The Weather ' . Friday: Fair, Warm Details pagé two ‘ THE PONTIAC RESS | ASSOCIATED PRESS ' INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE PHOTOS + 118th YEAR * * * *% = ~=PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955-72 PAGES em * me Dumping Chro Queen From the Orient Ob i NS RE OT! AP Wirephote Liegler Assures County of Roads in Future Pla Will Restudy Projects When Affecting Issues Are Resolved _— By BURDETT C. STODDARD LANSING — State High- way Commissioner Charles M. Ziegler here yesterday repeated statements made previously by his aides that Oakland County would not be overlookea in Michigan’s accelerated road-building program. As soon as three indefi- _|nite issues are resolved, probably in the next five months, the Oakland situa- ‘‘tion will be re-examined and more projects planned for this area, Ziegler prom- ised. The interview was r- ranged by State Sen. Wil- liam S. Broomfield (R-Royal | Oak). Ziegler said that no projects are | now in the planning stage for Oak- jland, above those already an- * |nounced, pending a new federal laid bill, a decision on the toll | road and results of a Detroit-area | traffic survey. | He summed up progress to- ward starting work en the Tele- | graph Rd. . Orchard Lake Ave. The commissioner said the pro- | jected extension of Northwestern MISS JAPAN — A tall shapely beauty queen from the Orient,| Highway across the county to Fen- Kelto ‘Takahashi, strolls with a Japanese parasol on the beach at) tom, planned for several years, is Long Beach, Calif, as she waits for the opening day of the Miss q definite possibility within the Universe contest. She represents her nation as Miss Japan when next two years. judging begins next week. Keito, at 5 feet 5 inches and 120 pounds, He stated surveys are being ig quite tall for a Japanese girl. Bust, waist and hip measurements are 34-23-35. Humid Heat Will Remain YESTERDAY TODAY S @. Me........- 6 C6.) M--..---.- @ 1 a. m.......... 90 LL Me B..ccc0000.. 88 TB. Me. rcoccees- % 48618 sme... 62000. 91 1 p. M..... eeces- a6 @ @. MB. .cces-s. 76 1 Pp. GB. cccece 1 3p. m..... coeee 88 LJ CS CO Soosoncsose 82 2 Po Mu. cccccces> 92 4:30 p.. m........ 91 4610 a. m.......... 83 While most of the nation shared the Pontiac area weather fate, and sizzled under 90 plus temperatures, the U. S. Weather Bureau had little immediate encour- agement for this vicinity and the country at large. Wide areas of the United States will continue to swelter under hot, sticky weather despite the thunder- storms that lashed the Mississippi Valley last night and —‘*this morning. American Motors Gives Flat Refusal to UAW DETROIT w—American Motors Corp, today rejected contract de- mands of the CIO United Auto Workers, saying it will not settle for what it called a “pattern plus” agreement, Edward L. Cushman, vice presi- dent in charge of industrial rela- tions, said by “pattern plus” he meant that the union is asking the same contract it secured from Gen- eral Motors and Ford plus several fringe benefits American already has in effect. General Motors and Ford agree- ments include a layoff pay plan which American also rejected. Good Company For Your VACATION Although a few scattered thundershower: are a pos- sibility in the Pontiac area Friday, the weather will continue hot and humid to- day and tomorrow. Today. in the Pontiac area, a low of 66 degrees was recorded at 4:45 a.m., and the mercury, stood at 92 degrees in the city at 2 p.m. The low tonight is expected to range from 68 to 72 degrees ris- ing to a high of from 88 to 92 degrees on Friday. The mercury made its custo- mary upward skid, Wednesday, reaching a torrid 91 degrees at 4:3 p.m. in Pontiac. The low re- corded yesterday was a comfort- able 66 degrees which, unfortunate- ly, began to mount early in the morning. In an emergency announcement today the city of Detroit asked residents to use wat-r only “for absolutely essential purposes.’ The city water reservoirs were report- ed “dangerously low’ and cannot be replenished as long as the cur- > |rent heat waves lasts, Transit Rejects Offer. WASHINGTON «—The .Capital Transit Co, today turned down a union counter proposal for a truce in the strike of Washington bus and street car operators now in its 14th day. Warren-Adenaver Lunch BONN, Germany @®—U. 8. Chief Justice Earl Warren lunched to- day with Chancellor Konrad Ad- enawer. « ; Father & oon whe saw tho aectsent | maw sem = eee | ed Storms Clark Gable Stays. | brought up to date for a limited- | access freeway north-south across the county along a route similar to that of the proposed toll road. | “We've already spent several | millions constructing bypasses of Flint and Saginaw which would | the in to a north-south freeway | through Oakland,” he stated. “We could build a north-south (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Away From Party to Be With Bride CRYSTAL BAY, Nev. —Actor Clark Gable scheduled a_ gala wedding party last night at a Lake Tahoe resort but failed to show up and the management finally can- celed his reservation. Gable, who took Kay Williams Spreckels as his fifth wife Monday did not emerge from two days of seclusion at a friend’s ranch in the high Sierra. Marion Johnson, maitre d'hotel at the plush Tahoe-Biltmore on the lake, commented: “We've set up and torn up his table for 40 twice already, They're no better than anyone, else. To hang with them.” A suite of 12 rooms had been reserved for the actor and his | party, which was supposed to ar- bey at 8 p.m. | At 11 p.m. when no word was | received from Gable or his friends Johnson declared the party was Loft. : New Treasury Nominee WASHINGTON ‘(®) — President | Eisenhower today nominated H. Chapman Rose to succeed Marion Folsom as undersecretary of the treasury, Rose, a lawyer from Cleveland, Ohio, ig now an as- sistant secretary. Plan to Arraign _ Train Rolls Down Embankment in Bridgeport AP Wirephote ENGINEER KILLED — Jumbled cars of the New Haven railroad’s Federal Express lie in a switching yard at Bridgeport, Conn., after | tumbling over an embankment. Curved main line is elevated about | 35 feet at this point. The engineer of the Washington-to-Boston express | was killed in the derailment. Triple Slayer Fourth Victim of Gun in Critical Condition | at Flint Hospital FLINT ww — Friendly looking | Paris Kenneth Kuzner, still bewildered | by his actions, faced court arraign- | ment in a murder charge today in| the wanton tavern slaying of three | persons he never had seen before. | Secretary Harold Macmillan He was to confer today ‘Dulles Arrives in France for Pre-Geneva Conclave PARIS (#—U. S. Secretary of State Dulles flew into today to help put the finishing touches on Western strategy for the Big Four summit conference. and tomorrow -with French Foreign Minister Antoine Pinay and British Foreign to complete coordination of He was picked up by State Pol-| Western policy for the Geneva talks. ice of the Pontiac Post only 45 minutes after he pulled a gun from Truman Predicts his shirt Tuesday night in a Grand | . Blane bar, and killed the tric. | Democrat Victory | While authorities prepared for | *s1.. egal action against him. the fourth | Wi th Stevenson victim of the 30-year-old Detroit} CHICAGO (® — The Democrats trucker’s fusillade of bullets Tues-| are going to win in 1956, says day night clung to life in a Flint | Harry S. Truman, and he is going hospital. to support Adlai E. Stevenson for James KR. Dollars, 26. of Flint, | the party's nomination. stil! was on the critical list, He Stevenson, the party’s 1952 presi- had two pare a ae aa ‘dential nominee, drove from his aoe esis Farah. 2 | Libertyville home to the Hilton were aran, > : = Flint engineer; his wife Jeannine, | Mosel yesterday and spent & |also 26, and Mrs. Margaret Cross, | ™inutes with Truman who has 31. a divorcee. | been in Chicago this week for the The four, longtime friends, were annual Shrine convention. sitting together in a booth in a| Stevenson, who was hospitalized tavern at nearby Grand Blanc! from last Thursday until Monday when Kuzner, without- provocation | by an attack of bronchial pneu- |and at point blank range, opened | monia, said he felt “‘weak, a little fire. Those killed all were shot in| weary.” He said Truman and he | the head by Kuzner’s snub-nosed | agreed that ‘the best thing for the 38 caliber revolver, country is the Democratic party.” GOP Seeks Compromise on Federal Highway Plan WASHINGTON (#—Republicans promised a strong effort in the House Public Works Committee today to compromise rival proposals for financing a mammoth new road-building program. The committee yesterday approved the construc- : tion p itself, calling for about 37 billions in federal funds and 10 billions from the states over the next 12 years. But it defeated 19-14 President Eisenhower's pro- pose! to finance the road-building expansion largely hrough bonds to be issued by a special government corporation. The committee takes up today a_ substitute Democratic plan to pay for the new roads by immediate increases in taxes on gasoline, trucks and buses, hea¥y tires and tubes, and diesel fuel. | As approved by a subcommittee, these increases | would raise about 850 million dollars a year. Some | Republicans and Democrats have protested the in- creases are too steep, especially on truckers, and drives vv | were under way to reduce them. They will meet Saturday with the North Atlantic Council to outline the West- ern policy to their NATO partners’ foreign ministers. Informed that Soviet Communist | party boss Nikita Khrushchev and fense Minister Georgi Zhukov were accompanying Premier Bul- ganin to Geneva, Dulles comment- ed “that’s normal.”’ In an airport statement, Dulles declared that “great hopes are in the air” that steps will be taken at Geneva toward a peace set- tlement “rich in human values.” The statement, taking cogni- zance that today ts Bastille Day, France's chief national holiday, said: “Our own liberty seems the more precious as we sacrifice to make it secure and as we see those who, having had liberty, have lost it and now aspire to regain it. After reading his statement to} reporters, Dulles went directly to the U. S. Embassy residence. . The Western Three were re- ported ready with a plan to limit Germany's armed forces — even after unification — to half a mil- lion men in order to convince Rus- sia that a unified Germany within NATO wouRi not menace her. Most Frequented Sites Named in California LOS ANGELES — The Auto Club of Southern California today announced these results of a survey of tourists to determine Southern California's 10 most popular nat- ural and man-made attractions: Natural: Beaches, Catalina Is- land, Colorado and Mojave deserts, Death Valley, Joshua Tree Nation- al Monument, Morro Bay, Mt. Whitney, Salton Sea, San Bernar-. dino Mountain area, Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks. Man-made: Farmers market, Forest Lawn, Hollywood studios, Huntington Library, Knott’s berry farm, Marineland, the Missions, Palm Springs, Palomar observa-- tory, radio and television studios. Waste in Clinton Continue Watrous Paces Amateur Golfers Royal Oak Lin kster Watrous, who posted a fF FF : | f qi 3 rE pe if i: * DEE it ri GOP Campaign Plan to Create Advisory Group LANSING w—Republican legis- lators moved today ot fight for continued control of the Michigan Legislature. In the face of a rising tide of Democratic successes in legisla- tive elections, the Senate Repub- lican caucus voted to create a five-man campaign committee and said that for the first time it ex- pects to receive funds from the Republican State Central Commit- tee for use in legislative district elections. ! Previously, each candidate fi | nanced his own campaign. If everything goes accord ing | to plan, the lawmakers will wind up their business today and to- morrow’s session will be merely a formality. + Small Quantity Detected Here; ‘Source Hunted - Water Supply of Utica Still Being Transported by Tank Trucks still being put into the Pon- tiac sewer system, Floyd Vermette, sewage treatment plant superintendent, told the Pontiac Press today. _He said the amounts were “dribbles” and that crews 2 < a ge if 7 = : rf F i Z i i hte g Can't Take License Till Final Conviction viction. . Kavanagh advised the gecretary of state that the law does not per- | license and record of conviction | to the secretary of state until the conviction becomes final, | If an appeal is taken after the license has been suspended the license must be returned to the driver, Kavanagh held. GENEVA (INS)—Extraordinary security precautions are near completion in Geneva to protect the Big Four leaders who will meet and live in luxurious surroundings at next week's historic “summit” Palais | des Nations wher President Additional security for the, cleared Geneva of any suspected American, Russian, British and) trouble- makers and frontier , by 350 sr aorta tol cto Special | the borders. All foreigners enter- concern was shown for Bulganin's| ing Switzerland in recent days have undergone a careful check. The most imposing of the ac- a rence President The 18th-Century villa is set in an enormous park that con- Big 4 Security Precautions Under by the Swiss Navy — several police motorboats. Secretary of State. John Foster Dulles will stay at the nearby villa “La Terrasse,"’ vwned by Miss Louise Worthington tuvtic, an American. Bulganin . will move into the villa ‘‘La Pastorale,” just behind the beautiful white villa which houses the permanent Soviet rep- Sore ee Editorials . ran Food News...........33 thra 42 . Sports Hinwe *eeececss 40 thre 33 eer er ee ro) a, J Titim ri) i Women's Pages.,....44 thee 41 \ \ j 7 ‘7 Way in Geneva resentatives to Switzerland. The choice adds greatly to the safety of Bulganin—who appears to be the chief worry of the Swiss police—hecause of its nearness to the Palais des Nations. when they eame to Geneva to confer on Indochina. The Russians are said to agree rapidly to most ¢% t ; f “pf | : , : -: he , y. 4 p ? ' : ey. 4} ls 5 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JULY 14. 1955 , {air share of moneyavaiable tor | LH@ Day in Birmingham Senate Debates ‘Says Oakland County tic a ees eee Fe eee | a & 4 ~ Quiz Suspect TWO | : , | John Haddad, 43, of Port Huron in | jail here yesterday. Police are holding him on a charge of larceny from a building, » ‘in Kidnaping | Police Check Errors in| -Farmhand’s Account of Rape; Slaying Denied «JOPLIN, Mo. ® — Officers checked discrepancies today in a farm laborer's rambling account of abducting 2-year-old Donna Sue Davis from her'-crib and raping and beating her. Revised Measure Up. Today Omits Veterans From Program | WASHINGTON «—A_ military and former servicemen comes up on Reserve Bill Won't Be Overlooked (Continued From Page One) freeway just as fast as a toll road could be built if the forth- coming federal-aid bill hikes the- U.S. government's share of in- terstate road building from 60 to 80 or 90 per cent.” The project would take longer reserves bill shorn of compulsory | than the three years the toll road! “Since 1947 we've spent $14,575.- training requirements for present Would be built in if federal aid is| 000 for new construction in Oak- left at the 60 per cent level, Zieg- | ler explained, wim" Water Rules Tightened mt ax tunds paid vy Wayne, QS Demand Nears Peak weight tax funds paid by Wayne, Oakland and the five other large | Cees oa it td | BIRMINGHAM — Notices con-|emergency,” he said. “The pro-| build = Flare y “ee sid ts cerning further emergency sprin- | longed dry spell brought on just a | SE IRL, ALE | kling regulations will be put in the | little more of a demand than our : : /mail today, City Engineer L. R.| system could supply.” - | “People in your county . want} Gare announced yesterday. | ~~ ar good roads to ride on when they! In addition to those rules already | City Commissioners this week travel outside Oakland. in effect, Gare, acting in the ab- | accepted the resignation of Clar- sence of City Manager Donald C. | ence W. Blenman, Birmingham's Egbert, said that no sprinkling is | junior member on the Oakland | to be allowed from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. | County Board of Supervisors. “In other words, persons living| In turn,’ the lawmakers reap- land, not counting projects now in the works. We've also expended for Senate debate today. 1 Z _ jabout $3,000,000 for maintenance The Senate Armed Services Com.) ‘“There is definitely no need for work in your county.” The body of the Sioux City, Iowa, | iis child was found Monday in a farm} Fe ae 4 | field near South Sioux City, Neb.,| ~NEW SECRETARY—Marion B. | asure | both a freeway and a toll road) Broomfield‘ expressed pleasure Buiiee 1 Serene) the ee re ' running north-south through Oak- | over the stg re-e ae d yesterday, voted to require future jand.”” Ziegler declared. speed 0 ind’ ne ae reserve training only of those men "| Ay elected Michi Pen | speed-up Oakland’s program. entering regular service 30 days NOWly elected Michigan Turn-| “But the county road commis- at an even-numbered address may sprinkle any time on even days of the month except the hours pro- hibited, and may not sprinkle on odd-numbered days of the month 'city’s representation from _ five pointed Mrs. Hope F. Lewis, El- mer W. Haack, Luther Heacock and David Levinson. Reappor- tionment on. the board cut the Police said he was arrested after’ leaving Cunningham's Drug Store, 101 South Woodward Avenue, with- out paying for a $6 bottle of cham- pagne he took with him, Haddad was expected to make a statement ,at the Oakland County Prosecu- tor's office today. ‘Honor Graduate Loses Hand in Bomb Blast DETROIT w— John Eilers, 17, a Denby High School honor grad- uate this spring, lost his left hand in the explosion of a homemade bomb yesterday. The youth is in a serious con- dition at Saratoga General Hos- pital. Doctors amputated his shat- just across the Missouri River’ Fol-om, 61, has, been named by pike Authority (MTA) chairman, | sion, Board of Supervisors and in- | @t all." The same process follows | to tour aerate . "| tered hand just above the wrist. from the lowa town. President Eisenhower to succeed ore the Mrs, Oveta Clup Hobby as Secre- | or more after the measure be- comes law, That would delay the~ George N. Higgins, of Ferndale, | dividual citizens must keep watch {0° those with odd-numbered house said Tuesday he could not see con- of the situation and let the High- | 2Umbers. * Det. Sgt. Robert Schaule and Eilers was injured while con- * * * Detective Showers said the farm-| The attendant, James Killeen, | hand related that he passed the ‘told Oakland County Deputy / roe OE Donna Sue's parents, Mr-| Sheriff Gordon Misenar that the | day night and then crept into the pair threatened to “blow his head ‘ child’s room through a window, | off” if he refused to follow orders. ‘took her from her crib and went) He said. the men tore the phone | across the ames River receiver off the wail before they | Showers quoted him as saying | fed in their car. he then raped the child and hit! Killeen stated that the thugs had | —— a een j entered the station earlier to pur- | e farm was arrested’ on "he _| chase a candy bar. “They acted : street ean here after a truck | sort of suspicious so I took their driver told police Lod hed oye 2 | hicense number when they left,” ride to a hitchhiker fitting the | he ea 4 Bisenar : , description of a man wanted in| They returned in about five or 10 the case, ; : minutes, and told the attendant to No charges have been filed. fill up their car’s gasoline tank. . . |Both went inside and when Kil- File Libel Warrant jleen followed, he said he found | Against Local Man ‘himself looking down the barrel of | /an automatic. An order for a warrant charging crimihal libel and slander was is- sued yesterday by Assistant Oak- Centennial Plan Vane Officer land County Prosecutor Homer G. | 7 lanl C Answering Call | Named ‘s, James Dean, 34, of | Police Lt. T. Pontiac, He is accused of falsely | Scott was slightly baffled this stating two Pontiac policemen took morning when he received a phone $275 from him and failed to return | cay from the State Treasurer's of- the sum, Gerue explained. ‘fice especially when the voice at | The officers arrested Dean early | the other end asked when Pontiac Monday at Saginaw and E. Pike was planning to hold its Centen- Sts. He pleaded innocent to drunk | nial celebration. and disorderly and was released on Dean went to an attorney and signed an affidavit stating the of- The conversation went something | like this: | “This is Warren Wright, the | state treasurer. Say, when are you ficers took the cash which he/ planning your centennial down claimed he was about to place in| there?” a night deposit box for his em-| Scott: “Centennial? What cen- plover, Gerue said. tennial?"’ The employer denied giving Dean any money to deposit and Wright: “The Livingston County centennial." the libel warrant followed. Mean-| “Scott: ‘Pontiac is in Oakland while, Dean was picked up on! County.” | another drunk charge and sen-| Wright: ‘There's no Oakland tenced to seven days in Oakland | County in the state” Pontiac, Ilinois.” “I thought it was a gag at first because I know Sanford A. Brown is Michigan’s treasurer,"’ Scott ge- | lated. “But I thought maybe I'd ship youths, charged with attempt-| misunderstood when he started | mentioning Livingston and Pon- ing breaking and entering, stood | tiac,”’ he said. mute to the charge when they were | arraigned yesterday before Troy; ‘The long distance operator could not be reached for comment. Township Justice Scott C. Belyea. The pair, Laquintes Collins and | Se Youth Sought Here Nabbed by Troopers Mute on Arraignment, 2 Released on Bonds Two 17-year-old Royal Oak Town- Mark Briggs, were released on. $500 bonds pending examination July 20. They are accused of at- tempting a nighttime breakin of a grocery store at 4020 Rochester Rd., Troy Township, Sunday. A resident noticed the pair flee | A 16-year-old Detroit boy, three- the store in a car and turned the | time escapee from the Boys Voca- license number over to police. tional School’ and wanted here in connection with at least three | The Weather _breakins and several car thefts, PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostiy fair| W285 seized today by State Police | today and tonight. Partly cloudy with from the Romeo Post. | continued ‘warm Soatheatteriy wings | TFOOPETS, who Said the youth was a-t8 mon. teday and tonight. igh to-; wanted for two St. Clair County Friday sa-o2, EME STP MIR reakins, acted on a tip from rela- Ee tives who said he and a 15-year-old Lowest temperature preceding 8 am , Pontiac boy had been living in a At @ am: Wind velocity 3 mph | cottage nee Imlay City. Direction: Southwest | State Police stated they found = = vee bane ee ey me = ' $1,000 worth of stolen articles in a _car the Detroit boy had been driv- | ing before he set out on foot. | The Pontiac boy was released Moon sets Thursday at 3:20 pm. Moon rises Friday at 1:02 a.m. Downtown Temperateres 68 ile Ave. and is a former president of Michigan Christian Endeavor. Hh meemet ye ee $1 to his parénts, Police said he was samt gy a Po meccttss:$)| not implicated in the breakins. WO, mM... 22.5. Pontige Police Lt. Walter Krause Be Wednesday in Pontiac said authorities at Port Huron will ce oe downtown) ~ ask for a juvenile court waiver on Lowen wenn. fo ig toa ol Youth so he can be ee, peerreies 8/ ried og an adult One Year Ago in Pontiac , Mean a we Named Vice President Highest snd Lowest, Tomperateres yhis| The Rev. Elwood Dunn, former 106 to tet FPP, so/tos0 | pastor of Central Christian Church, — i, | Was today elected a vice president wresettety Ti "Uoe aneelor #2 6s| for Great Lakes Region of the ‘8 i / 4 Suewe the oes of Christian ae \ 71 Minn “Endeavor. » group ig meeting | 0 2 New ¥ i in convention at Columbus, Ohio. = 10 A member of First Christian +4 Church here, he lives at 640 Third 2 a 8 83 Stee County Jail Tuesday by Municipal; Scott: ‘Where are you calling Judge Cecil McCallum. from?" Criminal libel is a misdemeanor! Wright: “Chicago.” F carrying $100 fine, 90 days in jail,| Scott: ‘This is Pontiac, Michi- or both. gan.” Wright: ‘What? I was calling | a rivet next move, despite hurried con-, ferences on possible means of res- cuing some of the administration's original proposals. Commission Slates Race Track Hearing A public hearing will be held Monday to discuss the amended | application of the Michigan Thor- ; oughbred Turf Club for a license to construct a horse racing tra with pari-mutuel wagering on a acre parcel of land at the north- | east corner of 14 Mile Rd. an { | -| \ | j sion of the M24 'Lake Orion north to the county ck, |. 200 line, the commissioner stated. tained for the Telegraph-Orchard | Lake grade separation “and we | have hopes of starting drainage |, and grading operations yet this; p Gibbing year.” A contract has been let and | work is slated to start in two to three weeks on widening M24 from two to four lanes between | Opdyke Road and Lake Orion. | Widening of Perry from Opdyke in to Mt. Clemens Street in Pontiac is slated for 1956, as is the exten- | widening from | Projects which would be given | d | first consideration in a reappraisal | John R Rd., in Troy Township, | f Oakland's situation would in- The heamng will begin at 19| clude widening M59 from Auburn a.m. in the offices of the State | Heights into Pontiac and aiso Or- | Racing Commission at 1702 Cadillac | chard Lake Avenue from = Tele- hicles during the first six months | Square Building. Detroit. Both Birmingham and Clawson | may voice possible objections to) the proposed race track. The Bir- | mingham City Commission's main objection is the possible traffic congestion on 14 and 15 Mile roads running through the city. The Clawson council expressed their opposition tnless’ ‘adequate precautions’ are taken on traffic and similar problems. The Troy Township board orig: | inally approved the track by a 4-3 vote, although one group of Troy residents had petitioned against the track, while another group. filed a counter-petition for it. Troy officials will attend the meeting. Charge Area Man With Manslaughter An order for a warrant charg- | ing manslaughter was issued yes- terday against William R. Birckel- baw, 23. of 315 Liberty St.. South Lyon, according to Assistant Oak- land County Prosecutor Robert D. Long. Birckelbaw drove a car which | collided with another on Pontiac Trail in Lyon Township June 30 resulting in the death of Mrs. Eleanor Haw, 32, of 29546 Gilchrest, Farmington, July 6 in. a Brighton hospital. s The order charges Birckelbaw with driving “under infiuence of intoxicating liquor’ at an “‘exces- | sive rate of speed.” He will prob- | ably be arraigned later today in Farmington Justice Court. Davy’s Still Roaming LITCHFIELD, Ill. W—David W. Crockett, 26, of Lake City, Ark., asked Police Chief Ted Rogers if |— * for a few hours in the city After a little nap, Davy told sers he was going to continue his hike northward. He was looking for .a job. he could r The United States had almost 319 times as many non-farm dwell- ings in 1950 as in 1900. FRIDAY & SATURDAY Only! # 42-Inch ALL STEEL. Car Top Carrier hd Complete with 8 suction cups and all necessary straps, Gray enamel finish. Limit 1 set. BROTMERS 98 N. Saginaw —2nd Floor a nch $4.95 Value said | graph to. Keego Harbor, Ziegler. The commissioner declared that | Utica water super-' green lawns or black ashes that | [SS | intendent, said the readings were | once were a house. 0 SSS <= == “Unde ‘system, we hope ey — = about .09, the same as yesterday. Under the new sys ’ : ; , mie to be able to meet the peak demand Merripley | whe The contamination | e v e| today temained far above the .05 parts per million judged safe. @ It’s a TRAPEZE @ It's Flying RINGS they have received official word.” | . ' Fire Chief Park Smith said, “It’s Frank |g question of whether people want | He said he could not estimate from 5 to 9 p.m. and to conserve our water supply in case of n Uticea’s water crisis would 1 3-in-1] PLAY enc CORRECTION Straits Ferry Traffic Up 7.3 Per Cent Over 1954 LANSING uw — Traffic on the Straits of Mackinac ferries during the first six months of 1955 showed a 7.3 per cent increase over the same period last year, the State Highway Department reported to- day. The ferries carried Tuesday's Ad, July 12 Should Have Read Small Car Specials Name Brand Line Tires Set of 4 6.70x15 WSW $79.85 Exchange Plus Tax Ed William Tire Co. 451 Se. 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ON Pieces Have Btitched Bindings Simms Everyday Low Price on REGULAR SIZE POPULAR CIGARETTES PER CARTON *] 89 OB da ae Sas 2 Buy a carton of your ({® favorite smokes and save ee rae the RAOTMERS same time. price é for regular size brands "'* 98 N. Sagi a . oniy. Tat | KING-SIZE Pine ae || = Cigarettes.... $2. Tax | CHOICE OF COLORS FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY---ALL METAL Deluxe Quality Roll-Away TABLE CARTS | Original $9.95 Value Exactly As Pictured SALE Famous Dennys Delight CIGARS, Box of 50 Kee Mapai $ 09 Irregulars 2 for 25¢ and lSe cigars. Windproof Style RONSON ‘wi NDLITE’ * Lorge 22 x 16 Inch Top and Shelves * Heavy Cauge Steel—Plasticized Enamel * Electro-Weld Construction—same as in Auto Bodies Step-saving serving cart ... ideal for use in ~ if , porch, dining area, cot back- yard picnics, etc. § square feet of ores or serving space, Full: 31 inches high, 214” S i M MS RS > $¢ N. Saginaw |\— Mein Floor * 8 # a pe = : uctin: i i Detective John Showers said ‘ary of Health, Education and eg el Gr tap at peoast ura structing a toll road if the Highway | way Department know we're vital The new ruling is te remain in icieela Gruman te ie eas pcarsey “ Gente “ Audrey Brandt, 42, of La Porte | Welfare. aie aoe ae As passed by the House, the bill Department goes ahead with plans ly interested in getting better effect until rescinded, he said. - Pi lcemeny rday attesded a meet. | ge City, Iowa, orally admitted taking , effective Aug. 1. Folsom has Seen would have permitied an almost ' Construct a freeway along a roads.” the senator urged. —_——_—_—__—_—_—__————_— | ing sponsored by the police edmin- the girl from her bed Sunday night, | serving as undersecretary of the | Giste use of a form of com. *#milar route. At 8 last night, only hours after een tronic s Rh an State Everyday Items YOU raping her and hitting her several Teasury. _pulsion, as asked by President Ei-| The apparent conflict may be Uti W t 5 | more rigid sprinkling regulations hiversity. Subject = the dey lend Need PRICED LOWER umes. ~ ~ senhower to assure trained men resolved when the MTA meets | ICa q er upply pore aerate eos conference was fraudulent checks. at Simms Showers said the farmhand _ | for the expanded reserve forces) in Lansing July 25. Higgins has . ‘ siren 12 times, the first time this Sao . claimed, however, that: he did not WO en 0 _he wants. The House voted to pre- | asked the Highway Department Still Contaminated summer - residents have been long tine | Biceninghar rest MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS = kill her. packed | | mit required training of all men} to supply him information at the signaled to cease sprinkling for | ot is dying and is expected to Famous ‘INGRAHAM’ He told officers he hitchhiked| _who entered service after the Ko-| meeting showing whether the toll (Continued From Page One) a two-hour period. | be gone by nightfall ALARM CLOCK here trong Ssoux City. . 2 rean armistice, July 27, 1953. | read would duplicate any work _ ; | _ Five Catet Fark Sauith sald. | sicin Park's big Elm tree - Offi into | OVI as tation The Senate committee voted 7-2 planned in Oakland by the de- |'° be a8 well off as it ever has while the 5,608,000 gallons of | hich 1 cari itare! ived $2.19 Value Utility icers questioned him late into | | to relect that idea, however 4! aaa | been,” he anid. “The dribbles now | water consumed yeaterday were | “ ich last year barely surviv , Model the night on his story, which they | iste ne e. ewever, ane | Paremect. | , ; new | not quite as high a count as the |2 /ightning strike, has succumbed | described as incoherent in parts. | Th Loot Cash B | Proposed oe = =a a ae Of the three things holding up| ®"® less than before the crisis fey aeinest ac wetialcouid wot [0° the Dutch Elm disease and is_ 69: Detective F. E. Eichelberger | ugs Loo as Ox an lo pied who woneaarly further work-plans here, the De-| 8d nobody was worried three | aed ay, ak demand | today being removed. _ said the FBI and Joplin police Threatening Attendant a : mny and oils ce — troit area traffic survey, including) weeks ago.” | aad oti hold eaangk water | The great Elm's demise marks were studying certain phases of | With Pistols = pe units during the nex Oakland's ‘south portion, will be | Meanwhile, water - short Utica | reserve in case of fire. ; the cage each aaeh te ene < heur Dana. hee hcg ve Chief Chairman Russell (D-Ga), call- ee Semone said has been offered a temporary sup- rs | wala LeBold, ted windup, Wenry Kruse said Brandt had "| Two pistol-brandishing holdup | ing for Senate passage of that | Face federal aid bill is expected | PIY from the city of Detroit. Utica ‘ Mele tan Se * * @ a aoe = eam record for petty thievery there.| men robbed a Novi filling station of | ees said in an ee ae a at least by fall and a State Su-| Officials were scheduled to stu dy Liat ea, take | A champagne appetite and ap- amas oe ee Brandt had been arrested on child | $285 early this morning after forc- | i a Wy Haale : “ ee ae’ preme Court decision on validity | the offer. Detroit authorities made | effect until notices are received, | Parently a beer pocketbook, landed | BB (Pius 10% tax.) mewn uses a 104T and ing the attendant to lie face down aware 8 realy to desend "of the toll road act ean be ex-| it-clear the offer was on an emer- | probably Friday, but would lke — —e-— ae ewe eathoenies 578 jon the floor while they looted his! The committee action left Sen- P% ee amet Seiganed . | gency basis only, to ask for residents’ cooperation in | @ It’s o CHILD'S SWING Famous Ingraham STURDY , | pockets and cash box: | ate Republicans uncertain of their ee ee ies “easing off at once, even before $2.19 Value Pocket Watch B Non - breakable crystal, Factory 4-Blade Style Scout Knife 55° Scout style ‘knife 3 with 4 blades. A dif- ferent use for Np every blade, Strong-Spring Type Fingernail Clippers a8: $1.49 Cipper $1.69 Precision made clippers at just BE about one-half price. $1.50 Quality Cuticle Clipper ~ eae a re, a } Choice of 6 Popular Flavors ; Kool-Aid Drink 30c Value For ; A Aid. Each pack makes 2 quarts - : & 4 VV AAAS Neely, Ay i= 94 ina St X] ATAT ATT ATA’, see of Wall Plaques wre As pictured, black frame with pink or white figures, Choice of 5 de- signs. 2 for $1.25. 72 Inch Size 1-Ft. Deep Swim Pool $15.00 Value ‘9 19 Ideal to keep the kids cool & safe in their own back yard. Schick comple WN cord and Weather carrying cane See f| House Favors New Program for Survivors WASHINGTON voted yesterday for a broad over- | WASHINGTON (®—Sixty persons were /ments to their ‘surviving widows, | dependent children and parents. | 60 Unhurt as Plane | Skids on Bent Wheel (P—The House | haul of government payments to escaped injury early today when the survivors of servicemen. complicated measure to the Sen. | ate, where it is uncertain whether | it can be acted on before the ses- sion’s end. Passage by voice vote sent the | landing at National Airport. | The bill would do away with the | but that none apparently was hurt. present $10,000 free insurance for One of the passengers was Rep. men in uniform, put all service- men under social security and | provide more a crew of five. The plane was liberal Veterans Newark, N.J., to Houston, Tex. ONLY AT SIMMS—Prices Like These! \ ye Famous “TYLER” Nationally Advertised Bosun SPORT OXFORDS Men's Sizes—6 to 12 2.88 Feather-light construce tion... airy open- weave uppers ,. thick cork & rubber soles. ee Navy, brown, 2106 burgundy orf rust, ‘SUN KIX’ G ‘WEDCIE’ Play Shoes LADIES jor Your Choice of— Crepe Rubber, Hard or New Washboard Soles. Good style selection in whites, reds, blues, beige colors. Every pair underpriced ALL SIZES 44 to 10 BIG PRICE SLASH ! Children’s-Boys’-Girls’ SHOES Former to $3.95 Values Peed Dressy Oxfords Piay Shees Strap Sandals @ Girls’ Play Oxfords Long wearing composition and crepe rub- ber soles. Gen- uine leather uppers. @ Boys’ @ Boys’ @ Girls’ MANY STYLES Children’s Red or Blue Heavy Values to $5 ere Play Shoes ne to St. PS rubber soles. As pictured. eeeeeeeeeoeseseeceeeeseeesesecoeoeseeeoeeeseees * ‘EJAY’ Infants’ 5". Walkers * Seamless Back * First Quality ® Sizes 5 to 9 LJ Leather insoles, flexible no-mark white out- soles. Goft white leather uppers. Genuine ‘ENDICOTT-JOHNSON’ ALL LEATHER Ld Complete Size Range, 3 to 6 * mane canvas uppers BIG LOT — Guaranteed $4.95 Values * Cushion Arch Scientific design for perfect foot comfort. SSoeseseesescevecsesesooososssoosoveseseeece Boys Oxfords | Administration compensation pay: | jan Eastern Airlines Constellation skidded several hundred feet after its right landing gear collapsed on| ~ An airline spokesman said many | | | of the 55 passengers were shaken, 3 4 Keating (R-NY). The plane carried bound . from | ; Senay mom Choice of several styles, Leother we” brown leather only. Wear Composition ‘ right now and ideal for Out-Boles school, too, 98 North SHOES —Bargain BROTHERS [isdeiaeaiagy f % * THE PONT IAC PRESS, Right Time for Lunch Depends on Breakfast | daylight SANTA FE, N.M. (#—The State | tunch on the same basis. Game Commission -held a session | | prevailed. jin Santa Fe, the only major city | aE Seen lin New Mexico with daylight |ties in America are saving time. og eS We Lee Oe a i YOU'VE Always Wanted A CUCKOO CLOCK—Look Here German ‘BLACK FOREST‘ Cuckoo Clock FULLY GUARANTEED Simms Y i Hand Carved—As Pictured Imported from famous ‘Black For- est’ tn Germany. Fully hand carved, and uaranteed against mechanica. defects Every hour and hal!-hour cuckoo pops out and gong strikes. Big @''x6‘2"" size, SIMAS.&.. 98 N. Saginaw — Main Floor $11.95 Value + HUNDREDS OF USES IN THE HOME ANY WHERE Decorated—Sturdy METAL FACED Panel Board d9° 17x19 Inches $3.00 Value $1.90 Value 19x8 Inches 1" Complete with assorted hooks, and handi-shelf in wrought iron finish. Chorce of 5 different colors and chrome plate. Oesigned for use in kitchen, basement, utility room, garage, bathroom, nursery, closets, etc. i MA MS oT AS Ba MERS 98 North 17x14 Inches $2.50 Value....... Hardware Dept. Saginaw —Second floor BEST BUY WE’VE SEEN—Compare Price Anywhere! Tubular METAL Frame—2-Way Folding Baby Stroller c Styled Exactly as Pictured Made to Sell at $13.95 SiMMS : PRICE vats anopy © Baby Can Sit or Lay ® Folds tor Storage or Auto BEST BUY we've seen. Extra sturdy yet lightweight. Wetproof, plasticized seat, can- opy sun-rain shield, a rubber tire, wire ~~} wheels, foot-rest, etc. SIMMS ‘SUPER-DUPER’ SPECIAL! Boys’ or Girls’ f, e fxn Pajamas_ Popular 2-PIECE Styles 1.29 Button front, jacket style. Short sleeves. Colorful children’s prints, cotton plisse. Boys’ styles included. Sizes 2 to 8 years. MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS Famous “WORLD'S BEST” Expanding Style Baby Guard Gates 2 Toa 1° Our $1.79 ooo “ “ 5-FOOT Size .... $1.95 | || \/ Heol) ocon La vy, 9-FOOT Size .... $2.95 ue Positive protection on stairways porches, piayrooms, etc Easy to cccccccccecebeccccccccesncees hang... locks securely . rust- It's Baby's First Bed $7.95 BASSINETTE Sturdy women construc- tion, smooth rolling cas- ters. Choice of pink, maize, blue or mint colors. : Bassinet PAD ........... $1.98 Bassinet LINER 40x40 Inch—2 Feet High | FOLDING PLAY PEN Regular $10.95 88 Easy-roll casters, Vs-inch Ma- onite floor is reinforced. Folds when not in use. Popular floor style. lie | a [MAS ee Ls Bargain BROTHER SHITE THURSDA Y. & know if the commission ‘recessed | for lunch on daylight or standard | time. The folks ate breakfast on! All Tell Same Joke time favored going to| They ’ Heads of colleges and universi- variously | Chairman C. M. Botts, who ate | known as rectors, presidents, chan- | breakfast on standard time, wanted ' cellors, provosts and principals. JULY 14, 1955 | Rotary Club Speakers insahe asylum, remained BELLEVILLE, Il. —The guest | | speakers at the weekly Rotary | | Club .meetngs changed but the | | joke. about the motorist and the | was’ shouted down. FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY! Holds Seven (7) Quart Size Mason Jars COLD PACK Bluestone Enamelware on Steel RACK For canning preserving . - : ; cooking,. too. Jumbo ALUMINUM Cold-Pack Canners ‘Usually $ 99 $5 or naMors NO Heavy gauge aluminum, complete with rack and cover. Instruction booklet included. SIMAS 98 North Saginaw A BROTHERS CANNERS sf 33 Complete with and . ideal for large quantity the | | same—for five consecutive weeks, The members began to complain. H. T. Dunck, the program chair- man, tried to forestail a repetition | of the joke by telling it himself in introducing speaker No. 6, He Item for Item YOU'LL Save More When YOU Shop SIMMS big 2nd Floor! roooes PARLE T ITe _ WIRING FRIDAY & ONLY 14-2 ROMEX CUT ANY LENGTH WHILE YOU WAIT! GUARANTEED FIRST QUALITY — continuous Per wire (not wel ded) meets all REA F specifications UL approved Resists rot, oot moisture and abrasioms. Golor coded 600V. Limit—300 feet per customer—none sold to dealers, For Car or Boat Use 1-Gal. Emergency GAS ian ° * eaeslece ——* i Sturdy woven has rattan back yy \=\ls rest fits ai) Sets! s\=(o ear seats. WW hee Ideal for driv- ing or relax- | ing in car. Handy for long tripa. or for he motor boat. ith flexible pour spout. =e sFaaalys® eeececeeeeesceeceoeseoeoeseeooeoesesssseeeseesees Not 10—Not 15—But 25 FOOT, ALL PURPOSE :TROUBLE ‘LIGHT : FOR ONLY iFully Insuloted KILLER os Hang-u i] NO stooping, NO DIGGING $1.95 Value stooping. no digging . . to kill New UNION Easy-To-Read Combination Square 1” Combination square with 11 tm- portant new features. 12-inch $1.59 Value sine Heavy Gauge Metal — BIG 20” Long, 94"’ Wide, Oe High Tool Boxes Famous {GREAT NECK’ Coping Saw Complete with Blade With TOTE- ‘4 sae ¢ $6.00 Value Val Styled as pictured, atue | Sturdy eonstruction, < | green crackle finish This low price for Friday | | a: with tote- ard Saturday only. 98 North AS | " A S {{@ and anew BROTHERS [ileal TTVTTVIT TTT Perr rer rrr SATURDAY SOOHSHSHSHSEHHSEHSSSHHSOSOSEOOSEEESEOOECEEES You're Relaxed While Driving Rattan Back Rest sm Hook! Pe | KAN E* eo ww Kill weeds without effort. No . Just place point on weed—press, and just the right amount killer is re- leased directly on plant you want eeeeceseeesooveseoeseees 7, MONDAY rwvvuvvuUvVUVVVUvwvvvvwuvwvvvvwvvuvvuvwvvevuvuvewvwvevvvwvwvovveevwevwvwvevevweve } To Make Your Shopping Easier — - SIMMS Is: OPEN NIGHTS. "til 10 P. M. FRIDAY, SATURDAY, | White Epsom. Salts lic Full Pint 100 Tablets $1.25 Size Rubbing Hinkles Absorbex Alcohol Cascara Liniment | Regular $1 Seaforth Shave Lotion Full Criart Full Pound Flaxseed St. Sccopk Light 16-Ounces For Hebt Rash Prickley 59° 69° 500 Tablets comm 200 Tablets Brewers Yeast Dovelette Cleansing Tissues For SEPTIC TANKS a CESSPOOLS ,OUTHOUSES RIZES d-COn 1ID-X : sare-eeannene | Just LL Full Po Pound Enough for 1,000 gallons. ging, bother. No dig- mo fuss, no $2.25 Size Ojibway 100 Caps DiCalcium | Phosphate Hair and ANTS:=DIE! So easy! clean! So “ics! aly on—forms color. that kills brush i stainless coat ANTS, water bugs. si pope end roaches by contact. le One apoli- cation is effective for months. 1 a 69 1/2 )Pint'end Special powechuanahenn CON AI ANT- PRUFE rd-CON ANT-PRUFE) LA AP 500 Tablets _ lodin Ration é 795€ Value Sturdy beach bag. GERBER’S STRAINED Baby Foods 12" handles, fabric is waterproof. Crib a Waterproof Plasticized Fabric Shopping Bags 39° durable plasticized May be used as FULL SIZE PLA 36x72 Inch ~ Famous ZBT 40c Size f Baby Fletchers Powder Castoria 25° |. ake 98e Rubber Toys 19° BEAUTY AIDS Richard Hudnut SPRAY ’n STAY—$150 Value. . 98 DuBarry CREME SUPERBE—$500 Value... “$2.50 Iceberg COLOGNE & TWEED ICICLE—$2 Value. . . $1.25 COTY Toilet Water & Face Powder—$2.50 Value. . $2.00 DuBerry Cleansing Cream & Skin Freshner—$2.75.. . $2.00 98 North S 1 S {{@ pReucs Saginaw A! * mold gin \ Street Waal BROTHERS Miaed ) 4 | J if ¥y { % 4 ' 2 ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ; a é ‘ % * Williams Ais / ‘ tain the bond of truth between. yeaa THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY.14, 1955 . fo Ha owe a, Views on Policy Tells Colgate Students U. S. Must Keep Faith With Captive Peoples . HAMILTON, N. Y. —Gov. Wil- liams said last night that nations in the shadow of the Iron Curtain will not rely on United States friendship if this nation forgets captive peoples in Communist sat- ellites. Williams spoke at a conference on American foreign policy at. Colgate University. “If we give even the appear- | ance of abandoning those behind the Iron Curtain,"’ Williams asked, “How can we ask those who live outside of it, but in its shadow, | to rely on our friendship?”’ “We must,” he said, “devise and put into effect a more posi- | tive program of action te show our sympathy for the victims of oppression, to reassure the world that we have not. forsaken the cause of freedom and to | keep alive the hopes of those be- hitid the Iron Curtain who hung- er and thiirst after justice.” Williams advocated more support | for the Voice of America “to main- | Williams advocated more sup- PEEK-A-BOO — The bride may be blushing, but you'd never know it. Both she and the groom wear heavy veils during their wedding at In a simple Moslem ceremony, port for the Voice of America “tq | Syed Barbar Ali, youngest brother of Pakistan Ambassador Syed the Pakistan embassy in Washington. ! One-Winged Bandit | DETROIT wm — A supermarket | was robbed of $3.000 last night by } " * % 6 Makes $3,000 Haul 'a holdup man with one arm in a sling. Assuming a “shiny object’’ part- ly hidden in the man’s sling hand was a gun, the store manager put the money in a shopping bag and gave it to the robber. , In another robbery a gasoline ‘station man was kidnaped by two imen, driven nearly a mile and robbed of $250. ; The supermarket, in the mid- | town-Woodward district, was held ~ * (up while about 50°customers were ' shopping. A man with his right arm in a black cloth sling went up to and handed him a note saying “There is a price on my head | for murder. I won't esitate to | shoot, Give me the money, The holdup man took the bag of , |money while also retriving his note ' and fled. Klein said he followed |him five blocks but lost him. ' | William Burgerhoudt, co-owner ‘of a service station, was driven /10 blocks to two holdup men in | their car, They took $250 from him | and released him unharmed. | Study of Michigan Trade Is Planned WASHINGTON (®—The Library maintain the bond of truth between | Amjad Ali, was married to Perwin Ahsan. He had not seen her since; of Congress has agreed to study and our ourselves lies... Everyone, Williams said, agrees silent al- captives by war would harm not : only them but the world. ly them but the word, From Jet Bomber Crash tinued policy of strong talk (often for political purposes) at home, and supine accpetance of the sta- ’ tus quo abroad, can only serve to drown the precious sparks which one day must rekindle the fires of freedom in those unhappy lands.’ orities State's Roadbuilders ix amber about mee nous ane, October. ‘the impact of fireign trade on _ Michigan | Members of Congress from the | that eration of the COamnst (DUrNeaA Bodies Removed ve 24 ty sment t | library's legislative reference serv- ‘ice and will cover business, in- | dustry and agriculture. SHREVEPORT, La. «® — The! vestigation at the scene was being| Similar studies have been of bedies of four men were removed hampered by a driving rain. from an Air Force BA7 Stratojet. sou at Barksdale Air Force Base said. games before it struck the A crash crew and civilian auth- | reached the wreckage of The Barksdale public informa- bomber which crashed 10 miles tion officer said two civilian wit- th of here early today. officials pesses said the plane burst into | ground. | Bill Bailey said he saw a ‘‘bright | | flash. The whole sky just lighted | dividuals are to receive question- five congressional districts in va- | rious parts of the country but none of a whole state, said a statement issued in behalf of the Michigan delegation, Approximately 15,000 business firms, trade organizations and in. up. The brightest light I ever saw naires. at night. It looked like the sun in) The statement said Rep. Lesin- Save 1.10 on Regularly 4.98 “Men’s Gingham Sportshirts > Ja All Sanforized, colorfast, easy iron by famous Cancer of Cali- fornia, Italian stylings in short sleeve checks. S-M-L. Rich col- ors. Street Floor. Save 54¢ on Regularly 2.98 Boy’s Chino ~ Slacks 44 All Sanforized sturdy twill cot- ton Chino slacks with zipper fly. , Perfect for summertime play or work. 6 to 16. Second Floor. ance! Hurry In Thursday-Friday & Saturday! No Mail-Phone or Delivery Orders! Save on Values ‘Up to 14.98! Luxury Lamp Clearance pss @ Drastic Reductions on All Styles! @ All Wanted Colors! First Quality Lamps! @ Others at 5.88 and 7.88! Hurry in today for exceptionally generous savings on finest farmous make luxury lamps. All in perfect condition! Choose from Boudoir and Table styles. Wall hanging and floor lamps. Bridge and brass. Modern. and ‘traditional, Some shades are slightly soiled. Hurry in today! R egularl y to 6.98! Waite's Lamp Center—Filth Floor Seve 12.07 on a Reg. 24.95 Lightweight Outdoor Aluminum Barbecue Grill... | op 3s @ Rust Resistant! Rubber Tired! @ Protective Hood, less spit! Big buy in budget outdoor din- ing—choose this large 18-inch grill for thrilling summertime dining. Come in today and save on this specially purchased all aluminum-clad big buy barbe- cue. Hurry in today and save. Waite's Sporting Goods Center—Downstairs Store | er midnight. Can Do More Work LANSING ( — Michigan's roa * * * _late afternoon. About six or seven’ ski (D-Mich) suggested the study. The bodies of the three officers | seconds later, there was a big ens. Potter R(R) and McNamara q-|and an airman were brought to, Shreveport. Names of the victims) were not disclosed. : | rumble.” _(D) and Reps. Dondero (R) and ._* * 'Rabaut (R) are representing the Joel Brown said he saw the delegation in the matter. « | ' builders can handle anything that | : comes up under the state’s new highway expansion program and | the federal road bill now being con- sidered in Congress, a spokesman said today. ‘tary of the Michigan Road Build- ‘worth of highways a year with | ‘ almost no increase in present or- Cc. J, Carroll, executive secre- ers’ Assn., said Michigan contrac- tors can build 175 million dollars ganizations. He said they could ex- pand to take care of 250 million | dollars worth of construction a’ year within three years. { Carrot said road builders last | year completed 8 0 million dollars | worth of highway and bridge pro- grams while working at 41 per) cent of capacity. : Russians Start on Mail Orders, Supermarkets (— Samovars and bicycles from Tula, kerosene stoves from Moscow, balalaikas from Tashkent—just mail your or- ders, folks. | The Ministry of Internal Trade ‘is beginning to. build up a mail ‘ + order business for consumer goods | through display advertisements in | its official newspaper Soviet Trade. | Simultaneously, the Soviet trade organization is working gradually | to develop self-help in stores. The | idea is to cut sales personnel for | . use of this manpower in other | industry and agriculture. * * we | In both merchandising fields the | Russians are just making a begin- | ing. | The mail order system is de- signed especially to aid millions | . of farmers and villagers who often. - can't find what they need in rural , ; stores and must travel to the. - nearest city to buy. ' Leni ngrad announced the pen . ing of its first self-help, American- | style supermarket last year. Some | . smaller shops of this kind have . + « . ‘ * ~ * i been opened in Moscow. | Campsites Available at Outstate Parks LANSING “® — Campers who have been finding most state parks | overloaded with visitors were ad- | The six-engine jet bomber, crashed on the banks of the Red | Sid he saw flames from a drive-in theater. He | “red flash followed | ar a lt ond then cone Promote Road Official River. Part of the plane was sub- | by a big red ball and then came. merged. Wreckage was strewn! terrific explosion.” over a wide area. | LANSING up—The State High-— Barksdale officials said the plane | way Department today announced The plane crashed about three | was atiached to the 376th Bomb/ the promotion of Roy L. Green- | miles south of Lucas, which is | Wing. about_10 miles southeast of Shreve- | port. * * ® Officers at Barksdale said an in- | FE 2-818). |man, suivey construction engineer ‘in the Lansing office, to the post YOU RECOVER MISSING be-' of acting district construction en- ‘longings through Lost. ads. Dial gineer at Alpena. He succeeds ‘Edwin C, Hamann, retired. + town | ‘(Maite | Regularly to 10.95 | @° and colors priced clearance White Only in 4\ to 10. 2.88 Straw = and White Straw Also White Leather. 42 to 10. 2.88 Natural White and Beige. 5 to 10. 4A to B 5.66 Regularly to 10.95 5° Extraordinary savings on women’s fine summer shoes in many styles Now is the time to reap savings during this specially Hurry in today for almost every size in every color and style. All Sales Final! No Mail or Phone Orders! SHOE CLEARANCE Pre-Inventory Savings on Women's Summer Shoes! Regularly to 4.99 2" Save 3.10 on Reg. 5.98 First Quality Super Cool Men’s Summer Rayon Slacks ... iti) @ All full cut with Hollywood waistband! @ Choose checks—plaids—solids! @ Light G Dark California Shades! @ All Wrinkle Resistant! Sizes 30-40! Now is the time to save as never before on a new supply of summer slacks. Special tirst quality proportioned fit slacks that are cool in every summer sun. Choose: Biue, Grey, Tan, Yéllow, and Brown! Hurry in today and save! Waite’s Men's Shop—Street Floor y Seve to 5.10 on Values to 10.98 €< , Latest Stylings Z{ Women’s Famous Swimwear 5* @ Stunning Styles for Every Figure! @ Five Vivid Colors! Beautiful name brand swimwear at this terrific reduction during this clearance Hurry in today for outstanding savings —each with distinctive decorative de- tailing! Sizes 34 to 38 Come in today tor choice selections! Waie's Budget Sports wear— Street Floor Reg. 1.00 Women’s Quilted Scuffs Wonderfully weshabdle tub-um scuffs for travel or ‘bout the house comfort. Bright prints with contrasting trims 8& L. Bave today on yout patr! Street Floor. Reg. 1.00 Women’s Sheer Nylons Pull fashioned in self or dark seams. All first quality with some slightly irregular. Rich rosy beige color in 98-11. Stock up today on a new summer supply. 6treet Pioor Reg. to 1.50 Children’s Popular Books Pamous activity books in wide variety of Jigsaw Pussies, Color Books, Story Books, . Activity Books and famous Scotch Tape { Books. Murry in today for choice selec- r , tions.. Measanine Books Beautifully fashioned in all wanted summer shades. Choose it. Gives 24 to 28. Street Fi neatly under any bed. Many uses—for linens or blankets. wood trimming around the door. Large 60x24x21-inch size. oo 44° Reg. to 1.95 Women’s Famous Nylons Pull length and Knee-Highs in full fashioned and self seams. All in lovely summer beige shades. Sizes 8'4-11 ¢ Super smooth fitting and cool. Come in today for several BB pair, Street Floor. Tints. Ail washable and colorfas’ Gave | ~ oday on choice selections. Street Floor. Reg. to 59c Ladies’ Luxury Hankies Choice group of fine pastel prints and new square designs. Large and small patterns. Washable and colorfast§ Fine 2 °)° joor Reg. 2.98 Plastic Sofa Covers Long wearing plastic covers that fit sofas 90-inches long j Easy to slip om for super clean protections. Murry in today for extra savings. Street Floor, Reg. 4.00 Blanket Storage Chest Hurry in today for yours and save! Street Floor. Reg. 4.99 Single Door Wardrobe Comes ready to assemble in minutes. Hurry im today and save! Street Floor : e Reg. 1.39 Clamp-On Wooden Hangers Strong and sturdy. Complete tn ab‘ im today for several at this excep- pe Por skirts or trousers seis of three Hurry tionally low price. Reg. 1.49 Floor Shoe Racks Holds 6 nair of shoes Conventent loop stvle—easy to vse No-marring with rubber tipped legs Heavy unichrome Come in today and Street Floor finish save! 66°" All machine washable denims with ‘.-inch foam rubber soles Light as, a feather on your feet. Sizes & to ® Reg. 1.98 Cool Denim Moccasins for Women | 44 Choose blue. pink, orchid and beige Save today All plastic lined with acetate covering. sipper closing or anap closing. Complete with fittings. Choose plain colors, Reg. to $5. Men's Famous Puritan Chambray Jackets Sport jackets im rich cotton knit all guaranteed washabie! [ } 8a Street Ploor 5 | All full eut and pre-cuffed. Rich solid colors and plaids Choose your exact waist and cuff length. Pour pockets. Reg. to 4.98. Men's Famous Cassino Sport Shirts Bensationally popular ‘1-piece It@lian styled im solid color p58 M [.) y to iron and colorfast. Rich colors. Street Pioor. Reg. 5.98 Girls’ Subteen Dresses with full skirts, Sizes 6 to 14. Murry in today and save! Reg. 2.50 Men’s Terrycloth Shower Wrap Thickly piled soft terry-cloth to wrap around and button 88 yellow. | Reg. to 3.98 Girls’ Cotton Skirts in Sanforized cottons. to 14. Hurry in teday and save! Second Floor. Sleeveless and short sleeve stylés in cottons and nylons. ¢€ All in assorted prints and solids. Hurry in today and save. oS Reg. to 14.98 Women’s Inexpensive Dresses pe. sult dresses, Jacket dresses. Dressy and casual styles. Prints, ‘rare (G** and solids, Sizes }0-18 and 16% to 22%. Save today. Third Reg. to 2.98 Fitted Tourist Kits ] 44 stripes and solids. Come in today and save! : Vivid emall plaid and solid color patterns! Gave today! , Reg. 2.98 Men's Cotton Wash Slacks 1 Brown, blue, tan and gray. Save today! Street Floor. or smart chest stripes. Sizes 8-M-L. ihrink controlled. Summer dresses in smart prints and sleeveless styles. All tates Second Floor, for in and out of the shower, Sines 8-M-L. White, biue, Summer skirts in dainty prints on light backgrounds. All | hoe sea 7 ’ = Reg. to 1.98 Girls’ Summer Blouses Sizes , to 14. Second Floor. Cottons, Linens, and Seersuckers. 1 & 2. it d Floor Reg. to 10.98 Women’s Inexpensive Dresses New summer cottons, Solids and checks. Crepes. failles 7 Save today. Third Floor ’ Reg. 2.98 Women’s Cotton Skirts hand rolled hems. Come in today for choice selections. Super strong cardboard ready to assemble chest that stores ha e Holds up to 90 garments. Strong corrugated cardboard with Reg. te 1.50 Boxed Reg. to 1.49 Clear Plastic and imported Irish linens including famous Shelton Strot- Reg. 2.98 Kiddie Kabinettes for lers. Sizes 12-20 & 16%-20's. Dressy and casual styles. ° * Toiletries 1.44 Reg. to 0.08 Salt & Dress Travel vised today that some state parks | stil] have camping sites even on_ holiday weekends The State Conservation Depart | Stationery 2 for 88c Famous brand name patterns and plain. Some deckled edges. 36 sheets and 24 envelopes. White, Covers 88c Por sults and dresses. Many uses — dampening bags, pillow pro- Bags 4.88 Holds up te 6 garments with pro. tection from dust and wrinkles. Heavy canvas with plastic trims, Plastic cabinet that fastens to the wall. Complete with tooth- brush, tumbler, mirror and nail ment said that even over the) Fourth of July weekend, excellent campsites were available at such | parks as Traverse City, Harrisville | and Rogers City. Rocket Kills Guardsman From Indiana at Grayling CAMP GRAYLING @®—Explosion E. Burkhalter, 21, of Delphi, Ind.,. R. Helfrich of White, Beige, Carmel Ombre. 5 to 10. 3A to B. 6.66 yy) ‘Shag Leather, Fawn, Orange or Turquoise. 5 to 10. 3A to B 5.66 tectors and luggage covers. Gave Pioor. pink, blue, green. Street Floor. today. Street Navy and red. Others at 8.88. brush. 3 colors. Street Poor. pore sented an Street Floor Reg. 56.05 Fall Sige Steel Glider 48.00 Reg. 15.08 Peel Cane Settee 10.88 Large size imported peel cane settee. Lightweight. use in or cushions for house or cottage. outdoors, Comfortable, hand- All water repellent. Gave today. made. Downstairs Store. wnsta! \ Reg. $1 Women's Summer Jewelry 44c Coel white and soft pastels for every summer ensemble. Tailored, gold trim or rhinestone accents. Bave today. ‘eet Floor. Reg. to $1 Men's Summer Sock Sale 44c Choose rayons, cottons and sheer stretch mesh nylons. All color- fast in 20 different colors and patterns. 10%-13. Street Floor. Reg. te 2.08 Men's Summer Sportshirts 88c Reg. $1 Little Girls’ Skirts 66c No-iron cotton plisses, nylon Washable no-iron cottons in rich uckers and rayon mesh Weaves,” dainty prints. Gizes 3 to éx. izes 8-M-L. Blues, green and Hurry in today and save! Second tan. Save today. Stree Floor. Pioor. J Pull tength fully lined. Sines Reg. to 19.06 Girls’ Wool and Rayon Coats 4.88 “or shorty styles all 3} to 14. Come in today and save! Second Floor. Reg. $1 Girls’ Cotten Playclothes 44c Sanforised 2-pe. cotton shorts” ay prints = Becohd Ploor. oo _ * Reg. 6.0 Adults’ & Chibdren's Reg. 1.08 Boys’ Wash Reg. to 49.95 Famous 68-pe. Sets Reg. 2.98 Women's Fa Make i . . Idents 2.88 Slacks 1.44 © Fine China 16.88 Halters 1.88 All eractively gift ed for Patique slacks” Im Sanforine All service for 8 in first i i : Mom, Dad, 6i4 and oonay, Two twills with large cargo erent and some irr roth mage hy ete ae dom ber : sizes. Al) stainless steel) and Zipper fly. Khaki grey and blue, signed in soft rounds and straps & back. Four rich calaee, rhodium finish. Street Floor. Sizes 6 (o 16. ‘Second Floor. contrasting tri fth Floor. Sises 10-20. Third Pioor ' ‘So - . June Physician in private life. ‘Copter Crashes in Roof Takeoff Pilot, Passenger Hurt as Craft Spills Debris on New York Street NEW YORK \®—A_ helicopter erashed and burst into flames yes- terday while taking off trom the l7th-floor heliport of the Port of New York Authority Building in downtown Manhattan. The pilot and the only passenger were injured as they tumbled out of the burning craft seconds after it crashed on the 16th floor. It then dropped to a narrow setback of the 15th floor, * rd * j Port Authority officials said the | pilot apparently forgot to unplug a %0-foot “booster’’ cable, often used to energize the starter. As the craft rose from the heliport, the cable became taunt and jerked the machine down over the side | — of the building. Debris and burning showered the street below, injuries there. * gasoline | traffic-jammed but there were no * & ~ | Port Autherity employes and | firemen quickly quenched the | smoldering skeleton of the craft as it hung precariously on the nar- row ledge above 9th Avenue near I6th Street. The helicopter was later hoisted to the 16th floor. The pilot, Marcel O. Chevalier. 30, suffered a concussion and) scalp laceration. He was reported | in fair condition * * * The passenger, Arthur Truss, 33, | a Port Authority photographer, suffered a concussion, ae and multiple abrasions. His con- | dition was listed as critical. | The heliport is a table-like struc- ture 10 feet above the 16th floor of the building. Canadian Sen. King Dies at 82 in Ottawa OTTAWA WF Federal Sen. James H. King of Vancouver, for- mer speaker of the Canadian Sen- ate, died early today in the Civic Hospital, He was 82. The Senator entered the hospital 20 for treatment of a heart condition. He subsequently con- tracted pneumonia. His death brought to 23 the num. ber of vacant seats in Canada’s 102-member upper chamber. Sen- ators are appointed for life by the, Governor General on recommenda- tion of the government, King, a member of dominant Liberal party, Canada’s Was a He had posts in both provincial and Fed- eral cabinets, I’S EASY TO REACH TEN. ANTS through For Rent ads! to quickly fill a — unit, call FE 2-#181. ra | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | New Teleph This man is talking over the new telephone that lets you You don't even have to lift the receiver to answer a call! Here’s how it works: Just press a button on the. telephone. A microphone in the base carries your voice to the person at the through the compact loud-speaker shown at the right. (You also can use this telephone in the conventional manner whenever you prefer.) It offers many advantages to the businessman. You can take notes with both hands free, keep the «conversation going while you get a file, quote from catalogs, or check blueprints. A hands-free telephone additional $6.60 a month (in To order one, call your Telephone Business Office. MICHIGAN BELL TEL tation Wins Soaring Title | Trager | glider years. He is a one-time commercial sideline ness. | competition You Keep Both Hands Free While You Talk FREED BY SHERMAN — Matt Carter, former slave, is 103 years | old, but his memory is still vivid enough for him to describe the Civil War days when he was freed by Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman during the Union leader's march to the sea. The Columbus, Ohio, centenarian lived on a plan- near Phenix City, Ala., then. He was the property of a Doctor Ingersaw, who bought him for $500. Detroit Glider Fan ELMIRA, N. Y. ww — Kemp of Detroit, who trained pilots during the war and once flew to an altitude of 23.000 feet in a motorless craft, tonight will receive a tfophy emblematic of the United States soaring title. Now a tool and dié executive in | Detroit, Trager was awarded the | title yesterday although he fin- ished second in points in the week- long contest. The Soaring Society of Amer- ica ruled the winner had to be an American citizen. Trager fin- ished second to Cmdr. H. C. N. Goodhart of England. Trager will receive the R. C. duPont trophy at a banquet here tonight. The pilot, father of four children. has been flying gliders for 15 airlines pilot and still does com- mercial flying for a Detroit mining engineer, Patrick Adamson, as a to his tool and die busi- Trager had 1.038 points to 1.081 for Goodhart. He flew 121 miles on a round trip flight from Elmira to Utica vesterday in the final |; more than an hour, i » 2 Ps » 2 . a ® » > ? > > » . > ® ‘ » . . > » . o ° 2 > ' ® ‘ » AG » troy! All deluxe features! Waite's Retrigerators—Downstairs Store r | oe ¢ 6 6 6 @.6.6~¢6 ) ; & \ . I ‘ Pe ’ 7 ‘oan y be. yt . i TITF, PONTIAC PRE SS. THURSDAY. JULY 14. 1955 none witness, took the -stand following | aligietiy out of kilter in ay pee giant Dratt Evasion Adviser Guilty Jury Decides Against Woman Who Wrote 9 Young Men. BRATTLEBORO, Vit. (P#—Mrs. Lucille S. Miller, 45, stood convict- ed today on 18 counts of advising young men to evade niilitary serv- ice. - Federal Judge Ernest. W. Gibson said he will sentence her Aug. 8. However, Mrs, Miller's lawyers have announced they will appeal. The jury returned its verdict | yesterday after deliberating a little | after a three- | day triak Mrs. Miller, the defense only five unsuccessful attempts- by. her counsel for a dismissal of the dictments. One of the panies for dismissal wags an assertion that the draft law is a violation of the 13th Amendmént against involun- tary servitude. . A high point in Mrs. Miller's testimony came when she replied fo a question asked her by U.S. Atty. Louis G, Whitcomb. He'‘asked her if she “deliberately intended’’ to violate the law when she wrote | to the nine young men, advising them to evade the draft. Her answer was, “I certainly did.” Maximum séntence for Mrs. Mil- ler could run as high as 90 years and fines of $180,000. Cuba is one of the best U.S export markets for surplus agri- cultural commodities. two of the world's the Yellow and China ie As greatest rivers, the Yangtse, e® 6 10 cu. ft. 5 Kelvinator Se eowvo~eoeoeooveed: L Sciclelels: ®e0eeee?e By Regularly $279.95 NO MONEY DOWN @ Handy shelves in the «| @ Cold clear- to-the-floor design with more moxi- fo mum usable storage space! @ Twin moisture seal crispers to keep vegetobles 4 garden fresh and crisp! ne @ Siera « ele SieiniG © @ ole se door!. Full width.meot Serewe one Lets 4 | ' | | I | | { \ { | | \ | | telephone—a remarkable falk with both hands free. other end; you hear him | can be yours for only tn cluding 10% federal tax). EPHONE COMPANY (Coite te tome Save 2.96 on Regularly 5.95 Famous Make 100% Shadow Panel Youth Form Slips @ No onee noe dry! @ Nylon selections in Many Styles! @ Sizes 32 to 40. White Only! “ED. is ae i.e vet Open Friday NIGHTS till 9:00 & \ mS Poms Seve 2.99 on Reg. 5.98 Populer Con-Con lea rr i er ee ee eee : Returned Transport | Delays ‘Gyroscope’ Gyroscope developed radio trouble over turned with its 100 America-bound — paratroops and crewmen, | transpacific airlift, Regiment to Ft. Bragg, N. The planes brought the Airborne Regimental ITAZUKE AIR-BASE, Japan up to the states. in 3,800 paratroopers. the Pacific today and_re- The mishap threw the schedule in the U.S, Capitol. The returned plane was the 27th ‘to leave of 37 hauling the cn There are 14 acres of floor ‘me | oda Com x5 a 4 —A C124 Team from Ft, Campbell, Ky. So: Seemann 5 Ober atice The 187th has 3,100 men going | reduction of number and person-| The 508th brought nel of neutral nations inspection | teams stationed at ports of entry jin Korea. Korean Reds Okay "Cut i in Truce Teams Poland. “ * «© PANMUNJOM, Korea i—The | ' + FoR SUOPPing - Open Friday NIGHTS till 9:00 the “mink” of ORLONS by famous PANDORA 98 Slipover as advertised in MADEMOISELLE! Exclusively at Waite's! Pandora-spun to such soft luxurious elegance it turns cashmere green with envy; impeccably full- fashioned to fit flawlessly .. . forevermore’ And you don’t need to fit flawlessly . . . forevermore! Just $1 down ot Waite's assures you —your very Own Pandora! White- pink-blue-maize-black-periwinkle-fire fly red-green- Paprika and avocado! Cardigan 8.98. Orlon cut & sewn slip-on ................ 4.98 Orion cut & sewn cardigan ................. 5.98 Waite's Sportswear—Third Floor of Fashion Save 1.96 on Values to 3.95 Nylons & Cottons Famous Brand Name Bras in Salesman fe |. Samples jy? @ Soave to '/2 on favorite brands! @ Many styles all white! All famous name bras in your very own favorite styles Chaose from softest nylons and cottons in sizes 32 to 40 Come in early for choice selections during this excep- tionally fine savings event. Don’t miss these savings — hurry in today! Salesman Sample Sale of Girdles 399 Values to 5.00! mer into Fall , Nd PF yy Vans. 7 black watch plaids by Betty Hartford [In trans-season cottons —~ The skirl of the pipes and the swirl of a tartan skirt . to set your feet a- dancing . . right through sum- fine crisp cottons in authentic clan _as Scotch os they make ‘em. . . a lot of dress Here are just three scrumptious plaids . .for a little price. styles from our coveted collection! Choose yours today! ° A. Dark Cotton Plaid sparked with white collar and cuf{s. Button down coat, full skirt: neckline tie- .. 10-18 B. Tailored smartly with round neckline, tucked skirt & cap sleeve. Blue, Grey Green Plaids. 1 12-221, C. Long Torso Cardigan Neckline with mandarin col- lar. Grey, Blue Plaid. 10-18. a 2 * or ah fea Phe nN ah - ee. ‘ot tlie four-power neutral wet . sion, Other members are Commu- nist satellites Czechoslovakia . ond The new plan cuts the univer |Communists today agreed to a. of teams from 10 to 6 and halves the personnel on each team. At present the Neutral Nations Super- visory Commission has five teams in North and five in South Korea. The reduction was proposed by | Each team now has 10 to 12 mem the Swiss and Swedish delegations | bers. ee | oad ts lity girdles h- Nv lon & Cotton Pettic Here's your ees to eee jee aa rationally (8 : fraction of their u savings! iat © All in White and Soft 99 corroi foundations ot egebiare Hurry in } §; Pestels! Hout! Sorry we cannot advertise Pink and white. ' 7 me e@ pec pgrnsct in today for yours in’ S-M- L. 3.99 a ee es 5- TR V.. gen fel So re . Teas | Values to 6.50, Only ise | : Ml Waite's Bétter Lingerie—Second Floor Waite's Corsets & Brassievies—Secand Floor Waite's Dresses—Third Floor of peri j cle { a at ~ , j j i | j/ { fi i > 2 sl / a ; ; Si Yu f ie ; ‘ (/ ; fi fi Ds] / a -_— ss = « JULY 14, 1955 Rosser: Basser Wat’) Adv Mer. Ae Advertising anaget Entered at Post Office. Pontiac. Mich. as ¢econd class matter MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ———— EE tor is entitied exclusively. to the use The Associated Press | Be ape cation of afi heat news printed tn this news- Der as well as all AP news dianatches Te Powrinc Press ts delivered “bs carrier for 40 cents week: aiiand we | pabtnal is not @vatiable by mat} op Laneer and oes Countieg tt oe $12. lsewhere in i ee tn ia ited States 620.00 bseriv.ions are payal one * pontine oes 2-8181 able tn advance, MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 The Home Gardener Now Comes Into His Own The season for the supreme revelry _ of the home gardener is at hand. If he has done his part he has won the battle of the bugs and war of the weeds. * * * He is reaping the rewards for those blistered hands, backaches, fights with the neighbors’ chickens and other dis- couragements of last spring when he often wondered why he fell for those lovely pictures in the seed catalog. Nobody ever has really lived and enjoyed life to the full until he has had a home garden. There's an appetizing satisfaction and waist bulging contentment in it that words cannot describe. * * ~ A home garden is such a family affair. Of course no man should plant one larger than his wife can weed. If she gets into the spirit of the occasion, both on the production and cooking lines, then the household joy is complete. Your first radishes have a snap, crack, flavor and lack of burp that you cannot buy. Your lettuce, peas, beets, beans, tur- nips, onions and other vegetables then all parade along in a man- ner that knocks out all dieting in the first round, and everybody is happy. But the apex of joy supreme 1» reached with your first green corn. That is when everything else is discounted. That’s when all restrictions go out the window, appetites seem endless, and-the bathroom scales climbs to new heights. x * \* There's only one way to enjoy fully home grown green corn. You must plaster on plenty of butter and salt, put both elbows on the table, throw EMILY Post and all conventionalities to the summer. breezes, and go after it a la harmonica. ~ Wrapping yourself around green corn plucked only a few minutes before in your own gar- den is like listening to a great symphony orchestra. There's never a sour note, and each suc- ceeding number only whets your | appetite for more. Be Careful of Fires Two tourist guides operating out of the Canadian Soo have been charged with failure to put out a campfire. It burned over 4,500 acres of forest. Some 350 men and ten airplanes fought the blaze before it was brought under con- trol. * * * Here is another reminder to all vacationers who go into the woods. If you build a fire, put it out before you leave the spot. It may look as if just a few sparks are left, and it may appear impossible to you that it could spread. But you never know what may happen after you leave. A breeze may spring up that will fan those sparks and blow them onto nearby leaves. Or a similar breeze may blow dry material into the remains of the fire. x * * Take no changes with anything as dangerous anywhere. But be particu- © larly careful in the woods. It takes many years to grow a tree; only a few min- utes to destroy it. Also the danger to life, both human and animal, is great. Put out your fires. Keep our forests green. ——_—___e ALTHOUGH it is well known that a partial vacuum is formed in the central area of a tornado, it is difficulf*to be- lieve the report by a Kansas farmer $ that @ tornado that ripped through his all his cows. ~, j y (ir wae a 5 Bet wg (ed In All Star Games An odd twist came Tuesday when funeral service was held for ARcH Warp, Chicago Tribune sports editor and the , originator 22 years ago of the All Star * Baseball game. * * * The first All Star Baseball game came simply as an offshot of the World’s Fair held in Chicago in 1933. It wasn’t in- tended to be a permanent affair. The club owners.and managers weren't exactly enthusiastic about lending a star pitcher, even if he worked only three innings or so, or any other star, with no profit to the club. And regular games that did mean profits had to be held up so that the All Star game could be held. But the fans lapped up the idea of the best of the American League being pitted against the best of the National League. The first All Star game at Chicago, with Gomez winning for the Americans, HALLAHAN losing for the Na- tionals drew 50,000 customers. So to discontinue the contest after one year proved impossible. * * * The outstanding feature of the first game was a home run by Base RutTH, hit when he had three balls and no strikes. Like this year’s game when the going is tough and the old pro steps to the plate watch out. The fans’ vote was not great enough to start Stan (The Man) Musial, but with the game tied in the twelfth inning he hit the first pitch into the right field bleachers well over the head of Detroit’s Al Kaline. The Man About Town Water Pollution A Former Resident Writes About Doings 60 Years Ago Middle age: When most of the exercise we get is caution. “Don’t worry about water pollution in Pontiac,” writes Jerry Strawbridge from his present home in Detroit. He con- tinues, “When I lived in your city 60 years ago we dumped our dead horses and all other dead animals and garbage into the Clinton River—which reminds me of our present Detroit water.” Celebrating his eightieth birthday this week by retiring from his work as traveling salesman, which he has followed for 53 years, is Robert L. Moule of 272 Oakland Ave. He divided his birthday between one son at Lansing and another at Worcester, Mass., making the trip by plane. Few Oakland County areas can run their local ancestry as far back as the Olive Branch community near Holly. Its annual picnic is on July 24 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Andrews which stands on the site of. the log cabin of the latter's great grandfather, Moses Smith, and she has the deed from the government, signed by President Martin VanBuren, the community being named for Olive, N. Y., from whence many of the first settlers came. Mr. Andrews is the son of Floyd Andrews, Chairman of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors. The season has arrived when some people find small “tomatoes” oy their potato vines. Really, these are not to- matoes at all, but a form of potato seed common many years ago, but now rather rare. Here around Pontiac we have plenty of transportation problems. But they don't bother the young opossums. The other day Mrs. Warren H. Organ of 3377 Clintonville Road, saw an old ‘possum leisurely carrying two young ones piggy back across her front yard. = - Born in Northern Michigan 37 and 35 years ago, Thomas Garrison now of 5796 Dwight Road, Pontiac, and his sister, Marion, had never seen each other. This week, in company with his wife and daughter, he flew to Riverside, Calif., to get acquainted with his sister, It is the observation of Business Director George H. Williams of the Oakland County Tuberculosis Sana- torlum that the former patients who held their annual meeting there Sunday are an outstanding testimonial of its work. Not only are they a vigorous and healthy company, but their children comprise the healthiest bunch of Lemont that can be imagined. ——— ——— Verbal Orchids to- Robert M. Corbit eighty-fourth birthday. & of Oxford; ew a ies es ___THF PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. Older and Wiser David Lawrence Says: Ban on Nuclear “hegue: May Hike Armament Costs: WASHINGTON — Paradoxical as it may seem, the net effect of any ban on the use of nuclear weapons that could be proclaimed at the four power conference at Geneva, or in any subsequent conference, might be to increase substantially the armament cost to the American people. * * * What is not generally realized is that because atomic and hydro- gen bombs contain many times the explosive power of the con- ventional bomb used in World War II and known as ‘“‘block- busters,” there is substantial economy in their substitute for the ordinary bombs. If both A- bombs and H-bombs are tabooed, the United States would have to build up its capacity to drop con- ventional bombs on enemy terri- tory. This means that long range bombers by the thousands would have to be provided, Estimates vary. But one military execu- tive said he thought it might mean trebling the cost for more bomber aircraft just to be able to deliver the blows that would be necessary to make sure “massive retaliation” against an aggressor would be effective. Obviously the contention of many military men is that dis- armament talk is nonsense unless the plan is to include all kinds of armament, In other words there cannot be any partial restriction on the use of weapons because it would only mean the equivalent increase in conventional weapons to secure adequate defensive strength. NICE TO TALK ABOUT The disarmament problem is re. garded here as something attrav- tive to talk about in international conferences — as a sort of evi- dence of good will and good inten- tion. But nobody expects the lim- itation to get anywhere, and if it does, the inevitable result will be to create a new demand for long- range bombers. The aircraft in- dustry certainly may enjoy its biggest boom if the ban on nu- clear weapons becomes effective. F * All this is but another way of saying that the world is reaching the point where it will become necessary to find a way to ban all forms of international mili- tary airpower, and find some sure means of inspection if anything real is to be accomplished in the field of disarmament, Precisely because no nation, least of all the United States, ‘is going to throw away its means of defense, whether on a con- ventional or unconventional bas- is, the chances of a disarmament agreement are nil. It is important to talk about it, however, as a goal and as a means of offsetting the accusa- tions of ‘“‘warmonger'’ which the Communists level at the United States. That's why disarmament will be a topic of discussion for a long time to come though noth- ing concrete will ever come of it. MILITARY CONCERNED Naturally,- military men are concerned about any restrictions on the use of weapons, They have been saying in recent years that introduction of nuclear wea- pons cuts down expense and ac- tually permits reduction in the arms budget. The fact that the converse is also true—abolition of nuclear weapons means an increase in conventional arms — has not yet seeped through to the people in the Western countries. There is evidence that the Russians are building ‘up their armament at the very time that ~ their propaganda js urging a re- duction or limitation, It is to the interest of Moscow to catch up with the United States, particu- larly in airpower, If air strength is to be limited, however, the Reds have an ace in the hole — they have the biggest land armies in the world. Natur- ally it is Moscow’s effort to persuade America and the West” to stand still a few years while the Communists build up /their armament. * * * So the disarmament game isn't fooling our own military leaders as they scoff at talk of reduced as a result of international agree- ments to limit armament. No plan that has as yet been brought out will accomplish any economy for the American people—it could con- ceivably increase by many billions of dollars the armament budget. (Copyright 1955, New York Her- /a Tribune Inc.) Smiles An Ohio man got a broken nose while trying to stop a fight. The safest side in any argument is the outside, The man who constantly toots his own horn shouldn't be sur- prised if friends dodge out of his Way. . It's natural, says a fire chief, for men to rush to see a fire. And if a fire sale follows, that's where the women come in. We can give you one certain answer to the question, “What's to become of the younger genera- tion?’’ They'll grow up! You can expect every resort with a good swimming place to have a large floating population. People who are always willing to take things as they come are the ones who kick when the good things don't. Voice of the People County Worker. Aorene With Editorial, Praises Integrity of County Government sary “becouse at “Weck ef space. Pll poi Seuene = onhar the accompany letters but these will not ay oh priblisiied a the writer so requests unless the letier is eritical its nature Congratulations to the Press on the editorial praising Mr. McQuaid for his work as Register of Deeds. 1 work for the county, and I ean testify personally how very right that editorial is. He runs his office like a business, and holds it-as a public trust; his only criterion in any decision is saving money for the taxpayer, and service to the public. The office is notably free of politics, a terrific contrast to those in the metropolis to the south, where workers must constantly “pony up’: campaign contributions. I know tw6 other county set- ups fairly well and the contrast in integrity and efficiency is startling. So far as I can. deter- mine, all other county offices here are well run. I have never entered partisan politics, and I. have no doubt that there are Republican- run local governments somewhere which are corrupt and graft-ridden. I just don't know where they are. The only ones T am familiar with are not Republican. And when I saw the heavy Demo- — crat vote in south Oakland _— — Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE _ 1 know how much you love me, and... Your heart is so polite... But, oh, I want to thank you for . Your compliment tonight . . . You did not have to say it, dear . It really was not true... Because you know our happiness ... Belongs at last to you... You know that you inspired all... The progress I have made... Without your inspiration I. . . Would not have gained the grade... And yet you gave me credit for... Our measure of success . . . And led the whole wide world to think . . . I shaped our happiness . . . When all the while it was yourself . , , Who pushed and prompted me .., To win this prize in token of ... Our special victory. : Coronight 1955) Lookina Back 15 Years Ago U. S. TO MOBILIZE two mil- lion men. CONSPIRACY LAID to Pender- gast, indicted in nine million dollar insurance case. 20 Years Ago HUNT RED haired girl in death of George Jarvis, Home Owner's Loan official. Case Records of a Psychologist County last fall, I was sickened for I know the kind of political machine these emigrant Detroit- ers would put into power. I can only pray that the people of this county may look long and carefully during the next year at what we have here, and remem- ber it next November when they vote. ‘ County Worker ‘Hospital Supporter’ Asks When They'll Start Work I'm one of the many people that voted to enlarge the city Hal Boyle Says: eagle I went in there the other day and right away I wondered “when are they going to start the work?” When are they? Hospital Supporter THOUGHT FOR TODAY Rejoice the soul of thy servant; for unto thee, O Lord, do I lift up my soul.—Psalms 86:4, * * * What came from the earth re- turns to the earth, and the spirit that was sent from heaven, again carried back, is received into the temple of heaven.—Lucretius, Resort Owner Illustrates Dignity of Mountain Folk ’ GATLINBURG, Tenn. — “In saying hill folk live with dignity, T feel that T-am not making a misstatement, for indeed they do." So said a lady here of whom I inquired what peculiar virtues mountain people have. * * * ; One example of mountain dignity is Jack Huff, who also superbly exemplifies another continuing vir- tue of the original Scotch-Irish settlers in the Great Smokies — pride of family. Would) you carry your own mother on your back up a moun- tain merely. to let her. see a sunset and a sunrise that you enjoyed and, as a- son, felt she should share? : & * * Jack Huff did once. It's a good story. Ernie Pyle told it in 1940, and I'd like to tell it again and bring it up to now. About 1900 Jack's father came here with a pocketful of timber money looking for more, and ended up by building the pioneer Moun- tain View Hotel. It lies here in a cup in the hills, now one of Amer- ica's leading summer resorts. oe * * Jack loved the mountains and didn’t want to lean on his pappy. So he decided he'd build a lodge of his own atop Le Conte, one of the highest peaks in the Great Smokies, then reachable only by footpath. This was before the fed- eral government took over the area and made it into one of the na- tion's most popular public parks. Jack built the lodge largely with supplies he toted up first on his own back, horses. * * * He now has enough cabins there to sleep 48 people overnight. Ernie Pyle figured in 1940 that Jack had Send Children Away to Summer Camp for Valuable Training in Growing Up Try adopting a child at least part time! Pick out somebody like Lois in your church and send her to a summer church camp. Mrs. Crane and I have sent all five of our children to church camps at least four summers oniece. and some went for sir summers. Note ‘the reasons why. By DR. GEORGE W. CP Ane Case 0-382: Lois L., aged 13, wants to attend a camp wth other young people from her church de- nomination. “Dr. Crane, I suppose jt is a good idea,” her mother began, “but it will cost us about $20 for the week she is away. “Her Daddy grumbles that we shouldn't waste so much money on her, He also thinks she is too young, and says let’s wait awhile. “But Lois has her heart set on going with the other young folks from our church. There will be eight boys and girls at the camp from our town. “So should I let her go this year or wait?” CAMP IMPORTANT By all means try to see that every child attends church camps, Scout camps and similar youth gatherings away from home. This is one of the essential stens ip helping a youngster grow up. For a child must learn to live away from mama. Millions of semi-adults haven't yet acquired this valuable train- ing. When they enter college in the fall, they grow so homesick that they run back home on al- ternate weekends, Or, if they do stay on the cam- pus, they may be so restless be- cause of nostalgia that they can't concentrate on their studies and hence flunk out during that first semester. In big universities, we may lose 5¢0 students the first semester, largely due to nostalgia (home- sickness) with its bad effect on grades. MOTHER BIRDS. Mother birds are often smarter in this respect than human parents, fora mother bird may actuely Wt WO -YOu May MOT Tey THEM push its fledgling from the nest when it sees the youngster should be trying its own wings and flit- ting around under its own power. * * * Nostalgia is the most widespread ailment on college campuses and causes more harm than all germ diseases that afflict students dur- ing their years at the university. Tens of thousands of young men also go AWOL from mili- tary service because they can't stand to be away from home. Thousands of patients enter mental sanatoriums because they were mever weaned, emotionally, and hence have never cut loose from Mamma’'s apron strings. And the tragedy about the mat- ter is that many supposedly edu- cated parents are the most guilty. * * * Wealthy families often try to coerce and dominate their chil- dren, even as regards choice of a sweetheart as well as occupation, so their children don't mature emo- tionally and thus become wastrels of the famous prodigal son variety. EMOTIONAL WEANING So start weaning your child emo- tionally before he can walk. This means you parents should hire a baby-sitter and go out for a date at least once per week, * * * Pick a baby-sitter who is kindly and loves children and who is well known and liked by your young- sters. Don't shock a child by sud- denly pushing it into the custody of a total stranger as your baby- sitter. Also, take your child to Sun- day school. And see that he is in a large play group or nursery school by the time he reaches the toddler stage, Prepare him with delightful an- ticipation for entrance into kinder- garten or first grade. And socialize moped helping him play the games is age group with average dexterity. By all means, teach him to earn his own money. Then let him spend f if it largely as he wishes. He'll be a shrewd spender if he has earned it. For further advice, send for my “Tests for Good Parents,’’ enclos- ing a stamped, self-addressed en- velope, plus a dime. Many college educated men and women are the very worst of par- ents, so you better check on yourself. Always write to Dr George W of The Pontiac Pre losing a long and Crane Pontiac, his psycholog + (Copyright 1955) then on the backs of climbed some 15,000 miles in creat- ing his mountain eyrie. During most of his trips up the 74-mile journey he shouldered a 50-pound pack, His description of the magnifi- cent view at the top of the peak intrigued his mother. She was time-crippled. * * Jack built a special back chair, and put his mother on it, She weighed more than 90 pounds, but her son carried her up the steep slopes with her favorite kitten sitting purring in her lap. He thought it was a_ privilege to do this for his mother, not a hardship. But it still has left him a deep regret. For the weather turned bad. His mother spent several days on the peak and her rheumatism finally forced her to come down again, and she died in time, never having seen the sun rise or set from the peak that Jack loved. It was something he had known she wanted to know, — too — and she never did. Ld a * Her son has never forgotten. Jack doesn't pack supplies up the trail on his back anymore. His father died four years ago, and now he has to run the big pros- perous hotel here in town. He worries about the service, says it's hard to find people dny- more who want to do a job right just because they feel that's the way a job should be done. * * * Jack takes his exercise now golf- ing. His doctor tells him his heart isn't what it was 20 years ago. But his spirit is, and now it's valley-bound, He makes plenty of money, I would guess, but his eyes shine when he talks about the past, and they dull when he talks about the present. He is a tall, lean, big-eared, courteous, friendly man hungry for yesterday, lonesome for the youthful prime when his mind was free and all his troubles were on his back. He. misses climbing, go- ing uphill, building in a new place. * 6 *& When I asked him about the mountain top, he said: “Up there you never find two days the same. It changes. You can see far. Every moment is different.” Growing older and wealthier tn the town below, Jack Huff remem- bers being. happier younger and higher up. But hereabouts he will always be honored because he once car- ried his mother up a stony road to watch a sunset she never lived to see. It gives him a_ respect beyond any bank account. Dr. Brady Savs: Diet Deficient in Vitamin B May Even Affect Memory By WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. Before World War II, a third of the population of ghe British Isles existed on diets containing insuf- ficient vitamin B. Probably nutri- tion was no better here. * * & After war began the British government required the millers to leave 85 per cent of the wheat in the flour. Aside mom the mild restriction this placed on the crim- inal waste: of food for the pro- duction of refined white flour, it restdred the consumers in Britain a good deal more of the vitamins and minerals removed from wheat in the refining process than we do in that snide product called ‘‘en- riched”’ flour. * * * Many mild clinical cases of vi- tamin B1 deficiency have escaped notice because (I quote this sen tence from Bignell & Prescott's The Vitamins in Medicine) clin- lelans wait for the appearance of ‘full-blown beri-beri . .. Until or unless you can work. up a full-blown case of beri-beri the doctor can give you “shots” of something or other to keep you from wondering what ails you. SYMPTOMS It is against my Hippocratic principles to tell readers which symptoms indicate what disease or vice versa. But I believe it can do no harm and may do much good to mention the common manifestations of vitamin B de- ficiency, which most Americans have because .they get most of their calories from refined white_ flour and refined white sugar ~— the namby-pambies. Fatigue. Dyspepsia. Palpitation. Breathlessness. Slight swelling around the ankles. Pain produced by squeezing the calf muscles. Pins and needles sensations in hands arms, feet or legs. Distension of veins in neck and arms. Squatting on the heels is painful and perhaps you can’t rise without using your hands. Inability to concentrate, de- fective memory, nervous irrita- bility and anxiety. Diminished in- clination to perform accustomed work. Today it is difficult even for the expert to select food which will supply the minimum daily requirement of vitamin B—that is, the amount necessary to pre- vent these manifestations of de- ficiency—ftrom the bewildering ar- ray of pretty packages of ready- cooked, ready-to-serve, pasteur- ized, sugarized and maybe ac- cepted yet by the AMA, Various investigators have no- \ticed these psychological manifes- tations in human volunteers who ate only foods extremely poor in vitamin Bl. * * * Intolerance of noise, inability to concentrate, inattention *to details, nervous irritability, memory de- ‘ fects, anxiety, insomnia, dimin- ished inclination to perform cus- tomary work. Being nutty, I readily imagine I have most of these manifesta- tions myself, so you needn't wor- ry if the description hits your case. Do as I do--eat:some extra vitamin B daily to supplement your re- fined namby-pamby Yankee diet. Signed letters, not more’ than Eee, ‘ SEVEN | 4 » ss , ; ~- . ¥ 5 smeemnenienencunee amuaeiemete . | : lle Ky.: "RCT), ~ JULY 14, 195: — f PRPS , | | us a een an vena) re elected; was assigned Oldest Twins 92 'steaded in the opening of the / . e ts THE oO} Fe : £¢ Hi sons were elec = thas hex f , | ba | no 2 / oe it's even a or mim sk No. 17 and pos | SATANTA, Kan, Mrs. re | 4 : Z check up on enpticl as (plenall), 17 Is Luc y io (UP) — State | — 17 at the State House. His ie caged fae | rokee Oklahoma | A | versity of Pittsburgh. In 1948 she No Ding-Dong-Dang to look in on pachin COLUMBUS, Obie aJ Bartu- | wife gave birth to their. second son shor C. iden, Sol omc a ne “Overcomes Handicap | received her ee, yee TOYKO (# — The Welfare Minis- parlors. _ slglapnmentine ae — Piel aime ener cy —— Kan., and cha Heney Short, Mt. . ‘ am ] - Tr __ 85 | | ; PITTSBURGH wW—Although she | from. the bag hag: od aor i a/try is going to make Japan oe SELLING’S SIMPLE thro ug h nek, ee aes nited has been confined toa tomapner eet eae ay science degree by the sce study ot ty ee cece weer Rie Cart Kase eG ‘ since 1940 by polio, Iris | ne eae eat wae tee ‘t let it | University of Nor Kiem of Miami, Fla., hasn't James: Madi- N be State ie; . | States were named nterfere w her education. This o be pretty horough abou oo. | kerose hi F Sa a qua ng a m e s fe; yorld's oldest brother | rf h : Ini ‘Ste : st) per well be the wor : a 7 love Oe Th United States has : “aa “ " year she receive r er aa ot hen c rants i "shen ‘in cent of the world's railroad mile- esd ne they be 93 nex pes a Polk, Buchanan and * e ° os , ; i i i 8 4 = ae . &. The were born near Gartf e id | (. ds ' = |dispose of ro fast! Phone FE) gen rie € sstvinl I ‘hich 11 sil ea \Nov. 18 : | : 7 | % ri factories, mines, | dispose : j se int it ived he: aa ae East’ Pakistan contains more | It pa t _ _ , or of pata. | eb i- | than 42 million people. automo . . : ; é ie from the Uni- | t biles, etc. When -omes tO 8 he fall con n which pe ap D y public health d gree — — b * $3 Shop in AIR CONDITIONED ~ gal a § % comfort at Federal’s . t values... bes at the peak ee SS ae a = Se = mM 612 cu. ft. Customatic defrosting a —— NORGE 1g with mammoth 80 Ib. Push-button automatic defrosting WESTINGHOUSE with huge 70 Ib. full-width freezer freezer chest Save $100. This Westinghouse de. Regularly 399.95 Looking { bargain? Here’ frosts at touch of button. Full- : " ‘ooking for a bargain? Here's one — ves _ complete with Customatic defrosting. Regularly 419.95 ot ae am Big jumbo freezer holds 80 lbs of frozen foods. Moist-cold compart- 95 ‘ ment insures fresher foods. Handidor | en storage and twin sliding crispers | ‘ eernae are other wanted features, Hurry! a= Price includes Delivery, Installation and Service width freezer holds 70 Ibs. of froz- en foods. Roomy interior provides space for tall bottles. Giant humi- drawer, egg shelves and door shelves are added features! Save! ; Price includes Delivery, Installation and Service Ld hr een ewes = ee . - vei dk 6 8 8 8 8 - ea op freezer holds 38 Ibs. | in this all-new big 9.1 cu. ft. am FRIGIDAIRE Big 9.1 cu. ft. Frigidaire with all-new Regularly 269.9 conveniences, Cross-the-top freezer 9 JAE holds 38 Ibs. Full-wi dth gliding hy. drator, ©8g server, chill drawer, 9 5 double-easy ice trays are assets of this outstandin buy! Buy it today at Federal’s | | with get the big savings! trade Installation and Service ‘Full-width freezer holds 32 Ibs. in this big family-size 10 cu. ft, KELVINATOR A small price on a big Kelvinator Regularly 249.95 refrigerator. 10 cu. ft. capacity with ; 32 Ib. freezer chest. Full-width meat and ice tray provide space for an 95 extra 19 Ibs. Twin “moisture-seal” sliding crispers and handy door with shelves are other conveniences, See " rede | it today at Federal’s! Save now! Price includes Delivery, } os = . | cod Cross-the-t Installation and Service Price includes Delivery, é | eer eee SAGINAW AT WARREN. PONTIAC - FEDERAL dept. stores OPEN MON. FRI. aa er ; s ; ; . ' . iN oF ‘ # re aS e : ‘a : \ i . f \ x A % i . j \ " % i j eA ig fi ‘ meer a. ek kk, | le peg es \ | | : ge: a : - i ; j- i ’ : i : 4 U } : ; , b = : i 7 i Y . : 4 . % F i ; f / THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 . Bes : : : _ | I was a boy if I had brought home 4 sure enough, found he had. in front of each foreleg. Otherwise, i per cent of the company’s cars. Verdict: He Deserv tt | note that would Tax Collector Caught lected to pay a personal proper- Two Heads Are Better it was a normal Hereford calf. Bleached Buggies * ‘It was virtually unknown on pas- \ = _ at negieg , . ; ch | _ _— ae fo tee | : NEW LONDON, Conn. (UP) —| wor ting.” Delinquent Record (ty tax of $3.24 for the last halt ot| WESTON, Wyo. (UP)—A ranch. | DETROIT w — Emphasizing | senger cars three years ago. vias Cet asian Vee| Se Cee on nq ino - Fal | With ty, t ¢ due | & checking his herd. after ‘the Largest Jungle Animal { what it terms: something revolu- aaaaseons Com ‘tionary in car buying habits, one| At 30 miles per hour, it would|R. Parmelee cleared a father ac-| SWAPERS SWEAR, BY Pontiac i ed of beating his son with a- : had given birth to a two-headed | __| big manufacturer reports more |take an automobile more than 11) cused © | Press Classified ads! To get what fice, checking on a delinquent tax of the South American 1”) oir its current output has | years to travel the 3,012,520 miles | belt for bringing a note trom his | animal : record, came across a report on| The Nav: Indians numbered | calf. Bob Mader said the calf’s | ae want for somethi ou don’t his boss, City Assessor Bart Zever. lonly 7,000 in 1867, and have in-| neck divided at the shoulder and | Jungle, says the National Geo-| hodies in two sharply contrasting | of rural highways in the United | teacher | Se ql ey aol Phone FE 2 he Zuver. checked into the record creased to 70,000. there was a normal head and neck | graphic Society. 'eolors. And white appears on 40! States. SASSY. ' ' . employe in the city assessor's of-| was $4.18. Zuver paid up. coo bee SO LE Ge The tapir is the largest land Man-size savings now on BOYS’ short sleeve sport SHIRTS > 100 @Convertible collars @Sanforized broadcloth @Cool slub linene GIRLS’ sun-happy styles a A with a price-slashed tag (eis Telel ie) cee || Use Federal’s en ‘ Ke Ae Cotten $ Denim 50 Boys’ 50 3 50 t : f f underwear So 1 play jeans 2 jeans 2 “2 shorts 2 . pajamas 2 “2 Briefs, 4-6-8; S-M-L. Side elastic, half belt. | Sanforized denim. 5 Semi-boxer. Seersuck- Cotton b’cloth or crepe. Athletic shirts, 6to 16. | Many colors. 6-18. pockets, zip fly. 6-16. er, cotton, rayon. 4-12. Coat or middy. 6-16. Budget-oasers CD in tots’ gay J ' cna : of ey handy Purchase | Summer $ B’cloth $ Cotton $ Girls’ $ Coupons! Pay on | dresses 2 5 midriffs 2 1 pajamas 2 3 panties 3 1 easy credit terms! Sleeveless, sunback White, pastel b’cloth, 2-pc. styles, cotton Cotton knit, plisse, styles. Sizes 3-6x, 7-12. _ striped cotton. 7-14. crepe. Prints. 8-16. rayon tricot. 414. ¥ EI A I LL A ee LE OR ER RE GML OE Oe URL a id 2 oe 4 ee j, 7 . > a Summer savings for tots! AYWEAR Your choice of better PL PLAYTOGS Qu s2 t sor ES / (\N - * 2. for | 3 Children’s TENNIS OXFORDS eWhite molded sole 1’ 5 , suits. styles. 1-6 in group. eRed or blue uppers . shite bind- sry ao oh @ Shorts, sunsuits, jeans - @Slacks, pinafores, dresses Your choice @Cabana sets, sweaters } r) | i of easy-care @Oalls, crawlers, longies TOTS’ T J @Dungaree sets, swimsuits / . Sweltering summer days mean chang- = \ ing the little ones’ togs several times anGi | .00 y “ a day .. . so Mom needs plenty of ‘ is Ss : an iris a 4 l | Ae easy-care playwear for her tots. Here Weekend Specia I! Boys Shorte. ¢' 34 Ll, ff samtae @ they are at super savings. Playtones, T S AN D ALS ore spate 79. 5, tp i) seersuckers, twills, gabs, others. Many BAREFOO -abana’s, connias ig colors. Sizes 1 to 6 in group. Save! longies. 16 in grp. | vf ee = 7 5 wae soles 7 5 eSoft leather uppers eBleck canves uppers 2-strap sandal, cut-out on yamP set Sturdy rubber and canvas. or red. Sizes 5 ke Sturdy rubs Oe C00 izhg3 Save at Federal’s! FINNS - 2 1 enone Pools and sandboxes af savi — a, Nn St ilies Large size wood sandboxes, one- $19 ee 99 man a | Yel 25] piece all-steel models, wading pool combinations. Sensational savings! FF ) FRAL SAGINAW AT WARREN PONTIAC 4 dept. storeS OPEN MON. FRI. SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 ; j ‘ * i at y | bd ; fff i i j ig ; ! ‘ie fit! \ j f ' ay j j |, j ' 400 Ib. test rope, 20” Band"leg, elastic waist, 2-pc. ayes in cool pli painted seat. Sturdy! double crotch. 1-6, cotton plisse, 1.3, i iyi ray, ' ion ; i i f fat ° el i i } ! j a ! . 4 ‘ \ * A t 1 at § : ae ‘ % \ ae a resi ee ae ee eS a \ 5 ; s . ‘ r A 4 4 ok ° vat : Mave og 40, ¥ ae ok a % i f P - " ey Sa es = F *\ i Y 4 x ‘ Reet frees v ; ; | rs yoda \ : i ; Qf | Pa — € er = a *- Zz. te Le ha eee a 4 i : \ : I . ; 5 é . | - ¢ THE PONTIAC PRESS. | THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 _~ Judge Enlists Group’ | The judge said he wants a com-. ow re | curator-driver, Sam Crockett, lost 1 Vi : ‘the post office ordered seven more gz rash Ini . |im Wichita Fails for treatment of 9 oup's ‘mittee to work out better ways of Bee Buzzes Fine Arts; | control and the vehicle overturned. Mail Via Caddie Cart Airman Crosh lnjory : mi . _' for the rest of the carriers. ‘a dislocated shoulder. He fell out Aid on Juvenile Problems: handling the cases of youngsters. Prefers Real Subjects Neither Crockett nor the cargo of PADUCAH, Ky. ® — After 35) | BIG SPRING, Tex. & — You of : CHICAGO (UP) — Judge Harold | He also said he hopes that training | SPROUSE’S CORNER, Va. (#—/ paifitings was injured. The bee years as a mail carrier, J. E. Lov- | ‘ ROOM-SEEKING FOLKS roam never can tell where you're going . P. O'Connell of family court has courses can bé given his probation The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts | departed for a study of real life/vo finally decided there must be’ the For Rent ads in The Pontiac to-have an accident. An airman| Margarine was first developed asked “22° prominent persons on| Officers. traveling artmobile has drawn | sub : an easier way to, tote the heavy press every day until they find! - |by @ French chemist in 1870 to university staffs and members of ae eens thousands of visitors, but one was| jleather bag. So he bought a two- | what they're cher Have you a | Webb agg Force Base blushingly help ease a fat si , that civie organizations to help him} Kansas is the geographic center | decidedly unwelcome. a East Pakistan has an area of | wheeled caddy cart. Three other | vacancy? Phone FE 28181 for an Wouldn't identify, had to be evacu-| came as a result of the with juvenile problems. of the United States. A bee buzzed into the cab. The | about 54/500 square miles. learriers also bought carts. And | ad-writer TODAY. |ated to Sheppard “Air Force Base | Prussian war, f “ae Beat-the-heat styles at a Tiny price tags for sensational values! LINGERIE $3 @Slips, petticoats @ Puffy Can-Cans @Dainty baby dolls @ Pajamas, gowns @Cotton, crepe, plisse Sleeveless, short sleeves, sensational savings price PLAYWEAR 33 @ Pedal pushers, 10-18 @ Tee-toppers, S-M-L @ Midriffs, halters, 32-38 @Bras, camisoles, 32-38 @Shorts, 10-18 . . I Lace - laden slips, 32 - 46; magic- high or low necklines! panel petticoats and popular baby ‘ dolls, S-M-L. Waltz-length gowns, WOMEN S BLOUSES 32-40, 2-piece pajamas, 34-40. Lux- Dacron, broadcloth, | ury lingerie at a budget - saving nylon, pima! White, $ | price! Hurry to Federal’s for yours! ca colors, patterns. for | Sizes 32-38, 40-46. | “Somerset” | ‘men'sersvan | DOLLAR DAYS PANTY SALE! | “sratersicses Trunk and Brief Styles Novelty panels, trims Elastic leg briefs Qreadduk Decres. Cuffed shorts, 10-18. Midriffs, Skirts, 22-30, 32-38; pop- ‘ $ halters, 32-38. Camisoles, sun 00 lin jackets, gab slacks. $ Trunks, X-XX. Cotton or rayon $ Mesh, 2-bar Bem- $ nylon, pima, Bates dis- i bras, S-M-L. Short sleeve, 12-20, Pedal pushers. 10- for ~ XXX. Nylon 2 fer | briefs. Colors. fer 1 berg. White, pas- 4 for 1 ciplined cotton! Sum- for sleeveless tee-toppers. S-M-L. 18. Jeans. 10-20; 38-44. briefs. Size 5-6-7. 5-7. X-XX-XXX. tels, high shades, mer hues. 32-38, 40-46. Toreadors in style- right denim, chambray, twill or poplin. New Ital- ian look tee-toppers in solids and stripes. Sun bras and other toppers in strap or strapless styles. Cuffed shorts in poplin, cord, twill, denim, chambray. Save now at Federal's! oo 9. aes SUMMER | ‘ HeuiSalt Save on 60 and 51-gauge full-fashioned nylons Dark seam irregular $ nylons that won't af- fect the wear. 815-11. prs. Cool summery knee-hi's in sun-drenched colors Full- fashioned plus $ via Sine Bg TE 2 a1 Cool and comfortable 51- Senet: , ae pier eee arrs Savings on Waldorf Save! Federal’s ow rystal clear! Re- : ; ngu ieee tee 3,; HIRTS, PAJAMAS MEN’S UNDERWEAR 819-11. Irregulars. SUMMER COTTONS Min Cloth dress shirts. Sizes Stretch nylons made by ae. — 32-35, Long sleeve S$ Combed cotton athlet; i Pinafores, sleeveless cottons, quick- : . amen ee > ML. Sanforized 36-46, T-shirt lbrice, Cres change button and zip fronts! Solids, 00 Oriental Lady for perfect fit Pajamas. Sigs A. B.C. D. for Broadcloth shen iriets, SOM-L. $ stripes, checks, pastels, prints. Prac- No bag, sag, wrinkle. 00 Bripper styles. Sizes a xer or tical and so very pretty! Sizes 12-20, Fach pair a perfect oe 164-2414, 38-44, 46-52. Save now! fit. Sizes A - B - C. ’ —- as ~ ad. New Cotton Print Aprons $ Summer Costume Jewelry S Bib and band styles to suit your fer Chalk white or pastels. Necklaces, for fancy. Variety of prints. Save now! bracelets, earrings, matched sets. . plus U. S. tax a Ee cay Sheer White Nylon Gloves $ Better Nylon Gloves u » ed a coe wear or dress-up. prs. Snowy-white sheer nylon, 40 and « ni! ain, novelty or fancy cuf 15-denier. In sizes 614-744. Save! a ee _ 4 Belted : a . at just 3% time wear! Washfast, sanfor- matching putter pants aed met ahinkage’ 1°, For work, sports or leisure. Elastic boxer waist, 2 pockets. Washable—max. shrinkage 3°,. In boys’ sizes 4 to 12 85°, rayon, 15° nylon. Waist sizes 30 thru 42. twill Putter pant = “cf ~ 998 © only /\ ONG , a, Ba now—at Seers lust sey “CHARGE IT PLEASE" ‘ \ \ @ Jackets and pants are matching © Wear ‘em for work, sports, leisure © In 4 assorted cool summer colors © Self belt, elastic side inserts Me assure perfect fit for you ate \ e J k ® * . , . ac * we knit wrists, vaistbond Men’s Roughshod © Both in easy-to-wash twill fabric Utility Slacks SOLD ONLY BY SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Boyville Nylon Short Sleeve Shirts Men's Clothing—Main Floor ; 98 37 HERCULES wont Ae eS ‘e ° ; use Sears easy credit Slew Sy, Pe opens prints on Sow omy ev en's rayon slacks fortifie “eo nylon pucker — need SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. plan on purchases with 15% nylon for extra®wear, no ironing. Pp comrertitie Zipper fly. Max. shrinkage 3%. collar. Sizes 4 to 16. Save! Waist sizes 29 to 42. . totaling $20 or more! Boys’ Clothing—Main Floor ‘4 N. Saginaw St. , poly FE 2-4242 Calitfaclion gumnanlbed or your monty back SNR’ 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5.4171 n * / (i f R Le ey { / % ° ligt t , y ry / (oe yl } jf j rf i 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 BRUSHING UP — Joseph Giustjno’s job at Republic Aviation Cor- poration’s Farmingdale, N. Y., plant is painting small signs on jet planes. But he's better known to Air Force pilots all over the country; for his lunch-time art—decorating their plastic helmets. Here he puts the finishing touches on a fire-breathing dragon for one of his ‘“cus- tomers.” Washington and Franklin Are Common Town Names WASHINGTON—Town and city; siderable transformation—to Sun- place names from A (Aaron, Ky.) |"Y Valley. Hell-to-Pay, Wash. to Z (Zylks, La.) dot the face of evolved Into Eltopay and later 2 , j into Eltopia. the United States, mirroring its his- | ° ; om - tory, charm, customs and sense: of QUITE A CHANGE | Mountain, W. Va., was made out Tk lof a Mole Hill in 1949. Long ago The commonest post office Hangtown, Calif., decided to forget names in the country are: Frank- the gruesome past. It is now lin and Clinton, each attached to | Placerville. Hot Spot, Ky.. became 27 «cities, towns or hamlets; | Premium. Prosperity, S.C., was Washington and Chester, 26; Ar- ce oe eae lington and Troy, 25; Kentucky and West Virginia Manchester, Princeton, Newport emer, [ee ae Sot and Greenville, 24 each. renme (Ct - copevaties Hace <) (els names, Hardshell, Baptist, Pumpkin Chapel, Hi Hat, Stop- over, Brightshade, Julip, Mud Lick, Mud Camp, Fishtrap, Pip- papass point up to the Blue Grass State. West Virginia pos- sesses Justice, Cinderella, Mud, Petroleum, Auto, Gip, Bim, Bud, Looneyville and Cuztzie. These place names, however, are outnumbered by the simple, workaday word Summit, says the National Geographic Society. Only 11 Summits are large enough to warrant post offices, but in all there are nearly 70 Summits scat- tered from California .to Rhode i and Marion, | | | Island. Most are wayside spots; many merely whistle stops at the top of railroad grades, some scarcely populated in the im- mediate vicinity. Nearly 20 States have more than one Summit—New York, Ohio, Tennessee and Pennsy!- vania at least four each. Other eye-catchers are: Solo, Dawn, Minimum, Huzzah, Clever in Missouri; Hurry, Dames Quarter, Accident in Maryland; Barnstable in Massachusetts; Only, Difficult in Tennessee; Ben Hur} |in Virginia; Cee Vee (from a | branding iron), Tarzan in Texas; Communities frequently wish to | Brave, Bird in Hand (from an old change their designations and tavern), Distant in Pennsylvania. | when they do, the problem likely {ee lands in the lap of the Board on| Also: Bread Loaf in Vermont; Geographic Names in the Depart- Weeping Water, Wynot (from Why ment of Interior. | Not) in Nebraska; Meddybemps in Maine; Sleepy Eye ifrom a | Sioux chief) in Minnesota; Marked . | Tree, Evening Shade, Smackover. pps ~~ is mow Gene (id in Arkansas: Economy in In- sont ; people of Hot | diana: Buncombe in Ilinois; Bunn- prings, N. Mex., changed their jege) in North Carolina: Battiest town te Truth or Consequences. and Bowlegs in Oklahoma. Grave Creek, Ore., made a con-| The West has Zigzag in Oregon: = * |Twodot in Montana; Cocolalla in ° | Idaho; Dusty in New Mexico; Kay- Ain't New No More cee in Wyoming; Rough and Ready HOLLYWOOD «— Oscar Ham- jn California: Paradox in Colo- merstein of musical world fame rado; and Jiggs in Nevada. was touring the set of ‘‘Okla-| * * « homa” at a movie studio. On an’ In the deep South there are Soso impulse he asked a deputy sheriff.’ and Askew_in Mississippi; Water who was escorting him, what he Proof in Louisiana; America, thought of the production. “Just | Choccolocco and Vinegar Bend in great,"’ said the deputy, ‘but why--Alabama; Round O in South Caro- are they using all that old lina; and Ty Ty and Social Ciricle music?”’ iin Georgia. Many towns have already been through the renaming process. Summer Clearance SUITS ‘222 Values to $40.00 SUMMER SHIRTS All Sizes ‘J 49 Up Nylon’s Cotton's - Dacron’s Swim Suits-Play Shorts $ U Soe A EE MEN’S WORK SHIRTS REG. $2.98 $] 88 | BLUE 3] 00 UNIFORM STYLES | CHAMBRAY... Men’s Sho | Si se iid Shs $2.49 Men's Dungarees . . $1.69 Save! Save! Save! 9@ CLOTHES CONN’S 71:N. Saginaw | ROEBUCK AND CO. Our 4.59 Part Wool Now at Even Greater Savings 7ox80-Inch «6s 3, J Warm, light yet extra strong weave! Fine blend o! 10% new wool, 60% lustrous rayon, 30°, cotton. 6 colors. * a ali ATI | \ ener Washable Comfort All Nylon-Filled Taffeta a 29 ©6997 New washable Chrometast ace- tate tilled with light warm ny- lon. 2-tone -Choice of 4 colors, Down Comforte 2-Tone, Reversible and Fitted Reg. 22.95! $0c Holds It 17.87 Now at Sears .. . luxurious acetate satin in beautiful re- versible contrasting colors. All down filled. 72x84. ¢ holds yours ‘til October Ist our 9.98 warm fleecy Harmony House Blankets all warm wool 7” 50c¢ Holds It Grand value at its regular price ... now save even more! New soft fluffy wool bound in acetate non-fray satin. Guaranteed 5 years against moth damage. 6 lovely colors. 72x84-in. Save 2.41 Each! ® Tuscan Rose © Sage Creen ® Horizon Bive © imperial Red 0&8 r00 oor © Sunshine © Emerald SOLO ONLY BY Yellow Green SEARS. ROFBUCK AND CO, Domestic Dept.—Main Floos Save 2.11 on wonder-wash wool ‘n nylon Regularl 87 03” 10% 80% new wool and 20° ny- lon makes it a miracle for warmth, strength, washabill- ty and lustrous beauty! Ny- lon binding, guaranteed for lanket's life. Guaranteed against moth damage for 5 years, Lovely colors. 72x90. Guaranteed washable! 6.98 Harmony House warm part wool blend save 1.01 to 3.01 Now! Save 1.99! Quilts Regular 5.98 Beauty — For Bedroom, Budget 3 99 80x84-Inch i fesse Lightweight covering at night, bed- spread during -the day. Multi-color patterned cover with all cotton filling. Full cut size! Tootsie Rolls Reg. 39 33¢ Lb. Bakery Fresh, Creamy Center Everybody loves these old fa- vorites .. . so solt and chewy with real rich chocolate cara- mel taste. Buy—save now! Sugar Wafers 39¢ ib. “Bite-Size” Taste Treats Reg. 49c | A delicious addition to any dessert! Dainty sugar. waters filled with vanilla and choco- late cream. Try some today! Seve 97 Candy Dept—Sears Main Floor - a: eee 1.01! =) . — Y Compare this fine blend with blankets >I selling for much more! 12% wool, for a, good warmth, 88% strong rayon for i, = ’ longer wear and lustrous finish. Pink, LD a ———4 , blue, yellow, red, deep or pale green, AK F —— 1 72x90-in. Come in now! WH SS 9 wi A —— ek ae rer OF :! ——— SOLD ONLY BY = SEARS. ROFBUCK AND CO. =5 prices! eee Lemp and Mirror Dept.—2nd Floor Fine Harmony House Quality J Reg. 15.98, r) 24x36-Inch..... Reg. 21.98, 30x40-Inch..... Reg. 26.98, 30x48-Inch..... Reg. 34.98 Mirror, 30x60-in. .. . .27.88 Enhance the beauty of your,home with Harmony House mirrors — at Perfect for living rooms as well as bedrooms; Made of heavy plate glass with expertly coppered back on masonite for true reflection! Savel PPOS BIA EE i) | 12" : B88 1 88 — ‘+ Venetian Blinds 21x64-In., Reg. 2.49 178 Extra low sale priced, but durable and attractive with. channel-type headbox that hides mechanism. White enam- . eled finish. Check your size — and savel Reg. 2.98 and 3.59, 23 to 36 in. sizes....... .2 for 5.00 budget ae Ly ie sale! our “economy” — trouser creasers Cotton Dishcloths Regularly 19¢c Each, Save Now Reduced 6 for 77 ¢ Washfast multicolor plaids in walfle weave. 14x!5-inches. Buy @ year's supply at Sears sale price: now Reg. 49c Each You Set The Amount! ts Modern It 4 Convenient! 3” 99 Fits both adult and children sizes 10 and up. Eliminates hours of ironing! Pants dry in neat press with sharp creases. Save time end work with creasers, They're easy to handle, Save now! oor RCSA Linen Toweling SAA Ned " WE Sie * PRPs rj Bright Washfast Colors ew Cee Reg. 5 = 3G E Ya. . SEA ; Ds Of extra fine quality tor oreater b ae absorbency. Bright yarn-dyed cotton stripes. In qay | colors. 16-in. width. 4 ! Sa , ; ! f i oP EE Choice of 2 Sizes—At 60¢ Savings! oieeaitamnane [29 Each! . Soil and wrinkle resistant Dacron® fabric is easy to wash : : . . . quick to dry. Double stitched side hems and decorator ; 40x81-In tops. Choose yours in sparkling white for more beautiful Size windows. Save now — at Sears! e 40x90-In. Reg. 1.98 ...1.39 cS \ ” / “A pour monty back SEARS _ TAN. Saginaw St. Phone FE S471 TWELVE '° * b -. oe ‘Davy's First Bear Shot at Age of 8 OKAWVILLE, ILL. (i# — Davy Crockett didn’t kill a bear when he was three, according to éne of his nearest living relatives. The first ‘killing by thte famed Indian fight- | er and frontiersman didn’t occur | until he was eight. Contrary to song and story, Margie Ree Chon. According to family eqoade: Mrs. | Chon said Davy Crockett was re- sponsible for obtaining meat for the family when he was eight | because his father and older broth- ers were too busy with the crops. To do this job, Davy was given one bullet a day. If he shot and | missed he still had to get the meat. In a short time, he rarely missed, Officials of the 1938 Texas Cen- tennial compiled a genealogy trac- oe oe New Welfare S Secretary: meee ay J “toy, THE PONTIAC PRESS. a THURSDAY. JULY: VA. 1935 5 Red Clover bicevery Folsom: Fathered Layoff Pay Plan By FRANK O'BRIEN that | is the word. passed on by Mrs. | WASHINGTON w—Marion Bay- ard Folsom, chosen by President | Eisenhower today to be the new secretary of health, education and welfare, is a founding father of | the social security system. He devised, and put into practice in 1928 a private social security| | system at the Eastman Kodak Co., ‘where -he was assistant to the chairman. That was seven. years before the United States became the last of the major industrial nations to legislate protection lagainst old age, unemployment and ——— * le And in 1931, as unemployment mounted toward its depression worst, Folsom organized 14 com- Rochester, N. Y., in- “*Ro- panies at cluding? astman, into the - Kent Employment Up _Employment Security Commission. ing Mrs.‘ Chon's relationship to chester Plan''—a scheme of ‘lay- Crockett. {off pay. similar in many respects Crockett and his wife had three | to the agreements signed this children, two boys and one girl. | spring by Ford and General Motors The daughter, Margaret Finley | with the CIO United Auto Workers. Crockett, married Wiley Flowers. This ¢ffort, startling in the dank They were the parents of Mrs. | depression year of 1931, sent hope- Cohn’s grandfather, David Flowers. | ful delegations from cities across David's son, Thomas, was Mrs. | the: nation to Rochester to confer Chon’s father, making Davy _ with Folsom, in hopes_ that other her great-great grandfather. cities could imitate the “Rochester “unemployment benefit plan.” * * * The plan coming atop the East- man-finaneed social security plan for its wage earners made Folsom nationally known as a big busi- ness executive with a bent for social planning. Folsom, now 61, was born Nov. GRAND RAPIDS ® — Michigan | reports show Kent County employ-- ment continued an Upward swing in June. ‘Figures list 109.800 wage and salaried workers for the period ending June 15, compared with | 23. 1893 in McRae. Ga.. He is a 109,500 for the previous period, An‘ quiet, soft-spoken man who neither’ unemployment jump—from 2,600 in| drinks nor. smokes and has made May to 3,000 in June—was de- | a life ‘Speciality of the dusty com- scribed the result of an influx of | plexities of pensions, and tax and/| verition at students into the labor market. social security law, YOUR ACCOUNT When the Eisenhower admin- istration came into power, Folsom was appointed undersecretary of the treasury for tax matters. From the outset, his job was the complete revision, first in over 70 years, of the federal tax code put into law last year, Folsom ' elaimed little public notice for his | part in devising the new 900-page tax law, but it is very much his, own work, | * » * That job done, he had planned to return to private business this) But the illness in her’ summer, family which prompted Mrs, Oveta Culp Hobby's resignation as sec- retary of welfare opened a job Folsom could not resist—admin- istering and making policy for the social security system he helped develop. SUSINESS passion Harvard School with a depression weapon. It was with this background that for tigures and detail, has very often seen an advantage to busi- ness as well as to workers and Folsom, a graduate Set Up Piano Award | INTERLOCHEN (P— Grinnell Bros, music house has announced a $1,000 piano scholarship, to be awarded annually to a Michigan piano student selected by the Michigan Federation of Music Clubs. The ‘scholarship was an- nounced by Lloyd P. Grinnell of Detroit, president of the music firm, attending the current Michi- gan Federation of Music Clubs con- the National Music Camp. About 90 per cent of U.S. babies | ‘are born n in hospitals. Put your pennies to work helping you have fun! end-of-season prices... to the blouses, pants, All summer sportswear at . but there's no end times you ll wear these skirts, shirts, ‘long and short for lounging or play, "round, Hurry year in and save. Clothes Dress the young misses of all ages at Mays! Every- thing playclothes dresses for parties. of all—you can charge all their clothes, too! MAY*§% they need from to fancy Best CREDIT CLOTHING Open Friday and Monday Nights 98 South Saginaw St. Opposite Auburn Ave. ‘week, the community in proposals that, the late President Roosevelt picked | set other businessmen to crying Folsom, a Republican, to help “Sscialism.” ‘frame the social security laws. = Folsom has served as a director In 1931 he publicly urged adop-| of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce tion by industry of the five--day and as a member of the Com-| Also, he tolda national, merce Department's advisory’ meeting of Community Chest ex-| council. He is an overseer of Har- | ecutives that planned public works | vard College and he is a Presby- | could be used as a powerful anti- | terian. : * * Resists Stem Disease (UP) CHAMPAIGN, Il. new variety of medium red clover, | | resistant to northern anthracnose, | ‘a stem disease, has been released by several midwest agricultural ‘experiment stations after 10 years of testing. C. N. Hittle of the University of ' Iineis’ agricultural school said a ‘limited amount of seed will be | available in 1956. The new clover, named Dollard, ‘has shown up exceptionally well in [the northern two-thirds of Illinois, - Nosh Officio! Dies out-yielding other varieties when | anthracnose is present. GRAND RAPIDS uw — Arnoid 'E. Pierson, traffic manager at | Nash-Kelvinator at Grand Rapids, died Tuesday at his home after an illness of 11. weeks. He was 60. a Conmienars Shifts Aide GRAND RAPIDS &®—Philip R. Brown, assistant to the Consumers | ‘Power Co.. division manager at! Battle Creek, Wednesday was named to a similar post at Grand Rapids. Brown has held the Battle Creek post since 1952. Advertisement) Husbands! Wives! Get Pep, Vim; Feel Younger. | ‘Thousands of couples are weak, worm-out,.ex- hausted just because body lacks iron. For new younger feeling after 40, try Ostrex —_ The ostrich makes a noise which on . 4 i, P q | Tablets. Contain iron for p sounds much like the rear of 4) go) vitamins By and B f ARE teeeorciend lion. | acquainted” size = 50¢. At all druggists, Hose Sprinkler Tough Vinyl! Plastic Hose 25-Ht. 2.7 5 It's flexible. Bends around trees, up hills, through ditches Sprays from one to 14 feet wide. 25-it. Other sizes. control! Dunlap Lawn Rake With Grass-Saving Flat Tines 98s 18-In. Wide tay em Brass Ring Sprinkler 1.49 Hose Reel Cart Holds 150-ft. Plastic Hose fires Can cover a All Steel A. 98 YY pf / 20-tt diameter : circle Makes a Year round st je tor ur No showertor garden hose t ‘roll it son aes children to into yard for use Rust-resist- ‘ 2 play in dunng ing steel coriatruction. * hot days CLEARANCE! PET save 9 tele | Ta RDP iy Ney Wet Remnants and Slightly Discolored Oaklawn Fence 22 | Fence in your property for beauty and protection - for your children and pets! You can do the job yourself at big savings! Everything you need is available at Sears — and at saving prices, too! Fence Yard—Sears Parking Lot— . Calitfaclion ® Regularly 31c Ft. e You Save 9c Per Ft. COMFORT AT SEARS Exclusive “Magic Control” 21-inch Craftsman Self-Propelled Rotary ae c You Sey T Y's Modern | he Amount! ' ‘ Convenien POWER MOWER * » * “5 a rd With the exclusive “Magic Control” you fust raise the handle to start the mower. Lower the handle and the mower stops! It’s a safer, single Famous Craftsman quality; cuts a full 21-inch shale 2 tycle \ Power Products engine with “Automatic rewind starter.” Height NS of cut easily adjusted troin 1'4 to 3'3-inches. Sy je an type, x wheels set in, tims close. Come in now... see it at Sears \ lower price! $14 Down 13 Clieck These Value-Packed Features: Hardware Dept. Sears Basement ASK FOR FREE MOWER DEMONSTRATION Phone FE 5-4171 Mixer Cook Socks Qver 256 Pages. 934 Recipes With Purchase FREE of the Mixer 23.95 Value Written for electric mixer and blender users Exciting recipes for meals, parties. Many help ideas tul hint ij 12-Speed Mixer All New Kenmore Design 29.95 UL Listed $2 DOWN Smart, tops in food-mixing' Front speed control, slide-ou' speed table. Reverse-turning bow] adjustment. New Grill Woffler Toasts, Grills, Bakes, Fries 13.95 Bakes four large watliles at once, has automatic heat con- trol Opens flat for use as a grill. Makes popular gift Kenmore 07 your money back SENRS é a Wall Light Sale Replace the Old... Add More Reg. 2.79 2.19 One-light wall fixtures for the kitchen, bath or laundry. Ex- Roto-Broil ‘400’ All Glass Spatter Shield Form. 39.95 29.95 $3 DOWN infra-red rotisserie t re barbecues, roasts; tends 6!/)-in. white glass brotls, toasts, grills, tries, 3- shade with clear bottom, heat switch sides Save $10 oe =) ee iy Ae Special Purchase! Sold Regularly for 8.95 Dinette Fixture habe _Adds a note of colonial charm to your dinette! Hand- somely styled of polished brass-plated steel. Hangs 24 to 36-in. Hood has 13-inch:diameter and reflecting white interior. Listed by U.L. Save 3.07‘now! Electrical Dept.—Sears Basement @ Buy Now... Save 3.07! @ Rich Red or Green Enameled Hood 54 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 5-4171° i ot . ss : i ' ; Wy, | \ f | fs ; | “4 aa sens tare "a THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, Ju LY 14, 1955 } Land Animals Swim Well When Necessity Arises Five in Family Pick [Sstcicne and lena, , cam | Vegetables Are Tops WASHIGTON — “O}’ swimming | monkeys bathes along the sea- hole" time is approaching for the | shore, and in Washington some | American boy, one of the few water - loving. North American | Rivers present no problem for mammals not a born swimmer. ne 15-pound Texas armadillo. | While hundreds of thousands “of | The armored beast swims wide | learning period of thrashing clum- sily about in river, lake, surf or pool, less resourceful lower animals seem to have built- in swimming ability. Most land animals, when the can propel themselves in water “Ty. The hare and hedgehog some. times take voluntarily to water, says the National Geographic Society. The mighty moose swims well. Bats can hold up on watery surfaces, , Ermine navi- gate proficiently In Puerto Rico a c colony of ; youngsters must go through a) on of narrow streams. ocean | need arises, |less mole swims among flooded some with agility some awkward. | ental and probes the ground years ago, ereeks but walks across the bot-. ane star-nosed mole, with its 2 fleshy tentacles, has a flair for aquatin 8, occasionally moving | under ice. A resident of Canada and the United States, the rest- or worms, The four-inch-long brown lem- mings, arctic inhabitants of old and new worlds, are dogged swimmers. Tawny, with short tails and furry feet, the crea- an escaped monkey plurged into the Potomae River and eluded a pursuing rowboat. for “more than an hour. home _Taiding thickets and hen- | | tures sometimes assemble in the millions to migrate. Neither lakes nor streams stop their march, When reaching the sea, as in Norway, they plunge in and, acting on some mysterious impulse, swim away to death. The brawniest lifeguards can't |compare with a polar bear in water. Occasionally, after the! seasonal retreat of ice, the big} white bears are seen in open sea far off the Labrador coast. A wounded female once swam = danger while shielding a cub twice the size of a Newfoundland dog between her forelegs. One | |ship’s company watched a bear) climb an uptilted ice pan, lie | its side and Slide 40 feet head- first to a watery splash. The solitary mink is equaily at | houses for food or seeking its fill with otterlike ease se under water. Taint Fann McGee BEVERLY HILLS, Calif, @— who has some) | uranium claims in Kern County, Frank Shinee, sent his representative, Jack Adams, to check up on them. Back came a postcard from Adams: “Having wonderful time. Wish uranium were here.” Careers in Medicine IOWA CITY (UP) -— When the last of A. W.. Berryhill’s 10 chil- dren finish at the University of ‘Towa here in 1957, five will be in ‘the medical profession, of medicine, and Glenda, 21, com- pleted nurses training last year. Rain Won't Tell PORTALES, N. M. (® — Ab | French, head of Roosevelt County's DAVIS, Calif, (® — The super giant among California's agricul- tural giants is the vegetable in- dustry. So says J, E. Knott, chairman of the Department of Vegetable Crops at the State Agri- cultural College. He said vege- The “medical family” 1951 when Boyd, now 41, enrolled in the college of medicine. He is a | ‘pediatrician at Eugene, | ter Marion is a nursing at Hendrick Memorial Abilene, Texas. Brothers Clinton, 27, and LeRoy, started in drought committee, had about all ‘the water he could use. A hail | double the state's combined vol- and rain storm broke off all his Ore. Sis-| fence-post rain gauges and he had instructor hospital, | water. He said he'd “swear to between five or six inches of rain, and I think we had more.” to use buckets to measure the | table shipments in 1954 more than ume of grapes, citrus fruits, de- ciduous fruits, nuts, berries and | miscellaneous fruits, Playing cards made of plastic date back to the early 1900's. Glasse GUARANTEED 13 NO. SAGINAW ST. Follow the crowds to Sears for Savings Specials...We’'ve | | got everything under the sun for you during our exciting SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO. LVERYONES GOING TO. ow Values You Can't Afford to Miss! Shop Today While Selection Is Large! TDRESSES ‘|s3 ; Values to $12.99 Sunbacks Pastels Cottons Sheers ‘4 - 55 | Plaids | ” ; Dressy * i MS cli ‘COATS ana SUITS: Every Coat and Suit in Our Stock Has Been Drastically Reduced for Quick Selling Reductions 50% and More SA. CLE ANCE |] ALL SUMMER HATS Drastically Reduced ‘SKIRTS 5198 Values to A SPECIAL GROUP $3.98 SPECIALLY PUDCHASED iia SKIRTS FROM OUR OWN | STORE [BLOUSES SHORTS POLO SHIRTS HALTERS MIDRIFFS Your Choice 19 Quantity on Our A Limited “Lemon Tree” to Go at Only *] CHILDREN’S DRESSES Values to $2.99 tor 3 OB $1.59 Each Famous Make BRAS During this Sale only! Lovable and Adorable OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS ‘SWIM | SUITS | runnin 3 8 4 4 WEAR REDUCED 2" *1.69° * 89 3 Ways To Buy ff] ; Customized Radios Full Power, Large Speaker Reg. 36.95 9.75 Compares with radios selling for over $40. Panel matches dash of most cars. See it at Sears now! 6 or 12 volt —— ‘eS f Allstate Chamois 100% Oil-Tanned Sheepskin 19x25S-inch Soft, one-piece chamois ab- sorbs water, wrings clean. For dusting and polishing use in home or on car! $3 Dewn ~ vt ae SEAT COVER SALE! Better Plastic Covers Regularly Priced at 18.95—Installed @ Made of Saran Plastic, Withstands Wear @ Rich Channel-Embossed Vinyl! Trim @ Matching Rayon Skirt and Back © Choice of Red, Blue or Green Colors Best Plastic Seat Covers Reg. 9 5 ~ 24.95 2.50 F*, Down ” — Our finest covers reduced to save Bao: & you $3! New cool weave, handy map pocket in front skirt. Glamor- ous patterns in choice of green or blue. Installed! Auto Accessories—Perry St. Basement 24-Month Batteries For Any 6-Volt Car Complete Oi] Change in Handy Container! ALLSTATE MOTOR OIL iu 104 Ps 79° Why wait ie ia battery "dies’? Save now High quality oil does with Sears low prices! outstanding job in kee’ i Wencines There's an Allstate 24- a > belnies month service guaranteed Goan Moke Your own battery for all popular oil change — now and makes of cars. Shop Sears save! today ... take advantage of these low prices! « Cash Layaway Budget OPEN FRIDAY TIL 9 P. M. More Carefree Miles at Extra Savings! 21° to 264 TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE When You Buy a Set of 4 New ALLSTATE CUSHIONS 31 6.70x15 Pius Tax EACH, IN SET OF 4 AND 4 OLD TIRES! , @ 18-month nation-wide triple guarantee @ “Cut-Skid” tread, greater grip on road! @ Extra tough X-41° Cold Rubber tread! @ Cool running bonded rayon cord body! No Trade-in Price, 21.75 Ea. Set of 4 We ALLSTATE SEAT > COVERS INSTALLED FREE! USE SEARS NEW REVOLVING CHARGE Se ee 6.70215 | 87.00 | 65.25. |- 21.75 TAGS | 97.80 | 73.35 | 24.45 ‘1.60218 | 105.80 | 79.35 | 26.45 All Prices Plus Tax end Old Tires ONLY 10% DOWN ON Sears Easy Payment Plan Aas ie ae 154 North Saginaw St. |} Phone FE 5-4171. ° Cushions 1.99 Ride in greater * comfort. Airy i construc- tion. Wipe clean 4 with damp cloth. - 45 Spark Plugs 39¢ Flat to flat gap, greater sparking area. Assures f.~ easier. starts . ~ Get a set for your car! 1.59 Car Pillows 99¢ New wrap around design. \, + Made of smooth rayon and stur- = dy plastic. Easy J to carry! Save! —<4 Easy Auto Shampoo 39¢ Removed grease, i grime or dirt. 12 envelopes for 12 car washes . . i Fast and effi. cient. Allstate Compass 3.45 A pleasing gift. Accurate, easy sto read dial. . Built-in appear- ance oa Lighter ... 4.45 Gasoline Cans 79¢ | Well sealed can has flexible 7'/3« inch spout | . Ideal for Hoat- _ ing, farm use of f clean. © Clamps on top of win- oy and into. ie eo ee A FOURTEFN' ©: |. or Srmal seen | 1ice’s Wartime Colleague Avenue. . Si. areee ee | Hint Zhukov May Attend , Pontiac ‘ool, Howard LL. Cooley, Isa- Precision Ti : _MALRR. | li per- sir orm eaten te" (Geneva Talks as Delegate conn chieftain also reportedly told Tito which the Commission decided should! Ns European General Manager | that Stalin was losing his mind for. sons roll of the @pecial Assessment heretofore mad the City Assessor for the pur- > : ; 0 ee Seta ‘ot the cost | ‘By KINGSBURY SMITH paid and borne by special assess- be t ment for the construction of sidewalk |) (ENEVA—Soviet Defense Min-| several years before his death om the north side of Orchard Lake Ave- nue from Voorheis Road to Telegraph | ister and World War II hero Mar- and toward the end indulged in ishal Georgi Zhukov was reported | wild parties and drinking orgies. SEARS , ROEBUCK ANDCO. ; fs now on file in my office for public inspection. Notice is also hereby given that the } - mission and the Assessor of the | by Russian sources to be a mem- | Com City of Pontiac, will meet in the Com- | 8 ; mission Chamber in the City of a ‘ber of the Russian delegation to fm said City, on the 19th day of July | : ; fs 7 A. Sn eset 8:00 o'clock PM. to re. next week's Geneva chiefs of view said assessment, at which time and | | aoe place opportunity will be given all per- ; State conference. sons tare het Taees heard. * Det july 12, 195 , , ADA idl poate These informarits in the Swiss | ity Cler per July 14, 1955 | lakeside ‘city oad — | ———!who commanded the defense o NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT— | : See ee Sidewalk on the North Side of Voorhets | Moscow and led the Red armies — Moward OG! Powers) Cherch of | to victory over Nazi Germany, God, Hugh C. and Marguerite Smith. | will welcome an opportunity to re- | Roy Corwin, Enoch P Holtin. James F |. ee acg eee : , acqui Barling, Paul C. Carson and to all per- | N€W his wartime frie ndly acquaint sons interested, take notice: That pes ahce with President Eisenhower roll of the Special Assessment heretofore see th Coneva talk : made by the City Assessor for ae pur- during the Geneva talks pose of defraying that part of the cost which the Commission decided should | There was a_ possibility that be paid and borne by special assess- | adh . 5 ‘ ment for the construction of sidewalk | the barrel-chested marshal . will on the north side of Voorhels Road from | seek a private infermal chat Ottawa Drive to west line of Seminole : A * Hills ts new on file in my office for With his wartime colleague-in- — rearapeta : en thet the| Brae in an effort to assure the ‘otice is also hereby given th h is i = . Commission and the Assessor of the| U.S. chief executive that Russia City of Pontiac, wil! meet in the Com- | . — “a mission Chamber tn the City of Pontiac, | does have peaceful intention im said City. on the 10th day of July; oi. - = A. D.. 1955 at 8-00 o'clock PM. to re- | Since arriving in Geneva,. this cal renal ereamngrongn sn oe andj correspondent has heard an amaz- ace oO rtunity Ww e given al were | ee trlstected to be heard. - | ing tale concerning the role that Deted July 12, 1065 | | vane | Zhukov allegedly played in con- City Clerk. | nection with Hquidation of former a July 14. 1955) Soviet Interior Minister and Secret NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT—/ Police Chief Lavrenti P. Beria. Sidewalk and Related Work on West * * Bide of Jessie Street ; _ © "er et do of Jeele Street. mond Me. | SHOW OF STRENGTH Cture, Mrs. Rhoda Piynn, Foster Lev- | Jf jt is true, it wotld be a ering, J. E. LaVeque, Lucille Amaden and | ; to ail persons interested, take notice | further indication of the strength That the roll of the Special Assessment Stina heretofore made by the City Assessor for | of his position in the Soviet setup. the pur rd od defraying thet part of the bd * * ‘ whi th Co ission decided : a ¢ a ; r “horas eciG According to the INS informant, assesament for the construction of mee | Soviet Communist Party boss‘ of!" s j Ss should be paid and borne by special walk and related work on west side zai Jessie Street from Auburn Avenue to inside story of how Beria was re- Whittemore Street is now on file in My | yrip: , nicaears Bay rans . cffice for public inspection | Nikita S. Khurhschev revealed this octet it else, hereby given a = |moved: to Yugoslavia's Marshal ommission and the Assessor 0 @ | mn —_ riei City of Pontisc, will meet in the Com- | Tito during the recent visit of- mission amber in the City of Pontiac. | Sovie eaders o. th Balkan im sald City, on the 19th day of July | Soviet lead AR : e F A.D. 1955 at 8:00 o'clock PM., to re- | State. : view said assessment, at which time and 4 - \ a . Ginas (eeportunmy | willibel given (alll par Khrushchev said the showdown ons interested to be heard over Beria came when the latter t 5 ‘ mB : ‘ ee. ea kK Evans | ies to aceept x catelnet of City Clerk. | his police powers following Stalin's July 14, 1988 |. Shee rs f wing. ae) === | death: : ‘ | | | | | The other members of the Soviet presidium became con- vineed Beria was seeking to step | | into Stalin's shoees' as the abso- pL ~_! lute ruler of the Soviet Union. it was decided to replace him | and a special meeting of the presi- | dium was called for that purpose. a a BELT Une t : Fz ' . | Beria, learning the purpose of the _jfd R an ? « 2 | meeting, refused to attend. Zhu-- Py * = |kov sent troops to bring the min- 52! + * |ister to the Kremlin by force, | bat $ 4 * |which they did. : | (| BERIA ACCUSED = rn ye According to thé story, Beria| F . = A & pat tay hea : then was accused by the now Soviet ORDINANCE NO. 1280 Premier Nikolai A. Bulganin and ° AB Ordinance to Amend the Building | by Khrushchev and others of at- Zone Map of Ordinance No. $44. Known | : as the “Building Zone Ordinance.” °*® tempting to engage in a struggle Adopted July 11, 1955 ) » u ieee pod eee for power. He was called upon Ordinance to Amend the Building ‘to give an accounting of his Zone Map of Ordinance No. #44, Known | actions _@s the “Building Zone Ordinance.” | _— The City’ of Pontiac Ordains | * * * othe Building” Zone’ Ordinance tz | At that point, Beria was said to hereby amended to provide that the have started shouting against Bul- land in the description hereinafter set ane er si . a =i forth. be classified aa Residential a. | ganin, Khrushchev and the others. . “ Section 22, IN. Range | a 10 Bast. City of — Oakiand County,| When it became evident Beria chigan, deser! as commencing at “ “paw : ” the BE. corner of said Section 22 was raving like a ‘madman, Sones west sheng the south line ot| Zhukov and Marshal Ivan Konev Sm section atl eing the southerly Chie pag bel _ 49 pomeppoctes — “2h 104, drew ‘their one ae with them e southwesterly corner of Lot 49 as ed he I chief forced @ point of beginning. Thence continu- point = S apelin ; ing west along the southerly line of | him to leave the room with them. the section 1180.46 ft. to the easterly ‘ ; . . is ot the Orend Trunk RR. Belt Line; According to Khrushchev's tale, .W., ence “26'08" FE. along aa ~ : the RO w. line | 1382 @0 ft. thence | the = marshals took Bera into *¢2°53"" 4.70 ft. to the west line | anothe 00 a ordere the of Lot 49 Assessor's Plat No. 104, thence another + 2 sh ; | pag t alens said wont nee of Lot | gaurds to shoot him right then anc oO ie W corner o ot 49 being py 1 , 5 ie piass lati bactaneng a jthere. The ne xt day it was an Section 2. The change in the butlding|nounced Beria had been im- gone map in the above area to Residen- | soned tial 2 is made pursuant to the recom. | Prisoned. fecoeorer of the City = hd * * : and sa ‘ommission is hereby appointed | P .. ) ey to make « final report upon thist he talkative Communist Party amendment to this Commission previous | ————————---—-—— = | to the public hearing to be held be- fore this amendment is adopted, pur- | suant to Section 4 of Act No. 207 of | Never Judge a Book Lipmooeh Acts. aoe as vag oof ; | b | id Cc | ection 3 at not less than fifteen #15) 7 ne the time ne place | y ts Outsi e over the public earing on the final | x , oti Passage of this amendment shall “<4 MILES CITY, Mont. u—Justice given in a newspaper of general circu- ™ . , lation in this city; that such pubite | Of the Peace Herbert Abel was hearing im peceny fixed-at the llth day | sympathetic with John Swanson, of July : | i ti 4. This ordinance shall take | 68. He was shabby = there were | effee m (10) days from and after | es | is shoes. the date of its passage by the city | DO! a ie his com _ ord Commission of the City of Pontiac | Abel fined Swanson $25. after ade and passed by the City Commis- | Cy, ‘ i sion of the City of Pontiac, this 11th | Swanson _Pleaded guilty to steal | day of July, A.D 1955. ing a 35cent package of figs.) bade ila asaaaiaamas eo | Swanson reached into his shabby ADA R. EVANS, | rans, pulled out $890, paid the | | City Clerk. | 2.- ¢. : July Me 1955 | $25 fine and went on his way. FAMOUS , rowan’ oR | F nat GUARANTEED FOR | A WATCH THAT CAN TAKE IT Ze ES" \ Amencot greetest work ealve oo” Americas sone LYNN Jewelers 1 South Saginaw St. "FE S-5731 police bomb squad. shattering intervals, so the rail- | DETROIT «—A steel company | road mail clerk summoned a post | claims its blast furnace on Zug | -@CroSs @ yard, into a garage, and fourth in the number of tourists | office inspector who sent for the | Island in the River Rouge is the! hoisted it into a company truck | Sgts. Drew Brown and Frank | feet 3 inches in diameter and has| a crowbar to pry a chain off a/| dollars annually. Grady Jr., opened .the package and found a harmless battery- pig iron a month. ‘least half the night. In the safe California. They dragged it through an office. | Council reports Michigan now is, | world’s largest.. It measures 30) with a company crane. They used | who spend an estimated 500 million | a rated capacity of 50,000 tons of gate and drove off. That took at, gan are New Y } ' Ne ea ‘ 5 es \' | a \ vers a Doser ; Ls. < t ‘ bd ; . | { } r r s 4 # THE PONTIAC PRESS. | THURSDAY, JULY 14,1955; a i ae /p ‘ a Oi operated intercommunication sys- | H Phen : lone an old, outdated deed to a Bomb Package Found | on They conrapoed' Waa cant Spend Night in Vain | tadigg nen beset) bees Number Necessary ‘to Contain Intercom | it on, | DETROIT w—Burglars broke! | = | HARTFORD, Conn. —A motor- CHICAGO «»—The package tick- | | into the Bor in Transit Mixed Con- Michigan—Tourist Mecca | ist asked the state motor vehicle | ed ominously and rang at nerve-| Largest Blast Furnace | grete Co. to get a heavy safe. | LANSING u—The State Tourist | department for the number of his old and discarded 1944 driver's license. He said he had forgotten it and needed it to get into his Ahead of Michi-| safe. The. license number and ork, Florida and | the safe combination, he explained, ‘were the same. ae ‘ BACKED BY COLDSPOT 5-YEAR NOW IT’S PRICED 30.00 BELOW OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE! PROTECTION Com Automate frosting De N Controlled Co Co Storage D for Tall Bot ond Cheese Bull-w! an Freezer Capacity pletely o Frost to Scrape id Automat: ee on ct id sles dth owt Big for Froren Foods WHERE BUT AT SEARS CAN YOU GET ALL THESE FEATURES AT COLDSPOT PRICES START AS LOW AS cee cost phon FOR YOUR PROTECTION Sears services what Sears sells promptly, expertly, at low Service is as near as your e, anywhere! OF NATIONALLY FAMOUS COLDSPOT REFRIGERATORS 3 SAVE :30 MW ; ITS HE resol, eres : Cc 17 AUTOMATIC mon b in, ‘i n. No Pans ty Empty 11. 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Coldspot ¢ Handy interior light on counter balanced lid e Fast freeze section; handy ‘lift out’ basket REFRIGERAT OR ¢ Easy to read temperature indicator on front Make Your Home A Com- forable Spot with Coldspot Dehumidifier dv Modern metal cabinet d Portable, plug it in Makes room healthier by remov- ing dampness. Drip tray collects indicator eliminates all guessing, tells you when to turn unit on ={s L, ate 8988 of water. Humidity. lightweight yet strong. Satin brass trim. © Perfect for everyone... working men and women, Peay ayer youths, teenagers. Makes an ideal gift! paim of . ¢ Has on/off switch with volume control . . . grand your hand! for homes, offices, vacations and sports! | 88 less Large, Direct Fits in Car Glove batteries Tuning Dial Compartment Only $2 Down on Sears Easy’ Payment Plan . (Usuel carrying charge) ag The Only Midget Portable So Low 2 Priced...With So Many Features! Carry tin Your —... Or in Your Suit Pocket Handbag @ Full range AM radio... gives you listening —> Uses two inexpensive entertainment most everywhere you go! IE long life batteries Handsome ynbreakable tan plastic case. Very 5 | h— 60° —4 SEE IT! HEAR IT DEMONSTRATED NOW! ONLY AT SEARS! a your money tack SEARS 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-417 : i j . j ‘ . j i ; . oy “ é \ ‘ j | « : THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1950 . Poe ae ‘FIFTEEN « oes S punctured it in a few places. Florida Town Exudes Air of Mystery Month After Unsolved Abduction | i; | MANALAPAN, Fia. (INS) — An colleagues are convinced the case, ‘People making those statements | atmosphere fused of suspicion, sun- shine, mystery and fear hung over the plush little community of | Manalapan today—serving as an) uneasy memorial to the disappear- | is one of vengeance. | just are not familiar with police | “ | work,” he said. He ‘added: Zhe jetge wen)s| tage ween | “Take the trouble to go - ‘back, on the bench,” he said, “ .... | } just, but unbending. True, he hi ugh your police files: It is not unusual for a tase to go un-| Bed many tread i solved for months, or even years, ance of Circuit Judge Curtis E. | bad bis) cecenicg | avon bere) Ga. Chillingsworth and his wife, Mar- West Pala Beach. ‘It took two years to catch the kid-- jorie, just one month ago. | The was not the po of 6 naper of the Lindbergh ‘child. -the- s n The consensus of the man-in-the- | 5 MEN ON CASE street is that “the perfect crime”. couple of amateurs. Whoever car- has been committed and that the ied off the judge and his wife | ‘We'll start worrying when we continuing investigation will come Knew exactly what they were after |stop getting phone calls and tips | to setts . F . . and it’s the belief here that from the public. At present we it was someone that received a have five men doing nothing but pay Levon 7 coil at ae stitt sentence.” ‘running down such ‘leads. | Some pped and peint te the | fe of them aren't too logical, but we famed Lindbergh case, which |FEW CLUES icheck them out anyway.” took two years to solve. Only .a few slim clues nave) Jiied | The Chillingsworths, both in turned up in the baffling case.| Loren Simon, Judge Chillings- | | + | |hour—and were never heard from | struggle, and nothing was missing. SOME RHUBARB! — This rhubarb leaf, just about a a square, | 2gain. | County Investigator John RK. is the pride of O. E. Hughes, who grew the massive leaf in his garden |C!TE MOTIVE Hiatt said he could not go along near Columbia, Mo, Recent rain didn't hurt the rhubarb, but hail- Btateel who asked that his} lingsworths case was destined to their late 50s, were last seen the Two rolls of adhesive tape—one Worth's brother-in-law and the night of June 14 when they at- partially used—a broken floodlight offictal spokesman for the family, tended a dinner party in fashion- and a few drops of common-type sald he had “all the confidence lable West Palmy Beach, a few blood are all the police have had i the world that the mystery ~ ‘miles to the north. They left for on which to work. will be solved.” He said the their seashore home at am early | family was content that “police The house showed no signs of are doing everything within their | power,” and added: ‘We're leaving it entirely in their | hands.” Hiatt had the highest praise for ithe Chillingsworth family. and the | A West Palm Beach city coni-| with the premise that the Chil- name not be used, said the judge’s| go down as an unsolved crime. jened, suspicious of anyone who way its members have conduc’ themselves during the tedio | outwardly untruitful pnvestigation ‘KEEP HEADS “They've cooperated 100 per cent,” he said, “and managed to ikeep their heads.- By this’ time, |most families would have been to a erystal gazer and consulted their ‘ouija board, then would have ex- pected us to check out the results." The Chillingsworth’s few- re- | maining neighbors in the “sum- mer ghost town” all have react- ed in about the same way to the ‘disappearance: They're fright- | mentions the judge's name. Ques- tions bring only “yes” and ‘‘no” if replied to at all, The community—made up almost | exclusively of winter homes of well- /to-do Northerners—borders Route | A-1-A, the Florida ocean highway. | The judge's home sits back off the road on a knoll overlooking the pounding surf, a strange mix- ture of all that's bright and gay— and sinister ond! for are | ‘GET PAID Cc 0. B:! Yes, when | you sell things through The Pon- | ‘tiae Rress Classified ads, you're paid C, QO. B.—cash on the bar- | rel! To sell anything, toys to- a Phone B E 2-8181. ——5 & be le i Appliances. Main Floor \ 4 WS KENMORE |' , 26,08 00) Ore, SOLD OMY bY SBARS, ROFBUCK AND CO. Automatic ] 69* Robotimer Cooking and old range PAY ONLY $5 DOWN 36-INCH ELECTRIC vfrarod top units; deepwell « Warist-Hi charcoa ke smokeless: Auto ratic over re-heat; roomy Mele) Om Vem Uthiolailohilal delale lcm eh Galt @ Meh. malas vy A ~ wT) yi it aa 8 8 wd Enjoy the ease and convenience of aNteratic drying . . . save hanging clothes on the line, lugging heavy baskets up and down stairs... saves you time and money. This Kenmore electric Dryer is sale priced at Sears now—see it! S-Year guarantee on transmission! Nation-wide service guarantee! Fills, washes, rinses, spin-dries. . All tub. free home trial! Kenmore With 25-inch Ove Only $5 Down on ea " aa hance Limited Lowest Priced Space-Saver! 