‘ = THE. PONTIAC, Pp ESS _ Cloudy, ' Details rege 2 118th YEAR * * x* PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1955—B0 PAGES | “#00 sna FionaL are PHoTos 1 Big Fier Find Cooler Over the Weekend Forecast Sees | Scattered Rain for Local Area Thunderstorms Lower Pontiac Temperature to Expected 88 High Heat-groggy Pontiac-area residents tumbled to close wide-open windows at 4 a.m. today as thundershow- | | _Gangway - Here Comes Auto-Plane ers dumped a quarter-inch| | ~ Of rain, bring cooling relief from the eontinued heat wave. main throught the week- end, with more scattered showers predicted for today. Skies will clear tonight, and tomorrow the weather- man says it will be fair and cooler, Sunday’s high will | be in the 84-88 degree range, and today’s predict- ed high is 88-92. Although this morning's show- | ers dropped the mercury but four degrees, midity which made sleeping diffi- cult for residents across the coun- try. The mercury hit a high of 94 degrees in downtown Pontiac yés- terday. The city’s respite from the stifling heat won't be shared by the rest of the eastern third of the nation which has also suffered from high temperatures every day this month. The northeastern states, al- ready wilted by the hottest day of the year yesterday, were in line for more discomfort today, according to the U.S. Weather Bureau, In New York, today’s high tem- perature was expected to ap- proach the year's record 96.8 de- grees yesterday. In parts of the nation’s largest city, thermom- eters registered 100 degrees. Elsewhere it was even hotter. In South Wales, near Buffalo, N.Y.. the mercury hit a broiling 114 degrees. In Plainfield, N. J., it was 102 and ee: N. Y¥., 101. Philadelphia chalked up 100 degrees, equaling the record for the date. And Boston roasted in Si-degree heat, The Midwest, meanwhile, was welcoming the cooler and less humid air which extended over Minnesota and the Northern Great Lakes region. The cool front is expected to reach the Ohio River valley tomorrow morning. Low temperature reading in Pontiac this morning was 72. Reading at 8 a.m. today was 78 degrees. The 2 p. m. temperature was 86. Mackinac Ferry Strike Averted Trans-Straits Operation Continues as Workers Agree to Arbitrate ST. IGNACE (#—The threat of another strike by crewmen of the state-operated Straits of Mackinac Russell Van Avery, a spokes- man for the non-union civil serv- In Lansing, Lawrence L. Far- they cleared the hu-|~ The slight relief will re-| = “a, Pica Poniiac Press Photes CLIMB ABOARD—Making a cockpit check before his takeoff for the flight shown above is Dewey Bryan, of Highland, inventor of the convertible auto-airplane shown above. The Milford General Motors Proving Ground employe took his machine the length of the field this morning in a test hop. Highland Man Up in Air Over His Converti-Plane By REBA HEINTZELMAN Pontiac Press Correspondent “sprouted” wings early today as he tested his converti- plane at Pontiac Airport. Starting with an airplane motor and wings from a crashed plane, Dewey Bryan, 33, of 597 Skigner avenue, Highland, has just completed a contraption that is| equally at home on the highway or in the air. Resembling a huge grass-* hopper, the wings fold neat- ly back when Bryan takes to the road for a jaunt. When crazy drivers get him down, he just pulls into the nearest airport, rigs his wings, and takes to the blue yonder, Bryan assembled the mechan- ism inf his basement garage, at a cost of approximately §250. It took 344 years to complete, he adds. “The wings and many other parts came from my “riend Earl Smith, who crashed his own glid- er," Bryan stated. ‘‘From the junk left after the crash, the present auto-plane emerged.” The motor was acquired from a plane that Bryan and his brother Max constructed in 1950. State officials were puzzled how to classify the flying mixture. But licensed: pilot Bryan finally got auto plates for the highway travel, and another license for airborn maneuvers, - Before every flight he pauses to remove his auto plates, just to keep everything legal. Clipping along on the highway at a neat 45 miles per hour, the vehicle is capable of 65 miles per hour aloft. According to its owner, he