deposit safe for drivers after plaster was torn down from around the safe Police said they were led to be- lieve the breakins were by juven- iles after finding several finger prints at two of the establishments took -Bears, tone or Wild, All Same to Tourists CENTRAL CITY, Colo «® — Cameras snapped in this hostoric ald mining_town yesterday as de- light tourists pointed their lenses at what they thought was a tame bear But they scattered in a hurry af ter Sheriff Kenneth MeKenzie fook a close. look at the full grown animal. ‘That's a real bear, and not a tame one,’ he sard--McKenzie said he believed the bear to be a grizzly which strolled from the woods and ambled lazily thrpugh the streets “It's sure tucky nobody. was hurt,"’ said the sheriff The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Fartty cloudy and stattered shower, ‘today Cooter tenicht and Sunday. Lew tenight 62 te 66. Sunday #6 te MM. Nerth- west te winds 10 to 15 m ph. Teday in Pentiac Lewest temperature preceding §& am 70 At 8 am.: Wind velocity Direction: Southwest Sun sets Saturday at 7 53 pm Sun rises Sunday at 5 24 am Moon sets Saturday at 1.36 pm Moon rises Sunday at 8 22 a m 18 mph Dewntewn Temperaiares 6 GO, MB... ccose> 7 lle m 1 YF @. Mi ncccoce. 70 12m 77 BO. Mn ceceee 10 ip m rt a 72 6am. 7 Friday in Pontiac (as recorded downtown) Ls temperature : 92 temperature 68 Mean temperature - . 80 in, 18 in One Year Age tn Pontiac Highest temperature .. em Lowest . Sesve 73 Bighest and hewest Temperatures this 82 Years 48 in 1895 immediately ‘This disease is climbing at a win this fall.” Fred W. Stalcup - | was injured when an auto driven tremendous rate.” eo . * The Rev. Raleigh FE. Sain, staff member of the Detroit Coun- ‘ cil of Chuithes, will be cust Committee on Fees preacher at tomorrow's 10 a.m. | service at” the Congregational! LANSING (UP)—Joseph B. Jew- Church. His sermon is entitled ¢j) of Pontiac. president of the “Look for God in’ Life.” | Michigan Engineeriiig Society, to- day announced appointment of Birmingham Mother members of the society's fees com- mittee. Appointments include Frank E Sanford, Jackson, chairman, Wil- Injured in Crash BIRMINGHAM — A 29-year-old Birmingham mother was reported in good condition in Pontiac's St Joseph Mercy Hospital today. aft jham C. Berryman, Lansing ’Charles A. Hamilton, Grand Rap- ids; Ralph A. Main, Birmingham | Samuet D: Porter, Ann Arbor; Rob- ert S. Scott, Alpena; Clifford H er being thrown from her hus-| Spicer, Saginaw; William H. Wil band’s car in a collision here yes- | kins, Kalamazoo, and W. B. Wil- y liams, Grand Rapids Mrs. Dorohy Miller of 510 Hanna' The committee assists govern- by Raymond P. Fohey, 63, of 7007 Middlebelt Road. struck the auto gineering work. ee ) driven by r husband, Richard . Lt, at Chester and Hanna COAN and Schine streets Slightly injured was the Miller's 18-month-old son, Daniet f According to police, Fohey's car Qt Lake Cottage struck the left rear of the Miller . auto, pressing it against a waiiny | ALBANY, N-Y. #—Roy Cohn and pole. Mrs. Miller fell trom the| Pvt. G. David Schine flew here today from New York City and car as it hit the pole : Fohev was ticketed for failure left imtnediately by auto, presum- to yield right-of-way at an inter- ably for the Schine summer hore at Caroga Lake, near Gloversville section ——ESEE— The two frequently weekend at . . the camp U. S. Scientist Flees Neither would talk with news men In New. York, Cohen, who re- cently resigned as chief counsel of the Senate Permanent Investiga- tions subcommittee, had this to say when asked by newsmen to com- ment on the Senate censure move against his former chief, Sen Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis) - ° * Behind Iron Curtain (Continued From Page One) Telegraph quoted him as saying in a shipboard interview Charging he would be persecuted for having belonged to the Com- munist party in his student days, Cort recently asked for political ' asylum in England. British author- ities refused and canceled his res- idence permit, effective today “I have decided that at least for the first few weeks after I left Washington I would read only good literature.”’ * * . > * . The case caused a stir in the _ In the recently concluded Army- House of Commons yesterday McCarthy Controversy, the Army accused Cohn of exerting undue pressure on the Army in behalf of his friend, Schine, formerly when Laborite A. Wedgwood Benn protested the young scientist's ou- ster. He described him as ‘‘a man = = whose only offense was that he Paid consultant to the McCarthy had been a Communist under- subcommittee. Schine, in civilian clothes, said he was on.a three-day pass from Camp Gordon, graduate.” * * * Cort, who came to England on a scholarship and stayed on, had taught physiology at Birmingham University the past year. His wife, a physician, had worked at a Bir- mingham hospital He denied being a draft dodger at a news conference last June He said he had registered for mili- | tary service in 1948 and been de-+ clared physically unfit Postmaster Nomination ARMADA—President Eisenhow- er has sent to the Senate several postmaster nominations for Mich- igan including Chester F. Le of Armada, Lee has been serving as acting postmaster in the area for about four years \ At Murphy Park City Parade to Kick Off County Labor Day Fete Plans for a complete Labor a luncheon for committee mem- Day program sponsored by Oak- | bers and. their guests from 4 land County labor organizations to 2 0 p.m Rynerson said the , parade were announced today by com- ‘ é committee will award: a prize for the best decorated bicycle entered by a youngster under 16 years of age, with beauty and originality of decoration be- ing the deciding factors Trophies for the three best decorated floats will also be made on the basis of the float having the most meaning as mittee chairman Harold Ryner- son who said activities wil] be- gin at 10 a.m. with a parade After proceeding through the downtown section of Pontiac, pa- | raders will march to Murphy Park for a flag-raising ceremony and invocation scheduled fér 12:30 p.m Elks Lodge 723 drill] team will stage a grand stand review at | nc phate Day: beauty 1 p.m... Rynerson said. and a mn beh baton twirling contest will start ivnerson urges interested Stoves ahd tables will be avail able for picnic groups. Poa at 2. bands or groups which wish to Friday's Temperatere “Chart - ; enter floats to contact the Oak- F 3 to 5 p.m. visitors 1 Meempints 4 n at park wilt be land County CIO Council office Miweukes 9: 6 with a band cna tocat | % FE 40579, New York 4 7 e sega hae The ’s recreat som- P+} | will be group son ‘com 90 Se unten efietals mittee said plans have been ce- : ath v1 7 duced. veloped for entertaining young. City Dancing, an amateur contest, | sters at the park: with games games and a fireworks display i are set for the evening, following me mental units seeking bids on en- | on Weekend Trip | Fred W. Stalcup, 65, of 3335 Au- | burn Rd., died Friday at 6.45 pm. | in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. He had been ill 10 months. two of ‘which he was in the hospital! Born in Bloomfield, Ind. May 10 | . he was the sen of Eli and Cynthia Pollick Stalcup. He mar ried Nellie House at Vincennes lInd., Dec 49, 1912 and came to Oakland County 25 years ago. He was a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division , | Besides his widow he is survived | by a son. Lloyd K., a daughter ’|Mrs. Maxine Cochrane, both of Pontiac granddaughter, and a