1955 Kenmore Quantities 30-INCH GAS RANGE for 15 peopl « Automatic liahting; guaranteed top burners your own and children’s clot DO IST 1 Dy J COMFORT AT SEARS DOWN Delivers ony Mojor ipplians: p iced undit $200 50. Vacuum Cleaner ONLY $5 DOWN! Limited § A 209.95 Value Quantities Price includes normal installation! Sensationally reduced Kenmore cleaner, complete with you do is set it, forget it. 6-vane agita- | Gttachments shown, gets deep-down dirt from carpets, tor washes cleaner. Big 9-lb. family-size cleans furniture and draperies as well. Call FE 5-4171 for Washer with Suds-0-Matic $229.88 _ Vacuum Cleaners—Sears Main Floor ; a Terrific value at this price... ¢ slide-out broiler for charcoal-lke flavor all your sewing — saves time and money by making away when not in use! See it nowl Sic gant tera here SAR 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-417 —, mR ee and Old Cleaner Portable Reg. 99.95 89" Sewing Machine O*> and Old Machine Kenmore portable does hes! Compact, easy to store fs ae | vt ae us ~ SUMMER: SALE USED and DEMONSTRATOR | CAMERAS 1955 EXAKTA VX F1.9 Xenon Automatic w/Penta Prism and Range Finder. $389. 70 Demo, | Only EXAKTA VX F2.8 TESSAR. mec EGne $179.00 CAMERA CASE and FLASH 95 YES, YOU MAY BUY IT ON TIME! \ led 16mm MAGAZINE LOAD MOVIE CAMERAS Single Lens Model F2.5 Reg. $129.50 539% Turret Model F2.5 REVERE 16mm Magazine Load with F2.5 Lens Reg. $139.50 ‘79” Ss Now Bens 8mm Bell & Howell Special Demonstrator Model 134TA. 3 Lens Fi.4—'" Normal Lens S$ 95 Fi.9—Tmm Wide Angle 2 Fi.9—1'2” Telephoto Save $100.00 On This Camera YES, YOU MAY BUY IT ON TIME! These Are Just a Few of Our merry Good Used Cameras Polaroid 95 . .$55.00 i» Argus 40 Flash . ... 24,95 Graflex 4x5 ..... 59.00 Korelle Reflex ... 31.50 Pony 828 ....... 18.95 Ikoflex IIo... ... 59.95 Mercury! ... 6.95 Mercury ll ...... 14.95 Spartaflex & Flash 3.95 8mm Reliant F2.7 65.50 Graflex 22 ...... 69.95 Dejur Reflex _... 69.95 Diax F2.8 RF .... 79.50 Argus AE....... 9.95 Reflecta ........ 16.95 4x5 Speed Graphic 89.95 4x5 BeJ Press.... 79.95 2%4x3V4 Watson 34.50 All our used and demo cameras are reduced for this sale. Sale ends Monday night, July. 18. The g& MARK DAVIS M amen ART 83 N. Saginaw St. FE 4-4343 V ; age l Cameras Are Our Business—Not a Sideline! SINTHE . Democrat Given Government Job Gordon Gray Succeeds Hensel in Foreign Aid Pragram for Pentagon WASHINGTON (®—Gordon Gray, Democrat who has served in administrative and investigative assignments under Democrats and Republicans, returns to govern- ment service today. Gray, secretary of the Army in the Truman administration, be- comes assistant secretary of de- fense for international security| affairs. | * * * | Despite his arrival, there will be | a net reduction of one Democrat / in the higher administrative levels of the Eisenhower administration. Two Democrats are leaving—Dep- uty Security of Defense Robert B. | Anderson and Mrs. Oveta Culp | Hobby, secretary of welfare, both | Texans, Both Anderson and Mrs. Hobby are being replaced by Republicans. | Gray succeeds H. Struve Hensel. His job is concerned primarily with carrying out the Pentagon's part in foreign military aid pro- grams Gray, during 1950, made an over- | seas mission as a special assistant to former President Truman to prepare ‘an economic report on conditions abroad. His latest previous government service was as chairman of a special board named by the Atom- | ic Energy Commission last year to investigate charges brought against Dr. J. Robert Oppenheim-_ er. Gray has been president of the , University of North Carolina since October 1950. Reds Invite Robeson TOKYO w—Paul Robeson, Amer- | jean Negro singer, ANIMAL PUZZLE — Paul Dittambl studies a new-| creature with a foxy nose is a fennec, a species of comer to Chicago's Lincoln Park ioe: Rabie: like African desert fox. Marion Davies Buys Hotel in Palm Springs | Davy Man of Year HOLLYWOOD uw — Marion for Dealers i in Fur ‘Davies is now a hotel owner. The former actress announced | ST. LOUIS w — yesterday that she has bought the | oe The man of the | Desert Inn in Palm Springs for Year among ae end Ce two million dollars. The sellers raw fur is Davy Crockett, who | were Earl Coffman and George died at the Alamo 120 years ago. | The demand for Davy Crockett | Miss Davies, who said she will; hats and other frontier garb cre- | Orteneau, “It'll cost| ated by the current craze over the | Roberson. be the sole owner, said, a lot more by the time we get | King of the Wild Frontier has en- ' through with it. I plan to develop, abled fur dealers to sell skins that ! it into a miniature Rockefeller! had been Center." taking up warehouse) | space for years ——— “We have sold a lot of lemons . | that had been around for a long | ‘Sign Insect Pact | time — anything that had a tail | TOKYO w—Red China and Bul- on it,’ said one dealer. ‘‘And rae- garia have signed an agreement in coon tails, which until gecently | vited to the fifth Youth and Stu- | sect pests and plant diseasés, Pei- for $4 to $5 a pound.” dent Festival in Warsaw guest of honor,"’ Peiing radio said, provides for exchange of experts and information. “as a ping radio said today. The plan) Cuba 'American rice and lard Engineer Is Killed ‘as Train Derails | | engineer of the Federal Express | | derailed cars on the Washington- eee ener is the freight yards. is the chief outlet for | BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (®—The' | was killed early today when the | |engine and seven cars plunged /from an embankment. The New Haven Railroad iden- tified the engineer as Arthur of New Haven. Six people were injured, ap- | parently none seriously, the rail- road said, A spokesman said five of the | to-Boston train had no passengers. The other two cars were a sleeper and a coach. There were 17 cars. | in the train. ! The derailment occurred about) has been in-| Sofia to cooperate in curbing in- | had been almost worthless, went |a mile west of Bridgeport station. | |The cars plunged about 10 feet The loco- | motive struck a switching engine, | prea ome "oF eee Sore ae Moa: SS. shes Sa : A i Ak OR Ste Pod Pi VE? Os “Short Story” for summer in the Bermuda them everywhere . informal after-five evening wear. fortable height-of-fashion summer! Smartly tailored, favorite with all For fun-in-the-sun get these rugged McGREGOR DENIMS ESQUIRE ‘SILCOTTA” 7 Plain Stretch Nylon or Wool $750 Colorful $195 TAKE 30- WE INVITE You to Open a Convenient | Osman's Charge Account --. at No Extra Charge DAYS TO PAY! 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Thurs.-Fri.-Sat, ‘til 9 P.M. whose engineer was injured, length look | You'll see ©) for a cool, com- Cr ee er | $10 Handsome Wool Argyle $495 SS GE ee es Sr ONS Tel-Huron Center . : OPEN oe od Names Do Map of America Choices of Founders Reflect Humor, Urge to Be Different | The American people dislike the | commonplace. They go to extremes | | trying to be different. This atti- | tude is found when a town is to be named. The National Geo- graphic Society, which keeps rec- ords of thames throughout the | world, came up with.the following: | Unusual names have been con- | sciously sought out in more than | one instance. Odd, W. Va., and Peculiar, Mo., both wanted to be odd and peculiar. The grim realities of frontier life were not ignored: Tomb- stone in southeastern Arizona; Skull Valley, Ariz.; Bone Cave, Tenn.; and Bone Gap, Il., have a funereal ring. And Montana made no bones about putting Quietus on its map. Frost, W. Va., recognized fts nippy weather, but a town in Florida wanted all the country to | know it was Frostproof. a King, Pennsylvania a a Queen, THE PONTIAC OODS -CU WE LOST OUR LEASE . | tons. ‘tons this year, Texas holds an Ace, three states Alabama a Jack, Texas a Spade, Buildi In ooms seven states a Diamond, and Missouri a. Clubb. 7 North, East, West and South | are among the most common pre- | on ac Cd | Construction _ Projects s also Due West (South Carolina). * Ohio has a North Star and Mon- | Aid Trade Development ‘ar uf \ ; i in Idaho, Washington, West Vir- | alien duni bea al competing fixes for combination names. Strangely, the hamlet North is | found in thé South (Virginia), as | tana Polaris. | on ‘International: Lake’ Incidentally, there are Dixies in | | the North as well as the South— | ginia and in Georgia, Louisiana |- boom along the shores of the Black and ‘Virginia. | Sea is writing a new chapter in the history of the ancient, strife- Mexico Trying to Sell aa eee Encircled by one democratic and | Huge Surplus of Sugar three Communist nations, the MEXICO CITY u®—Mexico 1s 159,000-square-mile inland sea be- trying to find somebody to buy | tween Europe and Asia upholds - 400,000 tons of sugar. An excess | its heritage as one of the world’ s of any foodstuff is something new) most strategic waterways, the | | for Mexico. | National an Society says. wail ax youre age Tien her | gait Marit nen tee coc | ple a vast canal system Too zante sg SA Sart ow tthe Art lerop is expected eS top 900,000. Ocean and warm-water anchor- P ages in the Black Sea. Ships on their way from northern waters to the southern sea and its | bustling Russian ports no longer must sail around Europe via Russia has: taken about 20,000 but can't be de- pended on to take much more. Mexico, through her ambassador! | in Washington has asked the United | Girakter. States to increase Mexico's pres-| Romania has started construc- ent quota of 11,445 tons to 160,000, tion of a 40-mile canal to link the tons. The Matter is still pending. | heavily traveled Danube River | with Media, its new Black Sea port. The Balkan nation has re- built Constanta, once a. luxury resort, and modernized its docks. Turkey, an anchor nation in the western world’s chain of defenses, is constructing a series-of modern - harbors along its 800-mile stretch of Black Sea coast. The Black Sea can hardly be called a friendly body of water, however. Rivers provide a sur- face layer of fresh water. But extreme salinity in its lower depths pickled life many- years ago. Today, few if any plants or animals exist below 300 feet, for hydrogen sulphide gas pro- duced by bacteria prohibits life at the lower levels. Rainmaker Takes Credit for More Dallas Water DALLAS wW — Dr. Irving P, | Krick, of Denver, says his “rain- increasing’ service is responsible for 21 billion extra gallons of water which has poured into Dallas reservoirs since 1952. He said yesterday lakes serving | Dallas have gained 84 billion gal- lons since he was hired in 1952, and that of this amount he claims | credit for 21 billion at a total cost of $100,000. SELL SURPLUS STUFF through Classified ads! Piano, sports-needs, furniture, anything! RTAINS IN PONTIAC . WE MUST BE OUT JULY 30th. You have only 20 more shopping days - — 20 days in which you can take advantage of the terrific money saving values we are offering. Many items below dealers’ cost. Unbelievable Prices SPREADS— DRAPES— CURTAINS Yard goods — everything must go at savings up to 70% and more! 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M, 73 NORTH SAGINAW STREET “A Full Measure of Value” NO PHONE OR MAIL onnens Going on Vacation?—Let the Press Follow — Call FE 2-8181 THE PONTIAC PRESS | * “ ! “4 r “Death Has Three Live™ Read ‘This New Serial Daily —- “THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 _PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. SEVENTEEN United Press Phete |are different. These two thirteen- year-old girls have turned a dream | SILENT SIGNALS — Gesturing in sign language, Ralph J. Lee of Memphis, Tenn, tells his pet Blackie to sit up, and the dog obeys | instantly. Lee and his wife are deaf and use their hands to talk to! each other. Blackie understands the sign language better than oral commands. If they make the word sign for cat, Blackie gets all excited. When asked in sign language if he’s hungry, the canine licks | its lips. : | The Grocery Bag | Beet to Be No. 1 Feature in Stores This Weekend © By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | Beef will be the No. 1 feature | in food stores across the nation this weekend. | s+ @ | grapefruit and limes are consid- Prime ribs and chuck roast will’ ered good buys in fruit. Western be particularly favored, with prices cherries are attractively priced and moderately below those of a week grapes are lower, with the white pipe polar ee aie | Thompson seedless the most abun- | ing beef. | dant. Fryers, legs of lamb, lamb chops and pork chops are other meats named by specialists as affractive buvs for weekend shop- pers, Selected markets will of- fer good buys in legs and rumps of veal, lettuce, onions, peppers, celery and tomatoes. Watermelons are cheap. Oranges, * ow * and | peaches are described by produce | men as moderately priced. | July is Ice Cream Festival Month | | and the dairy industry hopes you'll do your part, Last year, production | Sirloin steak prices will be on “4S @lmot 600 million gallons and the higher side, A major chain is | A™evicans spooned or licked their | boosting prices from two to six “4Y through an average of 3% | cents a pound in most of its out- | S4llons each. lets. | | Canteloupes, honeydews By PAT CONLON ; Ellen Niedelson and Sue Gordon | into reality. If you walk down Rosshire court past number 14, Ellen's home, Monday, Wednesday or Friday about 10 a.m., you'll see Ellen and Sue with four little girls and six young boys on the front porch. You’ll see the “Play Skool,” as they call it, in session. Everybody is happy about the. “Play Skool.’’ The mothers of the little boys and girls say it gives them a chance to get out three+ mornings and do their shopping or just relax and take it easy, The children are happy because they enjoy the organized activities and the association with children of their own age. Ellen and Sue like it because they want to be teachers or so- cial workers, and the school is bringing them closer to the realiza- tion of their dreams. Drugstore Blaze to Cost Over $60,000 PORTLAND, Mich, (®—Loss was estimated at upwards of $60,000 today in a ‘drugstore fire. Flames swept through the Port- land Drug Co. in the middle of a main business block last night. The _ blaze was believed to have start- ed in wastepaper storage in the basement of the two-story brick building, but the cause could not be learned immediately. The co-owners of the drugstore, Charles Callihan and Charles Quick, said the loss to contents would amount to $30,000. Mrs. Carl Bywater said the damage to the | building she owns would equal that amount. There also was smoke damage to two adioining stores students of Ellen Niedelson and Sue Gordon's Play| lesson in-coloring: Below, the little group is seated | tion. | selves for a period of fifteen min- They also enjoy making the weekly trip to the bank with | their earnings. te Following this is a 20 minute The two enterprising young la- period of group games after which | dies are both students in Washing- one of the older children or the ton Jr. High School. Ellen is in whose Ground Observer Corps posts are short 1,500 volunteers, Class begins at ten a.m. three teachers read to the class during the ninth grade while Sue is in mornings a week, and after as-/ the rest period. sembling on Ellen's front porch | the little group generally proceeds | to a nearby park where the chil- dren are allowed to play by them- utes. Every Friday is “picnic day” and the children bring their lunches and: go for a walk {o- | gether, perhaps to Washington dr. High School grounds or to | Webster School. | the: eighth. | And this is only the beginning. | | The girls hope to extend their serv- | ices next winter by setting up a “‘baby-minding” business at a nearby shopping center, | mothers can leave their children while they shop. oP Oe J Pentiac Press Photes ee | |Report Volunteer Appeal Issued in Pontiac Area There is a big hole in the defensive fence guarding this nation against surprise air attack. That figurative gap is in Oakland County, Coverage at the county’s 13 posts ranges from 24 hours a day | every day to no minutes a day any day. but with little success. The Air Force, which coordinates GOC activities, has been beating , the drums for volunteers throughout the county for several months, Today, the third anniversary of “Operation Skywatch,” stock was where| taken of the situation in the local area. “Pontiac is really sad,” observed S. Sgt. Nicholas A. Chizewsky, who coordinates post activities in Oakland and adjoining counties and | helps recruit yolunteers. “It is only 40 per cant manned.” | has but 50 volunteer sky watchers Chizewsky said. The unit is headed by Arthur J The city post, located atop the Oakland County Office Building, and at least 120 more are needed, . Heaton, who is seeking to interest | | Actress Returns to Hospital Bed Suzan Ball, Recovered From leg Amputation, Has Cancer Relapse HOLLYWOOD um—Suzan Ball, a resolute young actress who came | back to a film ‘career and mar- | riage after losing her right leg to ,cancer, is waging a fresh battle | against the disease today. The City of Hope medical cen- ter at nearby Duarte disclosed that the pretty brunette, 21, has been a patient there since July 5. Her condition is serious, Little more than two years ago | Suzan fell on a dance floor. She | had just been signed to a movie| contract. Nobody thought the in-' jury would keep her from work for | |long. But she had trouble with her leg, and doctors now think| SCHOOL DAYS! — School days are cool days for| look on as a group of the children take time for a| she aggravated a dormant condi- and a dentist's office over the Skool as the children hold classes three mornings! for “games in the grass."’ stores. s * * The Department of hericaeae| that meat supplies this | reports year will pounds for average around 160 each American, It figures that consumers will pay little if any, more for meat this year than last, EGGS GO HIGHER Egg prices will be up two or or | seven pounds more than last year. | Mechanic Salvages Snake Hiding in Car SAN DIEGO, Calif. U—Press Gragg, an auto mechanic for 33 years, has taken a lot of bugs out of cars, but never a snake—that is until yesterday. | Harold Brown brought his car) three cents a dozen in some parts to Gragg “to get the snake out.” | of the country this weekend. But- ter will sell for about the same as a week ago. * * * Once again, produce depart- ments will offer a wide range of | Gragg tackled the job with a plate of milk and a heat lamp after other mechanics had pulled the seats out of the car without snaring the reptile. Gregg grabbed the five-foot go- vegetables at reasonable prices. | pher snake with his hands, when it The men who watch the markets | came out from behind the dash report that beans, beets, cabbage. board to sip the milk. He dumped squash and corn are leading best lit into a cardboard box to be buys. | returned to Brown. They also favor potatoes, egg- “It's Mr. Brown's car and Mr. | plant, cauliflower, cucumbers, | Brown's snake,"’ he said. AIRCRAFT CANNON — Like the revolver held by the young lady, this 20-mm. aircraft gun has a revolving cylinder in which the rounds are chambered and fired. The cannon, used as main armament on U.S. Air Force fighter planes, are produced at the Pontiac Motor Division plants here. The Detroit Ordnance District this week awarded a $7.5 million contract to the local GM division for continued production of the guns. Capable of a rate of fire almost as rapid as a machine gun, the M39 cannon fires a bullet nearly seven-eighths of an inch in diameter. he ‘a week. In the picture above, Ellen (1) and Sue (r) -+ * 4 More States Impose Curbs on Fund Drives The following November she fell again, in the kitchen of her home. This time the injury to the leg did not respond to treatment, A positive result. Suzan learned soon afterward | that she would probably lose the leg. But she never lost hér cour- po In 1953 she and actor Richard | Long became engaged. Suzan’s ail- ment however, interrupted her |marriage plans as well as her /eareer. On Jan, 13, 1954, her right | leg was removed, — She bounced back to seeming | bone graft was tried, but without | teenagers over 15 and adults in joining the ranks of the 350,000 who | —— * scan the skies across the country. In comparison, Chizewsky points | happily to the post in the relatively small community of Milford. There 152 men and women make certain that every minute of every | day the course of each plane pass- ing overhead is carefully noted and reported to the GOC Filter Center in Grand Rapids, Post Supervisor is Mrs, George Seeley, Of- course, Chitewsky sald, some county posts are worse than Pontiac's. In Birmingham, South Lyon, Leonard and Goodi- son, for example, he reports there is no activity. Other communities vary, Clark- ston, supervised by Ted Hennig, has 20 active viewers and 160 are needed, Headed by George A. Vol-. kert, the Clyde post is about 50 per cent efficient. by Air Force standards. It needs 120 more vol- unteers. The competitive spirit is moving Mrs. Doris G. Hendershot and her 150-person crew to operate 90 per cent of the time in Commerce, not, far from Milford. And Chizewsky said that unit will soon join Mil- ford in operating around the clock, Davisburg is now inactive but is expected to get into action after Aug. 1, deadline for construction of an observation post. Heading the | activities there is William A. Mc- Cullen. Vern Willard, Farmington di- the time, And in Ortonville, Wil- mer G, Kilbourn operates a post | from his home about four hours a day. A regular station is to be | built by August 1 and 170 volun- | teers are needed to join the five already taking part. | The Oxford post, guided by Sil- | bert Roberts, is 75 per cent active and could use about 25 more vol- unteers. After logging 25 hours of sky | e * 8 health—in a few weeks she was; peering, watchers are presented planning her marriage again, aaa with a set of silver wings by the the resumption of her film work. | Air Force. Other awards are given In a few more weeks she was for service up to 2,500 hours. learning to walk with an artificial) Purpose of the GOC is to fill in leg | the defensive screen not covered by radar. Alow - fly’ 8 The postponed wedding took| bomber might sweep wpe ‘place in Santa Barbara April 12,|Canada beneath the probing radar | 1954. And Suzan walked up the’ rays. ‘aisle, just as she had said she) Only a ground observer, tele- would. ‘phone in hand, could sound the “I'm going to show the World warning which would send inter- T can walk,” she announced during | ceptor planes into the air to rehearsals for a TV play in which | lenge the enemy. ’ her husband also appeared. During| Persons wishing to join the corps much of the action she was shown) should contact their local super- in a wheel chair. But at the play’s| visor or may call the county civil end she walked. Then she made a picture, ‘Chief Crazy Horse.’ Thereafter she and Long settled into their domestic roles, , perience with cancer,” Suzan sa after the amputation. ‘I can only say I was never afraid of it. I always thought in terms of being cured; that was my only considera- tion. The grimmer aspects of can- cer never occurred to me,” CHICAGO (®—Legislatures in four more states cracked down | this year on charity rackets, said to be fleecing the public of up to | 120 million dollars annually. Income tax statistics show that an average American family doles out about $88 a year to charities ranging from lonely street corner beggars to nationwide drives. Most of this year's legislation followed a pattern set by New York last year. After hearing a commit- tee report on charity abuses, the New York Legislature adopted a law requiring charity organizations | to register with the State Depart- ment of Welfare. 2 we * Oklahoma passed a similar law) this year requiring charity groups: to register with the secretary of | State and file financial statements. Exemptions include. churches, the American Red Cross, educational | and fraternal groups. New York | exempts only church groups. A law requiring charities and professional fund raisers to register for the first time was put on the books in New Mexico. ‘ Maine made an existing law tougher. Professional _ solicitors | must now register with the state if thev are making collections away from the city where their organization has its home office. Utah's Legistature passed a bill” prohibiting charity groups from) using the names of persons with- out their consent. This also is a feature of the New York law. The City of Hope announcement yesterday came as a ‘shock to all except Suzan's closest friends in the movie colony. They knew she, hadn't been well. | “Mrs. Long's general condition | is considered serious,”’ a hospital | spokesman said, “and she is be-| ing evaluated to determine a- course of therapy.’ defense office, FE 3-7151. Democrat Blows Up 1 “People hav sked now fi : . fet aiter coming trough ny ex. @f OOP Sign Site id SOUTH CHARLESTON, W. Va. (® — Grocer John Ray, a Repub- lican, was peeved with the city's Democratic administration anyway. When a “‘no parking” sign appeared in front of his store, he boiled over -— uprooted the sign and heaved it into an empty lot. GOP Mayor Joseph W. Londeree said a stenographic error in the minutes of a council meeting put the sign in the wrong spot. “That still doesn’t justify Ray’s taking the law into his own hands,” he said. ‘‘There’s no politics in- volved. | ATTEND WHAT’S MY LINE? INSTRUCTIONS: Each word is related to my work. Un- scramble as few as possible to guess my line. Answer oppeors under arrow, reading downward. i — CLEET ROBE TKNIH ETME QABNUTE TEARO MITE so oN Oo OOHlUlUMlUWUWD 1 2 3 4 CEEVONN 5 6 7 8 9 THOLE ee ve eed On * * 10 RINNED 1] WHOS Yesterdey's Answer: catfish, pike, Somedays, frre rth - © 1955 What's My Line; Inc, Oakland County Ground Observer Posts Critically Understaffed Two Enferprising Teenagers Open Kiddie ‘Play Skool Ge ue oS cee 3 ee . 3 ‘ 4 \ ie THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY 14, 1955 | By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK (INS) — American ‘women love classital music — symphony, opera, the ballet — but not enough to buy theis own tickets and go it alone. They'd rather be in the company of a masterful man than masterful musicians. Ea me He European ladies, on the other hand, will give up dinner, bid) adiew to. their men, and stand in queues for hours to dream with Debussy or churn with Tchai- kovsky. “Who is to say which kind of woman is right?” sighed maestro “Efrem Kurtz, giving the old palms-up, or what're ya gonna de? gesture. “To a man who makes his. busi- ness conducting symphonies, like myself, the European woman seems to have a very likeable approach. However, for a hus- band who likes to go to night base- ball games, the American girl would seem to be smartex.” * bd a Kurtz,. who left the Houston Symphony 18 months ago to rove Europe conducting its largest or- chestras, insists that women the world over have the same sensi- tive urge to listen to fine music. “Tt’s just that in Europe, their urge takes the form of a terrific drive. | WON’T STAND FOR IT “The average European man is like the average American man. When he is weary, after a day's work, he will go in for sleep or light entertainment rather than visit a concert hall, Well, the women won't stand for it. * s° * “They will fight for their musical enjoyment. They will gather to- gether however many pennies they have saved, and will collect in lines outside the hall—sometimes bringing their knitting and handi- work—until they get up to the box office and can buy a standing- room ticket.” Kurtz dipped his head—a hand- some head, halt gray, half bald —and said, “I bow {fo them. Women everywhere.” , The Russian-born conductor was noted in this country for building the Kansas City Philharmonic and the Houston Symphony, as well as for. conducting every large and distinguished U. S. orchestra, be- fore he took off for Europe sud- denly. He has now accepted a post, beginning next fall, as permanent conductor of the Liverpool Phil- harmonic, and will return to Europe next month after conduct- ing several concerts at Lewisohn Stadium in New York Ancient Medics Had Know-How About Chemicals DETROIT (—A University of Pennsylvania professor says that the oldest known medica] prescrip- tions show the ancient had ‘a try’ and used material which re- quired skills for preparation. Dr. Samual Noah Kramer, research professor of Assyriology at Pennsylvania, said the ancient prescriptions are on clay tablets which lay buried 4,000 years in the sands of Mesopotamia, and are written in Cuneiform script developed by ancient Sumerians. Kramer told the American Assn. of the History of Medicine, the ancient doctor used potassium nitrate, table salt, ground snake skin and turtle shell in his prescriptions, as well as botanicals made from seeds, bark, roots or | leaves of cassia, myrtle, thyme, willow, pear, fire, fig and date. “The prescriptions,” he added, reflected the long-standing confi- dence of the ancients in odorifor- ous principles of botanical ele- ments. Asafetida was included.” Mt. Pleasant Regrets broad acquaintance with chemis-| Forgetfulness of Circus MOUNT PLEASANT (®—The cir- cus has left town but it left part of itself behind. Now the town fathers are un- willing custodians of a cageful of baboons. Crabby baboons, at that. Dog Warden James Deckerd has taken over care and feeding of the animals until the Cole Broth- ers Circus reclaims its lost prop- erty. Salesmen drive their cars the greatest number of miles each year, in comparison with other occupational groups. the } | GREAT ORCHESTRAS European Women Won’t Miss Good Music and Robin Hood Dell in Phila- said Efrem, with a pixie smile. delphia, % * he “It will be in many ways painful to leave the United States,” he says, “but I have come to the conclusion that I am not a large- eity man. The thump-thumps, bump-bumps, whack-smack noises distract me.” He has several “‘retreats’’ in Europe: In the mountains of Swit- zerland, in the outskirts of Liver- pool, and in the little town where Puccini was born in Italy. Now that he has spent more than a year traveling as guest con- ductor for symphonies from Israel through France and Belgium and Scandinavia and Holland, he can say—can Kurtz—that there are “three great orchestras” in Europe compared to the finest symphonies in the U, S. bl » * “But they are different. They are equally brilliant, and equally technically perfect, but they sound different.’’ Partly this is because of the variance in cultures, and partly because the individual in- struments are constructed differ- ently—like flutes, which are made] — of wood in some European coun- tries, but are made of metals in others. But fine music is fine music everywhere. Just as good audi- ences are good audiences, and beautiful women are beautiful women, “You study music—or for that matter, women—and you will find that it is the same in every land,” Sensational Complete 6-pc. modern BEDROOM GROUP — YOU HERE'S WHAT GET... * Sleeping comfort plus wide-awake modern beauty at a savings price! *DOUBLE Here’s cloud-soft comfort plus the beauty of limed oak . . . assembled with a touch of genius into a 6-piece bedroom group... and now offered at a . Savings price you've been waiting for! All-steel coil os and comfortable mattress for the most restful eep of your life . . . plus 2 non-allergic, odorless foam rubber pillows. Buy NOW at big savings! dept. stores SAT. 7 DRESSER WITH MIRROR *FULL SIZE PANEL BED FULL SIZE MATTRESS *ALL-STEEL COIL SPRING ©2 FOAM BED PILLOWS Open a convenient credit eccount and take many months to pay! Buy NOW and savel RUBBER. SAGINAW AT WARREN PONTIAC OPEN MON FRI NICHTS TO 9 “No matter where you go, music and women are just like the weather... “There are some refrestiing, lovely days and some gloomy, bad ones. Both are needed to make it a wonderful world.” Ceurieet Fasts in Florida: No Shark Fin Soup There MIAMI, Fla. y—Chua Choon Liong, a tractor and builder from Singdpore, stayed in a plush oceanf hotel during a Miami vacationf but avoided the dining room. “Only one comipinlad " he ob- served. ‘They don't serve shark fin soup, my favorite dish." There are plenty of sharks in Florida waters, too. OK First School Loan LANSING ()—The State Depart- ment of Public Instruction today ‘qualified its first school system for loans under the 100 million dollar state school construction loan fund. ,The qualification was Filter Just Too Good SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. #~ Norman Sharpe, a professor at California State Polytechnic Col- lege, says he has devised a holder that removes more than 9% per cent of a cigarette’s nicotine, He concedes commercial possibilities for the experimental filter are about nil because “it removes all the smoke and taste as well.” F Folding Hardwood Yacht Chairs 2 4° Smooth varnished frame and water-re- pellent striped can- vas seat and back. Arvin “Flash-Fold” Rockers 3.48 Multi-colored Saran seat and back, tubu- lar steel frame, enamel finish. Save! AUTOMATIC | TIME-SAVERS “40 Your Choice FULL, TWIN SIZE MATTRESS PADS 255 Irregulars of better qualit pads with sturdy cotton ake ering, fully ‘filled for com- forte Save now at Federal's! EDERAL’S Dollar Days Sle INNERSPRING CHAISE LOUNGE ADJUSTS To 4 POSITIONS toaster in chrome finish. shade indicator. SMART DOUBLE. RUFFLED QUILTS fp A old. A lied. Hi / fine urry! poh agp’ or white cotton dept. stores Automatic pop-up OPEN MON given to Garden City. Polished Aluminum with Adjustable Back Tubular steel alloy frame, YK Portable Hammoc-Kot FOR THE HOME 99 Eosy Terms Lightweight aluminum frame that’s easy to roll on its rubber tired wheels, yet is sturdily built and weather proofed for long life! Com- fortable innerspring pad is made for relaxation! Save! vat-dyed duck cover in green, multi-color saran. Inflatable pillow. Adult size. . Wr kaszs @9-way cooker- fryer with automatic landy signal light and thermo- Hurry! stat. 41 quart capacity. SS MELONI LIE OE SLES OLR RO TOWEL SALE! MILL CLOSEOUT OF - 24x46" BATH TOWELS King-size towels of thick, thirsty terry—in wonderful colors! Hurry for the sensational Federal savings! Matching washcloths FIRST QUALITY 20x40” BATH TOWELS Po eo eer eter ere reer rrr @12” electric fry- ing pan with domed cover, thermostat. Mirror 4 finish. Big savings now! | 1.00 “4 Moisture-loving practical double loops, in pretty pas- tels to add spice to bathroom decor! Save at Federal’s! Guest towels weeeee quae - il Fete uj al bh CURTAINS IN 3 POPULAR STYLES 36-inch Decton tiers, 42x81. in, no-iron Trulon panels or © 41x81-in. rayon marquisette panels. Hurry for i FRI 3 for $1 Weashcloths ...... 6 for $1 MODERN, FLORAL 42x90” DRAPES 5.00. Rainbow colors in excti — In cotton banjo cloth. Save! 2 traverse rods .. $1 SAGINAW AT WARREN PONTIAC SAT NICHTS TO 9 vend A lovey | + pe 2 ais T 2 f 4 ¥ ? ¥ 4 | a) ¥ ‘ * - i A i i : \ \ { \ | | THE PONTIAC. PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 + jf NINETEEN 1.6 per cent when the last survey| THE BERRYS . ' : . F By Carl Grubert | Cuba comprises the sixth most | ‘ Almost 1,800 miles of major toll U ut Survey Shows barra — ae coees ra aon important center for America's ex: | highways will be in operation in that the demand for housing con- hidalieggmpcee - net a ne 0S “ or Few Empty Houses WASHINGTON (INS) — Com- merce Secretary Sinclair Weeks. sid that a government survey shows housing vacancies are low enough to dispel any fears that builders are erecting too many new dwellings. ; Weeks said a survey by the Census Bureau shows that in the last. three months only 2.2 per cent of all dwelling units in the U. S. were vacant. This compares with tinues strong, and that the near record number of dwelling units which are being built this year are being. readily occupied. What a Fishy Story PETERSBURG, Ind. (INS)—The Petersburg Press carried the fol- lowing item in its classified col- umns: “Lost—Rod and reel, with la~-e fish attached to other end. Finder notifiy L. D. Biggs.” ‘) TdF x New, sensational MONEY-SAVING WATCH REPAIR POLICY/ Terrific ‘ONE PACKAGE” deal * Your watch CLEANED and OVERHAULED Now's the Time to SAVE on FUEL ORDER YOUR CLEA COAL TODAY FROM Colorful Owner of Ontario Inn Taken by Death RIVERSIDE, Ont. (INS) — Mrs. Bertha Thomas, started 35 years ago cooking and waiting on tables in her small res- taurant and expanded it to the ' million-dollar Thomas's Edgewater | Inn in Riverside, Ont., died Tues- | day. Death in Windsor's Hotel Dieu (hospital) was ascribed to injuries she received in a fall June 18. Mrs, Thomas, a former De- troiter, was one of the broder city’s most colorful figure, well known for work among the poor. At Halloween and Christmas she | children in the area's schools, In recognition of this , service, Mayor Robert Bondy of. Riverside today ordered all municipal flags in the community flown at half mast as a tribute to Mrs. Thomas, * * N, QUALITY Funeral service will | Saturday from her apartment ad- joining the inn and at St. Rose of ‘Lima Catholic Church. Burial will ibe in St. Alphonsus Cemetery, Windsor. | Maine may have 10 times more 'deer now than during its early (history. The annual kill in 1954 ‘was 37,000. EDERAL’ AIR-CONDITIONED FOR COOL RELAXING SHOPPING COMFORT DROP EVERYTHING! HERE’E A _DOUBLE-BARRELED VALUE, RIGHT IN THE HEART OF THE SEASON! SWIMSUITS Wow! What a collection! Federal’s has styles for every swimmer, from wader to pro. Streamlined 1-pc. suits that flatter figures, catch compliments. Bloomer and tomboy styles in splash florals, two-tones, geometric patterns on white and dark backgrounds! Buy one for wear, one for spare at THIS small price. Sizes 32 to 38 and S-M-L. Big savings now! Hurry! Make a big splash (compliment-wise) with a suit that has fashion AND fit appeal! Cottons or lastex it bloomer, tomboy, princess styles. Vivid florals or solids. Sizes 32-38; S-M-L. Save now at Federal’s! . 3° BETTER SWIMSUITS | | my 00 — IE a ae ‘Costly Vase Gone, | Bennett of London. a widow who} gave parties for underprivileged | be held | Worth $100,000 PASADEN, Calif. (INS)—A_ Chi- is missing from the private gal- | lery of Pasadena art collector Hu-| lett C. Merritt, 83. | The gallery manager, Stanley A. Anderson, reported the theft to po- lice yesterday, Merritt is out of town. . Anderson said the vase is 3 feet Hsi dynasty of 1722. Thieves took the vase from a glass case and also stole the vase's history, which was enclosed in a 12 to 14 inch picture frame, Ander- son said. | nese porcelain vase worth $100,000 | tall, and is from the imperial Kang | The valuable vase once was a ‘Tomato Powder Near Commercial Production | WASHINGTON (INS) — Tomato powder, which can be reconstituted into juice when mixed with water, is reported to have moved a step closer to commercial production. The Agriculture Department says a Milwaukee firm has proved that | high-quality powder can be pro- | duced by a continuous process in commercial vacuum-drying equip- ment, The nation’s hospitals employ 1,200,000 persons and pay them $3 billion a year. part of the collection of Sir William | , Socony Oil Reveals Cut |in Wholesale Gas Prices | NEW YORK (INS) — Socony | Mobil Oil Oil Co. Inc. announced | | Wednesday a reduction in whole- | sale gasoline prices in many areas | along the eastern seaboard in a move to restore orderly gasoline | marketing activities. | The adjustment involves price re- 'ductions of three-tenths to five- | tenths of a cent a gallon and the | E] simultaneous elimination in price _war areas of voluntary discounts | which have been as much as five, ' cents a gallon. Socony’s action rep- | resents the first downward revi- : 108 NORTH SAGINA wg ALL needed parts—ONLY RANTEED Riosng corse sos wetch elet- iitduy timed on the ‘Watchmester, sions in wholesale gasoline prices | ' since a short-lived cut put into ef-| . ‘PONY TAIL’ VINYL DOLL Wears ruffled pina- fore, Long hair can be washed, combed. 23” Tell 7.88 2 BRIDE DOLL She can walk, dance and do the splits! Non-mechanical. BEAUTIFUL ot 7.88 dept. store ‘fect July a year ago. ee She cries real fears, coos; she’s almost alive! — ‘SHED-A-TEAR’ smn { 88 @Has own layette @Her hair is rooted . This amazing] listic baby doll will deligh tapaible, : gly realistic y doll will delight eve Handsome buggy stroernted ea tes 88 little girl’s heart. Sixteen inches tall, she hae aloaitan —_ pnd (OS ift-out body,chrome eyes, is dressed in a jersey shirt with real buttons and — and sun visor canopy. (Saas button holes and matching jersey panties. It is the first enon gray of turquoise. 25x13x9 In. doll whose tears well up from the eyes. Skin-like vinyl body, rooted hair, cooing voice and layette. Buy now! ¥ _ PONTIAC TO 9 ‘ 2 2 tas AM r 2 TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: on Backlog Jams. |"SUNIOR ED Steel Plants Mills Rushing to Fill Old Orders; Delivery | Behind Week, 10, Days NEW YORK —The biggest or} &f der logjams in history are facing steel producers, Iron Age, the na- tional metalworking weekly, said |‘ The brief steel. strike made a bad situation worse, setting back deliveries a week to ten days on some products, it added. Two weeks after the end of the walkout, mills are still struggling to get! . back to the pre-strike production | level and it's questionable whether they'll achieve this in the next | several weeks. Iron Age reported as follows: The effects of the shutdown are | , broadened by a maintenance problem, The supply of hot iron has been reduced due to the strike and to shutdown of blast furnaces for repairs. In addition, hot weather and vacation prob- lems are having their normal SS summer slow-down effects, The chubby child pictured today is sketched from one of the | Meanwhile, there are no signs of famous paintings by the great artist, Sir Anthony van Dyck. The baby coe epte dimer portch hap | was one of the children of King Charles I of England, and when he panies are pushing production to! grew up he became King James II. the hilt, expecting prompt de-| The original painting shows three children — liveries in the face of their short brother and sister of young James Stuart. But the youngest of the inventories, They'll switch to the | children frequently is studied as though it were a single portrait. new models almost without miss-- = yan Dyck was born in Flanders, which is now known as Belgium, ing a beat in stories and | in 1599. He went to England when he was 33 and spent the rest of his pretty much the same situation life there. Before his death in 1641, he painted hundreds of portraits— . Ingot production was estimated ™ny of them of the royal family. ; . at 93 per cent of capacity, up The original painting of today’s picture is in a gallery in Turin, seven points from last week. | Italy. Color it as you think it should be,-and add it to your collection of famous paintings of children. Temerrow: Prince Baltasar Carlos NO MONEY DOWN! Assemble and SAVE 50” of the COST! BIRCH PANEL Wood Kitchen CABINETS at Tremendous Savings! , ITORS | eae A TOT EES al Sl s¥ oF Fee oP +e et er Se Se —s - - By 4 | Ss De | * “PS D} TE * y * D) Ve a oy ca » FAMOUS CHILDREN’S PAINTINGS—4" Baby Stuart Almost one-third of the nation's | aliens live in New York state.| 3 | Free Kitchen Planning Service for Mrs. Homemaker These wonderful cabinets with their. smooth finish birch door panels and drawer facings requires no special ability or tools to assemble. . You need only a hammer ond screwdriver . . . and best of all have a truly professional job in just a few minutes time . . . and YOU SAVE UP TO 50% of the Cost. OVER 100 CABINETS IN VARIOUS SIZES _ Examples: , Wall Cabinets 12x30” .. 15x30” 24x30” 30”x30” 36” Base Cabinet Sink....$35.60 | Includes Hardware CLOSE OUT SPECIAL 700 SQUARE YARDS FIRST QUALITY STANDARD GAUGE INLAID LINOLEUM Reg. $2.45 to $2.79 NOW 51.89 * % ALL REMNANTS 50% OFF CONGOWALL CLOSE-OUT Reg. 69c running ft. NOW 39¢ UANTITY LIMITED! ALL SALES FINAL! Base Cabinets oe ev eee eee eee o* ew @ e@ @ @ *ee ete ® # © * oo ww **e* © © @ @ @ *e*# @@#e#e#s FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL PLUMBING, HEATING, FLOORING AND KITCHENS Free Parking in Rear HL HL SMART DIV. including an older | Men! Don’t Miss the Terrific Savings in this Big Sale! | WE WON'T CARRY THEM OVER! THEY'RE YOURS NOW AT TERRIFIC REDUCTIONS! ml. NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY! si ra ARCHIE BARNETT Archie Says: We never carry over any merchandise from one season to the next! $3.95 RAYON OR KNIT Gaucho SHIRTS $2.95 & $3.95 NYLON PLISSE SPORT SHIRTS sys $495 PANAMA HATS..... $3.95 FAMOUS BRAND SPORT SHIRTS... .. $4.95 FAMOUS BRAND SPORT sHinTS..... *3°° $6.95 LIGHTWEIGHT GABARDINE JACKETS °3°° 4 palr 98° § ] 00 ; Sp 69 ee vp Ne 65c FAMOUS BRAND FANCY SOX. . $3.95 SLEEVELESS ORLON SWEATERS. $3.45 SANFORIZED DENIM SLACKS. . All Cool Summer SLACKS Piles and Piles of Gabardines and Tropicals, Flannels and Checks 2 GREAT GROUPS Values to $16.50 | § 84 so A * 4 a! Nd sh ids, Ceees .. y they’t *9eecee, eRe. to 46. *PPreciate 2 for $9 E Pee eee | C0ee - W GHTs $ 84 e 7 e A KIN ¢. $60 ‘0 Ss i | SHARK YOO territie 67 e KIN ‘ to ee th, Values. . tric Bowen pe? 3 ; SUITS a @ No '* @ Your no, eteat ¢ $ . 67 , e saving. gil tult at «fo get You never saw such a great selection of smart slacks today if at at such grand savings. All cool, crease-resistant, the kind you enjoy wearing. Wear ‘em late in the fall, too. Stock up now. Bank the savings! OUR STORE IS AIR CONDITIONED...SHOP_ IN COOL COMFORT! OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9 P.M. ... SATURDAY ‘til 5:30 Zanuctto MEN'S STORE 19 N. SAGINAW © Sid Says: REMEMBER: . et, Even at these sensational low prices you can ages CHARGE IT! TAKE TWELVE WEEKS TO PAY! Same As Cosh! No Extre Cost! No Carrying Charges! Oakland Avenue FE 4-4567 _ LAWRENCE FLEISCHMAN, Inc. | ale (ta THE PONTI IAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY. 14, 1955 zy Buttalo’s Good N sighbors Entertain F oreign Visitors BUFFALO, N, Y. (UP) — To scores of foreign visitors from all over the world, Buffalo is ‘The City of Good Neighbors,” For it is here that some 125 transient foreigners annually are welcomed into homes for an op- portunity to see what Americans ‘are really like. ment being the willingness to play host. There is no membership fee, nor is the group subsidized in any way, Last year, the committee catered to more than 125 visitors from 28 countries in Europe, Asia and Afr- rica. Among them were ambassa- dors, journalists, political leaders, Buffalo is believed to be the government officials, _ religious only city in the United States leaders and professional and busi- with an organized program for | ®€ss men. inviting foreign visitors to the home, church and school, Now in its fourth year, the program has been so successful in pro- moting international understand- ing and good will that it has at- tracted praise fro msuch offi- cials as Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, The program is administered by an- informal organization known as the Buffalo. World Hospitality Committee. More than 200 citizens; All stops here include a trip to participate, with the only require- nearby Niagara Falls and passage Most pass through Buffalo un- der the State Department's inter- national exchange program. As guests of the committee, they sleep in private homes, eat with families, attend church, tour cul- ‘tural points and schools and compare notes with their coun- terparts in government and busi- ness. In other cities, the visitors generally stay in hotels and eat at restaurants, —————— = — over the Peace Bridge into Cana-| da. Invariably the foreigners are astounded at the ease with which they can cross the international boundary. They wonder at the lack | of red tape and armed guards. LIKE PROGRAM Miss Ethel Mason Coan, com- | mittee chairman, said the foreign- ers eagerly accept their hosts’ friendliness and help. Most arrive an apparently distorted pic- | ture of Americans, she added, and that as they- are.’ Recently a couple from Aus- tria arrived by train, alone and | bewildered. When Miss Coan | walked over and said, “Welcome | te Buffalo,” the two broke down and wept with relief and joy. they will never forget _our kind- ness,"’ Miss Coan explained, feel we are helping the peace making these people our lasting friends.” Kids Don’t Change Much but Teachers’ Ideas Do SPRINGFIELD, Mass. —Guid-| | ance has changed more in 40 years | ~_ than children, says Francis Warner. “In fact, kids basically ers can do in guidance, says, is to manage the two three mean kids found in every © | group “‘so the other children will | . “Our visitors write and tell us influence the mean ones instead | ' of vice versa.’ “We have | © are agreeably, surprised to find | hardly changed at all,” Warner | x “we are simply people just says, and he should know—retiring | after 40 years as school janitor and | custodian. The’ most valuable thing teach, Warner by or oo ee ete Be i pein een Naa? CSR TSO Ss SS SES ¢ ‘ } thi : 4 a) ab bpistd i Lids. 2 er Big 59 Ibs. Compact, lightweight, carry it from room to room with ease. Big, prilliant picture tube. Smart, modern styling. DUO-THERM Electric WATER HEATER Automatic 52-Gal. Electric Model (=— Regular *12495 a ae : 2 4 s 3 . plies 00 : es & . SS ee e Fully insulated — fully guaranteed —Always plenty of hot water. Low cost operation. ae GRR BaF FREE WIRING On Detroit Edison Lines Free Delivery Anytime of ‘PONTIAC 51 West Huron Street Fhe OOD HOUSEKEEPING’ 7, Friday and Monday 'til 9:00 Capacity Door Shelves. Shelves for cleaning. “‘Glacier Tone” that blends with every kitchen. See this bargain-value ADMIRAL today! FREE DELIVERY! UY Now 5. SAVE *60 SHOP Cu. Ft. Admiral ) Built to Sell for $25995 199: NO MONEY DOWN Look at this value! A BIG 9.2 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator at the price of a 7 Cu. Ft.! Full-Width Freezer Chest. Stores of frozen food. 3 Deep- Removable ND SAVEr List Price $309.95 GENUINE Whintpoot FULLY AUTOMATIC WASHER With Guide Lite Control _and Famous Suds Miser That cuts cost of soap and detergent and hot water in half. Phone FE 4-1555 90 Days Same as Cash FREE Delivery & Service Pow. ~~ be 2 FER Sega: als eS YOUR CHOICE 2° DOMESTICS 59c Place Mats....2 for 25¢ 39¢ Table Napkins....... 25¢ 19¢ Dish Towels... 19¢ Wash Cloths. . 59 Chambray ......yd. 25¢ 49% Print Percale... 39¢ Hand Towels....... 25¢ LADIES’ WEAR 35¢ Ladies’ Panties... 1.00 Ladies’ Scarts 59c Ladies’ Hankies..... 59c Ladies’ Halters ..... .25¢ 1.00 Caps and Hats...... 25¢ 89c Nylon Hose ........25¢ 50c Ladies’ Anklets ...... 1.00 Ladies’ Collars..... Boys’ -Girls’-Infants’ 49c Mennen’s Baby Ce’m. . 25¢ 59c Rubber Pants ... .25¢ 29¢ Boys’ Socks... .2 oo 25¢ 29¢ Girls’ Socks....2 for 25¢ 49c Boys’ Briefs . .. -235e 50c Rubber Balls 1.00 Tots’ Bathing Suits. 59 Girls’ Cotton Pants. 1.00 Men's Ties ........ 1.00 Men‘s Caps ..... “ie 1.00 Suspenders 1.00 Men's Belts ...... 35¢ Work Gloves... phe ern *] Values to 5.99 Broken Sizes It's clean-up time... LADIES’ DRESSES Sp se Values to 7.99 Values to 10.99 Misses’, Large Sizes Misses’, Large Sixes To 24.99 Better LADIES’ “TOPPERS “10 Reg. 19.99 Wool LADIES’ SUITS sa 10.99 Cool Linen LADIES’ - TOPPERS $3 SAVE % T0-% AND MORE! Prices slashed on Summer and Early Fall goods . Here's your chance to buy at tremendous bargains. Be here when the store opens at 10 A. M. Values to 1.99 ‘I More for Your Money! LADIES’ PLAY TOGS Values to 3.99 8.99 Swim Suits od ha $ poe rg ate Halters, Shorts, Shorts, Jackets, T- Pp — Polos, Blouses Tops, Pedal Pushers Priced to Clear White Summer First Quality Ladies to 8.99 Values to 3.99 Values to 1.50 SUMMER LADIES’ SKIRTS PURSES i bi $88 89c Size 2 to 6x BOYS’ POLOS More for Your Money! - | SAVE—BOYS' - GIRLS’ WEAR 30° 69c Size 2 to 6x GIRLS’ SHORTS ob Ds 4.99 Size 1 to 12 YOUR CHOICE vO 1.00 Plastic Table Cloths. . $0¢ 1.00 Plastic Drapes ee eee ee rn $0¢ 1.29 Poorest | Nylon. yd. 50¢ ‘6% Ironing Board Cover. . 50¢ 89c Plastic Pillow Covers. 50c 69c Leff-Kins Napkins... . 50c , LADIES’ WEAR 50¢ 1.00 Boys’ Tee Shirts..... 50¢ 1.00 Boys’ Briefs ....... 52 1.00 Girls’ Poles ........ 5% 89c Girls’ Halters ....... 50c Lolly Pop Rayon Pants . 50¢ 1.99 Girls’ Mats ........ $0c Li MEN’S WEAR Come, follow the crowds ‘ YOUR CHOICE 00 DOMESTICS 1.59 Cate Curtains ..... 1.00 89c Fancy Dish Towels... 1.00 1.39 Plaid Blankets.....1.00 3.99 Plisse Drapes ......1.00 1.99 Bath Mat Sets.....1.00 1.99 Dressmaker Scissors. 1.00 . 1.00 1.00 . 1,00 1.69 Curtain Panels ....1.00 1.00 Bath Towels. 2 for 1.00 59c Mand Towels. .4 for 1.00 39¢ Wash Cloths. 4 for 1.00 1.99 Garment Bags...... 1.00 5.99 Men's Pants ......1.00 3.99 Men's White Shirts. 1.00 1.99 Sport Shirts... . 1.00 2.99 Polo Shirts ......- 1.00 1,50 Stretch Socks.2 for 1.00 2.99 Loafer Socks ......1.00 2.00 Men‘’s Ties .......1.00 1.99 Men’s Tee Shirts... 1.00 1.99 Mankies ....6 for 1.00 2.00 Suspenders veenen stew 3.00 Men's Belts ...... 1.00 1.99 Swim Trunks......1,00 A Real Buy Reg. to 8.99 MEN'S eben Special Group While They Last Reg. to 7.99 Values to 3.99 MEN’S MEN’S JACKETS SHIRTS $455 Sop ss More for Your Mone Stock Up 2.99 Tots - Boys - Girls 5.99 Size 3 to 10 BIRDSEYE SWIM GIRLS’ DIAPERS SUITS SUITS ace $I “ Reg. 49¢ 5.99 Full Size Higher Priced Sanforized CHENILLE PLAID CHAMBRAY || SPREADS BLANKETS Va s a os — ie, eee A ¥ or : Bal i ‘ ) r ho 4 : ‘ | i z™M ‘ | i ars a \ = ‘ ie a4 A , f ‘ j i fp wmekes ; a‘ j } : j 5 eae ee THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 14. 1955 * | ‘ TWENTY-TW \ Private Detective Mi- tell Pelice phone by the murderer. “Stop a minute, Will, and con- . Death by Brett Halliday chee Stsens, ap to Bie core te a poet | sia want = Chief Will Gentry the fell story of his _ “Maybe he was afraid she had after.” learns | : ‘ : : | his pretty secretary, Lucy Hamilton, has | something incriminating. The im-_ IN a flat, unemotional tone, | you going to do about that?” Shayne told Gentry exactly what' Will Gentry’s voice was decep-| the last 15 minutes, Give me a ‘ i e people will ha ing ground }the handicapped, enough fail to do’ _— . : tow told Lacy thet = dead met Crusades, Inc. ahah eet pons , : ~ sel as ce to pli cer 500 Hee, may pene i en “I recall you saying that i Ee skills“ for empl mt in other er" ® said Bristo& had told her wat. | Provides Work firms. His new firm will also be | the community, he urges. THAT ITCH as | Iv@s ne on we | for Handicapped y. “If you want a complete | fecti aetiera | hea | time, read the Classified ads regu- | feet. tmseet ective workers, says. | ime, [ anon oe vee Se ee ot cee One cop who was. handcuffed to Hugh) handicapped people is almost rea Distributed by | Allerdice when the police car went to start operations here. wee | ~ NEA Service, Inc. | into the river there three days Loveland who has given up a well- | | ago." an educational,» project to show description of your man. Detec-| [A CROSSE, Wis. U®—An indus- _| paid job to head Crusades, Inc., | that handicapped people can be ef-| FOR A GOOD JOB, full or part| | tive First Class Mark Switzer. The|try planned to provide jobs tor | _“!though many firms do employ ‘larly. Sam Benson Says: | argued Gentry. “He certainly knew | ing her as sort of hostage to force — (To Be Continued) » — 4) made the announcement. ;you to give him the money he’s eae *. * « - | 32 STYLES! * NURSES *nussés UNIFORMS * BEAUTICIANS : Light Didn’t Change; Loveland, president of the cham- - a3 er ef commerce, has been active | —There Wasn’t Any , in the National Association for In- PETERSBURG, Va. —Traffic | {antile Paralysis. He has a son | piled up at a busy intersection Stafford, 10, now being treated for | while a driver of the lead car sat Polio at Warm Springs, Ga. “I told you there was no money.” | portant thing right now is that | Shayne half rose from his chair |he has Lucy Hamilton. What are with clenched fists. “YOU told me a lot of things /on running my police department, | suppose you tell me what to do.” he had been told over the tele-' tively mild. “Since you seem bent} description of this so-called mur- derer . .. if he exists.” ‘He's heavy-set,"’ said Michael /calmly behind the wheel. The | driver told police he was waiting | for the light to change. But there | A survey shows there are | about 100 employable handi- capped people in the La Crosse | area, Subcontract work has been * FIGURE- FLATTERING a Jy 7/5) SPECIAL i | ORDERS TAKEN FOR sider the situation. What would’ you and your entire police force have done at that moment if I'd taken the story to you?”’ “We could have saved the wom- “Don't, Will. It's Lucy we're talk- Shayne bet ween tight-clenched ‘wasn't any light ing about. I'm convinced the man jeeth, “and middle-aged. Wearing) The judge said $100 fine and| who has her prisoner has already 4 gray suit and gray hat. . Prob- | thirty days in jail when the driver | killed two people tonight. Why not! ably driving the car he stole from admitted that, while maybe not | Lucy, too?"’ 'the Miami Beach resident who seeing double, he was “in no con- | an’s life and gotten the whole “J can’t think of any good rea-| picked him up at the accident and dition to drive."’ story from her by sitting tight.’ son.” The cigar was drawing ‘well, got slugged for his trouble." selection . . . at a sensible, low price. blustered Gentry. ‘He told you he and Gentry regarded the glowing; ‘‘That's not much to go on.” The Library of Congress has 250! At the same time he plans to ad- | had her hid out with arrangements end approvingly. “Unless he’s hold-: “Do you remember Jack Bris- miles of bookshelves. lined up to start Crusades, Inc. and it will eventually go into light manufacturing, Loveland says. COLORED Yes, Girls... Nylons, Dacrons, Cottons. If you want UNIFORMS He expects the project to com- | pete on a private enterprise basis. | Open ‘til 9 P. M. A the er! to SAM BENSON 20s. perry st | | just the jobs so that handicapped ' for us to find her if you Creal] — er come across with the money in a/| certain length of time. You caused | her death by forcing the issue.’’| “He told us he had her hid! out,’’ Shayne reminded him. “But he didn’t in fact. He had her tied | up and locked in the trunk of the| stolen car all the time.’ Michael Shayne's voice had an unaccus- | tomed note of pleading in it. “Do you have Doc Martin's preliminary report on her?’ Will Gentry hesitated, then he conceded gruffly, ‘Doc didn't find a trace of salt water in, her lungs. She must have been dead before the sedan went over. Suf- focated in the trunk.” *‘How long before the car went over, Will?” ; “At least half an hour,” Gentry grudgingly, ‘But doesn't absolve you, Mike."’ “I know, I know,"’ said Shayne wearly, “If you'd had a jackass for a father, you'd be out in a! field braying right now instead of | sitting at this desk. So, I made a fast decision. There was one wey we might trap the guy. By send- ing Lucy out with a decoy package Allowance ror your OLD WORN-OUT (Regardless of Condition) FURNITURE We will allow you up to $100 on your old ivi i wader her arm... and don't you up to $ your old worn out Living Room, Bedroom, Chair, Table, Lamp or make up that bomb. I gave him just anything of value. Come in and get real cash for ji — pa on j ything g S that useless item about the house. he cooperated the way you've al- ways had your men cooperate with said that (“Anything of Value”) Choose From Famous Makes! , aa ‘or bungaline the | $888 ; FLEXSTEEL ” me you for bungaling | rr : deal,” said Police Chief Gentry. | Si z MROBHLER | TOO MANY IFS a 3 mi ance | “Fair enough. There again, we | @ ; x HOWARD have a whole batch of ifs. If he | Sam cama qlee ; ‘ r¢ - GANZ UNION hadn't gunned the motor so tat . : & DREXEL | before the bomb went off. I¢ the | ia ’ j KLING guard fence hadnt been down! fag Os BASSETT at exactly that point. If an officious y motorist hadn't picked up the un- FASHION. concious man and carried him TREND away before the police or I got) f MAINLINE, there . .. Those are ifs no one can| ETc anticipate. I took a gamble on catching him and lost. If I'd sue- ceeded, you'd be pinning a medal on me instead of having me on the | carpet.”’ | oe “But you didn't succeed. Go on}! with your wild story about a bank robber named Hugh Allerdice." SHAYNE went back to the time | of the payroll theft and related the sequence of events leading up to the automobile tragedy while Allerdice was being taken to prison. Then Chief Gentry broke in with: “Arlene Bristow is missing from her home. Supposed to have left for Miami a couple days ago under somewhat mys- terious circumstances, With her brother dead here, I naturally wondered if it was she in the luggage compartment of the se- dan.” “Arlene in Miami!" exclaimed Shayne. ‘“‘Lucy must have learned that after we left her somehow. And that's what took her down to the morgue!"’ “From what you said there, I gathered you thought Lucy was the woman whom the man rec- ognized as he came out, and who took her away with him. Some man named Jenkins from 12th Street, who was afraid she was his oe o* . Pa * a 0 UY ee of oeee” AiG Oe I v - oe? os ¢ .? ee a OY . a oY An . oe G ois . Sogn te oer? . . oY aa * «6 my OF ev 59 ORY «** daughter."’ : “Nuts! He’s the murderer, of ots HE WE 0 hing FOPPU™ ee tt course. The man who was driv- ing the sedan. He recognized Lucy oa at the morgue, caught her by surprise and hurried her out before she could protest. His Miami street address was the giveaway, Will. No one in Miami lives on plain 12th Street. It's either North- west or Northeast, Southwest or Southeast. That mistake proves him a stranger." HE KNEW RER “Why would the murderer go down to try to identify the body?" oe * ee? ae . a8) % <° oe © ao 8 Ay oe e* ee 4 0 a tecek! * 1 BUYING A BICYCLE? “os ; NO MONEY Take 2 Years oe Li to Pay! = ae HEASY CREDIT TERMS ARRANGED - No Carrying Charge On Our Budget Plar BE SURE! Be certain when you buy your bicycle that you can get parts and service for it. Don't be left holding a useless new bicycle. BE SMART! wisely . . bu ‘our bicycle. yy y Sele « ee, at ou can serv- | and yn delay, We serv- eae we sell saa make ., . uso eceive a 8 6 6 day service that . e SCHWINN, RALEIGH, DUNELT end COLUMBIA BICYCLES Smail Down Payment — ‘osy Terms SCARLETT’S BICYCLE $ 20 &. Lowrence. 2-7221 DPANV AA AE: Co. 25 SOUTH SAGINAW PONTIAC’ S MOST BEAUTIFUL FURNITURE STORE Cee © lel e« + e¢j gs ny THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘FHURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 a . ¥ TWENTY-THR fi tT zi Notice of Intention to Construct Curb, gutter, drainage: on Edward street. ‘ You are hereby notified that at a regular meeting of the Commission of the City of Pontiac, Michigan, held on the llth day of July, 1955 by resolution t was declared to be the intention of the City Commission to construct curb, tter. drainage and related work on ward Street from Myra Avenue to Orehard Lake Avenue at an estimated cost of $6,640.43 and that the plan, pro- file and estimate of said improvement is on file for public tnspectton. It t further intended to construct said improvement itn accordance with the plan, profile and estimate, and that the cost thereof shall be defrayed by special assessment according to frontage and that all the lots and parcels of land either side of Edward Myra Avenue to Orchard Lake Avenue shall constitute the special assessment district to defray $3,202.88 of the estimated cost and exnenses there- of and that $3.437.55 of the estimated _ cost and expenses thereof shall be paid from the Capital Improvement Fund. : OTICY 18 HEREBY GIVEN That the Commission of the City of Pontiac, Michigan, will meet in the Commission Chamber on the 19th day of July, 1955 et 8 o'clock p. m. to hear suggestions and objections that may be mace bv narties interested. WO. 6864. Dated July 12, 1055. ADA R. EVANS, City Clerk. = July 14, 1955. Notice of Intention to Construct curb, gutter, drainage and related work on Nebraska Avenue. You are hereby notified that at a regular méeting of the Commission of the City of Pontiac, Michigan, held on the lith day of July, 1955 by resolution it was declared to be the intention of of the City Commission to construct curb, gutter, drainage and related work on Nebraska Avenue from Bagley Street to Franklin Road at an estimated cost _ot_ $22,172.37 and that the plan. profile and estimate of said improvement is on file for public inspection. tt is further intended to construct * sald improvement in accordance with the plan, profile and estimate, and that the cost thereof shall be defrayed by special assessment according to frontage and that all the Ints and parcels of land fronting upon either side of Nebraska Avenue from Bagley Street to Frank- lin Road shall constitute the! svecial assessment district to defray $10,176.32 of the estimated cost and expenses thereof and that $2304.00, the estimated cost of sewer stubs shall be defrayed by special assessment against the fol- lowing lots: 201 202, 203, 204, 295, 206 207, 208, 299, 211, 292, 5 E 222, 223, 22 258, 59, Bubdivision and that $9,69205 of the estimated cost and expenses thereof shall be paid from the Capital Improve- ment Pund NOTIC? 18 HEREBY GIVEN That the Commission of the City of Pontiac, Michigan, will meet tn the Commission Chamber on the 19th dav of July, 1986 et 8 o'clock p. m. to hear suggestions and obfections that may be made bv nrarties interested. Oo. 6r6. Dated July 12, 1955 July 14, 1955 NOTICE OF SPFCIAL ASSESSMENT— Sidewalk and Related Work on East Bice of. Telegraph Road To: Norman A. Milin, Ralph Burrette. Rateman & Kamosen Realty, Douglas Lathrup, Jack Tout, City of Pontiac. foceny-Vacuum Ot] Company, Wintfred C. Marrin. George Lasby, Edith Raum- pardner Pure O11 Comnany, Bolce Broth- ers, Otis Tucker, Wm. and Lucinds Fournier, Margaret Hutchinson. Martip A. Pote. Cleve Martin. Reatrice Schnuck H. Cicotte, Oma Fut- Baptt«t . The Company, MAL.RR and to all nersons interested. take notice: That the roll of the Snecte' Assessment heretofore made by the City Asseseor for the pur- pese of defravine that pert of the cox which the Commission decided should be paid and borne bv spectal axssess- ment for the construction of sidewalk and related work on east side of Tele- eraph Road from Ruth Btreet to Golf Drive is now on file tn my office for public inspection Notice ts also hereby given that the Commission and the Assessor of the City of Pontiac, will meet in the Com- misston Chamber tn the City of Pont'sr tn sald City, om the eth dav of July A. D. 1985 at 8:09 o'clock PM. to re- view sald assesament. at which time and place opportunity will be etven all per: | sone interested to he heard Dated July 12, 1065 ADA R_ FV July 14, 1985 Notice of Intention te Construct curb, gutter, drainage and related work on Hazel Street. You are hereby notified that at @ reguiar meeting of the Commisston ot the City Commission to construct curb, the ifth day of July, 1955 by resolution it was declared to be the intention of the City Commission to construct curd, gutter, drainage and related work on Hazel Street from Telegraph Road to Rtarr Avenue at an estimated cost of $11,018.38 and that the plan. profile and estimate of said tmorovement is on fi'e for public inepertion. It te further {ntended to construct anid improvement tn accordance with the plan. profile and estimate. and that the cost ,thereef shall be defraved by specia] agsesement according to frontage and that all the Inte and p«rcels of land fronting upon. ether side of Harel Street from Telerranh Road to Starr Avenue shall constitute the spectal acseasment district to defray $4,710 82 and that $6. mated cost and expenses thereof shall pa —_ from the Capital Improvement mi NOTICE 18 HEREBY OCIVEN That the Commission of the City of Pontiac, Michigan, will meet in the Commission Chamber itn the City Hall on the 10th day of July, 1955 at 8 o'clock Pp. m. to hear suggestions and objec- tions that may be made by parties in- terested. W.O. 6682 Dated July 12 1056. ‘ADA R EVANS, . City Clerk July 14, 1955 .| SUSAN AGREES World Fight Becomes Race ‘Frisco Executive; Pert Beauty Queen Will Fly in Different Directions SAN FRANCISCO (INS) — A 21- year-old former Denver girl and a young San Francisco executive made plans today:to confound all the Rudyard Kiplings and the Hor- ace Greeleys, and to prove that East goes East, and West goes West — and the twin shall meet in San Francisco. All that is involved is a sim- ple air race around the world, each traveling separately in oppo- site directions. The whole thing started last week when the San Francisco dunior Chamber of Commerce, after choosing pert, coppery- haired Susan Ryan as “Miss San Francisco International Air- port,” decided to send her on a round-the-world flight in an at- tempt to break the global record for present commercial airliners. At this point, in stepped Andrew W. Lerios, 34-year-old San Fran- cisco travel agency executive and global flying enthusiast since his teens. “Why not make it a race around the world?” he asked Susan. ‘‘You go East, and I'll go West, and we'll see who gets back to San Francisco first.” \ Susan promptly agreed. Lerios, flying West, will leave San Francisco International Air- port at 11:30 P.M. Monday. Julv 25 (PDT on Pan American World Airways flight 831 for Honolulu, Wake Island, Guam and Manila. * * Ld] Susan, leaving San Francisco just and hour and five minutes later (12:35 A.M. Tuesday, PDT), will head East by American Air Lines to New York. From there, via Pan American and Air France, she will travel to Paris, Rome, Beirut, Baghdad, Karachi. Calk- cutta, Bangkok, Saigon, Manila, Tokyo, Wake Island and Honolulu, thence. home to San Francisco. Her schedule will bring her back to the Golden Gate city just in.time to preside as queen over a two-day Flight-0-Rama air show, Saturday and Sunday, July 30 and 31, at the San Fran- cisco International Airport. Lerios meantime will be continu- ing westward via KLM. Air France, Pan American and United Air Lines through Bangkok. Ran- goon, Karachi. Beirut. Rome, Paris, London, New York and on to San Francisco. 160 HOUR FLIGHT Susan is scheduled to arrVe i back at San Francisco Interna- tional Airport at 11:30 A.M. Sat- urday, after 106 hours, 55 minutes —more than 8 hours better than ‘the existing record for current op- erating commercial airliners. bd * * Lerios’ connections so far call for him to trail Susan into San Francisco by three hours and a quarter, but he hopes to overcome his initial four-hour - 20 - minute “handicap” by arriving early at one or more of his connecting points and taking alternate sched- ules that may then be available. #21 C. of C. Cooperates ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. #—The Chamber of Commerce looked up the Triple H Bar brand for Fran- cis H. Jacoby of Carmel, Calif. He was designing a gift for his mother who registered the brand with the Cattle Sanitary Board in 1907 when she was Hazel Hostetter. Jacoby wanted to put the old brand on the gift. Senior Scouts to Hold Outing This Weekend MENOMINEE (® — The seventh annual Senior Scout Bay Jammer, one of the most unique outings in scouting, will be held in Menomi- nee Marina and the waters of Green Bay on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. °’’ ‘ The Bay Jammer, the idea of) Scout Leader John Turner of Me- | nominee, has grown until this year | 735 have sent registrations from | five states. Senior Boy and Girl Scouts, Explorers, Sea Scouts, Marine-Sea Scouts and Ranger Aids, will spend three days sailing large and small sailboats, take | part in boat safety drills and opera- tions, enter log rolling, swimming | and other water events and stage a Senior Scout parade. The affair is limited to Senior Scouts. Scouts are registered from Michigan, Wisconsin, . Hlinois, ‘Li Q lowe and Wndiana. imestone Quarry | Many will be quartered on sea) . { t > scout ships, which will be sailed | ed 5 here from all over Lake ers eopen in q e and Wisconsin's. Lake Winnehago . country, while others will cAMP | vee ENA ipl a in tents at the beach park and | ‘@X¢S area now more support Senior Girl Scouts and mariners to its claim of being the nation's will be quartered in hotels. ‘largest source for limestone. The Bay Jammer is the only) Reopening of the Stoneport scouting event of its kind in the | Quarry of Presque Isle Corp.—put nation. Similar outings are being | © . . —? patterned after the Bay. Jammer back in operation at an investment for Scouting activities in other of 15 million dollars—is responsible. parts of the country. Before the year is up, tons of 'limestone will have been shipped from here to steel mills. Set Safety Record. GRAND RAPIDS Con- | the area, sumers Power Co., Grand Rapids pecldte ci firms, a Beth- nance . : ehem, Youngstown, Republic, Na- division, this week achieved a safe- tional and sense Laid: formed ty record of one million consecu- ‘Presque Isle Corp. two years ago tive accident-free man hours. Gor- for the operation here. don L. Carson, division manager.) The first shipload of limestone said Wednesday the division's »40 went out from Stoneport last April. employes posted the mark over a Shipments will continue until navi- period of 11 months. |gation ends in December. | The quarry is one of several of | Woman Lavishes Care on Plants of War Marker GRAND RAPIDS (® —A daily ritual, carried out almost unno- ticed, keeps potted plants -bloom- ing brightly at the rid War I Memorial in 4d own Grand Rapids, ! A middle-aged woman, seen by early work-goers, has made it her personal project. Sometime between 6:30 and 7 | with a shopping bag which holds a sprinkling can of water for the) | potted geraniums and _petunias| around the monument base. She wipes off any stains she finds on the sturcture’s metal nameplates. ' “I think people on the other side of life see what we do,” she told a Grand Rapids Press reporter. | a.m. she appears at the memorial | “When I pick up around the monu- ment and water the flowers, they) the say, “Thank you, Pearl.’ - “I know that borders on spiritual- ism, but I believe it,” she says. The woman says she never had a son but thinks of the names on| have more than 15 | LOAN! BUY WHAT VOU NEED N PAY WHAT YOU OWE! » Now you can get up to $$00 the sensible Da way... with all the Bell ws your loan custom-fitted to your individual needs. We take into consideration much vou need . .-. (CiAl FINANCE CO. Es ( Provident Loon ) cre monument as “hers.” . ' didn't put them there, but I keep © The nation’s ie much you can afford to conveniently. 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M. to 6 P.M.’ Seturdey 9-A.M, to 6 P.M. 4 Py PR ORT ee er eg J: Sais - by Bret 2 Detective Mi- series Police flat, wnemotional tone, told Gentry exactly what been told over the tele-| by the murderer. “Stop a minute, Will, and con- sider the situation, What would you and your entire police force | have done at that moment if I'd) the story to you?” “We could have saved the wom-| an's life. and gotten the whole, story from her by sitting tight,” | blustered Gentry. ‘He told you he | had her hid out with arrangements | for us to find her if you didn't come across with the money in a certain length of time. You caused her death by forcing the issue.” “He told us he had her hid out,’ Shayne-reminded him. “But he didn’t in fact. He had her tied up and locked in the trunk of the i stolen car all the time.” Michael — Shayne's voice had an unaccus- tomed note of pleading in it. ‘‘Do| you have Doc Martin’s preliminary | report on her?” Will Gentry hesitated, then he conceded gruffly, ‘Doc didn’t find a trace of salt water in her tungs. She must have been dead before the sedan went over. Suf- focated in the trunk.” “How long before the car went over, Will?” “At least half an hour,” said Gentry grudgingly. “But that doesn't absolve you, Mike." “T know, I know,” said Shayne wearly. “If you'd had a jackass for a father, you'd be out in a field braying right now instead of sitting at this desk. So, I made a, fast decision. There was one way we might trap the guy. By send- ing Lucy out with a decoy package under her arm .. . and don’t blame Pete Fairwell for helping me make up that bomb. I gave him a good story why I wanted it, and he cooperated the way you've al- ways had your men cooperate with me before.” “IT blame you for bungaling the deal,”’ said Police Chief Gentry. TOO MANY IFs “Fair enough. There again, we have a whole batch of ifs. If he hadn't gunned the motor so fast | Bi before the bomb went off. If the | @ at exactly that point. If an officious | ae motorist hadn't picked up the un-| im concious man and carried him | ge guard fence hadnt been away before the police or I got there . . . Those are ifs no one can anticipate. I took a gamble on catching him and lost. If I'd suc- ceeded, you'd be pinning a medal | Sas on me instead of having me on aa o “But you didn't succeed. Go on| os with your wild story about a bank | 33% robber named Hugh Allerdice."’ SHAYNE went back to the time of the payroll theft and related the sequence of events leading up.to the automobile tragedy while Allerdice was being taken to prison. Then Chief Gentry broke in with: “Arlene Bristow is missing from her home. Supposed to have left for Miami a couple days ago under somewhat mys- terious circumstarices, With her brother dead here, I naturally wondered if it was she in the ueone compartment of the se- “Arlene in Miami!" exclaimed Shayne. “Lucy must have learned that after we left her somehow. And that’s what took her down to the morgue!" . “From what you said there, I gathered you thought Lucy was the woman whom the man rec- ognized as he came out, and who took her away with him. Some man named Jenkins from 12th Street, who was afraid she was his daughter,"’ “Nuts! He’s the murderer, of course. The man who was driv- ing the sedan. He recognized Lucy at the morgue, caught her by surprise and hurried her out before she could protest. His Miami street address was the giveaway, Will. No one in Miami lives on plain 12th Street. It's either North- west or Northeast, Southwest or Southeast. That mistake proves him a stranger.” HE KNEW HER “Why would the murderer go down to try to identify the body?” BUYING A BICYCLE? et : RE! Be certain when you buy your bicycle that you can get parts and service for it. Don’t be left holding a useless new bicycle, BE SMART! . buy your bicycle RES { "hiso ‘ou teceive e 8 Stays : bat, includes =k elalanlon ‘ Smail Down Payment _ \ Easy Terms SCARLETT’S. SHOP BICYCLE ) [20 © Lewrence. FE 2-7221 just anything of value. Come in and get real cash for that useless item about the house. EASY CREDIT TERMS ARRANGED —- No Carrying Charge On Our Budget Pla NTY-TWO - : i; THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955: . : v Fee ; ef ; ey Ee tow told that a dead man! people will have a proving ground | the handicapped, enough fail to do (Advertisement) | ' ae had shot eo ae Crusades, Inc. as well as & place to posh ther | 80 to Keep many people in idle DON’T SCRATCH : . Lo ait Meee ee aat| Provides Work | 3% 5, Seen Oe lie comma. eee THAT ITCH } e “Call New Orleans,” said Shayne | for Handica ped an educational,» project to show with sTOM-ME-NOT when a tor re tik leg hlgrad ped |S arom mem seen ons cl eee ee a le | ~ e oy . | ’ | re er a pang ony al Mark porrcag The| LA CROSSE, Wis. W—An indus- Although many firms do employ ' larly. ee 2S aa try planned to prov: cop who was handcuffed to Hugh | handicapped people ts cheniet seme | Allerdice when the police car went! to start operations here. . Warren | into the’ river there three days) Loveland who has given up a well- | t Halliday argued Gentry. “He certainly knew , ing her as sort of hostage to force | Distributed by NEA Service, Inc, 32 STYLES! | paid job to head Crusades, Inc.