gets 28 miles to the gallon from the Continental motor. Bryan, who is married and the father of three girls, has worked at the Milford proving grounds (Continued on Page 2, Sol. 1) Cue-Ball Clipping Sends Pair to Jail DETROIT @ — For a cue-ball clipping of a 12-year-old boy's head, two men will spend the next 10 to 20 days in the Detroit House of Correction. Marcel Rancourt, 36, was giv- en 20 days and Francis Canning, 27, 10 days by Municipal Judge George T. Martin in suburban Dearborn yesterday, They were accused of clipping to the scalp the head of Tom Goodman, 12, son of the landlady at their rooming house. Tom said he went to investigate a disturbance in the pair’s room and they dragged him inside, tell- ling him his hair was too long and proceeding to clip it. a | Foreign Aid Bill Restore Almost Whole Ike Measure Previously Slashed by House WASHINGTON w — A sizzling Senate-House conference on for- eign aid was in prospect today after the Senate restored practical- ly all the House cuts in President = Eisenhower's bill. The Senate eevee in session $3,205,841,750 measure yeaatdey,| giving the President one of his important victories of the 1955 ses- sion, The final passage vote was 62-22. The senators voted to restore $567,100,000 of the slashes made by the House in the bill, grant- ing Eisenhower all but $60,800,000 ef the sums he requested for U. °S, friends throughout the | world, Defeated in the long debate were A General Motors Proving Ground employe literally |"* SeParate attempts to make sharp cuts in the bil, All these votes cut across party lines but, reversing the Senators Vote Yes WASHINGTON UP—Michigan’s senators, Potter (R) and McNa- mara (D), voted with the ma- jority yesterday as the Senate party roles on foreign aid, more Republicans than Democrats backed the President on the key tests, The conference on the bill prob- ably will be held next week, Sen. Hayden (D-Ariz), for the bill in his branch, told a reporter today “We're going to stand pat on exactly what the Senate voted." Some of the House managers irt- | sist they will not grant a penny of increase beyond what their branch originaly voted — $2,638,- 741,78. This compares with Eisen- hower’s request of $3,266,641,750. In Days of Davy Crockett “In The Days of Davy Crockett,” told by an Old Scout, begins in the Pontiac Press Monday.’ Here is a thrilling pictufe story, told in strip form, of the stirring ae ee eee oe ore them with him. You won't wish to miss a single installment of these grand stoties, finely written and splendidly drawn, of the amazing adven- tures of Jim Bowie, Sam Houston, Buck Travis and Andy Jackson, who, like Davy Crockett, fought in the wilderness for their people. Remember, In The Days of Davy Crockett starts Monday in the Pontiac Press. Cordell Hull, 83, Statesman, Dies; Suffered Stroke ‘Sire of United Nations’ Was Secretary of State in Roosevelt Cabinet WASHINGTON (#)—Cor- dell Hull, former secretary of state whom many hailed | at “the father of the United Nations,” died today. He was. 83 last Oct. 2. Death came at 9 a.m. at| the U. S. Naval Hospital in | nearby Bethesda, Md. The) elderly statesman had been taken there last Match 26! | Miss Sweden is after suffering a stroke | ‘= his Hotel Sheraton-Park apartment. He had another stroke yesterday. Hull had long been in poor health suffering from high blood pressure and ailments of old age. In 1951 he suffered a cerebral thrombosis and was desperately ill for many months. Friends despaired of his life, but he made a goed recovery and left the hospital to live in his hotel quarters, Mrs. Hull died in March 1954, Uatil his strdke in March, and traditiona) party | ? | lines but, reversing the traditional floor manager | | other man in the nation's history— Hull spent his whole adult life in | public service. He was in Congress 2 in the Senate—before he became | | See, | when she brushed a defective elec- aside from periods of critical ill-| maintained an interest in national MISS UNIVERSE, 1955 | affairs. As the original sponsor of the | |reciprocal trade program, Wins Crown a od AP Werepactec 1955 — Hillevi Rombin of Sweden wears her royal crown and robe after she was named Miss Universe