brother, Arnold of Terre Haute Ind Funeral! will be Monday at 2 pm from Sparks-Griffin Chapel. Dr Milton H. Bank, of Central Method- | ist Church of which he was a mem | om ber, will officiate and burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cem- etery Vasil Todosiank Vasil Todosiant, 66, formerly of | 484 Franklin Rd., died yesterday |He was born in Rumania Aug. 10 1887. He ts survived by a George | The body is at the Kirkby Fu neral Home Short Escape Nets Pair Another Term | A Pontiac man and a Detroiter | both inmates at Ionia's state re- formatory, began serving added terms today for escapes which ;Metted them less than two hours | of freedom Lyle L. son ' Samples, 22. formerly of 208 Wessen St., drew an addi- | ‘ ‘tional one to 4% years after he admitted walking away from a farm work detail June 30. He was | captured while trying to duck away from guards in a nearby brush patch. Samples was sentenced here April 7, 1952. after Pontiac _/) Ap rroisreno JEWELER, AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY Special Purchase Offer Specially Priced at Only >250° FE 2-4800 No Money Down MECHANICAL REPAIRS Pontiac Piston By Herman Wouk a ee Chapter 28 When she came back her eyes were red, and with her make-up removed, sie was very pale. She smiled slightly. ‘‘Give me a cig- arette, dear. I haven't dared to smoke all day, thought my throat would close up.’’ She took an ash- tray to the bed and lay back | against the cushions with a sigh. |“‘Ah, that tastes wonderful.” They talked some more, not much. She came to the door with him and kissed tim affectionate- ly. “You're very, very goaod- | looking, all the same,”’ she whis- | pered. | “I'll call you tomorrow, May. Keep well.” He rang for the ele- vator. She stood in the d®orway, looking at him. When the elevafor | door was opened by a Negro in shirt sleeves, she suddenly said, “Will I see you any more?” “Sure. I'll talk to you tomor- row. Good night.” **Good-by, Willie."* | He did not call her the next day, | nor the day after that, nor the | day after that. | He weat to matinees with his | mother, to dinner with bis moth- | mother he visited the family | | with his mother. When his moth- er urged him te go out by him- | | self he ghumly declined. Sunday night Willie was in his His eyes fell on his wrist watch, and he realized that in twelve hours he would be on an airplane, re- turning to the Cain and the} court-martial His arm reached around stiffly, like a lever in an automatic phono- graph, and- picked up the tele- phone. He called the Woodley “May? How are you? It's Wil- lie."’ | *Hello, dear! I'd given you up—” “I'm going back tomorrow morning. I'd like to talk to you.” “I'm working tonight, Willie—” “May I come to the club | around midnight?” — “All righ Vast “Mother,”” Willie said as they | mind if I go on the town by myself | home | Her face showed how well she | understood, and how worried she |was. ‘‘Willie—our last night’ taxicab if she argued. She must have known, because she signaled for a cab herself. “Have a wonderful time. dear.” May was singing when he came into the crowded Grotto. When she had finished her number they went to her dressing room, and Willie said, “I didn't tell ‘ you about something last time. I want to | know what you think.” | He described the mutiny and the investigation to ber in long detall. May listened calmly. | “What do you want me to say, Willie?” she said when he was | finished. “I don't know, May. What do you think of it? What shall I do? What's going to happen?”’ She heaved a long sigh. ‘‘Is that | why you came tonight? To tell me | about that?”’ “I wanted you to know about ‘it | “Willie, I don't know much about the Navy. But it doesn’t seem to |me you have to do anything. The | Navy is a pretty smart outfit. They |won’t condemn any of you for | trying to save your ship. At worst, | you made a well-meaning mistake, of judgment. That isn't a crime—” “It was mutiny, May—"” | “Oh, h-——. Willie dear, you couldn’t mutiny — not even against your mother, let alone a ship’s captain—"’ They both laughed a little. |Though May’s verdict was the | same as his mother’s, it filled Wil- er, to shows at night with ‘his "+ ! room, dressing to go to the opera. |oath from a_ battered for a while? I'll see you back | The Caine Mutiny .... whereas Mrs. Keith's opinion had seemed ‘emotional and stupid. miseriés—Thanks.”’ “When are you leaving?" “Seven o'clock in the morning.” May rose, and slipped the bolt on her door. ‘‘Noisiegt musicians in the world work here.’’ She came to Willie and put her &rms arourid | him. They exchanged a fearfully |long, blind wild kiss. | “That's all,” May said, pushing herself out of his arms. ‘‘Remem- ber it the rest of your life. You'll have to go. I find it hurts to have you around."’ She opened the. door; Willie walked out and threaded through the jostling dancers to the street. He still had not the slightest‘ un- | derstanding of why he had really | come; he blamed himself for a late | flare of desire crudely masked as |a need for advice. He had no way |of recognizing the very common impulse of a husband to talk things over with his wife . . ~ Steve Maryk's spirit failed him inthe Very first moments of the court-martial, when the members ofthe court were . sworn. Seven officers stood on a dais in a semicircle behind a polished red-brown bench, their right arms raised, staring with religious grav- ity at Challee as he intoned ‘the copy of Courts and Boards. His eyes were drawn to the face of the president of the court, Capt. | Siakely. who stood at the center }of the bench, squarely in front of the flag. It was an alarming face; a sharp nose, a mouth like a black line, and small far-seeing eyes un- der heavy eyebrows, with a de- fiant, distrustful glare. Maryk knew his reputation: a - submariner, up from the ranks, beached by a heart condition, the toughest disciplinarian of Com Twelve. Maryk was shaking when he sat down after the oath, and it was the face of Blakely that had made him shake. One regular lieutenant came out of the lobby of the opera | commander and five lieutenants house to the slushy street, “do you made up the rest of the board. For his first witness, Challee called Lieutenant Commander | Philip Francis Queeg. Everyone in the room watched the door. The ex-captain of the | “1 won't be late, Mother.” He Caine entered, tanned, clear-eyed, | telt able to stuff her bodily into a |'™ & new blue uniform, the sleeve | stripes bright gold: was startling. | Maryk’s last vivid recollection | was of a little stooped potbellied | figure in a-gray life jacket and wet | khakis, clinging to the engine tele- | graph, the bristly face green and | twisted with fear. | ‘The man before him was erect, confident, and good-looking — and youthful, despite the few blind strands over a pink scalp. Maryk's nerves were jolted. Challee went quickly to the morning of the typhoon, and asked the ex-captain to narrate the events in his own words. The reply of Queeg was a coherent, rapid sketch, in formal language, of the mutiny. The court members followed the change /account with sympathetic interest. Once Capt. Blakely transferred a long ominous stare to the defend- ant. Before Queeg was finished Maryk had totally despaired. He looked -te- his counsel with fright- ened eyes. Greenwald doodled with a red crayon on a pad, draw- ing multitudes of little fat pink pigs. “Commander,” said Challee, “ean you account in any way for your executive officer's act?” “Well,” said Queeg calmly, “‘it was a rather