| made the announcement. Sam Benson Says: (To Be Continued) | | who she was.” ; you to give him the money he's | . | . . “Maybe he was afraid she had after.” Light Didn't. Change; __laveland, president of the cham. | * NURSES | | N | F OC R M S something. incriminating. The im-| “'I told you there was no money.” ‘ r of commerce, has been active | 1 poate gg Non right ee is that | Shayne half rose from his chair —There Wasn't Any in the National Association for In- | * WAITRESSES he has Lucy ‘Hamilton. What are! with clenched fists. PETERSBURG, Va, W®—Traffic | fantile Paralysis. He has a son’ . you going to do about that?” | “YOU told me a lot of things piled up at a busy intersection | Stafford, 10, now being treated for | * BEAUTICIANS Will Gentry’s voice was decep-| the last 15 minutes, Give me a While a driver of the lead car sat | Polio at Warm Springs, Ga. | $°)91 $hK71 §$ /$91 SPECIAL tively mild. “Since you seem bent| description of this so-called mur. calmly behind the wheel. The| A survey shows there are | %& FIGURE- ; ORDERS on running my police department,| derer ... if he exists.” ‘driver told police he was waiting about 100 employable handi- | FL ATTERIN G . SES suppose you tell me‘what to do.”| “He's heavy-set,”” said Michael {°F the light to change. But there | capped people in the La Crosse — “Don’t, Will. It's Luey we're talk- Shayne be t ween tight-clenched' ¥2™ t any light. | area. Subcontract work has been — FOR ing about. I’m convinced the man teeth, “and middle-aged. Wearing The judge said $100 fine and| lined up to start Crusades, Inc. | . COLORED who has her prisoner has already 4 gray suit and gray hat. Prob-| thirty days in jail when the driver| amd Mt will eventually go into Yes, Girls .. . Nylons, Dacrons, Cottons. If you want UNIFORMS killed two people tonight. Why not | ably driving the car he stole from | admitted that, while maybe not| lMght manufacturing, Loveland — selection at a sensible, low price Lucy, too?” ithe Miami Beach resident who seeing double, he was “in no con-| 58% i ses ’ : He expects the project to com- | ————————————— pete on a private enterprise basis. | The Library of Congress has 250! At the same time he plans to ad- | | just the jobs so that handicapped ' “I can't think of any good rea-| picked him up at the accident and. dition to drive.” son.” The cigar was drawing well, got slugged for his trouble.” and Gentry regarded the glowing | “That's not much to go on.” end approvingly. “Unless he’s hold-i “Do you remember Jack Bris- miles of bookshelves. Open 'til 9 P. M. $6 SAM BENSON 20 S. Perry St. Allowance ror YOUR OLD WORN-OUT (Regardless of Condition) FURNITURE We will allow you up to $100 on your old worn out Living Room, Bedroom, Chair, Table, Lamp or (“Anything of Value”) Choose From Famous Makes! eed FLEXSTEEL = KROEHLER = ROWE HOWARD “ 1a UNION DREXEL KLING BASSETT FASHION. TREND MAINLINE, ETC. LIVING = 1} ——_ : 'S/)- MSU ae a e ry hal be . Ce esq OY oe * es ee? acd eee 2 * . . . . y~o oY ee °? “ee” *? es < .?* Be ey Way * oe? Reese | | ae o 6) © 4 RL = q . ee ° ece ® * . . ee so ee a= * Ao eee . ane .* @ene~ . ° pad ae > *) 5 ee in seat, Ches De OS * . . ee eh FO AQO™MS Eis ee) lc dlc iI CC, I ee, ll NR ee Ne ee ll Me ll WK By AS ee eee mel aU ee eee lll owl lO ee dl eee FlUlUlt(‘(<éi‘ié~“ TS CP OlllllmlmlmmmCmCmC—C~—~C SC ee «* & © -— po pg AO ast Ox Oe hUrThlUh lUlUlCU Ce, lUlUlUclcllllllC Ce eee Be llllCtia“ Re "+ * * — e i i 8 oer ee orrlUdU0UllU OO lUlUlUlUlUCcC ll Ce Dl CLT ll Ll lilrlUdUdUdUlmlmlmlmUmllClCU Oh Cll t—“i‘“‘ SC ee 8 OR iC ESE er Ol rl Cl—_ CS Ol... 4 4a 2." #4 $;£ixL. “= FF QWGSiCenwite Be . °- **e#, . oe * © .?* me COM o* . * . we NR Ne GE ee lc WlC(‘é«i‘rR a Ce ee TlLlLlUlUlUlUlc _OCOTAr,.lhUCF hh hlUmUmlti<“—~t~t~t~tCCCCCC:::”””:~CC fh fT al) ee "4 a fe et A + . Son oe ¢ .* ee ee eee” . . oe, Oo es ry A oo oo . ee « . Take 2 Years to Pay! NO MONEY DOWN sete a en pean ‘os e . COG 5 6 eu. “« *-« * 4 ry City . @ “616 a > . 5 re ee aM, | POs A corereese . IS 7 4, y f . tC“ & * + . SC ANV AA AER Ory 25 SOUTH SAGINAW é ITIAR' } A f ii] mrimariey A oO ~ FP 4) p N, | 7! J , MOST BEAU lif UL r LIRN]] URE 5 TORE Pah aP 5" he * ie 9.4.06 ee Sot aaa Saute pe | aaah . pe i | ‘ ay ' ns m eee Gee é : i gink * ee : x i ¥ S eo Me ws Kees es =e ae fp cx i | a | , < [5 ™ , 4 | . ; j : ‘ } : | cS ’ , ‘ , of fa ‘| DHE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14,1955 * Notice of Intention to Construct "ye jo Michigan, Wisconsin, Hilinois, |] + : i ~pu ie . saaat and weter the Sowees, they te: memument ap “Ramat Curt, gutter, drainage on Edward | World Flight ; Senior Scouts lowa and Indiana. ‘Limestone Quarry Woman , ishes say, ‘Thank you, Pearl.’” _ | aida't put thane. eens ale — a = sume em « | to Hold Outing : aarp rh 2 ager ar R ed e § { Care on P nts “l know that boodars on spiritual- them living.” she says. i Bee se te cat : scout in, wich wil ve said Regpened in State Teo Les {itm it tele 8" she ane Mahon ge He the th, ny of dui, "as by esos Becomes Race This Weekend © [ty sa0 #1 ore tse ition : of War Marker ‘me ba Wake of tr sane ctl bare caoe tae ak ea ae the City Commission to construct curb, MENOMINEE (®— The seventh |country, while others will camp|, ALPENA ~The lower Great) Granp Rapips w —A daily| . ge ira teebceh art fe a on ward Street from Myra Avenue to Orehard Lake Avenue cost of $6.64043 and that the plan, = file and estimate of, said improvement is on file for public inspection. It ts further intended to construct sald improvement in accordance with re =. ee and estimate, and that hereof shall] be defrayed by vate po nee according to frontage sna that all the lots and parcels of land fronting upon either side of rd Street from Myra Avenue to Orchard Leake Avenue shal] constitute the special assessment district to defray $3,202.88 of the estimated cost and exnenses there- of and that $3,437.55 of the estimated cost and expenses thereof shall be paid from the Capital Improvement Fund. NOTIC® 16 HEREBY GIVEN That the Commission of the City of Pontiac, Michigan, will m he Commission Chamber on the 19th day of July, 1955 at 8 o'clock p. m. to hear suggestions and obtections Pinat may be made - hinans interested. O. 6864. Dated ed 12, 1065. City July 14, 1955. Notice of Intention to Construct curb, gutter, drainage and related work on Nebraska Avenue. You are hereby notified that at a regular meeting of the Commission of the City of Pontiac, Michigan, held on the llth day of July, 1955 by resolution it was declared to be the intention of of the City Commission to construct curb, gutter, drainage and related work on Nebraska Avenue from Bagley Street to Franklin Road at an estimated cost of $22,172.37 and that the plan, profile and estimate of said improvement is on file for blic inspection It is further intended to construct sald improvement in accordance with the plan, profile and estimate, and that Mees cost thereof shall be defrayed by pectal assessment according to frontage cna that all the Ints and parcels of land fronting upon either side of Nebraska Avenue from Bagley Street to Frank-~- lin Road shall constitute the! svectal assessment district to defray $10,176.32 of the estimated cost and expenses thereof and that 87304.00, the estimated cost of sewer stubs shall be defrayed by special assessment against the fol- lowing lots: 201 202, 203, 204, 295, 297, 208, 290, 211, 29%, 214, 218, 217, 218, 219, 221, 222, 293, 224, 256, 267. 258, 750, 261, 262. 263. 264. 267. 268, 269, 273, 277 278, 270, 20 Wilson Park Bubdivision and that $9,60208 of the estimated cost and expenses thereof shall be paid from the Capital Improve- ment Pund NOTIC? 18 HEREBY GIVEN That the Commission of the City of Pontiac, Michigan, will meet in the Commission Chamber on the 19th day of July, 1985 at 8 o'clock p. m. to hear sugeestions and obtections that may be made bv rarties interested. WO. 6876. Dated July 12, 1956 ADA RR EVANS. City Clerk July 14, 1955. NOTICE OF SPFCIAL ASSESSMENT— Sidewalk and Related Work on East Bice of Telegraph Road To: Notman A. Milin, Ralph Burrette. Rateman & Kamopsen Realty, Douglas Lathrup, Jack Tout. Citv of Pontise Roceny-Vacuum Ot! Company, Winifred C. Marrin. George Lasby, Edith Raum- rerdner Pure Off Comvany, Botce Broth- ers, Otls Tucker, Wm. and Lucinds Fournier, Margeret Hutchinson. Martin A. Pote. Cleve Martin. Reatrice Schnuck H. Cteotte, Oma Fnt- Oakland Lakes Realty Co. Baptict Church. The Texas MALRR. and to all versons interested. take notice: That the rol! of the Specie’ Assessment heretofore made by the City Assessor for the pur- pese of defravine that pert of the cost which the Commission decided should be neld and borne bv spectal assess- of sidewalk Company public tnepection Notice 1s also hereby given that the Commission and the Assessor of the City of Pontiac, will meet tn the Com- mission Chamber tn the City of Pontiser = said City. on the 19th dav of July D.. 1065 at 8:09 o'clock PM. to re- nes sald assessment. at which timé and place opportunity wit! be etven all per- sone interested to he heard Dated July 12, 1965 ADA R_ FVANS City Clerk July 14, 1966 Notice of Intention to Construct | curb, gutter, drainage and related work on Hazel Street. You are hereby notified that at « -reguiar meeting of the Commission o' the City Commission to construct curb, the 11th day of July, 1985 by resohution red to be the — bee eu! fi'e for public inspection. Tt te further intended to construct said improvement in aceordance with the plan, profile and estimate, and that the cost thereof shall be defraved by shectal assecement according to frontage and that all the lete and percels of land fronting upon elther side of Hazel @treet from Telecraph Road to Starr Avenue shall constitute l etsessment district to -— $4,710 62 of the estimated coat expences theerof and that $6,304 56 ot the estt- ore cost and expenses thereof shell be 4, from the Capital. Improvement core 18 HEREBY OIVEN t the Commission of the City of aoa meet tn = bes .O. 6682 Dated July 12 1065 **ADA RFR EVANS, ¥ rk. July 14, 1965 Frisco Executive, Pert Beauty Queen Will Fly in Different Directions SAN FRANCISCO (INS) — A 21- year-old former Denver girl and a young San Francisco executive made plans today to confound all the Rudyard Kiplings and the Hor- ace Greeleys, and to prove that East goes East, and West goes West — and the twin shall meet in San Francisco. All that is involved is a sim- ple air race around the world, each traveling separately in oppo- site directions. The whole thing started last week when the San Francisco dunior Chamber of Commerce, after choosing pert, coppery- haired Susan Ryan as “Miss San Francisco International Air- port,” decided to send her on a round-the-world flight in an at- tempt to break the global record for present commercial airliners. At this point, in stepped Andrew |: W. Lerios, 34-year-old San Fran- cisco travel agency executive and global flying enthusiast since his teens. “Why not make it a race around the world?" he asked Susan. “‘You go East, and I'll go West, and 206, | we'll see who gets back to San Francisco first.” SUSAN AGREES Susan promptly agreed. Lerios, flying West, will leave San “Francisco International Air- port at 11:30 P.M. Monday. July 25 (PDT on Pan American World Airways flight 831 for Honolulu, Wake Island, Guam and Manila. * CJ * Susan; leaving San Francisco just and hour and five minutes later (12:35 A.M. Tuesday, PDT), will head East by American Air Lines to New York. From there, via Pan American and Air France, she will travel to Paris, Rome, Beirut, Baghdad, Karachi. Calk- cutta, Bangkok, Saigon, Manila, Tokyo, Wake Island and Honolulu, thence. home to San Francisco. Her schedule will bring her back to the Golden Gate city just in time to preside as queen over a- two-day Flight-0-Rama air show, Saturday and Sunday, July 30 and 31, at the San Fran- cisco International Airport. Lerios meantime will be continu- ing westward via KLM. Air France, Pan American and United Air Lines through Bangkok, Ran- eoon, Karachi. Beirut, Rome, Paris, London, New York and on to San Francisco. 160 HOUR FLIGHT Susan is scheduled to arr‘Ve |. back at San Francisco Interna- tional Airport at 11:30 A.M. Sat- urday, after 106 hours, 55 minutes —more than 8 hours better than the existing record for current op- erating commercial airliners. : ° * i Lerios’ connections so far call for him to trail Susan into San Francisco by three hours and a quarter, but he hopes to overcome his initial four-hour - 20 - minute “handicap” by arriving early at one or more of his connecting points and taking alternate sched- ules that may then be available. C. of C. Cooperates ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (#—The Chamber of Commerce looked up the Triple H Bar brand for Fran- cis H. Jacoby of Carmel, Calif. He was designing a gift for his mother who registered the brand with the Cattle Sanitary Board in| 1907 when she was Hazel Hostetter. Jacoby wanted to put the old brand on the gift. For Women in White! Nurses -- Waitresses -- Beauticians CORRECTIVE STEP Four Styles for Women in White. FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY! Nights til 9 o’Clock Pontiac State Bank annual Senior Scout Bay Jammer, one of the most unique outings in scouting, will be held in Menomi- nee Marina and the waters of Green. Bay on Friday, Saturday rand Sunday. The Bay Jammer, the idea ‘of Scout Leader John Turner of Me- nominee, has grown until this year | 735 have sent registrations from. five states. Senior Boy and Girl Scouts, Explorers, Sea Scouts, Marine-Sea Scouts and Ranger Aids, will spend three days, sailing large and small sailboats, take part in boat safety drills and opera- tions, enter log rolling, swimming and other water events and stage a Senior Scout parade. The affair is limited to Senior Scouts. Scouts are registered from in tents at, the beach park and Senior Girl Scouts and mariners will be quartered in hotels. The Bay Jammer is the only scouting event of its kind in the nation. Similar outings are being | patterned after the Bay Jammer for Scouting activities in other | parts of the cot Set Safety Record GRAND RAPIDS Ww Con- | Lakes area now has more support to its claim of being the nation's largest source for limestone. Reopening of the Stoneport Quarry of Presque Isle Corp.—put back in operation at an investment ‘of 15 million dollars—is responsible. |Before the year is up. tons of \limestone will have been shipped “ from -here to steel mills. i] | The quarry is one of several of | ithe area... sumers Power Co.,: Grand Rapids | ‘Five steel firms, including Beth- division, this week achieved a safe- ty record of one million consecu- tive accident-free man hours. Gor- | don L. Carson, division manager, said Wednesday the division's »40 | /employes posted the mark over a period of 11 months. - \lehem, Youngstown, Republic, Na- \tional and Jones-Laughlin, formed | Presque Isle Corp. two years ago |for the operation here. The first shipload of limestone went out from Stoneport last April. Shipments will continue until navi- igation ends in December. ritual, carried out almost unno- ticed, keeps potted plants bloom- ing. brightly at the World War II) Memorial in downtown Grand) Rapids, | A middle-aged woman, seen by. early work-goers, has made it her personal project. Sometime between 6:30 and 7 a.m, she appears at the memorial | with a shopping bag which holds a | sprinkling can of water for the | potted geraniums and petunias around the monument base. She wipes off any stains she finds on the sturcture's metal nameplates. “TI. think people on the other side of life see what we do,” she told a Grand Rapids Press reporter. “When I pick up around the monu- needs. We take into consideration how much vou need . . . how FINANCE CO. | (Provident revident Loon ) to their request. | one-trip loan. 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L. ap- proved. | 4]3140 coon f. / ie j “ee, Easy to. clean. _ Straight tube type. 7c oereneeeeoe hd CAR FLOOR MAT. Protects regular floor mat. Has lip to fit angle of front 16%" x 20”. Black, 2N1120. Regularly 35< . Contour floor mat from 3.19 WESTERN AUTO:— 162 NORTH SAGINAW STREET Store Hours: Mon. & Fri, 9:30 A. M. to 9 P.M. Tues., Wed, & Thurs. 9:30 A. M. to 6 P, M. Seturdey 9 A.M, to 6 dhe floor board, ene scl a i i a eT in 3 Smoke-Cancer Link Unfounded British Research Fails to Establish Connection in Extensive Tests LONDON — (INS)—The British Empire cancer campaign has re- ported that a lengthy series of tests has failed to prove that smoking causes cancer. * * * The 53l-page report cited in de- tail- tests made on mice and ham- sters in various laboratories. ‘Leeds University, which con- structed “a robot smoker” that puffs 36 cigarettes simultaneously, started orie set of experiments in 1953. Extracts from the tars pro- - duced by the smoking cigarettes were injected into mice of five different strains for 18 months —and with negative results. “This suggests,” said the re- port, “that at most any carcino- genic (cancerous) properties pos- sessed by the tars used are very attenuated.” 50 CIGARETTES DAILY The report cited the efforts of other laboratories to produce can- cer by exposing hamsters to the smoke of 50 cigarettes daily. These tests also were negative for eight months, but the report said cautiously that the negative results might be caused by the use of unsuitable strains of labora- tory animals. The experiments are continuing. . The long report told of similar negative results in the attémpts to cause cancer in other labora- tories by injecting, feeding, or NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT— Sidewalk on West Side of South John- son Avenue. To: William &. Teague, Brode, Pure Products, Mrs. ra, Louis re- ae ‘jald ecsessment, at which time and place opportunity will be given all per- sons interested to be heard. Dated July 12, 1055 ADA BR. EVANS, City Clerk. , July 14, 1955 NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT— _ on North | cigarettes made entirely of paper. |Wales and England where people | died from various forms of cancer. | Argue About miso — should | MOLOTOV LISTENS ON WEATHER PHONE — Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov listens on phone to a special weather report device as he tours Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago recently during lay-over between trains. Explaining the phone operation is Maj. | Lenox Lohr, left, head of the museum. Others are unidentified. painting the skin with tobacco tars. The injections included tars from ordinary cigarettes and also from * ~* * Another investigation line sought a possible link between soil and stomach concer. Soil samples were | taken from gardens of homes in Senators Even Vacation Sites WASHINGTON (INS) — In case you're wondering where to go to escape the heat this summer, ask a senator. | If you don't feel like asking. | | he'll tell you anyway, and he’ iy also tell other senators. | Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn) started it off in the Senate yes- terday by extending a brief invita- tién to his colleagues and the world in general to visit his state for a of inee aca 1 e Ly reots take wotice: ‘That ‘the roll ef the| _ S@®- Olin Johnston (D-SC) Socetal - t bh f made| leaped to his feet. He said he De Assecser ter, the pect | didn’t want to take anything which the mission decided should| from Minnesota, but he added: be id amd berne by special a S- re’ —, on north Menominee Road to east line of lo 18, Crofoot Western | Addition is now on file in my office for — inspection ‘otice is se wa hereby given that the | Pasen din] and the Assessor of the opportunity will be given all per- interested to heard, Dated July 12, 1955. ADA R. EVANS, “It is just about half as far to South Carolina, where you can go to Myrtle Beach. Or, if you don’t like that, go to the northern part Humphrey said he didn’t mind if “some” people go to South Caro- lina, but Sen. Alexander Wiley (R-Wis), whose state borders on Humphrey's, had a word or two of his own to speak. ARMY WAVY JOE'S 8x9 SURPLUS gee 32S. Saginaw St. TARPAULINS +. $3.50 woe - $4.20 ++. $5.40 .... $7.20 8x10 .... $8.00 U.S. NAVY LIFE PRESERVERS. . MAE WEST LIFE PRESERVERS. . PLASTIC PLAY POOLS, Reg. 9,95 $5.95 FE 2-0022 9x12 .. $10.80 10x12 .. $12.00 12x15 .. $18.00 12x18 .. $21.60 15x20 .. $30.00 . $2.50 . $3.95 Fitted Canvas BOAT COVERS 12 Ft. $11.95 14 Ft. $13.50||/ ¢ 16 Ft. $17.25 Coast Guard Approved BOAT CUSHIONS Req. $3.95 3% Ea. $]2 Aluminum Collapsible BOAT OARS HAMMOCK “a $5 45 Brand New Jungle HAMMOCK Wit Neti. $ 495 Heavy Swim Fins $125 Swim Mask $295 With Double Snorkel SNORKLE .. . 79c MASK ..... 69 GOGGLES ee 39c TENTS FOR RENT and SALE JOE'S WAVY 82 S. Saginaw St. y SURPLUS FE 2-0022 ‘of my state and-there bask well in| - |the mountain regions." . * Marriage License! | ‘Applications , - Barney D. Thomas, 80 Willard kc Mabie M. Wallis, 662 Homestead a James FP. Fritz, 3050 Phillips a4 Bernice Birrell, Keego Harbor my Max C. Wells, Lake Orion Marion F. Seger, Rochester Carlyle E. Hornung, Birmingham Nency M. Havermaie, Birmingham Thomas A. Tuffin, 3416 Eastwood Shirley A. Lewis, 2646 Midvale Bobbie R. McCool, 62 E. Columbia Shirley A. Smith, Decatur, Ga. John W. Day Jr., Skokie, Til Barbara A. Cline, Birmingham Angelo J. DiSantis, Birmingham Ariene G. Nevala, Birmingham Leonard W. Yocum, 2055 Knollwood Trula Davis, 431 Raeburn oe Murrell D. Beutler, 1016 £. ues Freida L. Fuller, 74 8. Park Richard J. Abraham, Dearborn Marilyn J. Wright, 74 Forest Roy E. Newman Jr., 136 Auburn Annabell Hawkins, Rochester Marley R. Hall, Walled Lake Mary BE. Fuson, Walled Lake James A. Broussard, Farmington dune V. Wright, Parmington Kenneth R. Morris, Walled Lake Monivene Toulbee, Walled Lake Hubert C, Hass, Ferndale Joanne McCoail, Birmingham Hubert E. Hancock, 910 Williams Lake Patricia L. Lowe, 1356 Tull Sherman Tenderson, 176 8. Saginaw Eimira Hoolm, 178 8. Saginaw Arthur W. Jeffery, 771 Monticello Bigrid I. Marling, Milford George R. Kerr Jr, Peirfax, Va. Nancy J. Lippert, 2011 Churchill Jeanette T. Nordiund, 29‘, Central Harry 8. O'Neill, Drayton Plains Olive B. Vismer, Drayton Plains James E. Hereford, 28 Henderson Patricia A. Vess, 116 W. New York Soma W. Peckham Jr. Norwalk, Mary A. Crane, 337 W. Iroquois John J. Borkowski, 01 Fairgrove Elizabet Vivian R. Wymer, 5950 h Lake Charles D. Chapman, Rochester Peggy A. Fisher, Detroit Robert J. Buell, 633 Lakeview Dorothy J. Loop, C-@7 BE. Huron Archie Croft, 254 Harrison Jimmie. Lee Mason, 438 Highland James A. Carter, 201 Marion Patricia A. Conway, 2820 Buick Leonard G. Thomas, Royal Oak Freda M. Payne, Clawson Thomas HM. Murrian, Knoxville, Tenn LaVanga M. Oberhein, Hol ly Envelope Dates Donor ST. PAUL, Minn, (UP)—The Society for Crippled Children and Adults said one of its benefactors must be a man who doesn't believe in waste. During the recent Easter Seal drive, the society re- ceived one contribution in a return | address envelope of the type it a | distributed in 1950. \ & Ne eee ee Bikes lai Roy C. Bargent, 141 S. Parke | The Shoes You love To live In Fra eet Regular Styles as Nationally Advertised -$9.95 and $10.95 The LION STORE'S duly CLEARANCE Save 0% © —— Ps | Men’s Swim Wear ar 3M eae Swim Suits 18 Ec aR Rd Boys’ SWIM SUITS a 1 99 WO a ae Chad Ladies’ SKIRTS Reg. $5.98 $ 99 & $7.98 Reg. $3.95 & $4.95 Reg. to $8.98 pat 3 Girls’ ‘and Ladies’ PLAYWEAR Shorts, short and halter sets, caps, Kcol. seme slacks and pedal 20 20% off i 0 A ee eer tee 6 + Men’s Summer Suits peatend cords, dacron bienda, 1 & 2 pant suits. "20% off — STRAW HATS aos. 0 ‘ 99 Seo Short Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS | 39 nro ERT CHARGE ‘EM ALL at the Sizes 3-8 - Reg. $1.98 CHARGE ‘EM IF YOU - by Van Heusen = Special Purchase! SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHTRE Values from $3.95 to $5.95 $93 Others — Reg. $2.96 - Now $1.99 SRR Oe ule ole, Bead Linens, Sheer Batistes, Plisses, Embroidered trim Doe- skins, fine Cotton Plaids, neat Checks, Cool Chambrays and fine Cotton and Dacron Blends. Here is a special purchase of famous Van Heusen fine quality sport shirts that have not been on display, and are so exceptionally priced that you will want several at sav- ings of one-half. SEE RRR: ERE eRe ky CRE: Men’s Portage’ Regular $1195 $ 8° 85 * ES, SOSA ES IS REI he Leather and Mesh shoes in choice of black, blue or brown. Also. two-tone leathers in black and white or tan and white. Oxfords and low cut styles. —— tagpe Sah OSS * | Porto-Ped ita Cuts 4 2°° CHARGE YOUR PURCHASES AT THE LION STORE! | Two eyelét ties. Honey and white. Regular $17.95. ae Se ies ie E ls : eer Ee a ee ee ee | . 5 Charge > Your Dresses Jresses Special Selling! @HALF SIZES © JUNIORS Values to $17.98 778 Cotton coolers for the warm months ahead that will amaze you. The values are simply outstanding and you'll want several at this low, low @ MISSY ‘* Summer Shoes x i 4 ! % | . cer ot, f bach esines +. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1959 “] Scorned Sweetheart (scum .ct*.si"%.",om | Woman Gives Bandit Atomic City Vagrant | Pei on condion the arr | And She's Wrong? Gets Just Deserts GRAND RAPIDS & — Police learned the power of a women scorned, but. they won't tell her name. Her boy friend won't prose- cute, Someone paparied | a hit- aa cee accident, A young woman was lying in the street. Questioning | dis- closed it wasn't a hit-run_ case, ‘exactly. She had followed her boy friend, who drove another young woman home in his convertible. While he was saying good night to the other woman, No. 1 pitked up rocks and smashed the lights, windows and instrument panel of his car, As he vertible top and began ripping away. He drove off while she was still ripping. She was knocked down. Water Drillers Strike Oil on Farmer's Land FREDONIA, Ky. ®—Oil's well with farmer Malcom Boone, but the town’s ¢ivie clubs have ‘troubles, The clubs raised money -for Fredonia's first waterworks and arranged to drill on Boone's land. . - But oil was struck and the pro- ject was abandoned after the clubs | had spent $1,300. Boone leased 296 acres to an oil company, which will drill for oil, not water. Scare of His Life MINNEAPOLIS (UP) — A stick- up man approached Mrs. Mary McGlynn, about 50, at her grocery store here. “Theres going to be no robbery here,”’ she shouted at him. ‘‘I'll hit you over the head with a bottle first.” . She proceeded to shoo him out and chase him down the street screaming, “That man tried to ‘hold me up. Follow him.” Two neighbors nailed the would- be bandit, a six-footer weighing 280 pounds. Mrs. McGlynn stands five feet, two inches. HOUSE-HUNTING’S EASY when | you place a Pontiac Press Wanted- To-Rent ad, Phone FE 2-8181, Summer Clearance Entire Stock of Summer Clothing ° Reduced for Quick Clearance 3 GROU PS Ladies Dresses Regularly priced to $20.00! Nothing reserved! Every dress must go! $400 5600 +300 ae 54% MEN'S SLACKS Rayon and nylon cords, gabardines and other popular summer fabrics. gu sy Nylons, Short Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS Regularly Priced to $5.00 linens and fine cottons. ALL MEN’S 1 A J dresses, rayons, Ladies cotton house dresses . $2 §.'%, Ladies Skirts & Blouses . . 62°53 Mens Sport Coats _— . $1988 Mens Fully Lined Jackets $688 5 N. Saginaw St. UNION STORE “Established 1913” Pontiac | derived its name from Jean Rou- | NO STORAGE SPACE — Grain has a partial solution to the shortage of boxcars to haul away wheat from his Waldo, Kas., elevator. Pelee’ ace elevator operator Jim Luder, right, He cut a hole in the side of the elevatur and dumped the extra wheat on the ground through the hole. ' Capacity of the elevator is 16,000 | bushels on the ground. bushels, with an additional 12,000 United States Place Names: Present Amusing Thought United States place names some- times lend themselves to amusing word patterns when arranged in groups. For instance, Roulette, _Pa., might coryjure a picture of a gam- bling town. The community really lette, a French land promoter. | Mention of Looneyville, W. Va., | may bring smiles. But it stems | from the family name Looney,| the National Geographic Society | says. Nonetheless it is a fact that Arkansas, Missouri and West Vir- ginia each have towng named Ro- mance. And there's Love in Kentucky; and a Loving, N. Mex., Ga. and Texas; Beauty, Ky.: Admire, Kans.; Coy, Ala. and Ark.; Smile, Ky.: Wink, Texas; | Clinch, Va.; Embarrass, Minn. and Wis.; Blue Eye, Mo.; Deary, Ida.; Kissimmee, Fla.; Darling, Pa. ‘and Miss.; Bridal Veil, Ore.; Bliss, Ida., Ky. and N. Y.; Venus, | Fia., Neb., Pa. and Texas; Romeo, Colo., Fla. and Mich.; Juliette, Ga.; and- Casanova, Va. Ava Gardner must be shared by many states, four have an Ava and seven a Gardner. The devil's domain is suggested | by Diablo, Calif.; Devil's Elbow, Mo.; Devil's Lake, N. D.; Devils | Slide, .Utah; .Devils .Tower .and | an Ideal. Arkansas and Texas each claim a Best; Georgia and South Dakota Three states have an Advance (Louisiana has Retreat). One Mississippi town is Money; and tewns or hamlets in Arkansas, Kentucky, and Virginia are called Cash. Many a name strikes a cheerful note: Sunshine, La. and Wyo.; Sunny South, Ala.; Sunbeam, Ida.; Sunnyside in several states; What Cheer, Ia.; Happy, Ky. and Texas; Happy Jack, La. and Ariz.; Benevolence, Ga.; Brilliant, Ala. and Ohio; Jolly, Texas; Welcome in four states; and Amity, Con- cord and Harmony scattered over the country. To a small commu- nity in Oklahoma, home town is Okay. Long ago a Blessing was bestowed on Texas. ‘A Ripping Good Time ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. w-lIt was all in the line of duty but Deputy Sheriff Mickey Espinosa wag embarrassed anyway. Trying to place a disorderly woman under arrest, the officer lost the protection of the seat of his pants when she grabbed a | hip pocket, pulled, and produced two long rips down his trousers. man leave the area. It was the first vagrancy case in Los Alamos’ more-than-l0-year history. L@S ALAMOS, N. M. At long last, this atomic center had ‘a vagrancy case, ° A $100 fine on the charge was levied by Justice of the Peace Joseph Conner and the fine sus- CLEMSON, s&s. c. 1 About 65 per cent of Formosa’s people can read and write. Public Notice OUR TOWN MAY NOT HAVE AN EARLY WARNING! Lack of civilian volunteer plane spotters leaves vital observation posts vacant | not be depended upon because of its inability to spot low-flying aircraft. Only the eyes and ears of the Ground Observer Corps can do this job. And, the shocking fact is that our town simply does not have enough volunteers to man all of the necessary spotter posts! Will you help fill the gaps in our ranks? Join the 300,000 Americans wearing the G.O.C. wings. So long as the Iron Curtain still exists, we dare not relax our “Sky Watch.’ Two hours a week is all that is re- quired to help keep your home and your country safe! How important are these plane spot- ter posts? Read these facts and judge for yourself: The Reds have recently completed several air bases in northern Russia from which they can reach any point in the United States. The Soviets are known to have 1000 heavy bombers—enough to blast 89 top U. S. cities at a single blow leaving eleven million casualties! “What about the Air Force and Radar?” you ask. Our interceptor planes and anti- aircraft batteries ... must have an early warning. Our present radar can Keep your eye on the sky in the GROUND OBSERVER CORPS JOIN TODAY=Write or phone= Mr, Larry Collins, 35 S. Parke St., FE 3-7131 Contributed os © public service by’ PIC-150-30 CONSUMERS POWER ..>.. COMPANY Sign Up! Look Upt 28 W. Lawrence St., Pontiac oe ie | tenes —ne Hell’s Half Acre in Wyoming. But paradoxically Paradise is not | far away—in eight states. There. are also 16 Edens and a Utopia in’ Texas. Three states have a Prosperity, | Utah a Bountiful, Washington an Opportunity, Mississippi a Prog- ress, Kentucky a Busy, Indiana and California a Mecca, Linas see a Boom, and Booster. Minnesota has a Bab- bitt. AND EVEN MORE Appropriately Iowa and Min- nesota have a Fertile. There is a | 79¢ Rapid Shave . 1.49 Wall Paint. , 1.69 Waste Baskets .. 79¢ Cannon Bath Towel $1.79 Enamel Dish Pan . 39¢ Reynolds Wrap .. TERRIFIC WHAT HINCKLEY IS DOING TO PRICES AT THEIR “eee ® HINCKLEY'S 5° to *1.00 — OUT OF BUSINESS a» SALE a THESE PRICES—WHY PAY MORE? $1.09. Bruce Floor Cleaner ........50e | wees 29¢ Moth Balls 59c Baby Pants Parakeets ** eee * Hurry! Merchandise $2.00 Home Permanents “ee $4.29 Electric Perculator iiwedi 908 W. HURON PONTIAC, MICH. Is Going Fast « *e eee eee *@e ee eevee “** # # © @ ok , Built Like The Finest! That’s Pontiac for ’55 ~~ You Can't Beat the Price- Finest Built — Lowest Priced — Top Dollar for Your Tradé A well-equipped Pontiac will cost you less than many models in the lowest priced field. YOU JUST CAN’T MAKE A BETTER DEAL ANYWHERE! Get all the facts today at the... Pontiac Retail Store 65 Mt. Clemens—Across From the Post Office $2132" ee Sea es ie ee Psa f Pees . Ss i, , = : ee eis j eae é m 2 ae ie a : # ig - : ; ; : + ; : a j 3 Lee 4 : a | pee Lohse” "ss eee BOMTIAD PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY 14, 1955 ‘3 i225 roe t ’ T c Li f x A d ; ] Pj b h H . | the steel firm is conducting ex. | : | | Peximents to solve the preblem. : (ut Disneys True Life Adventures IEISDUPON FAS en rset oe | “Best Dressed’ TE | aaa Ag Smokeles Shy SSE E=s | x4 fe iy m 7 ESS y | stintartory was an hecrot 1 3 Optometrist 3 sereon Glamor Girts| - Steel City Brags About Snare high cost of such | Onc St shod = Classified by Choice’ Reducing Its Soot 95.8 4 Dp apo pore agai $400,000); Phone FE 4-6842 > of Personal Attire _ Per Cent Since 1946 | scceouminally probibitive, ue ery tHe PORCUPINE voes nor ,\ HOLLYWOOD (UP) — The film | : : industry's jammer ats are divided SHOOT HIS QUILLS. WITH (| ‘ \ ‘i WA Bs PITTSBURGH (UP)—The proof Unglamor ous iE ; “into three groups—those who be-| LAGHING TAIL AND Y/ Yee : LET 5, the pudding is in the eating, | 1. | } «came famous as “best dressed,” BRISTLING SPINES, ‘ LU | es TAL yon! ; jand in Pittsburgh the ‘proof of Birds Convene : NY smokeless skies is in the seeing. ° . } A glance out of any window in ON Florida Key | “Beuer Things in Sight” . Open Friday Evenings “those whi de th de “best tumdressed’” and ao, as a quali- | HE BACKS INTO . HIS FOE. “fied in both classes. The first two are the main divi- | sions, and each has found that it is | able“to command .a large follow- | - ing. An unofficial captain of the first bunch is Joan Crawford, who does not particularly mind the fact that “she made a name for herself as | “a “clothes horse.’ When Miss Crawford's female fans go to a “Crawford motion picture, it's fre- | “quently for the dual purpose of getting a preview of next year's’). style trend and of watching what | may become an Academy Award- ‘the ‘Steel City’ is sufficient to) pep 7c : reveal the tremendous seriges| KEY WEST. Fle. @ Like the | made in smoke control, but there ®Wéllows at Capistrano, but with 'also are figures to prove that the less romance, the sooty terns al- | once-familiar “Smoky City” title ways come back to Bush Key is a thing of the past. 4 An estim ue ated 71,000 of the ugly, aide sdoesselcy Bureau of black and white sea birds swarm | ae cael aut ery bales | down on the serubby little island at within city limits has been re. |e western end of the Florida’ duced by 85.8 per cent since Keys and raise families. With them In addition, during the same pe- Roseate terns to what is believed | riod, heavy smoke was reduced their northernost nesting ground. | 1 by 98.7 per cent. Even the fall of dust has been| Bird men believe the sooties Closed Wednesday Afternoons 1946, |¢ome a sprinkling of Noddy and | 'reduced by pioneer : anti-smoke stay in the air almost con- liaws. The bureau estimated that) “mscwsty during the six months | | 60 tons of dust per square mile they are gone trom Bush Key. | fell in 1938, while the 1954 figure Joseph C. Moore, birth biologist | | Stood at 47.6 tons. for the federal government who | | TRYING TO OUST DUST counts the terns each year, is often | The report attributed the dust- attacked by the quarrelsome birds jar to the still Regen problem as he goes about his work. One of how to stop the discharge of ore tern, he said, nests in the same | i i dust from open hearth furnaces of! spot year after tyear and for re 27 S. Saginaw, Pontiac i steel mills in this area. ‘last three years has pecked him as | 11 5 S Woodward Birmingham ” ’ | A joint committee sponsored by' he came near to take the census. winning performance. Miss Crawford's taste has proven reliable. If her hemline drops, a woman knows that she will be quite correct if she drops her hemline, too. And when the actress introduces natural “Ivy ~ League” shoulders in Columbia's “Queen Bee,” her fashion-con- scious fans know shoulder pads have had it. This whole fashion busines is a 7 very serious thing with Miss Craw- | < —ferd..A month of hought, plan- ning and conferences with the. stu- dio designer, Jean Louis, went into her wardrobe for the film in which she plays Eva Avery, a femme fa- “tale of the South. The role gives a range of attire which includes afternoon dresses, evening gowns and negligees. ‘DRESSED GROUP’ 4 | , , | | : Rosalind pasek is another | Phone System The Sjoperatce! | §can ering gare Says What U.S. Needs | N member of the “dressed” group. ‘Helps in Training or awe Meeps vancthce Is More Eggheads | Marlene Dietrich, despite an oc- | rom the switchboard hen! \oproLk. Va. u—Kenneth | Jahon x oa | ask 5 ccent cent. vin run. CP Youngsters "sic Grz.om tM MNS ns, al a w : ; - | ; 8. needs dreamers and eggheads (in- | aegis here is Audrey eee (UP) — A miniature) “We hope this experiment willy tellectuals). He described Thomas And on the other side of the can eae sins a help motivate tte children to speak Jefferson as a “real egghead.” . rua neik pace ae | Aca P more adequately, thus aiming to-| Harris told the Lions Club that sgh eee ees & eee | | ward improved speed."’ said Su- | civilization as we know it is based | near by leg display pore oe es erp gp Aah or perintendent Richard Eddy of the © the reveries of dreamers but | sold many a theater ticket and | phones — was installed by Illinois Hospital-School. ae ee ae , we will continue to, as in “Three for Bell Telephone Company employes 7 | place our trust a fi baad of | Grinnell’s Festival PIANO SALE! BUT HED RATHER BE LEFT ALONE TO ENJOY HIS NOCTURNAL REPASTS OF BUUS AND BARK. | Distributed by King Featuses Syndicase © Copyright 1955 Wak Disney Productions World Rights Reserved the Show.” Marilyn Monroe and | at the Illinois Children’s Hospital- Pick Your Date a J Jane Russell are in the same | School here. | . dreamers." He spoke of anti- | league. ; The Dra. Valiey in French Mo- intellectualism as a basic defect | Each of the three telephones rocco grows more than 300 varie-| in American society. | In the dual class, Gloria Swan- | interconnects with the other two (ties of dates, says the National ———— son is perhaps the best remem- | and with the switchboard so that Geographic Society. The average| It is believed that poliomyelitis bered for her performances a telephone conversation can be resident of the valley eats three was first described by a pate when | she stared for Cecil B. | carried on. ' pounds of dried dates a day. | physician in 1874. : DeMille. Soe The old master could present her as a fashion plate. And, as everybody knows, he also could . offer any of his stars in the usual * DeMill bathtub. * Netice of Intention to Construct «Water Mains. * You are hereby notified that at @ “regular meeting of the Commission of “the City of Pontiac, Mic! , held on the llth day of July, 1055, by resolution ~%t was declared to be the intention of the City Commission to construct water “mains in Cloverlawn Drive from Ken- nett Road to Ypsilanti Avenue; Cherry- lawn Drive from Kennett Road to w. Columbia Avenue; Mesdowlawn Drive ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY! »eots of $56,609.00 and thet the plan, profile and estimate of said improve- . penses * the estimated cost and expenses thereof shall be rs from the Water Improve- an Fund, made by parties interested Dated July 12, 1955 ADA R_ EVANS, City Clerk. | July 14, 1955. | NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT-— A fi gieewals on East Side of Telegraph ortu ne To: Tel-Huron Shopping Center, Inc., Edwin Gage, William Hotham, Wm. P. “Dohaney and James E. Delaney and te * all persons interested, take notice: That — the roll of the Bpecial Assessment here- . tofore made by the City Assessor for the purpose of defraying that part of the cost which the Commission decided should be paid and borne by special assess- “ment for the construction of sidewalk on east side of Telegraph Road from in fashion for just Dresses with look-like-a-million airs and a less-than- price tag! You'll find dozens of the season's Nee important styies, all the fabrics that will see you beauti- fully through the Summer, perfectly into early Fall. Whatever your figure, whatever your tasie, yon’ll find the right dresses at Penney’s RIGHT Now! Commission and the Assessor of the City ef Pontiac, will meet in the Com- mission Chamber in the City of Pontiac, in said City, om the 19th day of July “A. D.. 1955 at 8:00 o'clock P.M. to re- “wlew said assessment. at which time and | “piace opportunity will be given all per: | "gon: interested to be heard * Dated July 12, 1055 ADA R_ EVANS, City Clerk July 14, 1055 Notice of Intention to Construct “eurb, gutter, drainage and related work on Elm Street. BEAUTIFUL RAYON.NYLON BLANKET SOFT, WARM...IN SUPERB COLORS This is the kind of value you have to see to believe! Run your fingers over it, you'll be amazed at the rich, warm, cloud-soft texture. Feast your eyes on the lovely shades . . . just _plan, profile and estimate of said im- provement is on file for public inspec- "te te further intended to construct _said improvement in accordance with othe plan, profile and estimate, and that —the cost thereof shall be defrayed by apecth! «: ment according to frontage and that all the lots and parcels of land ———— ..! either side of Elm Street : 1 Street { © to 120 feet Bast sahetsies Sa, jana expen ce cent ee i ee in your own bedroom. This fine strared. by weil ae anaes ment agusnet plan et was made to Penney’s specifications sSubaiviston and thet is4.554 88 ot, the y one of America’s top mills. Despite the thal be pal the ‘Capital Improve- small price you get a. laboratory-tested first pe Fe OIVEN oe quality blanket, 3 pound’... 72 by 84 iffches. - Sma on SPOR ny “ ae | hy Poon Y I. e. 4 ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, UL 14, 1955 Cities May Vie on Air Academy ) Appropriations Snarl Could Revive Bidding | by Interested Towns WASHINGTON WW — Rep, Kil- day (D-Tex.) reported yesterday there is a possibility of a revived fight among cities seeking the proposed Air Force Academy. But the Air Force said it had no | plans or intentions of making a_| change in the site of the academy. Kilday is a member of the House Armed Services Committee. The committee sald in report- ing the appropriation bill that no more funds should be spent on the academy until the De- feuse Department has definitely settled its plans for the pro- posed academy and coordinated it with proposed expansion of Ft. Carson in the Colorado Springs - area. The House is scheduled to debate the bill today. Kilday said the question has arisen as to the adequacy of water |‘ supplies for all of the proposed defense requirements in the Colo- rado Springs area. academy will not be built -in Colo- | rado Springs,”’ Kilday told a re- | porter. “In this event, there un- doubtedly would be a wide open fight again for selection of a site for the Air Academy. Naturally, I would then do my best to get it in the San Antonio vicinity." Phantom Strikes Again HARTFORD, Conn. (UP) — Two months after 500 ballpoint pens were installed in the postoffice, the old - fashioned ‘‘scratchers”’ were returned to duty. Otic said patrons were so pleased with | the new pens that they swiped) not only them but also their “theft-proof” chains. The planet Mercury has about V/zith = mass = oe =o pore TRY tings. Blue, ivory or tan. WHITE SETS BATH SET Complete with chrome plated fit- green, STRAIGHT FROM THE TAP | Cruelty to Animals, drinks straight—from the tap, that is. This picture of him stretching | lar system,” he said, ifor some cold water was taken during ‘a hot spell in Philadelphia, Pa. “There is a possibility that the | The bird is a tenant at the shelter of the Society for the Prevention of | Blowing Stack at Work H elps Protect Heart PHILADELPHIA w—Want to avoid a heart attack ebecause of worry at work? | Then tell off yo ur benectack fully. Or a& Dr. David Gelfand puts. ‘it: “Get it-off. your chest. “Blow | your stack.” i Dr. Gelfand has a unique job, | He heads the cardiac work evalua- | tion Unit at Philadelphia General | Hospital under the sponsorship of | the Heart Assn. of Southeastern Pennsylvania and in 3’ years of: careful study has examined 438) men and women. Nearly all of the patients are | referred to the unit by industries | anxious fe determine the heart | victim's capacity for work — | whether he be- tired business- | man or frustrated ditchdigger. | Dr. Gelfand said 46 per cent of the patients—each examined by a, cardiologist, a vocational counsel- | lor, a me dical social worker and | a psychiatrist—have a psychologi- | eal factor which “‘is a basic in-| security.”’ i ee yt th, 4% waadas (dbeerssererite * * & i “Resentment that is not ex- presed goes into the cardiovascu- | “where it tightens the blood vessels. Con- | tinued insult to blood veséel tis- ues results in permanent hyper- | tenion.”” — Jo Jo the blackbird takes his Cover All Kohler Clay Ship Seeking New Port MILWAUKEE # — gre owners of clay ordered by the “strike- beset | Kohler Co. decided last night to abandon efforts to unload their shipments at the Lake Michigan ports of Milwaukee and Sheboy- gan. The decision was announced by 0. S. Hoebreck, Milwaukee attor- ‘ney for the cargo owners. He said {We are looking around for other |ports closer to Sheboygan, either | American or Canadian, where we MID-SUMMER FLOOR CLEARANCE SALE! * Je OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS Until 9 O'CLOCK Reg, $179.50 Value 3-PIECE COLORED 109” from $61.95 up FACTORY CLOSE-OUTS ON BIG 96” SINK TOPS ‘39” Acid Resisting White Enamel Finish — ideal for restaurarits, basemerits, etc. LAUNDRY TRAYS Complete with sturdy stand and faucets. AS as 5] 6” = homes, Could Sell for cottages, ; $98.50 FIRST QUALITY NEW GALVANIZED PIPE. Cash and Carry Va-in, (21-2. lengths) $2.1 &%-in, (21-ft. lengths) $2.8 T-in. (21-ft. lengths) $4.04 TVYa-in. (21-ft. length) $5.39 1Ve-in. (21-ft. lengths) $6.3 2-in, (21-ft, lengths) $8.52 at Wholesale Prices ; | BIG SAVINGS on SOIL PIPE 4-in. Single Hub (5-ft.) ... $3.98 3-in. Single Hub (5-f#.) .... $3.49 7 SAVE ean find people willing to do busi- | Bingo—a~ heart attack. | Dr. Gelfand. said of 350 workers ness with us.” i : sll82 par coat! want | - is unit examin n The announcement followed a back to full-time employment—and_ vote by the Milwaukee Common | 23 per cent of these needed no| Council which refused to guaran-| restrictions, Only 3 per cent were) tee the unloading of a shipment of ‘advised not to work at all. | clay headed forthe city and aj} decision by the White House to step up federal efforts to settle the 15-month long dispute at the | plumbingware firm.. Fits ever eld mat Ritual Gets Results CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — No Local 833 of | rain was. forecast for the annual DIRECTRONIC |the UAW-CIO struck the firm, lo- | Cherokee Area Council Boy Scout j cated in the village of Kohler near | Exposition, ‘but it came down in. INDOOR | Sheboygan, April, 5, 1954. “buckets” shortly after a Tallade- The first shipment of clay| ga, Ala., troop did an Indian rain ANTENNA |sparked mob violence in Sheboy- | dance. | gan, its first port of call, and later '§ UHF VHF Channels 2 to 83 at Milwaukee a threat by the| GOODS GO FAST whén adver- | . ; ClO to imsue a general strike call|teed through Classified adst (my (Tt "ew DWectronic | Indoor j Antenna is by the world’s lead- ‘in the city. Phone FE 2-8181. ing manufacturer. A flick of the switch electronically gives you clearer, sharper pictures on all channels with a signal in jy your area. SENSATIONAL CRISS-CR¢ PHASIN ELEMENT wry SPECIAL NOTICE TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS! We sell what we advertise. We represent our merchandise for what it is. We use no come-ons, and then tell you we are all out of the item. When we give you specials, they are honest specials that you can check anytime . . . anywhere. You can depend on us giving you the best buys possible . . . as honestly represented. ef bp je he ie be bb bb ha np ph bth bh tet bbe tid 21x32 Double Compartment SINKS be Ie fi 30 Gellon HOT WATER Reg. $69.50 GAS HEATER A. PE ow ANTENNA ‘has @ Stamper? : Ca asnuaree KIT Everything you need for in- Attaches to Hose stalling a TV antenna. . ; “ 79° complete with parts instructions. . \ Stainproof white enamel. : Completed Factory irregulars. $ 95 : . 2 $ 99 Fea $ 95 Partie ay care sa Grade . . , Not Crate Marred $2495 Less Fittings - §2-Gel. Hot Water ELECTRIC HEATER % Detroit Edison Approved % Free Electrical Hook-up on Detroit Edison Lines Famous $24.95 Model 75 Whirlaway REG. $79.95 a $76 SPIN ROD and REEL Warranty new 1955 deluxe th the line CLOSE-OUT SPECIAL! Ot Avtematic HOT WATER HEATERS nee. siete $89.95 YOU © SAVE $20.45! YOUNGSTOWN STALL SHOWER Completa with $ 3] 95 fee cou CABINET : SINKS 4 Ft.—4'2 Ft.-5 Ft. ‘59° || BATH Septem oe eee eee TU BS All Youngstown Cabinet Sinks at Cut-Rate Prices! 9 95 54-In. Sinks .. $ 89.95 qu ° an 66-In. Sinks . . $119.50 P CAST IRON HEATING BOILERS » 4 » 4 , and » 4 > 4 FLY ROD Reg. $9.95 56° ‘se Feria Spinning Rods 42-In. Sinks .. $ 59.50 100-Yd. Levelwind Chrome Finish CASTING $ 99 REELS REPLACEMENT PARTS pewrwyT?Te. wevurvrVTY.Y DIXIE DAN THE DISCOUNT MAN IS HERE IN PONTIAC TO SAVE YOU MONEY! Repeat Sellout... PLASTIC Seat Covers 7 : ic ; Slip over the seats rovers OG folded to store in glove box FLOOR MATS emt te fit over center ¢ bump . . iifte owt for easy cleaning. Save Money $122 ELECTRIC HAIR CLIPPER 50-Ft. Plastie Lawn Soaker —S CLOSING OUT 275 Pairs Men’s Summer Dress Pants , SAVE YOU PLENTY on Haircuts. SETS Famous Wahl hair Clip- per, Scissors, Combs, on ne other acces- Factory Guaranteed POTTS OCTT CeCe TTT NT VOUT UN VO aaa pp 3 WAYS TO BUY: 1. Cash 2. FHA—3 yrs. 3. Layaway Plumbing Supply Co. rair Full Stock‘of Soil Pipe Fittings—Everything in Plumbing Supplies ms PARKING @ —Eacapt on Cosh cae or 100 S$. Saginaw . Phones: FE 65-2100 and FE 4-583! eS fy f , i / t 1 . | t iy / { } if f i f 2 | af bed ge fyt i i : {'l NOR e a eee er oe et OEY P ot i : ‘ 4 y : rE ; j ; " ‘ a | le i f , gs | 2 ] : Ne ) bala 3 : Ss {TIAC PRES THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 , , — “TWENTY-EIGHT ee. — Sk oe we bey HE PON rIAC PRESS, THURSDAY , in , os Ge Yering Flown at ultras ke Repudiates “Seow en Wier ae sto Texas for 2nd Shots. | 6+ ine sasiinn iy thatthe vae-| “Were tt not for the ‘imperative Why Join the Men and Suffer? Women Who Know ' of the Defense Department M R | 0) : AUSTIN, Tex. @—A shipment | cination program can be resumed, | preg the money, Eisenhower. said | ay ep ace ats Relief and Comfort! tot Salk polio vaccine for Texas| Ay Air National Guard plane flew | id Bill Action ‘in the unusual message to Con-| ; y, e ‘Tschoolchildren’s second shots af-|from Dallas to get vaccine for Comet eho a = owe on G RUPT URE- SER 4 Srived by. plane last night from Eli | Dallas County and 14 other north- i | hereabouts are keeping their eyes a DRU 4 Lilly Co., Indianapolis, Ind. east Texas counties. | President Attacks Rider | on the fall-seeded barley field of Wal ST ORES + — | Giving Congress Veto | Starts Solo Vopage | Henry Classen for it may prove to | ' 4 S 'Across Atlantic Ocean | be a profitable substitute, for oats | New — Sensational — Money Saving | Power Over Arms Bills SWAMPSCOTT, Names. ww — A820 EFOP- | 48N SAGINAW Wo MURON AT WE GIVE ) | | former Harvard faced al | Known in New York state as TELEGRAPH EEN TRAINS a | WASHINGTON —President Ei- ; | versity football player leaves to-| Hudson barley, it is a new winter _ senhower Ss avowed intent to dis- day on the first leg of 4 solo voy- variety developed at Ithaca by the /regard a provision of the new de- age across the Atlantic in a home- | Watch Repair = Cornell University Agricultural Ex- | ; bill unless the courts Made 30-foot boat. wnt < a es Your Watch CLEANED and © Bay | tomse a ae George Boston, 33, estimated it| periment Station in cooperation OVERHAULED — NOW |tell him to abide by it brought will take him 40 days to cover the | with the U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. | Republic an praise and Democratic |» 999 miles to the Azores and an-| In its home state, yields have av- | atinn in Coneres ay tl ee ang Pat | eraged 54.6 bushels an acre during ‘denunciation in Congress today. | other 20 for the 1,000-mile trip from | ' cars 1947 to 1953. The test |-'Sen. Mundt (R-SD) said the | there to Gibraltar in his double: {% years TH to hime RBs es President showed “courage and in- end auxiliary ketch Tahiti. | weight is 49.4 pounds a use t ‘tegrity."”. Rep. Sikes (D-Fla) pro-| Boston said he may continue’ /t is believed the new variety o | tested, ‘This country is not under around the world in the ketch, if barley is especially daptable to the | martial law.” lhe reaches Gibraltar. Illinois climate because Classen’s | Chronographs * * * field showed very little winter kill. & Automatics : Slightly / j In a special message, Eisenhow- tee . Coe | ; Mighes ‘ f 'er directed a broadside against a Brilliant Excuse Fails ‘Wallet Injury Wort S = — |provision giving either the Senate) ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — ee ‘ Ee ereeny Tree te Te eee ee Se e@ @ e@ e (Not King Size) ¢ :. ‘or House appropriations commit- | William Harris Henson, charged | LEXINGTON, Ky. (®—Although | Plu s Tax . Bring this Ring Sizing vs . ltees veto power over Defense De- |with speeding, explained, he had | cut and bruised in an auto acci- | . Ad with your While You . | partment decisions to divest itself | borrowed the unmarked patrol car dent, Charles Padgett was hurt a ¢ al Ay ne Wait . of any of its business activities.’ of Police Chief Tom Kilpatrick, of worst in the wallet. The mishap 5 ry = $ 49 : low price! ’ ; | Describing the provision as ainearby Belle Vista Beach, and occurred: several miles outside e en | e . ‘violation of the constitutional in-| was hurrying to get it back by Lexington. When the Mount Clem- P LOU.- MOR JEWELRY junction that the branches of gov- 'the time Kilpatrick had to start ens, Mich.,. motorist reached for 2 ernment shall be independent, Ei-| | patrolling. City Judge Herbert L. his wallet after arriving here, it | senhower said it “will be regarded | Peterson said the excuse was good was gone. It and the $2,611 in it) 45 S. Saginow St. (Next to Ocklond Theater) as invalid by the executive branch | but was not good enough. He fined are still missing. Padgett has no Self Retracting—Formerly Sold for $1 69 'of the government ... unless ' Henson $20. |idea how he lost the wallet. c . t all Point Pen. . . Fe Sal Hepatica eoeeeeee ee 51° Pinkham’s Veg. C $1 % Pinkham’s Veg. Comp. e td] inerai Ul @eeeee#eee®# BS s icaiclum VaDS. Vv" z 8 Vitamin D eenex | ISSUCS, UU. . 3 1 100 lodine Tablets ; ~ aad e@eeeee® 100 Liver-Iron B Complex 51° With B12—$2.98 Value 100 Cod Liver Oil Caps. . . 89° 8 40° Noxzema Skin Cream . 23° Pre- MENSTR U AL Amazing Medical Tablet e Witheut electrical devices, sheets, alarms, Medicajly preven 75% L effective. DRV-TABS must step functional BEN - WETTING ofr meney hack. Foll sapply of DRY- A NEEDLESS MISERY TABS only 3.00 at Thrifty Drug. Thanks to the New Keep Your. ronald! “DRIP ZONE” CLEAR -..end gagging nose and throat congestion Seem, = WHO EVER HEARD OF A RUAAPS UE ieeeee 5-pc. DINETTE FORONLY s1 YOU ARE FACE TO FACE WITH THE You can buy it temorrew at this pepular furniture r ARINC CA Nie MIs , store. Read below for full details. It is an amazing MOST FABULOUS SALE IN OUR HISTORY offer! JUST THINK OF IT... AT "BUY FURNITURE DISCOUNT HOUSE PRICES | AND GET A DINETTE FOR thanks te our This is a new rarwe ging cores the $1 Dinette offer. Roem mater ese ysaon can ser = Bo TRA. : a er, = Pe READ THLIS! 7 4 SPECTACULAR SALE EVENT —«d| Sa ee : “1 DINETTE OFFER ees §63 DAYS ' Me eae ONLY Don't Delay! Be poe 60 $998 THIS IS THE FORMULA THAT HAS BEEN GIVEN... .-- NATIONAL RECOGNITION! Here Tomorrow! . It means you get the biggest buy in your lifetime. We are indeed proud ef our tremendous selection of stunning living reom and bedroom suites. New stylings as shown in leading magazines. Priced te save you money, quality te bring us a Hfetime of SATISFACTION! » 4 “TIRED? WORN OUT?s = ’ ~ When your system lacks’ [)\ strong red blood, and is if IGORETS vitamin starved you feel . V listless, nervous, irritable te a mR . weak blood is taxing] Mew PHENYL THRICIN your heart. Rid your system of that “DEAD, ANTIBIOTIC NASAL SPRAY TIRED” feeling NOW, Melts Away Mucus — Stops Gagging enrich your blood fast] and es of Posinasa’ with VIGORETS. — toe Pheny! Thricin 3 Months Supply . 3s Nasal Spray with an exclusive anti- . pemaned fecmels rs ow our 40 Day 95 “drip zone.” rive Supply $4.95 AAR Vis WE ARE NEVER UNBERSOLD! “et ta teehee Mp bj . A ee YELLS 7 Lt Get Our DISCOUNT PRICES MERCHANDISE SURPLUS FURNITURE— APPLIANCES THRIFTY] PHARMACISTS Charge LESS for Filing Bt PRESCRIPTIONS Appliances, TV & Rugs 15 E. Pike St., Just Off Saginaw — Oe FE 4-8795 . \ ‘ f tad T fi ts | | ¢ } i/ 2 Wd \ / r ’ ; f f \ | " te ra : i : “= —— Bob Chaaldine Says: THE PONTTAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 14; 1955 4 « - Davy Dies Once More i in ‘America’ s Stores NEW YORK (INS) — Davy Crockett didn't die nearly as com- pletely. at the Alamo as he's now dying on the special clothing and novelty counters of our department stores, * * * “Something or somebody pulled. the coonskin rug from under our Davy,”.. Max Hess Jr., the Allen- * town, Pa., merchandising prodigy tells us. “We haven't found the culprit as yet, Maybe it was all those stories about his various love af- * fairs. Maybe it was the release of his congressional speeches. . "Maybe it's the hot weather, Any- way, the kids stopped buying. We had Davy all over the store. Now he’s on ene table.” Young Hess owns and minds what must be the biggest country store in the country, The five-story To . boot, Allentown ig the only place 1 know of in this country where the city maintains gay flow- erpots on its lamp — Real purty. BUSINESS BALLOONS building, town, too, * * Its fine newspapers, the Call and Chronicle, have a circulation only a few thousand under the population. Newspaper people have come from all over the world to inspect the | shows in which sells everything from canned octopus to uncanned mink coats, grossed $22,000,000 last year in a town of 106,000. Quite a business 20 times since he took over during the depression at the | age of 21. The Pennsylvania Dutch ‘troop in from miles around to gog- gle at the wonders of his bazaar. * * # . But Hess takes the show on the road, too. He has put on fashion coal mines and steel | plant's almost completely auto- | plants, to show the men what their ‘matic composing room, ‘wives are blowing the dough on. Hess has increased his place's} Informal soul, Waits on cus. tomers who can't find a sales- girl, doesn’t have an office, sends his Santa Claus looping about the Pennsylvania countryside in a helicopter, invites all new housewives who meve into the “area to lunch at the store, sells sterling flatware and rare china for 33 cents a week, insures credit payments against the death of a Wage earner ... and officiated at the latest death of Davy Crockett. Howard Hawks, producer o “Land of. the Pharoahs’’ iner Brothers, finally found a way | to fill a Cinemascope screen. He hired 10,000 Egyptians for| reaching. for his own roll, To keep “water breaks” from slow- | ing down production in the sizzling, Air Force Recruit Has Real Enthusiasm | RICHMOND, Va. () — The Air) Force will have a hard time find- | ing a more enthusiastic - recruit | Cc ontinuation of Our shirted blokes to stroll among the Scot. extras, carrying water jugs sus-| heat he hired dozens of~ night-| than Norman Sutherland, 18, a. Sutherlad has wanted to join July Clearance Sale! Men’‘s Summer Pants... .$3.97 ©. : "pended on poles just as was done | 4,750 years ago. His TURN TO PAY Texas story: Two ollmen dropped: into the Packillac agency in, Fort | Worth one afternoon while on a lit- | tle shopping spree. The eye of one, of them lighted on two $10,000 con- vertibles. “I'll take them, podner,”' he said | __Of| to the salesman. But as he reached | for War-| in his pocket his friend slapped at | his arm. “No you don't, Clem,” he said, | “You 10. When he reached 16 he wrote ' the mayor of Richmond, then Dr. the U. S. Air Force since he was Men’s Jackets.............1.99: E. E. Haddock, about it. He was advised of the requirements and | the necessity for a sponsor. Par- ents prevailed on him to wait until i he was 18. He did and he still | wanted to join. He wrote Mayor | Thomas P. Bryan. Bryan turned the letter over to Maj. William E. Morgan of the recruiting serv- | ice. Maj. Morgan became spon- | sor. Sutherland said he held two jobs| World Communism at Cnoasonth Today Through Failure to Indoctrinate People AP Foreign News Analyst The summit conference of the | Big Four will find world commu- nism at a crossroads. Much has happened in the So- viet Union since President Eisen- —hower saw it at the end of World | War II. Undoubtedly Ambassador Charles E. Bohlen has been bring- ing the President up to date on| im- | those changes, .which loom portantly at Geneva. The Geneva conference is a fate- ful gamble for high stakes. The Soviet leadership has, in a sense, anted up the future of world com- munism, The West may be gam- bling on its faith in human na- ture and a belief the Communist ‘experiment to produce a machine called “the new Soviet man’ has failed. * * Two world wars and modern technological progress have pro- duced a new Russian man. He seems gradually to be realizing his own strength. He is looking around his vast, rich and beautiful country, a land he loves passionately, and sees promise of a peaceful and prosperous life. But he is afraid too. I have war. He accepts most, if not all, of his government's peace prop- aganda because he dreads war. The ordinary Russian is not a Communist party member—there are only six million party mem- bers in a country of 210 millions— | but he is an important factor at Geneva. * * « | A constant tug-of-war goes on i inside the U.S.S.R., mirrored by its press and propaganda. Tt is on all levels—economic, social, po- litical, cultural—between old. and new. Bolshevism, a product of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. is dead. Now the type of dictator. |- unwarranted | ship going by the name of communism is fighting a hback-to-the-wall battle for the purity of its doctrine. If it loses in the Soviet Union, it loses in the world. Communist boss Nikita § Khrushchev and the party have not surrendered their pretensions | of world Communist domination. 4 They remain doctrinaire Com=1W- nists, ostensibly devoted to Lenin's principles and giving at least lip service to Ral 8. i lective bluntly and outspokenly pudlicizes the shortcomings of the economy. They have emerged from behind the forbidding Krem- lin walls and made friendly ses- tures to representatives of other systems, They have pushed aside the bluster of Stalinism in favor | of a more fetching approach of surface reasonableness and ami- able words, Why? The problems of Khrushchev and the collective go back to the peo- ple. Year by year the number of educated and eager citizens is growing, At the end of the school year this summer, 250000 young sDe- cialists with higher. poured into the stream of the na tion's economy. They are not the servile robots pictured in the Stalinist description of “the new Soviet man.” . Pravda’ said recently these young specialists must go ‘where the greatest need for qualified cadres is felt." re But many are get: = amped |ting stubborn about it. These young people, said Pravda, are wrong. They want to choose their’ own futures and places of work. Still another sign of the burgeon- iing bloodless revolution is the atti- tude of Soviet youth. Authorities constantly. are concerned with a against the attempt to strait- jacket all of them into a single Communist pattern. These manifestations of social change must be in the back of So- viet minds as Moscow approaches the conferefice fable at Geneva. Tomorrow: All this and Chi-a some of the background scenes in| got the lunch.” the impending superduper about | the, building of the great Cheops. pyramid. Another item for the, Plant Starts Addition and worked 85 hours a week to | get the money for his passage from Scotland. The U. s. ‘Capitol rises o a bleh film's auditors: 12,000 breech- clouths. On the occasion of a visit to the pyramid in April, an Egyp- | tologist told us one of the greater feats involved in the building of the incredible structure was keeping 100,000 workers and their families supplied with water. | tendency of young people to rebel | too. Haw ks had | a a water problem, too. MIDDLEVILLE « — The Mid-| dieville Engineering & Manufactur- ling Co., producers of plumbing | ; : hardware and home appliance | A Year ’Round Exclusive | parts, has started work on a | Toy — Hobby — Crafts | | $200,000 addition to its main plant. | 'The White Products Corp., manu- | Shopping Center ‘facturer of home water heaters, | HINES HOBBY HOUSE 'also has begun work on a plant, 18. Saginaw | addition at Middleville. | of 287 feet. ) ‘ BUY ON THE EASIEST TERMS PAY NO MONEY DOWN Ladies’ Dresses..........$1.88 ” Ladies’ Skirts Leva eceee es SRIT! CLOTHING CO, a a MEN'S WEAR — WOMEN'S WEAR : 9 SO. SAGINAW ST., Omak. MICHIGAN eee oe Hes common | spoken to him in many places and | . found him deathly afraid of a new [ On the other hand, the new col- education | TWO STORES— WATOH for the GRAND OPENING OF OUR NEW FURNITURE STORE IN THE WALLED LAKE Shopping Genter 1150 W. Maple St. JOERIN HOME FURNISHINGS 644 E. Huron St. | Milford. Michigan MU 4-8705 | “Pine Pursitere at * head ngs + Bu a, ' jf with greatnew | developments Only new Chevrolet TasksForce trucks bring you all these truly moe features. if ye you don’t get them in the truck you buy, you're actually getting an old fashioned truck. £ aa NEw CHEVROLET Task-Force | "~~ TRUCKS MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, 34 Mill St. end 211 f a dern A truck like no NEW CAMEO CARRIER MODEL ever seen! New distinctive | ...... 2-tone color styling t truck you've SERIES Styling that catches the NEW LOW-CAB-FORWARD Replaces the old fashioned C.0.E.! “NEW PANEL BODIES calls attention to your New Flite-Ride De Luxe Cabs | More durable construction, new comfort and conven- aye: iences throughout! New long-wheelbase Ya-ton pickup model New domelight switch : on instrument panel New optional Full-View rear window _ business! Custom cabs at extra cost. New New New Nn New %-ton parallel- ae ~ Ventilation System Forward Control New rebound- design : front axte Phactiraee better = chassis a ' circulation in a frames pane kinds of weather! ie ae ie picaraelny "New Power | , N on Steering NEW HIGHER MAXIMUM jew exteri es G.V.W.—UP TO 18,000 LBS. chrome option option The highest in Chevrolet history! You - papeuirl can get it in all 2-ton Task-Force models! | ee | ‘ New higher gross torque NEW wheelbase 34-inch and horsepower ratings New concealed a Powermatic features give Safety Steps PANORAMIC gel frame pss Lea) aaeesl pees iN hod ice WINDSHIELD 220 inches width pores for actual hauling! New areas front axles New deeper, stronger frame side-members cnee | cceet eet emer r een nes sate Samet me New smaller turning circles for nearly all M>re rigid and d—both | tee deiaet aa the oad ride | conventional models easier! New, | Hotchkiss Drive on New N New safer All Models : flexibly a double-wrapped Smoother going with power mounted fr = fixed eyes impulses —— by rear muffler and ‘ont on trent oprings springs! tailpipe | springs 2 _ _ 2. POWER-PACKED | New larger, N V8 ENGINES NEW LOWER STEERING quieter ag —5 SIXES— Phrondle cory FOR Greatest engine choice in NAL MODELS epee coe Chevrolet ck binery! ae heey water pump New greater New optional New larger, frontal area radiators Alrmatic more durable a seat steering gear worm For more efficient cooling! : -- ad . stronger _alloy-steel spring center bolts New 12-volt electrical system circuit eee re ae, rear i New band-type propeller- shaft parking brake | New ospeed ) planetary-gear duty s New heavy- | eee rear axle ee ere er Pierre + higher ignition reserve « larger spark plug electrodés * faster cranking speeds ¢ extra-high-voltage st arting d26eeneecneapes ceases: (standard on '/;-ton models) New more rugged standard 3-speed Synchro-Mesh transmission New hand lever for parking i, eS ingle- axle - >| S. Saginaw St se New two-speed axle control on gearshift extra cost. ( OVERDRIVE | | Saves gas, cuts engine wear— | | NEW OVERDRIVE optional on “2-ton models at NEW POWER BRAKES Safer, makes driver’s job easier. Stand- ard on 2-ton models, an extra-cost option on others. New fuel tank filter New 160° thermostat New 7-lb. radiator pressure cap INC. Pontiac, Michigan New dual circuit breaker for lighting cirevits ea gc itil c THIRTY | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1953 _ Reds End Ban ‘on Jazz, Swing * Czechoslovakia Bows ‘to Popular Demand for | Western Music ? VIENNA (UP) — Communist | ‘ Czechoslovakia, apprently bowing | «to popular demand, has started | « broadcasting Western-style dance | ‘\ musie for the first time since the » Reds seized power there in 1948. For seven years the Czech radio | denounced jazz, swing and other | popular Western music ‘as “deca- | , dent” and “a form corruption.” 4 & But a few weeks ago Radio i Prague started to throb again | * with familiar dance tunes, in- ‘cluding U.S. favorites. | The station now devotes about | two hours of its broadcasting day | to dance music, all of it played by Czech studio orchestras. One of the bandleaders men- tioned by name is Karel Vlach. | who previously has been criticized by the Communists for his “bad musical influence.’’ POPULAR EXPORT Observers here long have re- garded American popular music as one of the most successful U.S. propaganda exports to Iron -Cur- tain lands. Mailbags at Vienna radio sta- tions bulge with record requests | from behind the curtain. The quality of the Cxech studio orchestras is good. GOLD BELL with every purchase! eat» SAM BENSON 20 S. Perry St. OPEN Wed., Thurs., Fri., Gat, Nights “TIL 9 FP. M. of American | {mated both the past and future. | * * | practiced. AGING GRACEFULLY — Former silent screen stars Ben Lyon) and Bebe Daniels are happy as they celebrate 25th wedding anniver- | sary in their London, EF. foe and, home. Chou Promises fo End Abuses Overseas Chinese Told Money Sent Home Will | Reach Needy Relatives | HONG KONG (UP)—Red China has launched a new campaign to. assure overseas Chinese that mon- ey they send home lands in the right pockets Premier Chou En-lal issued a) proclamation recently that illumi- | He condemned officials who “have failed to grasp the signifi- |ecance of the government's policy w 529 ~ 59g" potable checked and put in good GOOD HOUSEKEEPING Used Refrigerators ery used ttem we sell has been orking order, THE SHOP OF PONTIAC 51 W. HURON ST. Pretty Plastered | of protecting overseas Chinese’s remittances.” | Chou said some officials have ex- | oe the funds from the families receiving them, simply failing to deliver the money. The admission that remit- tances often failed to get jnte the hands of the intended reci- cipient merely confirmed what so many Chinese abroad have strongly suspected for a long time. THE PROCLAMATION The proclamation, directed to the more than 12,000,000 overseas Chinese as much as to the officials who must mend their ways, went | on to say: No delay of payment or investi- | gation under any excuses of over- | seas Chinese's remittances shall be No person or public | body shall be allowed to borrow | money by. means of force or pres- | sure from dependents of overseas Chinese. Cases of deliberate em- | bezzlement, theft or extortion of remittances shall be dealt with according to law.” | Chou further said that ‘‘depend- ents of overseas Chinese enjoy full | freedom to spend their remittances , on weddings, funerals and other living expenses.” | YADKINVILLE, N. C. State | Highway Patrolman R. L. Car- | penter arrested a man who was | really plastered. The man piled | up his ear on a highway and came | out white as a ghost. A sack of | flour in the car had burst. Car- | penter said the man also was plas- | tered with the usual stuff. Lovely Tea Rose Pattern --Crinkled Cotton Plisse Easily Laundered - - Never Needs Ironing! BEDROOM ENSEMBLE Sculptured Cotton Rugs Resilient cotten rugs wit carved high - and ~low sculp- tured pattern. Heavy durable Skid- ® Rose Red room in your home! to care for. Tier skirt can be used bring in coolness. Size 99 nae : : 24" x36” | NOW ~ «+ AT ROSENBERGER’S. 27 x 48-inch .....2.99 30 x 60-inch .... .4.99 ; 48 x 72-inch .... 8.99 8 h Full and Twin Drapes Pillow Shams .. Tier Curtains ... For treatment use two pairs of tier curtains. Beautiful Colors on White Ground @ Sky Blue Crisp, cool crinkled cotton plisse for every bed- Gay, bright Tea Rose print on white background adds a fresh look that will win compliments galore from your friends. .- pleasingly inexpensive! tain. Priscilla-styled drapes let summer breezes Bedspreads are lavishly fin- ished with deep ruffles. Hurry, CHOOSE YOURS 34 S. Saginaw St. = Bedspreads Size 70° x90” 99 Each . $1.99 . $2.99 $2.99 Vanity Skirts .. this interesting window @ Sun Yellow Easy for vanity or as a tier cur- FE 2-7001 1 The high and low points in the | | Whitney rises 14, 496 feet above sea | U.S. are within 60 miles of each | level and Death Valley sinks 276 cent of the people are | other | in California, where Mount | Vs. 4 i feet below it. | years old. In the United Kingdom, 16 per| Ducks have. transparent mem-| - over 60) ‘brane which can be lowered over is the best known composition | their eyes, much like goggles. ‘The operetta “Hansel and Gretel” | Humperdinck, -YOU ALWAYS SAVE AT Cun FOUNTAIN SPECIAL Mouth-W atering SLICED HAM ON BUN WITH © CRISP LETTUCE © DRESSING ® PICKLE CHIPS ® HOMEMADE POTATO SALAD All For. 49: Only ICE CREAM CAKE ROLL CHOCOLATE-MARSHMALLOW TOPPING Special 1 9: At Just large UTILITY ¥ BAG With shoulder strap $1 98 Instant Action ESTOVIN HAY FEVER Complete with dropper "A Durable FL y SWATTER With rubber tip 19: ASPIRIN TABLETS 2 Bottles 100 each JUNIOR LINIMENT ning DRUG STORES SALE DAYS THRU SUNDAY » q THIRST AID! A Sure Cure For Your Thirst! A Thirst Mm Quenching @ Triple “é Threat! 12: Guaranteed to give you satisfying thirst aid! WRAP Fruit Flavors You'll Like! € Big Jumbo Up Size Glass ZZZ>, Y YY; TSARAN ham’s Oy, PIERO ELECTRIC » FAN | Has powerful motor ene metal guard. ~"§ type. Guaranteed REGULAR 3S9¢ SIZE-25 FOOT ROLL REGULAR 14¢ SIZE - SAVE AT 22Te eKEEP Y ALLA $10. 49—l0-lncb Bra! i Cool comfort is yours now at this low budget price on these, ": top-flight fons. Y Metal Folding BAR-B-BOWL BRAZIER Stands $ 4’ 22” High - 79 Plastic ICE BUCKET 2-Tone 39° Color 98e Swing-Away CAN OPENER 77° 29c Fastens To Wall BUTTER 1 ounce tube REG. 10¢ EACH - ARIGTOCRAT CALAMINE LOTION 4 OUNCE SIZE - BUY NOW! - 8A SUPPOSITORI ES GLYCERINE - 24’s(INFANT or ADULT CAMP STOOL Wood & 88c Canvas Poloron PELICAN Seen 2 Gal. ‘] 79 ‘Size $2.25 Value BEACH MAT Strong $ Plastic 69 #7 Hashlight Batteries Dio fc \- ORANGE SLICES baz 39 wu Green f PORT Sun Visor Adjustable head bend 16¢ 39 | cA ASN ASN % sA ~-_— rh bhe >> 2S 3 Q\ INSECT REPELLENT 9s Size Now Only 3 9: You can say goodbye to those annoying in- sects and hello ‘to more summer fun DOUBLE EDGE RAZOR BLADES if you use Skram! 4 / CUNNINGHAM’ S CARNIVAL BUYS! Y Davy Crockett KIDDIES UKETTE Really 79 Cc Plays Loads of fun for Davy's followers. Dary C pockets GOLDEN BOOK 48-Page $900 Book ] Mustrations by Walt SEN $1.19 Deeded WATER SET Pitcher, | 6 Glasses 88c Black and Rose Es Glows For Comfort EZO DENTURE _ CUSHIONS 8 Uppers or 10 Lowers / 60: RS \@s SS Net Tetrachloride 16-ounce bottle 49:4) aie. FOOTor ces Generous supply only & 19 -CUNNINGHAM’S SODA FOUNTAIN "9 > CONVENIENT LOCATIONS SA NN XN BOBBY BOX 8-Inch $919 Diam. Gaily decorated. Plastic handle RY EX- EARDRUM PROTECTORS | ; YY YHA, y oF, Back With X) ’ STANBACK Y TABLETS © Hendy tin of 12 All Metal TACKLE BOX With $969 Lock With partitioned Special Bonus! CHARLES ANTELL FORMULA *9 With 60¢ 98¢ , Size Free, J Save now on this 5 care for your hair J, “pe (0 OY tun st Sb "h, M7 SHOP i a 2 oe 2) WATER \ 10: WAAN Ne. yo No. 1—29 N. SAGINAW (Downtown Store) No. 2—TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER the ‘ THE PO? ea , : ; i ; ‘ 'TIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 Evolve From Where do names come from? The National Geographic Society has some answers concerning the | naming of towns. Most names fit into several cate- | gories: 1. Personal names: Twain Harte, Calif., perpetuates memory | of West Coast visitors Mark Twain and Bret Harte. Every president's name. save Eisenhower's is match- ed by a town. 2. Foreign cities: Capitals| abroad particularly have loaned their names—London, Paris, Rome, | Moscow, Dublin, Belfast, Vienna, | Lisbon, Berlin, Madrid, Cairo, | Tokyo, Warsaw and Belgrade. | During World War II Berlin, Ala., | was renamed Sardis. 