at Long 'Beach, Calif., last night. She is a tall blonde—5 feet 7—who speaks five languages. She won from a group of five finalists that included Miss El Salvador, Miss Ceylon, Miss Germany and Miss Japan. blonde, but there was little beautiful. CORDELL HULL held the post longer than any from March 1933 to November 1944. Iilness forced his’ retirement in World War II. He was awarded the Nobel Peace prize in 1945 in tribute to his ef- forts to develop a plan to banish war. These efforts led to creation of the United Nations. Born in a log cabin in Tennessee, | for 24 years—22 in the House and secretary of state. Before that he was first a state legislator and later a circuit judge in Tennes- Shock Fatal to Tot DETROIT ®—Marie Gilley, 2, of Detroit, was electrocuted Friday Speaks 5 Languages Miss Sweden Runs Away With ‘Universe’ Contest LONG BEACH, Calif. 2R—Miss Sweden today is Miss ‘Agreement on Major ee + End of Patley ‘Slated Tonight. at Last Meeting Foreign Ministers Get Problem of Settling European Problems =; GENEVA (INS)—The Big Four “summit” leaders wound up six days of cold war negotiations tonight with agreement on ways to seek settlement of major East-West issyes and find a road to real peace in the atomic era. The government leaders arranged a final plenary session for 6:30 p. m. (1:30 ‘|p. m. EDT) to make the conference closing official. Universe, the world’s most beautiful woman. The judges, true to form, picked a short-haired else they could do—blonde, blue-eyed, 21-year-old Hillevi Rombin was just that J3ut the race was a close one—Miss El Salvador, blonde Maribel Arrieta, was only a few points behind. The other runners up were—in this order, Ceylon, Ger- Ford and Bolt Set Early Pace PGA’s Medalist Leads Down at 9 Holes Medalist Doug Ford, and Tommy Bolt, another popular favorite, held leads but Dr. Cary Middlecoff was down at the 9-hole mark of their 36-hole matches today at Northville’s Meadowbrook CC, in the National PGA golf tourney. * * * Middlecoff was 1-down to little- _ known Mike Pavella of Washing- iton, Pa. Ford coutinued his great play and took a 4-up edge over Wally Ulrich with a hot ¢under par 31 * @¢ «& Meanwhile Bolt and U.S. Open champion Jack Fleck were both over par, but Tommy held a 1-up lead at the turn, Fleck 3-putted the 2nd hole, but got it back when tric lamp cord and a radiator si- multaneously while crawling under | a chair to retrive a ball, Bolt 3-putted the 4th green. Fleck's putter failed again on the 8th, | where he Sputted to to go 1-down. _ Ulrich; - Middlecoff 1. *many and Japan. For Miss Sweden—one of the biggest girls in the con- test at 130 pounds—the title means a host of prizes, most important of which is a $250-a-week contract at Universal - International Studios. “This is one girl that I think | we can really do something with, | aoo4gabines "a top Ul official sai Starting Monday, the new Miss Universe will start work in “The Benny Goodman Story” at U-I. When told of this, she exclaimed happily: “I think that’s wonderful, be- cause I've always collected his 1 ” Hilevi is a college graduate and hails from the town of Upsala, about. a half-hour’s drive from Stockholm. It is Sweeden’s greatest university town and Miss Universe is a representative citizen. She speaks five languages, One of the judges disclosed it was her reserved bearing, plus her ee that helped swing the title to her. How many beauty contest win- ners can speak five languages? She is fluent in German, French, Spanish, English and her native tongue. For those who like statistics, her vital measurements are 36 inches ow oe oe the waist, Heat Wave Underlines Water Problem Facing Area available. | Many communities have had to} a? strict water - conserving old wells in the best condition possible. But City Manager Walter K. Will- such @ program underway by of- ficials man, “If we have to wait 10 years for more water, there might not be a cred left in Pontiac,” he are six-county water survey has been agreed on by. representatives In Today's Press Batiding News.........13 thru 21. Church News .......06.0005 8 9 County News , een enoe weeeere 23 SPCR CHRO eR eee 4 Sports * HOCH HH RCH OHHH He ee 12 Theaters .................. 