serious situation. Mr. Maryk had shown evidences of growing nervousness and instabil- took that last bad roll he simply Hie with hope and good cheer, ( Fotttics! Aévertiooment) Felitics Adverticom yement) Cast YOUR VOTE 7 Vote for: - STATE @ HIGHER UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION @ MORE JOBS @ EXPAND VETERANS HOMESTEAD ACT —_ - P | TUESDAY, AUGUST 3rd ~ LESLIE H. HUDSON ’ DEMOCRAT REPRESENTATIVE Elect a Man. Who. Will—really fight for legislation to provide for: LT @ AID TO SCHOOLS @ EQUAL JOB OPPORTUNIT @ IMPROVED MENTAL HOSPITAL FACILITIES ELECT A CAPABLE MAN WHO WILL REPRESENT ALL THE PEOPLE - “Okay, May. I don't know why, I had to load you down with my a one went into panic and proceeded to act irrationally. “He acted under the delusion that he and he alone could save the ‘ship. His worst weakness was conceit about his seamanship.” *‘Was the Caine in grave danger at that moment?” “I wouldn't say so,‘ no sir. Ot | course a typhoon is an extreme hazard at all times, but the ship had ridden wel} up to that moment and continued to ride well after- ward.” “Have you ever been mentally il, sir?” “Ne, sir.’* “Were you ill in any way when Mr. Maryk relieved you?” : “IT was not.” “Did you protest the relief?" “As forecfully as I could.” “Did you attempt to resume command?” **Repeatedly.”’ “Did you warn your executive officer of the consequences of his | : The * re ' % * 3 a Ss 8 8 y 4 ‘ Noh LTRS Tig Amusing Word Pictures of Well | - Known Celebrities of Stage & Screen ity all morning. I think when we |— i act’”’ “I told him he was performing a mutinous act.” “What was his reply?”’ “That he expected to be court- martialed, but was going to re- tain command anyway.” “What was the attitude of Liew- | tenant Junior Grade Keith, the of- | ficer of the deck.?” | “He was in a state of panic as bad as Maryk's or worse. He con- i sistently backed up Maryk.” “What was the attitude of the | rest of the officers?” l “They were preplexed and sub- | missive. Under the circumstances | I don’t suppose they had any al- | ternative. ; “What was the attitude of the | helmsman?"’ “Stilwell 1 considered the worst troublemaker on the ship. He was emotionally unbalanced, and for some reason was very devoted to Lieutenant Junior Grade Keith. He gladly parti- cipated in defying my orders.” “Where is Stilwell at present?”’ “I understand he is in the psy- | chiatric ward of the hospital here, with a diagnosis of acute melan- cholia.”’ To Be Continued | by the Great Entertainer Himself Entertaining sketches packed with human interest and humor about the well known show people of stage and screen, never before portrayed in story form... His Sparkling Articles Will Appear Five Times a Week ... Monday Through Friday Starting Monday...August 2nd...in the PONTIAC PRESS — /- —Get-on Bectric Air Drier (Dehumidifier) Spending less and less time in your recreation room because it smeiis musty? Concerned because expensive paneling is warped, and doors won't close? Win back that valuable living space — dry out the air with an electric dehumidiber! A dehumidifier’s thirst is enormous. It removes as much as 3 gallons of water from damp air every 24 hours. Electric dehumidifiers are compact — easily moved from one trouble spot to another They plug in, just like a floor lamp. CEE YOUR DEALER or elim we lceo7 x ee ree x x x ’ r uf | eae x i» wis ~~ & x’ Steps menstere damage fer pennies @ day. ri re t if *» Pontiae 12. Michigan Rex. 0. & Patent Office Daily Except Sunday Published from Tus Porwriuc Passs Building Hasote A _Prregrasiy,—Publisher Come Satter = averting a a Ne tl Oh Mrr v n anage a : Ww, Entered at Post Office. Pontiac. Mich. as second cleas_matter — MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS = The A Press ts entitied exclusively to the use for republiqation of all ipeal news printed tp this news- as tehes Daper as all AP news dispe’ ~~ ——— The Portiac Press ts delivered by 4 B week: T ‘All matl subscriptions ere vavable tm advance Phone Pontiac PE 2-8181 MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1954 VOTE ON TUESDAY “We vote Tuesday. Republicans and Democrats head for the polls to determine party candidates. for the Fall election. Both sides should turn out in’ force. Each division wants the strongest possible men as the color bearers. A weak candidate can capture the vote of the solid “party man,” but the elusive voters standing in the twi- light zone may, well decide this and many other elections. They scrutinize the candidates. Don't forget that. Both side’ need this group. These independent ballots often represent the balance of power. They can split a November ballot six ways for Sunday, as they mark only the candidates they feel are the preferred selections. Whether you're a Donkey or an Elephant isn't important. * * * Then there's the bond issue This is nonpartisan. Both parties will declare them- selves on this without respect to - political alignments. If you pre- fer a new, modern court house that is big enough to handle the current work and allow for un- precedented growth, then vbdte “YES.” The cost to each indi- vidual voter is trifling. If you're Satisfied with the present mad- house where men and women work under cramped and confin- ing conditions. vote -ne~ * * * A new building could be erected on the site of the present, but estimates — Suggest it would cost more than two million dollars additional and it would do nothing to relieve downtown conges- tion. The additional cost isn’t insur- mountable although no one wishes to throw money away needlessly. But much greater freedom of action and greater comfort will result from the new location. This is one of the purposes of moving to the outskirts. ~ & & Whether you vote “YES” or “ne.” —get out and vote. That's paramount. Both sides agree. A Pool of Executives The National Planning Association has called on the Defense Department to organize an adequate pool of civilian executive talent for emergency service. * * * The association, an independent group of leaders in the fields of indus- try, labor and agriculture, is urging a nationwide survey. It considers pres- ent plans calling for a reserve force of only 300 specialized administrators, wholly inadequate. ~ In the association's opinion a reserve force of men capable of taking over Government depart- ments in wartime should number at least 5,000. An important part of the proposed program would create a Government school to teach selected persons. wartime management and problerris.~ * * x. Certainly national experience in World War II and the Korean struggle is a sound argument for careful consid- eration of the association’s proposals. 