3. Indian words: Chicago, ‘“‘wild | onion place,’’ ig one of hundreds of examples, , American Town Names ything For instance, Amsterdam in five states; Santa Fe, N. Mex.; Pierre, S. D.; Hamburg in 12 states, and Oslo, Minn. 5. Biblical terms: for instance, | Bethlehem, Nazareth, Egypt, Em- | maus, Lebanon, are all in Pennsyl- | vania. Ilinoig has a Bible Grove and New a Bible School Park. | North Carolina .and South Dakota have Faith; Missouri Charity; but | the greatest—in numbers—is Hope. There are Hopes (often taken from plantation grants) in 13 states. oa * a 6. Local history: Council Bluffs, la., stands where Lewis and Clark held council: with the Indians. 7. Anmals and plants; Alligator, | Miss.; Coyote, Calif. and N. Mex.; Bat Cave, N. C.; Cuckoo and Birds- nest, Va.; Bivalve, Md. and N. J.; | Ky.; Wanted ads in The Pontiac Press | protects it well in shipping. Pigeonroost and Raccoon, { at | Bean City, Fla.; Blue Grass, Ia, 'and Va., and Bluegrass, N. D. | (but no Blue Grass post office in Kentucky). Arkansas has a Deer, Bass, To- fjmato, Strawberry, Grapevine, Wild Cherry and Peach Orchard. H ‘Homing Pigeon Bored ‘With Returning Home - | MATTOON, Ill. uw If.the pigeon club of Cleveland, Ohio, is missing | one pigeon with band number “A.U, 52-L.U.33" and a tag marked “U_ 948,” the bird is in the hands | of Mrs. Harley Snyder. She told | police that the pigeon landed in) | her yard and showed no signs of | | wanting to leave. Investigation showed it was one | of 1,800 homing pigeons released for the annual 500-mile pigeon | derby which starts in Mattoon and _ ends in Cleveland. SHORT OF HELP? Place Help 4. Dutch, Spanish, French, Ger-| Bison in three prairie states; Alf- to fill openings FAST. Dial FE | ed a freeze of November, 1950, which killed off about half south- | west Michigan's peach trees, 2 New Varieties ‘of Peaches Get Michigan Tests _ Rules Driver of Bus | are " SOUTH HAVEN u -~ Sunhaven Kind of Public Servant | and Richhaven—two new varieties | ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. «®—The) of peaches developed by Stanley | driver of a bus is in a sense a Johnston at the South Haven Ag- | public servant “in that he must | ricultural Experiment Station —)} pe more patient and careful than | were introduced this year. Both |the average driver and must hold | originated from crossing of the | pis temper” District Judge D. A. Redhaven and SH-50. Macpherson ruled. Both varieties are bright red and) ye dismissed a $5,000 damage | gold, averaging 2% to 2% inches | suit brought by a bus driver in diameter, The Sunhaven ripens | against a motorist following a fight 10 days earlier than the Redhaven, | petween the two. currently the first Michigan peach | eee of commercial importance. ; Johnston says the Sunhaven And Here's the Proof tends to be clingy until it is fully INDIANAPOLIS (UP) — Clay ripened and is intended only for | Trusty, city editor of the Indian- | fresh market channels. The Rich- | apolis- News, dashed outdoors into | haven is a dual purpose peach, | a midnight hailstorm, scooped up rated excellent in ee |S handful of hailstones and put canning tests. A tough, thick skin| them on ice in a home freezer. | Next day he published a photo. Trees are large, vigorous and, proving the hailstones were as big | | | | | @ Duncan Phyte or straight legs. @ Padded seats @ Tables in choice of eolors @ Chairs in many com binations of colors @ Perfect Formica top e a bar on Tables ; Available in Other Sizes: 30x48x60 -36x38x60 LOOK! AT OUR LOW |! ‘EVERY SET IS GUARANTEED FIRST QUALITY! | TABLE SIZE 30°x40x48"—SEATS 8 PEOPLE COMFORTABLY! 5 Pieces Extra Large Delu ‘Guaranteed Perfect EASY TERMS! $4995 pase... $89.95 Pree... .... 949.95 ‘ i Sh.” te rv» $40.00 wenn eere LAYAWAY xe Triple Plated OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS TILL 9:00 P. M. OPEN SUNDAY 12-4 TEL-HURON DINETTE CO. a til man and Scandinavian names: ' alfa, Okla.; Cucumber, W. Va.; | 2-8181. elegraph — — Across from -Huron Center | self-fertile. Some of them weather- | as golf balls, j 36 S. BS Die a=: Pee — naiiasaie oe aes YOU ALWAYS SAVE MORE AT LORD'S DISCOUNT STORES |! a “ I "© ¥ quel | with the purchase el tee. eNy a sel of any 3 room outtitrs ° and EASY CREDIT, TOO! capac ORES. 3 ROOM OUTFIT wey 3 AT coo $12.00 DOWN HURRY! HURRY! SPECIAL DISCOUNTS ON ALL MERCHANDISE THIS WEEK-END . ANOTHER NEW SHIPMENT JUST *ARRIVED--HURRY! | Exactly As Pictured aoe $ Complete Living 9 5 Incindes: Suite Sete © Mateh- Complete Living Room Outfit PORTABLE Gg e'cotee Table © 2 Longe end ‘4 Teens me Sh AIR CONDITIONERS Terrific Sale! hes eee a a NATIONALLY ADVERTISED Picnicfaf: Jugs Lemp end Shede. nl NO MONEY DOWN! LIMIT—1 TO A CUSTOMER! CHAISE \ arr LOUNGE ——— go SALE WHILE 36 OUTFITS LAST a G* AT THESE $-L-A-S-H-E-D PRICES — HURRY!!! THE HOUSE OF DISCOUNTS PLENTY of EASY : LOR n’s CREDIT and FREE FURNITURE, TV and APPLIANCES am ae $5.00 Dewan Delivers i, , of Complete -Modern Bedroom Inciedest Meders Bow-Freat Dov Al] $] 47” bie Dresser © Bookcase Heed- boerd (Full or Twin Size) © inner- for apring Mattress @ Bex Spring ©2 Includes: Huge @ Drewer Triple All Dresser © Beekcose Headboerd e rai a, Mettress @ Box For +2 Piles Spring Pillows @2 Lamps Only th £ Beautiful .Chrome Dinette incledes: Teble with Meet, Acid end Stein-Resistent Tep — Letest Medern Style. 4 Matching Uphels- — Chrome Cheirs complete ia OPEN TONIGHT and FRIDAY TIL 9 a THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JULY 14, 1953 | Annual Store-Wide -NOW....THE HUB’S" OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS til 9 LARGE GUARANTEED SAVINGS ON DEPENDABLE FINE QUALITY CLOTHING SENSATIONAL SALE OF TROPICAL SUITS... Nylon Blend Cords Fine Rayon Tropicals Wash ’n Wear Suits 100% Wool Tropicals ~ Plain Colors— Stripes—Checks 3" Values to $55 | TROPICAL SUITS Dacron and Wool Suits $3 Ge Values to $55 Short Sleeves | Values to $5. 95 ($988 REGULARS SHORTS LONGS STOUTS ALL SIZES! ‘ft SPORTS SHIRTS ALL WOOL YEAR ’ROUND SUITS © ‘a3* Values to $59.50 TROPICAL SUITS ~ Mohair Blends .. Wool... ‘43" Values to $65 Dacron Blends PAJ AMAS 20% OFF $3.95 Value—Now .............. $3.16 $4.95 Value—Now .............. $3.96 $5.95 Value—Now .............. $4.76 ALL WOOL YEAR ’ROUND SUITS SA gs Values to $65 EAGLE Tropicals All Wool . . Mohair . Hand-Tailored Suits $5 388 Were- $69.50 Dacron .. Linen Finish Rayon Tropical SLACKS $688 Values to $10.95 2 Pair for $11.50 ALL WOOL YEAR ’ROUND SUITS $ 32 88 Values to $69.50 Tropical and Year ’Round ~ SPORT COATS $25.00 Value—Now ............ $19.96 $27.50 Value—Now ............ $22.00 $29.50 Value—Now ............ $23.60 $32.50 Value—Now ............ $26.00 $36.50 Value—Now ............ $29.20 $ 8.95 ............. 088 Now $ 7.16 $10.95 .... 00. eee eee ee Now $ 8.76 $12.95 ........ eve eeee Now $10.36 $14.95 ......: vow ents tee ds Now $11.96 $16.95... 0... eee eee Now $13.56 SIR 9675-2. eee Now $15.16 SLACKS 20% OFF ALL WOOL YEAR ’ROUND SUITS *6 3°° Values to $85 THE , 4 18-20 NORTH SAGINAW STREET of i | THE HUB’S Semi-Annual Shoe Sale Selected Groups of Quality Shoes at Substantial Savings Air Film .. . Crosby Square Thornton Brogues Bostonian .. . Wright Arch Preservers ... ~ Entire Stock SUMMER SHOES Formerly to $12.95 Now Formerly to $18.95 +7 * ‘1 O*° Black and White, Brown and White Solids ... Also Nylon Mesh and an Oustanding Selection SPECIAL! Genuine Shell Cordovan The finest of all leather, bought special- ly for this event. Wing or Plain Toe. A terrific value at “7 4* | SPECIAL GROUPS Short Lots, Odds and Ends, Broken Sizes. Outstanding Values in Quality Shoes. Black or Brown 6" Bn ii s . ; % f vee at aes TR ae { aX i | % ’ \ eae Se He on %) fo : ry z ; : ie ‘ ¢ 13 ‘ 4 ar i ' oe : i : ' i ee =e Se) a \ aot S eee ya: : ; : : 4 . f : ¢ ; \ 4 ; \ ' AN } : ' | ‘ ie a ‘ ‘ Ws / ; 4 i ; Pi i t i : / i ; ais : \ s : f cA THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1953 PONTIAC Baldwin Avenue 118 Baldwin Avenue Dixie Highway LOTAN’S DIXIE & TELEGRAPH MKT. 2135 Dixie Highway TREASURE CAKE SPECIAL! <—-7 5‘ COUPON Franklin Road w~ mae f i Ni Ly DE Se rca nane JOHN PHILLIP’S Spry , NEXT Pun MARKET seo oxi : 360 Franklin Rood Howard Street HOWARD STREET 1220 N. Perry St. 39: Cherries Blue Label 2 ad 39° : ») Nilcar Downy Fiake KARO PINK — Late | lamas temonape | “AEE 23° ||CUT BEETS @B || 9 <2. 99¢ | 9~ 39 —| 2" 25° 7 Chef Pontes : ®APPLE °CHERRY °*PEACH: rego MARE a7! > = PeaNut Defiance On f f d ’ Perry Street oe 4) In | | Crushed ice kling water. About 1 quart, ‘ youngsters to get interested in’ Frozen concentrate for lemonade Plain or sparkling water breakfast. from California provides fresh fla- \fash raspberries and sweeten It takes just about a quarter Vor for these drinks and is so much 1, taste. In each tall glass use ? Cream Extra Chicken of an hour to prepare a breakfast |¢4sier than squeezing lemons.. ‘tablespoons of the crushed rasp-| Dice that leftover chicken and of fruit or juice, ready-to-eat Red Strawberries in Lemonade |bemies and 2 tablespoons of un- add to a well-seasoned cream | PEOPLE'S FISH & POULTRY MARKET 82 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET —Wholesale and Retail— TE 4-1521 AMM IOI IU ULI cereal with milk, bread and but- | Fresh strawberries ter or margarine, and a beverage | Babee: copouncrete for lemonade | dqilyted concentrate for lemonade. | Sauce. Serve over hot biscuits for a —little time for big returns in| Make a pitcherful of lemonade Fill each glass with crushed ice ' wonderful brunch on Saturday or | health. And while the kids may | by adding water according to the |and plain or sparkling water. Sunday morning. Sprinkle a little | not be too willing to “go-it-alone,” | ocmens on the can of frozen | stir and serve immediately. Makes | Paprika over the creamed chicken | they'll pitch in and help. ‘cone t . So make breakfast a family! Wash and hull strawberries. E serves. io etre =~ attra | ‘Uz. S. No. | U.S. No. 1 U. S. No. | Grade A meal. It’s the pleasantest way to | Then, in tall glasses, | ayer the Lemonade and Grape Juice a get off toa good start in the morn- | strawberries in cracked ice (this | Lemonade and grape juice have | SPEED UP SALES through Cas-| | ST EWI! NG ing. |way they will stay floating in the |a real taste affinity. | Sified ads, Merchandise, cars, real | a glass and not sink). For a cool, refreshing summer | estate and personal things go fast | CH ICKENS Use Roquefort cheese instead of | Fill glasses with lemonade, and | drink, place 2 or 3 tablespoons | through For Sale ads! Dial FE) 1=4 al | butter in creaming tuna or salmon. | serve, frozen concentrate for lemonade in | 2-8181. | reese amma mean amen esa am =e * : an ee = See — Fresh c ’ | ¢3 * "Go : Fresh c Cc | | hie “ve 3 9: ! 2 9 | ° | E | -f Killed lb. bb. || Hts good thing i 7 , a | |B STUSS- ROUND | WATERMELON.....89¢] GOGA-COLA STEAK CHOICE CUTS we mothers have CLOROX on our team! CANTALOUPES . .. = 19¢ CUCUMBERS... Se] ‘= 89° GREEN PEPPERS . . = 5¢ | RADISHES ......"* 5°] SALAD DRESSING GREEN ONIONS. . =< 5¢ CELERY ...... 2 5=™ 29¢ GREEN BEANS...“ 10 . Grade A Ground 89 LARGE EGGS BEEF U. S. NO. 1 Dor. Cc ~ CLOROX makes linens POTATOES it makes them SamtaNy, too! PORK , Vlasic Ice Box Jar Style LOIN 10 Ibs. Stuffed OLIVES ROAST 13 9: Rib End steins...even scorch end mildew...simply by laundering 000s becouse it deodorizes. Clorox also ee with Clerex. And Clorex makes white end coler-fass <°"e°ves linens. It is extra gentle, free Armour’s Crescent SEALTEST How CLOROX helps busy mothers give “first aid“ to bathrooms and kitchens! Fe Ws oe ey HH ' ~ > cescasaidl Negus cate domi cales Sas basil Mesuuas from coustic...made by an exclusive, ; a 2 icici ncarigenios cawcmmncnans | | |g SLICED BNPON MILK _ | Northern TISSUE Lge ! ~ ae Wa SS ‘Gg Cc | 1 /. G al 4 Rolls ) wed) | he as lb. ‘2 Su ) Used in routine cleaning, Clorox removes stains ond unpleasant odors...mokes surfaces sanitary... oll without scrubbing! In fact, SPADAFORE BROS. MNT a: ments recommend the Clorox type of disinfection, Why not seve steps by keeping Clorox — in and kitchen? See the B tabel for directions and other house-cleening hints. 5. Sanitary linens... Cloros } is . mont senate i hee. 706 WEST HURON STREET ee _— 2 _THE PONTIAC PRESS, THU RSDAY; JULY 14, 1953 Soh — ; | — THIRTY- TV (ee vor », PEOPLE'S MARKETS FREE! FREE! ee OT ad WW SUTTON BAY PIE || ANCHOR HOCKING CHERRIES] BATTER BOWL TOMATO Broadcast BEEF STEW £29 BIG WITH ‘10% PURCHASE can HART BRAND DEL MONTE JUICE i GIANT 46-02. CAN PEACHES SLICED or HALVES LARGE No. 2!2 CAN ~Morton’s - Jelly Nougats Water Softener Georgia c ALVES Cannonball Watermelons LIVER 79 | ( SEALTEST MILK BIG 7 Cc PEOPLE'S HALF EVERYDAY CALLON LOW PRICE! PEOPLE i / #29: Pellets BUTTERFIELD SLICED 100 Lb. Bag $7°° | IRISH POTATOES ] 0 Sno-White BREAD oar T T° evetvon ONLY LOW PRICE! , TALL No. 303 CAN 465 E. ke Street Corner Sanford Street Ph. FE2-1298 § SUPER=-MADKET VAULOMANtliltini tea acer _FE5-8311 Ke FOOD=0-MAT ; 95° [Birdseye FISH STICKS — r , J ¥\ f Sel ff \ ‘ A | f'» yf : j ‘ ' f H } j I ( i 4 eo ir P ‘ i | i ee, fi Me /[ me id | | i j hee f | i i dikes a mes bb bbbbbbbbbeiatiieiitteett ttt. Tt Aho ew RROD OP EN CRORES OREN, a THIRTY-SIX oe oo THE PONTIAC Baran TH URSDAY. SU LY 14, 1955 Here’s the easy way fo Jumbo Sweet, 32 Lb. Avg. | WATERMELONS . 89° POTATOES... *%::.. 1.49 HEAD LETTUCE ‘7 .2 for 25¢ PASCAL CELERY et | 2 for 295 GREEN PEPPERS ‘[s ..2 for 5¢ CUCUMBERS = 57"* eee OE TOMATOES er ~.. &19¢ LEMONS it 2... ... 2398 GREEN ONIONS ... 2 for 15¢ CABBAGE Letra’ | eg a my ob eld Cantaloupes 5... 229° Oranges S:.......... "23° POTATOES wx «=A TABLE KING MERCHANDISE Top Quality at Low Prices SWEET PEAS............... 7 ™ 51.00 CREAM STYLE CORN.........7°™ 51.00 WHOLE KERNEL CORN........7~ 51.00 KIDNEY BEANS............. 10 51.00 TOMATOES...........-02202- 2 ™ 51.00 APPLE SAUCE...............7 “™ 51.00 ‘EGGS won» m AO: oe essen ® HURRY! 4 RING BOLOGNA....3° ‘1. a LARGE BOLOGNA ..3 51.00 Chicken toot Torey Morrell’s Sliced Bacon . . * 39° 4 89° SMOKED PICNICS......“ 29 STE Round - Sirloin - Club Steak » 59° Moros’. GROUND BEEF ......3% 89 Fruit Pies = ey SPARE RIBS.........." 29 4 hl FRYERS orcs .....2..° 39° STEWERS crcncs.......% 29° ROASTERS » Abe LEMONADE eeeeseesene 4 Cans 65¢ SLAB BACON oe eee aes 7 33° PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE! THREE SISTERS’ SUPER MARKET| 608 W. HURON Baked Into Rice| Rice aban which have appetite | appeal and economy in their fever have a permanent place on your | family’s menu. Fiesta Baked Rice | wi th its flavor accent of tomatoes and olives has these advantages | and is easy on the busy homemak- er, Chopped onion is cooked cont | too. golden in margarine, then the raw rice and aj) the other ingredients It , are added, and the dish is baked couldn't be simpler or more de- licious As a final added touch, about halfway through baking, grated cheese is sprinkled on. The cheese adds extra flavor and nutritive value to the dish Fiesta Baked Kice \g bar margarine eaxpoon Ie up gr Longe "Amerie an cheesi onion and cook until yellow. Add | next seven ingredients and mix well. Turn into greased 2-quart casserole, cover, and bake in mod- erate oven (350 degrees) 30 min- ut kle with one-half cup grated cheese and bake. uncovered, 45 minutes longer, or until rice is tender. | Makes six servings. Cold Soup Features T flavored cold soup welcome GRAND SALE! a... | 2can (10% ounces) condensed to- | | Pres iy “ground _Eopese iy j 2 saciea aoouas apeictias juice . Stir soup, water. garlic and Dash of res one t 1 medium sare m. finely chopped leup raw ric 1 cup boiling ‘water 1 No 2 can to | 1 2-ounce jar st en pita “puiced (‘@] cup ly Melt margarine in saucepan, add | es. Remove from oven, stir, sprin- omato, Cucumber Warm weather makes a well- erg oe | can | te ate | 1 sma y aon oe ric ‘(peeled and ucumber pepper to taste together; chill. | Wash and dry cucumber; partially | pare so you have a striped effect; | slice very thin: there should be | bout two-thirds cup. Mix cucumber with lemon juice; | chill. Just before serving. stir | soup mixture and cucumber | gether. Serve in chilled bowis | Makes four servings. | Any mint in your garden? Top | breakfast orange juice with a | sprig of it! Pleasant fresh flavor, pretty « appearence! — ESS Six Delicious Flavors -.e-made purely for your refreshment Refreshing News! Now— from a name. you've trusted for over 100 years—a complete new line of delicious soft drinks! In Pabst Sparkling Beverages, you taste refresh- ment at its purest! No preservatives. Children love them—and they're safe! The exclusive Steady Sparkle of Pabst beverages keeps the refreshing flavor till the last delicious sip—actually aids the diges- tive process! Flat-top MiraCans protect the flavor and lively sparkle. They stack easy—chill faster. And there are no deposits, no returns! Fiesta Flavor Me es —— em Retesirg ~_ Saabs sie ald name ame Made purely —for your refreshment! Surprise your nappies emer haste ped emer ; eels : purity of Pabst Root Beer. Pabst family with ice cold glasses of Pabst Sparkling Bever- Sparkling Beverages are safe—the whole ages. Start enjoying all six refreshing flavors today. family will love them! oeoeveeevee * trademerk eevee eee oevee eee eevee eee eeeeneees Flaver-sealed in faster ° chilling, easier stocking : flet-top MireCona.* iraG@an * © eaten ott "MIRACLE OF CONVENIENCE—MireCon is the new of the American Con Compeny's scien- * * tificallydesigned, flever-locked,sperkie-seaied, ° carbonated beverage con. ° eeeveeeereeeneeeeeeeeeene ninemsn: setae 9 to 9 PINE CONE TOMATOES - 10: PICNIC SPECIAL, FROZEN CUBE STEAKS Big 12-0z.—4 Steck Peckege SHOP at ADLER’S and SAVE MORE! SEALTEST SAVE ON MILK VELVET ICE CREAM |} +: catton carton Corned Beef < BIG. , Yetead ae aos oo GALLON ONLY C ARGENTINA _ PHONE FE 2-2912 PONTIAC PRESS. hr HURSDAY, JUL y 14 955 Ps + SEAFOAM COOKIES — Warm weather calls for | rice biscuits which give them a delicate quality and simple treats to accompany tall, cool drinks. These | | Seafoam Cookies are made with bite-size shredded , ————— E l hc kj With Ri Bit If you can't get to the seashore this summer, bring the seaside atmosphere to your table in the form of Seatoam Cookies — the hght and right accompaniment for an icy fruit drink. As refreshing to the eye as they are to the palate, these cookies look like miniature whitecaps and are as light and delicate a sum- mer sweet as you, can find. But don't be fooled by ap- pearances. Their daintiness be- lies their real value—good cereal nourishment provided by the bite-size shredded rice biscuits from which these cookies are made, It takes just a few minutes to make the frothy egg white and sugar mixture that surrounds the golden-crisp shredded rice biscuits —and a few minutes to bake—just long enough to tan the tips of these meringue-like cookies. Win warm compliments on a warm summer evening by serving Seafoam Cookies with your favor- | ite fruit or carbonated beverage in tall, frosty glasses. Seafooam Cookies 1 ege white ‘, cup brown suger, firmly packed % cup white sugar | | sheet. \% teaspoons salt teaspoon vanilla 14g cups “bite-stte’ biscuits Heat oven to slow (300 degrees). Grease shallow pan or cookie Beat egg white in 6-cup bowl with rotary beater until peaks bend over slightly at top when beater is removed. Beat in shredded rice | brown sugar, a tablespoon at a) Add white sugar, salt and Stir until all sugar is time. vanilla. | mixed into the egg white. Add bite-size shredded rice biscuits. Stir gently until each biscuit is coated with mixture. Drop from teaspoon onto greased baking pan 2 inches apart. Bake on rack slightly above cen- ter 12 to 15 minutes, or until] out- sides of cookies are dry and very light brown. Remove {rom pan at once. Makes about 2 dozen 1'- inch cookies, Broil This Sandwich Here's a tasty way to use left- over baked beans, Spread the beans on buttered brown bread slices. Place half a strip of bacon on top and broil until the bacon | is crisp — about 10 minutes. Use Sardines in Pizza Next snack, build it around tasty, suc- culent sardines. You'll save your- self time in preparation for sar- | dines are already cooked in the can. For a really shortcut, prepared pizza mix too, ie { ; | | e». look for it on the shelf or in the freezer >> now ’ear this... cally one a Macs si 2 ab contribute important food values. His Favorite Menu -| potato with sour cream and chives. time you plan a_ pizza| use a. Try Pineapple Chytney Quick Pineapple Chutney: simple pineapple relish js the right! powder and a dash of salt. accompaniment for curry. Drain | drained pineapple chunks, stirring a No, 2% can ‘of pineapple chunks.! to coat well, wonantenemyeniars hits Yate bic when "heal is applied, leaving the blessing of wine's flavorful bouquet, ~ Melt 2 tablespoons of butter ot | margarine in medium-sized skillet Stir in ‘one-fourth teaspoon curry, A knowing dash of wine in the| Add| Pet seasons, tenderizes, imparts | pegged flavor. Alcohol? Mlbed some mysterious alchemy, alcohol ‘Wine tines Niguel: This siameek alten ———_— ——¥ _{Schnozzola Tells. Jimmy Durante's Tavorite menu | ‘has been included in Betty) Crocker’'s forthcoming book, “Favorite Menus of Famous People.” The Schnozz’ meal is as_follows: First a shrimp cocktail. This is followed by an “Um- briago” salad. This is a tossed salad with Jimmy's own special dressing. It is made with olive oil, vinegar, Koquefort cheese, a little cream, lemon, English mustard and Worcestershire sauce, Next is a broiled steak (so there's no grease) with a baked | For a vegetable, Jimmy prefers fresh asparagus or chopped spin- ach. For dessert, fresh fruit in season topped half with ice cream and half with sherbet. The beverage is tea. Sour Cream Gives Cooking Gourmet Touch If you have become acquainted | with fresh dairy sour cream, you're | undoubtedly on the lookout for | more ways of using it. If you've never used this product, it would be an excellent idea to add it to your next marketing list. * * * Dairy sour cream has a pleasant tangy flavor that gives a magic | taste to foods with which jt is used, Many a homemaker has built up her reputation as a good cook through the use of sour cream. It is the finest marinating agent known for meats; it makes ' beef, veal and chicken very ten- der, As a salad dressing, sour cream blends with both garden and fruit salads, Fine textured cakes, cookies and breadstuffs result when sour cream is an ingredient, It is a gourmet's delight when used in borscht, beef stroganoff and chicken pa- prika. * * bd | For a quick dessert, sweeten sour | cream and serve it over fresh | strawberries sliced bananas or Davy Crockett Glass Fels Noptha 6 B= Ei Naptha 6 Puss and Boots CAT FOOD PEANUT BUTTER BISQUICK . .~ Senses 30: wi 10 ox. Defiance 303 Can CUT BEETS 2 BEER «x. WINES to Take Out LIQUORS PLENTY OF For 25 PARKING SPACE! 1220 Perry St. SPRY Chase and Bh COFFEE 79° Bird’s Eye Frozen STRAWBERRIES PERRY FRIENDLY MARKET 3 Lb. Can 1% Sanborn Cc FE 5-6321 ROAST. BAZLEY’S JUNEDALE BRAND REDI-EAT Shankless Half Smoked Tenderloin Portion PORK PO 7 Rib RK 29:8 ROAST ee Mild Cured SLICED BACON.. Shoulder Cut 29: Sresxs . DON Tender Blade Cut CHUCK ROAST Fresh, Lean GROUND BEEF @eeoeeé ‘FRESH DRESSED PAN-REDI FRYERS: Lean Beef SHORT . RIBS eee Shop Refreshed! Shop in Air - Conditioned Comfort! BAZLEY’S PORK CHOP SALE!! Lean Blade Cuts 29%. Lean Center Cuts Choice Center Cuts 69. Cc lb. 29%. MONEY-SAVING WAY FEED YOUR DOG KEN-L-RATION’S ed meat I Si EMO i ER A Ee en ey wer = to p) TAl! cont yyil coro? WEG. U.6. PAT OFF. Vit TWO-DOG OWNERS! N DOG AND CAT OWNERS! \ Co The new, giant, economy-size can is exclusive with Ken-L-Ration—no other dog food has it! It’s another famous first for Ken-L-Ration, just as putting dog food in cans was a famous first for Ken-L-Ration 30 years ago. ‘Whether you own a big dog, two smaller dogs, or a dog and a cat—the new, giant, economy-size can of Ken-L- ; Ration will make feeding easier and quicker, and save you money. Three generations of dogs have lived strong and healthy lives on Ken-L-Ration because it’s packed with lean red meat and “dog health” vitamins and minerals. Switch to Ken-L-Ration for your dog—and be sure to buy it in the new, “exclusive,” giant, economy-size can that saves you money! CONTAINS “THIRTY-EIGHT eee "y iy THe PONTIAC PRESS THVESDAY. gent 14, 1955 } bs ae _ - 1 Shulf Turkeys Scie ge Rea ee RES ree erence ee = =6~<- ~_ Help Yourself To Big Savings During NATIONAL NATIONAL OFFERS YOU ONCE IN A LIFE- | we Si FOOD STORES iu A bacteriological investigation ana Y ~~ vy We Give Holden i of bread. stuffings, made by the Red Stamps institute laboratories and test _ kitchen in 1952, showed that ad- vance stuffing and holding of poul- a — a food poisoning haz- a that time definite recom mendations were made that the stuffing ingredients be combined, and the cavity of the cleaned, ready-to-cook bird be filled just before roasting. Since tt is not always prac- ticable to prepare stuffing at the last minute, certain advance prep- aration procedures were sug- gested, These were: _ Fer Moist Stuffing Refrigerate prepared liquid Rabbani Z. Measure and prepare dry ingredients, Store at room tem- _ SWIFT'S | PREMIUM MEATS The finest quality money can buy, prepared, frozen and packaged fresh—basic red meats of Beef, Veal, Lamb and fom now sold in the following NATIONAL FOOD STOR 2375 Orchard Lake Ave., Sylvan Lake Sugar Cured Ready to Eat, 6 to 8 Lb. Shank Portion SMOKED HE U.S. Graded “Choice™ National Trim CHUCK ROAST Ground Beef, Veal, Pork MEAT LOAF . - ickleberry's ae or Fres! perature. 3. Combine ingredients just be- fore stuffing and roasting the bird. 499 Hunter, Birmingham For Dry Stuffing 1. Combine ingredients (with the exception of raw egg if it is to be used), and refrigerate. 2. Stuff the bird just before roasting. Currently, it has been found that in roasting the stuffed and frozen birds, now available in some Star-Kist Eatwell Klein's or Mickelberry's Sliced Variety Zoe COOKED COLD CUTS ™* Lean Prediced Ready to Cook BONELESS BEEF Freshly Ground Daily Made HAMBURGER market areas, that the. meat of the bird is overcooked and falling from the bone by the time the temperature of the stuffing has reached a degree that will assure safety. Cantonese-Style Pancakes Lend Zing to Supper Here’s a dish that is delightfully different. Klein’ sorM LIVER SAUSAGE . Cantonese Pancakes tablespoons peanut off cup ch onion @iced celery bouillon Bean, Clam Chowder, Cream of Chicken, Cream of Green Pea, Vegetable with Beef Stock or Vegetarian HEINZ SOUP... . 4:49: HEINZ CREAM OF TOMATO souP .. . 6:59: Heinz Strained Fruit and Vegetable BABY Foops 5:49: Heinz in Tomato Sauce Pp —_— One No, 2 can bead sprouts (rinsed end drained) } kf i tbeeoren: core oa Pancakes 7 sauce Heat oil in 10-inch skillet; add onion and celery; cook gently un- til onion is golden brown. Add | bouillon; simmer 10 minutes. | anti] shrimp is heated through. : Stir in soy sauce to taste. Place filling across center of Box BEANS = 2=29°)0RR As 2229 65° argarine. Pour one third cup batter for each pancake onto a hot lightly greased griddle. Bake to a golden brown, turning only once. Orange-Lime Sauce Tops Off Cupcakes A luscious combination of fruit flavors makes this dessert sauce recipe one you'll want to use often. Orange-Lime Sauce - To Give that Wonderful Taste to Your Favorite Salad MAZOLA OIL ~ Stokely Frozen ain Turkey, Beef UAE) Tuna or : teaspoon Ce poe lime rind strain: ‘an ice 1 jpoon lime gy Stir cornstarch, sugar and salt together thoroughly in a 1-quart saucepan. Add grated lime rind, orange and lime juices; stir until there are no dry-ingredient lumps. Cook and stir constantly over moderately low heat until thick- éned, clear and bubbly. . . ‘ . i i ll a +E “ag te 3 a —" ® ‘ : ————, + et; - # x Halak, - so * “> Serve warm over white or gin- gerbread cupcakes; top with whipped cream if white cupcakes are used, with cream cheese blended with a little milk or cream if gingerbread cupcakes are used. Or toppings may be omitted. Makes enough sauce for four to six cupcakes. Tomato Kraut Cocktail Is Cool and Refreshing Here’s a cool and refreshing first course, Tomato Kraut Cocktail One No. 2 can tomato juice One No. 2 can sauerkraut juice % teaspoon dried crushed oreganc Mix tomato juice, sauerkraut juice and oregano; chill to allow flavors to blend. Makes six serv- ings. Tropical Gingerbread delicious cup of crushed pineapple to 1 cup of cream iwhipped) and serve over squares of , your favorite gingerbread. | | + Like Milk Ice Cold Arecent national survey revealed that most connoisseurs of milk like it best ice cold, Milk served at a temperature of 38 to 40 degrees is recommended as most appetizing. Sisk CHOP SUEY....... aw 49 Whele Sun Fres en 6: tO : 89 c fJ ORANGE JUICE -...... GitMONADE..........4=69° Birds Eye Fresh Frozen Welch Frozen GRAPE yuice........ 4:=° 79° Dole Fresh Frozen PINEAPPLE JuICE..... 2°= 39° GiimEADE............ 2229: BLEMONADE..........2=37' g Pet Ritz Apple, Peach, or ! Femil € CHERRY PIE...........'" SD B CHICKEN PlES 5 = *1°° Ye, SYLVAN LAKE STORE HOURS Mon. Thru Sat. 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. | 2375 Orchard Lake Avenue . = Sylvan Lake « | o 1 i . fe f if ‘ 4 “Blend Cheese and Pineapple Pineapple Roquefort Cheese Sal- ad is excellent for dinner or lunch- eon and will fit into almost any menu pattern. Stuffed ripe olives and celery enrich this green lime mold that makes a refreshing des- sert salad also. Pineapple Roquefort Cheese Salad gelatin ene in 2 1 tablespoon Jemon juice or vinegar © \ teaspoon salt ‘ cup chopped celery ', cup chopped stuffed olives 1 cup drained crushed pineapple nt pound crumbled Roquefort or blue cheese Soften gelatin in cold water and dissolve with lime-flavored gelatin in the hot water. Add the pineapple juice, vinegar of lemon juice, salt, celery, olives and crushed pine- apple and Chill until slightly thick- ened. . Add the Roquefort cheese and turn into individual molds and chill until firm. Unmold on crisp | endive and servé with your favorite salad dressing. Serves six. Liver Patties Good Broiled or Pan-Fried If broiled dishes are your meat, Liver Patties are for you. Or pan- fry, if you like. Keep one or two handy con- tainers of junior meat on the emer- gency shelf for just such welcome | main dishes. Liver Patties 2 tablespoons butter or cooking fat 2 tablespoons minced onion 1 tablespoon minced parsley ‘, teaspoon thyme 1 teaspoon salt 1 cup boiling water 2 cup quick-cooking rice : % cup funtor liver and bacon (one 3'g- ounce container) z Melt fat; add onion, cook until tender but not brown. Add parsley and thyme. Add salt to boiling wa- ter, then quick-cooking rice: sim- mer about five minutes or until all | water has been absorbed. Add chopped liver and bacon. | Combine rice and meat mixture | with the cooked onion. Mix well. Cool mixture thoroughly. ((Store in refrigerator when pre- pared in advance.) Shape into patties, brown under the broiler Or in a small amount of fat. Makes four generous patties. Note: To round out the live- aloner's meal, serve with sliced fresh tomatoes and crisp greens. milk or hot beverage, rolls and fruit, fresh or canned. Chilled Soup Stars Chicken, Pimiento Like chilled soups? Try this new combination. Chilled Chicken Pimiente Soup lcan (10% ounces} condensed cream of chicken soup U Milk Diced canned pimiento Chopped chives Put undiluted soup ih a mixing bowl Add 1 soup can of milk. Blend with a mixing fork or whisk. Stir in diced pimiento and chopped chives to taste . Cover and chill. Serve in chilled bowls. Makes four servings. ORDINANCE NO. 1281 An Ordinance to Amend the Title of Ordinance No. 448 of the City of Pontiac Adopted July 19 1908 and to add to seid Ordinance No. 448 Sections 1A, 1B and 1C Adopted: July 11, 1959 Fifective: July 21, 1055 The City of Pontiac Ordains Rection 1 That the title of Ordinance No. 448 be amended to read_as follows: ‘ “An Ordinance to provide for the re- moval and destroying of noxious weeds in the City of Pontiac and for the col- lection of the cost of such removal by the City of Pontiac by Special Assess- ment procedures." fection 2 That sections 1A, 1B and 1C be added to said Ordinance No 448 said added and amended sections to read as follows: Section 1A The Director of Parks and Recreation is hereby appointed Commissioner of Weeds pursuant to Act 350 of Public Acts, |041 Tt shall be the duty of sald Director to give general notice to the owners of property or occupiers of any land in the City of Pontiac whereon noxious weeds are growing Said notice shall order the cutting and destroying of such noxious weeds which stall te by publication im The Pontiac Press at least one week previous to August Ist of each year. If any weeds so ordered to be cut and destroyed by August Ist as aforesaid. are not removed by the owner or occupier of the premises then the Director of Patks and Recreation is hereby authorized to enter upon the land and destroy said weeds at the expense of the persons fatling to comply with said nublished notice | Section 1B If any person herein requested to cut or destroy noxious weeds shall fail or refuse to destror said weeds by August Ist then the Director of Parks and Recreation shall enter and cause such noxious weeds to be eut down or destroyed with as little damage to the premises as may be | Section 1C The Director of Parks and Recreation shall keep an accurate account of the expenses incurred im carrying out the provistons of thie Ordinance with re spect to each parcel of land entered upon under the terms of this Ordinance The amount of such expenses incurred in the destruction of such weeds shall constitute a debt due the City of Pontiac by the persons so failing to comply with the order of the Director of Parks and Recreation to remove such noxious weeds. In the event the cost of destroy- ing such weeds as herein before provided remains uncollected or unpaid on the 15th day of September following the eutting of such weeds said unpaid amount shall be certified by the Director of Parks and Recreation to the City Maneger who shall forthwith report such amount and the owners of the lands de- Hnquent in the payment of the same to the City Commission of the City of Pontiac The City Commission shail cause an Assessment Roll to be prepared by the City Assessor in the same manner as other special assessments are made under the Charter of the City of Pontiac, The charges for the removal and cutting of said noxtous weeds shall become & lien wpon said lands from and after the certification by the Director of Parks and Recreation to the City Manager of the City of Pontiac and a of such certification shall be filed by the Direc- tor of Parks and Recreation with the Peds ond passed by the Clty Commts- ston-of the B ed of Pontiac this 1ith day , el = WM. W. DONALDSON, r Mayor ADA R. EVANS, Near Dequindre National is Proud to Open Their 37th Super Market in Greater Detroit. Looking Forward to Serve You Better! Save You More! A Real Opportunity 203 To Save \¥ r | ‘fou bo Brand Halved PEARS 19: ? * U.S. No. 1 Finest Quality, {POTATOES Medium Size ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 : . ; . National’s JULY OPPORT TIME OPPORTUNITY ON FOOD SAVINGS SWEET PEAS National’s Grand Opening Now in Progress at 2200 E. EIGHT MILE ROAD Fresh, Crisp and Solid NEW CABBAGE ies California Sweet and Tasty, Vine Ripened Tetley Orange Pekoe TEA BAGS Quaker PUFFED ‘<2 5 RICE Johnson's GLO-COAT Real-Kill 48 Count Pkg. Quaker PUFFED Or. 24-0z. WHEAT INSECT BOMB 12-Oxz. Spray Can NATCO — No Deposit — No Return EVERAGES ALL Bottl FLAVORS alias 5° 100 Count $7 19 ot. 9 §: Pod 39 oan $999 All Purpose, California Long White Michigan Grown, Large and duicy BLUEBERRIES California Sweet and Tasty, 252 Size ? Lbs 29 Hazel Brand Packer's Salad Dressing cane 3Q° FRESH DAIRY PROD SLICED American Brick Pkgs. MARGARINE = 29° | SALTED BUTTER = MARGARINE 2 :* 93° | ROLL BUTTER Reed German POTATO SALAD.... CHOP SUEY MEATLESS | ‘ Nerth Americon STEAK SAUCE wusuroom =< CHOPPED HAM... Gulf Kist Lerge CLEANED SHRIMP. . Niblets Brond MEXICORN..... American Beauty WIDE NOODLES... . Durkee Ground BLACK PEPPER.... Bennett's CHILI SAUCE..... TABLE NAPKINS . . . 6-02. 12-Oz. Cen 4',-Oz. Cen 12-02. Cens 12-02. Pkg. (4-0. Cen 8-02. Bri. Box of SO 33° 35° 11° 49° 55° 33 25 $447 FeeMen Beran § te, FenecHen ReFAL WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. ® FOOD STO Red Stamps 1 | ~ | SAVE 17: ON 2 CANS | 10-49 Pull Pint SUNKIST ORANGES 45° GRAPES - 19: TOMATO JUI “AY YOUR CHOICE sx) TOP.TASTE ENRICHED of ’ ha -, 2 29° Label UCTS Pimento Swiss a) $4 S| | SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH “MLY 16th RES We Give Holden City Clerk July 14, 1958 Michigan’s Fastest Growing and Most Modern, Complete Food Store A JOSLYN ...PONTIAC 4 | * Cheese Snacks Mimic Cookies These tempting little tidbits _ | THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY 14.1953 aren't cookies, but crunchy cheese wafers topped with. a pecan half. They make delicious appetizers | served with salad, soup, vegetable, or fruit juice. Easy to make and well worth | the little effort they take, these | Cheese Tempters are sure to be such a family favorite that you'll | want to keep the cookie jar filled | with them for between-meal | snacks. Cheese Tempters | 1 bar (% cup) margarine | % pound «rated sharp or American | cheese 2 tables spoons sifted a.l- purpose flour Pecap he'ves or quarters Let margarine soften slightly in) mixing bowl. Add cheese, salt, and | cayenne and mix until well blend- | ed. Add flour and mix well. Shape dough into three rolls, about 14 - inches in diameter. Wrap in waxed paper and chill in refrigerator overnight. Cut in one-eighth inch slices and place on Bake in erately hot oven (375) 11 to 13 minutes. Makes - about 5 dozen. ungreased baking sheets. —— : CHEESE TEMPTERS — They may look like | petizers are perfect with juice, soup, a salad or cookies, but they're actually tempting little wafers | chilled fruit. with a wonderful cheese flavor. The rich, short ap- er Skillet-Cooked Stuffed Steak Ideal in Summer | When it’s hot, cook your main dish on top of the range. Stuffed Flank Steak 1 package (1% ounces) beef vegetable ] soup with = les | 1% cups wate - —— eae 1% to 3 — : | blender, all ingredients may be Fix Lemonade Eggnogs | mixed at the same time.) Flavor- Children love lemondae eggnogs. | ful and nutritious, these bear fre- For each serving, beat 1 egg, ‘quent repeats. thoroughly, add 4 tablespoons | . frozen concentrate for lemonade, | beat again, then add 1 cup milk. (If you make the eggnog in a Channel Catfish... .49* U. S. Good or Choice 39: CHUCK ROAST ..... “Marinate snap beans and thinly sliced radishes in a tangy French | dressing Serve as_a relish with hamburgers or cold meat or fish. leup soft bread crumbs 1 small onton (finely chopped) ks pound sausage meat (cooked | browned) | % cup sausage drippings | Cook beef vegetable soup with | noodles according to package di- | rections using 1'4 cups water. peppe | Ge Sars Any and ri An. PANE SAVE!" SnowCrop - LEMONADE 2-29" DONATO’S SUPER MARKET 6500 Hatchery Rd. OR 3-1552 | BEER-WINE to TAKE OUT OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. Campbell's TOMATO JUICE 46 Oz. Can . Large SURF 2 w Ag U.S. Choice Round Steak 7 ¢ Lb. Defiance DOG FOOD 6 for Age ~- as REE PREMIUMS: Yours Free of All Cost — at Nicks Yes! You get these wonderful household premiums FREE with the Everedy Coupons Nick gives with each grocery and meat purchase. Save the coupons . . . use them to get the things you want FREE! See our big display in the store. Ask for the catalog filled with hundreds and hundreds of items. START TODAY TO SAVE AT NICK’S ... SAVE ON LOW PRICES... SAVE THE PREMIUM COUPONS, TOO! Swift's Premium 24 Oz. 39° | Strain soup, reserving noodles. | Sprinkle flank steak with salt, BEEF STEW Can | pepper and garlic salt. Mix re- | served noodles, bread —. % onion, sausage meat and iP Campbell 8 Family ¢€ | pings. PORK & BEANS ee Spread stuffing on steak and roll up crosswise like a jelly | | Ice Cold ! ¢ roll, Fasten with skewers. Brown | us. steak on all sides in saucepan or | WATERMELON eoeeee skillet; add soup liquor. Cover pan closely and cook over | Home-Grown ¢ |} low heat for two hours or until | TO UL». Bil tender. Cut into 1-inch slices and | MATOES | serve with meat juices; or thicken | juices slightly with flour if de- sired. WwW B Note: Stuffed flank steak may , | be cooked after browning in a| | Pressure saucepan at 15 pounds | pressure for 30 minutes. Vary Breakfast Waffles Vary those breakfast waffles. Add grated cheese, chopped nuts, | slivers of boiled or baked ham or |erumbled cooked bacon to the | batter, « |LOTAN’S Dixie Highway at Telegraph Lots of Parking Chase & Sanborn capi Defiance or IGNs UIT 0 eM A, Naw Defiant =-o DEFIANCE Red Sour 5 for Tomato or Pineapple CHERRIES —QQc/ JUICE...2 49° Velvet Brand ICE CREAM . . Ye gal. 69 ISBEST PEACHES 3 for 69¢ 2% Can oe © # # @ Wilson Crisprite BACON . ." 42¢ Defiance TUNA... Swi 3° 69 ve Yam "69° “s Steak 79° | SHORTENING... °2 59° SIRLOIN 100 Bags STEAK... 85° ‘DALADA Ground Beef or Pure Pork Sausage 39°" — 351,10 99° Millions Are Switching To peer -White FRESHrap Is one waxe de mer different from all others? Yes! FR rap alone is ¢ waxed pen FREStire Bolo keape bread- ee wa “longer! Ste os y housshett weet Pe i dieener wecopine. Buy FRESHrap pages ay Leckie, | all-metal dispenser offer on every box os PRODUCT OF BADGER paren MILES, INC., PESHTIGO, Seid ea adh aed 4?) WY CROCKEL This sot depices che high lights ia the sdvencurows life of che famow poner, DAVY CROCKIF, ead will epost c every cid from a toddler co the THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 14,1935 : STUFFED SPARERIBS—Spareribs are always wel- ‘come on the dinner table. You can expect three cheers when you serve them sutee with a cornbread Chef-Style Dressing | Always Welcome This salad dressing is always al favorite. Chet-Style Salad Dressing % cup salad oil, % cup heavy cream ty cup white wine vinegar Galt and pepper Qarlic powder Onion powder Put salad oil. cream and vine- gar in container; beat with a fork or shake until combined. Add salt, pepper, garlic powder and onion powder to taste. Makes 1 1-3 cups. For a tasty and refreshing salad, ioss drained canned apple slices with coleslaw... . a goed com- uarioe to sausages or frankfurters. ¢ HEALTH PROTECTION BY HANGING . Aeroxon FLY RIBBONS World's Best Fly Catcher! Get rid of annoying flies the safe and sanitary way. Comes with Tack Attached — easy to hang. | ue Low in cost, only 5 for 25¢. a Buy a supply. of AEROXON FLY } CATCHERS from your grocer, | hardware or general store. If not | available, send $1.00 for a box of | \ 20 catchers, postage paid. (No Ne C.0.D. Please) AEROXON SALES COMPANY 9 East 38th St.,New York 16,N.Y. | cludes taste appeal and satisfies | _hearty appetites. Vo : ; | ' without making considerable fuss | ‘ate oven, 350 degrees, j fourths to 1 pound ribs per serv- | ing. dressing. Garnish the platter with sprigs of parsley and pickled crabapples for contrast in Toon | pouring Cheese Adds Zest fo Creamy Spinach Here’s a brand-new way to make spinach taste delicious PO aay ‘Creamy Spinach 1 ie - Ounces) chopped frozen 8 1 peckage (3 ounces) cream cheese 2 to 3 teaspoons lemon juice % to % teaspoon onion powder Balt and pepper. ‘ Cook spinach according to pack- ‘age directions; drain lightly by placing cover over saucepan and off liquid. spinach cooking liquid for use in ‘sauce or gravy next day.) Push spinach to one side of saucepan; put cream cheese in other side. Stir over low heat to break up and melt cream cheese. Add lemon juice, onion powder spinach and melted cheese well with seasonings and reheat. Makes four servings. good mixed cup for cup with) chilled ginger ale and a couple of tablespoons of lemon juice. (Refrigerate | and salt and pepper to taste; mix| Left-over syrup from peaches is_ Lend Tang to ) Appetizers Pickles are a cocktail time fav- orite whether they lend their flavor to canapes or are part of a relish tray. There is a multitude of variations for serv- ing pickles as cocktail tidbits. Try wrapping thin lengthwise slices of carrot around sweet gherkins and fasten with tooth- picks. Or cut holes in centers of radish slices and thread strips of dill pickles through slices. For a tempting treat, wrap thin slices of candied dill strips around Serve Cottage Cheese Promptly; Don’t Store Unlike other cheeses, cottage | cheese should be used promptly, | within a day or two after pur- chase. Also unlike other cheeses, cottage cheese is best served cold. Cottage cheese cannot be stored for long periods of time. Always refrigerate cottage cheese and keep it tightly covered, with ulppy cheese. Pickle Fruit Kabobs are the proof that.pickles plus imagina- tion provide a never-ending source of nibble food. Chilled glasses of tomato juice _and shredded whole wheat wafers are tasty companions, ' small — = mashed lemon juice 4 cup mayonnaise 1 cup sweet Gherkine 1 cup cubed a 1% cups canned, drained pineapple chunks Combine banana, and mayonnaise; mix well and chill. Arrange gherkins, avocado and pineapple as desired, on toothpicks or short lengths of plas- tic straws. Serve banana mixture as a dip | for pickle kabobs. ‘Makes ‘about 24, lemon juice _when you US0.0. favorite toilet bowl cleaner EASY-T0-OPEN TOP Press thumb under teb. Off it snaps. Snepe back on to close. Spill proof. Container will not break if dropped. FAST-ACTING FORMULA ‘Improved, end more effective, Makes sub: born stains dapper in @ jiffy. Cleans toilet bowls faster, No mopping, no scrub: bing. Disinfects too. Follow directions on familier yellow con. NEW Soni-Flush has been proved safe with ony septic tank system. No slowing-down effect on bacterial action. Will not herm tanks themselves. © The Hygienic Products Co., Canton 2, Ohie give yourself d holiday a : , ‘Connseesd Stuffing Adds. to Goodness of Spareribs | | Corn Bread | % cup sifted flour 3 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 1% cups cornmeal 2 eggs. well beaten 1 cup sweet mflk ‘room peoeresatseel 2 tablespoons melted butt or bother for mother. | If self-rising corneal and flour /are used, omit baking powder and salt from this-recipe. Sift together the flour, baking Add cornmeal Men like a good meal that in- Baked spare ribs | stuffed with cornbread do just that, Like most dressings, cornbread stuffing for spareribs can be made | excellently from leftover bread, or | the cornbread can be baked fresh. powder and salt. Either way, this is an easy and land mix well. Combine beaten | healthful main course dish to pre- | C885, milk and butter and add to pare. |dry ingredients all at once. Stir | Corn-Stuffed Spareribs 2 matching sparerib racks, cracked | through center ! smal) onion, finely minced ', cup melted butter or bacon drip- | oven, 400 degrees, 20 to 25 minutes. pings 5 cups crumbled cormbread ingredients. Pour into greased 8-inch square 1 egg. slightly beaten 1 cup milk 1% teaspoon salt Saute minced onion in fat slowly for about five minutes. Pour over crumbled cornbread. Combine egg, | milk and ‘salt and pour over bread. | These Qualities Combine carefully. | You’ ll find these main types of PI : t ribs flesh | lettuce in the stores right now. cd nee eect ith malt and | CRISP HEAD OR ICEBERG pepper, and spread with stuffing. | The most popular—available the Cover with other section (which | Year Tound—a tight head. medial ie lGaanllannsened unt inaides” | Breen = the outside with pale and elther sew together or lace ota eee AD OR BOSTON together using small metal skew- ors and cord. ‘leaves feel oily or buttery; the Sprinkle with salt and pepper. leaves are generally greener and Place on a trivet in a shallow pan | smoother than the crisp head; and bake, uncovered, in a moder- | medium size, usually smaller and, about 144 lighter in weight than the — Allow three- head. M ain Varieties of Lettuce Show hours or until tender. Cos OR ROMAINE A long head with stiff upright | leaves. Leaves are coarse but | Comes in Pints and Half Gallons Dairy co. Cool Refreshment Every Time... | Maple Leaf Dairy sweet, Has stronger flavor than other types; color ranges from a light to dark: green depending on, | variety. BIBB loose, very small head; mild flavored, A flat. leaves are tender, blue-green in color. | SALAD BOWL Small head, larger than Bibb, surrounnded by curly, spreading ‘leaves; leaves are smooth, soft, very tender; outside leaves are medium green while center of | head is yellow green, LEAF Leaves grow loosely branching | from the stalk; may have a curled | or somewhat smooth leaf and crisp” Sherbets Tops in Town! e Lim e texture, © Raspberry ‘Serve Quick Hot Sauce @Orange - With Burgers, Franks For your next hamburger or | frank cook-out, we suggest serving | | this Quick Hot Sauce as a tangy taste treat = the perennial baie | nic favorites | Hot Sauce for Hamburgers, Franks | Saute in 2 tablespoons salad oil: One finely chopped onion and 1| finely chopped green pepper, until | soft but not browned; add: 1 tablespoon brown sugar 1 B-ounce can tomato juice 1 od junior vegetable soup % teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon ¢ Pineapple Ld Worcestershire sauce Phone FE 4-2547 “Cook over low heat 10 minutes. Makes about 2 cups of sauce. .. EASIER WITH BEST BLEACH Double-action Roman Cleanser Bleach whitens clothes snowy- white, removes many stains, and disinfects all at the same time. These extra ben and save wear save work of hard rubbing. Use Roman Cleanser Bleach; see the amazing differenc ' only enough to moisten the dry | | pan and bake in moderately hot | The head is soft and the inner | | | | Se” fech Nu! _ Coffet “> - | HILISe pros COEFEE All Popular Brands COFFEE +4 ax soesessse r+? 4 4 eee: sees eeces: Defiance PLUS Holden _ Trading : seeds tH o io New Pack RED TART CHERRIES Cans 99: herr D9: Armour’s Cloverbloom Kingan’s Reliable Grade LARGE 4 EGGS | Breast-O-Chicken Chunk Style BREAST-()-CHICKEN SG n-proran Ee TUNA 29° Roast | Fancy Vine Ripened | TOMATOES 19: Home Grown SWEET CORN 39. ! | Banquet Whole Chicken a 09 READY FOR REALEMON | LEMON JUICE INSTANT USE Sweetened 12 Oz. 2* 49 Maxwell House MAXWEL! Houst Coffee | instant COFFEE Lg. 6 Ox. Jar $43 39 ADA WY CROCKET | This set depicts the high lights in the adventurous life of the famous pioneer, DAVY CROCKETT, and will appeal to every child from a woddier to the teens. The set is decorated in a soft buckskin brown, with our exclusive underglaze printing process i) 72 Lb. Canned Ham Kingan’s Sliced boneless = Bacon b. Roast b Rib End Blade Cut Pork Loin Beef Pot Roa cH st Seana LD'S DINNER Be A aes Near I ST la kN ot i ee sp EO a lee ¢ ] i i ke _ForTY-TWO Lap Or el re ee pee es Sa ( it 4 Po A { oie aa © : ee OR IN ee OR ae . ae | aoe | . PR ey i ! | i ; fel Twin Loaves Make 2 Meals One to serve and one to save— that's what you'll have when you bs make Twin Meat Loaves. And if you want them to be the best you've ever tasted, use this recipe. ca * = Bite size shredded wheat biscuits and condensed cream of tomato soup are the ingredients that make the loaves extra good. The soup F helps make them moist and tasty. The bite size biscuits keep them in shape and add the good wheat flavor that blends so well with meat. : You'll like using bite size shredded wheat biscuits for an- other reason—they’re ready .to add as they come from the pack- age, no crushing or crumbling necessary. You'll also like the idea of Pe ing two loaves at once—saves time, THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY. 1, 1955 : ( “or so before serving. Milk, wee | Mix Fruit, Milk Drinks iT Devil Burger deviled ham. Pile hot mixture on | bananas and sugar make @ de- 7 gers split bun and toast. for’ a few | .Ig there an electric blender in licious drink. Here's a new and hearty mix- minutes. your kitchen? Use it for fruit and | ‘ture for burger buns: Saute milk drinks for small fry. If you, Give added flavor to meat pie by make the drink an-hour or so be-| putting a little minced onion into aavent peppers, onion and celery; fore serving and chill it, you may the baking powder biscuit dough | Scramble eggs into mixture and, want to reblend it for 10 seconds | used for the crust. : when eggs are soft, stir in can Carrots simmered gently in apple juice develop a delicate hint of apple flavor « . . delicious with pan-boiled meat patties. All Popular Brands of TWIN MEAT LOAVES — Make Twin Meat Loaves and save your- self time and work on hot summer night; save one for tomorrow's pi Serve one loaf for dinner to- These loaves owe their good days. enc. looks and better flavor to the bite-size shredded wheat biscuits and meiionis cream of tomato soup. COFFEE 3 Pounds Use Yolks in Custard When you prepare a gelatin des- | sert that calls for egg whites, use the yolks in a soft custard sauce. Serve the sauce with the gelatin dessert or with a fresh fruit | compote, ct and oven beat There Is Always News, Serve one of the meat loaves, , New Food Products hot for dinner tonight, wrap the, 1n } | ’DAVY CROCKETT CRISCO.. other in foil and take it along | for tomorrow's picnic lunch. Or | keep it on hand for slicing and serving with a sauce or in sand- | wiches. | Twin Meat Loaves | 4 ege ey (10% ounces) condensed cream lg cup wate | siecee bite- cies shredded wheat bis | cults 2% pounds ground beef | Pa pound pork sausage 2 teaspoons salt ry cup finely cut onion Break eggs into 4quart bowl. Beat slightly. Add tomato soup and water. Mix well. Add bite | size shredded wheat biscuits. Let | stand 15 to 20 minutes. Heat oven to slow (300). Grease two 6-cup loaf pans. When cereal __mixture has stood 15 to 20 min- utes, add meat, salt and onion. Mix well. * Pack half of mixture into each loaf pan. Pour two tablespoons of water over the top of each loaf. Bake on rack slightly below center 1 hour and 15 minutes. Makes two loaves, each yielding eight %-inch | slices. By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor Move your chair over into that patch of shade and let me fill your glass with more iced tea. Now, we can settle down for a short chat ‘about this and that. Sure, it's been hot, But those families of ours still insist on eat- | ing three times a day, don't they? | | You might tempt their appetities 'with a new salad dressing now appearing in the stores. It’s a sweet-sour dressing, good for all | vegetable, meat and seafood sal- 'ads, The introductory. offer gives | you two bottles for the price of | one. Have you seen the new instant chocolate milk? _Put out by a famous evaporated milk compa- Dill Strips and Barbecue Relish. The relish is especially versatile. Use it as a table garnish on hot burgers or hot dogs. It is also | good for a | Try this recipe: 4, pound chipped spiced ham 1 cup Barbecue Relish 6 sandwich buns, heated Heat ham and relish in sauce- | pan. Serve in heated buns. Makes | 6 sandwiches. For centuries man has dried food to preserve it, Now modern man is learning how to dry a food that previously was impos- sible to dry—meat, Notable progress had been made in producing dehydrated pork ny it comes ina 10-ounce package | Steak and dehydrated fish sticks with a convenient pouring spout. The “magic crystals’ of this instant chocolate flavored drink dissolve immediately in hot or cold water, It provides all the nourishment of fresh whole milk, except butter fat, Speaking of instant milk .. |have both been perfected. All of these would be mighty useful in case of any major disaster. I should like to tell, you of al | cooking failure I had just recently |in order that you might be spared |the same mistake. _ USE GREASE-FREE BOWL ham, pork or sliced beef, ham- | “quickie” barbecue. that both looks and tastes good | |when reconstituted. Dehydrated | i j | } | Minute Maid Frozen ORANGE | JUICE OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to (0 P.M. Friday & Saturday 9 A.M. to 11 P.M. Ina¥t This set depicts the high lights in the adventurous life of the famous pioneer, DAVY CROCKETT, and will appeal to every child from a toddler to the teens. The set is decorated in a soft buckskin brown, with our exclusive underglaze printing process. CHILD'S DINNER wld. BEER — WINE SOFT DRINKS ICE COLD another milk company is putting! Having broken the large bowl out a family-size package of its for my electric mixer, I had to nonfat dry milk. It makes\ three | | substitute a plastic bowl when I gallons of milk and is most* \eCO- | |made a package angel food for Serve one loaf hot, garnished , with tomato wedges. Cool the other loaf, cover and store in potrigureter | for later use. seven cents a quart. nomical, adding up only to absut | Miss Teenager’s birthday. The egg | \ | | whites never did attain the heights | FARL’S MARKET 701 ORCHARD LAKE at All Times PLENTY OF FREE SUNDAY Other or F lavors \\they were supposed to, and the 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. (FORMERLY BREEN’S MARKET) PAVED PARKING 30 MILLION UNDERWEIGHT Flatter Shrimp and youngsters in America who are in Appetizers | underweight? I sometimes think Tender, plump shrimp make de- we dwell too much on the prob- licious party appetizers and their lems of the overweight and forget pink profiles are even prettier when | those who strive désperately to speared with gaily colored tooth- | gain pounds. Does it surprise you to know | jt\ should have been. that there are thirty million adults | ‘cake was only half as high as J ‘Bvidently the plastic bow! was not ‘entirely free of grease—it holds ‘grease longer than a glass or ceramic one does, This grease prevented the egg whites from whipping Wp, NOW...BLUE BONNET MARGARINE [5 picks. As a matter of fact, there are so many ways to spear shrimp | that you'll soon be thinking up flavor combinations of your own. | In the meantime, here are some | ideas from the Shrimp Association | of the Americas to make your next party not only more fun, but a. little different, too. For extra | generous hors d'oeuvres, sandwich | more than one shrimp between | the -other foods. Clean and cook one pound of | shrimp, fresh or frozen. Wrap each shrimp in a half slice of | bacon, and secure with a tooth- pick. Broil until bacon crisps. Place a stuffed olive on the end of each toothpick and serve im- mediately. Skewer cooked shrimp and pine- | apple chunks on toothpicks, or shrimp and cocktail sousages. Place cokes aes speared | with colored toothpicks, on a cock- | tail platter around a dunking bow! | of Thousand Island dressing, or | make a dip sauce of two parts— sour cream, one part mayonnaise, | with a dash of ecemreaee sauce, Skewer cooked shrimp with avo- cado chunks, artichoke hearts, or pearly cocktail onions. Dress Up Plain Cake Dress up baker's plain white or | sponge cake with a homemade , frosting. Cream 3 tablespoons of butter or margarine with 2 sifted confectioner’s sugar and a tablespoon of grated orange rind. Mix in enough orange juice to make good spreading consistency. Ever add a dash of curry powder to egg salad for sandwiches? Good! cups | For these individuals there is good news, A new high-calorie food supplement is on the mar- ket. It can be used in the same way in which you use wheat germ. It can be sprinkled on fruits, cereals or ice cream; it may be used in baking, sauces and gravies. It can be substituted for part of the flour in a recipe. Leok for it in most chain and independent drug stores, New products to watch for in| the stores: opaque waxed paper that is white. The featured ad- vantage of this type of waxed, | paper is its vitamin-saving ability. A second new product is a par- ticularly soft paper napkin put out by a famous paper company. Pic- }nic season calls for more paper napkins than usual. | PICKLES IN NEW STYLE Pickle -lovers, take note, The ‘line of the famous 57 has been in- | creased by the addition of Candied | j | mistake again and I hope this warning saves you. Frozen Shrimp Soup |Adds Savor to Fish If there's a fisherman, in your family, you can ‘‘do him\ \proud” | by dressing up his catch with an easy shrimp sauce. Heat a can of frozen cream of shrimp soup with one-third cup milk. Pour saude over fish while it bakes. Lay a frozen fillet (1-pound size) in a flat casserole or baking dish and top with an unthawed can of shrimp soup. Whisk casserole into the oven to bake for an hour. Ex- tra touches . . . brush fillet with melted butter and sprinkle a table- | spoon of lemon juice over it before baking. Or, sprinkle grated cheese over | shrimp sauce. It will taste simply _etegant! NOW—for a limited time... for { SALE! i toste for solads, saws, seafood: ond meat | Money bock guarontee. SAVE MONEY at these leading Wrigley Stores National Food Stores “Toms Northwood Markets B&C Markets Lipson Markets © Pantry Markets You'll love its tangy, sweet-sour taste. No other dressing like it! An old Dutch formula blending exotic spices, herbs and oils into the year's biggest ASK YOUR GROCER FOR THIS 2-for-1 PACK! and other good stores in this area. I shan’t repeat that particular \ AROUND THE WHOLE POUND GOLDEN FOIL OUTSIDE DOUBLE WRAPPED IN AROUND £ACH PRINT GOLDEN FOIL INSIDE | SEALS ALL THE GOLDEN GOODNESS IN! Yes, now all the golden goodness of BLUE BONNET Margarine is doubly protected in golden foil—with a Zip Tape for easy opening. Better for FLAVOR! BLUE Bonnet’s delicate, sunny- sweet taste is protected right to your table. Better for FRESHNESS! BLUE BonneEt’s delicious i 006C-dN | i, vegetables freshness is all sealed in: . . all “off flavors” sealedout. 5 4 Better for NUTRITION! Bie Bonnet now gives ! t eee hen Minerals, Vitamins, Food Energy of the I 1 1058 ends, tea, ” Pp ce” spread, protected as ot the “h SS iin wa price’’ spread is protected. nied, ace ore Thrifty Markets c | | veuen a ON PURCHASE OF 1 LB. OF SUNNY-SWEET Ue ay e esc | Blue Bonnet | 22 *sBener Margarine | ‘ee Shop Markets 1 DOUBLE WRAPPED IN GOLDEN FOIL | ] ‘ redeemed represen Detiance Store | ft FLAVOR and | Satie mice treme | only. Void wherever my any sales tax. Offer good in U, 8. A. NUTRITION wih ECONOMY! | me a sy ! 12, 1 Chicago L# lp age STANDARD BRANDS mrcparenit nb & totepndeel rs, Aieags 9a —- om am om anal Fs / | ‘i i ‘ | : te 4 / f i Put a No. 2 or No. 2% can of Bartlett pears in food freezer or in ice cube compartment er re- frigerator 12 hours or longer until frozen. When ready to serve, run hot water over the outside of the can, ‘then open both ends. With one of the discs fram the can push the | fiozen pears from the can. Slice. “A No. 2 can will serve six. No. 2% can will serve eight. -Iee Cap Salads Place icecap on salad greens. Top slices with cottage cheese and mayonnaise and maraschino cherry. Top with mayonnaise, shred- ded carrot and salted peanuts. Top with cream cheese balls Use Frozen Pear Icecaps to Make Salads, Desserts rolled in nuts and mayonnaise. Put icecap on pineapple slice. Top with whipped cream dressing and pimiento garnish. Top icecap with combination fruit salad or Waldorf salad, Crumble blue cheese into may- onnaise and serve with icecap. Ieecap Desserts « Fold peppermint stick candy crushed into whipped cream and top slices of Icecap. Fold chipped chocolate mints in- to whipping cream for topping. Top with vanilla ice cream and strawberry sundae sauce. Serve atop slice of jelly roll. Top with whipped cream and chop- ped nuts. Make sandwich of two large gin- ger cookies with a slice of icecap. |, Open can and put in mara- schino~ cherries before freezing. Top with bit of whipped cream. Put Pineapple Mixture in Cupcake for Dessert Giant-sized cup cakes: A large, this way. Cut a cone-shaped sec- tion from the top of each cake. Fill the hole with this filling: Combine in a saucepan 14% cups drained crushed pineapple, one- half cup sugar, 1 tablespoon cornstarch and 1 tablespoon butter or margarine, dash salt and nut- ed THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. 3 JULY 14,1955 meg. Cook, stirring until thick and| [am clear. Cool. Replace top, pointed- side up. This also makes an ex- i caked filling for cookies, Pour hot creamed seafood mix- tures into halves: of pitted, ripe avocado, unpeeled, OAKLAND PACKING HOUSE MKT. 77 S. Saginaw Wholesale—Retail BONELESS SIRLOIN Open Fridays ‘til 9 P.M. Hotel, Restaurant, Barbeque Supplies FRESH PORK SHOULDER . BACON BAKED SALMON SANDWICHES — Serve a hot | tuna for the salmon if your family prefers it; or use 4) | Baby Fruit Provides © Basis for Taste Treat For a simple but distinctive des- sert when there are only two for dinner, borrow a can or jar of strained fruit from the baby food shelf — apricots, peaches, apple- sauce, or whatever you like. : Add to it a tablespoon of sugar, for cash! Phone FE 2-8181, dispose of un-~needed belongings Its smart to stay slim whole wheat bread instead of white. Defiance GRENNAN’S a meal-in-a-dish or as a per Hot Sandwiches Feature Salmon A good hunch for lunch! Make ‘it one hot main dish for a cool ‘summer meal in the form of a ‘baked souffle sandwich. Green 'pepper, onion and mustard add tang to tuna or salmon. * * » STEAKS | ROASTS | SQUARES “65° i. 30° “O° pare oe ete LARD.........59 "85° Leases Lean Sliced | Beef Pot BACON ROAST STEAKS. b. 59° Lb. 39° Lb. 39° Fresh Killed FRYING CHICKENS ......° 47° A cool, crisp salad and tall glesses of iced tea are all this sandwich needs to make your meal quick, cool and complete. It's an excellent guest menu, Baked Salmon Sandwiches 6 slices enriched bread utter of Margarine yp fazed pet pel (®ounce can) ry eabtesvoune chopped onion tablespoons chopped areen pepper CERTIFIED ROLLED aS COOKED CANNED BEEF BOl LI NG yr yireregretmrtn Cnaege Vy poner ewes, beaten 1 cup milk Paprika Spread four slices bread with | butter or margarine. Place in bot- tom of 8inch square baking dish. Toast lightly in oven (350) about /10 minutes, Combine salmon, celery, green | BEEF 2 - 25° HAMS Lb. | 7S" ROASTS Lb. 4 4° NEW PACK—RED SOUR 599 59 CHERRIES ANGEL FOOD Cake... Gg SHORTENING C ee «of 3 ste 69 CANNED MEATS ICE cou Watermelon . .°12° ALL- VEGETABLE Defiance os Chicken and Rice... . 33° Beef Stew..........00° GROUND © 398 | isceiet4.4, SMOKED u. < BEEF 3 ™ $4 69 FRESH LEAN | Rolled HAM Whsieorcurup FRYERS or STEWERS......° 59° PORK LOIN ROAST = 39: -_ 3 lb SMALL, LEAN CHOICE BEEF POT ROAST............ Fresh Ground Sugar Cured Smoked HAM PATTIES..." 69° FARME R’ SUPER > MKT. 484 Auburn Ave. | Free Parking: Tiger Baseball Phone FE 2-0119 FREE! Tickets in MUFFETS | tice cx Puffed Goods sandwich like this baked salmon treat when you want snack, Substitute ra pepper, salt and caraway seeds. Mix to blend, Arrange salmon Cheese Souffle Tops Open Tomato Sandwich and trim and get Domine’ “Energy Lift” too! mixture on toast slices. Top with : Sure, you need Domino to sweeten slices of American cheese. Cover | Here is a bit of summer WHICH IS LESS coffee, tea and your foods. But with remaining bread slices to | sophistication for the little lunch- FATTENING? 1 Sugar make sandwiches. eon—Tomato Cheese Souffle Sand- Combine eggs and milk and pour | Wich. On buttered slices of bread, _ over sandwiches, Sprinkle with! Place two slices of fresh tomato. 7 paprika, Bake in moderate oven To make the souffle: Allow one Ee (350) 40 to 45 minutes, Makes four | ©&& for each two open-face sand- ia sandwiches wiches.. Beat egg whites and yolks . separately, Season yolks with) ‘Yes, 3 teaspoons of Domino pepper, paprika, Worcestershire | Sugor ectvelly contein fewer ‘Serve Chive Butter sauce and mustagd. Add one - coleries than fourth cup grated, sharp cheese 1 fresh Mince chives and mix with but-| for each egg yolk. ter; place q dollop of the mixture; Combine egg mixtures, folding. a over each portion of broiled! steak as you serve it. Makes a Sugar. | wonderful sauce as it mixes with| cup souffle mixture. Place on, [ agpdee J Lerten 4 Jam | the meat juices. The steak should | Booklet! Address: be broiled so it is rare or me- dium-rare. | the yolks carefully into the whites. | Top tomatoes with about one-half | greased baking sheet and bake) in a moderate oven (350 degrees) | for 15 minutes. THE AMERICAN SUGAR REFINING COMPANY, BOX 236, NEW YORK 5, NEW YORK GRADE 1 SKINLESS HOT DOGS 3-99 Armour’s | BACON SQUARES 25": Blue Bonnet OLEO 32°" ALL PURPOSE BISQUICK LARGE BOX 39° Double-Header Value 1 POUND Tray Packed, Sliced ~ BACON 1 POUND Fresh, Tender LIVER BOTH FOR Chase & Sanborn COFFEE Choice of Grinds BEER, WINE LQUOR TAKE, OUT PI @ Chicken Morton’s Frozen POT ISBEST Freestone PEACHES No. 22 Can 4°99 PET ES @ Beef @ Turkey YOUR CHOICE 4"89 We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities! [ATLAS MILK TALL CAN SUPER MARKET | Corner of Baldwin Ave. and Walton Blvd. — Tues., Wed., riday and Seturdey —9 te 10 "Gus Suntan ti Thurs. —— 9 to 9 Stes TELEPHONE FE 2-5192 Me gti ee “3 ni it cal Good reading habits often are the result of early li-| i Pontiac Press Photos brary training. Barbara Olds (left) of Pioneer avenue and caught by ey phetographer during a visit to the Pontiac her sister, Marsha, a first grader, were two youngsters | City Library this week. “This might help you,” Wells (left) of Williams street to Jackie Kosky. (center) | of LaSal LaSalle avenue and Sendy Filer of Edgefield drive. | Bride- Elect Entertained at Shower Lynn. M. McCallum Honored at Party in Scott Home Lynn Mildred McCallum, bride- elect of Edward M. Green of Lans- ing, was honored Tuesday evening at a bridal shower given by Mrs. Bradley D. Scott of South Genesee avenue. The hostess was assisted by her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Brad- ley D. Scott. 7” * * Lynn is the daughter of Judge and Mrs. Cecil McCallum of Dwight avenue and Ed is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris J. Green of Lans- ing. The wedding ceremony will be performed Aug. 6 at Christ Church Cranbrook, The Rev. Per- ry Williams will officiate at the 8 p.m, ceremony. Guests at the shower were Mrs. McCallum, Mrs. Green, Mrs. Leo tt ™ suggests librarian Florence The girls find real pleasure in the books on the shelves at Pontiac City Library. Library ‘Answers Questions on A Pleas aa erat Two students of the Bible, Ross Berry (left) of Judah | i! road and Doris Tucker of Collier street were photographed | at Pontiac City Library as they ane were doing research on| ~t one ot ate most Ev ee \ < a vy {' various religious doctrines. ated rything . Rey the fF They find the library an ex- cellent source for information in their work. » ahget ee is wht tee meg City Folks Often Seek Information 55,515 Books Are Kept Available for People of Pontiac Some folks want to know how to raise crickets—others want help in raising butterflies. So, they call the Pontiac City Library. L * * And most often they find the answers they're looking for. If members of the staff are in doubt, they can, in a few seconds’ time, locate the answer for you. Miss Adah Shelly, head Ii- brarian, ex plains that many times they are asked questions on wedding etiquette, and on ra- dio and television repair. They often are asked for books oa building houses and boats. Job and career information ts available for high school students, the librarian pointed out. There is a file of over 10,000 pamphlets. pictures, maps and agricultural Miss Adah Shelly, head librarian at’ of Lorraine court as she prepares to take buletins THE Pontiac City Library, helps Shirley Hopper PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Deem of guest for four weeks, their niece, Mrs, William Johnson of Glous- ter, Ohio. » * * Woodbine drive after spending sev- | Cadillac. | * * « After spending 10 days at their | /eabin on Saginaw Bay near Case- | | Wentworth. Visiting for a week at the home | ville the Clarence L, Smiths have | ———-—— ' a few books out of the library. Womens Section PAGES 44-47 Residents Take Trips Far and Near and Mrs, Wilfred Wentworth and Robinwood avenue have as a house- eral days in Traverse City and | family of Detroit are home again |after an extended trip to Texas, | |New Mexico and Colorado, Mrs. | Hutchinson is a sister of Mr. 5,515 VOLUMES The library lists a total member- ship of 28.234 and a total book stock of 55,515. During the month of June 12,193 library loans were made. + * * LJ Miss Shelly. who has served this community for nearly 30 years, | was honored last March when the | Adah Shelly Library wag dedi- | cated. Besides the Adah Shelly branch which is on Rundell Street, there is a small branch | on South Sanford Street. Both branches are under the ad- ministration of the main library, as is the bookmobile. ‘Coming Events Ladies Auxiliary FOE 1230 will hold | officers meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. in hall, 280 W, Montcalm 8t. Regular meet. | | ing and birthday party will follow, R. Donaldson, Mrs. Dawson C. : Baer, Mrs. Arthur C. Compton, of the Rev. and Mrs. George J.| returned to their home on Cass’ Ur. and Mrs Mrs., Eugene ‘K. Wellman, Mrs. Mahder on Fourth avenue are Mr. — road. = eee Clark J. Adams, Mrs. William B. and Mrs. Emil C. Rauscher and) Tonight, the Past Chiefs’ Club of | James P. Moore and Mrs. Harold Richards. son, Bernard, of Chesterfield, Mo. | Fannie E Tompkins ‘Temple 41, Cummiskey : * * The Rauschers are the parents of | Pythian Sisters, is having a steak | ‘ Other guests were Mrs. Ericson Mrs, Mahder. roast and cooperative dinner at | Jr. of Lewis, Mrs. Clarence Saunders, eo. the Smiths, Birmingham Mrs, Horace Young, Mrs: Allan i . Eee Beker) | Speatiers) va” an e th McLintock, Mrs. Bert F. Griffin, I? % Bridge road will be leaving soon = The Rev. Lawrence D. Graves, | “erent bed Mrs. Phillip Long. Mrs. Clifford ie for their cottage on Lake Mit- assistant pastor of the First Con- | engagement E. Maison, Mrs. Kenneth Miller . CT chell near Cadillac where they | gregational Church, has returned of their end Mrs. Frank J. Moreau. ae i. . i: 5 22 WP) te Py pane Fe vara: from two weeks’ training at daughter Mrs. Cash Bond, Mrs. Ben A, . . . _ . . 7+ , y their son | Camp McCoy near La Crosse, . Ronan, Mrs. R. E. Spangler, Checking the catalogue at Pontiac City| (left) of West Pike street, library cata = ee: vith — Wis. with the 70th Division. The Alicia Hayes, Mrs, W. L. Moore of Lake Orion, | [ibrary is Diane Walker of Mary Day ave-| | rs. William Spindler, with their | Rey. Mr. Graves is assistant 4 ! Day ave- | loguer, | to Jeremiah and Mrs. Otto J. Dey> and Mrs. ye 5 : ‘ Li atet children, Terry Lee afd the haplain of the division and has Arnold W. Grooms, both of Bir |"U¢. She is being assisted by Doris Haynes | twins, Janet and Jeffrey. | | reciecens in the Chaplain Black aa =: ' md = Leaving tor Chester Iowa, for et Soo Gillene, tym and £4 were teted reoenty Nancy Campbell Honored at Shower \1x, ese ite Rev. ant Mr vacationing for a week in the aa 2} nal ee 3 eh fog tame |Helen, of Owego drive They will , Copper Country will be the Harry Mr. and Mrs. ing. Gaily aca Hasty ere A linen shower honored Nancy) and Ella Powers. Dianne Campbell ; Denison and the _ bride-elect’s | visit the Rev. Mr. Nelson's mother, D- Staytons of Birmingham. Taey John W. held assorted canned. goods and Campbell Wednesday evening at | will be flower gi:". mother and the prospective bride-| Mrs. C. A. Nelson. [pesos pe Career tue Fe Gillette Jr. gifts. Fifteen couples were pres-/the Chamberlain street home of} |. a, groom's mother. oe eee ssh of Wing Lake ent at the affair. Mrs. John Hill. Assisting the hos- William has asked his brother, | A miscellananeous shower was Coming home on the Queen Eliza- * tess was Mrs. William L. Camp- | Thomas Donahue, to serve as best | given regently for Nancy by Miss beth from a six-week trip to After a 10-day vacation in their She was : bell. man. Seating the guests will be | Europe are the Cyril J. Strangs of | cottage at High Banks on Wal- Acquaintance Club a Louis Miller, Michael Lovinger,|Clancy, and Mrs. James Powers | Wenonah drive. They took a 10-day| pole Island, the Harold J. Hack- graduated P lans Bob-Lo Trip Nancy deusiaan ot Mr aad Sire. William Campbell. Richard Camp-|and Mrs. Barney McKevitz were | Motor trip through the- English) etts of Delaware drive are home from . . Dona ; countryside. ] ed | . ichi A trip to Bob-Lo is planned by Collin L. Campbell of Bellevue | bell and Daniel hue, | hostesses at another shower. Ge ry! They also visit again . M ichigan , s ' rmany, Holland, Switzerland, Tuesday, ‘the Hacketts enter the Widow and Widowers’ Acquain- | avenue, is the bride@lect of Wil-| SHOWER GUESTS Fr | . State ven . Trance and Htaly. tained the family at a dinner honor tance Club for Saturday evening. |liam A. Donahue Jr. He is the son; Guests at the shower were Mrs. Couple Will Ma rry ef ing their granddaughter, Cheryl University and The group will meet at Malta|of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Don-|Ruth Nackerman, Mrs. Philo E rl in Se temb | ‘The Rev. na Mrs. William E. | Marie Stephens, on her fifth birth- | h nd Temple on Perkins street at 7 ahue of Lewis street. Wright. Mrs. Gilbert Hoffman, arly | p er | Hakes and family of Moreland day. Cheryl will spend three. weeks | nd atten ed o'clock and go to Detroit on & — Phe couple will exchange aup- Mts Glen Donahue. Mrs M. J.| William Popps of Hillside drive) avenue will be arriving home here with her mother, Mrs. B. L. | Deerfield [Tye vn. dere Today | Oe rere oe: 6 at 9 a.m. in Ho peny ain pm sige aie announces the engagement of his recep iin ons in flo layers = iar — é al Academy and meet x, St. Vincent de Pant Church, "" “ * “a : ; ; hy . Pa. area, chael Jon, Mrs. Stephens is the | opps 77 w air-conditioned Maite Tem: |. Nancy has asked her cousin, = *_ * ® heoayeall nae = pay ws jt phere irs apt Ce ee ee C maga) , + 9%) tor irst Church, .