10, 11 TV & Radio Programs........ 2 $00 eNEd Cea cess esse il Women's Pages ..........,.,. 6,7 | needs they will be able to provide. of Oakland, Wayne, Monroe, Ma- — Washtenaw and St. Clair The work will probably be done in several phases, according to George N, Skrubb, director of the Oakland County Plan Commission. The area to be served by a pipeline wil) have to be deter- mined, ang what future needs will amount to in that area, Then individual local water sys- tems must be analyzed to decide how big a portion of forseeable DETAILED PLANS = * An engineering firm will then be |: for the system — determining where the intake will be located and where the pipe or pipes will run, fj Then a cost estimate can be made from results ,of the en- gi study and costs allocated pecoasir sor among commun’ - ties who will participate. the problem are of the opinion) that the. project will pay for it-| self once it is constructed from required to make detailed plans “Most persons who have studied | “Once the area to be included is determined, then the govern- menta] units involveg wil] have te get together on the method of financing they will use, “When this is decided, legislation Fall From Car Fatal fo Mother Mrs. Eula Wheatcroft Dies in Hospital After Motoring Mishap A 30-year-old expectant mother, out for a drive with her husband and two children, was killed last night when she fell from the family car about a mile north of the city limits, The woman, Mrs. Eula H, Wheatcroft, of 1820 Hillside Dr., died in Pontiae General Hospital an hour after the mishap at Joslyn and Lake Angelus ties he was driving at 4 m.p.h, when Mrs. Wheatcroft asked him to stop the auto, “Before I could stop, the door was open and my wife fell from the right front seat,” Ba gaecsce sy ; : whirled and fired. Wounded, Reich- @ ‘Age in Pontion gapbhanciivescacs TF é Ser ceesediessoces ; Ft Lesduiieda clade ladle 8 : fs Jia lel } THE PONTIAC PRESS, ' SATURDAY. JULY’ 23, 1955. ra Flee ~ Vendi - gHalt Officers Told to Stop Sales by Unlicensed Street Peddlers Pontiac police yesterday were. ordered to halt ice cream sales by street vendors because none of the vendors has been licensed under a new city ordinance. Chief Herbert W. Straley told his men to jssue violation cita- tions to such vendors and to order them “to desist in their vending and selling” until they have been issued a peddler’s license. The order applies to all street vendors under thé peddling ordi- nance, but especially ice cream - sales, the chief said. - “Just the Yact that some may have applied for a city license does not give them the privilege of operating on the streets until the city license has actually been is- sued to them,” Straley asserted, The action followed notice from City Clerk Ada R. Evans that to date no licenses had been issued by her office. Straley also told the officers to be alert for violations of another section of the ordinance which per. mits no bell ringing to attract | persons, Parolee Shot Dead in Holdup Attempt DETROIT #®—Leonard B. Reich- ert, 28, paroled only 23 days ago from Southern Michigan Prison, was shot to death last night in the attempted holdup of a patent medicine store run by a retired Detroit policeman, Louis E, Estes, a former police he . . ee . \ae ‘ tale A @e, ‘ \) ae ‘ i j SWIFT DIVE * Gam WHICH IS oS MUFFLED BY .*s VOWN-EDGED > PINIONS. :°° © Se 4 Wut Disveys True Life Adventures. NIGHT ATTACK ! | KEEN ARE THE ENORMOUS EYES OF “AES '. THE GREAT HORNED OWL: .° THEY ARE PLACED IN FRONT ~ RATHER THAN ON THE SIDES OF \ 3 . HIS HEAD AS WITH MOST SS - OTHER BIRDS. © Copyright 195 | ~ Wak Disney Productions © World Righis Resgrved ” an « _ ° THE CLAWS AND " CRUEL BEAK WHICH . EVEN THE EAGLE 2 ™ % ~ c, nS DEADLY ARE RESPECTS. lieutertant, said he shot Reichert to death with a gun he carries inside his shirt, A clerk, her husband) and two customers witnessed the | shooting. Estes said Reichert pulled what looked like an automatic pistol and was marching toward the cash reg- ister when he drew his own: gun, { ert staggered through the door. He was struck twice by two of four bullets fired through the doorway by Estes. Highland Man Tests His Converti-Plane State