40 Years After Four decades ago the people of the Western world were wondering whether ah’ assussin’s bomb at Sarajevo’ would precipitate a general war. . As everyone knows World War I did result and became the cause of ‘most of the troubles which now beset civilization. But the anni- versary date depends on which declaration of war one considérs pT ; | ayéystarted ~general Kestili- te ete ‘ [i Yy oreennF “4 Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia on July 29, 1914, Germany on Russia August 1 after getting no answer to atr- ultimatum to Russia to rescind general mobilization. On August 3 Ger- many declared war on France, then France on Germany. The next day the Kaiser’s troops entered Belgium and Great Britain declared war on Germany. Today everybody agrees that Germany precipitated World War Il. Yet the argument still con- tinues as to where lies the re- sponsibility and to what degree ‘ for the start of the first global conflict. . pi * x * Frontiers were crossed first by Aus- tria, ally of Germany. Vienna later claimed to have been egged on by Ber- lin. Berlin claimed it tried to restrain Austria. The Germans maintained also that Russia, protector of Serbia, need have mobilized only on the Austrian frontier, not on the German. : The post-armistice effort of the new German Republic to fix war guilt got nowhere. The hearings created so much public controversy. they had to be aban- doned. r -* * * Looking backward it appears that the blame for all the misery and death rests on that day’s civilization. In 1914 no United Nations or League of Nations ex- isted for multi-nation talks in- stead of the separate series of two Nation discussions that failed to prevent war. Today we at least have the machinery so tragically lacking then. SLAvE away and save your money for a rainy day, and the chances are that you'll die of overwork while the sun is still shining. : The People’s Business: Moody Muddle ‘Vote for Blair’ Movement Disturbs Dem Leaders By JACK 1. GREEN LANSING ‘(AP)—Michigan has had more than its share of screwy politics—but noth- ‘Ing to compare with the current move to nominate a dead man for United States sen- ator When the late Blair Moody passed away untimely two weeks before the primary elec- tion, some of his most bereft followers pro- posed that a memorial vote be cast in his name anyway. But the politicians didn't really take it seriously But now, in at least three instances, CIO unions have seriously advocated that te their members—and there may be others. One large CIO local in Detroit reportedly has sent letters to its 30,000 members asking them to vote for Moody at next Tuesday's primary election. Another is reported to have distributed 15,000 cards saying “Show ‘You Care, Vote for Blair.” A major outstate labor newspaper Thurs- day published what purports to be an offi- cial CIO slate to guide its members on pri- mary date, and it contains Moody's name as the favored candidate. Just how widespread this campaign is cannot be determined now. The Democratic State Central Committee has disavowed the idea, but neither Gov. Williams nor August Scholle, state CIO president, have come out _forthrightly and attempted to stop it. ' candidate who represents On the face of it—and some CIO officers have said this—the vote for Moody would be a testimonial to the ideals and principles for which he stood and therefore serve notice on the party that it wants a candidate of that stripe for the November election. And back of it seems to lie the idea that the nomination of Moody would permit the State Central Committee to pick another the Moody philosophy. “ However, leading Democrats are seriously upset by the movement betause they feel that if it should succeed it would just about wreck the party in the fall campaign. They point to the fact that Robert M. Montgomery, state elections director, has said that the law makes no provision for the central committee or anyone else to select a nominee in such a situation. The law covers the case where the party is left before the primary without any candidate and the case of a candi- date who dies after nomination — but not the Moody case, Montgomery’ says. Of course, Montgomery may be wrong. Or the courts may say that as a practical mat- ter the central committee would have to step in and make the selection. But what worries Democratic leaders is the thought that the mess would have to go to court. They can foresee a tedious court fight before they know who their -can- didate will be — with the campaign days slipping past rapidly. And more than that, they wonder how enthusiastic the’ American Federation. of . Labor boys will be about the Democratic Party this fall if the party has gone to such extreme lengths to defeat Patrick V. Mc- Namara, the only other Democratic candi- date on*the ballot for U.S. senator and an AFL official. ‘ : FR 8 es ea, mth te “logy is involved. Kod Voice of the People Inadequacy Take Pe coe = etme _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1954 { S Be REA YS, n Care Of "MY GRACE 16 SUFFICIENT FOR THEE.’ ~ Zab {2:9 The Oakland Citizens League Is Unfair; Biased in Opinion, Says Anthony Renne (Letters will be condensed when neces- Sadrect "end “tloghone "nsmbet of ts writer must accom will not be pw requests, unless the letter ts critical to tts nature.) As a candidate for the office of State Senator on the Republican party ballot, I am writing this let- ter to you to call your attention to the report which has been pub- lished, by the Oakland Citizens League, Inc., 5303 Community Na- tional Bank Building, Pontiac, Michigan The Oakland Citizens League. Inc., holds itself out as a fair and impartial organization and yet its report has published facts concern- ing me which are not true, and facts concerning one other candi- date which are not true, and, in my opinion, the report is not fair, nor impartial, and appears to be Case Records of a Psychologist biased in favor of certain cand) dates : Anthony Reane 86', -North Saginaw Street Lynn_Rorabacher Knows Urgent Need of Hospital I would like to make a few re- marks in regard to the need of a targe addition to the General Hos- pital Believe me, I know after spend- ing several days there with the patients overflowing into the halls I think if the people who voted down the bond issue last spring were to spend a d&y up there it would carry 100°; Lynn M. Rorabacher 20 Chippewa Rd. Vision Greatly Improved Declares James W. Clapp Representative Harrelson's vision apparently has greatly improved since ‘the campaign of ‘52. At that time, the gentleman was not able to see one of -his-own signs posted illegally dn a utility pole beside General Hospital all through the campaign. Now he is able to see clearly some of his signs’ paint smeared. Personally, I dont believe in those political signs no matter where posted, Democrat or Repub- lican. I never did and I never will, However, if they do post them beforé election then make the can- didates remove them immediate- ly after it dames W. Clapp 14 S. Johnson Win New Friends by Use of Psychology, Then Lead Them to Christ and Church Dr. Jones is a famous Chris- tian psychologist who knows that there are definite laws of psychology which should be harnessed to help fill the churches and further the cause of goodwill toward men. Discuss the strategy given be- low at your nert Sunday school meeting. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case L-372: Dr. George H. Jones, aged about 50, is the editor of re- ligious publications of the Method- ist Church at Nashville, Tennessee “Dr. Crane, I want to impose on you again for a special article for our magazine called Shepherds,” he recently wrote me. “We need a piece that is simple and down to earth on the general topic ‘How to Win Friends. for Christ.’ “It should be adapted” to tHe average man and woman, as well as to young people. So I hope you can do ft: for us in not over 1,500 words."’ rll give you a quick digest of the essential points in the result- ing article which I wrote for Dr. Jones, since most of yor are in- terested in widening whole. some influence of your church. Whether you are trying to win friends for Christ or customers for your insurance company or store, the same~cardinal-law of psycho- You, yourself, must first be lhked by your prospects or they will pay > Aunt Het Httle attention to what you are trying to sell them The early missionaries to China didn’t get to first base when they tried to out-argye the Buddhist priests or the Hindu and Shinto. . But when they saved the lives of dying Chinese babies by their un- selfish medical care and restored starving children to health by giving them American food, they won the personal gratitude and friendship of the Chinese. Chinese let down their intellec- ural guard and pay serious at- tention to the missionary’s story of Jesus, In order to win friends, you must first develop X-ray vision and see the psychological tattoo engraved across the chest of every man, woman and child. “IT want to feel important": is what it says. If you are thus meeting the other person for the first time, by all means visualize that indelible tat- too on the other person's chest. Then smile, for a smile is a non- verbal type of compliment. It shows that you like the other per- son and are glad he is present. But also follow up your initial 7 wef» » taile with some words of hon- est praise about him, or his pos- sessions, such as his children, dog, automobile, garden, etc. You won't need to repeat this process many days before you will become an emotional crutch on which he will depend for ego in- flation. So he will begin to like you and look forward eagerly to your ap- pearance. You wil] have won him for your personal friend. Then, after-he—likes you, he_ is in the market to listen to your ‘ invitation .to accompany you to eburch, " Even then you may find it help- ful to employ the technique demon- strated by the Arab's camel that first got his nose in the tent on a very cold night. Then Re coaxed the Arab to let him get his neck in Next came his front foot. Then his trunk, and finally the whole camel was inside the warm tent. This story suggests the value of gradual persuasion, Applied to churches, it involves inviting your new friend to a church supper or church play or the Women's Society luncheon, etc Then offer to pick up the new- comer on § y to attend the sermon or mass. And before long. you will have actually won that stranger both as a friend for your- self and then for Christ. 7 (Copyright Hopkins Syndicate Inc ) 7” Days of All Faiths ~ Solemn Mood Intensif + —as Tisha b’ab ‘Af DR. HOWARD V. HARPER Besides- being July 31, today is also the Ist day of the Jewish month of Ab. The big day in this - month is the 9th, called Tisha b’ab, and it is preceded’by a three-week period of mourning. Tisha b'ab itself commemorates the two times the Temple in Jeru- salem was destroyed by the Ro- mans in the 70th year of the Chris- tian era, and by the Babylonians six-and-a-half centuries before that As the new month begins and the sad anniversary is only 9% days. away, the solemn tone grows deeper, in somewhat the ‘same way as the Christian Lent grows more intense with the be- ginning of Holy Week. Devout Jews believe that if their nation had not sinned they would not have lost their Temple and their land. They fast and mourn, therefore, to expiate their sins and to make themselves more worthy Baéring Dowa By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER (International News Service) Just independently possible that France has ‘finally been side- saddled with a premier who will nat resign Pierre Mendes-France fails to recognize the self-funding tradi-_ tion -of the historic premiers who have seen their duty and changed the subject On the eve of Bastille Day, Pierre, Eden and Dulles met to _ calibrate the parallels of penin- sulas and the future of equivoca- tion. With the sun escaping in the west they sat down to a supper of bar mousseline, roast chicken, rose wine, red wine, yellow, wine and white wine. Under such a fer- mented rainbow things looked brigher than electro-plating Pierre wags premeered on his promise of a cease-fire. Which does not include the popping of - corks There have been other predeces- sors of Pierre who couldn't find the handle on the situation. May- be they didn't order the right wine Mons. Lautrec-Monet Dubois was premier until lunchtime. He had but one wine and that was in a revolving door. Deputy Arnold Marceau-Marie made the pedestrian mistake of asking for a vote of confidence Fortunately his high silk hat fitted the next premier. Jacques Le Bonn was senator from the south of France when asked to preside over the destines of France's oriental hassel. with the future of the coalition tremb- ling like a loose lip, with the enemy taking giant steps on the threshold and with disaster staring through the keyhole Jacques ordered. mineral water The Commies have told Pierre to take his pins out of their maps, his alternatives from their ulti- | matums and his shoadow from their sun dial Pierre is not preeming him- self on the connoissuer’s flare for fitting the wine to the crisis. He is up against peace at any price and no refunds We know that Duiles did not pick up .the dinner check Also that Eden has- very short table reach Looking Back 15 Years Ago FORTY TWO are hurt in Cleve- ‘land riot U.S games. IS MOBILIZING for war 2 Years Ago ; ADOLPH HITLER takes over German government LICENSES BOUGHT for 78 new cars this week People. Would Be So Much if They Forget Their Blood , By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. THE MAIL BOX H. B. P. Why must we get h bleed pressure when we are pact middie age? Have you & pamphiet on the causes and treat- ment of high blood pressure? (Mrs 8 é WW) Answer—Blood pressure is none of your business, Ma'am. Low. high or game, you'll be happier if you leave such technical matters to the judgment of your doctor. And you had better beware of the doctor who pretends to diagnose or treat just ‘high blood pressure”’ in any circumstances. Uleer Please put inthe paper your treat- ment for ulcer (A.C) Answer—If you mean varicose (leg) ulcer, send stamped, self- addressed envelope for pamphiet on Varicose Veins anti Varicose Ulcer. If you mean stomach, gas- tric, peptic, duodenal ulcer, inclose with s. a. & e. 25c for booklet So You Have Indigestion? Sucrose A product called sucrose is recom- as diets. What a nt is your opinion of sucrose? Is it ble for diabetics? ww. RR» = _a follower of the Lord, but he turns Spirit that was completely beyond his ability to understand. up again in John 19, Verse bringing spices and helping the burial after the Crucifixion. this evidence the cepted him as a saint, and hag set in his honor. ‘man in the community, for Jesus called him “, master in Israel.” This would mean, too, that he 5 rf & -y fi a z darkness in order to avoid recogni- tion by any passers-by, factual data Wednesday, August 4, in polis, more than 600 priests, and lay people of the , can communion wilt gather from | the Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE God, bless my father in hig grave One year ago today , .. Who did the best he could to Jive . _. . According to Your way... He loved You, God, and in his heart... He loved our family... And prayed for our reunion in. ., * Your great eternity .. . There were so many things on earth. ., He hoped that he could do . . , Including all his dreams for us=-. , That never could come true . ... Dear Father, keep my father in ... Your good and loving care . .. And let him rest in peace, as I . . . Implore You in this prayer . . . Protect him with Your biess- ing for .. . The kindliest of men . .. And when my day is over, let ... Me be with him again. (Copyright 1984) glucose, levulose, et¢> A diabetic can utilize one sugar as well as another. Makes no. difference