* | 01 « For further information, call | Shirley Clancy, to attend her ds Other guests were. Mrs. Harold! Menter of Spence street. | * ns | The Rev. and Mrs, Kenneth Oct ail d on Mrs. Adeline Cox of South Sanford | ‘maid of honor. Bridesmaids will | Wesley, Marcee Hill, Janice Price, | An carly September wedding is| Mr. and Mrs. Theron N. Slosson | Hutchinson and daughter, Carol aos wedaing street, [be Kathiéen Kinch, Elinor Schutt ' Mrs. W. R. Campbell, Mrs. Clark | planned, | have returned to their home on | Ann, of Norton avenue and Mr, is planned. ; s _ | { { { , j is wf { : ry 4 : f | ' { i) j f iy 4 { Hi j i | | i | dey 3 re: perf | the | f j | iN f ri f { i fi i a EN iy 6 4 ¢ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, you 14) 1955 4 _. By ELIZABETH WOODWARD ~ When you need a pal to squat low and pin up a sagging hem, a sister is right useful; When you can't see to put the permanent: curlers in your back hair, a sister comes. in handy. You can count on her to get phone messages straight. She's tal- alge at covering up for you, rush- g to your defense when you need | frotection, She recognizes the wisdom of cooperating with the beds, the dishes, the tidying up. Together you present a united front. A mutual society of two. - Until some béy comes between you! Then everything goes plop. She | won't even lend you a nickle. You | Jock up your lipsticks. Turn a deaf | ear to her arguments that it’s your turn to clear the table. And sud- | denly plaster a placard on your | bedroom door that says ‘Private, Keep Out, This Means You.” * * * Your beautiful relationship is riddled with suspicion, doubt, jeal- ously and resentment, An uncon- cious male is the cause of it all. Sisters, though they may be cut from the same pattern, are rarely really alike, Their tastes are different, They appeal to different boys. They ought to be smart enough to realize that boys they cannot share. As in this case. “Dear Miss Woodwar d: Last | summer my sister, who is a year , older than I am, liked Jaek, but | ,| liam Beer, who talked on away from her! “This time she likes Joe but he doesn't know it yet.' Last night I saw him and talked with him, and when I nientioned it at home, right deliberately trying to take him |away she accused me 2 of trying to get him to like me. “She won't speak to me around the house and is telling untrue about me to all her friends. But worst of all is hav- bee ee ee - about me. Can you help me: out?” el Answer: Your sister is jumping |_ the gun a bit in considering any Wednesday evening at, Hotel Wal- by Mrs. Hope Scott, past president. Mary Eleanor Lockman was in- ‘stalled as president; Edythe Perry as vice president; Mrs, Warren 'Trevethan, recording secretary; 'Mrs. William Robinson, | sponding secretary, and Mrs. Lor- etta Collins, treasurer. Committee chairmen appointed by Miss Lockman were Mrs. Collins, birthday and means; Miss Perry, program; Mrs, Rus- sell Brackett, public relations, publicity and scrapbook; Mrs. Robinson, employment, and Mrs. Harry Ault, membership, Mrs. John Duncan is—edueation jchairman; Mrs. Ellen Boyd, achievement, and Mrs. Scott, public works and welfare. Speaker for the evening was Wil- “The Secretarial Profession."' Marcella Kilgore rendered two piano selec- tions as~ part of the yrogram. TO ATTEND PARLEY | Mrs. Ault, Oakland County Secre-+— | SUMME SALE he liked me. _She accused me of | tary ot the _Year, _announced she | M Post R SHOE Women's end Girls’ WEDGIES and FLATS Reg. to $6.98 NOW $98 eer and Women's orts Casuals LOAFERS and STRAPS oi fs . Bas 98 $338 Youths’ “Great Scott” OXFORDS Reg. $4.98 Now $348 Children's “Better” SANDALS Reg. $3.98 Now $8 Big Boys’ and Men's LEATHER OXFORDS Reg. to $9.98 Now $4is Boys’ & Men's ‘Better Quality’ SUMMER OXFORDS Reg. $4.98 w $398 $498 Reg. $5.98 Shoes for Young Folks 26 W. Huron St. FE 2-7440. SHOE STORE eorre-- New as spring... Select one or more of pete Dana introduces colognes i in elegantly styled spray containers. Feather-light, finger-tip control is designed for ideal application. fragrances to enhance your loveliness. - nba 2O cARATS CLOONAN’S 72 North Saginaw Street Dana’s five famous ‘ full ounces . of cologne ‘3 A “be IR to attend the 10th being held July 20-24. Mrs. Ivy Baker Priest, treas- dron. The ceremony was conducted | yer of the United States, will Secretaries Conduct Installation Rite Members and guests of the Pon-; will ‘be leaving soon for Chatta-| be the keynote speaker at the tioak Chapter of the National Sec-| nooga, Tenn., convention, retaries Assn., International, held | annual National V peaeaaes Aan a candlelight installation of officers Convention She will use the convention's theme, “‘The Secret of Success Is Constancy of Purpose,” as _ the basis for her talk. Highlights of the affair will in- clude the selection of the associa- tion's “Secretary of ihe Year." * The hea sacsling of the Pon- tioak Chapter will be a picnic at the Williams Lake home of Mrs. Boy Plays Havoc With: Sisterly Teamwork boy she likes as her personal prop- erty. Neither of the boys you men- tioned staked a claim to her ap- parently, or gave her real reason to think he liked her best. 3 * LJ But until she figures a that she’s slightly previous, don’t. add tinder to her fire. Avoid any boy she says she likes. Don't mention his name. Act as though you couldn't care less. It he talks to you, and | feel yoy must mention it, mash it quite clear that you've no claws “out, that he asked you about her, | that he is very much her type If he’s around the house, dig out so you can leave them alone. And the best trick of all is to do a let of talking about a boy you like. Even if it’s not true, it's very reassuring to a jumpy sister! (Copyright, 1955) ed oe LOCKMAN Takes Sides With Hubby _ Woman Objects to. _ Being Left Alone at} | Restaurant Table By EMILY POST | A wife tells me: “My husband -and I had dinner in a restaurant the other evening and while we were waiting to be served, my husband spotted an old friend and ‘his wife seated at another table. | My husband left me and went over to their table and had a short visit with them. | “When he came back I told him) that I thought he was very rude | to leave me sitting alone. He, of | course, can't see anything wrong | in what he did and says that I am | | just too sensitive. Will you please | give me your opinion on this mat- ter?" | Answer: I'm sorry but I have to agree with your husband! “Dear Mrs. Post: Recently I _ gave a large dinner party at my | house and later was told by my nvaid that several of the guests tipped her. I never heard of this being done before and was quite put out with her for having ac- | cepted these tips as I pay her — well for her services. Wasn't | this most irregular?” nswer: I have never heard of | suth a thing (except of course for | | guests who stay overnight), Your maid, however, would have been. very discourteous had she not ac- cepted the gratuities with obvious pleasure, od ‘Dear Mrs. Post: I am going to be married at a summer evening wedding. The bridegroom and best | man are going to wear white din- ner coats and I would like to know if it is necessary for the ushers to wear white coats too or may they | wear the regular dark tuxedos.” | Answer: It is not necessary that. the usher's clothes match those of | the bridegroom and best man, but | ithe ushers themselves must be. dressed alike, ‘Lawn Dinner Held by Philathea Class | A cooperative dinner was enjoyed | Tuesday on the lawn of Mrs. Anna Brown's Meinrad road home by 25 “members and their husbands of | the Philathea Class of the Oak- | ‘land Avenue United Presbyterian | ' Church. Mrs. Ernal Lloyd conducted the | business meeting and Mrs. E. J. | Schultz had charge of devotions. | Mrs. Andrew Creswell, a former | |member visiting from Pittsburgh, | gave a talk on the churches and colleges she had visited. Guests at | the affair were Mrs. Ann Johnson, Mrs. Martha Martin, Mrs. Jeanie Graham and Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Martin. Mrs. Dayner Feted George Korn. Republicans Hold Election Mrs. Kenneth B. Nichols of | Franklin is the newly elected 2 a © j Mrs. “William Randall of Royal Oak is first vice president; Mrs. Harry Henderson of Franklin is second vice president, and Mrs. Grace Shulz is third vice president. Mrs, Sadie Williams is fourth vice president; Mrs, Ralph Cook of Ferndale is fifth vice presi- dent; Mrs. Everett Reese of Wa- tertord is recording secretary, and Mrs. C. M, Pelican is as- | sistant recording secretary. Mrs. Floyd Andrews of Clarkston is corresponding secretary; Mrs. ‘Be Wrinkle Free, ‘Pack Linen Knits You needn't pack a_ single wrinkle or single laundering head- ache this summer when you set off for a vacation. The handsome new linen knits, pack like a dream and are soap- and-water washable, with no blocking needed. Frederick Ziem is assistant cor- | responding secretary; Mrs. Charles president of the Republican’s Wom- | en's Federation of Oakland County.| Gregor, assistant treasurer, and Barrett, treasurer; Mrs. Frank Mc- Mrs. Clare Fuller of Oxford, auditor, | MRS. KENNETH NICHOLS Summer Hats CLEARANCE sy” Summer Large Hats $00 Up to $8.95 Nardis and Serbin 48 Perry Street COTTON BLOUSES and SKIRTS The DeCOR SHOP IN PONTIAC HOTEL If, OFF FE 2-2822 Susan BE: Mock ‘ to Become Bride The engagement of Susan Eliza- beth Mock to William Li. Shallberg is being announced. Susan is the daughter of Mrs. Frances Marshall Mock of Birmingham and James R, Mock of Orchard Lake, She was graduated from Ste- phens College and the Univers'ty of Michigan and is a provisional member of the Junior League. ‘Mr. Shallberg is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester E. Shallberg. He was graduated from Michigan State University where he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, and from the American Institute of Foreign Trade at Phoe- .|Clean, Dry, Store: « Hot Water. Bottles Put the family hot water bottle away clean and dry for the sum- mer, and it will last to comfort aches and pains again next winter. First wash it in warm soapsuds nix, Ariz. 'Mothersinaers Meet for Picnic The Pontiac Mothersingers were entertained at a picnic dinner Tuesday evening at the Bo'gie Lake road home of Mrs. Stoddard Hamilton. Assisting the besten! were Mrs. Lowell Green and Mrs. Milton Red- | (2) deman. Open Monday and Priday "til a beautiful gown for the Bride — When beauty is the order of the day —our gowns will star on Praipics See our breathtaking collec- tion today. : % Saeefetulid gownn om. 88 our ui gowns, Bridesmaids* Gowns, from. ...9% - “One-of-a-kind" Jr. Miss : Pormals, POM .ccs essere nennes ste Bridal hematin Bridal Salon FE $-3675 ® — Evenings by Appointment * * * Mrs. John Bills will have a pic- nic for the group at her Watki-s Lake home Aug. 16. She will be as- sisted by Mrs. Phoebe Van Deusen and Mrs. Harry Dickie. Rehearsals will begin -in Septem- ber and anyone interested in joining may contact Mrs. Charles Chapman or Mrs. Sidney Fellows. porary playpen for a child by turn- ing it upside-down and winding a sheet around the legs. Coca | Arthur's TURBAN TRAVELLER 12.95 NEW! NEW! NEW! Practically fits im your et for traveling. Most wearable hat shape of the season. The Golden jMon im the front or back of ra jersey tn beige, brown, charcoal, red, black, or navy blue. A “Gerdmer" hat... with ws. MILLINERY—Second Floor Use Our Elevetor fezze a 48 N. bemneonniy See ; om et (ea CT exclusive id 4 é. bd 3 - 5 1 . MID-SUMMERS==a= WOMEN’S SHOES WOE « CHILDRENS SHOES Nationally Famous Sport Shoes, Play Shoes, Dress Shoes! Your chance to buy quality at a savings! $14°° and Choose from marth Lo Tops Sport “oxlords, “ind Dress Shoe of snes ‘for all Nationally Famous FLORSHEIM SHOES for Men Regular $17.95 to $22.95 $16% pviee oop — $688 Sensational Nationally Famous WINTHROP, JOHN C. ROBERTS and KINGSWAY SHOES for Men Regular $8.95 te $12.95 roup of Dress. por 4p cluding styles with eath Nearly ah sizes to select from. and $108 and Casual Shoes er or crepe soles. Nationally Famous NATUARLIZERS for Women Smartly fashioned Dress and Casual styles. Wide variety of colors. Wedges . . . in choice of materials. Pumps, Straps, Ties and Regular $8.95 to $12.95 $685 = $785 Nationally Famous AMERICAN Mrs. Harold Dayner of LeBaron avenue was honored recently when | /met to celebrate her birthday. The next meeting will be held at the Stirling avenue home of Mrs. i derson Bee Sept. 12. UNIFORMS 'members of the Lucky 13 Club | GIRL SHOES for Women Regular $7.95 to $9.95 $3°.54"-55" | ee 4 ¢ foro NYLON --- DACRON COTTONS - og, OXFORD SHOP! FE 4-7212 "woenen 4 Nationally Famous RED GOOSE and ROCKINGHAM Shoes for Children Regular $5.95 and $6.95 $38 apt at thie 0's a Nationally Famous THRILL MATES for Women Regular $5.95 and $6.95 «$48 a| | Seearered| FREE PARKING at The Telephone FE 4-0259 TEL-HURON ‘SHOPPING CENTER A table can be turned into a tem- | 3 ss een satin Sizes 32 to 40. : Regularly Sold to $12.95 [now 5 6 99 ; Regularly Sold to $18.95 | now *S HO i Lastex, nylon, cotton dressmaker styles. Swim Shop—Main Floor Completely Air Conditioned of SUMMER ACCESSORIES SWIM SUITS ENTIRE STOCK Drastically Reduced - Now *&D Regularly now °@ Straws, Fabrics, shapes. HANDBAGS SUMMER STOCK Drastically Reduced Regularly Sold tw $12.95 Leathers Huge assortment of colors. Bags—Main Floor, ‘35 Sold to $15.00 “ °9 Large or small Regularly now *4f Regularly fabrics. prints, solid colors. SUMMER ROBES MANY STYLES Drastically Reduced now * “Il Duster, Soaeear wrap styles. Cottons, nylons, Short_or long length. Plaids, stripes, Robes—Main Floor Sold to $12.95 5 °7 Sold to $22.95 i i Poe el : as by * * 4 i j | ye , : ' ~THE PONTIAC PRESS. “THURSDAY, Iv LY’ 14, 1955 ot Be matics Br ens DIEM’S ‘Semi-Annual 0% to SHOE 0” SALE Qo Were $10.95 to $16.95 $390 ; $490 ; o Summer and year- ‘round styles . . . High, medium heels and “flats .. . Patent leather, white, red, blue, brown and pastels—for town and country . . . all sizes, but not in every style. no exchanges - no refunds - noc.o.d's - all sales final OPEN MONDAY AND AIR CONDITIONED FOR , YOUR SHOPPING FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 GREE DIEM'S “The Best Friend Your Feet Ever Had" 87 N. Saginaw St. Next to Federal Store FE 2-2492 When You Buy | a . Mattress at Oxford—You Buy the Best! When you need a new Mattress . you want the BEST . a cus tom-made mattress by Ox- ford! All superior quality ma- terials . . . any width . any length . . . any degree of firmness YOU want. Call today! OXFORD MATTRESS CO. 332 West Huron Street FE 2-7695 Two: New Silhouettes Challenge the Sheath Dress B. He W ragge’s Insertions of black. silk chiffon for day dress of | .a@ sheer worsted | black wool flannel has thrown-back afternoon or cocktail dress scarf in grey are seen on and white silk this dress print attached to the half moon collar. from Samuel HF inston’s collection by Roxane. The “piping Silk satin rock” ribbon set in coloring under the of the unpressed dress is pleats of the charcoal- skirt toned. tles ina bustle-like bow. o------- ee to $7 2 85 Over 1800 Pairs of Famous Fashion Shoes SAVINGS DeLiso Debs . , Carmelettes . . Andrew Geller. . . . Sandler. . 20% to 50% Rhythm Step . Joyce and Others Cotton SKIRTS Were to $10.95 $499 $09 Beautiful with ‘wide full skirts. Hundreds from. ‘+ Save On Millinery iy -*3 -*5 Values to $10.95 SWIM SUITS Specially Priced cotton skirts to choose DEGCY’S 16 N. SAGINAW ST. One group of famous make swim suits at special savings for this event. Charge Yes, use purchases /PORTY-EIGHT ee é : THF. PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955) | : i Thurs. Fri, Sat... -and ONLY at SIKRESGE’S. A “Believe- lt-or-Not”’ 3-Day Special at Just... —Hundreds to choose from —10 Different Styles —Dorzens of colors, patterns Gay scoop neck dress with. pi ing; 14-44; e Cool washable o ln 14-44, l4%A- 24% e All new... ~ not a clearance Exciting savings on the prettiest... freshest dresses that ever answered a doorbell! Sunshine prints that are iceberg cool with airy necklines and airy cap sleeves. Of fine percale to _ launder over and over again. Many, many styles to choose from—every one sale priced for mid-summer . savings. Hurry in for your choice! = * \X. le ~~ Amb. € 5 a ‘o® aan dress; set in yoke; 14-44; oh. Bastoned front ‘| with cuff coller; 144-2. i $1. DOWNTOWN STORE, Saginaw at Huron — or— TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER KRESGE’S for Save on Cups—Saucers, Sets in this DINNERWARE Sale starts tomorrow! ... Buy any decorated cup at regular price and get a saucer for just one cent. Save on open stock! Save on complete sets! Replace your broken or cracked dishes at amazing savings now! Giant reductions ‘on all decorated patterns at Kresge’s! on “Delphine” Carolyn” Borbara” CUP & SAUCER Decorated cup . . 1% Reg. 13¢ saucer . . . It Sale price 2 0 4 Save 96¢ on 16-x. set Regular open stock price on 4 cups, 4 saucers, 4 fruits and 4 plates is $2.92. During this sale just Sale price ‘2.46 E12: on “Golda” pattern CUP & SAUCER Decorated cup... 15¢ Reg. 13¢ saucer. . . Ic ———_ Sale price 16° Save 46° 0 16-». set -Regular open stock price on 4 cups, 4 saucers, 4 fruits oye 4 plotes is $2.69. During this sale just Sale price ‘2.14 @ This Pattern Downtown Store Only @ VE 14 on “Pansy” -‘‘Mildred” CUP & SAUCER Decorated cup . . 20¢ Reg. 15« saucer. . . Ic Sale price ai: Save S6¢ on 16-». set Regulay open stock price on 4 cups, 4 saucers, 4 fruits dnd 4 plates is $3.16. During this sale just Sale price ‘2.60 AT KRESGE’'S—FAMOUS FOR AMERICA’S BEST DINNERWARE VALUES a SF ' { mY . = - . an ar \ c vi 24 i Ag”, F ( . j | ; i) if ; . f i | i : i f winner, He j he :; 5 4 “4 Rate a i s THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 i] JACKSON (®—The 44th Michigan; champion Glenn Johnson of Grosse Amateur golf championship went | Pointe. into its 2nd qualifying round today after probably the lowest scoring competition in history. Eighty-six players in the field of 315 scored 76 or better in yester- day’s 1st round, making it appear likely it would take 152 or better to win a place in the bracket of 64 that goes into three days of match play starting Friday against Holding a two-stroke lead in the fight for medalist honors was Ed Ervasti, 41-yéar-old former champion from Royal Oak. He posted a 34-34—68 at the Coun- try Club of Jackson yesterday. His nearest rivals were Tom Watrous, University of Detroit |sophomore who celebrated his 20th birthday by shooting 35-35—70 for the day’s best round at Arbor Hills Country Club, and Charles Barker, 37-year-old Pontiac public course | player who scored his 36-34—70 at the Country Club... The huge field was split for the Ist round of qualifying and the players changed courses today. Ervasti, runner-up for the title the past two years, was consis- tency personified, hitting all 18 greens in regulation figures. He had four birdies. At i were Harold Brink, Grandg Rapids veteran playing in his 23rd state competition, and Dave Hill, 18-year-old Jackson champion. Hill cut four strokes from’ par with a 32 on the Ist nine, the day's towest, but seared to a 39 on the way back. Brink shot 35-36. Both played the Country. Club... - Players at Arbor Hills dominated Charles Gains Split Decision Over Andrews Comes Off Floor in 2nd to Edge New Yorker in Heavyweight Bout CHICAGO ® — A slowed-down Ezzard Charles plodded to a split 10-round decision over young Paul ‘ Andrews last night to keep grind- ing away on the comeback tread- mill, He proved he still has the heart of a champion if little else. He was decked by a short right for the eight count in the second round. But he weathered Andrews sav- age left hooks and right uppercuts to fight back and earn the decision from Referee Frank Sikora, 94-91, and Judge Frank McAdams, 96-95. Judge James McManus gave it to the 25-year-old ex-paratrooper from Buffalo, N.Y., 95-89. * @ ie The Chicago Stadium scrap, tele- vised nationally, drew only 2,123 fans to ringside and a net gate of | $5,072. * ¢ « Charles, outweighing Andrews 193 pounds to 189, opened a gash under his opponent's right eye in the fourth round and it kept bleed- ing most of the way. He battered | Andrews in a sledging body attack ta slow him down from the fifth WALTZ TIME — Former heavyweight champion Ezzard Charles (left) and Paul Andrews of Buffalo, | w 4 AP Wirephoto | Wednesday night. Both fighters went the distance, Last Inning Rally Gives ith Charles winning a split decision in the national- | on. But Charles’ only impressivé | N. Y., hold onto each other to keep from falling | ly-televised affair, punch of the fight was a long right during their 10-round bout at the: Chicago Stadium | that staggered his lanky foe in the first round. * * 2 The Cincinnati fighter, who out- , side the rig shows little wear and | tear for a 34-year-old veteran of 104 bouts, appeared to have lost all the finesse that once carried him | to the heavyweight title. He no} longer seems to have the) power that earned him three shots at the crown aftcr he had lost it, | nor the skill that puzzled cham- | pion Rocky Marciano at times dur- | ing their two title bouts last year. | * = Me | In fact. Charles was asked blunt- | iy why he goes on. ! “Fighting is my business.” he | 3 Junior Teams Tied Lunsford’s Gain Tie for Lead in City Class E Play; Mets, Rosebud 9s Win CLASS D Rosebud Market 10, Clarkston § Mets 10, Dublin 1 88 E Lunsford Market 11, Vivian's Bry 3. CLASS F East Siders 6. Dick & Wes 2 Don Nicholie 14. West Side 8 KNOTHOINE White Sox 6 Whitfield Cubs 1 M Tigers 25, @arl's Market 2 Orioles 23, Athletics 3 Lunsford’s Market pulled into a said. “I don't have another job. Be- turn down 3-way tie for Ist place in the sides, how can you money.”’ He has hopes of getting another by beating Vivian's bBeauty Shop, crack at the title some day. espe- | 11-3. It was Lunsford’s 4th win in cially if Archie Moore dethrones|5 games, a record matched by Marciano in September. Boys Club and Cass Ponts, oO Roger Rogers_and Leon Weeks j j | each had 3 hits to pace the Mar- Five Sports Pages in keteers, and Len Biallas con- Today's Pontiac Press tributed a home run. with one Trabert Leads Favorites Class E City League Wednesday | | aboard in the 6th. Don Gibbs ho-, Ron Bunch limited Dick & Wes. | mered for the losers. In Class D, Mets had an easy time dispesing of Dublin Com- munity Center, 10-1, but Rese- bud Market had to come from behind te down Clarkston Mer- chants, 10-5. | Ron Sandage pitched 4-hit ball _ to stop Dublin, striking out 7 bat- ters. Ray Boyl was the big man with the stick for the Mets, rapping out 3 singles and a double. The Clarkston-Rosebud game was 4 see-saw affair, which Rosebud tied at 5-5 in the 4th inning. In the 5th, 3 walks and 2 errors gave the vic- tors 3 runs and the game. Chuck Graves homered Clarkston. Tougher Boxing in defeat for t in Tennis Quarter-Finals ATLANTA (#—Favorites, led by top-seeded Tony Trabert of Cin- cinnati, met today in the quarter- finals of the National Clay Courts tennis tournament. Of the seeded players, only Bill Lone Star State Lucrative Spot for Golf Pros | SAN ANTONIO, Tex. ()—Texas will become the happy hunting ground of the golf professionals next year, It will have three tournaments offering a combined $75,000 in prize money. The ancient Texas Open. which revolutionized the golf tournament in 1922 when it offered $5,000 and set the pattern for the present day big money events, has raised its purse from $12.500 to $20,000 for next year. M. P. Wilson, tournament di- rector, said it was to insure the presence of the game’s top. tour- ing professionals. The Texas C pen makes a profit each year and has a good sized reserve fund at this time, The highest paying tournament in Texas is the Houston Open, which offers $30,000. Colonial Na- tional Invitation at Fort Worth forks over $25,000. | The Texas and Houston Opens | are held in February, the Colonial | tournament in May. Gregory, Sam Kocsis Still in Public Links INDIANAPOLIS (®—Two Michi- gan golfers remained in the run- ning today as the fifth round be- gan in the National publinx golf ament. gee were Jack Gregory of De- troit, who had to go 21 holes to whip Billy Joe Lauer of Spokane | in the fourth round, and Sam Koc- | sis of Detroy. another overtime | : at: Robert Kay of: in 19 holes. ( } Toledo 1 up Quillian of Seattle, rated No. 7, has fallen out of line. He was topped in a marathon match Wednesday with second-seeded Jo- hann Kupferberger of South Africa 6-2, 8-10, 8-6. HARRISBURG, Pa. (®—Pennsy}- | vania ‘hoped today to salvage its vanishing boxing prestige with a new, tougher boxing code aimed at * 2 Trabert had a rough time of it giving the State Athletic Commis- | for a spell against 18-year-old Sion control over outside promoters Mike Green of Miami, He trimmed operating in the state. Green 6-0 in the first set. but the Goaded by a. series of contro- youngster broke his service and Versial fights climaxed by Harold took the second set 8-6, Tony, who | Johnson's myst~-ious collapse in a won his Wimbledon crown yvithout | bout May 6 with Julio Mederos, dropping a set, topped Green 6-3 the commission yesterday culmi- for the third set and the match, | Dated weeks of investigation with * «* the presentation of the new code. Ham Richardson, seeded No. 2,| Now it hopes for quick legisla- found himself up against a toughie | tive approval and, eventually, na- and appeared to: tire after breez- | tionwide adoption of the Pennsyl- ing 6-2 in the first set against Tim | vania model. : Coss of Washington, D.C. He Outstandirz features of the p-o- dropped the second set 5-7 but took Posed code are a five per cent command again to score an im- gross receipts tax on all admis- Code Presented | , to 2 hits as the East Siders took a | Class F victory, 8-2. Stan Jertal had 3 straight hits for the win- ners. Also in “F,’’ Don Nicholie overcame a 7-run 4th inning by the West Siders to take a 148 triumph. | The Nicholie nine scored 10 runs - jin the 5th. Earl Hewitt led the way ' with 3 Hits. | In Knothole action, White Sox | tripped Whitfield Cubs, 6-1, behind | | hit pitching by Gary Greene and |Glen Roberts. Dave Moczarski belted home runs in both the 1st | and 2nd innings, but North Side | Aces couldn't hold the lead as GMC came up with 7 in the 3rd o win, 9-5, Tigers blasted Earl’s Market. 25- | 2. with Ron Burnstrum pitching no- | hit ball for 5 innings and striking | out 12. Don Marsh homered for j the Tigers. The Orioles walloped | the Athletics, 23-3, as Keith Smith and Larry Brennan hit homers. Summer Tan Is. ‘Shelved for Rest of Racing Season NEW YORK (®—Summer Tan. leading money winning 2-vear-old in 1954, is through with racing for this year. The colt, who won five of 11 starts and $266,821 last year and then survived a critical illness, was shipped yesterday to the Meadow Farm of John Ward at Versailles, Ky. Ward is a brother of Summer Tan's trainer, Sherrill Ward. Summer Tan, ‘owned by M>-s. John W. Galbreath, was edged by Nashua in the Wood Memorial and finished third back of Swaps and | Nashua in the Kentucky Derby. He fea Golfers Set Pace in State Amateur Test the par 72 group with Bob Glick of Jackson, Fred Micklow, young Uni- versity of Michigan player from Hillsdale, and John Huettman of Grosse Pointe Farms equalling par there, and Dr. Robert Corley of Jackson matching par at the Coun- try Club. In the 73 bracket were Howard Closcum and Howard Weikle of Amn Arbor, Vic Cuiss of Jackson, former champion Bob Babbish of Detroit, Fred King of Dearborn, Dale Grieve of Montague and Wally Smith of Royal Oak. Smith hustled here from Indiana- polis after being eliminated from the National Publinx tournament there, Two former champions, . Fred Turner of Flint and Tom Draper of Detroit, were among a group at 74, This list also had Mickey Mc- Millen of Midland, John Shert, Wait Pittman and Bill Pautke of Jackson, Bob Wallace of Charie- ‘LeClair of Ann Arbor, Jim Selt- ser and Frank Gerrard of Flint, Lioyd Syron of Pontiac, Jim Frost of Battle Creek, H, E. Woodward and Don Mead of De- troit, and Frank Skeystone Jr. of Grand Rapids. Other Oakland county players taking part in the state amateur golf qualifying rounds, Wednesday included the following: Mike Andonian, Pontiac (38-37— | 75), Paul Weyand, Birmingham (39-37—76), Richard Weyand, Bir- mingham (38-38—76), Al Krol, | Royal Oak (34-42--76). This group played the CC of Jackson. On the | Arbor Hills CC, were Jack Rey- nolds, Pontiac (37-39-76), Tom- my Shannon Jr., Royal Oak (37-39—T76). Dick DeWitt (41-40—81), Jim Brafford (40-42—82) and Stan Sav- age, all of Pontiac (40-42—82) also played qualifying rounds. ‘Betters World Mark CHICAGO w—Nashua gave ‘Ed- die Arcaro the fastest five fulong ride of his life in a workout at Arlington Park yesterday but failed to scare any rival out of Saturday's $155,000 classic. : * * * The Belair Stud's champion, seeking his fifth $100,000 payoff vic- tory of the year, was timed in :36 3-5 handily, the swiftest trial at five furlongs ever recorded at Ari- ington Park. It bettered the world mark of :57 for the five-eighths of a mile route set in 1951 by Encan- tadora, Arcaro then pulled up Nashua sharply, but the big son of Nasrul- lah galloped out three-quarters of a mile in 1:09 4-5, only a second off Hill Gail's track record. “TI had no idea he was going that fast,’’ said -the veteran jockey. “But when I left New York, Mr. Fitz (trainer Sunny Jim Fitzsim- mons) said to let the horse roll, Nashua Gives Arar Swift 5-Furlong Run and I did. This horse is improving with every workout and every race. “He's much better now-than he was in the Kentucky Derby (when he lost to Swaps)." Despite Nashua’s showing at least six others are expected to op- pose him Saturday. | One other colt yesterday was added to the probable field—Wil- liam A. Peavy’s Jett Flame, easy — of a six-furlong sprint last Brookfield Farms’ Impromptu, Mrs. Jan Burke's Dedicate, C. F. Morris’ Munchausen, E. Gay Drake’s Dogoon and @lifford Mooers’ Traffic Judge. Calumet's Trentonian and Hasty House Farm's Summer Solstice are on the doubtful list. Dedicate breezed a mile in 1:41 2-5 yesterday and Munchausen dashed the half mile in :46 3-5, KANSAS CITY, Kan. ® — The by the experts in almost all pre- season among themselves about a first division berth. * * «® . Manager Lou, Boudreau left that surprise cat out of the bag at a private dinner party given the ball club last night. . * The A’s, who finished 60 games out of first place last year, now have a firm hold on sixth place, 18 games behind the league lead- ing New York Yankees and 514 back of fifth place Detroit. For Kansas City fans, getting their first taste of major league baseball, that in itself is highly | satisfactory. Most of them would enth place. Kansas City Athletics, consigned But Boudreau, once the boy won. | der in big league managerial cir- cles and up until now conservative polls to the American jn discussing the erstwhile Phila- | £0ing to have to win those one run League cellar again, are talking 'delphia failures, is hitting a new | games—you'll see this club close to | note. | Introduced at the banquet given | by meat packer Art Mauer as a possible selection for ‘‘Manager of ‘the Year,” Lou bowed gracefully | past that suggestion. | | “No one man, or even six or. eight-men can make a ball team | if they (the players) don’t want | to play,” he said. “I just hope the | ball bounces right and I can guess | right whenever I’ have to call for somebody from the bullpen.” Boudreau suggested the fans look at the schedule from here on out. | ‘It shows 52 ball games for the “'s against New York, Cleveland, Chi- | have been willing to settle for sev- | cago and Boston—the current first division family. Motors Edge General Motors rallied for two runs in the last half of the 7th inning to nip the L. C. Anderson Jets, 4-3, in Class A City Baseball League action Wednesday night at | Wisner Field. It was the Coachers’ | 10th win in 11 games and strength- ened their grip on 1st place. | Both teams blew leads last night. GMC had a 1-0 advantage | entering the 6th, but saw if fade | into a twe . run deficit when the Jets scored three runs. The Coach club came rearing back in its final turn at bat and the | on Jets 4-3 | Jets saw their hopes for victory — go by the boards. ] In the 7th, Al Barkley led off) with a single and was forced at) 2nd by Ernie Zubalik, Zubalik ad- | vanced to 2nd on a passed ball | and Wes Roberts walked, Dick. Goldsworthy running for him. Both runners moved up a base as Bob | Swindell was thrown out at Ist. Jack Farms rifled a single toleft, scoring Zubalik and Goldsworthy |with the tving and winning runs. | Singles by Fletcher Davis and Eugene Cox, a pair of GMC errors “If we can play .500 ball against those four ball clubs—we are going | to have to improve and we are fourth place,”’ he declared. Athletics Eye Ist Division The. club opens a 13-game home Stand tonight taking on Baltimore, Washington, Boston and New York in that order, Boudreau's big ‘‘If’* will get its test soon, Industrialist Eyes Purchase of Frisco Seals Rogers Hornsby Would Publinx Champ Still Winning Be Co-Owner, General Manager of Coast 9 SAN FRANCISCO —Oscar Sal- enger, Los Angeles industrialist, will be here this weekend to talk terms on buying the San Francisco Seals, limping at the gate and in the Pacific Coast League cellar. If a deal is made, Salenger told the Chronicle, Rogers Hornsby would be a co-owner and general manager. Salenger said he talked with Baton) in Chicago. “Hornsby thinks he can take over this club and make real money,” said Salenger, former owner of the Sacramento Solons, now tied with the Seals in eighth at Indianapolis — Andrews Bests Bradley, O’Brien, Now Opposes Missouri Golfer INDIANAPOLIS @® — Walter Robyn, a Maplewood, Mo., insect exterminator, today had the sixth chance to stop Gene Andrews’ toward a second straight USGA Andrews, insurance agent from Pacific Palisades, Calif. was one .over par for 30 holes yesterday in eliminating Foster of Los Angeles, 1954 USGA junior champi- place. “It's a wonderful franchise but it needs some solid backing. In this case, I would put up most of the | ing money and be the silent partner, and Hornsby would be the co-own- er and general manager.” MSU Planning }and a wild pitch accounted for | Anderson's three-run 6th. Singles | by Terry Thomas and Barkeley| tallied the Coachers Ist run in the 4th and a walk to Farms and Thomas’ triple scored another in | the 6th, reducing the Jets lead to one run, Council Talks TV and Pensions sont mee Group seven batters. Jim Wagner started | for GMC.and hurled six innings be- fore Herman Bishop relieved him. Bishop was the winning pitcher. Jets wees ve 000 003 O—3 5 0 GMC * 900 101 2—4 6 3 othery and Seay; Wagner, Bishop RL | CHICAGO (®—The major-minor #24 Roberts. ; ‘league executive council was to) Maior - Minor Ends Two-Day Session | in Chicago | | 18-Hole Course 144-Acre Golf Links to Be Completed by Next} Summer LANSING (®—Detailed plans for the new 18 hole golf course to be | constructed at Michigan State Uni- | versity were outlined today by the | course architect, Bruce Matthews of Grand Rapids. conclude a two-day closed meeting today with discussions of various administrative problems. Television-radio effects on minor league attendance and the player's pension plan were believed to be subjects reviewed althorgh the agenda was not disclosed. * ® * Charles Sevar, secretory-trescur: er indoer Ceramic! onag Fond Er’ ot said no puble anroumeement will be made of the talks and that | other meeting is scheduled in Chi- | cago Aug. 1. Frick presumably included a re- port on his survey aimed at im- proving the game in the discus- sions, * * * < who direct professional baseball including, in addition to Frick and club owner revresentatives, Will liean and National Jeacue presi- The council is made up of men} Harridge and Warren Giles, Amer- | | Bartzen of San Angelo, Tex., seed- | Paid to promoters for television, | /ed No. 4, took Atlanta’s 15-year. Tadio and motion picture 1°_hts to pressive 6-1 final set. sions to closed television bouts seen | came out of the Derby with a bad | Defending champion Bernard in the state, as well as on money ankle and has not raced since. | president of the National Assn. of ———— Professional Baseball Leagues. Colorful Hunting Stamp _ ole Ned Neely in straight sets 6-3, | fights. and a requirement that an | Rocco Calvo, a member of Cor- dents, and George M. Trautman. | | all seeded players, completed the | games in a season twice in their | Alden Knight's Solar Tables. 6-0 to gain the quarter-finals. and Jack Frost of Monterey, Calif. | quarter-finals lineup. Pirates Hit Century Mark Both Directions. PITTSBURGH w — Pittsburgh Pirates have won more than 100. National League history, rolling up 103 victories in 1902 and 110 in 1909. On the other side of the ledger they have lost more than 100 games a year five times—the last three in succession. Solunar Tables | Best fishing times for Friday and Saturday. according to John prepared especially for this area. are as follows: * Minor | SATURDAY — sion requests. | out of state applicant for a co- | The 1955-56 migratory bird hunt- | nell’s 1952 football team, will be Eddie Moylan of Trenton, N.J.,, Promoter's license must furnish | ing stamp shows three blue geese | starting his Ist season as a grid Gerald Moss of Modesto, Calif.,| Whatever information the commis-| braking their flight for a landing | coach at Moravian College, Beth- ‘in marsh grass of a nearby lake. ‘lehem, Pa., this fall. | was 3rd. ‘Leading Trotters Run in Roosevelt Feature WESTBURY, N.Y. W—A dozen \of the nation’s leading free-for-all | trotting stars will battle it out to- | night in the $35.000 Roosevelt Trot at Roosevelt Raceway. The ficld for the mile and one hal! event incIndes Newport Dream .. | last: year's Hambletonian winner, and Katie Key and Pronto Don, | both two-time winners of the coun- try's richest race for older trot- ters. Katie Key and her stablemate, Gene Mac, are the early 5-2 favor- ites. Owned by Pat Tuccio of River- head, N.Y., Katie won the Roose- velt last year and in 1953. Knight Stick on Top DETROIT «® — Knight Stick, owned by Mrs. Al Eastin of | Wayne, Mich., won the Ist of the | Michigan Colt Stakes for 3-year- | old pacers at Northville Downs | last night. : Knight Stick, driven by Leon | Boring, finished 1% lengths ahead of Marna Creed. Direct Eddie | The major league pennant races get back to action tonight with two big questions to be answered: Can Cleveland and Chicago survive the one-two invasion punch of New York and Boston in the American? And, just how secure is Brooklyn's | 11%9-game lead in the National? New York's Yankees top the AL by five ge~-es as the All-Star game break comes to an end, while only one .game separates each of the other first division teams—Cleve- land, Chicago and Boston. That means the runner-up Indians, who ‘had a half-game lead on the Yarks _at this point in ‘54, and the third ; place White Sox have to worry about kicking off the Red Sox as well as catching the New Yorkers. Minor Major ’ 2:55 = 8:08 Manager Al Lopez, naming Bob Lemon (12-4) to face Tommy a night, claims his pitching staff is facing the Yanks for two, the Tribe must then take on the bustlin’ Bostons, who have lost only six of their last 34, for three games Saturday! and Sunday. The Yanks will have a_three- game “breather” against fifth place Detroit over the weekend, then start the one-two punch all over again at Chicago, They play day arid ‘Thursday with the Red Sox barging into) Comiskey Park Friday, Sdturday and Sunday in a four-game series. back in shape. It better be. After | the White Sox Tuesday, Wednes- | |them away out front is, cay | ‘enough, the even-Stephen make-up | of the circuit. | There's no panic yet, but a team that loses 10 of its last 19 games can't be sleeping too well—even with that 11'4-game bulge. Roy Campanella insists He's ready to go back to work behind the plate tonight when the Dodgers take on the St. Louis Cardinals at Baseball Resumes With Tribe and White Sox on Spot Byrne (7-2) and the Yanks to-| hurtin’ the only thing that's kept |Campanella too sbon and perhaps | have him lost later when things may really be bad. | 24 | course What has kept Brooklyn riding | high so far is that early season | 10-game winning streak followed | quickly with a 11-game all-winning burst. | Second place Milwaukee looks to | be in the best position, perking | up for recent seven and six-game | streaks. Ebbets Field, but Manager Walt Alston indicates he has other | plans. , FJ ® i | That disturbing 9-10 record fol- ‘lowed Campy's knee injury, and The National presents a differ-| Alston doesn’t- want to start his | ent picture. It hardly seems pos-| big guy before the leg is healed | sible, but the Brooklyns, a league completely. Better to lose some | ee a’ | Third place Chicago has won no- |more than four games straight this | | season. New York won six in a ow ;—once. So did Se, cg and Pitts- | burgh. The Cards Won five straight | at one point, Philadelphia picked. up seven in a row but it didn’t do the Phils much good—they had ‘and a half ahead of the pack, are! while you can afford it than use just lost, 17 of 19. f |championship length and is plan Matthews, a 1923 MSU graduate in landscape architecture, is man- ager of the Green Ridge Country Club at Grand Rapids. He designed the Williams aCollege and_ the Manistee Country Club course course among others. The MSU courte will be laid out over 144 acres near the cor- ne. of Herrison and Mt, Hope P4s., within walking distance of the campus, Matthews said it was hoped the course would be completed by next summer. YARDS “We'll have to hustle to make it, but that’s our goal,” he said. He said the course will be of to measure-6,750 yards from the back tees, * * * “It will be a very interesting | course,"' he promised. Water hazards wil] be provided on at least three of the holes. Par will be 71. MSU Athletic Director Clar- ence (Biggie) “first and foremost for the bene- fit of the students.” He said ar- rangements also will be worked out so faculty members and alumni also can use the course, A club house still is in the plan- | ning stage. The cost of construc- tion for the course and club house will come from athletic funds. primarily from football receipts. At present, MSU is the only big ten school without its own golf, Kazoo, Hamtramck Pair Wins Junior, Boy Titles KALAMAZOO w — Les Dodson of Kalamazoo and Gerald Dubie of Hamtramck are the junior and boy champions, respectively, of the Michigan Junior Chamber of Commerce tennis tournament, Dodson beat out Jon Erickson ie of Kalamazoo in straight sets in the juniors finals yesterday, 6-3, | 6-2, 6-4. . | In the boys’ division, Dubie, the | state Class A high school, champ. | | Francisco junior, | Baltimore Munn said the | °° - Munn said the course will be on, 5 and 3, and Bill O’Brien of * * * Marshall Carlson, Miami ac- countant and former University of Toledo basketball star, and plaster- er Ralph Allen of Miami Springs, came through the third and fourth rounds Wednesday against strong opposition, Carlson shot 2-under-par to beat Don Essig of Indianapolis, a 16- year-old links prodigy, 3 and 2, and was only one over in a match with Lester Kelly of Atlanta, Ga., that went the full 18 holes. Today he met William C. Scarbrough, Jacksonville, Fla., Navy chief and 1954 semifinalist. Allen had to go two extra holes to beat Harry T. Matthews of At- lanta after both shot 74s for the of Minneapolis in the afternoop, 3 and 2. The men had sent home most of Oakland, Calif., University of San were still in business. Thurn won 10 straight holes with par golf in a fourth round victory over Robert W. Lichtenwalter of Erie, Pa., by the widest possible margin, 10 and 8. Fry defeated —— Nannina of Highwood, Ill., and 1. Major Leagues. mame mt pa i: Detroit caisieweisiois Kaneas City % bat rane hoe rai 23 55 295 TODAY'S SCHEDULE ton at Detroit. (2), 5:30 p.m.—Susce (33) and ore (6-4) vs. (7-1) an aes . New York at —— 7 p.m.—Burne (7-2) at Chicago (2) 6: and i | or Pascual (2-7) vs, johnson (24). (2) 7 p.m.—Wil- 7) vs, Ceccarelll may Detroit, 2 p. Washington at Chicago, 1:39 p.m. Baltimore at Kansas City, 3 p.m. New York at Cleveland, 12:30 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lest Pet. Brooklyn . S BB Milwaukee chi ‘season yet failed to beat or tie any/ ion, defeated Ray Senkowski tite nine football oppo Hamtramck, 6-0, 6-1. Aggies TT points, ra L ‘i ; ve pt r iy yl Other probable starters are € _ FIFTY | ’ pe 1. THE PON N'TIAC ‘PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1953 ° “Yow RESTOCKED! DAVY CROCKETT \, Play Tent a” rs | ey t- ig 6-teet long! 2 : NG > | Steet high! $ 35 : A , 3-color effect mural on two panels. Women Pros Chasing Suggs Smith, Crocker, Faulk Open Mon. & Fri. Evenings 24 E. Lewrence St. COMPLETE TUNE-UP @ Improve Gas Mileage © Get Faster Pickup @ Increase All-Around Performance Every Car Is Serviced with the Latest Sun Testing Equipment WOHLFEIL-DEE Test at Ft. Wayne FORT WAYNE, Ind. (of the nation's top women golfers | started out today to challenge the ;Mmoney-winning lead of Louise | | Suggs, Sea Island, Ga., in Ladies Professional Golf Assn. tional] tournament. win here is Marilynn Smith, Wich- ne ——— Specialists ita, Kan., as well as Fay Crocker, i pean iwinner of the recent National Cell E 2-4907 for Appointment Help! Help! Help! WANTED *MECHANICS *BUMPERS _ *PAINTERS *PARTS MEN Excellent working conditions, ———- lite in- surance and paid vacation. tt opportunity for the right men. Only experienced men need apply. Ask for Mr. Foreman or Mr. Smith at: MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, Inc. 84 Mill Street FE 5-416], /Open Tourney in Wichita, and Mary Lena Faulk, Thomasville, Ga., who tied for runner-up in the Open. Miss Suggs leads the LPGA’s “dollar derby’’ with winnings of $10,458, will continue over 54 holes through | Saturday before the top two are paired ot Sd a 36-hole title match. Top threats to Babe Ruth's homer record in a season were by Hack Wilson with 56 in 1930, Jimmy Foxx with 58 in 1932, and | Hank Greenburg, also with 58, in the season of 1938. UNDER THE SUMMER SUN ! Tropical Worsteds... Miracle Fabrics... Blends You never had it so COOL as in one of these zephyr-weight sum- 22, mer suits! Skillfully tailored from i t fabrics that hold their press... : look crisp and trim on the hottest, muggiest days. Choose from a wonderful selection of colors and Top Threats in LPGA: “um—Some | te | Na- | Back to try to repeat last year's | { | j TRACTOR CADDIE — Henry Cotton finds it easy to follow through with this electrical golf bag carrier which will even pull him along. Medal play opened today and ‘The engine is operated by a twist-grip control in the handle. The fa- ae British professional designed the power unit. - Orioles Yield ‘Hoot’ in Return for Bill Wight Greenberg Hopes Ferris Will Provide Pennant Spark for Tribe CLEVELAND up—The Cleveland team with two former Detroit Ti- gers—Hoot Evers and Ferris Fain. Evers, Baltimore outfielder, went to Cleveland on ‘waivers in exchange for southpaw relief pitch- er Bill Wight whom the Orioles claimed off the waiver list. Fain, fiery 1s¢ baseman fired by Detroit last week after g se- ries of run-iis with teammates, is being signed as a free agent. Fain may be wearing an Indians’ uniform when the Tribe goes against the league-leading New = No-Hit Victory Riteway Hurler Also Keeps Foes Out Scoring Column were considered unusual, but the way city league softball pitc hers | are hurling these days, it's becom- ing downright common. twirled a nine-inning no-hit, ne- run game at Beaudette Park Wednesday night to edge Ash- many nights. on balls and a costly error gave | | Riteway the winning run in the dnd eventing sacs = “* Cidcumb Pitches Lions’ 9 Gil Luebke hurled a_three- hit | shutout as North Side Service up- ended National league-leading Lou- patterns! Remember —It’s And $400 OK to OWE MAY Starts Your Account CLOTHES FOR BOYS OF ALL AGES— FROM smart continental stripes. CREDIT CLOTHING Open Monday and Friday Nights 98 South Saginaw St. Opposite Auburn Ave. | Side, fe’s Tavern, also by a 1-0 count, in the opener at Beaudette. Mike's Used Cars, 7-2, at North | of Cal Bidwell. Homer Mark Mark Challenged ¢ Reynolds Fi ives of Reuse, Harper and aldat Once upon a time no-hit games— 8-Game ‘Schedule Riteway’s Roger Reynolds | football schedule this fall on Sept. land Flying Octane, 1-0, in the | Oct. feature game on last night’s | Hope; ecard. It was the 2nd no-hitter in coming); the men’s softball leagues in as | Oct. 29— a t Hillsdale (N): | S—Olivet (Dad's Day) ; Reynolds had tough competition, Albion. since John Geiger was also mow: | ing them down for Ashland, Geiger | allowed only four hits, but a base | behind the four-hit pitching ford Lions a success Wednesday General micters girls unleashed into a first- place tie with Dick & Dairy nine, York Yankees tonight. “We think that acquiring Ferris | Fain will help us win another pen- nant,” said Cleveland's ‘general a 10-hit attack to trample Avon- dale, 13-5, as Bendig clouted two | home runs for the winners. | Sani ss | 2 . 000 000 oo 908 og0 oo1—1 «4 | manager Hank Greenberg. “He is AR Reyas es ae toe ee Ltd Cages ond — . ce y p improve our club." eee “or? 99 fee s=1 3 | Fain was batting .264 when the |canaaiee, ame nations’ Luedke end/ Tigers released him. He hadn't Franklin ............. 401 110 0—? 8 © | been able to perform regularly be- M | Beeb Gad aes ae pracbasy, ‘De! cause of a knee injury. He has a lifetime batting average of .291 and led American League batting jin 1951 and 1952. Cleveland manager Al Lopez said he was “tickled to have Fain on the team.” Evers, who was among the American League's top hitters ear- | | ly 2 the season, was batting .354 on May 13. However, he went into a slump and has played only oc- The echdule: ‘asionally the last month and a Sept. 24—at Eastern Illinois; | He was picked up as a tree 1—Alma (night); Oct. 8—at | ". Get) 15 Dietiance | thome.| agent in the spring after playing Oct. 2—Adrian nd: |with the New York Giants, and aa Nov, | Boston and Detroit in the Amer- Nov. 12—at 14 League last season. His Oriole record in 60 games ee and 185 times at bat was 44 hits, | Virginia Tech's football team including six homers, a triple, 10 will be a swift outfit. Thirteen doubles and 30 runs batted in, for of the gridmen are trackmen. | an average of .238. iy se ae be ‘ Mecastia ned | Avondale 20 Wasik and “Johnson: Goodell. Set for Hornets KALAMAZOO uw — Kalamazoo College will open an eight-game | 24, visiting Eastern Illinois. + Nie Indians hoped today to bolster their | \faster at | stepped a mile in Records Fall, Scott Frost Still Favored California Trotter Remains Choice for Rich Hambletonian NEW YORK (#—Two track re¢- ords, one over the half-mile oval | at Roosevelt Raceway and the oth- | er over Vernon Downs (N.Y.) 6- furlong. strip, failed to dislodge Scott Frost as the favorite for the $100,000 Hambletonian at Goshen, N.Y., Aug. 3 * » Scott Frost, owned by Sol. A. Camp of Shafter, Calif., and driven 'by Joe O'Brien, established one of the marks himself as he won the * | $15,000 Old Country Trot at Roose- Fvelt in 2:03 45, The time was one- fifth of a second faster than the track standard for 3-year-old trot- ters. * * * Childs Hanover, representing K. D. Owen of Houston, 'Tex., and reined by Frank Ervin, went even Vernon Downs. He 2:01 for his sec- ond track record in a week. Last week he beat Scott Frost in one | heat of the Dickerson Cup over | Goshen's half-mile track in 2:04 3-5. The 2:01 was the fastest time turned in this year by a 3-year-old trotter. Indians Sign Ey- Tiers. Evers and Fain RICH PAPOOSE—Kenny Kuhn, 18, of Okalona, Ky., a suburb of Louisville, has been signed by the Cleveland Indians for a reported $40,000. The youngster, a classy- fielding, hard-hitting shortstop, graduated from high school in June, He will join the club at once. Stefanis Set Pace for Ranger Victory Mack and Jack Stefani, father and son polo combination, set the pace for the Ivory Rangers in their winning match with Detroit Rock- ets, Wednesday night at Ivory Field. Each counted three goals in the 8-6 victory. Two goals in the final period clinched the win. Pontiac Chiefs defeated Roches- ter 11-7 in the opening match. Official major league baseballs ‘have red stitching. Get fixed to GET THERE not just start there You can’t buy Auto Club membership advantages, privileges and protection at gas stations or roadside stores, en route. And almost everyone knows that these days Back Into Township Lead | Chuck Gidcumb, a veteran pitch. Wes in the Waterford Softball Franklin Products downed ¢r in Pontiac-area softball circles, | League. made his 1st start for the Water-| The Lions’ 2-1 decision over Rich- | ardson Dairy was their 11th win; in 13 games. For the luckless it was the 12th loss | night by hurling the Lions back _in 13 games SENSATIONAL SPECIAL! Gidcumb fanned 6 without , Yylelding a walk in posting the victery on a S-hitter. The lone 13 DUNLOP | Tires of Quality 99 run he gave up came in the 4th on Jack Hagen's single, a force play, passed ball and sin- gle by Harold Richardson. The only other.time Richardson's threatened was in the 5th when Jack Nelson led off with a double and was stranded. Lions made the 2 runs they scored in the 2nd inning hold up. Stan Roosa's single and a walk were followed by a wid pitch, an) error, Gidcumb’s sacrifice fly and | another error. Tom Studet and Al | you are not fixed for a trip unless you travel as an AAA member. Membership for twelve months only $15, about the price of half a cup of coffee a day. Phone or visit Club office. There’s a man there waiting to sponsor you as a member. AUTOMOBILE CLUB : of | eR a LING Detroit Automobile Inter-Insurance Exchange Attorneys-in-{ aries L. Wilson a Ch st. Ralph 7 Thoma Rey M. Hood Robert G. Jamieson, Genera! Manager VISIT OR PHONE YOUR NEAREST OFFICE E. F. ALSTON, Mgr. 63 N. Perry Street | R. L. Taft, FE 2-6919 — K. t.. Long, FE 83-7213 | €, B. Borne . W, W. MeNalley, OF 9-7741 | FE 4-1496 FE 2-9255 R. A, Warken, FE 9-240 E. G. Tynan, FE 6-280) Virgi! Keener, (Helly) MElrose %-7451 Plus Tax Doud had 2 hits each for the Lions while Wayne Beckley picked up 2 | Enshonge ‘of the 5 safeties off Gidcumb. If Your Old Richardson Dairy .... 000 100 o-3 $ 1 Tire Is | Waterford Lions . 020 000 0— 1 jelson and H. " Richardson: Giecomt, Recappable and Ruelle. _ Z 6.70215 ! DELUXE FULLY GUARANTEED! CUSHION a Dunlop Ist Quality DELUXE CUSHION — TIRE SIZE | REG. PRICE | SALE PRICE | | 6.00x16 | 18.60 1295 | | ~ 6.40x15_ | 19.85 | 13.95 ~6.70x15_| 2080 | 13.95 _ ~7.10x15 23.00 | (15.95 _7.60x15_ | 25.15 | —*16.95__ Plus Ta: Tox and Old Ti Tire BUY ON EASY BUDGET TERMS WHEELS BALANCED BATHING TRUNKS paittien 1M-27 “WELTER WEIGHT” — Sleek looking swim trunks Jantzen tailored of textured Tamise taflita .. , an acetate-Lastex® well known for its durability. Waist is elasticized for smooth body-line fit... plus having adjustable drawstring. Quick-drying in- ner mesh supporter. Coin pocket and mock fly front _complete its fine-tailored touches. In six he-man col- ors with contrasting-color leg and waist stripes. With Each 28 - 38 $4.95 TIRE SOLD a... Tire C LYDES or | —_ FRIDAY and FRAME and WHEEL SERVICE || ws seeaioay FE 5-6467 — NIGHTS 169 ORCHARD LAKE CORNER BAGLEY | 106 N. Saginaw St. "til 9 , ¥ / . , , / ; / f z ‘ / ‘ ; i * : } I ‘ i : pees - Pros Rip Par at Milwaukee MILWAUKEE (—A field of 132, of the top professionals and ama- teurs-in golf opened fire in the $35,000 Milwaukee Open today over the Blue Mound Country Club par 70 layout which was taken apart in practice rounds yesterday. Best reported fired in the warm- | up were six-under par 64's turned | in by Tommy Bolt, Chattanooga, | Tenn., and Bill Casper, San D:-go, Calif. * * * { Casper tuned up for the 72 holes of medal play by blasting six | birdies and an even dozen pars. Bolt kept his birdie production to himself but had nines of 31-33, against the 35-35 par. Blue Mound is a short run, stretching just over 6,500 yards, but the traps and bunkers are often and well placed. * La * Sam Snead missed a short putt /on the final hole that kept him out ‘of a tie with the dry-run leaders. His 65, on nines of 31-34, was one of four. Julius Boros, former National Open champion of Mid Pines, N.C., Mike Fetchick, Lake Mahopac, N. Y., and Walker Inman Jr., Au- gusta, Ga., had the other three. Jack Fleck, victor over Ben Hogan in a man-to-man playoff for this year’s National Open title, toured in 66, He was matched by Ed Furgol, Paul O'Leary, Bis- mark, N.D., and Eric Monti, Los Angeles, Bill Spiller, another Los Angeles entrant, was alone at 67, Mike Sou- | chak, Grossinger, N.Y., who paces Eight Skaters Pass Proficiency Tests | In the season's final skating tests Tuesday at Rolladium Rink, eight roller skaters were success- | ful. - Richard Hamlin and David Perkins passed the bronze medal dance test and Louis Parker passed the bronze medal free skating requirements. ' Other successful skaters includ- ed Tom: Obie, silver bar free | skating; David Hakim, silver medal dance; Mary Alice Clouse and Phyllis Linden, prize bar dance and Lynn Anselmy, singles bar. Going price for a pair of wolf ears to bounty hunters in Harris | County, Texas, is $5 a pair. | Sunday ‘ 'esee County Sportsmen's Associa- Shelley Family Set for Trip to Wilds With dufflebags all packed and | the car ready, Mr. and Mrs. How- ard Shelley and son, Mickey, Fri- | day head for the wilds of the Cana- | dian Algoma district, 245 miles | |north of thé Soo. They will be gone | for 10 days on a fishing and camp- | ing trip which the OCSC official will probably record on colored motion picture film. Trip will be Mickey's Ist to the | “big outdoors.” 3 Events on con at GSA Field Test There are three events on the) ‘fun trial” for the Gen- Ortonville Recreation include a puppy tion, at Area. They derby (entries close at 11) and \all-age (entries close at noon), Running starts at 7 a.m. _ Sports Calendar | TODAY Baseball CLASS A Auburn Merchants vs. clo | (Wisner, 5-30 | CLASS es 8 oe vs. Rosebud | |Market ‘(C-J south, 5:30 | E—Bovys Club vs Lunsford | 88 Market (C-J north 8:30); Community | Super searust vs. Cass Ponts (Washing- fon. 5:30) Peeks MEN'S—Franklin Products vs uck & Loule's Market (Beaudette. 7): | Bete: -in Cleaners vs. Pontiac & Opdyke Softball | | 'Beaudette, |Biemar Inn ‘North Side, 8:30). | CITY GIRLS — Shaw's Jewelers vs. |Gingellville (North Bide, 7) | WATERFPOR" MEN’S — Svivan Conter ys. Drayton Drug (Drayton, 1); Day's |Sanitary Service vs. Gidley Electric , (Drayton, 8:30) | FRIDAY Baseball | AMERICAN LEGION — Livonia at Wa- terford, ‘exhibition’, @ p.m Softball WATERFORD JUNIOR—White Broth- | | match (entries. close at 10 a.m.); \ers vs. Huntoon Lake (Drayton, 6:30). THE PONTIAC PRESS, TULRSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 {the season's money winners samn| close to $20,000, Fredgie I" as, Claremont, Calif., Joe Cielsa, Arl- ington, Tex., and Chandler Harper, Portsmouth, Va., turned in 68's. * La * | Most of the contenders said the | course “‘played easy’’ yesterday. | They predicted things would “toughen up” for the champion- | | ship rounds. | The first squad in the tourna- | ment trail to drive off left the first tee at 8 a.m. In the threesome , was Gene Battistoni, Chicago, am- | ateur Sammy Ruskin, Milwaukee and Brien Charter, of Janesville, Wis. 8:30): Shaw's—_Jewelers _vs_| J SALE Thurs., Fri., Sat. $20.50 coun’ Tennis Racket ........ $11.65 $12.95 Spalding Tennis Racket ....... $10.45 $15.65 seaiees Tennis | Meee. $8.75 $30.00 coe i ceisise SIS4S $12.50 Golf Bags ...... $8.75 $19.50 Golf Carts .....$15.75 $21.00 Golf Woods ..... $8.95 WELDEN SPORTING GOODS 51 Me. Clemens. 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Saginaw St. FE 2-9234 SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR MONEY BACK { : : i FIFTY-TWO | reve PONTIAC PRESS. “THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 - : , - ‘Apchle Moore, world’s _light- heavyweight champion, was chris- tened Archibald Lee Moore. OO eee Fine Used Cars at Real Bargain Prices! Schutz Motors Inc. DeSoto-P! th 912 S. Weedward. Birmin Aussies, Mexicans ‘Set for Cup Test | CHICAGO @ — Australia, an overwhelming favorite, and Mexi- ‘co have completed their singles pairings for the American Zone Davis Cup tennis matches opening | Semnerrow at the Saddle and Cycle | Club. Experts predict the Aussies will sweep the two opening singles com- “petition tomorrow when they send aces Ken Rosewall and Rex Hart- wig against Mexico's Gustavo Pal- afox and Esteban Reyes, respec- tively. the lone doubles match Saturday. | Tigers Shoot for ist Division Paositi DETROIT w — The Detroit, somethifAg about it tonight when | Keen observers believe Australia | | Tigers, hoping to finish in the lst | they meet the Boston Red Sox in | will wrap up a team victory with | division for the 1st time since’ a twi-night doubleheader in Briggs 1950, get a chance to start doing ' Stadium. At the same time, nmranager Bucky Harris of the Tigers will get a chance to start straighten. ing out bis pitching staff, + which ca Pontiac’s Top Trim Shop «awe weyeryrerr’s Complete set for all cars up to 1949 models — late models $2.00 higher. 5g _ Headquarters for All Custom Trim and Seat Covers _ IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION bai sore "BUDGET MONEY DOWN! $12.95 to $21.95 Values Custom Trim Custom Floor Carpeting Door Panels — Head Liners Convertible Tops and Rear Windows Repaired. Arm Rests Covered. We Specialize in Insurance and Fire Repair Jobs ALL CLEAR Plastic Covers for a Cars 2 12> Complete Set PLASTIC #'s'se3' 20" “" Front only . $1025 one enee 136 S. SAGINAW AT CHASE, PONTIAC SEAT COVER MART FE 4-8272 Howell Extends Hardtop Streak : There seems to be no stopping | Benny Howell and his hardtop | | these days. The Pontiac driver bagged | his 4th straight feature event win | | | | Wednesday at the Pontiac Speed- way by coaxing his swift little | Ford around the 25 laps in 8 | minutes, 25.12 seconds to beat Chuck Partello by about three- quarters of a lap. Howell's string of wins has |Stamped him as the pre-race fa- /vorite in .Saturday’s 75-lap track championship test at the ‘oval. last night, while Partello took the semi-windup and Rusty Kelly won the dash, _ Heat winners included _Jim Estes, Dorris Sanders, | Gody and Glen MacAbee. Saturday's title race program at the Pontiac Speedway starts at ParteHo Ted (8:30 p.m, with qualifying at 7 * o'clock. Church League Resumes Free Methodist Church Softball iLeague swings back into action ‘tonight at the GMC athletic field. |The Bulldogs encounter the Cru-| saders on the lst diamond and the gers on the 3rd field. Both games start at 6 p.m. League-leading Bulldogs , man- aged by Laverne Riemenschnei- der, boast a 4-2 record. The Farm- ers, even at Bob Myer. Russell Carlisle’s Cru- ‘saders and the Slugger are | knotted with 2-3 marks. Sluggers’ manager Darwin Pratt, left for the army Tuesday and his father, Keith Pratt, has taken over the reins. Three games, including tonight's contests, remain on the schedule for each team, plus one tie game ito play off. M59 Benny also won the pursuit | Fightin’ Farmers meet the Slug- | 3-3, are piloted by | 5 Birmingham Babe Ruth « | Players on All-Star 9 oe with batting averages! troit, Port Huron and Port Huron | over .500 were among all-stars| Township, and Walled Lake. | named this week to represent Bir- / Tournament wil} be run off on a -mingham in the Babe Ruth League one-game knockout basis on the | State tournament opening at Bir- weekends of July 23 and July 30, _mingham and Southfield* High with finals on Sunday, July 31. | School fields on July 23. Winner will enter the regional tour- Sixteen teams will be entered, nament against Ohio, Indiana, I- | including Algonac, Berkley, Bes- | linois and Wisconsin champions at | semer, Southfield Twp., Escana- | Terre Haute, Ind., Aug. 1-6. Re-| ba, Farmington, Grosse Pointe gional champion will play in the | | Weeds, Huron Valley, Kalama- | World Series at Austin, Tex., dur- | m0, ‘Uncoin Park, Northwest De- | ing the following week. a I Pete Hurley (588) and Dick Cloonan $41) were top hitters of the Birming- ° lao All-Stars. Both are pitchers who | Morning Star jalso play regularly at other sitions. . Far Ahead in Yachting Test |Madonna (440), Bob Squiers +416), en (437), ‘Dave Parnie (390), Ron | Baldwin completed the top bracket with an even .500 | Other All-Stars elected by vote of all! five man 1 Le | —— 4 They were closely followed by Phil Rus- Leu HONOLUL U w — Richard S$ Leupen (300), Ed Busch (385), and Gary Job aeereon ; Rheem's 98- foot ketch Morning red Petrucci, manager of Birming- Star raced toward a new crossing pe an Stars. will climes practices thi wee with an exhiibtion SAE record in the 2,225 mile Trans- against Berkley’s All-Stars Sund ay | Pacifie yacht race last night. But 2 p.m. at Birmingham High ae Field. | She would be lucky if it finishes in the top three of the final standings Sqq7m Snead’s of the 49-vear-old racing classic Golf School ‘because of pence Experts differ as to just how the ili bette bail downswing should begin—whether it starts with a hip turn which | “leads” the shoulders and arms, The sleek-hulled | from the Los Angeles Yacht Cl ‘was only 40 miles from the Dia- mond Head finish line at 9 p.m. The rest of the 50-boat fleet was ‘strung out for 1,200 miles behind Which the hips follow. sell and Jim Maurer, each with 534 Pat. | the Tigers to 542 ahead of them. just about seached the point of Tigers had pulled into a 3-3 tie. impossibility before the All-Star Harvey Kuenn' and Al Kaline, break. who played im the All-Star fame The Red Sox come into Detroit) Tuesday, skipped the dcsageoni with a flaming record of nine vic-| trip. Joe Coleman, ul Foy- tories in their last 10 games, plus| tack and Leo Cristante handled 98 out of their last 34. In that time,| the pitching with Cristante draw- | they drove from 942 games behind ing the loss. The exhibition marked the ist: While the Red Sox surged for- | appearance of bonus rookie Jim ward, the Tigers sagged. They Small for the Tigers. The young ‘have dropped nine of their last 12 ‘outfielder took over from Bill Tut- '—a span in which Harris has used tle in centerfield and collected a ' 40 pitchers. ' single in two times at bat. Harris has named two rookie | sree RH cONOINN'R H righthanders—Frank Lary (7-10) Prine? 3 9 0 Broviait 3 22 and Dike Maas (5-5) — to face | 3mall.cf 2 0 1 Klusz'skilb 2 0 0 f 1b 20 0 Boston tonight, They will be op- \Fecpason.t 2 2.10 posed by George Susce, Jr, (3-3) | Leniiipe. 1 a [peat and Ike Delock (6-4), | Hatfield. my ¢ ° ¢ Harmon.ct 3 8 2 ps atte.c . Originally, Harris said Billy) toi ents i 4 v) aprmca ao : : Hoeft, his All-Star lefty, would | Sristante.p 0 0 0 McMillan.ss 2 0 6 | pitch against Boston in one of to- | Wilson.c © mal HH bee 30 0 |night's games, but the Detroit! colemanp 1 0 0 »manager changed his mind, prefer-|Oeine'f 2} ee ‘ring to save Hoeft for the New | Totals 34 4:11 Totals 38 8 York Yankees, who visit Detroit. House singled for" Foytack a 8th for a doubleheader Saturday, ‘Detroit ........ 001 o21—4 ors W innati . J... O11 001 02x—5 The Tigers will be seeking a bit a ane RBI—Batis, Bridges, Max ’ of revenge against the Red Sox. | well, Brovie, or with a shoulder-and-arm action it. | This confusion is understandable. | Final standings will not be de- since there are no separate move- termined for several days. race winner is detemined on a han- | flowing swing. ‘dicap basis. The correct swing is one continu- together simultaneously. The only Drug, Puertas Teams \Victors in Waterford Drayton Drug won its 5th straight game in Waterford Town- | ship's Junior Softball League Wednesday by trimming ms Hardware, 10-7 The Drug team is in 1st place. Meanwhile, Puertas Service won its 1st Little League decision by | downing Waterford Village, 8-1, as | Gordon Rice struck out 9 and con- tributed a home run and 2 singles ‘at the plate. If swveet soft drinks leave you thirsty... SWITCH 110 SGU ia - ,..mever an after- thirst! IN PARTY-SIZE TOO! ' { Bottled by SQUIRT. DETRON a 60. Ask for Squirt today wherever beverages are sold or served.., Enjoyable as ... and, clean taste in mixed drinks, too! + ore the one soft drink with the fresh clean taste Squirt has a fresh Distributed in Oakland County by HILL DISTRIBUTING CO. 2675 Orchard Lake Rd. | essential difference between good | players, I think, is in their mental | picture of the swing—not their ac- tual making of it. | Thus one expert is conscious of l'a hip turn at the start of his down- | swing. while another is thinking | about a left arm pull. But both at the same time. At any rate, you'll note in to- ready has his hips turned back square to the ball (or paralle! with the line of flight, if you prefer), | while his shoulders still have quite a bit of unwind left in them. This certainly indicates that the | hip rotation proceeds faster than the shoulder rotation, even if it doesn't precede it. Note also that the wrists are still fully cocked and there is an im- | pression of a straight left arm pulling the end of the shaft down —toward the ground—at this point. (Copyright 1955) The, ments at any stage of a smooth- | ous motion with all parts working | ; are actually doing the same thing. day's drawing that the player al- | Peeve ap House, Harmon: 2, Helsing $5 Brov Batts, Harmon On their last eastern trip, Tigers 3, “Harmon, HR—Bridges, Maxwell, Bro- we jolted three straight ti via, Delsing. SB—Wilson. SF—Maxwell —_ d Yy fe “ DP—Malmberg and Bertola, Left—De- in Boston’s Fenway Park. ‘troeit 7, Cincinnatt 5. BB—Coleman }, | Minarcin 2. Cristante 1 oleman 1 In an exhibition game last night, | Tigers bowed 5-4 to the Redlegs. jat Cincinnati, Chuck Foytack 4, Cristante 1, Minarcin 2. HO - a 4; LA a ee 2 } ae tac n R-ER—Coleman ¥- Harmon tack 1-1, Cristante 2-2; Minarcin 4-4. | i ri i HBP—By Minarcin (Wilson). W—Minar- -| | drove home ewe runs with a triple cin L—Cristante U—Sexton, Hofer, | for Cincinnati in the 8th after the Aldemeyer, Heinold. T1583. A—12,718 & sama RE. nS SES. eS 53 Sa Saaae FREEMAN SHOES we $14.90 Now $7 90 Many Outstanding ' Values at Lower Prices Every Pair Of FREEMAN SPORT SHOES on SALE . -. Also Selected Groups of Black | and Brown Styles Dickinsons SAGINAW AT Open Friday and LAWRENCE ar ‘tho Be ee e sage. [SALES Whirlaway Fishing Outfit . FAMOUS SPIN FISHING KIT Phone FE 8-0797 FEDERAL’S | AIR-CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORT Value-packed, complete a Don't let this value “get away’! Complete tod, g . ‘vel, $12 Bronson No. 400 jet spin reel! oh © ft., st fiberglass spinning rod. Spoleto OPEN MONDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS TO 9 ROD, REEL COMBINATION 3° 5-ft. 2-in, glass rod with level wind castin reel! Bakelite sides, Perfect as a spare outfit, grip! Ea - Kaycee Park Proving Homer Hitters Paradise NEW YORK #—American|to connect bor the circuit. League batters, streaking toward | ss a possible home run record, are| A total of 161 homers have been , finding Kansas City’s Municipal! hit in baseball's newest major | The Associated Press showed to- | day. The.Kansas City stadium has | replaced Boston's Fenway Patk as ‘the American League ‘“‘bandbox."’ Stadium the easiest park in which | league park, figures compiled by | The Red Sox’ park in which 139 four-baggers were hit in 1954, has been the scene of 102 this year. * ae * National League with 125 homers. Brooklyn Dodger fans have seen 106 walloped at Ebbets Field while Busch Stadium (St.Louis) has had 100 and the Polo Grounds (New Cincinnati's Crosley Field re- | maing the hitters’ paradise in the Nelson Is Tied — for French Lead Vacation Objective ’ ’ : Lord Byron Linked By MORT NEFF With British Pair at One of the prime objectives of a 10-Under-Par satisfactory vacation is to return PARIS (®—Byron Nelson, former | U.S. Open champion, headed into) refreshed in mind and body—yet the final 36 holes of the French | Open Golf championship today | i + far too often it é | “ just doesn't work | out that way! The hazards of tied for first place with two vet-| § vacationing —_in- eran British’ Pros. _ volve a lot of The Roanoke, Tex., stylist shot a] : \ worry about the 10-under-par 134 over the 6,660-yard | 4g . youngsters who) la Boulie course yesterday to tie, & ; can always find | for the lead with Harry Weetman fj trouble even when and Harry Bradshaw. it seems far out. Nelson and Bradshaw had cards | of reach. A good af 69-65 while Weetman turned in a 68-66. Defending champion Flory Van ous moves during a vacation—and Donck of Belgium was three maybe a few tips here will help strokes back. (bring YOU back mentally and physically better off. You don't have to be e NEFF The 1928 Boston Braves lost five straight doubleheaders. warned ‘that vacationing driv ers are a haz.’ IMPORTANT! READ! All tires, regardless of make, are guaranteed against defec- tive workmanship and materials. BUT experience proves that less than 2 out of every 100 tires on the road fail b of defective workmanship or materials. With every Dayton Tire purchased, you are given a WRITTEN ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE against ALL DAMACE due to: Blowouts, Cuts, Stone Breaks, Impact Breaks, Glass Cuts, Spike Holes... OR ANY AND ALL ROAD RAZARDS! ASK YOUR DEALER ... POINT BLANK .. . DOES THIS TIRE CARRY A ROAD HAZARD CUARANTEE? SPECIAL! Motor Tune-Up id Tale All work done on our brand NEW 1955 SUN ANALYZER! LABOR and MATERIAL GUARANTEED! MOST CARS DAYTON'’S: BIG 3 GUARANTEE Lifetime Factory 1. Guarantee 2, 30.000-Mile Guarantee Two-Year Written e Road Hazard Guarantee Against All Possible Hazards Writer Lists Hazards |. to Returning Refreshed |ard to themselves. | taurants deal of farsighted | ‘thinking is necessary to plan vari- | FREE PARKING them will be traveling the same roads you travel—and a lot of them | will be sight-seeing, paying not too much attention to their driving. The automobile can be a lethal piece of machinery, Treat it prop- erly and it can be an _ indispen- sable aid to a good vacation. Mis- use can end up in pure tragedy for /you and your family. Vacationing calls for eating at scores of drive-ins, road-side res- | and resort establish- management can result in many a tummy ache for the customers. It's best to stick to simple foods. Poison ivy, poison oak or poison sumac can spoil any vacation. Teach the youngsters (and your- Self ) how to identify these plants. Thousands of |. ments. Unfortunately the combina- | the 1955 champion tion of summertime temperatures | and not-too-rigid precautions by the | | matches at York) 99. . The Athletics, making a surpris- Roberta Gubbins Top ‘Rifleman’ Takes Grand Aggregate in Smallbore Test at OCSC Range |with the opposition getting 64. Cleveland has had 12 homers in 10 apiece, the Yankees 6 and Baltimore 4. | sews! the majors’ home run) Paced ey Roberta Gubbins, ; leader, getting 16 of his 29 round Michigan's new smallbore rifle | tippers at home, champion, Oakland County rifle- ; A total of 199 homers was ac- men collected their share of med- als and trophies in the 46th annual | Michigan Smallbore Championship the Oakland County | Sportsmen’s Club. Other area shooters helping to keep awards in the OCSC clubhouse {son, topping the 193 bets Field and the 187 for the Polo. Grounds. The major league home figure is up to 1,269 with 717 in the National League and 552 in the ing showing in the pennant race, | have hit 43 at their home ball yard | Kansas City, Detroit and Chicago | } 11 each, Boston and Washington | run to American. At that clip, the exis*ing | records for both circuits — 1,197 center and 331 to right. for the NL and 973 for AL — will go by the boards. The loud long-distance cannonad- ing around the league amounts to- in | merely sporadic popgun. fire Baltimore's Memorial Stadium | where only 24 home runs have been hit. The powerless eighth-place Or- ioles have hit only eight. The seven visiting clubs have combined for 16, which shows there is little fav- oritism and no one club has the secret. Pittsburgh, last in the National | Lbague, is also last in the homer The Redlegs have walloped 64 Production at hometown Forbes ‘in Crosley Field compared with 61 | Field. Only 55 have gone into or | | for their opponents with Ted Klus- | over the seats in the steel city. The A's gained little or no ground on their transfer from | Philadelphia but will probably see an improvement in the 129 home | counted for at Cincinnati last sea-| runs hit in Connie Mack Stadium total for Eb- | at Philadelphia during 1954 — whether or ' sible. The A's new park measures 330 feet to left, 430 to center and 37 right. Connie Mack Stadium measures 334 to left field, 440 to were John Treeful K. Danielson, Jane Martini, Don Rose, Cora | 5,ce igen eerste Roberta Gubbins. Garbutt, Bert Beam and Carolyn Casper: ee: 10x i junior cham- _ pionship—Ron Insley, 1566; Any Henry. A total of 66 shooters, |aggregate—Roberta Gubbins. 1594-96x; including a team from Canada, |Four-man team registered for the two-day event held last week-end. | 1582-85x: Charles Casper, 398: |match—Richard Roberts, 400-29: lette, 202x300. ete free rifle mateh—Goeraid Sea 50-meter any sight—Alex Smith, 300- Winners were as 3 follows: sight Gerald ‘Quellette, champlonship—OCsc. | any sight—Roberta Gubbins, 398-20; 100- 50-meter iron sight event— yard any sight—Charles Casper, 390-23. . 50-yard tron ee | ee | 25: 50-yeard any sight—Roberta Gub- Iron sight aggregate—Charies | bins, 400-30; Dewar fron sight—Roberta |Gubbins, 398-24; 100-yard iron sight— 400-22: Sporting rifle | match—Gerald Quellette, 199; wa Court Fleet has sired thorough- | breds Which \ won S02; 000. . SAVINGS © on Golf Clubs & Bags ute 50% HAGEN—H & B POWER-BILT and McGREGOR | PONTIAC COUNTRY CLUB 4335 Elizabeth ‘ake Rd. FE 5-8939 not they are respon- | gJLARRY J AUTO PAINTING Expert Body and Fender Repair _ on All Makes of Cars EROME- ret EARS rO BUY ‘FOR MORE THAN 3 Y | DAYTON’S ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE Offering You One of the TIRE SALE STRONGEST GUARANTEES IN THE WORLD Dayton Thorobred BLACK SIDEWALLS Size 6.00x16. 6.50x16 Reg. Price $21.25 $28.20 Sele Price You Seve Dayton Premium WHITE SIDEWALLS Size Reg. Price $33.20 $13.95 | $7.30— ~ $20.95 Sale Price You Save $19.75 $9.45 6 50x16 ~ $39, 40 6.70x16 | $23.75 6.70x15 | $36.45 $15.75 _ $25.95 _ $20.95 _— ie $13.45 $15.50 7.10x15 | $26.30 7.10x15 | $40.30 $17.75 ~ $23.95 ~ $16.35 7.60x15 | $44.10 7.60x15.| $28.75 $19.75 —_ a Stet $19.55 All Prices Plus Fed. Tax and Exchange All Prices Plus Fed. Tax and Exchange SPECIAL PRICE .. . for Ford, Chevrolet, Plymouth. Complete Brake Relining. FIRST QUALITY! FULLY GUARANTEED! BRAKES RELINED COMPLETE JOB — PARTS and LABOR 14° colors. Installation Extra INSTALLED FREE! ‘65... ARKET TIRE CO. FREE Most “ @ STUDEBAKERS @FORDS | @ CHEVROLETS PLASTIC COATED FIBER SEAT COVERS All coated fibre, fully guaranteed, full fash- ioned, brand new. Exciting new patterns and Late model styles $2 extra 8? | Open 9 to 9 | —— PARKING Pontiac's Motorist ae 717 W. Huron St., Corner Cass FE 8-0424 OPEN YOUR CHARGE ACCOUNT BY TELEPHONE! tp A bp Ap by bp bp tn te bp dp bn te tn LOOK! NOTICE! Market Tire SELLS ONLY First Line, all-rayon cord, eriginal equipment tires. WE REFUSE TO SELL any second line, cotton cord; reclaimed rubber tires! BE SURE THE TIRE YOU BUY IS A FIRST LINE, ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT QUALITY, ALL-RAYON CORD TIRE! ASK YOUR DEALER ... POINT BLANK... 