Tourney Under Way for Babe Ruth Loop The Babe Ruth League's state tournament involving 14 teams will get under way at three fields in Birmingharh and Southfield Twp. at 1:30 p.m. today. Birmingham and Northwest De- troit (bracket 1) will play at Bir- mingham High School Field; Port Huron Reds and Huron Valley | (bracket 2) and Grosse Pointe | Woods and Berkley (bracket 3) | (Continued From Page One) with the Experimental Division for seven years, . He learned his aeronautical me- chanics while serving a hitch with the Navy, he says. to the airport, and bolted on the car’s wings in a hangar, His flight was limited to an altitude of 10 feet local airport authorities, but he took off into the wind, and trav- eled the length of the field. “This was my first test flight from a real airfield, but I still don’t know just how high she'll go.” mused owner Bryan after the test hop. “Ill just have to find out soon!’* Square Lake Collision Injures Two Drivers BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — A head-on collision on Square Lake Road near Franklin demolished two cars and sent the two drivers to St, Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pon- tiac, this morning. Alfred E. Smith, 21, of 479 Edith St., Pontiac, received superficial abrasions to both knees and Jack H. Ecarius, 42, of Flint, was treat- ed for scalp lacerations. Witnesses told police that Ecar- jus, traveling west, was driving on the wrong side of the road and crashed into Smith's eastbound auto. Less Cost, of Course HARBOR SPRINGS @—A burg- lar who took $50 of $100 from a surmises the other $2 went for a long distance call the thief made to say he had “done a terrible thing” and would mail the money back. The Weather cooler today, “= we ing amd cooler Deke ails 1656 mol. tine x iP. . Today tn Pentise Lowest temperature preceding § a.m. j am: Wind velocity 12 m.p.b. at sets Saturday at 8:01 p.m. Noon sets Saturd at 5:16 a.m. sets at pa p.m. rises Gunday at 11:17 e.m. ( Dewntewn eee | | ii @&.m.,..... oe 80 BMicccesseee Th 12 Ma. .k- cases BM. .coees-. 72 PMaresseoee- 4 DMs csvecees TS P.M. cwees sees roeeeeaee | | eee eee ener ene Bt ele lull daddies wie se eGeeeeer ees rae : . ee both will play at Southfield High | School fields. At 4 p.m.: Escanaba and Kala- mazog (bracket 3) at Birming- ham; Lincoln Park and Algonac (bracket 1) and Port Huron Whites and Walled Lake (bracket 2) at Southfield fields. : Sunday at 1:30 winners of bracket 1 play at Birmingham and winners of bracket 3 play at South- field, At 4 p.m, winners of bracket 2 play at Birmingham, and Bes- |semer and Southfield (who drew byes) will play at Southfield. Pontiac Democrat Club Slates Sunday Meeting Members of the “Pontiac Demo- crat Club” will hold their regular monthly business meeting tomor- row afternoon at the home of Aaron Copeman, 9260 Sashabaw Rd., Whipple Lake, those who have no transportation or don’t know the route to Cope- man's home will met at 1 p.m. in the Hotel Roosevelt, where road directions will be given, Following the business meeting club members will enjoy fishing and swimming. New membership cards have been printed and will be available at the meeting, Hicks George Hicks, club president, said | Propose Trade. With Russians Senators Would Okay Non-Military | Materials for Shipment to Reds WASHINGTON #—Sens. Russell (D-Ga) and Young (R-ND) said | today that if Russia moves to low- er the Iron Curtain, as proposed by President Eisenhower, the United States should consider ship- pittg the Soviets needed food sup- plies. ‘ Eisenhower called at the Geneva conference yesterday for a lower- ing of the, East-West barriers against exchange of information, travel and trade. His proposal was endorsed by British Prime Min- ister Eden but there was no im- mediate official Russian reply. Russell, who heads the Senate Armed Services Committee, sald he would continue to oppose shipment of strategic materials to Russia, but added: “We could send them cotton | goods, for instauce, and butter afd | other food products, It has always been-my belief that trade will do a great deal toward promoting in- ternational good will." Young said that “if the Russian attitude continues as it