whether the sugar is manufactured by bees in honey or by man from corn. Send 25c and stamped, self- addressed envelope for booklet Training for Diabetes. © . Ringworm After two years of experimenting with prescriptions | used the treatment given im your pamphlet on Athlete's Foot on mpneck and was amazed at the rapid- ity with which the trouble cleared up (Mre. M. W..) A Answer—For the pamphlet send stamped, self-addressed envelope. _ Cramps in Legs - I had terrible’ cramps in legs and feet. Sometimes cried with it. On your sue- gestion I began supplementing my diet with Ca and D and in a few filays the trouble ceased and has never /retu (Mrs. EB. R. M.) 4 Answer — One subject to such painful cramps in legs or feet, sometimes in arms or wrists, oc- curring usually in the night, should boost his calcium and vitamin D intake—and keep it at optimal level evey after the cramps have gone— as described in pamphlet Adult Tetany, available’ on. written, signed request if you provide Never Rolled?. * ‘Tm 28 and have never felled & somer- y a . / 5 } & de &. ‘ / a a ee ee oe a \ ¥ { { { Plan edhe 1 Manicure < —+—_—-¢ Hands Tell Age Secrets So Keep Nails Groomed By ANITA COLBY | Learn to do a professional mani- cure—Your hands tel] your age as/ quickly as a clock—and they tell) more. They tell your doctor about your health and vitality. They tip off your public to your grooming habits and state of nerves It's no trick for a fortune teller to study fingernails and hands -and say, “You have had a long tilness.”’ “You are worried about some- ~~~ thing.” Crosswise or lengthwise ridges mean the root of the nail has been | injured, perhaps by rough cuticle | pushing. A deep rough one will tell | exactly when there has been a serious iliness or disorder. Splitting and brittleness have | been found miest common among housewives and typists—where nail plates get constant small whacks, er strong cleaning solutions and soaps, or too frequent washing and consequently drying out. An average nail grows only one- eighth of an inch a month—it takes a long time to grow an injury out and get « fresh nail. Star’s Solution Proper diet, fienty of oil, time and care are needed to bring a set of nails to perfect show condi- But here’s what a movie star, who shall be/ nameless, did about the problem on her hands—her | once, you may wrinkle. the. first. if you try to wipe off two coats at Prettier Shapes Ta paint on prettier shapes than | b | your own: For An Oval Nail—Paint all, or | leave & moon and echo its shape | with a white tip. For a Round Nail— Make it look oval by leaving a narrow paring of white strip- along each side. For a Square Nail—L¢ave a deep moon showing, and make a decided curve to your edge, then leave a white tip. Fer a Fan-Shaped Nail—Round the tip and keep paint away from wide sidelines. Note: Twenty-four hours after | your manicure, add a coat of \ sealer: or if you can't wait a day, make sure nails are thoroughly dry before seal coat is applied. This adds brilliance, insures greater protection, but should not go on until enamel has totally ay oa fer THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY : 954 $a ny ' Offer'Wholesome Fun for Sun-Seekers - hardened. Therefore, next day is best—and any time during week when you begin to show signs of wearing back polish, give it an- other coat. Try Rita’s Method Whenever I want to learn some that has the most outstanding hands down. brittle, thin, splitting nails.. They forced her fo wear artificial ones+ for her films, making things worse. in one difection only, with short | pauses to avoid overheating. | She soaked nails in warm oil, gave them fingertip massage. ‘ She loaded them with nail cream | every night. She protected thin splitting nails with tiny patches, put an ‘with fixa- tive and covered with polish. And she wore three or four coats of | enamel for ‘‘armor."’ P'S. She got good nails And so can you. Set yourself a date for a weekly manicure, never break it, and do a profes-| Here’s your equipment: Heated | oll and brush and hot soapy water, towels, emery beards, baffer, cuticle nippers, orange | pice. ” Polishes: Coloriess base, colored | -enamel, sealer. If repairs. are needed: Pumice, cololdion, white iodine, patches and | fixative. (These latter can be | bought in little kits, and are worth | it if you've a bad case of nails | grow out.) Ready - - - Begin | Step 1 pel r removing old polish with cotton and remover, shape nails with an emery, pot a file, and don't cut. Hold emery at a slant, and sweep up to tip in one | direction énly—don't saw Don't file down cyticle at cor- | ners — leave one - sixteenth - inch there. (If you're trying to. develop strong nails, grow them out square at the corners to strengthen them.) | Form a pleasant, re oval— | balanced with rest of nail and Gngertip. Step 2. Soak one hand in heated | oil (if nails are softened | filing they tear) and massage its | fingers and back with more oil. | | Scrub oil off fingernails only, with brush and warm suds, and dry | carefully, gently urging cuticle back to oval shape Dip ¢gotton-tipped orange stick in warm oil and loosen cuticle with | great care around moon cuticle clings to nail plate, it will tear loose as nail grows out—and that’s a hangnail. Step 3. Examine nails for inci- pient or actual hangnails, and if there are slight tears, seal down to rest of cuticle with collodion. If deeper, lift out with tiny bites of nippers, and touch with alcohol or white. iodine if you have ridges, buff them —with a speck of pumice if they’re rough. If there are splits or breaks, use your patching kit, or cut: bits of tissue paper to shape of nail, fix on with base inifer..danes about hair, and Gene Tierney about skin—but Rita, 1] She buffed 10 minutes daily—| figured, must do something special | to those beautiful long, supple | hands of hers. She does. She wrings them a lot—she lotions and creams them really constantly, and she does this good piano exercise: Rest all finger tips lightly on table top. Then starting with little finger, lift it up and tap it 10 times on table, keeping all ether tips down. Deo this for all fingers. Then play the scales. Fling your hands above your | head and keep them there for 10 seconds. Veins disappear and your hands have lost 10 years As for jewelry on your hands— | you have to do some type-casting | For hands that are | } | here, too Long and Slender — Dramatic, | large ‘rings and bracelets. Small and Slim—Delicate, small jewelry Large—Simply decor | much of it (Continued Monday) | a “ ‘A8 PHS Grads Planning Picnic | Pontiac Lake Recreation Area is the site chosen by the 1948 June | | and summer school graduating | iclass of Pontiac High School for the alumni picnic to be held Aug 29 at 1 p.m. Further event may be obtained by con- tacting any member of the com- mittee. Planning the reunion are | Mrs, Wayne White, Mrs. Edward Forsythe, Mrs. Ray Bush Jr., Mrs | James Reed, Mrs. Jerry Hicks and Menetah Lingle. Others are Mrs. Robert Chand- ler, Mrs: Dary!t Donaldson, Rouni Savas, Mrs, Frank Doll, Bud Tem- | ple, Bob ae and Donna Anderson 2 Showers Honor | Barbara Jo Zoch | Barbara Jo Zoch, daughter of | it dried | Mrs. Sonya R. Zoch of Linabury | drive was honored at two showers |recently. She will speak her vows |with Robert “A. Bell Aug. 14 in| First Congregational Church. Robert is the son of Robert D. Bells of Detroit. Mrs. Sargey Rosin. and Mrs. Burl Moore were hostesses at a. miscellaneous shower held in the | garden of the Rosin home at Eliza- beth