1S THIS A FIRST-LINE, ALL RAYON CORD TIRE? FREE Front End Inspection Complete front end alignment .-» includes: Caster, camber, and .toe-in. All work done on our BEAN VISUALINER. “7 ALL WORE FULLY GUARANTEED! inciudes: "Tie Reds “Shocks and Springs *Compiete Front End Over- hauling Wheel Alignment BUDGET TERMS @ Full Year to Payl NO MONEY DOWN! _ 'FIFTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 Superintendent Sues to “Get Job Back Ousted Carver Charges Right “ to Quiz Denied Buffington Says Board Fired Him Without His Questioning Witnesses eis, ater tee ROYAL OAK. TOWNSHIP — Ousted Carver’ School Superintend- ent Walter Buffington has filed suit against the Royal Oak Town- ship Board of Education to ;:-t his job back. A hearing has been | set for Aug, 8. In his suit, filed Tuesday after- noon in Oakland County Circuit Court, Buffington charges that he was denied the right to cross-ex- amine or question the 14 witnesses who testified against him at a pri- vate hearing Jupe 21 on a morals charge. . ___ Buffington further charges that his contract was negotiated in April of this year and has three MR. AND MRS. RICHARD J. ABRAHAM Young City to Operate From Second Floor of Community School KEEGO HARBOR — Officials of this city will move into their new offices this week, on the renovated, | redecorated second floor of the Community School building on Or- chard Lake road. Edward Hermoyian, city clerk, Double Ring Ceremony years to run. U : Pp 7 C] k fotert 7 colombo, Buttngton's| J tes Fair at Clarkston lawyer, has requested an investi-| CLARKSTON—Married Saturday A reception at Bemis-Olson Am- gation of all records in the case. | jn 9 double ring, evening ceremony | Vet Hall followed the ceremony. Buffington was issued a three- sicmaeé ot Al Gaints Est ; |. After a wedding trip to northern year contract at a salary of $8,980 | Performed al Saints ©piscopa’ | Michigan the newlyweds will reside per year at an April meeting of |Church were Marilyn Wright and jn petroit. the Carver School Board. Richard J. Abraham. -_ “pl lovee sche a oo Mr, and Mrs. Owen Wright IK M . a oO * * from the | ‘ao wacall @ | Clarkston are the bride s ae €ego oving held May 12. The new board de- and the bridegroom is the son of | - clared the April 11 meeting null |Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Abraham of | , . and void because armed guards Dearborn. ‘fo New Offices kept the public from attending. The bride approached the altar |in a floor length gown of Chantilly \lace and tulle over satin. A heart |Shaped headpiece of matching lace | with embroidered seed pearls se- | cured her fingertip length veil of silk illusion. She carried a tinted | orchid mounted on a prayer book. Matron of honor was Mrs. Wil- Ham Morris, the bride’s sister, and bridesmaids were Lorraine Weine of Berrien Springs, and Delores Abraham of Dearborn, the bridegroom's sister. Raymond Abraham, the bride- groom's brother, performed the duties of best man and ushers were | Edward Abraham of Adrian and | Vern Roberts of Dearborn. safe, new locks on the doors, files and office furniture installed, and business going in full force by ' Saturday. There are two rooms to be used by the city. One will house the clerk-treasurer office along with the chief of police and the Imlay City Couple | Wed in Lap eer | building inspector. The other _ © 149" Sie” 5199% Weokty tlds end greem. tasy terns be Griff, membership chairman. j a J 4 h aoe : ] “THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1935 FIFTY-FIVE | - YOUR PROFIT-PATH is a Clas- sified ad in The Pontiac Press, To sell, rent, swap, buy, phone FE 2-8181 for an ad-writer. OLeeeeeen \ New Lake Theater \ 420 Pontiac Trail \ WALLED LAKE \ Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. In Cinemascope CAPTAIN LICHTFOOT | Starring Rock. Hudsen Claims Race From Cop Just Borrowing Round DETROIT w&—Clover West, 59, explained to Traffic Court yester- day why he led a policeman on a foot race through apartment houses and back yards and. over fences after his car hit another. _ “I knew a lot of friends in the buildings. and was just trying to borrow money to ‘pay the dam- ages," he said. West got a 30-day jail sentence \ SHOTGUN % for reckless driving. Starrin, \ portne Rerece \ Dallas Taking Step DALLAS —The Dallas School Board says it is studying ‘fair and equitable methods’ of deseg- regating public schools but will be “impatient with any undue pres- sure.” Weer wraas JOHNNY ‘LONG AND HIS ORCH. FRI. & SAT. WALLED LAKE CASINO BALLROOM WALLED LAKE, MICH. 2 BALL ~ \. PARKING Roller Skating Rowboats— Speed Boats— . WW Thursday Friday Saturday .. Out of the pages of the most amazing story ever written comes the AMENTIEST Nothow Plcties of them all! JAMES MASON pPaut voxas - pever Lonne | Devcad by ECRARD FLBSCHER Sereepay by EM FELTON « Soe = | | TONIGHT FFTHXINY | “ONE OF THE FUNNIEST FARCE COMEDIES IN YEARS —N. Y. Times ~ Ow fi —wH errr Teer r7rr77CCCCeCe cee eee eee eee eeeeeeeeeeeerererermeererererererererrererererrerrrrrrrrrrwevrvrvevevrewvrwewvrwrrrerwrrrrreeereeeeee PPPPPP PIP PPP PPP OPP PPP PPP DPD OEP PE PDD DS POSS D EP EEE ESE EEE EEC EEE EY She's easy going but balks ot being pushed too fost! On the whole, she's a breezy sort, When she feels the spark, she con bump ond grind with the best of them! q You™ agree there never wos another quite like Genevieve! TECHNICOLOR Dinah Sheridan» John Gregson Kay Kendell > Kenneth More PLUS her Academy Award triumph | a9 in'Come Back, Little Sheba’ SHIRLEY BOOTH ROBERT RYAN s HAL le it “ABOUT MRS. LE: SLIE- FRIDAY and SATURDAY DOORS OPEN 12:45 GLENN FORD FRANK LOVEJOY URSULA THIESS CESAR ROMERO ANE “JUNGLE MAN-EATERS” muller ‘with the’ heavy industry buildup. /equipment particularly had Red Five-Year’ Plans Progress Russian Leaders Boast About ‘Success’ Gained in Economic Buildup MOSCOW (®—The Central Com- mittee of the Soviet Communist party told the Russian people to- | day they have reached the goals 'of Russia's fifth five-year plan eight months ahead of schedule. The plan, covering the 1951-55 period, was fulfilled last May 1, the committee said in a statement published in all Moscow news- papers, As outlined before the last |alJ-Soviet party congress in 1952, the plan called for an immense buildup of Soviet economic strength, * * * marked, “Thére was nothing por- nographic about it at all. There) Hollywood Headlines Lana as Irked as Senator jitt siivardt to"tome move “The reason it was criticized was because the pose had never Over Painted Panty Case wise’ ye na ve By BOB THOMAS | ordered pants painted in an effort | people thought it ‘was immoral. : HOLLYWOOD uw —Lana Turer|to make the picture seem less| Kefauver .could find nothing to! —_ Italian, 86, Receives Grade School Diploma’ LA SPEZIA, Italy (#—Gaetano ' Barrili today had the grade school | diploma for which he began study- ing 80 years ago, He quit school after completing he third grade. Last year he took ee missed a session of the night school at nearby Castiglione Vara, Now 86, Barrili received his di- ploma and a letter of congratila- tions yesterday. The famous Washington monu- ment rises 555 feet 6 inches. is just as indignant about the case racy. | complain about in Lana's cas. | of the painted panties as Sen. Ke-, “The picture was much worse | ‘tumes for her current epic,| fauver is. | afterward than it was before,” ex- “Diane.” When viewed, she was | Récently the Tennessee Demo.| claimed Lana when the matter’ covered from peck to toe in a crat’was here to investigate the WaS brought up. “Those pants suede riding dress of old France. effect of movies on juvenile delin- | looked awful. Such a drab green She was riding a horse—sidesaddle | quency. The hearings went far color; Awful!” be a foxhunt in the film. She'd | afield and one day the matter of | * + \like to get out of the costumes | movie ads was brought up. | She defended the costume, which | 494 into a smart comedy, but $0. * * # | appeared to expose her hips to a {@" her studio has not come up | Several exhibits were offered, remarkable degree. Actually she, With one for her: including one featuring Lana's wore flesh colored covering under- | frame in ‘The Prodigal.’’ A movie neath the beads, | ad censor testified that he had “I was well concealed, ° she | re- * Steel production in the U.S. has | now spread into 27 states. FIRST RUN!I= Two First-Runs for the Pontiac Area! IT’S THE NEW POLICY — The committee statement accom- | panied a report by Premier Nikolai | Bulganin that the Soviet Union has made great progress in heavy in- dustry development. The party leaders said the ex- | perience of past years reaffirms “the correctness of the general line of our party — the priority development of heavy industry.” . * * * Emphasis in the fifth five-year plan, as outlined in its early stages, _was on boosting the output of Steel, coal and petroleum in line Goals called for an increase in | steel output of 62 per cent, 43 per | cent for-coal and 85 per cent for | | petroleum. The .statement published today | said production of consumer goods, machine tools and agricultural in- | creased. It added, however, that | ‘rapid introduction of new techni- | | ques Was being hampered by con- | ceit and complacency among workers and “weak leadership of ministers.” Finds Rifle Superior to Broom for Bear LA VETA, COLO. (®#—A summer resident at Cucharas Camps, | | southwest. of here, found that- a broom is a poor substitute for a | | gun when it comes to dealing with | | a bear. Mamie Burns said she stepped | from her cabin | found a young bear just outside | | the door. She seized a broom to| protect herself, but the bear, in- | stead of heading for the woods, | | | | | | charged her. | She dropped the broom and) grabbed a_ .22-caliber rifle. Her | first two shots missed but the third the last left in the weapon — killed the bear, a Airman Sues Colonel OKLAHOMA CITY (—An air. man second class has filed suit in| | District Court for $10,000, accus- ing a lieutenant colonel of slander- | ing him. John F.. Crogman claims | Lt. Col. Walter Callahan damaged his reputation by calling him lazy in a statement spoken in the pres-| /ence of another airman, Miles Mil- ler. All are stationed at 7 Tinker Air Force Base. One of every 60 of the nation's workers is employed by a hospital. TO GET GOOD WORKERS use | Help Wanted ads. Dial FE 2-8181 | | for a Pontiac Press ad-writer, ' AT THE BLUE SKY — where you see them . , . FIRST! STARTS [FRIDAY yesterday and ||- Drive-In Theater IT HAPPENED IN BRAZIL! They gambled for high stakes, in this exciting action-packed Cc South American adventure! 2150 Opdyke Road Open at 7:00 P. M. Show ot -8:15 P. M. Phone FE 4-461 1 FREE PLAYGROUND LAST TIME TONIGHT! q cncony 4 menWIN M MIN THAN TECHNICOLOR : “toot | 1 i ERIC AMBLER-ROBERT PARRISH JOHN BRYAN Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Ine, A. Arthur Rank Organization Presentation + Relessed thru United Artists Dixie Hwy. (US-10) Near Telegraph Road WATERFORD Yue aw #, DRIVE-IN THEATER | | THE FAMILY tN Cor. Williams Lake-Airport Reads — Box Office Opens 7:25 P. M. DRIVE Open 7:00 P.M, LAST TIMES TONIGHT LAST TIMES TONIGHT boas TALL MAN| RIDING rt cor om w FRCOLC DOROTHY MALONE zx71. Marilyn Monroe and niagara Fi] a raging torrent of emotion that % Aeven nature cant control! STARTS TOMORROW ALL COLOR PROGRAM! a. e Fag Ravers ae fe JEAN in Burma's e TTEN ° PETERS “Purple Heil” som Coney Adem Dost O'Dea -Rchard Alen Pratt ty CHARLES BRACKETT + secee wy WEMRY HATHAWAY PLUS VAN JOHNSON + JOHN HODIAK RICARDO MONTALBAN GEORGE MURPHY WIN MIN THAR tebe DELUXE MOVIE roon TO SATISFY EVERY TASTE! Its Blue Ribbon Showtime PHONE FEDERAL 2-485] OAKLAND: MODERNLY AIR CONDITIONED LAST TIMES TODAY JOHN WAYNE e@ LANA TURNER “The SEA CHASE” “JUNGLE MOONMEN” ENTERTAINMENT CE ee eS eT eee ae Seen Te AT BUTTERFIELD AIR-CONDITIONED: THEATRES x! ~—seeerrererreerCYrY. ba i in i in i hi Min hi Mi i Me hn Mi tll brilliance. it's ever gtoduced! TOMORROW M-G-M’s STORY OF REAL PEOPLE! Doris DAY: JAMES CAGN EY ‘Love Me Or Leave Me | CAMERON MITCHELL - Ronee Kes Tou Tous FEATURES AT — 1:00 - -—~-seeeeeeeeeee rvvvevVeYTeY.-Y.eee,. worn COLOR 3:12 - 5:14 - 7:26 - 9:48 MEAR THE HIT TUNES IN THE COLUMBIA RECORD ALBUM! PLUS: TOM and JERRY CARTOON—NEWS TODAY AND FRIDAY Abbott and Costello in “MEET THE MUMMY" STARTS SAT. JEFF CHANDLER @ r JANE i USSELL '" ‘FOX FIRE’ with A PRE-RELEASE GIG YOUNG ADELE MARA> LUTHER ADLER THEIR FIRST NEW Comedy Feature In Years! Oliver HARDY Have The Time of Your Life... Take A Trip To ..+ t wai “qi j } \ j ' af / "rrrerrerrrrwrrwrrTT Tre Tee whee, an ee es * 5 eles . pee & f fi i é ay } ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURS w DAY, JULY 14, 1955 re Retired People Bored With Life; _ All Want Work DETROIT (UP) — Dr. Ferdi- nand Mauser, chairman of the de- es ot ity, said the widely held idea that people look forward to Nearly half said they were in- Woman Drunk Pays— for the Liquor, Too ~ RICHMOND, Ca. -—-A woman arrested on a charge of public drunkenness - was brought into court several hours later. Asked ‘it she was still drunk she replied: “Hic — certainly not.” “That’s the most damaging testi- mony I’ve ever heard,”’ remarked Trial Justice R. Dixon Powers. “Ten dollars and costs,” EMERGENCY DEBT-RE- |LIEF is yours through Pontiac Press Classified ads! Want Ads ‘sell un-needed articles, rent the terested in doing community —— rooms and find you a job. charity work even though it of-| Phone FE 2-8181, NICK HALIDAY By Keats Petree Sonia Deportation : of River Swimmer ‘DETROIT (INS) — Deportation proceedings were started Wednes- | day against a penniless Yugoslav refugee arrested swimming across the Detroit River, apparently con- | — fident that someone in the States would give him a job and a pair of pants. | He is Milan Davidovich, 25, who had been in the water 45 minutes and was within 50 feet of the Belle Isle shore when seized Mon- day. WHEN THEY STOPPED BURNIN’ WITCHES * * «& Immigration officers said Da- vidovich would be shipped back to Cannada as soon ag the deporta- tion proceedings are completed. He said he had sneaked across the border from Communist Yu- goslavia into Austria three years ago and then entered Canada but couldn’t. find work in Windsor, BOARDING HOUSE 4 CITY GOT THE DROP ON THE LEADERS OF THE ‘BAND/<~IN THOSE DAYS IL WAS SO DEFT I COULD HOLDA A BIRD CAGE IN MY GUN HAND, DRAW AND FIRE AND RECONER THE CAGE BEFORE IT HIT m- THE GROUND! c—4 a ce |) A E ‘ Ti | f 4 4 aul f "| 4 eaxn t - ¥ J eeegtte G48 ayy Mt) - LAAN pn Jf Ae. Ba nlf ZS 1968 by NEA Berviee, no, 7. M. > iny * Sisce a" fe uddha etsy . hae aT, i) * te *e wtay tt, 2 tate ey Joi4 TRWILUAMS “oe Py) at A ! ht | E } a%s GAR C1985, Piekd Enterpriom, tec. | Arpt red | 1 “Nat the dog, toot” = < ik ‘ E I at , : " ‘ { ‘ i a i { ; t« ( i a wf | a 7 | OH, NANCY--- CAN BORROW SOME THING ? T SURE, PEEWEE “LEVEL -HEADED > BOY WANTED L~e XS aK * oe. | Py . oe j ’ ° | pf ¢ \ 604? acd GR [ Z ee sno : | By Charles Kuhn HAVIN’ SO MANY O' TH" OH,! LIKE KIDS’ 7 Fo]... MUCH, THAT IS/// INEIGHBORHOOD BOYS IN | | THEY NEVER It L : ) NOUR HOUSE ALL TH’ TIME?] | BOTHER ME... ; nD il i 4 Prey re a, r i ° ~ * o—, - By John Morris — TLL REVIEW THE COMPANY HISTORY FROM 1910 To 1955... ~ OUTLINE OUR NEXT YEAR'S PLANS ---- DONALD DUCK mill ia} ig ~Sour Accounts Growing Daily Easy Credit Causing _ Increase in Number of Delinquencies" NEW YORK (®#—The Wall Street ‘Journal said today that soaring | buying on credit is pushing a rising number of delinquent bills into the laps of collection agencies. A survey by staff reporter Ray Vicker said that collections at tribute the bad debt boom to the widespread easing of credit terms. The newspaper added that the credit easing has helped to push up the volume of installment credit outstanding by $2,700,000,- 000 in a year to a total of $24,- 100,000,000 on May 31. Although exact records of un- collectable bills are not available, the survey indicated that this year’s total is running ahead of last year’s by at least 10 per cent. “We're having the best year in _24 in this business,” said Robert Heller, owner of the Heller Collec- tion Bureau of Warren, Ohio, which is processing 1,000 delin- quent accounts a month. “My business is so good it hae me worried,” commented Fred A. Church of Des Moines, who noted a 100 per cent jump in business over last year. ; But some of the biggest lenders in the United States see no cause for alarm. “In every barrel of apples,”’ said an official of a big national lend- ing concern, ‘‘you'll find some bad ones. Relative to the total amount of credit outstanding, delinquents still are small.” Pontiac Deaths Mrs. Thomas Crowle Mrs. Thomas (Maria G.) Crowle, 76, of 112 Omar St. died at her home at 3:15. p.m. - Wednesday. She had been ill two weeks. Born in Durham, Eng. Sept. 17, 1878 she was the daughter of Simon and Helen Gilbert Menear. She married Mr. Crowle at Cornwall in June 1904. She came to Pontiac from Calumet 36 years ago, and was a member of Oakland Park | Methodist Church. _Besides her husband she is sur- vived by four daughters and a son, Mrs. George Lentz of Sag- inaw, Mrs. Lowell Stack and Mrs. volve in opposite directions when FLYING SAUCER — Here's an engineless model | 135-horsepower of the French aerodyne—iatest version of the flying | visible on the underside in the lower view. Pilot and saucer machine. The plane, unveiled in Paris by| passengers will be carried within the transparent designer Rene Couzinet, has a diameter-of- almost} cupola at top center. The designer hopes the experi- | 27 feet. Upper and lower circular sections will re-| mental plane will fly next year. powered by = engines and the turbojet : reactor Grains Show Small Losses CHICAGO w—Grains eased for | mostly fractional losses in routine | dealings on the Board of Trade today. The list started a little lower. Wheat dipped the most, partly on gelling by local traders. It -then tried to stage a little recovery, but |» quickly fell back. Corn was independently firm. Soybeans started out steady and | then dropped. Oats were weak! crop is proceeding at good pace with fair-sized quantities arriving at terminals. Wheat near the end of the first hour was % to % lower, July $1.99%; corn % to \% higher, July $1.41%; oats %& to % lower, July 614; rye 5% to 1% lower, July 98; soybeans % to 1% lower, July $2.3744, and yard 5 cents lower to'| July $11.95. Grain Prices Robert LeMar of Pontiac, Mrs.| cycaco, gals! 13-148) -0nse |e san ae West! admiral... 23.6 Kelsey ayes et Ralph Hacker of Coldwater and day: Michigan 24 pint erates, red 1.00, black | Alea Gnem 1183 paoneset 7 eS Clarence Crowle of Keego Har- = Osi _ [taps §.00-8. : 16 | Allied Btrs |. $8 kr eas iely. Gs. 00% July . 01% [quart crates 418-8. lis Chal... 73.3 pene, bor. sep sess 202% Bept. ”, #i%e | Tomatoes, repacks 19 Jo cartons 1.15 Alum ‘iia : 108 | tor a it Also surviving are a sister, Mrs.| Maren 2°°:: 2.05% March I Peet ey ow Oe dF ay ee ee st 8, Harry Hancock of Cornwall, 12/ My wie ee 102% | Ozpennouse & 1. baskets | 1.25-2.00 Am Can... 2 et in le a i melon Can- ” 5 u Pr) grandchildren and four great-| july. ..... 1.40% Dee 1.06% | nonballs 40 1b lgr 128-150 10-30 1b | Am Gas & Ei 65.2 Loew's... Ss grandchildren. Sept. 137% 38-90, lon Greys 30-34 Ib 60-.75, Congo | Am M & Fdy 29 Lone 8 Chem 62. Dee. 131% July. s.eses 11.97 | 23- ow Am Motors .. 10 _ Lorillard ..., 21. Funeral will be at 1:30 p.m. Sat-| Maren - 1% Bept. . . 12.02 25 ee 301 Meck th ; 5 urday in the Voorhees-Siple Chapel. . Dec. «os... ~ rr DETROIN Boos ae am aa non 2.4 srtin, Ol 12. 33. DXTROIT, 13) (AP)— » fob. | A elt... Dr. Milton H. Bank of Central Dutret chase’ ached, Skenal-ccote | be fortes tong MO? "Grn 4 Methodist Chur-h will officiate Livestock ha = SR PR OE) COS . medium = Mount Park Comet | cern a EEE ute |P stone: tare a ei. motto a cn| Aemeor by ay Mee BuLPS - Sty u (AP) —Hogs sala owns: A 4, i L : Mount Park Cemetery. 190. Market 0 nn pat curly sales | large B42. sil _o Armour & Co 17 Mpls Mon. -.,. 24 8. No 1 0 rrows and gilts mmercii : : i : 18 75-19 50; few small lote choice 1 around | Whites, A large 4i%-42. mediums 38,| AU Cst Line. 473 Mont Ward . 90.1 Albert J. Fisher 200 Ibs 19-75, other weights scarce. B large 38. browns A extra large 44. | AU aie. 3% Motor! : as se ats, gti, Sari | MMe esteeeat orate Bar| Gob fe: hy Beer aes: steady. mpare s ursday market | men’ arket unse . e bbe Funeral for Albert J. Fisher, 91, | generaity active good ¢ rence, sleugh- moderals but ample ee overall | wate Gee, Gee | 7 Murray Cp - ee 38 ty ‘ 4 ter steers. ifers and cows steady to undertone nervous and outside markets | BCR? at y pm. Friday at the SparkeGriffin| Set"Tectin oath. Shas"ttis arias [oe ea ae TY Ret ca oe -m. | In| an ers steady; me an tohn Al - 486 ; ; Chapel. Dr. Milton H. Bank, pas-| p20 Oster ty in stents Seuese en, CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS — HUT Res Gwe oo 3 tor of Certtral Methodist Church, bem geod and choice fed steers 21.00- tse wae pi ares on —— Fi erosid ore War #3 jenn Pomona bey s most wi and commercia te * : wholesa. i . . will officiate and burial will follow 16.00-19 $9; several loads and lots cheice | buying prices unchanged to be lower: ris My... 307 Nia M Pow .. 33. in Oak Hill Cemetery poy ne prime 783-919 Ib ted” hetfers ‘nh. $0 93 score AA 56.75; 92 A i? LPs 64.5; | Brun Balke .. 23.6 Norf & West , 58 : 23.00; few good heifers 20.00; bulk utility | 89 C 52.5: plivos 96 B SS; 89 C 53.5 budd Co ..... 29.6 No Am Av .. 56 Mr. Fisher died last Sunday in and commercial heifers and mixed steer wate weak; receipts 10,854; wholesale often ge | ": 3 — ‘ ‘a — - and heifer yearlings ; rices unchanged to 3% lower; | © “ wst Airline . 22. Florida. cutter grassers down 1.00; bulk utility 7 B= whites 00-008 per perl ane Som . Rt Ohio » 386.7 and commercial -— 1 Spel Apo i a; wees dirieg 33.31 30.8: U. a stan- rv 5a Pte Oth gi 16 * hae P40 Desi ies checks 23; cur- | Capital Afr] .. 32.6 , canners oe cutters mostly 1000-12 60; Pan A w Air 10.6 Horry Fi. King Rts. Sulit oad cement ge] Se Dee HS Panta Be" utter bu. own. = tie . aram c , Word has been received here of | to 11.00; bui nd. choice 420-633 CHICAGO POTATOES at cae ot ss the death Wednesday of Harry H. | Sek calves and yearlings 19.00-22.00. cHtcage. July 13 Py rink ~ A Ar- Sevier. wa a ieee Sha King, 74, of 45 G St. in Mt. Ganmeeed lacs Seanosag teen og) eeoek ments sits ; yg Semana | Giles Sy... ms Priece bee rn ge. (4, rove ot. G asathe: mareet oc pts largest i vaie and marke slightly weaker. Carlot | G’™8*, Mo erp GC) og 7 ry spotty = Ne Cora Cri 1414 Phelps D.... 53.7 on : late demand ‘extremely narrow: v oe _ pone oe Pea 3.40- Cole ann : $n4 Phileo ...... + 1 r. King li for many years —- —_ lower, instances off a Feds ‘ Philip Mor..,, 40.1 lived Col Gar .......1%4 Phill Pet. 73.6 at 104 8. Johnson Ave. moving to| vealers 17 00 33 00; few end pobre aee Oe oie. 426 Pit Plate G... 74.6 Mt. Clemens about 14 years e- >. | Prime 28:00" weiter x dete ie on oultry a OR ee A r= v an cpmmercia . * * Surviving is his widow and a/ 17.00: culls §.00-) TRY Cont Mat “7 Pure Oil 39.6 en At yd SEE fd | cont On a7 * 49. daughter, Mrs. Helen Copenhaver | 1.°0%¢?_ taleble 28." Wo. reliable ontiet per apn me et for Nol quatity | corm: > "ong RCA... oe 49,7 ‘or alauchter lambs; sheen steady. Com- it > Re =pub Btl..., 45.5 of Pontiac. pared last Thursday slauchter lambs Sel eo loan oP ated fh fight type 19 20: lead Wr .... ae Drug..... 9.4) Funeral will be at 2 p.m. Satur- | 22%., "ost, S04, ver, therm ,rcaree | heavy type "brotlers Se teed | eee Bt ne igen * ; on i CAs ne day from the Hubbard Funeral | 2? head choice end prime 8@ Ib native | Rocks 30-31; Gockines 26-30. . | eoig leaf =< 2: k Spg..., 29.6 Hi enrin@ lambs 93.75: most root and choice Comment: Market about steady. Su Now Chem #* "54 Safeway St... 42.3 . s spring lambs 21.50-23.00. mostly | plies fully ample and t Jos Lead., ome in Mt. Clemens 7.82 Th spring Iambs 2130-23 p y ample as trade is relatively | pu Pont go «Bt Jos Lead., 50 i ae gar pea enil to woo? ermine | 5 slow. Hot weather generally retarding | Fast Air... #3 St Re La $3.6 h crop shern Tame and Geartings, We | cece neces any St fryers poor end | Past © 2 Beav Al RAL. Ot Charles Stamas Lom seu ee Tae pond | ogee, irregular due to the current hot Bi Avra Lite... 3 eno ate slaughier sheep. §.00-8.00. lt ee TE “* shell . Ga Graveside service was held to- —_— cee ee - or "OR /3 1760 ‘AN SELL YOUR HOME OR Sasol aR AGS | 10 LT WIDE-AW. YOU AC&ION OR YOU GAN CAN | THE LISTING. CALL US TODAY AND START PACKING | “WHITE Bee. ROOMS. VI vEaY cle ocean cou- ple only. 300 N. Saginaw. Inquire at rear door 3 ROOMS AND BATH. eee _entrance. 103 N_ Roselaw 3 ROOM PLAT. Heat LIGHTS. | 6. FE 46458, 130 8. Parke. Close in. Prefer a A melallaenas ONE WAY LL APT. FOR BACHELOR OR Se ee ox ~ couple Fs tae01. °F! COAST TO COAST ib SELES OFF |M NEE Last rane eg ee) eee egy | 7 Eg ee WILL SHARE APAR Tt ___ For Sale Houses 43 nf _W,_ Boren, BY OWNER 46 ACRES, 7 ROOM | Gamervitew HOMES, INC. LOW hot water. Newly redecorated. _Adults. FE 45263. 389 8. Marshall. mut rom, sae mt as 3 ROOM APT iL. 208% or OL _bath and sumporeh, We ral 1-9121., FOR SALE BY OWNER: LARGE 4 ROOM WU! REFRIGERA- house erate f Bf lo or tor, stove, $65. PE 2-7832. 2 blocr- « ROOM PRIVATE EN- Kitchens partially a “Beer trane: s. nished. PE * Mr) sen, PE 52003 FIVE ROOMS. LOWER DUPLEX. 91. 3 BEDROOM HOMES. $350 Near Eastern Junior High. Partly | DOWN, PERRY AND KETTER- fui . References Phone MY | ING, HANNAN, LI 44900. ea =|. ONLY $4,000 ~Grinking, MI 47602 me | Mey™ _ Be? gitrect, from builder ve. ao 5 es NO CHILDREN” ONDER 0 CHILDREN UNDER home in exclusty modern house tt miles north of Lapeer. 244 Barnes Rd uire rE $Sbe2. P.H.A. terms. 862 Emerson. FE | &-1 INCOME. ° HOUSES ON LOT 140x240 Lope yearly poe Paved road naa stores. ‘Priced down. EN. ranch subdiv- sion. Lake privileges 34148. aprRactivE 3 2 ROOMS AND Groun¢ floor close in. Adulte, FE 4-294 ATTRACTIVE FOUR ROOM APT First floor 947 W. Huron. THREE ROOMS AND BATH. FE 5-9696 DEI. RIO APTS. 3 rooms Vand. bath. stove and 2 BEDROOM MODERN HOME. and bath, adults. heated. FE |2 TOMERS through Classis fied Ads. Call FE 2-8181.|, NEARLY Lote BRICY. RANCH A bedroom: @ baths 27 ft. living reom. vat Saar warace. mane controlled doors, “% acre, land- scaped and fenced on vaved street near Woodward Bloomfield Town- ms. Owner , eT Cash or terms. rE 6 ACRES WEST SUBURBAN. MYER'S REAL ESTATE. FE By owner. \REACH CASH CUS- = opens, HE SP tiled basement. 2 car ga- — Bloom ce beat 7 oe Mirite J. Van Horn r. ae APT, SEPARATE INCOME 4 , a baths, gas > Seed eo Sion. Close in owner. FE 2-7236. MODERN HOUSE. 10 MILES “trom Pisher Bet Body. 0598 Dartmou BROWN DOWN — Brand pang bungalow. Exterior vad com come — Pull ae. well, sep- be Pin ch pee | Seine: wired kite en 6 interior studding ‘’Here is a real buy and you not be all your life paying for it. PRICE - y 3 room . bath. ofl rirewlater little home and you . can have terms S i ear a 4 ee] y tile DOWN—Little farm, 5 bungalow & 1'e car gar. Lot 65x = Lake area Carpeted liv- room, Vestibule entrance. Priced at only $9,500. $12,500 RANCH HOME — Attached breezeway and two car ger. fire- lace. basement. ) A. C. Pure. Well constructed home and almost an acre of land e is one wo! possessin, Owner leaving city. lifetime ‘tile roof. For rer tee! Mrs. Hoyt full particulars call FE 2-0640. L. H. BROWN, Realtor 1362 W. Huron FE 2-4816 Member Coop Real Estate Exch. Johnson FOR BETTER HOMES BLOOMFIELD HILLS Gorgeous brick ranch home bedrooms and den, lovely studio living room with ledge rock fire- lace, and cozy balcony, that s ideal for sewing room- or li- brary situated on beautifuly land- scaped 2", acre lot, priced at only $38,000 shown by appoint ment. WOULD YOU? Like to live on_an island on! 8 miles from Pontiac, nice room furnished cottage, on lot 60x180 ft, boat Included, a spot for those who love seclusion, full price $5,450 with wonderful terms. THE REST your life can be peacefully lot, lake privileges. owner ‘moving and will sacrifice for only §7.450 with terms. Evenings after 600 call Mrs, Snyder OR 3-1975. OFFICE OPEN 66 A. JOHNSON, Realtor 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 aes 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE WEST SIDE —— location just om Huron _ neet ne School. 6 large th Needs some = “fizing’ = $8,500 on terms A LITTLE GEM Comfortable picturesque, ¢ bungalow overlooking beautiful Walters Lake Large natural stone fireplace on ite bik room. I's car garage In good condition through- Lake privileges. §7,.000 on room |\ terme. | WARD FE. PARTRIDGE /RBAL TOR FE 2-8316 43 W) Huron 8t., Open Eve. 1 to 9 en West Side Colonial . 2 car garage An ction will disclose more e favorable particulars. Marg miss this sacrifice an ais Side Neat and clean five room home with basement, on paved street. cme room =~ and dining room carpeted. Stoker heat. A best buy at $8,450 with $1,450 down. Princeton Street Immaculate 5 room bunga- low with tiled bath, of} heat, everything owe tamity even an xpansion attic own. Todays best value First Street 1% stories, 3 bedroom home on excellent corner perce! Just % block to school. Full basement, Pioneer Highlands Featuring four year old brick with 3 days possession. Super Value An inspection will convince ou of the water hes oer prs ewes we ore THe 8 val of 0 with AY hr) gine Kampsen STORY B = 2-7425. _ heated. 3 2nd tem medern LOWER 4 ROOMS AND BATH. sohbet tn West side, now vacant. FE ¢-1206 four aod. “Walton, Bivd., close WEST SIDE. } ROOM AND BATH. | party’ who wints living quarters | Realtors FE 4-0528 _Couple only FE 5-2438. Facome ane Hid veclnces. 4260 8. Telegraph rv Rent Houses Furnished 35) soy 30 se FoR | Cooperative Real Estate Exchange 3 ROOM HOUSE. $35 PER MONTH NOTHING DOWN Scott Lake goes, 1 neoreoe, Ho OSE Will build two bedroom ouse| §,f7, modern home on large tot with basement on sour lot, Un- Ta uit shade “onion, finished interior. Small down pay-| rms., sunte ie eG 2 be for i $80 per Will bufld on my lot OR d-saoe | Plastered waits nicely cocere raved” ; my lots, 7 =aeny Ra. om heater car renee Rte melee 2919 ROWAN DR., WILLIAMS LK, BUILD NOW only $10,500 on terms. Call’ today. . In_ our Rent Houses Unfurn, 36| His Enates, Betimacs tree | Close to Downtown nite adn: Hiaaapdnned gf from our plans or yours, a Wn house, f0xi09 ot, ercial, ¢ ROOMS. pi a ea = ERBERT C. DAVIS | pest Jecation Can be “used for Se Eee 8024 Pontiac Lakd Rd. fiormaume™* © home. Call for ets. con” r , ae p.m. \equtty tm 7 modern house. I : 3480 bl: (built ‘im "1983." ‘Totel "nrice, ; | Paty, 14 of these 3 bedrm.. brick matic water. Full me nt. | oll “Gnd 3 acres | ‘Bots ‘ean txcetlent ‘oo ’ ent. | © RO rt tion. Plastered 5181 Hwy . yton Plains. lanr 34758 | Shim: Rd.| floors, full walls, pee oa Tnauire at Roceo’s mt | Pe oetoat,_ roll! emt” with partitioned HOUSE IN BEA aa 7 John 1K. Irwin nani Titian iC _9HE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 99800. 2 BEDROOMS, GAS HEA scabies te cent oe insurance. 121 W. Sheffield. Retiring? Babee 8 with plenty of trees and J - =. pay of this hetie 2 home are s a reared in Hoes basement. T ho ane --e tired water ‘heat located just @ mi. north tlac, All this ean be yours lor Just why not see this hg “Tittle — right now? Call for appolatm ITE BROS. seco sar Phone OR - Pst y or ey 3-1769 NORTH SIDE HOME Close to stores, schools bus. 3 bedroom and bath. uy Livine room with Thermopane window. iarge dinine room Includes storms, screens all Ve- netian blinds and carneting. Call owner. FE 2-'206 No Agents. 2 BEDROOM HOME WITH 4 lots. Price $6.200 with terms. cross {rom — Hieh 2864 Hartline L = . j Established 1016 IT's NICE! Suburban. 4 large rms and bath, fireplace. partitioned basement copper plumbing, oil heat, breeseway to double ga- . with berries FHA mortgage .er might consider smaller city home in trade. Phone tonight. MOVE RIGHT IN. Be the first gener of this new home. Tiled th, window brick tached 2-car , Large lot. terms COZY HOME. Among other well- kept homes. 4 rms. & bath with bap basement, gas heat ga- e. Paved drive and backyard is Newly paved street. schoo] city bus service nearby. 750, terms. fireplace, at- pps Urs: snd $8, NEAR LAKE ORION. 2% acres. 3-bedrm. home all 1 Full basement, garage with work bench and stove. Nicely landscaped lawn with outdoor grill. $13,060, terms. SEMINOLE HILLS. Quick posses- ston. Attractive }-bedrm. home careuda by er fine homes and neighbors Large ae rm, with fireplace, ‘ey bath ist tr. — lovely tiled bath with double wash stand on and garage. Beautifully to grade Tel-H u ron shopping center fhearby. Com information ‘witout obli- plete gation QUALITY BUILT HOMES BRICK naEce 3-bedrm. home all Full basement and for the low Custom built from Mode! home open 1-4 m or 6&8 pm. We arrange inancing, us for details no obligation. Consult and buy from Kent — serving Pon- tiae homeowners for nearly 40 years. oe tan ir ir }bedrm. home Modern kitehen $12,950, terms BA ch — Wr. high school, 42 ths, 2 entrances, 2 Ness 2 furnaces, street. Only $15 ACRES. One mile west of Pon- Ty houses, 2 nearly new, One }-bedrm home, select eek shade and hwy. Large site 3390x1320 a — te! subdividing. §29,- aed FRONTAGE 16 acres = rontage goes « © om tirement. Good soil. 61,960 FLOYD KENT, Realtor 2 W. Lawrence FE 5-6105 o Evenings Next to Cansumers Power ON CEDARDALE _ 3 bedroom buangaiow all newly decorated, 2 eatra iots tonal; FHA financed. Offered for less than the price of replacement at —, $12,000 without extra lots. one its reaellye Terms. bath. electric = aod of) hea Terms. This really nice. Call for appointment, ILLIS M_ BREWER 66 N. PARKE EM pe Fem 40)! TERFORD AREA & ROOMS 2 baths—basement house, 3 fam- fly. com $1,000 down. 3 bedroom rancn type attached eames. wu _ = trade for (; FO. M. ARBI. ‘E. T Realtor 6261 Andersonville Ra Waterford __Phon; OR 3-1268 3 “REDROOM ~ BRICK RANCH type Near — Lot 200x14 OR 3 room 2 car garage, ek vard on Pir foe icp ies ont Pirmoeth sa er e i ving im quiet sur-!. modern kitchen, picture | C COTTAGE FREE These two lots with total frontage 155 ft. are wort os ome suking price. Bylv bedroom cottage, Saoely fone sete breeze- way, | sao garage. Hot water — sto: and screens, En- Ci . * ABOUT HALF DOWN THESE EXTRAS TELL Stone natural ger all double closets with sliding doors,- alum- leges, Included. in City sewer, water. Nicely shaded. Quick possession, ’ TERMS THIS OWNER HAS replaced the furnace and water heater, remodeled the ritchen and bath, and generally reconditioned this large older home; then hb gothing left to do but live com- fortably tn this clean, square col- onial type house. Immediate pos- session. Double lot $14.200 $3,000 OR LESS DOWN COME 8EE IT REALTORS FE 45-0418 2383 Orchard Lake Rd. Op. FORCED SALE er's business forces sale of re Own bedroom modern bome. Perima- ter heat, Roman brick fireplace. newly redecorated Owner consider any down payment. $700 DOWN 2 bedroom Perry Lake. Total price a. includes furniture AN . MIS | Ph. Ortonville 132, Reverse Chgs. . FAST SIDE Pamilvy home on the best street this side of town 3 huge rooms down 2 —ee arom snou furmes ot] poses! peved drive. tenced lot, awnings, enetian blinds, enclosed front porch, only §3 000 down. R. J. VALUET, = 345 “Oakland Ave Co-operstive Real wotare ‘ps KNUDSEN West cntarban Near Elizabeth Lake, occupy, this new 44, rm. home with full basement. $1000 terms. Woodward Estate ready to Seeing Is Believing Bee this and you have selected our new home. 2 story fully fimished. Full with gas heat. Modern to minute, $1500 down, WM. H. KNUDSEN REALTOR 510 Pontiac State Bank Bid Ph. FE ¢4816 Eve FE 2-3: Templeton WATERFORD In the Village room odern. Ca tile bath i Mving basement, recreation arage. 1 block Cash to mort- sold to qualified down, -? bedroors: . Substantial discount for ce m ment, pew of} Price, $11, with -te’ K. L. Jempieton: Poe bak | gh ariy Rd. FE 44563 After 6 if no ans., call FE 2-0503 _or OR 3-1708 SALE INCOME PROPERTY. with of land small wit> te, eer acre, of pee +4 immons those fine west side Reatae! homes you w be oud to own. large aoe. a Iogear heat. Fenced back yard. Garage Man fine fextures too numer- ous menti n. Only $2,400 down. Call OR 3-1872. Phone OR mis or OR 3-2061 New 3 Bedroom Ranch hs gecren pd fey and large lot summer and winter. ru price $15,700 J. A. Taylor REA wah setae ranch, 2 laree . Bargain at “$3,400. - al aple Hills, OL, 6 @ ACRES AND 6 ¢ ROOM MODERR house. Cash or terms, 760 Se Lake Rd Located near Puner Body met off — Rd. Now vacant bungalow with wiilny, “ra room, Needs Cor prison . Lag xing door. Niece oa with ove for with ‘fruit trees, Payments $55 EY, BROKE ih ner FET ey Always & 1500 down, $45 wks ra 7 HEMPSTEAD, Large a, we. real pilaster, or., 1% Sg Soar ; LI 5-0143 aia | / {. ELIZ.-LK. ESTATES Nice 2 Bedroom Home, % ft. living & dining room, shaded lot, » ges, only $7 each priv Terms. PONTIAC LAKE Less than 1 block from the lake. 209 ft \3 Modesty priced = just $8880. Te .(R. HILTZ FE 5-6181 EAL ESTATE OPEN 9-0 1011 W, HURON CLARKSTON Reng quod “ng Nothi like i. Call ewe sii 180 seo Ty mort sage. WHITE BROS. EALTORS sent Dixte Hw: Phone OR 31872 ot OR 3-176 DON’T WISH FOR MONEY! Make it easily | throash Classified Ads. To sell, rent, buy, swap, hire, dial FE 2-8181. Rin gore ioraite Z ; oath up. . Boivsows don ‘down. 3 es gapes under house ne uae ee only. Pate after pm, Call 15, WANTED Small farm near Rochester (10 to acres) with nice ranch type home. We have a purchas- who will go to i with half down. ie was transferred to Flint. There's will all copper or | plumbing.) to Oktawa Hills—Brick Beauty surrounds this home with its 2 bed landsee) shrubs ‘an pera: nial flowers. 6 “feulghetul rooms, decorated. in, well-to-wi a wi ‘oni ake . Price regneed tet quick sas: Easy FHA terms Watkins Lake Area up. To include carpeting 3 "rooms . Pull basement. ou “New cyclone fence. ‘HA terms. fernase. Price $12,800, Auburn Heights - @ room 1% story modern bungalow. 1 bedroom down, and 2 rooms end up. a, pine recreation room, ges furnace. 2 car g4a- rage Sih workshop. Price $10,500 terms. JOHN KINZLER REALTOR 670 W. Huron 6t ‘If no answer ‘phone Coceertits teal Estate Exchang $700 DOWN ___ For Sale Houses . 3 Large 5 room and bath with | and MODEST MAIDENS mm) Ds & my Ny RS oa RY Xe n ¢ nt ‘N “eet : wy ti Sites a of aay PRLAN — op rewrote by Jay Alan Y “It's real love all right. He’s wearing the sweater I knitted ' for him!” hot water heater. Situated on 2 jots, on the wih new paved streets. Needs some interior finishing. R OD. RILEY. BROKER FE 41157 and __sFE_7-008 6 ROOM HOUSE, LOCATED IN beautiful Ottawa Hilis subdivision 2 bedroom and ‘» bath up, living room, dining room kitchen, hes room or den down. 2 car under house, Will contract) Shown ty “epp0l only. FE 42570 or after 6 Call FE 32-6215. GAYLORD EAST SIDE Excellent three bedroom home spection of this home will ie tr te BALDWIN SCHOOL DISTRICT Income home, ¢ irom _ owner oiment p.m. and three rooms ba - up. Resoment_ ps avea aol Quick possession, Only 96,676. Terms. a MODERN ctive bomc, three nice bed- end & hes 9 dining tom: — ot trees Don't miss see- v ‘tia, 700. LAKE ORION Above averave home. Master bed- ry on ie ast second paved treet ata poren, etreet, 2.600 Call LAWR CRTORD FE 4-9584 Realtor 136 E. Pike &t. Co-operative Real Estate Exchange WE bata | BUILD ON YOUR LOT x23 room house. a down 845 poten edd Red Horse “an NEW 4 Ye Boone iS AND BATR. EAST side White onlv. 87200. COTTAGE YE" r ag wh 7 “wi iv home 54 - nehland cive, Sear Bubdiy Pie east side of town LAKE HOME owner. vase Bald Eagle Lake. Orton- 4 ROOMS AND ‘8B BEDROOMS IN ORA pole basement. ol) eee 2 fireplaces, large lot, $16 000 Reasonable down AUP = * fates to fright party. OR GI HOMES FULL BASEMENTS 3 BEDROO: cious lovely livable rms. out. Beautiful kitchen and bath, 2 veel oak re situated on lots 56 cent down to Gr "consider cauliea in trade, | SIX LOVELY ROOM OWNE! TRANSFERRED Attractive white frame home. stt- uated on nice corner lot with curb and pavement) Two car garage, nice Nvine room with fireplace. bedroom and bath down. 3 bedrooms and half bath uo Ex- cellent basement with oll A.C. heat — asphalt, tile floor Water 8 other outstanding sncointmente $12 oS. - QI RESALE OUTSTANDING BUNGALOW Attractive five room exe | with stairway to large focr =O a ean ct oak wall and ath. Lovelv Lichen and @ base- par excellent with and landscaped screens and nicelv 0.500, wn. $1 EAST SIDE Se 975 3 BEDROOM! Home built ‘in 1042 with pre oak floors. plastered walls. two bed- one beautiful dormitory ee up. babel carpetin: an basement with, of “heat A sca sound value Ngee BUNGALOW $1,000 DOWN 6 Dandv grey shingle “punealow with eutomatic heat and hot water | For Sale Houses 43 For § Sale Houses 8 FOR COLORED Z bedroom home. Tile bath, well- area kitchen and dinette, large notty pine recreation room and bar. New gas furnace and Oasina- tor. Aluminum siding on house garage Nicel landscaped. _Call after o FE .-7658. $750 DOWN 2 bedroom —— nace. Lot 2 payments only Pr buys this cule as @ button modern bed home. warge screened except fur- 40, Monthiy ROOM HOME Modern with 3 large lots. Fruit trees privileges on White and a Lakes. ly: $7500 with $2500 own. ATTENTION NEWCOMERS Here is a completely furnished modern 2 bedroom- home. m- . fortabie furniture. , electric refrigerator and stove, automatic washer, 2 larg* tots, lake privi- leges. Possess: at once. Com- ach price, $11,200 with moderate Dorothy ny der Lavender 3140_w. Muroa TOR ye 244i $150 DOWN. MODERN 4 ROOMS. Lake privileges. MA 5-0471. Pontiac Lake Front our summer in breed New asonry C vear round bome 3. Bedroom Laree jiving tz e walls Lot 62200 Immediate Possession WM. A. KENNEDY RE.LTOR OPEN EVENINGS ‘TIL 8 3007T_W_ Huron FE_ 4-350 Laree fenced lot and storms and screens Consider car or equity in small home as down pavment WE SELL - We TRADE ~ DORRIS & SON REALTOR FE 41587 For Colored Families Reautiful 2 bedroom with unfin- Lake Front Attractive remodeled home Drayton Woods New ranch home with brick and sluminum siding, 3 bed- large recreation avees vo fireplace, attached 2 car ga- lot 120x157 with, trees: 22,900 terms. Sylvan Lake Front Attractive 8 room femily room of Pine Lake Privileges Brick ranch ee in limed oak, * teomereter, “2 car garage 1002150, $23,975. Rochester Beautiful new #8 room homie on ist floor. Carpeted living eee innstnn ro me Spa Leo stone fireplac kitehen and gutivities reses in mahogany, maid's room, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, Ther- modor range and race disposal, ing. Fruit ment with Pj Stu Ee See ao Roy. Annett, Inc. REALTOS 28 £. Huron TORS eral 3-T103 __Open_Ev: & Sun, 1 to 4 Lake Front Only $2,000 Down Located beautiful Maceday Lake, this cory 3 gp on bunga- low has rate room Pitstle tie bath, convenient sre meg —— se yon elle ida ! BUD" = a ae 61201 FE 54-8004 it with | urved — full basem: eas peat, par i -7° os or “| = to sell on OFFERS kine. Mrs. USSELL & NOTT Indian Village By = ya om iv 3 bedroom home in Secelions condition. Living do ? up. Pull basemen room 13<22, fir , ves her Paved crock. ortees tibule, modern h rel settle esta’ b t nook. . terrace, aluminum “ bath, < SB woreee to floored attic gas furne ee, recree- N tion space car bon, Picesession. 415,780, ! | J ( = terms. 5 — BUNGALOW plastered walls. oak floors. try basement. «" forced air heat, ‘mn the Schoo! district, home well worth .he asking peice bac apa with terms, see it ay A LAKE FRCNT? We have several nice to — es cane and brick, 5 Fooms to 12 rooms, some Boy 4 from #80000. we will be glad to well who wi answer your need, call rae 6 FAMILY Off north Perry $312.00 per month moome, full basement. of) heat, on paved street excelent —— every ment, et $16,500 00 w, down, it won't last ong, see it today : Russell Young REALTOR . reves ® Sun. FE ¢09612 MIDDLE STRAPS LAKE 2, BED- ey 0M, EM 3-344. 2 FAMILY INCOME fenmtty some fn tn Pontiac. *F ——— oe he this is pte -age GIROU xX "k FRANKS onran. “ “aren ESTATE 4395 Di . seeh 2? us i - ee a $7380'00. $700 00 49.00 per oe ia be’ MD - ces them toda : out Bald- to on Rut- $2 W. Huron &t Co-operative Real Estate Exchange Even isi) poe Ora rative Real REALTOR 83 N. Lesage: oo Open | AA mood you “pu NEW FHA MODEL HOME 3 BEDROOMS with large living and ure wind h — e ensts t.. west of Joslyn Ave. GI RESALE room and ent corner jot close to schools, and bus. $3, down and per month, OFF BALDWIN 4 bedroom, ful) basement, eat, ecreened in porch lot — bar) terms SCHRAM FE 5-5091 or FE 5-9471. lf no answer ph. FE and Bunda: REA Tor MODERN BUNGALOW Near Wisner School 2 bedroom ee “toy yw ene room, n one oy ment with oil poten heat. jarage too. — lawn, 87.950 with $1,500 down JAMES K BLVD. Lake and park privileges Dandv 22 «ff. reereation room attractive brick 1%» story buncalow Spaciou: living room, inetle and streamlined kitehen, Ceramic tile bath Oi) I car earace 900. terms heat. course. ‘ and extra larwe lot. $17 PHONE FOR SHOWIN! ~HUMPHRIES FE 2-0474 GATEWAYS to HAPPINESS COLONIAL BEAU Ty WITH PLENTY OF STYLE Bpence Street in —. Houstn Addition, immaculate 6 room bath, 3 bedroom a vestibule entrance with mw a gjeont Py joset off the ly sited dining room, compact r nm, full basement, of] heat, =. i a. landscaped shrubbery) 3 cat garage ¢, paved Offer 5 rou ~ ine NETONBOR- FIRST OFFERING gn eee me acre garden. 6 ariy one acre reais . fully tneul) 4 bedroom home. ae} room tod 18212 ft. hiving room, Vene- 4 linds, storms a tam” setting, Oitered at 450, moLaas coke, THE SPOT A SMALL FAMILY. NEAR ROCHESTER SE ae So BA e sr room, pa’ ——- to two car TB om erage. $10,075 termes. CA Us TODAY. Trade INSURE IT MAHAN REALTY CO.. REAL i Ertete Exchange Eves, “ta 6, Sun, 10-4 FE 2-0263 we gt a —To Sell-—T T?—WE'LL 7 For ‘Sale »_Honges 43 . For Sale Houses 43 _! TERMS 6 family i. acres, 6 room, modern. $7,250. room, 3 $650 DO Buys this cute tHac's walk distance Body. ment, full ba only $6.500 $750 DO located with 1% baths Hosea ana on a dow ? bed area we have a and kite and also large Only : And extra lot sorbed oe house. Only $ sma}; moves you into . One Edw. M. Stou Tl N, Saginaw 8t. Open Eves home, located on rated, Bchoo) bus 000 STOUT S Best Buys Today ° WN two bed- of Fisher a full base- furnace and large tot * rdeal price WN For this 3 bedroom home in Keego Harbor and utility room. Living room, dining nd stool rooms a full Maths up Only $7950.00 NORTH SUBURBAN Located in the Gakland lake nice 2 bed- room home with part bath. House has large living room hen and utility room extra lot 1200:00 dn. on this one. LAKE PRIV ILEGES With this 2 + Sdedl home in 60 $4990 down payment thig lovely little 3 room home west of Pontiac in lake area. House has water and reptic in and stool ssday. lavatory. See this t. Realtor Ph. FE 58165 Ti 8:30 : plant. rms, information PERRY ss Seo ey Brice: ‘Lose. IN 3 bed en, bath, full red kiteh- new $7,060, al) Perry C. m Price, NOTT, REALTOR FE 4-5005 New 4 calow. Just 2 $600 DOWN bedroom ranch type bun- left. Never so much = 8 little. Call today = Phar again Gale foes Pobad price $6,650 month, CRAW FO “ORD AGENCY ‘3% W. Huron +1540 Eves, MY 3-7085 _ oft 6 ROOM HOUSE ON 54 GAGE _Perry, » pacino —s ba ear = INCLUDING TION: PER MONT A. ee Income ses Set ir. 102, FE 5-35 Beautifully Geacenet. so x “TOE. BRYANT Real Estate on ——— EOE _ 00088 00 DOWN FINISH EXTERIOR PTOM & W HURON __OR | Mia OR FE Brick Ranch $17,900 St. 1 bDivck west block er al, Shpotat ir 178 PARTI- INTERIOR ROUGH PLUMBING AND IC ON YOUR LOT. 850 S acres. i oe int. arge down me! ——— eo houses, “Mel tty, FE West Sub this cool mod 2 for 2 houses for . GILES NOW The right time to ca on this love the east gown. hORA only. Are alw ~~ ke this for ner = excellent 16,000. mouse ole sauare peo mes sible. A beautiful 3 with lake privileges. You heard right. floors. GILES urban Enjoy Be sure to see this real 1 e price of better Call for appoint- REALTY CO. Is Nand see this the enst a “ Is at hand to make a good deal 2 bedroom home on carpeting Greg oe ® a and. dias Ry appointment # interested in buying a po family. 2 8 heat cor- dition. On THE rest OF lovely —_ 5 tan ee Sn ‘bedroom ——a bs corner of 5. va, BY ove: MODERN CounTRy home. One acre all kinds of fruit. Lake Privileges Hag thannodinn Real Estate ‘a mechanes ? r FE ear Co-operative Real 1 Estate E Exchange 4286 Dixie Hwy. 22 W. Lawrence F. No realtors. Leach Ra. Vacant 5 room with vestibule Cass Lake Privileges. Newly remodeled 6 rom Oe un@alow . welv eled Bar Gas heat. Pene yard, oh 9s 97050. $950 down 865. per Lovely scene oo on poaustifel i wale re wool F tnosapog Storms and screens. 1 car ga- jase. “10.800. Peres RIDGEWAY om Bi 1 = = Jj NEAT. CLEA $-ream modern bun-alow. 2 - bed- rooms living room. dining room kitchen cond bath. Boasting a full Laoe dry. basement with matic Take advantase per cent interest on the bal- ance. CONTEMPORARY. LIVING —at its. verv best is vrom- ised in this reall” delight- ful 3-bedroom rancher. Its large living room with 1 complete wall of windows opens on a 30° screened pa- tio. Fireplace? Certainly! The verv finest «f like-new carpeting 1s included. Pine most discriminating buver By appointment olease. ENJOY THE MANY COM- FORTS—of this attractive well built epee burea- low Loe: tn . beautiful Bllvercrest, Subdivision, on nice shady well-tendecaned lot. Large screened-in vorch overlooks pleasant back Has oak floors plas- : and tile beth. ether features for ~ comfortable livine 6 it soon RAY O'NEIL, Realtor’ 75 W. Huron oon iJ 9 Phone 3-7103 Li) SELL OR TRADE. 4 ROOMS. beth. garace — a vard for _house_ in Pontiac. OR 3-2863. ayocpaseuret HOUSE AT 245 M15. Ortonville. 2 bedrooms and bath. elertric aoa an beach and an $1,000 wn, ee. ened take. MaArket 4-2042. oar LARS BLOOMFIELD bedrms.. den. ee window. 3 recreation ci Ai > Dr. abe y acres, 120 3 ROOM COTTAGE, WITH FRONT back ne creened Loba=" th oth id a e er side Lind 428__ Lowe: porch. Snade : r ter- soap psy oe be had completely fur- nish venient down — pay- er cat erme “rranged. Owner —_EM_ 3-41" LOWER STRAITS LK. ern Inke SALE OR TRADE: HOUSE AND en ed Must be sold by July 20th. PAUL KERN. Realto 31 Pontiac eves, and OWNER’S BEAUTIFUL MODERN year Brick 8 ame} Mave, _——- con: or other busines lightful for homes @t just $60 per f% Terms. SYLVAN LAKE lot 75 «x 220. icated j ied K iteven Sandy beech. 88,500 on terms WARD E. PAL IDGE | Oxford._Mich, REALTOR * 2-8316 43 Ww. oes a. lot on jake. Clare County. FE 1ON COTTAGE POR i ogg RE call LAKE sale, Middle Straits Lake 5 Room modern year round home, close to ¢. Ss beach. Price of includes boat and motor, 85 Foot Lake Front Ranch home built im 1949 tn exce . 2 bed- rooms thi et lake level. Paneled kitchen dining space, ed = =6orpcreation room with outside , wl tached «e ment, aped en # Reasonably priced at $16,800, terms. Cass Lake Front rope. erteed at $96,500, Roy Annett, ‘Inc. REALTORS 3% £. Huron FEdera! 3-7193 Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 PRIVILEGES bearoom, modern, 2 lots, Newly rated By owner. Terms. EM | Ln ee ~ WATKINS LAKE - Porced Lats ot} heat, Pull base. arge vse bedroo screened in porch. Puli — foo te 300 fn tot ‘ gates e x Oakland pea at $14,400 with __EADD' o Inc. | For Sale Resort Prop, 44A PINE ——e RESORT furnished 2 >| REAL ESTATE Priced to sell | SALE OR TRADE: HOUSE | HUMPHRIES ROOM YEAR AROUND COTTAG = 7" Lake REALTOR FE 2-0474| Glarkston "na. Rocetions “tecatios 83 N. Telegravh Oven Evenings for subdividing. Call J. A. Taylor. Co-Operative Real Estate Exchans: Realtor FE 42544. ES ON U. WITH # Acnme cane oe 2 ing (20 ACRE PARCEL LOCATED cabins, 4 unit “notes ony mohers within short distance of Pontiac. end furnished 5 th of Well shaded and suitable for Grayling, Mich. ‘One ered development * Helene Handled tneas. Priced to sell. dee propert With only $850 d owner. Mr. Aubrey Waimeiey, Grayling, Mich Edw. M. Stout. Realtor Tl: N. Saginaw Street Ph. FE 5-8165 pen Eve. ‘til 8:30 100 ft Tittabawesse River, Good inting & fishing, elec- tricity, reasonable- Good wel Room build more cabins. H Mc 113 Clarence &t _ Holly, Mich. Sale Suburban Prop. 45A. —eN COLONIAL HOME W'TH green se. FE 5-592). ROCHESTER = rooms and bath eeewery WAInAT cee atic of] ‘urnace, garag chicken house built in’ 1944 ear village limits on % acre, Full SMALL family home 5 rooms and floor, 3 partially nisi full basement with lovely trees Convenient to | shopoine and schools. Price only | $0500 with terms | Macrice Watson, Realtor! otere 6-0371 — Garage on 2 bo! Ludlo close to park school. $1500 JUDSON PARK Beautiful home sites available. Model _ ‘tod | OL 1-731 — OL 2-0801 —- MY 2-5581 SCENIC 4 ACRES | @ room bome on 4 acres of land | Home is modern with oi] furnace. | attached garage Larve a trees. Chicken coop. Ortonville | area. e $8.500 | | MEAGHER REAL ESTATE | OA 48-3122 46 | | 1 Office cor Adams & Tienken | For Sale Lots CHOICE LOT OTTAWA HILLS Building at rear of lot. Suitable for garage and work shop with acre oe porch — landscaped. _22118 Crescent Lake Estates _ 77 N. Saginaw St oO Ranc> style home. 53 x 28: 4) pen Kves. till 6 30 @ 8 bedrooms. bath. larce | utility room cutomatic ga, base | _ a boare heat tot 240 x 126. Here is| = i as Ay $12.500 with | 10 ACRES ROCHESTER A nice 3 alec ie bathe Be Base- | m4 %. Lawrence FE 5-6105 |LAKE ORION. ® ACRES, CLOSE | 66 Park Bivd Lake Frontage FOR Call Rutledge. OR 3-1111 CL. ARKSTON AREA 12 ACRES 5 AVAILABLE NEAR; > Oniv “% mile off |» 6 ACRES Beautiful fevh ros site < | east of Clarkston on bi jack- | e of the few reels left in this wait on this one Only $3500.00 with terms, $5250 For this 10 acre parcel located east of Pontiac with lovely hill- top eran site. Located 2 miles from city limits this piece gives you country solitude with small transportation costs. Only $600.00 | dn I-dw. M. Stout. Realtor PH. FE 5-6165 Vacant wooded parcel north of ——Pontiac. Plenty of saw timber to build your home and outbidgs. $2,950, $450 down. FLOYD KENT, Realtor im eves ext to Consumers wer in | $1.000 down | WALTER GREEN RUTR (M24) Opp. yp. depot we have four 25 acre parcels on ® private 20 acre lake. nty of lake frontage with each parcel. Located just 8 mi. hapten Selling at $9950 each Cal) for ap WHITE BROs. Dee mes $660 Dixie Hwy. Phone OR 3.6] ar ‘OR 31769 FARMS AND ACREAGE FE 4.0003 Beautifus ot, = erty | ton River 200, a r mo. Business For Sale Farms 48 on ine Le .. $800. | ——~~~~-~-~-~---- -~-- PPO $100. down., $10 r Mo. Building ts or park lots . $100. down, PRIME INVESTMENT $10 per mo, Lake privilege lots Subdividing possibilities. °. $300., $100. down, per mo. mile road frontage some on All lots to have rene privileges pavement. 140 A. level. Now with park and recre fa- set wu e beef cattle cilities. Hurry these won't last Charm 3% pagh owner's . Bee A) g at ee Bar- home, remode! in 1 ber Shop on Rd. or Leaf @ $63,750, or will sepa’ iy at call FE 58. $260.09 per sere —, . BSITILDINOG SITE cent we owner 240 ft. on pavement. 600 ft. es other” rests. PAUL % mi. from Soran $2. A. KERN. Recher Nn Oak- term: MA 5-410 Ave DRAYTON WOODS _ lea ~~¥OR CO SStORED FAMILIES 2 parcels out Prenklin Rd bevond city limits. Corner 52x152 Priced $2,000, A strip 387.8552, Price $2260 2 corner lots near Whittier Schoo! 80x120. Price $2,000. $350 down. ag information call Mrs. Spears. LARGE CORNER LOT. 190 X 128. ecenes in Perry orm, 10 miles of Pontiac MM, Call area: 63R5. Can seen any night after 6 p.m. FOR BETTER HOMES SEE CHEROKEE HILLS! like the advantages of close-ir, eo > | location — Elizabeth Lae . 1 mile Ww of Telegraph Rd CARL W. BIRD, Realtor 503 Community Nationa) Bank Bhig. PE 4421) «| 1 CORNER 1 LOT, & 1 ADJOINING located on Milamons _MUrtey 3-3809, Clio, as 10 acres with rent Ca CRAWFORD AGENCY FE 4-1549 37085 ) ZONED COMMERCIAL pte Sun MA 5-3703. bo, ACRES. & ROOM MODERN A limited number of excell tent | “nom barn cow barn. silo, lots sti) available in. ete “ie miles from Pontiac, only beautitur subdivision Lectoties ve | $7,000 down restrictions. PHA wes. Con-| PAUL M. JONES REAL 3 ESTATE ce Ga one 832 W. Huron Ph 4-3505 OWNEr LEAVING arate HOTMES“BART TRAM 120 acres. 12 room home. laree 4392 Dixie barn Rosell ho'e 71 head of cows _on_3-is0 Eves OR 3-0006 from Orinnvite | oo 3 miles | 000. 58.500 dow HOMESITES PAUL M JONwotrorrr | Lg Pe | and triserater a 4 a Munro "Bleetric Co Wweo W /uron DINING SUITE. 10 PC. | PRICE $45. Complete Will sell poapereceiy. China buffet ext. table 6 chairs and server 07 E. aple St. 4-63092. diekooasy $110. DISHWASHER WESTINGHOUSE portable. On casters $75. Dress my adjustable. new. $15. MI 4-5) DEMONS? Ho ATOR Spey double basket French fryer, 83 Munro Electric. 1060 _ Huron. DAVENPORT. GAS RANGE. DIN- ing table and 6 chairs mattress items 334 NORGE ERETRIGERATOR i_condition. DEEP FREEZE | 14 CU. FT. $90. | 2-3656 | EI LECTROMASTEN STOVE, 840. 129 Bass 88 NOBILITY A pACCORDIAN. ate Eee . 2 for $15 DRYER. FA- mous name brand, slightly marred. Exceptional value. Michican Fiu- __orescent. 393 Orchard Lake Ave. Le ae up to 50 per cent. 5 Creakfast set, $15. j Coll spring, $5 | China cabinets. Lalas oe Huron at Saginaw St. Cuper's PA epey oh von for PE 40541 mar “ne ay ite “operate Latatidinnel, Hiren 4512 Dixte | with equipm poo eee WALLED LAKE: 230 Barnston, | years old Onlv 3 owners in pony last 25 vears. (Thev've all (Next to the bank). MA 41584. retired) A challenging op- a a portunity which imchudes all eoulpment. $8,000 in stock Mortgage Loans 54 all real estate, includine BR es plush apartment on sec : floor. $23,000 down Owner LOW INTEREST $23, would consider 1 floor home tn Boos area as vart vay- ment. Bateman & Kampsen Unitm choateceese aon — H. G. PETER ‘SON. 1310 Pontiac Phone FE tted ‘unds for = family eled | State Bank Bide. 5-8406 or FE 54-6772 Realtors FE 4-0528 377 8S. Telegravh Eves & Sun. or Real Estate Exchance . TO SELL peas “Pantmipoe ts THE _TO SEE.” / __ wait WELL ESTABLISHED BEAUTY Owner must sell because LOANS ON HOUSES — IN OAKLAN 9600 to $ = = Apatorh tI 1.500 modern homes. not modern. oe ny, 2. On homes . On pokey — WATIONAL BUILDING PE 44729 of child consider part ser MUiberrs i or MUlberry Swaps iT HOME rapher who wants FARMALL SUPFR_C. all investm required. For por Sones ? gang 14 In. plow. 8 ther information c ft doub'e disk trade for late = m: oick and cash 61TY 4 de “berg APT SIZE GAS BTOVE. Sale Land Contracts 52 2 PER CENT DISCOUNT. BAL- ance S 6.500- Payabie at $60 montb- ly. 6 per cent interest per annum to vou $4.960 Secured by EQUITY 35 FORD ‘5 TON < 2 eaireon Home Laree custom cab Radin and white 2 PER CENT DIECOUN? Balence model, OR eezf aften@on Payable at 050 monthly Cost to vou %3 775 red by | ‘ee suburban home Lake saraene 73% Pre “CENT DISCOUNT Bal- - sree or $225 peoane rest. Secured 20% DISCOUNT Present balanc> on contract $5200. Payments %52 ner ™ 6 wer cent interest, Cost to vou $4160 Secured by za o new 4room low with full basement. Ex- celent investment FE 5- | REVERSIBLE “WINDOW FAN FOR __g00d shotgun vr cash. |}. ACRES, MODERN | Sores 10 miles from Pontiac, for small Pas $6,200. Pavable at $60 month- Colorado, New Mexico, Utah or Iv 6 oe cent interest ner annum Arizona. W Box Ne. 10, Pon- | to Ad x4 *05.00 Secured by tiac Press. room bunm ; POR ‘47 NASH NEEDS WORK. FOR se es Ch rn Pott | motor or boat. posed cheap, FE Ask for Mr. Clark §-2424 or FE 8-1149. = 1343_W. Huron Open_ Evenings. SEARS 1 FORNA\ ACE 20 IN. rg 8, eater Ww tank 4 SS oe ful of oil, cotton mattress. For smal] piano vacuum ‘e701 subur- ween 8 a.m. 2 noon. EL iat ROWBOAT AND “TRAILER. | | ] | $9 95 |New tnnerspring peanresees $18.50 ELECTRIC. RAPOw ~ NEw Fou: burner model <7 value $169 Slightly raemed | pare id paged Pluorescent _Ave eect cue RANGE NEWEST orescent. 393 Ore L _Ave ae PREW Y ELECTRIC | RANGE Med size Excellent con- mn 290 k man- EY SHELVADOR REPRIO- erator, 8% cubie ber automatic defrost, ireezer chest, =, bal- ance at $15 per month. dry washer, liste model, ca Terms. MY 3.9711 DETROIT JEWEL GAS STOVE. __Good condition. FE 4-2406 “EXPANSION SALE _ On ell new and used furniture New cotton mattresses. | aut feed pl Ged electric pect $19 95. ios Oaisiee table Captain chair Hic’ Easy spin ances $35 2 pe. sectional living room suite, ria size electric stove, $39 ta top gas range. Ana ted Aen | for your home Wa exchange. Come in peel be convinced. OAKLAND FURNITURE 104 8. Saginaw FE 25523 EXTENSOLE DINING TABLE, MA- $20, $29 | rE 3-153. NICE 6 PIECE ats “ROOM suites OA 8-3600 after 5 v.m. NEW AND USED FURNIIURE. Twin size beds $°95 Sofa bed $19.50. Dav chair, $24.50. New getaver ae $17.95 complete hair $6.95 Chin ¢ tinge ‘ 50. Television stand $3.9 5 Electric up Ga: stoves $15 up sectional $19.50. Refrigerator $20.50 Love seat $29.5" New cot- son mattresses $11.95 New inner- 7 95. Elec- 95. Bovs Bike $9 50 $3.05 Mird cage $1.95. R WA Next to Farmer's Ga Station OIL HOT pWATER HEATER. 48 _Seneca. FE_2-4148 PENNY PAINT SALE. House vieres as = socodsvecne G208 2nd gal eecscseetecnce 01 Two pat Hse erence ecccccsee 03.00 Rubber base paint. gal. ,.... 83 80 on nilegty Scobey or ‘pap $3.90 LOOR SHOP Open 9-0 99 S Saginaw St PHILCO LCO REFRIGERATOR. $50. 143 pac arin GAS STOVE. $25. FE 545-8975. 2 PIECE e+ LIVING ROOM suite. OR SS LAST YEAR'S 1054 models. One of America's best brands. Perfect, new, guar- anteed for 5 years Buy a new refrigerator for a little more than & used machine. Michigan Flu- _orescent 393 Orchard Lake Ave. RUGS 8x8. 10x10 RUNNER 3x13 _pads, brown, ). FE 46644. RCA_ ‘CONSOLE TV. 1244 IN. SET and cabinet in excellent condition. $45.00 OR 3-2039 _ 6pm < a DMIRAL COMBINATION, ie * WALTON TV Walton, Cor. _Josiyn _FE2-2257 REFRIGERATOR, DINING $30; D suite $25. nlatiorm ‘ocker. new. $20 daven enport, $15 Miscel. laneous items FE 5-2766 oe 3 NORGE REFRIGERATOR. ~ SALE ~ washer ets and up. model Hoover, $49.95. — Philco range. regular $239, ” $178 05. = Naor model freezer, was $420.95 “CRU ME ELECTRIC 3465 Auburn | Ra Le 4-3573 SPEED QUEEN WASHER WITH Sar n 106 FE end aes Iss 4 dr. chest 15x27x35 $14.95 headboard Hollywood bedframe ‘1. etal) $ 895 ahs —_ or pee spring. 34.50 value. . ; $24 Student degk . wns Sliding door cabinets $295 uo We carry a comaiete line of finishes for painted furniture; Acme. ros.. Nu-Ename! PICK & PAINT STORE 143 Oakland Ave PE 5-0562 Terms Free _ bapa (SPECIAL ae ES O RAND | NEW ota TERNATIONAL VESTER” FREEZE! 16 beoteninn 100 6 OFT. MODEL KING BROS. CREDIT TERMs = PE 1112 UR I-H OBALER _PONTIAC _RD. AT OPDYKE a! as, FLOOR x12 | Teversible ru Tus. 50, FE 4-6125 9X12 RUG, $10. CUTE DINETTE porno Pras barely mal sro ace NE OGasiP BENGE 7 rome a chairs, ONE P B el 2s we Wall e.| LaBaron ence. 08 4-2412. Hl TRON. FLECTR IC vmRANOE. Dt are goat m ae Soe “0 FE elv r. excelient c tion. $120. FE 5-4561, 255 W. Long- | THOR babes Aba eg fellow, _ pemp po timer. 681 | ( TAYK TYPE VACUU ft CLEAN- _E “Pourth. pe ge pe ‘howd att-chments. | TWO 9x12 RUGS $10 AND $25. 27 9 FE a FREE USED WASHER, GOOD F RUNNING Seaton crt mara | Satin eS * arner . 3040 Willett’ Pontiac. FE ¢oeel USED . FOR SALE GUARANTEED, | RE- TRADE-IN DEPT. ei + ew ewe P Lounge chal 96. washers ..,... $39.95 uD | Gas oe i os Ream Siesy 2: S48 S| beth reste at Roy’ 96 Oakland. “ ‘ Senstek some c Fine furniture, Irwin din- ing room; beautiful sofa; decorator chairs; lamps; electric stove and refrig. ; and many other items. By appointment only. FE 2-5696. | HOOVER ~ VACUUM. LIKE NEW. $1495 New Hoover upright and tank, . Bags, ri 06s = makes. Open eves. aut _956 Myrtle, Huron 8 Pc. Gi wot pamieaa BOOS suite, OF 29002, LINOLEUM AND PAINT ¢ bean) SALE 4% ft. wall tile 8e ft. ss ae 850, race New sation 271 Baldwin — Lots of Parking _ = $1.80 et et” ry "washing machine or Son of equal value. FE “1 CHEV _sell 1 TON PANEL trade for car of ll OR_3-5077. w ILL oval value or mos. cent 4 discount. al Sie % to handle, R J. VALUET, ‘Realtor aw. M. Stout, Realtor Tl N. Saginaw St. PE 5-8165 Open Eves ri 8:30 ROCH -HESTER, Ve ICH. UPRIGHT PIANO FOR pz RUG | or sewing machine VIOLIN CASE AND oa WORTH 4-2847. 'NE | . aitor will trace for piano, bs a. 7m een Fe) ._ oF _22 auto. pistol PE 5-412. _ Phone FE 3-7103 or FE 5-7292 |'46 HUDSON BOAT AND TRAIL- F | Co-operative Real Estate Exchance el ph — Lh serie Leagan Spee -. |_Ford truck. 651 E Peurth. WILL TRADE AUTOMATIC WASH- or olekun Sale Household Goods 57 POPPI PLE PEPE RP oe Tie eRe = Money to Loan 83) "raat tmahs, nant Sidra ot (State Licensed Lenders) Bout SAN TTHING re NANT LEA ETRE | Bed dation ie, wp one at $24; refrigerators. $25 up; ranges & elec. $5 up; dede sizes LOANS sd atte, teh eh iS’: cbecte. wee & mses: 66 iy Pe | voalsco, ivi [Tove sateen "sth.0e tot Ge 30 eo LawREnce 0" z ee ine teow suites $1950 up. Many TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN. vr for me i APEX AUTOMATIC WASHER. 3 Geiness $0603 | «a pereview zn on | _¥ts. old, $30. MA 4-1711 Co-operative Real Estate. Brchange seeks for a hewk gad nese eo (Lamcleumi, Snl2...., $2.00 Oven 9: an’ wn equal value. OL SURPLUS FAINT Seine tanoo 1.0 000 S N WILL TRADE 1948 30 FT. TRAIL White Enamel |... 2022 ).. $1.98 _ $3, oe DI COUNT — en | ¢t im A-1 condition for equity in , rt ‘Limofeum AP NOP RAEECDe bod Ete PET, ee wt er | Asphalt "Tle sn a ar ance $14, ith ments of RILEY, BROKER arold’ s Paint & Lino. tise per me. a6 Der cent tne PHONE FE 4115 and FE. 10006 ie LIVING ROOM SUITE, MODERN- istic design Must be seen to be sopreciated. $395 value $165. Fac- tory irreguiars, Michigan Flu- —orescent, 383 Orchard Lake Ave. Lord’s Specials : pe. dinette set — Used TV from $24.95 Hide-Bed from sis 95 7 Used gas stoves Lord's Furniture and Appliances Huron 8t. FE 4-0583 ‘where a weigiey's Used To Be" 9x12 LINO, aus: —— & dresser Hoover 1 ot RUG GREEN ‘ 00 15.00; Oxia yen 00: 1 ele 4 ofenre- me UI Ww. range, $49.50. pnd jeaf table and 4 chairs, blond. Refrigerator with freezer chest. Automatic washer 2 ste old. $99.50 THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE CO. 3441 8. SAGINAW 8ST PONTIAC, MICHIGAN rm seTe CONDE | _ Mon Fro» $18 my FE 40736 TRADE GAS RANGES FOR ELEC. inne B. Munro Electric, 1060 USED WASHING MACHINES, $23 5° and R. B Munro Elec. trie Co.” .* 1060 W. Huron SED | REFRIG. GOOD CONDI- ton. FE 8-1360, USED TRADE-IN _ DEPT. Rebuilt Washers guaranteed $30.95 up Rebuilt Refricerators ber yg $40. at 17 = $19.95 up ser eon 2 oc. livine room a i 5, ond outomat' contral. ve oe ace , _Sfeeue" Harbor Mic _ ‘ . LADD’ S, Inc. a rep plan your | BLOND} BET, PE 5-081! or PE 5-006 __ | Toustict a ant AID = 1.650 Friendly courteous service practealty new. Reasonable, FE | MASSIVE § PIECE CARVED S0L-/“')i, power transis model. 4286 Dixie Hwy. Drasten Pi awaits you. Logie Pick Tr, Man 1580. id oak dining room suite. OL complete new case. Uv y 7 Lake -% ft. on Dixie OR 3-2361— onen jaye ager. Berkley President. 32 GaL. LOCHIN AR ELECTRIC 2-2197. mo., now less than % orisg with Lake, 180 ft. deep, 70 ft on road. Pye Lake Ra. water heate’ 1 sinele roll-away | 36 IN. KENMORE GRIDDLE TOP, a year’s uaren Well all ini ‘Verv scenic spot Lapeer Rd. or M24 Ph, FE 5-8121 _bed. 509 E. Tennyson. ®E 4-6087,| gas range, under 1 year guaran- DENNE, 0.D. : i a tee men ake. < 4 : ‘a i i ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY ii PPL AOL For Sale Miscellaneous 60) “er oes ae “A HALF ae. INSLEY BACK HOR and Allis “een HOT WATER BOILER WITH BUR- mer g controls. Avprox, radiation condition, Michigan Boucr’ Mig. Co. ‘OR 3-8172 bet. § and 12 a.m HOT. WATER HEATER, GAL. ; . New. reved ior use on _lines .. $08:50 and $40 and 50. These slightly marred. Also electric, "oul ui bottled gas heat- rs at terrific values, Michigan tworescent 303 Orchard Lake ae alDs. NEW AND Phon. Rules FE 2100, _ HOLLAND 8TEEL FURNACE complete with ducts and therm stat. Good condition, $75. 181 HOME ORFSSFD PORK AND ind beef becop and sausage. BE 5-104) NEW AN fai LLERS POWEA SPRAYERS. i hold ROTARY Ra. xe,’ F ENAMEL RECESSED bathtubs rred SAVE Supply, 100 8 Sagina REINFORCED CONCRETE tic tanks. Ph FE 4-6428. _ RALEIGH BIKE. 3 SPEED GEAR. ee chain generator lights ind other extras. B ger | fur cara- ot jacket, size Man's over- coat like new. Write Box 1, Pon- _tiac Press. ~NEW GALVANIZED PIPE _ in 12) t Jengths) 8 ft. r (ay ft } ' 3 J tt SAVE PL ING SUPPL 00 8 Saginaw ____FE_ 5-2100 HOT AIR FURNACE, STOKER, _ blower, all set up. FE 20642, = Angin RAILROAD Lots $3 Will sell fo a “oriainal “cost MT 4-7825 Eve- sorLivo@eneie VARIETY STORE 7 miles out Baldwin. Armstrong floor covering and Mac-O-Lac paints Phone FE KITCHEN SINKS, 24 = 21, $20 98 value, $12.05, Tollets, $39.50 value $1095 Lavatories. complete oc carome mixing faucets, $14.95. These are factury marred. Michi- an Fluorescent, 303 Orchard sake Ave KENMORE 2 POT BURNER. LIKE new, Reasonable. MArket 4-3205. KENMORE 1 ey >” WASHER IN A- 1 condition, $75 11, | OR +1611, KITCHEN: “CABINET SINKS, BEAU- tiful 42 in model, $65.00 value $50.50 Slichtly marred in transit Also several 54 in. and 66 in. mod- els at terrific values Michigan _ 33) «(Orchard Lake Canc GE DOG HOUSE, KIRBY vee wonderful buy, FE 2-6042 LENNOX 4° STEEL FURNACE. On conversion burner and al) con- trols FE 4-5056 LAVATORIES. COMPLETE WITH faucets $24.50 value, $14.95. Also toilets. bathtubs. ower stalls at terrific values ese are crate marred. Michigan “luorescent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave. Taner | “VOLUME PUMP FOR ating alew o rv Wisconsin - oor ne FE §-2410 2 LAWN MOWERS $10 AND $15 2 vacuum cleaner $15 130 Wolfe, LUMBER CASH AND CABRY Cedar post all vew stoc tasterboard and lath jirch flush doors, 87.95 up. -psulation ree & fou ioe orice. edar -ane ywood nlein & Sccarative Conbination doors eee wal! soared & tile ul St Cvr Lumber Co ei Braia Lake Be Com merce "IM 49731 METAL TURNING "LATHE, 12 2 IN 36 (uo between centers milling | attachments center rests pates dogs, 45 milling cutters ehuck, Knurline te extra cut- tine ls. rine ools centers. etc like new. First $200. __ #6353. after 4:09 p.m MYFRS PUMPS Recular ‘nis ‘3 - “thallow Leo fet with 11 eal tank now $108 Regular $125. 1-3 bp. deep well) Mvers tet with 1) oh) tank now | “115 . KELLY’S HARDWARE, 3994 Auburn + Adams Auburn Hetehts FP 2-881) | f-v'cye™= CABINETS LARGE 7 toch mirror, all metal cabinet 87 05 — 83 96 _ Slightly merred Alse lara a cabinets with cad without lights New sliding trinle door units, all | et exceptiona) bargains, Michican | face | 1L® GARAGES REPAIRED TO look like new Leneth. nm vour ga- = aes earage doors. RING. BRACELET AND - EAR- _Tings of Chinese Jade. FE 4-3350. § FT, PLYWOOD CAR TOP BOAT $50. md saw. $35, Ironer. $15. FE 5-1332. PACHOUD Neath toad CO.” 2310 Dixie Hwy PE_5-0108 RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT. ‘ADD- ine machine—cash ree. electric pop cooler, grill, stools. ple cases. retrig. and other items. A-1 con- dition. ae %1 Orchard Lk trear), FF 49679 Before 1:00. _P.m. Poe Saar _ 30 gal. led gas [oe $59.50, 62 gal electric heaters. $70.50 G_A. Thompson, 60 8. Perry. | STOP Look and tisten The first punch =e starter ‘awn mower, Sure s ACOBSON Now at EVANS EQUIPMENT 6507 Dixie Hwv SEPTIC TANKS Reinforced concrete, FE 2-1440_ 1-3 HP. JET PUMPS F- OM 960.50 G. A, Thompson, 80 8. Perry ‘Save Money at BURMEISTER’S | LUMBER 800,000 “AT ASS OUR PRICES ARE NOT ONLY LOW BUT OUR SERVICE IS A 3 YARDS TO SERVE YOU 4x8 Sheet Rocke C &C...... oh . = “ 2 a 2 5 | per m. | 1x12 w. pine pre oy 2x4 RL. D. fir std ft. 'x4 std flooring per M 2x6 std. Douglas fir per M 2x8 «td Douglas fir, per M. blanket Insi 4x $3 388. é eoeveneeceereesty ry =S=8833 x8x% W. fee £8 4x8x% Kn pine ply ixt0 knotty olme oer M | 1m12 paneling, WP. per M. $ Cedar fence posts | Natls, @'s ard 16's comm Sot] pipe ft Com = Alum doors from W P Comb. doors : } 40 Agape! mowers, from 3 colored bet set, all coat medicine ¢ - aie cele seg SS BOYDELL PAINT: ee sex¥acvnss keg c8s Beses | MAKE BUNS IT’S _BURMEISTER Northern Lumber Co, aoe Cooley Lake Rad Fluorescent. 33 Orchard Leke = Pontia EM #4171 Ave | Telegrapn & » Mile i te IN 4X» PLYSCORE, $4.50 PER | Detrot FL 1-418 sheet 2x8-12 ft-No 2 and better, soMaea prices 6 GN COAL $2.10 each ~ & r ee ae any. commer of Crooks a u- ? urn. FE 2-€141 Open 7 dars a) M. A. ‘BENSON eee ce | SUMMER PRICES ON COAL 00006 USED > YELLOW Face a piehe good condition Angle tron 849 N Saginaw FEderal 4-282! lintels. Bautpment and , $1 each: one bed, Hollywood type. poly size One Tend-a-babe, $4. OR 3-4388_— ~ PLYWOOD Ail kinds at lowest prices. Also | pero Hardware, wholesale and retaii ‘Ponting ay ceed Ca, 148, Baldw Ave. ad + PLUMRING SPECIALS 2 compartment rement taundry tray with wand @ faucets $23 50 gal etectr’e water heater Ne trolt Edie approved « ent! pipe $3.95 length Oven, daut w 6 Sun tv to 2 Arnason Plimbing Supply 650 M15 Ortenville Prow 1 he We Deliver PLYWOOD me se se Wicks. 267R Orch: f bb ta UIPMENT, 61A. LIONEL & AMERICAN FLYER TRAINS [7D FACTORY SERV ctory parts ane'veer ron St. nx 12 RvG AND PAD a fs hot water — Phebe aml Used 4 “200, 000 FEET ‘ . ber tbe! Dimen- ‘ive. ried oe nee, YSCORE fae DOOR TRIM "x34" base WP ae tim "2%" Base Shoe tin ee TAGCERTY LUMBER CO ft. MArket 41034 1047 Haggerty Hwv Watied take ii, gDiAMON ID WEDDING RA ND. * months will accrifice for es a, —— SHORT-CUT TO CASH: Classified Ads! FE 2.8181. ' 1625 | WITH | rubber base | AD. $35 30) er tank and “ _— | ‘ * Talbott Lumber] $i |: Garces Doors j TO CHO’ SE FROM | SPECIAL SUMMER OFFER Berry el} stee, fully guaranteed From $35 avd up Estimates on remodeling free 7) 8 Wdidor” FE 23-0203 BERRY DOOR SALES CO. —_—. | STORM SASH | Atminum combination windows and doors. ay LOW orice!!! ip. Shea ‘$50M and up. 4x4's. mE E. etree North, “e 1) e $3.20 At- WAR- Wicks, Orchard Lk a SUMMER SALE Union Wrecking Co inc offers good ouality ‘umber et special reduced orices .or a ‘imited time only . — HURRY! These prices won't Get Your Materia)s For Later Use —_ All len@ths 3c fin ft All lengths 7e lin ft. inks All length 8 lin. ft 2205 All lengths Lic lin. ft. ‘inte $5. per ae oe < ir a! pipe 0c nm cimere pe Bg 43.97 & sheet. last ow | Comen $1.58 per semen) windows, stokers, plumbing, radiators, sash _— tre kinds of salvage bidg. mate TAKE ADVANTAGE | OF THIS SALE | Bring vour truck or trailer, | (Cash and carry onlv) | WRECKING CO., INC. 313245 W. 8&8 MILE RD ‘Corner Orchard Lk Rd) DAILY 6.0 » SUN ® - 9. a NWOO an -Aing ea ce sete STORM WINDOWS AND SCREENS 1 1 Pee 32x a pA 3 20% SEPTIC TANKS Boe «° oa a insu hathog it dew dertted RECOND! alga SING. SEW. ing machin: $39.50. 2 for free home Gemonstration, § HP. ROTARY TILLER. 1 gas and 1 electric sower mow- er, Cheap. MA_5-4796 ae site GAR/GE cigs PHONE §2 GAL. ELEC HEATER § trays, scand, taucet. “eat ! Fri. Closed every bgt Det WHY PAY THE HIGH DOLLAR FOR PRINT? UALITY KING B PE 41112 4-0734 PONTIAC RD AT OPDYKE Cameras, , Equipment OLA OTHER CAMERAS, & EQUIPMENT listed under obbie: _blies,” o Slassitigetien pale 4A. 16 MM REVERE CAMERA. TUR- Fe mount. F1.9 lens, never used. 1 4-7825 eve-ines. 62, "Sale Musical. Goods 6 APT. SIZE PIANO. FE 5-1025 rE ATTENTION 8UMMER VACATION- = i to plav the accordion easy way Join Fer Sale Miscellaneous 60 For Sale. Pets oo Used Bldg. = Dasucuy aN, sare | * vallenbe Keooctian schoo) with | “ while learn- E 40566, | CHASE & BaaeR BABY GRAND _ piano, $350. 379 Centra) . FAMOUS MAKE CONSOLE PIANO Mahog: any finish. Save $200. | Terms. — pai payment CAT up | ALBI MUSIC CO. 118 5 Saginaw sCSWFEsS5-8222 MAGNAVOX HI-FI RADIO-PHONO. | graph combination. Blond console. __ $150.65 8. Francis St. FE ¢-4007. PLAYE) Li Fane EXCELLENT Spee rolls ‘*0 Pike | PLAYER PIANO IN EXCELLENT | condition with harp attachment | and — GALLAGHER'S, FE PIANO FUNING AND REPaiR- _ing. Usea: Senmiat. rE 2-3 23-5217 139 oa ama ees CCORDIAN. LES. 4 MONTHS OLD. “pM 1000 mn Lake Rd. age “BEAGLE § YRS. $30. Baby Parakeets te. $2.79 WITH CAGE $5.98 $01 4th Bt: PE 2-405; Closed Sun. BEAGLES AKC CC REG. nurs “AND age rE 41104. 3036 EB. Walton = SRVSSE!], GRIFFON PUPS CHAM. excellent house pion b Make _80Rs. FE yag43 COLLIE PUPS Little beauties at 820 each, FE eves MERLE. te- LUE MA #1031. 6 24m. CEAGLE. | 5° FE- male. trl a ‘or fur- _ ther Pes vette ep r an OR 31614. ENGLISH POINT DOG. REG _male. OR 3-2939 after 6 p.m. TNOLISH POINTER p PUPPIES FE | EN eiccae POINTER DOG Ri Male. OP 3-2030_ after 6 p.m GERMAN SHEPHERD, ERD. FEMALE. 16 mos, Housebroken, some train- ing. to country home. OR 3- 7105. @ YR. OLD FEMALE 8ST. BER-|~ nard to soous? home. 34 Niagara after 3 AKC SROMTERED 1 BROKE Beagle. Also, Park Ont Kenneth Thomes, 27 Pa: ord. MALE BOSTCN BULL. CALL after 4°00 p.m, FE 2-3491. saat echo SPECIAL thru 75 FU NNY ndncetncnevted _to DACHSHUND REGISTERED PUP- | *) >" ww s Pet OM. i by NEA Serre, ie oe BOYS Pal : new, $50. EM | ie’ * SCH mp A Deluse mote en) ~ Boats & Accessories 85 LLL LAL AP ALUMA-CRAFT BOATS EVINRUDE MOTORS PENN YAN BOATS tKuleniean eoteps. fers al! marine vaint & enish Ee? terms We board my MIR, LK 8) 2 14. PT. MAR: , BOAT with Reo Inboard Trolling motor. 677 W Walton Will demonstrate. CENTURY BOATS — BOATTRAIL- ers — portable docks — boat hoists d Lake Sales. FE 2-6123. i¢ FT. MOLDED PLYWOOD Be BOAT 33 a2. Zraree outboard motor M4 FT DELUXE RUNABOUT 15 ho Evinrude. Cover. Trailer. Live new Cheap. Call after 4 p.m. FE 5-2035 _ “Believe me, this is the last time I play with a surveyor!" Sale Farm Produce 75 ‘Sth th Beautiful Parakeets $1 49 ea., ar'es, finches, cockateels por love birds. A full = of reas | a ne rer cages. tove a Por also breeders, rates | on aon Fox terrier Puppies and pekingese. PONTIAC PET SHO 373 Auburn Ave FE 2 2-6154 | PARAKEET® ore 0 A NARInS. _2489 Auburn Rd F PARAKEETS Seicinne. CA- nearies. 1304 At. Clemens. FE 4-6960. PARAKEETS | ast tat Gehl areas PARAREETS, 183 < ses ee ria PIGEONS Selling out. Beautiful fantails. all colors. Reasonable een at 3076 Portman, opvosite Roose- | velt School, Cass Lake Rd. Keego Harbor __ FE __5-6008 “es PARAKE! ~ SUPPLIES. Dancey’s, “Voorhies. PE 5-5031 | ‘PUREBRED GER.