is and there ‘is a change for the better in in- ternational relations, there is no | reason in the world why we should ‘not exchange nonstrategic mater- jials with them.” | However, Sen, Capehart (R-"1d) said he thinks such trade should come only after the Soviets agree to withdraw from the satellite countries and ‘“‘not try to spread said, communism throughout the world.” and precipitation for the period. More Hot Weather Ahead The weather maps below give you the U.S. Weather Bureau's long-range forecast through the middle of August. It is not a specific forecast in the usual sense, but an estimate of the average temperature i Y NAA, “ yy fuse r J Ys . LQ, Temperatures up to mid-August will average below normal in the Southeast and Far West. Above normal temperatures are expected in the remainder of the country. Willis Cub Pack Has Sport Night, Gives Awards Willis School Cub pack no. 64) met Thursday night at the GMc| athletic field for a program of | sports activities and presentation of cub awards, ] Following a softball game com- | posed of members of nine cub) dens, under the direction of As- sistant Cubmaster Joe Pocchiola, several badge presentations were made by Cubmaster Fred Strass- Winners from Den no. 3 were: Gary Gobb, Wolf badge and Silver Arrow; Robert James, a Bear badge and a Gold and Silver ar- row; Clayton Gobb, Bear badge | and two Silver Arrows; Gary Poc- chiola, two Silver Arrows; Ronnie Jackson Inmate Remains Silent Declines - Discussion of 31-Year-Old Murder Committed Locally A SS-year-old Jackson prison’ in- mate. yesterday refused to talk, about a murder which three wit- nesses claim they saw him com- mit here 31 years ago. Saint Helm, convicted of man- slaughter here in 1919 and second degree murder in New York in 1927, was questioned about a third killing by Assistant Oakland Coun: | ty Prosecutor William E. Lang. Helm, who comes up for parole next month, is said by the three witnesses to have stabbed Mrs. Cora Wickware, 22, to death here April 14, 1924 while on parole from a manslaughter conviction five years earlier. Helm escaped arrest here fol- lowing Mrs. Wickware's slaying, but committed another murder in _|1927 in Albany, N, Y., of which he was convicted. He was re- turned here in 1952 and placed in Jackson as a parole violator on the original manslaughter count. The docter, who examined Mrs. Wickware’s body, and coroner, who conducted an inquest, are dead and the prosecutor's office now faces a difficult task in legal- ly establishing she died of unnat- ural causes, Such proof is vital to a murder case, © Helm told Lang yesterday he} has “nothing to say" about the Wickware murder. Prosecutor Fredeick C. Ziem said he will press a search for records of the croner’s inquest which might form the basis for a new murder charge. It charged, Helm could be brought here from prison to stand trial. Big Four-Agree on Major Issues | (Continued From Page One) of all four delegations to the Ge- neva conference—the first meeting of East-West chiefs of government in a decade. The work of the Big Four in Geneva was considered successful, although no concrete agreements on basic issues were reached. Such agreements had not been expected. President Eisenhower had said—and other Big Four lead- ers had made it clear they felt the same—that the Geneva conference was designed to reduce cold war tensions and find a path to world peace, President Eisenhower skipped arrangements to hold a final news conference in Geneva be- for his departure for Washington. Slippery Prisoner from a Michigan prison who es- caped yesterday as he was being transferred from jail to a nearby courthouse. Still handcuffed, Ernest C. Hol- lands, 24, formerly of Ottawa, bolt- ed away from guard William Cur- ley and sprinted into an alley, leav- ing Curley badly outdistanced. ‘He was just too fast for me,” said Curley. . Holland was serving a 15-year term for armed robbery in Mich- igan when he escaped last April while being led from Wayne Coun- ty Jail to a courthouse. He was arrested here June 17 by Detec- tive Robert Smith, who recognized | him as a fugitive, and was being held for Michigan authorities. Octogenarian Killed in Reed’City Crash REED