Lake. The hostesses are the | bride-to-be's grandmother and aunt respectively. Another shower was given by Mrs. William A. Hollibaugh in her home on Dover road. coat, fold back under edge of nail if there’s room. This is only a | temporary repair. Step 4. A clear base coat goes | on for smoothness and protection first. Rest arms for steadiness, from elbow down, on table. Do hardest hand first—usually it's the right. Spread fingers out flat— paint entire nail moon and tip. You, should wait 10 minutes be- ‘fore adding colored polish to base —it must dry completely, till it}- feels slick. While you're waiting, study your nails for the shape you on them. short, you will cover all—/ he B If broad, leave a fi ts aA 4 se pi it BEE : i i ; z t INDY, SHARON and C. ATHY ST. DENNIS of Lakeside drive. “L«@ oul for talent Beattie of Dixie highuay. agree (le “Beau” u's ‘Nancy Burgess to Marry Dr. Thomas Torgerson At a dinner given Friday eve- ning at the Detroit Athletic Club for. members. of the family and close friends, Mrs. Magnus Mal- lory Burgess of Country Club drive, Bloomfield Hills, announced the engagement of her daughter, ,|Naney Irene to Dr, thomas Sted- ;man Torgerson of Ann Arbor. Nancy is the daughter of the jlate >Mr. Burgess. The late Rev. | and Mrs. Magnus Burgess and the late Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Reynolds were her grandparents Dr. Torgerson is the son of the Thomas Emil Torgersons of &, Petersburg, Fla., formerly of Kalamazoo, Miss Burgess attended Liggett | School, where she was May Queen, |and graduated from Pihe -Manor Junior College, She made her debut at a dance held in the Detroit Athletic Club on Dec, 26, 1950. Dr. Torgerson attended Western Michigan College of Education and Kalamazoo College and was grad- uated from the University of Mich- igan Dental School. illuminated by colored lights dur- ing the evening. Epergnes filled with pink carnations and flanked by cupids centered the individual tables, - Miss Burgess carried out the floral atrangements by using her | father’s favorite flower. The an- nouncement was made on the 35th wedding anniversary of the bride-elect's parents. A large carved cupid surrounded } by white cupid candelabra was { NANCY IRENE BURGESS % Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Torgerson, Mr. and Mrs. Bur- A lake is a good place to wash the car. ft to right) R. D. Biskner, , me it APOE fh You just can't keep young sun-seekers lakes . . and who would want to when healthful and whole- away from the when summer comes some activities such as these Aaron Koenig and Ronnie Buchanan, all of Boston avenue, and Gene Perkio of Dover road. | "Good bye, ‘My Fancy’ to Be Staged - | Comedy Will P Oner Tuesday Evening at | Will-O-Way | Minnie Jo Curtis will appear at | Will-O-Way Playhouse for the first time this season in Fay Kanin’s | warm-hearted comedy, ‘‘Goodbye | My Fancy,” which opens next | Tuesday evening Miss Curtis, who will be wel- comed back after a year’s absefce, | will play the role of the congress- woman's sage secretary. which was handled by Shirley Booth on Broadway Mrs. Kanin's comedy is the story of an ex-reporter turned congresswoman who returns to her New England alma mater to receive an honorary § degree. When she departed from the col- lege under duress some 20 years earlier, for having a love affair with a handsome professor, she set out to see life: First as a war correspondent, and present- ly, as a fighting and intelligent congresswoman. Her old flame, the professor, is | now the college president, whom | she discovers she stil] loves. What she had not realized is that her | old college, its faculty and its head | are afraid of the liberal ideas which seem like common sense to her. A brash and realistic life photog- rapher, with whom the heroine had had a fleeting wartime love | affair, is covering her return and | honorary activities. He represents the insurgent liberalism of the con- gresswoman, which he encour . | ages, and completes the romantic -.- triangle. Adeline Hirschfield plays the | role of the romantic congresswom- an,-who makes a sentimental re- bos to her past. Miss Hirschfield, m in ‘Affairs of State” at can be enjoyed? Bra OWay, has worked with Louis ony Moving. Air Eases © ‘Discomfort ton M. Barber of Kalamazoo, Mr. | James H, Tolhuizen. of Kalamgfoo, ‘uncle of the propsective }ride- | groom, and Mr. and Mfrs. larold | M. Taylor of Akron Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Peter O. Peterson of South Bend, Ind., Mr,/ ‘and Mrs. John A. McKeown of Poftland, Ind. and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lawrence | Haberkorn of Portlayld, cousins of the bride-elect, completed the list. No immediate polans have been | made for the weirs. Carol Morris ‘Repeats Vows } : | Capol Mae Morris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. of Russell Frank McNamara, son of the William P. McNamaras of | of the William P. McNamaras of | | West Huron street, this afternoon. | The 3 o'clock ceremony was per- formed by the Rev, Edward Au | Morris | Two things beside temperature affect how you feel — relative | humidity and air movement: If you can dry the air or stir wpa breeze, you can.do a lot te reduce your | discomfort, even thotgh the air | temperature remains unchanged. | In fact, the’ thermometer, by it- self, has very little to do with sum- | mer heat. On a humid, muggy | you ¢an get just as hot| Tuesday evening and will play for | with the thermometer reading 79/ the next fortnight , | night, degrees as on a dry day when it says 91, all’ in the same climate zone. A brees can make a feally surprising difference. Under av- | efdge “conditions, with the air neithér very.moist nor very dry, ; five-mile-an-hour. breeze does as mu¢h for you, comfortwise, | as a/7 degree drep in tem- | perature. Moving air carries away heat and | | moistgre. Moving through the air ihag fhe same effect, which is! | why A spin in the family car can} Calhern and Ruth Chatterton, and | appeared with Robert Q. Lewis in “Three Men on a Horse’’ at the Ann Arbor Festival. Miss Curtis, as mentioned above plays the worldly, dead-pan sec- | retary. Michael Keith is the Life pho- | tographer, which marks his first | appearance at Will-O-Way. Mr. Keith's ~acting honors -include the role of Payne in the Broad- way production of ‘Mister Ro- berts,”” extensive television work | in New York, and motion pic- ture’ parts in Hollywood. George C. Scott is cast as the | quietly. unctious college president |who nobly reforms himself. Their acting colleagues include Robert Bryson, Bettie Toti, Kamel Kasem, Larry Johnson, Martha |Kern Buhs, Francis Hamburger and Margaret Kausch. “Goodbye, My Fancy’ opens through Aug. 15, The comedy will be presented nightly at 8:40 except on Monday |evenings when the theater is closed. {Marion A. Faulds |\Wed This Morning Marion A. Faulds of Stout street | and Joseph H. Riegle of West | Huron ‘street were united in -mar- (riage this morning in St...Vincent de Paul Church. | Mary. Mazurke and James D. j Miller, both of Detroit, attended |chard in the parlérs of the First! pe 5 refreshing on a hot night, | the couple. After a northern Mich- Presbyterian Church. Evelyn Morris was her sister's only attendant and William Bieske of Devils Lake served as Russell's best man. Sees. Coming Events Women's Auxiliary to the Pontiac Ty- | pographical Union will hold « pice | Monday at Cass-Dodge Park at 6 pm i Busbands are invited. and why you can play tennis in hat weather. Hufhidity also makes & great deal of difference. temperature soars, is by evaporat- | ing moisture from our skin. be z us doesn’t want to accept the ture, ‘it tufns into drippy, perspiration, s ‘ }igan trip, the Riegles will reside ‘on Stout. street, Betrothal Revealed Mr, and Mrs, Herbert Fields of Ferry avenue announce the en- Ferndale, Sept. 4 has been chosen as the wedding date. Me :° we _ THE AG ho PRESS. SATU RD. AY, JU LY 31, 1954 . aay Ay Lia. | healthful diet. The ‘p hewn Lrcliowledlortth ther th When Refinishing, | originally applied to toys and chil-| necessdrily-@ sigd of poor qi | dren's furniture is non - toxic. meat. The yellow color is due to} rotene. So-called “grassed” Use Lead-Free Paint) Punt. furreand ty Tat | the greene of crete, an |e more comment ated uring industries watch this SS SS ee ql It you were handed a menu in| maine yery carefully. When re- ine : = eae breie listed — under | | finishing such items, be sure to POSS PPPOE: (S “foods'’ — such items as wood,| use an interior enamel that dogs household dirt, paint, naaghoiean not Contain lead pigments. ‘ LAWN Bat MACHINE SHARPENING! medicine; and — under “drinks” — "HOOD CHISELS: KNIVES, Etc. —kerosene “and oi] products, you ew | would be sure the manager had_| N taken leave of ‘his senses. | HIGHFIELD We Specialize in Sharpening 4” — 6” — and 8” Joiner Knives! | Wise parents are constantly vigi- | laht to see that their young chil- | BXILECTRIC | dren do not try out such an un-| N LICEN at | ee : (ee If ‘you enjoy trying something} Should spinach stain your linen, | different, you. might add a bit of| moisten the spot, rub it well with! grated orange rind to your tea.| soap and bleach it in the sun. It gives an exotic flaver, and you Then ~ Wash as usual with hot | may find you’ 1 _Use less sugar. soxipsuds. Carload of Hardwood FLOORING ® Oak No. 1 Com. $225 per M, Oak Clear $275 per M Oak No. 2 Com. $160 per M, Oak Select $255 per M TAl-Weoman Realty” heaters, service changes, . extra cetlels, new uaaka aac asec laraatatahed | mae a 5143 Cass-Elisabdeth R4. COMMERCIAL — INDUSTRIAL FE 4-3844 ot FE §-1984:.., RES. PHONE FE 4-1666 I I J Pec I aac oax Vex Poa Manutactured by Bradiey Hardwood Flooring Co. | ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR a Di I L b Cc | | To Buy or Sell Real Extste |] RESIDENTIAL WIRING | ALL ———e GUA ad | °e ou Wait! 4 Always Service—Al]l Ways! 831 Oakland Avenue FE 2-0224 Your Own (etalon {FIREPLACE You'll Be Delighted to learn how easy it is to build an attractive, per- meen oo tseor "| Writer Gets Helpful Hints. N. W. Corner Welton ond Opdyke - FE are Q OPEN SUNDAY nN eee ae ae ae ae ae ae a a ae a ee ee ee ee ee ec place! The Secret Is: From Million-Dollar Show Ist. The HANCOCK ‘'SKELE- B si ooD MOTORIZED BARBECUE SPITS: TON” unit around which 7 SAY EE WOt BAKING OVENS: BROILERS and the masonry ts built — a Vimar . ' ether accessories available. . 7 Be it ever so clegant, there's no place like home. Aad when the LEDGESTONE DRIVE 2nd ll alt Pape | country’s top interior designers get together to strut their stuff, as | , v1, kane oF pote . e ylans and instruc- . | Also the NEW HANCOCK ae ee sei) cen |i = “we = en of Decoraors’ convention | x DELUXE PORTABLE follow ee eee é | Highlight of the convention was a million-dollar display of 18 See Your Builders’ Supply, Hardware or Garden Shop Dealer, rooms decorated by regional chapters, and side exhibits of new or comé in and let us show you the various units we have— products, also elegant $19.95 up. Goggle-eyed at the splendor, I picked my way through a Never- | : Never land of priceless antiques. luxurious new sculptured furniture ‘ : Hantock lron Works | fabulous hand-woven fabrics and white pigskifi floors Highly E . . | individual and dfamatic room settings make it difficult to stamp 52 W. Pike St. Pontiac, Mich. ‘trend’ on anything, but with the help of Eugene Stephenson, presi- | * ~ . dent of A. I. D.. I noted a few general ideas and a few specific N ry 00 A tricks I'll file for future reference | SUNDAY 2: to 6:00 P. M. . , 1. Soft, neutral-toned backgrounds, often with floers and walls a of the same _or a sin ilar neutral shade are restful and space-making See This Beautiful mew = (Beige, walnut and gray-blue are three examples ) . ALWAYS READY 2. When black and white are wage they are cut decisively and Home Equipped ' sharply with color. For example. a fed screen against a white wall, , To Serve You With turquoise upholstery on black chairs W uh the Demanded orn i ildi ; . 3. Floors can set the decorative pace of a room. Random-width ¢ a Quality Building Supplies! planks, color-stained in stripes of blues, greens and yellow, for ANDERSEN ; - example,- are picked-up colors used in a tropical glazed-tile panel , je : hung on a white wall. To duplicate the idea would be quite a trick . Pe . but the effect of lots of color on the floor against a white contrast WINDOWS is refreshing, and could be the lift the old sunporch needs 4. Resolved: To scour the family possessions and second-hand | The windowalls that bring , . . “ ” stores for interesting antique (or unusual) accessories. Ideas | filed In Exclusive Westridge at Waterford |new window beauty, cap- include the use of an old brass tray set on a modern folding stand ture @ view and flood your j to pare ee ae teak wich os eee aos home with sunlight end The winding, paved streets, ‘large building sites, and varied architectural : | |e ian [fresh ar, designs are making “Westridge” Pontiac’s most desirable suburban 5. Shutters are showing up in pew uses. A room divider, for | residential community. : ar ell ae cae. es a ee pdislenartoy pond Quality construction throughout, this brick colonial ranch home has three PREVENT SHRINKACE — BUILD THOSE WALKS, | units with shuttered closings, to screen the television set, radio ; brig htes bedrooms with large sliding door closets, paneled activities room, 114 baths with vanity and ceramic tile features, Andersen Windowalls, CRACKING IN YOUR pRIVEWAYS, CARACE and phonograph Y fl di WALLS WITH AUTO- ' uaiey A good example of multipurpose furniture arrangement in this oungstown, Kitchens, counter-flow radiant heat, 2-car attached, plastered CLAVED BUILDING FLcoRs §=WITH - not-very-large room, was the placement of a desk so that it doubled garage. Offered at $24,500. BLOCKS! — MIXED CONCRETE. as end table for the curving sectional sofa, and as a headboard for a day bed placed at right angles to the sofa Of poy ne ghey Md bls pense aw eg Rambler pg enn j This left an aisle between day bed and outer wall large enough 20-Y ear 3 oO Mortgage at a kee yt a, uae ae gorse dinsase | for a card table, two chairs and wall-hung shelves for more books . venting cracked walls. Be sure and value of your property. | newspapers and magazines e bed me hpergy we Blnam Sgr tem h Legal gop . ~ ale 6. Integrating a flowered carpet into its setting in a cozy New Building Blocks before you buy! cottmntes. | England parlor was a stenciled border along the ceiling line and — a > | the corners of the putty-colored walls. It picked up the green, blue ; ‘ : “ | orange and black of the carpet. It could be that a wallpaper border pemmagpadalenge ssi Dixie See Us for a Complete Line of Builders Supplies | in the harmonizing color and style of a figured rug might give a arch — aoe one GENERAL CONTRACTORS - : : similar effect. . * Ready Mixed X Soma par Gravel ~ — and Fire 7. Here's another use for shaded wallpaper borders. Y you have Lane to prea Drive Phones: FE 5-8161 — FE 5-8822 — OR 3- 9411 Z }