{AN SHEPHERD | puppies. Reasonable OR after 6. | REG TOY FOX TERRIER PUP-! Also Boxer puppies. $5. FE | SPAN- | pies 4-2170. REGISTERED TERED SPRINGER vel puppies. best blood =~ A ovt | _3$@ Orchard Lake Rd. FE & , REGISTERED ~ BOSTON breeders and ios for sale 16206 -e ev net ‘o Parkwav | ote REG. COCKER PUPPIES 825 OR 3-2602 SHEPHERD [RD PUFRIEA. T THOR- | ‘M 3-4658 ed collie mother, E' thbred collie m SELLING OUT ors, reasonable |WHITE MICE HAMSTERS, ALL amie rodna play in min ggoocial vrice. i $05 Terms Ane CALBI MUSIC CO. 119 N. Saginaw PE 5-8222. MISSIONARY FOLDING ORGAN | Samer = = Terms $25 | = Cc AL. BI MUS 1G CO: | 119 N. Saginaw FE 56-8222 | NEW SPIN®T PIANOS USED AS Bi, Roel _Produc cts 0 50 3¢ “~ pPRE-INVENTORY Cable «rand Wyse grand. $495 Schoninger grand. $477.50 Grinnel) upright piano, nailo upright plano. $75. A Orin- ; nell console iano. $395. Colum- | _ bia Hi-Fi phonorranh $190.05. | w ane recorder $190 50 el ” t Zenith radio $2150 RCA radio GRINNELL | eros ine VEGA aca Se | condition MArket 41034 | VALVE TROMBONE, pol “SQUIR- _rel Rd. Auburn Hei~ht GooD “Sale Office e Equiment 6 63 _Pet_Shop, 69 8. Astor. FE 4-6433 ? PONIES AND ONE SADDLE Norse. MA 5-77"" | WHITE = RABBITS OF ‘DIFFERENT Call after 00 FE sitee Dogs Trained, , Boarded 70 aLL a = EE B 8 deny ert and ti ree pick bvery sith bate’ Parm Kennels, ae | ~ Due to iliness. Paraveets all col- | FE 54-0211 i Aneel MARSH NOW | open 4669 W. Walton Bivd., Dray- _ton_ Plains. |RED CURRANTS, RASPBERRIES. gooseberries, bring the containers. _433_ Franklin Ra. ' Sale Farm _Equipment RA Orr oe A-1 BUYS LEE THE TRACTOR MAN. Garden Tractors—Roto Hoes mse — and Power sewers New. Terms [E EF’ 5 sles & Service FE 3-0830 _#21_ Mt. _ Clemens CASE COMBINE. MOTOR DRIVEN $260. FE_4-0916_ COMBINE, INTERNATIONAL 52R with Continental red sea) engine. . Spring finger pickup, scour clean. Also grass and bean acreen Good condition, $500 1300 Allen Road, Clarkston. PRAZER ROTO TILLERS, | | end used Parts and service ae to-Mower Ree type: and mowers A¢v* service 1580 ov. dyke Ro 'E 44380. FORD TRACTOR, condition, ltehts | Juenzels Orchard 2802, i=, GOOD 115 Kalthaven, Rochester, OL ~FAR MERS GARVEST TIME 18 wo WE HAVE B ay LE Rs OPPERS. COMBINES Mowers. RA ALL READY 90 Fo we BUBiwess ane IN AND wel ARE E TRADE-INS | Pati BROS. | Pw 407% FE 41112 YOUR (-H DEALER | PONTIAC RD AT OPDYKE | JOHN ~ DEERE | moter Also Joho Dee = new Bargain _ NEW AND USED COMBINES!!! (. se - proven America's fa- combine on ve al a" erain—save. you $8 im w and get a Case, new or ay BOARDING DATHINO & AND CLIP- ping. PE 2-6113 boas, ON) res Doos oeans Burr-Shell 75 § Tele Hay, Grain & Feed 71 ABOUT © ACR*S GOOD STAND. | ing alfalfe and mixed hay mile west of Pontiac Phone OR 3-1444 after 6 p.m, ALL KiNr® oP HAY STRAW. | 5-066 oats, corn. Phone MA ALL KINDS OF HAY AND CORN LT | EXCELLENT ALPALPFA ann brome hay for sale $14 per ton me oc enc WE CAN LOAD YOU. PIT RUN ROAD om AviE VEL, PROC. ess road gravel, field Lape field cond Washed 60-40 concrete ravel, pea gravel, 10A “gravel. jack dirt and mason sand. FE 21768 C. ice. a Prepared top soils mixed to your specifications. Peat-sand or clay loam as vou desire. $15 per load delivered. FE 4-4597. sae ARM TOP SOIL ane =. ROAD GRAVEL & yards, $7.00 delivered. FR 4-0588, “ (AND GRAVEL, TOP er} R trade for | che too, Brtees Bed ~~“ UY AND SAVE AT HOUGHTEN & SON Case, Ferguson. New idea ‘ut N Main ..ochester. OL 1-976) | NEW HOLLAND MODEL 771 Tyee | te baler Three vears old. | perfect condition Just broken in Mvst sell after movine from laree ! u | farm Includes engine with self | | bale tension, | sserter poten canvas cover, ae) Allen | KECONDITIONED MACHINES For Sale Housetrailers 78 MOBILE APARTMENTS Stewart coaches are that With storm & Pande = eee. Pienty of wardrobe new heaters complete bath i. ORS | a size tub. Double floors, many, pe new features, Low te nk 45 ft. trailer package in bi this lot. New ae: AL. skyline Holly and Tint H ‘ail = Good selection. Buy or Aled an be will take vour contract car, furniture, house. i or what bave you on used tratle Oxford Trader Sales tates. See also the big = i {2 FT. WOLVERINE i¢ HP. MO. Ser, aod boat trailer. $500. OR 16 FT. SAILBOAT. OR 39-7848 AFT- er 6 weekdays, all dav Sat. and __ Sun i¢ HP ELGIN OUTBOARD MOTOR old. $165. CHRIS trailer. vr. MERCURY MARK “15. Craft a cram an? _bt ast OUTBOA ELECTR: RIC) MOTOR _ end Revers, $40 FE - R CENT Star weete i Owens cruisers, now tn stac OWEN'?® MARINE bet 398 Orchard Lk. Ave | FE 2-9203 Woodward st 13 Mile ¥ % TON. ONE OWNER Peas = ‘2 cheve A NEW 3 TO 5 ine a oe ae a4 & “#309 FISHIN’ For a Better Truck? HERE ARE SOME THAT ane PRIZE CATCHES, . TRY YOURSELF! ot GMC. % ton hydramatic rive, Sey eet beat, 1 ton pick up. 8 ton pick up. COMMUNITY MOTORS THE PLACE WHERE YOU CAN WHEEL ors DEAL er on iat tes Rlow and ssa TRUCKS OAKLAND AT CASS OPEN EVENINGS FE 4-4531 12 MARINE PLYWOOD ear $65. Goo' condition West side Mace- oav “ake — e Marshall, 4118 i WOLVERINE MARED ay 19 Auburn Deigets trailer N Pontiac PONTIAC CHIEF MOBILE HOMES un tw FEET Also We cow o*ve a fine selection of reconditioned and used trailers Regular $0056 wnd $1095. reduced to as low a, $305 and 8495 Hutchinson cess. New in Jun _—_ Micnigan cone aes Trailer parts putls set bln accessories Mile South of Lake Orion on M-24 pa @ A aol se "ete “Leaving My_>-0731 EVINRUDE O17 BOARD MOTORS 1654 MODERN 27 POOT LIKE Trade ite accepted Easy terms new Severaj outstandine fea ATOR ROAT TRAILERS _ tures 21720. 4! Dek me world’s targest line Of boat i's RIGHT ERE in PONTIAC arma) gel a wo He mptdnttoea! ¢ New. Ventura Home that was . lees ee ® the ieoent Na play ca ? pa D OTe a Se ca eee ue earn oes CADILLAL ALUMINUM BOATS ‘it's @ commeter new aonroach tT T PAINTS to muptle home wine Outside tt Se L A. Ys HARDWARE looks lite a corv tnvitine per- A manent home Insic there is ete uburn af Adams Auburn new open airy feeling of spa- eights. FE ae and rong Also een-|12 PT. BOAT. “HP. MOTOR eral Rove rs 4983 All accessories Sun sarge trailer Anderson 3) a Like new Save Excellent condition $225. Ghown at ay = Vel. Boies 3e1_Foerte Ms. na EVINRUDE E MOTORS” 1952 PONTIA:: CHIEF Expert reva'r service Chris-Craft room, 40 ft deluxe model. Lot te and boat — No, ‘onv * Marine 9606 Orchard e NEW EVINRUDE MOTOKS Wolverine ar Weather.’ ‘aft 12 $65, 1600 Elizabeth Lake ‘th 8 e112 mg ATS $35. ae BOAT WORKS a99 8 Telegraph _ ye Town and Mr iman Canoes. riing tratlers Marine supplies. Onen Sund and as. Bank | Terms. ARRINGTON New GMC W625 tandem truck, good price and job Opportunities with sale. Apply 339 S.. Paddock. Ask for Mr.- Kent. ~~ 1939 M FickuP rE ay 47 FORD a rue, CRO ee ndition $350, ‘atl 2 i060 CHEVROLET. 4 an GO6D ¥% TON EXPRESS 8 CYLINVDER-« SPEED TRANS. 245 LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer “TOR MORE, ZHAN Ge TEARS & For Sale Used Cars 91 i re LE, 1951 gaijon, Must b> oe full down goemes. imemeately” Trailer Sales | #35 Sevens Sonsbory, Mh cover, 2 In # 430) i re Plat me St. FE 2 aetaes, OR Sie | was MERCURY 74 HP. 380 8 Dort Highway, Fitnt. ae Speed a ir. COMPLETE HOUSETRAILER RE- | _“Y_ 2108) afer_§ p.m. —___ HYDROPLANE. IN iD CONDI- nair & service. FE_2-5006. |W ilom MATKet a mt | #6 ASSEMBLED SLEEPS « 14 FT. ROWBOAT TRAILER. | piece kitchen good heater. ready | Johnson motor. oars All for _— to, rele oniv cog boris | D> os lleloe and 2 ». Ree "try A. A R 767" a _ | AVE Fe $0003. \~ EW : Ss NE | PT TRAVELO 1 YEARS OLD Ee excellent condition 82500 BOATS Modern. _PE 56-3713 WILL SELL OR TRADE 1053 modern houret r%4 late model var. FE FT ALUMINUM on built housetrailer. Sleeps 4 Raymond Hansen, Lakeside Dr., STEWART 27 FOOTER. heap. Call OL 1-3722. Trailer Exchange mt ERVICE sungeeon t AMPION GREAT KES, R NER. wn, “ ~ per cent tntere: ND = TRAILERS Sole “te iPTION oe Bae PAR’ [S—STORE raph Fr > Tel-Huren er en & Bun M isss 18 HOLIY COACH. Lis LIKE _rew. Call after 4:30. MA ~ Rent ” Trailer er ‘Space 73 ca aan TRAILER ‘SPACE AVAILABLE @ 8. ACTOS, HUCKLEBERRY Glen Fruit Farm eT0 Middlebelt Rd, GOAT'S MILK. gra! ROLLCREST. Farmington. _ GEO. H. Snir HUCKLE- pag ar — M658 & Hospital Rd., iy ar WILL DELIV- Pet_2201 Dixie wy. OR. 2185 FROZEN FOODS ORDER eect Tenoer voung 20 tb. 60; strawberries, surar waded tins, $3.79 “DAVEY’S MARKET 1012 N. Main St Rochester j OL 2151 tA) NED BLACK (THIM- A i CT10 ble) berries, ¥@ year old pure 7760 Orion Rd. tween Lk. Orion | ple cider Vinegar. Ird house east |) it Rochester. . nite.” Every. | _of Crooks Rd. cn Hamlin 1187. 3 thing 6 bargéin. ‘0 N SWEET AND Sal Houset ad cherries. B vee i 44 ~ - railers 78, ui $s. north. “% mile west of Romeo 1048 pocee nALee 7 FT. IN i wood condition $560. FE 5-3019 2 miles Sade oon after 5:30 p.m. or all dav Bat, NENTAL — Bl — _ cattle FES or will Mower laud Bracer blades ca GRAY METAL STENOGRAPHER'S > A . Waener Lorfer an Back Hoe desk. Stenographer's swivel chair, TALES “ALPALF4« « BROME IN “Parmail 4” « drawer standard filing cabinet.| ,.t%- ise" suverbet! Np nace 214 , eo ey ea ae — for = Joslyn. care rhein waicy Frown ys eel tmokedor Cowhide rippered at-| FINE fay poo AND AL- BLA KE tT Na” be « All Mike new. MI ~~ Lo on State — —— rEeRousu* 2ves come a ie r T vat FIXTURES TABLES. graph Rd. Also 14 acres of brome bs 4 PP oe AWKS cash reeister showcases The and Timothy. $14 ovr ton in field GRAND RIVER Yardstock, 7] N. Saginaw wae ie one ¥. 2M ie PARMING?TON ¥. Sale Store . Equipment « 64 bale 35c Alfalfa and Brome. Forminetoe.2 2 me = K ee 1 pes, r Mi 53 ae Te) | or leoweeatiee cae ‘MA 533098 5-330" | 4" EXHAUST FAN $100 COST | =. | GALE OF LAWN AND GARDEN 8250. 2 yre_go, OR 37200. | CUSTOM COMBINING o WITH SEL? equipment continuing. Manv er MUST SFI. Coe ent we | ey, caving values Bart 8 Mer ie nen e o T OUR LEASE | WILI. HAVE 28 ACRES GOOD! Phone Miitora eteea Once atad $1,600 worth of store eou 4 wheat straw for sale after com-| and Sunday less than ? vrs = er | bining. You bale. Rochester Ol. | sex OUR REBUILT “IDE DELIV. ters. sate avle of of- = erv rakes ae ree Joho tere. sate, che Mo reasenabio of Saint CAS AINT CREEK AUCTION. 3780 | Deere ew id | deal 908 W Huron, Pontiac, be Prida koi + aha ulm ent 7 COMBINATION DISPLAY AND | Eve . . OSED TRA x {oe “since and ‘Fond tocionyre, |# ACRES STANDING ¥ ) MIXED HAY. Farm and industrial equipment, One x2 Mosler ea { paver cutter? rolle of paver all | WET WET OAT DAT STRAW POR WULCH-| {reet loser Cam, whee. nt for's200 003633 Oreard Lawe Ra. "ing. wan we ‘ooaer, dua} wheels, —_Keego Harbor. - Firm, 9 vies Crosby Lake Ra. Sherman powé: digger. our “Sale Sporting Goods 65 __ For | Sale Livestock 72) sects 58 son Re ELEN ee | x BURR-SHELL GUN SHOP BUY. (3 RIDING HORSES” AND PONY. Ford mente Gpneva 8 8-4241 oon trade. 375 % Telegraph. FE Lp larwad amet horse. w pinek. i DEX WALKING TRA R. \ w vr. ol | SPEE LKI ACTO | § tRows A°SERTCAN LADY NO ee yao pone MY 2-3181 — ny Stes al 0 OR ry 2 wood $35 golf bee Will sell _all tor $50. E 40292 ___ EXTRA GOOD HOLSTEIN HEIF- Tee case assogn BLADE pabe * : lately pay IE saan ine acltias and brood ¢ow Sel! H G CLETRAC TRACTOR. PTO) - — —_—- or trade for voune catile FE A-) conditin 8350 MUlberry | Sand, Gravel & Dirt 66 _i-sn6 eens aes 9-2634 after __ ae | Pie RABBIT® AT 3760 WALDON UNELL MILE COOLER, = cv Lae ATTENTION _ : by We deliver 1.°2. 3 ards or more | HOLSTEIN 1 HEIFERS. 2 FRESH. —offer_ MA ris — 7m erushea stone. sand, grav- ‘our open pp alley Sale < — soil, fil "Shoots G. — iy Davison Lk. Rd.. Ox- | _Auct = =! ee TOPSOIL FILL DiRT. GAWD | STANDARD BRED BROOD Wane | ANTIQUE, aucTiON. x PRL JULY. “ted ravel EM 3-8742 in foal to Martin Hannover. FE = cern BW between Middle- ALL KINDS >P_ TOPSOTL_AND a belt and Orchard Lk Ave. 10 m = $9 delivered Also to * de cna ena OR oe sar | SAD-| miles Pontiac. Large __ trae! atock of antiques of every de- &\ TOP soil. FILL iL DIRT. 2 NANNY GOATS. 1 AND 4 YRS. | scri You'll find it here crushed stone, sand and vid, ready for kL AND Treason. sold, must Vacate. F Earl Howard. FE 4-8493 | able, OLive 1-4246. peered fet tones a “3 TOP OLE. 1, auc ts : Tene agen! ten cere ie 384 | Wanted Livestock 73) _or O8 82159, Oxford Aube near Croore 2eTe UCTION SALE, FRI NIGHT 6 » F: 80 nee GOOD RIDING HORSE SPIRITED at B & B Auction House 5089 Dix BEST GRADE | ded and black soil je ioya | i wontie ie ee Good is Joab! £9 = = gheowr and Slade. o. 50448 me, | aterfo: e are just mention- LACK DIRY AND GRAVEL BY| For Sale Poultry 74 tun ten" Very rice curved aiass Gick pia 108 VEL | om Se bag Serge MUST DISPOSE or APPROXI- eT TARaT, Glee diet Coane, py on eae Bull dorin ; | mately 190 White Rock and Rhode Rea studio couch ie re vist: +5 Inland Red chickens. 12 weeks fet na Sand and Gravel Dave FE 3-01 med oak. Also 4 i? producing form, 16x80, will be pil ameed ate Gk rN GRAVELES A a7 toe bene. OA 6-9003.—__ Tou. ae re"plenty. pargina pees. inda of RS cad tee ool _ Sale Fa Farm Produce 3 Fine ‘relreshmen oan B&B MA 6-749 ‘ae ance. » Sale, OF 17. AUCTION ESTATE SALE SATUR- day July 16 10 a.m. 155 Under- down Road. Barton Hills. 1 mile North of Anm Arbor. Mich., off us. Antique dining room suite, several dishes, chest, refrigerator, h of Dresden ae. stem ware, many, many other items, Helen R. Harley Lag: L. A. Burns executive. Bob Perry, Auc- tioneer. AUCIIOn EVERY WEUNESVDAY pieht » & Smart Sale Farm in few sectioo of our modern mobile villace All factiities ROBINS MOBILE VILLAGE 3300 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 5-3678 TRAIL ne OR FOR RENT ON _jake ALL $98.00 up SIL.AYRAUGH’S ae Oakiand Ave | WERCUR AND YEL “ A WERCURY ere Salen. 2.9 JOHNSON ONTBOARD gran. —— os cruisers A a cc mak MARIN fee, Fa bam Le Lifetime Also 22% = rude tn ra] condition. to eee or separately. ae Mercury Outboard Motors Genuine Parts, Sales & Service Shorty Hook's .Piace at uk 79 SEW Boats 3 IN. y “Notes e2)) Filer Seas Then Lake .h. WIZARD, 7 H.P, OUTBOARD ) MO- tor, . $50, FE 402%. 1950 Sage INBOARD 00 HP. engine, completely rebuilt. Hull refinished. Also trailer Mgnt before 6: after 6, OR 3-20) Transportation orareli 87 TRUCK GOING NORTH — PART load either way FE 5-6806 Aue Glass Service When you need it! Have = service? Glass oo Wait tnenrenee an fl ab guaranteed” ape eetive ioe a customer wi io for Sven 8 windshield instalied ry tnt! 4 UTO GLASS CO Onuiana 2 Ave PE 47008 ATTFNTION! We are wrecking (949 to e, puare several tried — > egrets axies and body parts Rebuilt starters. generators and voltage controls. SCHRAM AUTO PARTS + pipe exten tice ter al and models HOLUERBACK'S AUTO PARTS 340_Baldw FE_ 3077 COO ag TS Open Evenings 7 Days a Week built P| i] ™ $1.50 ot "ened carte tor “46 cate and up 86 86 Oakland ave Ph. FE 4-4513 __. Auto” Service 8l - ahs, BUNTING ESTIMATE. ARS ‘ny, YMENT PLAN BRAID MOTOR SALES y Years Fa $3 3 CURIION EAGLE WITH SIDE car. Not used in ‘34, MI cul N SAOLE 1 MO. OLD. “For, Sale | ete RAP. Nel ert FOR PARTS & . it Harley Dsvidvon, or a4 Fae agearo cue we rises Cates Co- H8 H, Se ea om __ Auto icouueeiaa 80 WANTED ~ Sale Métor Scooters 82 : RESPONSIBLE PARTY to deliver new car to Miami, Pia. _m 2 PASSEN SHARE EX- mse and drive 1 SE. Mo Fri- 7 Eve PE siete RVICE -"MAN. LEAVING FOR eran. Calif, July 20th, Want pg to and he'o drive share expenses. __ Wanted Used C an 88 |mon $ CHEAP Day or eve F ecRAP cA RS 2-2666 clee cars ana cash ECON THE y AUBURN OF.LAR used cars. We ell. 4540 Dix wy. HI. J. VANWELT 3-1385 PRICE THE sr - THEN GET the be: from . Bill. SPENCE USED CARS Ave. FE 4-733 2_Onkiand_ 3 See M&M Motor Sales att aie Hwy wn tate mone 3 1809 SCRAP cat 8 ze CARS “CAT. SORNIA RUYER AVERIL'S, 2020 DIXIE HWY ._ FE 20878 Ww AIGH grade WRECK agley Auto Parts 19 y Loe sales. Am ¢ "M = URON MOTOR SALES ae emia ~ “PAY. mn DOLLAR FOR “COMMUNITY MOTORS 803: \N. Main, Rochester 10 P.M. OLive 4 A ed re toring and ‘et. "6a," “HSTOMER* WAITING = Goop | Call FE 2-8 WILSON GMC}- 8 CYLINDER COUPE $475 1952 Ford 8 CYLINDER COUPE $679 LARRY | JEROME. Rochester: Ford Dealer U Cor é and :ee nice selec- Sead et eee cee la el be: = AUTO SALES. Bob Frost, Inc. as? io Shand sen oe ef ona CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY . SALES, INC. 57 W. Pike at Cass No Co-Signers! Immediate Delivery! Deal Direct! No Kinance Co.! Buy Here—Pay Here YALL - COME oir MOTOR SALES | ‘BUICK dio, on Se’ ed cn ‘4 BUICK | SUPER. ar i be Lincol 1982 BUICK | SPECIAL HARDTOP — Lame oo w, two. green sh. A re rea Soon Ps oniv | $075. CENTRAL LINCOLN-ME RY - SALES, INC. 57 W, Pike at Cass AL i052 BUICK %DR — we PLACE A | 81 for an ad loss, Dial FE an ad- -writer, to recover a 2-8181 for “LOST AD."| Chevrolet 1955 Demo's Floor Cars Officials Cars Courtesy Cars ieomr Cou Bes acum # CLUB COUF STANDARD EgpToviinnind Location, SAVE SAVE SAVE Don't Delay — Act ‘Today HASKINS ~ Chevrolet Growing Dealer OIXTE HWY. A “ CHEVY " - dition. $250, 60 N. sf fom UPE, mech betel 8 on, Radio sand Le: CHEVIE DELU ioe ro oaay 7 PANEL. . HEW rin, battery brak ‘) CHEVROLET, RADIO, HEAT- trans- er. white walls. = go 1 owner car Nor niuwesr cHmvaonET 1955 CHEVROLETS Officials’ Cars and Demonstrators cylinders?" dre) and. '¢ an ey 7 cmc, Fas cody styles. fully 14 TO CHOOSE FROM 1nd Ss wr aad Sat owt “Northwest Chevrolet Say i a ft.” f. 3} ee | “nile —___“Hineotn"s-1100 Oakland County’s Fastest © ear Must full SS aren coseren Povmeste 234 SOLIS Oita far bac +4 Your-ear will make-the1 * a Pi Pit ee ae - * Up to 36 months. to fi- = Be a proud first owner— : t Es i] "4 = . e i ~ an PUTT OVER TO ~ COMMUNITY MOTORS * * - negeeest ee + HG EKEE DEO B ee ee ae i060 FORD 6 PASSENGER ‘ $350 i THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘THURSDAY, JULY. “ 1955 ~CARKNER - _ SSTUDEBAKER ingham ORY ILL fae appearance priced to sell, just your car down Haskins Chev. WHY Buy Demos? WHY Buy a Second Hand Car? W We can sell you a brand new 1955 Chevrolet for| - the same price. down payment. * Lower finance rates on new cars. nance. * New car guarantee. not a doubtful second owner. See us today! Many mod- els and G6lors to choose from. — 2 Stores to Serve You MATTHEWS HARGREAVES INC. 8. Saginaw St. & ¥%4 Mill &t. | OAKLAND COUNTYS oem ___ CHEVROLET DEA i951 CHRYSLER NEW seen club coupe. Radio heater auto trans. power brakes power stecr- ing. white Act tires This beau- tituy creation bv Chrvsier Corn. a origina] tieht blue body es the luxurious «potiess = tortor Ar id car down. bal- ance to suit SCHUTZ MOTORS DESOTO-PLYMOUTH DEALER —#i2 8. Woodward_ Birmingham 8. A LITTLE gHORT THA “LONG GREEN om OL, 2-0321 WHERE YOU CAN 194o $05 | 912 8. Woodward, Pe WEP OI cd PORD, 2 DOOR HEAT- be perhaul, rs ‘clean. Ford 6, oer, Radio and heater o49 Fora “ie terms and month- ly paym H. J. [VAN WELT $40 Dixie Hwy. Phone OR 3-1385. __OR ‘a after 4:30 P.M. i950 ) FORD CONV VERTIBUE, $375 _eash. Call PE 5-5707 after 4 p.m. They ney Must ust Go! ANY DECENT OPFPE ‘4 ‘Chevrolet geaversbte, Bel “49 and ‘50 Pontiac Convertible ‘0 Sredeuauet convertibles. ‘48 Ford and ‘48 Pontiec ir. Convertibles. ALSO MANY me LATE MODEL CARS FINANCE ARRANGED. ECONOMY CARS 22 AUBURN 1954 FORD This is custom V-8 2-door sedan with metallic Academy Blue fin- ish. Heater and straight stick transmission. A value leader at only $1,165 CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY SALES, INC. — 57 W. Pike at Cass Mu4 MY 2261 “tit 8:30 pm FORD 1954 CRESTLINE. FORDOR. and heater. Very ciean. Bob Frost, Inc. LINCOLN, MERCURY DEALER 850 S. Woodward BIRMINGHAM _JOrdan_6-3933 MA MI_6-2200 “42. FORD. $8 5-4202. 16) ~roR) V# CONVERTIBLE motor New ton Sew white won tires FE 43-0463 Corner of Crooks Rd. and South Bivd. Upson ~s395. « OPULLY and gaa to go. $5 or pole old car NOR THWEST “CHEVROI ET Wotadad v 13 Mile Lincoln 5-1100_ ‘$64 HUDS -s SUPER JET. access. Overdrive 5.000 miles. driven onty 7 months, miles to a gi $1 250. PE 54-7140 1946 JEEP. 4 WHEEL DRIVE. SEE Cox 30000 Orchard Lake Rd Northwestern T: Trailer Park CASH. ALL actua! 26 e490 KAISER VERY CLEAN thro t Bargain FE 3-7542. ist KAISER ecg HEATER, Wn payment BSCHOTZ. MOTORS DeSOTO-PLYMOUTH DEALER Birmingham 1952 LINCOLN 4-DOOR CAPRI Has dual range Hydramatic trans- mission radio, heater, white wal! tires and an excellent 2-tone tan and paige exterior with beautiful alas. interior A real buy at only CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY SALES, ANC. 57 W. Pike at Cass “BI CHRYSLER. | ‘RADIO HEATER. ace Jent condition, $505. Anv old Lt down. NORTHWEST CHEVROLET Woodward et 13 Mile 162 DESOTO (1B COUPE. so | wn mune paym . 404 | 8. eye Leona Beavtife nent Sct eh MOTORS, DeSUTO-PLYMOUTH DEALER o2 5 Wood ward Lirmingham | Tudor Deluxe Many extras. in- "46 De Soto ........ $125 47 Dodge ac. e 6 $195 ’47 Merc. Conv. ..... $195 48 Nash (good one) $195 }’47 Plymouth ...... $195 20 Good Transportation Cars transm: power r brakes. 2 tone — re. 1 owner car. Any a Reasonable month! yon WEST CHFVROLET Wesgverd of i) Mie "S? OLDS | S ¢ DE. 9708. 5. HYDR- matic, radio and heater. 1 owner CHE /RO ‘WEST LET meer ere at 13 Mile Lincoln _5-1100 Buy With Confidence 1949 DODGE Deluxe Fordor Black Finish Clean as a pin inside Radio that plays. Tire are extra good. Sound value for “o~ 1951 FORD (BARGAIN) cluding Rad‘o turn signals Runs good. Try “. on the road. EXTRA BIG TRUNK 1952 Dodge ———— coupe has a whale of trunk. Mile- age only 15.000 ‘hace black fin- ish Yes it has turn signals and a fine smooth moter 1952 DE SOTO If you've alwavs wanted a De- Soto but. thought they were out of your price range see this cus- ton Tudor It'’< a one-owner. 1951 POWER GLIDE Chevrolet Fordor one-owner car that's had extra zood care. Low mileage Very clean Come test drive this one we'll trade. ’*$2 CLUB COUPE You'll find this one-owner Plym-- outh one of the best used cars you've seen this year. Radio and many extras. It's really clean. ‘53 V-8 DE SOTO Automatit transmission Radio anc many extras. [t's less than two years old and we're offering | cost. Try it out, Al $25.00 to $75 00 Down. Easy Terms on Balance BRAID DesoTo-F PLYMOUTH TOEALER Cass at W. Pike St. FE 2-0186 680 N. Cass Ave. _, FE 2610, $3 OLDS 98 HOLIDAY CPE. Ex- eellent condition throurhout. New white wall tires all vower equip- ment and low mi.. must sacrifice $1,695. 2875 Newberry Rd. off Clintonville ‘41 OLDS CLUR “OUPE $125 FULL See a rive, Walled vane. Mich. "53 OLDS 88 Beautiful white and blue 4 door sedan. Radio, heater. Hydrama- tic, white walls. This is a one owner car & exceptionally clean. a J right “rice. Oakland, FE ae oka FE 2-778. 370 ‘9 LINCOLN 4 DOOR. RADIO and — ag mes Exce}- lent cond: offer takes uiffemore. “MECHANIC SPECIAL. __ th 186 = i PE CSC) eae | — Aree covers A real bar- ‘ gain. Bob "Frost, Inc |=" LINCOLN. MERCURY DEALER | 850 S..Woodward BIRMINGHAM 65 DODGE ROYAL LANCER HARD | “MI 6-200 JOrdan’ 63382 | Sacrifice: Cal) or see. at 7 70 1992 MO $108. FLAME RED | rut | Ds 7 _ iv ui ew and side dio and hd cf dts _ cu arinins Can't tell from new. dition Can te coop ot tes Ee | “NORTHWEST CHEVROLET aa tonne et. _____Lineoln_5-1100 6 ORS? SPL wt COmSt |Z ER PROCU RY 1953 MONTEREY ton $1’ E. Howard. hardtop. e, radio and heat, ‘SS DOMNGE CLI'R ee Pe V-8 white i Merc-o-Matic. $1,395. Red'e hear and were walls, T Low, aiieace beautiwt 2 tone) ROb Frost, Inc. Page ORIOF MOTOR SALES M24 at horn Lake MY_2-261) Ull 9:00 pm. Runs very 1274 Round Lak Ne DONIT | "51 " MERCURY a DR. jo9 FORD « ‘poor CUSTOM. FE 4-5026 after 5 p 1952 FORD ~FORnOn IR CUSTOM- > tonal sienals, windshield washers, chrome wheel cans wrap arou b= Avken ~varde WT Arevie Ave "o ings! a &# RADIO Heater. Whtle w. Extra sharp. Pull i Brice $505 “ier As ante Sales. kiag A erg hey RADIO, HE a « ER. ite wall tires, 1 owner car. Lincoln 511000 MODEL A ans 212 - Cass Pont MI 4-1007__ i: FORD 195 CRESTLINE 4 POOR Radio. heater Verw clean $1) 306 LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER 850 S. Woodward BIRM(NOHAM JOrdan 6-3933 RADIO. to be appreciated. MI__ 6-2200 heater 63 6) NASH ~ amMBASSADOR RADIO — ih 116 Fourth te NASH RAMBLER HARDTOP. ng heater ID es a pap “ee continenta’ tire re cellent condition Phone after 5:15 daily or anytime Sat- urday eee $3 NASH RAMRBI.ER $875. ‘75, 7 N. Sanford. ~ NASH RAMBLER STATION wagon ree eer and over- Bob Frost, Inc. * LINCOLN ITRCURY DEA 850 S--Woodw acd BIRMINGHAM | 38 Ml! 62200 _SJOrdan 6-3033 | 86 NOOTHWEST CHEVROLET Woodward at 13 Mile Lincoln 5-1100_ Bue MONSTR: R AT OR. HOUG SATE NS x SON 1982 FORD RANCH 1 WAGON gio | | Your FRIENIDY OLDSMOBILE WwW down and assume payments 8, Woodward, Birmingham. ‘$3 FORD VICTORIA. $1295. omatic, .adio and neater Whi walk —— 2 tor- aint Any old | NORTHV: EST CHEVROLET Woodward at 1° Mile Lincoin_5-1100 1951 Lg mb TAKE OVER PAY- ¢ . seat cov- n ~ FORD CONVERTTOLE ED- ‘uno heads and dus'- st sell FE 4-3180. ‘80 FORD TWO'DOOR. RUNG | WER. | fect. Ful price, §205 k- land Ave. FE 5-91d« | it FORD 6 TUDOR Very clean excellent condi- tion Pullv eaninned mM es oe for 8500 ft» or all dav __#nd_ Bun FORD T_am a 1051 Ford 6 tudor: My color is nave ue and 1 DON'T PASS UP MONEY?! Sell unneeded belongings for cash hrot Apassified Ads! GMC TRUCK DEALER FORD. e N, Main Rochester. OL 1-9761 OLDS 1952 SUPER & 4 DOOR. Seden radio and heater, Hydra D-‘ve cpotless interior new car appearance see this beauty to- dav, just vour car down. | Haskins Chev. DIXIE HYW_AT M-15 MAple_ 5-5071 “TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS venpl — #95 Your choice of many LARE ORION MOTOR SALES M24 at Buckhorn “ake | MY 2-261) till 9:07 ”.m 1953 OLDS. Radio heater. auto. trans power brakes power steer. ine. white sore tires This beauti- ful creation ral Motors has original ont blue body that matches the tusurtou: otiess in- terior Anv old car down. balance to sult : SCHUTZ MOTORS DESOTO-PLYMOU DEALER 912 8S. Woodward Rirmingham ‘54 OLDS SUPER #8 4 DR cellent condition 10.000 mi _FE_ 4-341, Oldsmobile 1955 Demo's Courtesy Cars Floor Cars EXx- 81950 by a pet go) | §O FINANCING LEMS SAVE SAVE SAVE Don’t Delay — Act Today HASKINS | Oakland County's Fastest Growing Chevrolet Oldsmobile jee Dealer piKig HWY, AT M-iS MAple,S-607 AND I MEAN BARGAIN! Bead — _— Aw ‘sO, all models to | $95 “ECONOMY CARS wee AUBURN YMOUTH SA Lice S maal sharp Full equip- | | ne Al a good price, amy car JIOUSE OF GOOD USED CARS CARKNER = | STUDEBAKER MI 43410 _ Birmingham 1935 PLYMOUTH SUBURBAN | | 6.000 miles traded. Terms. 34248. ‘83 PLYMOUTH. RADIO AND heater. Very nice c S605 ond ition . full price. $895 down. Payments $8 per week. ORTHWEST estes Wood ward = oe “SC UTZ ‘MOTORS DeSOTO-PI, bho etdalas ee 12 8. Woodw: rmingham use SSLTOnTE earoae SE- = S owner Verv cood. Mies Tt) WT PELUXE ©D. 7 Ex. ceptionally good with evervthing $775 FE 2-616 CONV. ‘ ~ IVORY. hvdra. sharp. FE "Specials" 'S4 Pontiac 2 dr.....$1495 MI 4-3410 _For Sale Used Cars. 1 For Sale Used Cers 1 ‘As hood as new, Hydra- atic, radio. heater. Wine ek a mi a Any © HOUSE OF GOOD USED CARS CARKNER STUDEBAKER Birmingham it @ less than one-half new car) _ «DR |S!) GREEN «. $1295 .$10ys .$8y5 53 Packard ‘53 Dodge V-84 dr.. 53 Plymouth 4 dr. eevee —|'53 Dodge 6 cyl. 4 dr. $s $2 De Soto V-8 4 dr. $WY5 ’52 Dodge Hardtop. .$1095 52 Plymouth 2 dr... .$695 51 Nash 4 dr. ....06- $395 ’°S1 Hudson ..,.....-$395 ’50 Dodges (2)... .$295 up 50 Chevrolet ....... $395 ’SO Ford Convertible $395 ‘SO Pontiae-......... $350 ’SO Nash Ambassador $400 ’49 Plymouth 2 dr... .$295 ’49 De Soto ..... ose $295 48 Dodge 4 dr.......$150 Riemen- schneider 232 S. SAGINAW ST. 1954 “4 PONTIAC STATION WAGON 4 door. 26.000 miles, Nvlon white side wane. radio ar? heater Good _condition. $1,600, 77 W. Huron, _ Guaranteed SHARP USED CARS Al) Makes oe a Glenn's MOTOR SALES ay OT FE 47371 Fully Lech oS mT iad — ioe PONTIAC 2 a DR. RADIO AND _ $100 cash, OR 3-2863. © SAVE!$700 - cars. : wet of br mi siege and_eolors P| TRA. GLRAR _ $200 heak tities. PE +416. \ 3 \. os TIP TOP Guaranteed USED CARS 1953 cmiikh Windsor, EXCE KOCH DE SOTOS ‘34 V8 4 DR WITH POWER FLYTE TRANSMISSION P O W STEERING, RADIO, HEATER, WHITE WALLS AND 2 T TONE BL ‘84. V8 CLUB COUPE. ‘Two TONE BLUE, POWER WINDOWS, CANNOT = D FR ‘St CUSTOM FORDO SPORTSMAN COUPE. T TONE BROWN AND TAN WITH ITE WALLS $8 645 4 CLUB COUP™. BLUE WITH WHITE WALLS . - 845 CHRYSLERS he oft a ag eres TWO — BLUE 8 NEW $2005 ‘WORKER Tw ‘33 CLUB COUPE. LI DIO. HEATER AND WHIT E NEW YORKER 74 4DR.. . one ‘Sl NEW leas a! NEW a K WITH POWER RT. STEER- § 45 D_ COUNTRY CON- Y Is BUICKS ADMASTER. ER STEERING BRAKES AND LL8 "52 BIICK HARDTOP SUPER $1095 ‘dL BUICK SPECIAL 4DR. DYNA: LOW . - 8 ‘80 BUICK SPECIAL 4DR .. $ 495 WE mave oe 10 CAR SELECTION OF N pe eB IN ALL KELLER KOCH Sirmingham La DEALER seat covers. Verv Reasonabdie New top geod mechanically FE 2-475 ‘51 PONTIAC CATALIN’ . RADIO. heater white walls. autometic abit $795 full orice Any old car “NORTHWEST CHEVROLET Woodward at. 13 Mile Lincoln 5-H00 ‘1 STUDEB*SKER. LIKE NEW. dark green. see it it. At a low price. Any “HOUSE OF GOOD USED CARS CARKNER STUDEBAKER MI 4-3410 Birmingham DON’T WAIT ‘S8 Studebakers New and demon- beara ——— deals given at this ti factory cost. all models. ‘tar pict Any car dow TIOUSE OF GOOD USED CARS CARKNER STUDEBAKER | MT 43410 Birmingham ‘$0 STUDEBAKER. EXCELLENT mMIOUSE OF GOOD USED CARS CARKNER STUDEBAKER MI 4-3410 _ Birmingham TAYLOR'S GOOD USED CARS 1954 Chevrolet 7th all the 1952 Chevrolet «dr. Radio, heater and turn s' . About the cli est car vou've ever seen . $ 1963 a Bel a Convertible wi wer steerin, cowcrene. voackup lites, white ‘ae. You 3 abowt tt winter, now do page a" down Lg 4 and easy $1,346 = ‘Chevrolet 2dr with radio directional — i vente | win be ~ talk of friends at only wats $625 other transportation aaa ‘at only $5 down. TAWLOR’S Meee aie ‘ Phone MArket — + i ef nn pe fey | | TOWN AN ! VERTIBLE. NEW Lbs AND THE | BOD LIKE $8 0 TON? OREEN WINDGOR | KE NEW. R | WALLS | $2 TWO TONF GRAY ee Liberty #-4888 ~ Mite ed Se ieervard ' ond BOY) in? PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE. nie No ~ radio, eet | 4 DR. OO a ie DR.. $495, RADIO. fas as as saving overdrive. “enter 1 $5. full NOR ST CHEVROLET Wood ward +. 13 Mile ee __incoln 1100 0 Don't Fret Be Set Visit 211 TRUCKS _ "54 Chev. dump ..... $1875 54 Ford pickup ..... $995 ’53 Ford Sed. Del.S.. $695 psliGhevapanelle..--- $445, 52 Chev. pickup ....$645 MATTHEWS fo\ HARGREAVES, | 65 MT. CLEMENS ST, | 211 S. Saginaw St. FE 4-4546 "54 PONTIAC LENT CONDITION: ee Catalina 2 dr. with ra- $1.2: 8. Saginaw dio, heater, Hydramatic 953 Plymouth 4 81 Merc. 2 dr $495 and visor. . 7 Ni 1 5 5 63 Ubiocis aicia J ‘ BA GE EN ’50 Chev. Clb. Cpe.. .°.$475 din sees Dee ee ’51 Chev. Clb. Cpe... .$595 ke DAK 575 54 Chev. 2 dr....... $1088 PO ee ond 1951 oat 54 Chev. 4 dr....... $1245) Hodcematic carct, ai : 52 Stude. 4 dr.......$475)] $1395 1949 Gorrie : ton she te *5O Stude. 2 dr....... $195) Good Condition, $295 | +59 Hudson 4 dr..... .$245| SPORTIAG 1951 Plymouth club 2 dr. "48 Ford 2 dr......... $165) :* Dee . Like New, $595 ps . ~.,,2\| Catalina, 2 tone, radio rE NEW 922° ’$2 Pontiac 2 dr...... The aes Bp porch , Several good 1946 through 1960 SSChev. 2 de.......- $795. atthe S 005 < = . ji skkeTON | °52 Ford Wagon..... $895. * of STON - 53 Ford Conv....... $1375. ie ee MOTOR SALES [53 Ford 2 dr......+-$1095, eee MA ae | 4 dr., radio, heater, Hy- cunYsLeR PLYMOUTH H 54 Ford 2:dre....-- $1395) diamatic: power - steer=— ONE BUY Sect, Anb TRADE. | 54 Pontiac 2dr..... $1445 ing I @Fowtinc “urpaamanic—s| 92 Dodge Clb. Cpe.. .$595/) ™ $1395 door Good condition. $225. Cay *50 Plymouth 2 dr.. "$305. _— Stout St. PE 52580 after 6:30. y | is powTiAG « ba corricrat'a| 5! Olds S58 -.....- $795 59 PONTIAC car Pully equipped. Low mileage, | ’<() Olds 98 $495 | 92 PO! j iY dealer's cost. Ask for AL FIRTH.| ~ J As) CHCoCObSS : | 2 dr. sedan with radio MI 4193000 | 47 Cadillac 4 dr...... $295 x “Te 1051 4-DOOR DELUXE PONTIAC. | ,, : i} and heater. Drive it and Very clean 3675 Brookdale FE 53 Pontiac Cata. ...$1375)] cee. af tow uiikaog poxriaé—s| 53 Pontiac 2 dr.....$1195||- $895 good tires motor does jot use oil | *S1 Chev. Clb. Cpe... $575) $108 14 ft. boat, $118. 3882 Mt | ’50 Buick 4 dr........ $495 | 33 FORD Pontiac 4 dr, Starchief. ao Merc. 2 dr.....ses $395) 2 dr., radio, heater, Power brakes. Power}, 2 Pontiac 4 dr...... ee overdrive and sun visor. steering. Whitewall tires. 50 Ford 4 dr......e. $395 $1095 Radio and heater. 4.000] ‘49 Ford 2 dr. ....... 7s) mi. OR 3-9454 bet. 9| 49 Ford 2 dr. .......$225 "53 PONTIAC a.m. and 2:30 p.m. ‘31 Ford 4 dr........ $625 |] 2 dr. sedan with radio, ina 7 PONTIAT Goon Gt CONDITION. ene ia * pie heater, and other ex- eulres *5 vev. Conv. . SOYS | . , Aubt Heteh fe : ky HOO DONOR NEES! | LLY, seats Seoucrciecd poor Rapto.|'52 Pontiac Sed. ....$795 $1095 maoril rae Cis eee Loreal "$2 Dodge Cl. Cpe... . $645 $0 PONTIAC. RADIO HEATER. "50 Buick Sedan .....$495_ <1 GHEVROLE FT tae ate aewa st 6 soot Mase \'49 Ply. C pe. ..0. . $295 | 4 at sedans . ! - fi NORTHWEST CHEVROLET $305 | - sedan with radio, ward at 13 Mile 50 Chev. 2 dr. ......8 395 heater and Powerglide ___*"Ujncon*s-tive | 50 Ford 6 ....... +. -$273 | leg 49 Ford 6 ..........8175 . k ELLER "50 Pontiac Sed. ....-. $495) | - THERE'S NO URANIUM on our lot—but if you are prospecting for a good used car, stake your claim at the Pontiac Retail Store HOME OF THE GOODWILL USED CAR ‘SS CHEVROLET 4 dr. Bel Air, radio, heater and overdrive, $1895 "52 CHEVROLET 2 dr. sedan with radio and heater, Nice car. , 5 51 PONTIAC 4 dr. sedan with radio, and $595 heater tires. whitewall *80 CHEVROLET 2 dr. sedan with radio and heater. Many-miles left. : $495 "$9 PONTIAC 2 dr., radio, heater, Hy- dramatic and direction _ signals. $395 32 DODGE sedan with radio 2 dr. and heater. A very nice cal. $495 53 PONTIAC 2 dr. sedan with radio and heater. See it to- day. $1195 "53 CHEVROLET 2idr. tu-tone finish. $045 radio, heater and 100 More Cars to Choose From PONTIAC RETAIL STORE “Goodwill Used Cars” KE 3-7117 68” A-] Buys "0 Olds 88 2 dr.... 50 Chrysler 4 dr.. ‘52 Nash 2 dr.....- Harold 464 S. Woodward MlIdwest 4-7500 “JOrdan 4-6266 '55 Ford Ranch Wagon 59” Mo. , 55 Chev. Bel Air $1799 54 Pontiac 4 dr. $1544 $299 53 Ford Hardtop $1099 If Your Car Is Worth $125 - With Only $10 Down Cheapies 49 Dodge Sedan . :$144 49 Ford 2 dr-..... $144 ’54 Buick H’dtop $2195 ‘47 Pontiac Sedan . .$99 53 Chev. 2 dr.....$899 '49 Olds 88 4 dr... $199 ‘54 Ford 2 dr......9999 ‘SO Nash 2 dr..... $10 3 Pontiae Dix..$10M 46 Ford 2 desc 8 53 Packard 4 dr...$999 +59 Hudson 2 dr... .$144 54 Chev. 4 dr.....$1144 47 Chev. 2 dr......$99 51 Ford 2 dr...... $299 '46 Packard Sed... $99 53 Plymouth 2 dr. $699 49 Mere. Clb. Cpe. $144 SO Ford 2 dr...... $199 46 Dodge Sedan .. .$99 49 DeSoto Sedan. .$144 ’53 Ply. Hardtop ..$44 ; ‘50 Buick 2 dr.....§2% Convertibles ’52 Plymouth 2 dr. $499 ’°50 Nash Conv.....$199 *$3 Olds 4 dr......$1344 ——-’51 Ford Conv.... .$599 139 Cad. (like new) $244 50 Ply. Conv.. eos $399 52 Ford 4 dr......$599 92 Ford Conv. ... $944 52 Ford R. Wen...$799 4 Ford Conv... .$1599 gn 52 Chev. Conv. ...$799 ’51 Chrysler 4 dr.. .$499 "52 Chev. 2 dr.....$544 Trucks ’51 Merc. Clb. Cpe. $599 50 Ford 1% t. pan. $299 52 Pontiac 2 dr....$744 53 Ford Courier. .$599 '52 Buick 2 dr.....$899 46 Dodge platf'm $244 SI Chev. 4 dr.....$299 {8GMC7% © pick. $19 41 Ford % t. pick. $44 $999 $999 $999 1954 FORD TUDOR Your Vacation 51 Henry J 2 dr.. .$199 Special "53 Chev. H’rdtop $1144 $260 Dn. & $29.70 Mo. 52 Olds 88 2 dr... .$944 or | °S1 Kaiser 2 dr.... -$209 Your old car down and I] °53 Buick Riviera $1299 ‘*lightly higher pay'ts. i] °52 Chrysler 4 dr.. .$799 or $10 down and slightly higher payments. Turner, Ford. 2 BIG LOTS 13'4 Mile Rd. at Woodward Liberty 9-4000 Liberty 9-4001 Low, Low Bank Rates—No Down Payment Immediate “Spot” Delivery The Home of 295 Full = Down Payment Required 1950 Buick 2 dr. 1950 Hudson 4 dr. 1950 Chev. Cpe. 1950 Packard 4 dr. 1950 Pontiac 4 dr, 1950 Merc. 2 dr 1950 De Soto 2 dr. 1950 Plymouth 2 dr. 1954 Buick Special 4 dr.. 1954 Buick Century Har Open Till 9 oe a the Good Deal — Deal More! $445 Full Price—No Down Payment Required 1951 Chev. 2 dr. 1951 Nash 2dr. 1951 Olds 2dr. - 1951 Pontiac 2 dr. 1951 Buick 2 dr. 1952 Kaiser 2 dr. 1952 Stude. 2 dr. 1951 Mere. 2 dr. 1954 Ford Customline Club Coupe, a real low mileage beauty 1953 Pontiac Deluxe 2 dr., Hydramatic, radio, heater and undercoated, ready.to roll... 1953 Chevrolet Deluxe Station Wagon. 4 dr. a real sharpie dtop 2 dr., P.M. this is a clean one owner OLIVER BU CK Plus a Good $835 A Sale to End All Sales — Read and Compare! ~ Full Price—$195 or Your Old Car Down 1952 Buick 2 dr. 1952 Pontiac 2 dr. 1953 Chev. 2 dr. 1952 Merc. 2 dr. 1953 Ford 2 dr. 1953 Chev. 4 dr. 1982 Olds 4 dr. 1983 Hludson 4 dr. - a bright yellow beauty............ FE-2-9101 _ 10 Courteous Salesmen — re a se eee one eee eee No Reasonable Offer Refused 1954. Buick 4 dr. Super, 2 tone green, radio, heater and Dynaflow..... $2195 1954 Pontiac 4 dr. Starchief Deluxe, radio, heater and hydramatic.....$1595 1954 Chevrolet Bel Air, a beauty that is loaded with extras..... slelecte als $1195 1953 Buick 2 dr. Special radio heater, and Dynaflow, spotless.......... $1195 60 Cars to Choose From We Will Not Knowingly Be Undersold by Anyone! OLIVER BUICK WHERE PONTIAG BUYS ITS BUICKS! 210 Orch rd Lake Ave. "Brig Ole Je | : Brig JEROME FE 80488 | NO BETTER STEERI wa FEAR... To the ht Spot” : SHARPIES | "55 Chev. V-8 Bel Air 4 Dr., ‘34 Olds Super 88 Hardtop, Power °53 Olds Su Loaded per 88 Conv., Extras SPECIALS $3 Ford Custom 8 Tudor, $3 Chry. N.Y..Cl. Cpe.. V-8..........0.. .. $1298 53 Kaiser Man. 4 Dr., Hydra., Sharp 53 Chev. Dix. 4 Dr., P/Glide, Auto. Eye... Ford-O . - $888 - $988 een ae | 53 Olds Super 88 4 Dr., R&H, Hydra.......$1588 | '53 Olds Super 88 Holiday, Power....... .. $1644 ‘34 Pont. Chief 8 Dix. 2 Dr., R&H, Hydra... .$1588 | CHEAPIES i} 47 Chev. 4 Dr...... $95 *50 Ford 82 Dr... . .$399 ‘46 DeSoto Sed..... $199 "47 Pont. Cl. Cpe.. $244 ‘47 Nash Sed.......$177. 49 Ford 8 2 Dr... .$199 ‘| 48 Chev. Aero Sed. $244 40 Olds 98 Sed... .$299 | 49 Nash 600 Sed....$179 49 Line. Sed. ...., . $366 | 48 Hudson 8 Sed.. $169 49 Chev. 2 Dr... ,. $211 NO MONEY DOWN! INANCING! Meet Your Next Car At the ht Spot” OLDS-CADILLAC | 1 Cass at Orchard Lake ce 204s { ' THE PONTIAC. PRESS, “§ THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 _ -- Today’ s Radio Beaaieiare -- Programs furnished by stations listed tp this column are subject te change without notice. Wau, ie URLW, (see) WW, (woo) WUAR, (1190; WAYS, (ite) WIJBE, (hee WPRON, (1460) TONIGHT |. CKLW, Cantor WJBK, New 8, T. Geor Pa New :00— WIR, News 10:00— WIR, Tenn. Ernie WCAR, News, Rhytme CKLW, Musica) Airs WWJ, tiews WWJ, Pibber McGee | WPON News Miladv Muste News, George -CKLW. News, Sports WXYZ, Ed Morgan 9:15—WJR, Kitchen Club. WCAR, News, Music WCAR, News, Music News :30—WJR, Mrs. Page WPON. News, Platters Newer 10: VETS bap Mears of News| CKLW, Toby David 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins 6: hw 2 lors Quartet one om f Town Peel ey or Calling ~ WXYZ, Paul Winter ww, Lyn : bs Lazy Ranch WXYZ, Lee Smite 18:80—WJK Boe Ady CKLW Good Weighvor | ron, ‘Guy Kuna CKLW, Eddie WWJ, News bat Arthur Godfrey 1:30—w ; WCAR, Talk Sports CALW, &. McBride. Peale ce tee IN Serenade PON. Zee & Orville wv, My True Story WAR, S Te 6:—WJR Sports - Ab WIR. Melody CKLW, News, Homechate | ,WoAR, Tiger Tunes nt WWJ, Jim Deland VWJ Stars Sing WCAR, News, Temple WOAR Warm Us Tin WXYZ, Hill Stern CKLW, Martin WPON News ean. orm Up Time WCAR. Muste 11:00—WJK, News 10:15--WW3. Fran's Favorite: | “Cxrw. News, Davies — WPON &ports WWJ. Bruce Mayer | WPON Pontiar Party WeAn Geuze 6:45—WJR, uo. Thomas CKLW, News 10:30-—-WWJ, Second Chance} 915 Wyp Perry Mason WXYZ, World of Speed WIBK. News Gentile WXYZ, Whispering Sts. CKLW. News N 2 Buns 11:15—WJR Sports ."inal CKLW, Mary Morgen 2:30—WJR, Nora Drake 71:00—WJR, Guest Bouse CKLW Sportsmortem WCAR Music “CKLW, Clubtime | WWJ, 3 Star ):30—wWJK. M'nite Muste 10:45—WWJ. TBA WCAR. Club 1 WxYR | erie y peu WBE, dongs of Wilke Lee wwe Btrke te Rich | 24S—WIK. Brianter Dev ton wis i a, rike it WJBK: Newa, Sporte WPON. Musie in Air wxyZ, Companion er oe +, ig Aymus WCAR, News, Music — UW, Mutua orning N News #hanley WJBK, Tom George, News weve ed folly teaace 1:15—WJR Gerenade FRIDAY MORNING — WCAR, News, Lady $:15—WJR, Rosemary WWJ, Jim Deland 6:30—WIK, Agri'cit. Voice WPON News Party 8:30—WJR, Helen Trent CKLW, Guy Nuno WWJ. Bob Maxw 11:15—CKLW. News WWJ, Lorenzo Jones WCAR. Sign Of WXYZ, Fred Wolf WXYZ, Curtain Calls WJBK. 7:te— WIR, Serenade CKLW, Guy Nunn WCAR, Music 3:45—WJIR. Our Gai Sunday ww bergen Beatty WJBK, Gentle, Binge WPON, Pont. Party WWJ, Woman in My House WXYZ, str WCAR, Coffee With Clem, |'1:30—-WJK. Make U» Mind | ¢:00-WJR. House arty CKLW. Gabrie! — ise 'n’ Ghine WWJ, Phrase Pays ww Rignt to Happiness WJBK. Housepar 6:45—CKLW, Toby Vavid CKLW, Queen for a Day WXYZ, Wattrick, McKenzie 2:45—WIR. ©. Collingwood WCAR, Coffee WPON tine: Party CKLW. Eddie Chase WWJ, 1 Man's ily 00—WJR, Jim Vinal 11:45—WJR, Second Husband| WCAR News Music CKLW, F. Martin WXYZ On olf ww Tt McGee 4:15—WWJ. Stella ‘elles WXYZ. Gage WCAR, News, Coffee aaa ie — White WPON Club 1 6:00—WJIR, “whistler T1S—WIR Music Hall 4:30-WJR, Music Hel WWJ, Roy Rogers 7:30—CKLW. Terence O'Dell oRLW, "hews 3 Suns Www, Widd . CRLW: Set Preston” | “CuLW tony’ Davis WEOW New WAR, Mt LW, oD vi WCAR, Music KL. le 00— WIR, Jack White 12:15—WJR, parm Roundup WON, Club 1460 8:15—WXYZ. Show World Wd, ata Paye Elizabeth 4:45—WJR, Woman tn House $:30—WJR, Symphony CKLW, News CKLW, Austin Grant ww ni WCAR, Music WPON ——— ateee N nta: CKLW Brady Kav a:b WIR, “bud Guest (2:30—WJR, Time Out Music| §:-0a-wJR, News 8:45—WXYZ, Benson's Hdwy.| WCAR, Coffee WXYZ, News, Crocker WWJ, News at § 9:00—WJR, R Ch WPON Rise ‘n’ Shin CKLW. Bud Davies CKLW. Eddie Chase ww, X Minus 1 8:30—WJR. Musto Hall WCAR. Music WCAR, News WXYZ, Serenade room 45—WWJ. News 12:45— WXYZ arte Lady PON News. Serenade CKLW. Official Detective WCAR. Radio Revival WPON, Perm Mt kts. 6:15—WJR, Music #:1—WIR, Bing Crosby 00 We Wm, Sheehaa rR N ww, Jim 9:80— WIR. Amos ‘a’ Andy WWJ. Minute Parade IDAY AFTERNOON WCAR. Muste The Loser WXYZ. Breakfast Club 1:00—WJR Life's Road 6:30—WJR, Music Hall were Rhythm CKLW. News David WWJ, Lawrence WXYZ, News, McKenzie -- Today's Television Programs -- Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channe| 4—WW4-TV Channel i—WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00—(7) Soupy Sales. Comedy. (9) Circle 9 Theater. Lash LeRue in ‘‘Frontier Phantom.” Eliot. Variety. 6:15—(7) Dinner Theater. Rascals in “Free Wheeling.” (4) News. Paul Williams. (2) News. Jac LeGoff. 6:25—(4) Sports. Bill Flemming. (2) TV Weatherman. Dr Everette | Phelps. ':30—(7) The Lone Ranger. Ranger solves framing of reformed out- law accused of murders in ‘The | Return of Dice Dawson.” (4) Dinah Shore Show. Summer in the park setting for songs. Final | show. (2) News. Doug Edwards. 6:45—(4) News Caravan. John Cameron Swayze. (2) Patti Page Show. Songs. 7:00—(7) Cisco Kid. Western ad- | venture with Duncan Renaldo, Leo Carillo. (9) Your TV Theater. William Bishop in : Destiny.” (4) The Best of Groucho. Rerun of Groucho Marx quiz. (2) The Bob Com- mings Show. Bob is excited over | Air Force reunion until one of | his buddies decides to marry him off. 1:30—(7) Hollywoad Prevue. News, film scenes. behind the scenes views. (9) Story Theater. ‘The Tenor,” drama. (4) Make The Connection. Quiz. Jerry Colonna, | guest. (2) Climax. Jouis Jourdan | in “The Escape of Mendes- | France,"’ true story of how for- mer French premier Mendes- | France tried to escape from Naz- | is during World War II. $:00—17) Star Tonight. ‘The | Critic.” story of drama critic whose hatred for actors leads | him to death. (9) Motion Picture Academy. Sonja Henie in “The | Countess of Monte Cristo." (4) Dragnet. Swindlers with auto- buying racket tracked by Sgt. Friday and Officer Smith. 1:30—(7) Great Sports Thrills. Films of events at Madison Square Garden. (4) Ford Theater. A. “Trip Around the Block” changes life of young actress. Jan Sterling. Steve Cochran star. (2 Four Star Playhouse. Dick | Powell. Dorothy Malone in in Panic,’ columnist who is threatened after he runs series of crusading ar- ticles. 1:@0—(7) Let's See. Quiz with John Reed King, (4) Video Theater. Rod Taylor, Robert Coote, Gage Clark play three men who try to outwit each other in black- mail scheme in ‘“‘Dark Tribute.” (2) Johnny Carson Show. Roving reporter interviews man dan- | gling from 38th floor window | ledge in comedy skit. “Study (4) Sonny | Little | “Land of | story of newspaper | 9:30—(7) Science Fiction Theater. Edmund Gwenn in “Strange Dr. Lorenz.” (2) Eddie plays ‘‘The Romance Wrecker” who tries to play cupid for a | young couple. 10:00—(7) Black Spider. John How- | ard in “Bulldog Drummond's | Revenge.’ (9) National News. (4) Michigan Outdoors. Mort Neff | with items of interest to sports- men. (2) Insp. Mark Saber. Tom | Conway in ‘‘Deadly Dream.” | be: 15—(9) | Films. | 10:30—(9) Blondell in '‘The Merry - Go - Round.” (4) Playhouse. Arthur Franz in ‘Devil's Other Name.” (2) Studio Two “The Wife Who Lives Twice,"’ drama. 11:00—(7) Dee Parker Show. Musi- cal variety. (9) F 11 m Theater. Jane Frazee, Warren Douglas in “Incident.” (4) News. Paul Williams. (2) News. Jac LeGoff. a: 15—(7) Mystery Theater. Jeif Chandler in ‘“The Invisible Wall." (4) Little Show. James Gregory in “Calculated Risk.” (2) Miss Fair Weather. Pat Rousseau Yesterday's Newsreel 11:%—(2) Night Watch Theater. «Deadly Game.” 11:30—(4) Tonight. Variety Show with Steve Allen, host. FRIDAY MORNING (7:00—(4) Today. (2) Morning | Show. '9:00—(7) Todd Purse Show. (4) Romper Room. (2) Garry Moore. 9:30—(2) Arthur Godfrey. | 10:00—(7) Wixie’s Wonderland. (4) Home. jee wo—(2). Strike It Rich. 11:00—(7) ‘Story Studio. (4) Ding Dong School.. (2) Valiant Lady. 11:15—(2) Love of Life. 11:30—(4) Feather Your Nest. (2) Search for Tomorrow. 11:45—(2) Guiding Light. Cantor | Comedy Theater. Charles Coburn The Unexpected, Gloria | b FRIDAY AFTERNOON | 12:00—(7) 12 O'Clock Comics. (4) | surance agents, Fx-6I Starring in Great Life’ ‘Friends’ Flock Around Since He Has Gained Television Fame By EMILY BELSER HOLLYWOOD (INS)—TV actor William Bishop decided today that success has brought him more headaches than a harem full of | Marilyn Monroes. * * * Bishop, the romantic-looking ex- GI who's always being chased by the gals in “It's a Great Life,” said his troubles began when his video series option was picked up for another 39 weeks. “I received a congratulatory note from my landlerd,” hé shrugged, “with a postscript in- forming me that my rent had _been raised 50 per cent ‘for the next 39 weeks!’ “Then, I came home one day and there were a dozeH people sitting outside, including three in- two real estate brokers, a stockbroker and a Texan.” * » Ed “Come to think of it," Bill ad- ded, “I, never did find out what the TeXan wanted, but he had some oil leases sticking out of his pocket.” Bill recalled it was ‘only about a year ago that he was counting his pennies and his girl friends on one hand. NOW_HE HAS PALS “All I had to offer,”’ he grinned. Mr. Twinky Presents. (2) Noon- | “was a couple of hamburgers and day Playhouse. |; few jokes that nobody laughed 12:30—(7) Beulah. (4) Hour of | 4'. Now, when I go into a res- _ Shows. (2) Ladies Day. | aur tal eek i | r = Kitchen. (9) | in year stop by for a drink or | two—all on my tab. jt: 390—(4) Jean McBride. (2) Link- | s *« © letter’s Houseparty. | “And if I tell a joke older than 2:00—(7) Stars on Seven. (4) Ted} Joe Miller, you'd think I was | Mack's Matinee. (2) Baseball, | George Gobel by the roars that '2:15—19) About Baby. | 30—(9) Friday Matinee. Pays to be Married. 3: :00—(7) Hearthrob Theater. Friday Matinee. 3:15—(4) First Love. be 30—(4) World of Mr. Sweeney. 3:45—(4) Modern Romance. la: oo—(7) Captain Flint. (9) Fear- less Fosdick. (4) Pinky Lee. (4:30 — (9) Howdy Doody.® (4) | | Howdy Doody. (2) Welcome | Travelers. | 4:45—(7) Ricky the Clown. |5:00—(7) Auntie Dee. (9) Justice | Colt. (4) Rocky Jones. (2) Sage- | brush Shorty. | §:30—(7) Laurel Tennessee Ernie. (9) & Hardy. Nehru Says Russians Similar to Americans | .NEW DELHI, India #—Indian |Prime Minister Nehru during his | recent trip to the Soviet Union re- | portedly- found the Russians “‘re- |markably similar’ to Americans. | Associates said Nehru, at a Cab- |inet reception last night welcom- (4) It) (4) First Love. | () | go up. It's great for the ego, but rough on the pocketbook.” Bishop, a product of motion pictures, stage and summer stock, once decided he'd be a lawyer, but his uncle — play- wright Charles MacArthur — got him a job at the Suffern County (N. Y.) theater and that was the end of William “Clarence | Darrow” Bishop. | He became so inspired after | working with Broderick Crawford. + uccess Brings Headaches to. Video’ Ss William “Printed in By EARL Hollywood publicist for Burns etage, s'il and said, 25 or 30 you need GRACIE cards—those bf Bikini babes sold in respectable spots. They bear a label saying: “Printed in Italy.” * -munista!” Harold Lloyd had taken 200 se wine, she * Walt for two safe, if DOROTHY | Jose Ferrer, George Tobias and Kent Smith that he quit college to tour in ‘“Tobacco Road."’ * * * After apvearing in Regina’ and ‘“‘Merchant of Venice with Helen Hayes, Bishop was | signed. by MGM to make a South | | Pacific movie with Esther—Wil- | “Victoria | liams. The film was shelved and the 19)-pound hero got, instead, a starring role in the. U. S. Army with the Signal Battalion. He was stationed, of all places, in the South Pacific. THEN CAME FILMS | ing him home, described the peo- 'ple of both major cold war op-| ‘ponents as “hospitable, friendly, | mechanically minded, and liking | to do things in a big way.’ The Indian leader arrived back in New Delhi yesterday from a five-week tour of the Soviet Union and countries in Eastern and West- ern Europe. He visited the United 102 Years Ago Today: States for three weeks in late 1949. With Rites at years ago today. Startled Japanese saw strange red, white and blue flags fluttering over decks lined with menacing snub-nosed cannon. * These visitors who had dared | violate the Mikado’s ‘‘forbidden |waters” were the Mississippi, Sus- quehanna, Plymouth and Saratoga |—the fleet of Commodore Matthew | Japan Marks Perry Visit TOKYO i —Four black ships | slipped silently into Tokyo Bay 102) Landing Site Cc. Perry .of the U.S. Navy. Now Perry's arrival is celebrat- ed here as a link with America that opened Japan to western trade. * * * Today the great adventure will be marked in ceremonies at Kuri- hama — midway between Yoko- hama and Yokosuka—where Perry and 300 ‘‘splendidly arrayed’ of- ficers first stepped ashore. U.S. Ambassador John M. Alli- ~~ ACROSS | son will particiate. So will Rear oe | p 16 ma 7 [0 | Adm, Fitzhugh Lee, chief of the ana te mt. U. S. fleet air arm in Japan and baseball great-grandson of one of Perry's Risenhower’ ae fevorie sport i] ship a . Briss Uy A parade follows at the | Soviet city om vy Yokosuka U. 8. naval air base. | Wheys of milk Vy Stories of the “black ships of Pane nae yy evil mien” remain vivid in Jap- anése memory. The strangers re- socio ad YY) Y fused to deal with local officials aoe an Wd Cats and would not deliver a message ‘Fish eggs Yj, bb, Yh from President Millard Fillmore | Prighten to anyone but the Japanese Em- Pina peror in person. “Masobn After threatening to land an | Sesame armed party, Perry finally agreed | Hatem room to the Japanese stand that the 1 Compass point } Emperor was too exalted a per- ‘ Natural | | sonage to approach in person. He 1 Rett | | asreed to detiver the letter to high- abo : ranking Prince Toda. nme — ea, PF i nee reluctance . nerd A special house had been erected a ae DOWN 11 Vanish 41 Evade at Kurihama for eee Musteal 1 Goal — 53 Ghetees. at S eeeen There, July. 14, 1853, the delega- ena Heep el M4 African tree 44 Rnd | tions. ‘met under the threatening i Lay tslang) ¢ Lecturer 4 nage sd Poe om. guns of the American fleet, and Repteec § Breeitan posing -——— #6 European Japan was lifted from a long cd of acaw se Seaphtes eeallog riod of self-imposed isolation. * ¢€ family 9 Tenacles False 48 Quantity of pe ‘ ° 2 1 Bercntial 8 Souk Aart wo he ine Some say the trade agreement bn @ Trieste wine 36 having q signed was the first step along Ln ring yd t 16 Prative of Bi] 1 Cantor 3 Safteckion” of the road that ‘made Japan a med- \ Darling = Latvia 40 Rot Flax sayings ern nation, ; Later, he spent three years emoting in such films as “Anna Lucasta.” “The Walking Hills”. | and “Harriet Craig.”* “For years,"" Bill recalled, “I knocked around Hollywood with moderate success and it wasn’t too bad, Since I wasn't a star, my life wasn’t complicated. But now that I've gotten lucky things sure have changed!” * * & . To help consolidate his sudden professional rise, Bill hired a business manager. ance, out ef which I have to pay my rent, atilities and car ex- penses,” Bishop related. “Last week I had used up his check when the phone company notified me of an outstanding bill. I called my manager for some additional money but he refused me flatly and told me I'd have to work it out for myself. “So I had to sell my best suit that afternoon to come up with enough cash to pay the bill. “Success ig wonderful, but it sure presents a lot of problems!” Montana Legislature Probing Gas Prices MISSOULA, Mont. @ The man in charge of a oMntana Legisla- ture-ordered investigation of gaso- line prices said his preliminary studes show that gasoline prices in Montana are the nation’s high- est, exclusive of taxes, He said Missoula's gag prices, exclusicve of taxes, are the highest of any city in the United States. John Vance, counsel for the Mon- tana Trade Commission, said ‘‘Maybe there is a satisfactory ex- planation. That's what we are try- ing to find out.’ The Legislature appropriated $20,000 for the in- vestigation. Ale) Be isisist ini@tris: STAI ICOlRI SP io] IN| Sle Z/OlOl [ely leis) PAIN EI SL AIS iB IAL 16] P 1A VISINIG SRI 1S TIA Telr) SIAL LE Ai! fel ew aL OWI JE ha * From Rome come reports of Red Buttons’ doing Italian double talk while ordering food—and causing panic among a dozen waiters. They asked him his name and he replied, “Rouge Butoni.” They laughed and said, “Ahhhh, Com- French Postcards Bear Italy” Label WILSON CANNES—When I saw Elsa Maxwell and Ben Cohn, the & Allen, on the Hotel Carlton terrace, I felt I hadn't left home. * * * Ben had a complaint about the French women. They’re always chasing him. Ben—a former Broadwayite—and I were in college together. When we got in the elevator and he told the operator, “Premier vous plait,” he turned to me “That’s my Ohio State French.” “The women do the pursuing here,” lamented Ben. “Every time I walk on the terrace, of the prettiest, girls you ever saw bat their eyes at me. It’s terrible.” Ben. took off for London to help launch the Burns & Allen TV show there. First we compared our new cameras, his new Retina, my new Nikon. His has a built- in everything. “You don’t need a photographer with these new cameras,” claimed Ben. oo ‘All is an engineering degree.” I made a discovery about French post- * rolls of stereo pictures ren he finished Paris. “How's Paris?” he was asked. “All I know,” he said, “is what I see through my camera.” * The wife and I risked a few francs on a game of chance at a cones Island type concession. I won a cheap bottle of what she thought was a box of “St. Louis” candy. The candy proved to ; be plain cube sugar—some prize for people trying to diet by using saccharin!” THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Sammy Davis Jr. will sue a magazine ‘for libel. Famed att’y Jerry Giesler has | the case . Europe this fall; degree in London. . ing in Las Vegas, turned his check over ., to Rita to make sure the gambling tables didn’t get it. . . Harry Truman will tour he'll get an honorary . Dick Haymes, sing- Disney bought four of Jeff Chandler’s original tunes... Frank Sinatra's nightly dates this past week have been with his daughter, Nancy » .» Gary Cresby can pick up $50,000 weeks’ singing at a Las Vegas he wants it ... Dorothy Wil- son, a top fashion model, is taking up another career: Dancing on TV. Catholics Urge Press Freedom Ask Peron to Allow Exchange of Ideas ip Argentina BUENOS AIRES, Argentina ®— Argentina's Roman Catholic epis- copate has urged that the Peron government grant complete free- dom of press, radio and public meetings as the first step toward establishing a real public opinion in this country. A pastoral letter calling for such action was published yesterday in response to President Juan D. Peron's July 5 appeal for poli. tical truce. The letter reviewed events it said figured in the “state of reli- gious persecution in Argentina.” Its 24 signers included two car- dinals and ed archbishops. * * : Peron brought the government- church feud into the open last No- vember when he accused some members of the clergy of working against his regime. The church denied the accusation. Since the June 16 revolt against Peron was put down, the government has dropped its open antichurch cam- paign. Roman Catholic church sources has decided to resume salary pay- ments to some clergymen. Salary government to top Catholic prel- ates and their assistants but were cut off last month, | the government. contributions had been paid by the ~wrreereereeereerererrrereeryretrTeS YY HAMPTON-TV 825 West Huron St. 84-2525 REDECORATING? Rent a Wallpaper Steamer iv’s WE FIX IT” RAYAL TV SERVICE Evenings and Week-Ends « Specialty 270 Dick Ave. FE 4-2418 TV Barga Everybody's been twitting me about what happens to all the pictures I take. Glad to say some of them are in the new | Collier’s, and have to admit I'm a. very proud photographer. More of Those Wonderful ins at WALTON-TV 1430 Joslyn — Corner Walton — 712, Good Used Sets to Choose From! “He put me on a tight allow- That's ear!, brother. (Copyright — Post-Hall Syndicate, Inc.) WASHINGTON — The Senate Investigations subcommittee today ‘blamed 48 errors and Army red tape but not subversion for the | promotion and honorable discharge of Maj. Irving Peress after he re- fused to say whether he was a Communist. It said Secretary of the Army Stevens, or perhaps some of his Pentagon bosses, did ‘‘a disser~’- jce” to the country by what it termed concealing facts about the case of the New York dentist for almost a year. It also accused “the Department of the Army” of some deceptive practices toward Congress, | * * * But it made no mention of sub- _version in a formal report saying the case showed “individual errors in judgment, lack of proper co- ordination, ineffective: administra- tion procedures, inconsistent ap- plication of investigating regula- tions, and excessive delays." Army delay in making the facts public, it said, ‘‘served to unduly arouse and increase suspicions of Army Labeled Deceptive for Hiding Peress Facts the public as to possible Commu- nist influences and thereby was a disservice, to the Army as a whole, to this subcommittee, to the Con- gress, and to the general public.” Bender (R-Ohio), refused to sign the report. * * It should have stated, he con- tended in a minority report, that ‘no Communist influence was found in the Army.” It should have stated, Bender said, that “not one iota of evi- dence” was found to support charges by Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis) | that some “silent Communist mas- | termind”’ volved, Famous Make USED TV SETS Only $5 Per Week! HAMPTON TV om W. Heres eB ¢-2n08 One subcommittee member, Sen. | in the Pentagon was in- Cabinet Work 357 N. Cass Pontiac Window Co. Phone FE 5-3281 SPECIAL KITCHEN CABINETS up to 12 feet $100% includes hardware Estimates given on lots of 6 or more. One Lot of Picture Windows Y2 Price After 5 p.m. All Makes Bussard TELEVISION — RADIO REPAIR-SERVICE Expert Trained Technicians © All Work Guaranteed © Electric Phone FE 2-6445 84 Oakland Avenue—Free Parking Member Oakland County Electronic-TV Service Association Look at These Prices 1—10-Inch Sern’ S 1—10-inch De Weald . | 1—10-Inch Grinnell | 110-Inch General Electric ............-. 2 1—10-Inch Admiral 5— 10-inch RCAs ee aee eee ove eee ee ee ege er ee ee ee ee eee ee we eee even ereenaneevre | 1—10-Inch General Electric Combination... . 1—12'%4-Inch Jeckson | 1—12¥2-Inch Silvertone 1—1214-Inch Olympic 1—12'42-Inch Grinnell .... 1—1214-Inch prego arama cee 1—122-Inch Air King . ose ee soe eee ene eee ee ee oon ween eee ove eee 1—12¥2-Inch Silvertone ... 1—12-Inch Motorole spoasiivoa0s04 oeee 2—12a-Inch Admirals ............-+-65 3 1—12'%2-Inch Philco Ce ee ee 2—~12Ve-Inch Emersons ........--s00ee08 1—12'2-Inch Zenith 1—12'2-Inch Sperton . 1—12¥2-Inch Hollicrefter ACIDE 2-——122-Inch RCAs . j 1—12-Inch Admiral Cakes ee 2—14-Inch Admiral Combinations 1—16-Inch Air King . 3—16-Inch Air Castles 2—16-Inch Bendix eee eee een ewm eee en eee “te oe ee Oe eee eeeee “eve soe e ee eve enone oe eheee ee ee eee eee eee enews eee 2—16-Inch Silvertone ..; . 1—16-Inch Air King ...... 2—16-Inch Hellicrafters .. 2—16-Inch os a9 1—16-Inch Rega 2—16-Inch RCAs . 1—16-Inch Motorola . 2—16-Inch Admirals . . 1—16-Inch Phileo ... 1—16” Motorole Blond : ¥—16-Inch RCA Combination . 1—17-Inch Olympic | J—— 17-inch Silvertone .. 1—17-Inch Ambassador ... 1—17-Inch Emerson . 1—17-Inch Herald 1—17-Inch Hyde Park 1—17-Inch Bendix 1—17-Inch Stewart Warner ... ee 1—17-Inch Philco Blond . 1——20-Inch Ambassador 1—20-Inch Muntz 1-20-Inch Emerson ... owe 1—16-Inch rat Electric . eoeneene oeeenenee eee eee eeene e*eeee eee eee eee eee ee) ee @ eee oeeeee “ee ee oO oe eee eee se eeee ee ooeeeen veers eeee oe eee ee oon eee eee eee oer eee ee eeeae ee enwee eee eee anene ov ee oe eee 1—21-Inch Hallicrafter Aino feeeeone ae 79, 1—2Z1-Inch Trutone 1—27-Inch Munts TERMS AVAILABLE _ SO-DAYS GUARANTEE ne oe eee eee eae "stamps We Give Holdens With teen eka WALTON RADIO-TV 1430 Joslyn — Corner Walton BE 2ST ee ..$ 9.95 14.95 f ‘i ee Gees Z | ' \ i £ aN lg neo eae, aT en 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. ,THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1953, r fey eee he RMiNeg ir Reet eriee ee oe ¢ ' ‘ Z di Alc cca Maureen Hingert, a Ceylonese girl of Dutch descent, poses prettily | after being named “Miss Ceylon of 1355’ in a contest in Colembo. | She’s headed for Long Beach, Calif., to compete for the title of “Miss Universe.” | Tax Men Striking at Canadian Tickets t i BUFFALO, N. Y. (®—The United | : States Internal Revenue Service | F has launched a drive to curtail | + purchase by Americans of travel | ; tickets in Canada. By buying in | : Canada, travelers avoid payment | - Of a 10 per cent U. S. excise ta. Edward S. Shea, assistant direc- | tor of the Buffalo office, said the practice has become widespread | on the Niagara frontier in recent months. | American tourists, he sa’’, | flock te Canada to buy travel | tickets. Most buying is done in | Fort Erie and Niagara Falls, Ont. | : Shea disclosed his office already | has notified ‘‘a number” of Bul- | falo residennts they will have to | pay the tax. Americans visiting | in Canada or maintaining summer | homes there are not free from the tax liability. Under the revenue code, Shea said, Americans convicted willft1- | ly avoiding the tax are guilty of | an offense puninshable by five years imprisonment, a $10,000 "| | | | j 1 or booth. | Democrats Aver | Their Platform Will Hold Ike | : x RICHMOND. Va. (#—Nineteen of | Richmond's Democrats for Eisen- | hower were invited to the White | House. The Richmond News Lead. | er gives this report of a part of | the conversation with the Presi- | dent. Coleman Wortham Jr., invited | the President to Virginia to see | “the best duck hunting marsh in> the United States.” “Do I have to go through. Rich 2” the President asked. | On one visit, he recalled, he was | hustied past some dignitaries he was supposed to greet. Then of course the speaker’s platform collapsed with him on his 195% campaign stop. “Mr. President. excuse me,” one - member of the party cut in, ‘‘but the Republicans built that plat- form, They wouldn't let us near it. Democratic platforms don’t col- : lapse.” YOU'RE INCOME AHEAD when) you fill vacancies through The Pon.- | tiae Press Classified ads. Phone FE 2-8181 for a heipful ad-writer. Sanforized | 9-Oz. 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Come in now — see it and savel Back rest not included. regularly $249! Now / Follow the crowds to Sears for Savings Specials ...We’ve got everything under the sun for you during our exciting ag ON yr comme ne ee om some ee ' t Why Rent a Cottage .. . Save Money With This Cottage Tent Aluminum = Steel a, Camp Cot ing events. Folds tor carry- ing. Braced for ix Ca oa én $ se : 3 ee id ag SER Y ™ P Py Swimming Vests Boat Cushions Plaid Gallon Jugs Flotite Flotation Material U.S. Coast Guard Approved With Fiberglas Insulation Pk ay ae 0: | Reg. 298 =o D7 Only 1.99 Adjustable straps for snug fit. Water and scuff prooi! All Gay red and black plaid jug has Flex-Rock glass liner that will not stain. Easy to clean. Plastic cup and handle vinyl plastic, will not crack or peel. Reversible color combin- ation. 1$x15x2-inches. Buckle and tape front closure. Vinyl! incased, Sizes small, large. Color, orange New “Magic Cold” For Chilling Food. Drink a ~ Casting Reel Reduced for This Event Only! Reg. 3.98 1.99 Economy Rod Solid Glass J. C. Higgins ster = 1.999 A low price dandy with en- 89¢ Freeze and use instead of ice Quart Will give you years of fine, i smooth casting. Chrome-plated ameled aluminum handle, cork in food cooler chests Retains tor lasting beauty. Cap, 100- grip. Stainless stee! quides, ny- cold longer than ice. No messy j wound. Mist green melting Can be re-used line lon yards; 18-lb Get both swing and glide ct one low sale price! For Indoors — Outdoors — Homes — Rumpus Rooms! Kiddies can glide — then decide to try the swing... change is made in seconds. It's compact, rugged, easily portable. Stands almost 5-ft, high, 22-in. wide. Sporting Goods—Sears Basement quick -~ ~x? ~~ gO OE Gee CL aie Buy this terrific value eos! All for Only Sleepytime crib with springs, and chest. Your choice. of $ W D beautiful natural or maple matching finish. Crib springs adjustable to three heights. Crib mattress has No Money Down! innerspring unit! CRIB, CHEST and INNERSPRING MATTRESS } Can Be Purchased , : Separately! 108 N. SAGINAW... FE 3-7114 FOUR , THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 > WMG yo FLU save $100 on this new 1955 © - Admiral 21-Inch TV, Radio and Phono Combination Was $399.95 $2999” Long distance radio, giant 21-inch television, automatic phonograph —all inone! The phonograph plays and changes 3313, 45 and 78 rpm records. The long distance radio brings clear and perfect pro- grams as you like them best! Ina beautiful modern console cabinet! Admiral Table Model TV Now Only $4929”" New side tuning! New power chassis! New cleorer pictures! Compact, lightweight—you con carry it from room to room with ease . . . big, brilliant se!f- focusing picture tube. _ 2 Full Years | to Pay! Open Friday Night ‘til 9 High Fidelity Phonograph PLUS 32 Selections _ ——— 7 Record Library: A dmir al at | $50 Portable Radio Only Weekly SPQ?5 PROFESSIONAL-TYPE 3-SPEED CHANGER intermixes rec- ords of different sizes, shuts itself off after last record... yom pao presceggtnel ral eae orre now real hi- fidelity! a batteries. . WKC, 108 NV SAGINA W...FE 3-7114 i nt BELG indiehhitithihiititia thi iil bhbii —— a THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 FIVE _ VL Shecwug a PK TT ati * | r@ PRICE: —3Q nctaic nance 79” | | SROIL-QUIK emcees = NO MONEY DOWN Bh iitstic naisore @ Four 7-Heat Surface Unit Controls sey =P 4A” — ° Four Superspeed Microtube Surface Units $69.95 “Even Oven Heat” ends underbakin No Money Down—50c Weekly some parts of oven, overbaking in wr eo @ Individual Removable Drip Pans @ King-Size Rotary Roaster (optional) @ Full-Width Non-glare Fluorescent Light @ Appliance Outlet ... many more features Save 570 a a a Se 23” OVEN! More oven area for small-size kitchens! nT 4 : Be. | | Roaster-Oven = . Dual-Temp J .:.°27” a [lg REFRIGERATOR with § “"”" ew Huge 70-Ib. Built-In Home Freezer Reg. $369.95 . ee t \ PER ETESES ; i I : : F nagaaic 30c ol f = — a =x — ? . ™ ; = — - : neue eel g 95 | = Defrostia , = : : Pe on | Waffle-lron and S). 2 ea oe int Grill Combination Ever! King-size dairy chest with butter keeper, 3 Reg. $ 95 CX removable egg racks, snock compartment. $15.95 ; s Deep capacity door shelves. “Glide-Out” 2 a4 mee Medel : shelves plus many other super deluxe No Money Down—50c Weekly 10708 features. WKC, 108 N. SAGINAW...FE 3-7114 for this beautiful new 1956 J Mslomate Eeeic Pop-Up Toaster _ Admiral | =: '5 No Money Down—50c Weekly ae 2 | ee) i Ee mir ai NESCO Electric TIE: PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 NOW FOR ‘19 YOU CAN WEAR A BENRUS WATERPROOF WATCH THAT SWAM THE ATLANTIC a? } ASS i UNBREAKABLE MAINSPRING! tn : _m SWEEP SECOND HAND! STAINLESS STEEL BACK! >, SHOCK ABSORBING! = = ~ LUMINOUS DIAL! WATERPROOF! DUSTPROOF! 17 JEWELS! ey, GUARANTEED * WATERPROOF UNTIL 1957 r $9975 Less trade-in allowance 1Q°° You Pay Only o> * Gleaming, Bright NATURAL GOLD Finish. Raised gold numerals * Dome Crystal, % Unbreakable Mainspring * Matching Expansion bracelet Metal typewriter Db table with — iE CUCU OCU CP a ee Veee”lCLLLk Picture , your new typewr.ter ° W ©, . fn ‘i = a ne = \ c Be ; A i‘ os, ; ate ae ¢ rs - } \ 3 Electric Shaver Reg. - $24.95 10-DAY FREE Trial on Remington You won't believe it until NOW = a | Royal and you try it. Advanced design — < features flexible contour + . Underwood Portables —_ = ‘3 =., $900 = head, self-sharpening blades. -resistant wall an nd . js ' Senet iis. mnt " “ $@95 . We “Y & 00 No Money from N gm ae LAND CAMERA 50¢ ——. ae Down! §G9°95 N22" No Money Down! Weekly WKC, 108 N. SAGINAW...FE 3-711 ee POLAROID Weekly THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14,1955 _ SEVEN > DIAMOND WE GIVE YOU On Any Old Jewelry Regardless of Age, Type or Condition "a A magnificent diamond in. © ted mounting of gleaming nae gold. Matching Tak gold wedding band. 6 Sparkling Diamond S$ Duet. 14k. Both for 49 With Trade CLEARANCE FEATURE! Gorgeous New COSTUME JEWELRY Values to $2.95 & necklaces. Many styles. ELGIN-AMERICAN and VOLUPTE compacts $°—95 Values to al Ne Meney 51 1-Pe. SERVICE FOR 8 Restidogep by re poems oe pep 7, cate s¥ Ee: SPEIDEL PHOTO-IDENT te 5 0:. pt ‘es ini; t iad ebiadts $ednds i 33 EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JULY 14, 1955 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 NINE Sale Special. Many patterns ae) and colors to Pi choose from. up your easy-to-look- at Lino Rugs: ea Hurry! “= Occasional Tables limed ch or Berend 4? any end, step or cock- tail tables. Grand Value at Special Low Price! Complete 8-Piece Living Room 7139 Beautiful, modern living room group thot gives you the lovely, comfortable room you've always wanted. You geta restful, big sofa and lounge chair that are well worth the price of the com- plete outfit AND IN ADDITION—3 eye-stop- ping, matching tables, 2 exquisite table lamps and a comfort-packed extra, occasional choir, too! Table Lamps Modern, conven- wage $95 table lamps. Many ; styles. j . Own a Complete Modern Living Room, | Bedroom and Kitchen for Just . ° 4 fe,’ A : fo” ‘ . J : ‘ * j ¥ 80-Pc. Homemaker Sel You Get All These Pieces @ 32-Pc. Moderntone Dinnerware Set @ 11-Piece Salad Set @ 13-Piece Beverage Set @ 24-Piece Flatware Set with the Purchase of either Room by MOHAWK ih, | Rug Pad FREE Complete 8-Piece Bedroom Group ‘139 Not.a thing has been missed to bring you the utmost in comfort and convemience. Multiple drawerdresser and roomy chest for neat, gen- erous storing. Space-saving, wonderfully handy bookcase headboard bed! AND BESIDES THE SUITE a comfortable famous name mattress and coil springs, and two modern boudoir lamps, plus a framed picture. Sale priced so low you con scarcely believe your eyes! , mahogany. proof tops. Hurry! NO MONEY DOWN-_2 YEARS TO PAY OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9 FREE -PARKING! ‘ \ Colorful plastic covered Rock-O- Lock Chair with matching ottoman. SEWING MACHINE - Brand new Electric Portable Sewing Machine. Only 6 to go at this price. Electric Portable 539 “4 mr COASTER WAGON Filled with SOAP . 58S No Money | Down ai Not 20-inch, not 30-inch but @ full 36-inch size range with a big banquet size oven, large adjustable broiler, two spa- cious storage drawers! A reg- ular $139.95 value now only $88. Hurry for this big money saving bargain. They'll go fast! »” OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT ‘TIL 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 A fol Year's Supply of Fameus Reap Absolutely Free of Extra Charge All for Only ... $79 ‘New 1955 Speed Queen Washer has a full capacity, porcelain tub, equipped with aluminum, tangle-proof, adjustable pressure wringer. Full guarantee. No Money Down—2 Full Years to Pay 36” Gas Range Lowest Price! Best Value! END hot water problems th } LOW PRICE! Duo-THERM tomatic Gas WATER HEATERS $69") Triple tested tank bathed in zine for longer life. Pressure tested three times. Fiberglas insulated to keep water hotter longer and save on gas bills. No Money Down — $1.00 Weekly! eee lronrite Demonstration! Friday and Soturday at WKC lronrile Ask About Our AUTOMATIC IRONER Rental Plan for Only SLEES $y 50 your laundry. Come in and ask for details. Weekly Imported Directly From Germany - 3-SPEED BIKE All This: *24°° @ All Purpose-Wrench Reg. $69.95 @ Tire Air Pump $ © All Leather Seddle Bog 44 © Adjusteble Stee! Bike Stend Camere jac i ‘ ae ee 7 Pee ee gene me celle SS aia aR eet ia a ER ER OM ORE ig Hh ON OWN Rear he CMP puedes art Ws SIE Waa, Ba MO ais cs lh seas "pbs ES ea Sag a MN a tu catalt Nair u a ‘ Mode : : : BIO, eae CME pane cits ie belibealiciedty THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 ELEVEN New “isd j A WKC , Save *21 ESTOKRAFT MATTRESS EASY <2 ~ OWS v Regular *59.95 TERMS °° Pay Only @ ‘Permel” treated cover to resist stains and 50< perspiration! ee A WEEK @ Costly Latexed curled hair filled top and bot- tom of mattress! « @ Hundreds of heavy gauge coil innerspring mattress! @ Pre-built quilted border and heavy stitched edge! @ Luxury mattress with heavy 8-ounce quality HAIRPROOF ticking and metal! turning hon- dies, air vents! LOOK What You Get FOR s§ ONEY rat | Innerspring Mattress! _ ZZ and Coil Spring! Bee | | s — = | Matching Chest | a a and Dresser Available ~ Sensation value, at a terrific low price that even includes your bed- ding! Rich blond finish bookcase bed, yours for years of beautiful service. Im addition you get a famous name = innercpring mat- tress and coil spring all for $58.00. Moar expect to pay twice that x hindi Se ete oe eee a imei hi hai -LATEX-HAIR INNERSPRING Ni 29s iP an, eEeOI Rr CE Re ONL eS Sar a Wo di is ae BO AIL Laer em de Bll OP an hee tg ED as ROE RE En Sge dan aa, A Modern Bookcase Bed! Za | PY owes Ye a ON EP SE EEE TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY .14, 1955 SSS SSS —_,. | ; —\ | ; 7 Now—top allowance for your See A] old refrigerator regardless SS NS er WS SSS —— ; of age or condition me << EES : om * RSXS SS si Ss ’ ou PHILCO AUTOMATIC . = RADIO-TIMER a (‘4 | J The only radio of its kind. Brand new from Philco—with built-in automatic electric timer. Absolutely FREE while limited supply lasts with purchase of any new 1955 Philco Air Conditioned Refrigerator. PHUCO 1257 THIS WEEK ONLY— DON’T MISS IT Philco nol tl kill aod lect refrigeration sytem While They Last! re keep foods fr yas Huge iB7 cu. ft. 7/2) > -Philco "Easy-Our” Ice Cube Tray : . | & THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 THIRTEEN | é BRAND NEW -PHILCO —* 21-INCH CONSOLE MAHOGANY CABINET . Now Phileg, gives you Aluminized Tube thot increases BI 1” N E ; brightness 2% 100% —and now you can buy this brand emcee A oto new Philco console at this record low price—even less than . ordinary TV consoles. Console in_richly grained mahogany F finish. Come in and __ _—s $ A ale lang Spey Save 7 oO Philco Ranges a FULL-SIZE -PHILCO Electric Range $199" } Regular $269.95 It’s easier to use because it’s easier to reach into and see into . . . and gives you nearly 50% more front shelf ee than many full-size ovens. Hh La Lea i ALMA . PULP NR MD ASOT HL OMEN ULL e ORLY ER” LPO OPA EY i ae a re ee rE! em aneat mee TP eT NS omar OT NTU Se SEU ni CaEgR TS NUNES ES ERY NERY URSIN TRL CoO NASR LR OL Hae ema aT Ne SE ERORNY OT Uyare MRS EY Ty NT RCaRL yO, SEE ON ae area SET (ip PORT LR Ga SNCS OES, AN er ern SemeeON A Pcney = lating © SST ey ca Tea aT YS ee PTH. SMMC TT” Sugino ns Sete ae Ure ree _FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 1g Enuguine Now * 40 Less 21” Console with New Top Tuning m PAY LESS OLD TV IN TRADE! Zenith PORTABLE Leather Carrying Case and Beach 'n Picnic Blanket Here’s brand new TV with all the advance styling, super performance arid dependability Zenith has come to be (Complete with Case) re famous for — plus America’s most talked-about TV con- {li \, venience feature—Zenith top tuning. Why settle for on $ 95 / old, last-year’s ‘close-out model’’ TV that’s already out of for date? This new, YEARS AHEAD, Zenith value sensation Only can be yours. today! New Side Jet Tuning BIG 21° PICTURE 3169 No Money Down—$1.75 Weekly Really big value at smoll cost! This new Zenith 21” table model has new side jet tuning, genuine cascode tuner, Cine beam picture tube, thot gives you movie-like pictures on a silver screen + brings out background detail more clearly for 3D realism. WKC, 108 N. SAGINAW...FE 3-7114 eco e be 04% eee es * ‘eee ee tae ee ¢ * a + eee 88 . teers . aioe _| THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1955 FIFTEEN | 0 FaMog hua Ehigutne Friday. and Satur day Only a NN “AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC DEEP-FRY COOKER IN GLEAMING COPPER Westinghouse Thermostat REG. PRICE °24.50 REDUCED TO. Jo 4 te ) 4 ‘ “4 A Mn {| x . : ‘ , ; ‘ a 5 eS r 4 ; - - - } _— | eres ; 7 oe sssess: ssese ra —$ ¢ , . “~, a = = . Weekly 7 10 Exclusive Featuses! © Fries © Bun Warmer nches © Steams @ Cooks @ R w yi) geatnla! “e Soe Bnet * Roasts @’'Worms $a in Factory Grates! Hurry, While They Last! \ ——t. . LUXURIOUS FOLDING LAWN | CS ge aa zs0) GLIDERS or CAMP CHAIR a 2 "9-| GIA 40%) = 59: | a you go! Ray ah No Money Down! tor Only WKC, 108 N. SAGINAW...FE 3-714 ’ YMENT-Many Months to Pay aT i Ay * hd a PU: chee ~ sn _ she 4 Fis j 4 "e ‘ 5 lia nt 7 i. Me, ; , Luxury Bedroom Suite for the Homemakers ... Budget Priced! Especially designed and priced for the modest \ budget at a saving of $50. Only Bassett, the world’s largest manufacturer of bedroom furniture could bring you this Value. - . : Large double dresser with tilt back Pittsburgh fo r Phone : plate glass mirror, bookcase bed with handy sliding . ; doors, plus a chest with ample storage space. FEderal This fine quality bedroom is finished in Du Pont BG yp cies al 3-7114 “Dulux,” and trimmed with specially designed hard- ware. Your choice of Limed Oak or Platinum se Pay only #2 a week Never before have we presented such a bargain. 108 NORTH SAGINAW oO -—+ ZOz @ —-wn ZmvoO ee ee er saan ees —/?