CITY (®—An 87-year-old man was killed and his wife and son injured last night when their car collided with another auto and smashed into a tree. Killed in the collision two miles north of Reed City on U.S. 131 was Henry Blake of Charlevoix. His wife Pearl, 45, and 9-year-old son, Robert, were injured. State police said Mrs. Blake was at the wheel of the car when it collided with one driven by Jo- seph J. Graveel, 44, of Rural City. Graveel was unhurt. ' | gressional | White House | however, and report to the Ameri- to can nation by radio and television The President will brief con- Monday . morning, Monday night. Sicilian Village Threatened by Etna Lava Flow FORNAZZO, Sicily “®—A wall of burning lava crept at the rate of village on the side of Mt. Etna. The glowing fed river, 15 feet high and 150 feet wide, was still some four miles from the center of Fornazzo but only 2,500 feet from outlying houses. Milo, another village a mile away, also was in the path of the lava. Mt. Etna, Europe’s 10,705- feet, highest volcano, began overflowing four days ago from a crater 1,000 feet i FF Fornazzo’s 800 resients clus- tered in the streets until Jong after midnight, Volcanologists told them there was no imminent danger, however, and authorities said there was no need to evacuate the town- folk. During a 1951 eruption, the lava flow divided above Fornazzo, bracketing the town with searing streams but not damaging it. leaders fully at the | Killed in Home Fire 120 feet an hour today toward this | SPEED MARK — Donald Camp- bell of England broke the world's 'water speed record today at Ulls- |water Lake, England. He set a! in his turbojet Bluebird. The old mark of 178.4 miles an hour was set by an American, Stanley Sayres, three years ago. Senators Clash on Talbott Probe Solons: Split Sharply. Over Hearings on Air Secretary's Job - WASHINGTON \#—Sharply dis- agreeing senators meet behind | closed doors today to decide how | far to carry their investigation of Secretary of the Air Force Tal- | bott's outside business interests. | Among items for discussion was | Talbott’s offer to quit as a special partner in Paul B. Mulligan and 'Co. of New York if the senators | think such action would help the | Air Force.* Talbott has insisted, ‘however, that his interest does not conflict with his Air Force duties. The Senate Investigations sub- committee's inquiry, erupted into a bitter, public row yesterday, which its members may thresh out in this closed door session. One of them, Sen. Mundt (R- | SD), contended in advance of the session that the subcommittee has ‘become a ‘leak’ factory and a ‘smear machine,’ with Talbott its victim. * * * He said “‘leaks’’ of the subcom- | mittee secrets ‘have dragged Mr. | Talbott's name in public,-and yet jno one has yet made a charge against him.” A major issue before the sena- ‘The Day in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM—There are few landlubbers at Baldwin Pubtic Li- | brary. for, this summer interest is focused on the ‘“‘Spaceman's Read- Club.” a contrivance of Kath- leén Piket, children’s librarian. Miss Piket explained that as each child enrolls, he is given an routline of the planet system, tite first step in his adventures into outer space. Next, he reads a book of his choice, and is rewarded with a cut-out of the sun, which he ad- heres to his map, Miss Piket said that the reason the sun is given first is because it is around that’ great celestial body that the earth and all other planets ro- tate, “As he continues, he will visit each one representing a different type of book found in the library. There's a special bonus when more than one of the same type of book has been completed by the same child. In that case, he is presented with ‘one of man’s luminous friends, a star, which he places out in the orbit as indicated on hig map. Miss Piket already has 267 en- rollees but sky-minded readers from the third grade up may still enroll in the fun-making activities, aig will last until August 19, she * * * Leo A, Stiers of Hazel street, who fetired last. October after 25 years with the Birmingham Police partment, is in Dearborn Vet- ; Hospital, where he under- went surgery last weekend. * * * A roast beet dinner wil] be sponsored from 1 to 6 p.m, to- morrow, by St. Columban Catho- lic parish on Melton street. Out- door games and pony rides are planned for the youngsters * * * The City Commission decided this week to use the probate court method of selling parts of three city-owned lots just south of Web- ster avenue, facing US-10. 5 Under, this procedure, commis- | sioners will set a minimum price and take bids. During a two-week waiting period which follows, bid- ders are allowed to increase their offers. City Assessor Elmer Haack will appraise the property before a sale price is ‘dorttes. * * Continuing his biographical ser- mons, the Rev, Robert D. Dewey will preach on ‘Monk in Armor,” at the 10 a.m. service at the Con- tors is whether to call Talbott gan company, an efficiency en- gineering firm which pays Talbott | upwards of $50,000 a year, Talbott swore Thursday his as-| sociations with the company re- “clean” and ‘not improper.” He insisted he never has used his | Pentagon office improperly to seek | business for the company. Hold Father of 3 DETROIT # — The father of | three small children fatally burned ‘in their Northville Township home Thursday night was held today as. a police witness and probation vio- | lator. Sheriff's deputies said they | were not satisfied with his account | of the fire. : Loren J, Montgomery, 31, a fac- tory machinist, was taken into cus- tody late yesterday. Deputies said he admitted having five beers prior to the blaze that destroyed, his home near suburban Plymouth. Deputy Frank Van Wulfen said Montgomery was released on pro- bation from Ypsilanti State Hos- pital where he was committed for seven months on charges of mo- lesting a child in 1951, As a proba- tioner, Van Wulfen said, Mont- when the fire broke out. The chil- dren were Connie, 8; Calvert, 5, and Rebecca, 4. Steeplejack Killed’ DETROIT (®—A young steeple- jack-painter disregarded warnings of a helper yesterday and fell six | stories to his death while working on the General Motors Building. | Joseph Skirchak, 29, died at Ford Hospital an hour after the mishap. One of the features of the forth- coming General Motors Powerama in Chicago will be a “‘sun-powered” mode{ automobile. — ; The GM display is scheduled for car, The photoelectric cells are made of selenium, an element which has the property of converting light into electric power, In the “Power for Progress” demonstration, from electric lamps will simulaté Sun-Powered Model Auto to Be Seen at Powerama source of the future. GM officials emphasized that solar power has no practical application in the auto industry at present. GM is presenting the admis- ney direct such use. * @ gregational Church tomorrow. His back for more public questioning | topic deals with the life of Martin about his relations with the Mulli- | Luther. * * * Use of Pierce School's field for Saturday games and practice be- ginning in August, has been granted two new Little League football teams here, with the Board of Education stipulation that City Recreation Director Frank Whit- * roaf ties is being pondered by police here. They said at least two trips would have been neces- sary to cart away the 2% ties, | valued at $174, and each measur- ing about six inches square and 10 feet long. They were reported taken from the Grand Trunk Railroad yards yesterday. * * * Tracy Park Miller Service for Tracy Park Miller, who was born here 62 years ago, Local 653 Picnic Slated for Sunday The annual picnic sponsored by Pontiac Motor Division Local 653 (UAW-CIO) will be held Sunday at Walled Lake, Featured will be free amusement and a bathing beauty contest for wives and daughters, The rides will be free from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. A union membership card or plant badge will be the only iden- tification needed for admission. Yesterday's Pontiac Press listed Elizabeth H.; one son, Tracy Jr.; one daughter, Mrs. Betty Wise of Child Readers at Library Sky-Minded This Season wilt be at 3-p.m. Monday at Bell Chapel! of the William R. Hamilton Co.,, with burial in Greenwood Cemetery. _Mr. Miller, who lived at 448 St. Clair Ave., Detroit, died Thurs- day. He received his early educa- -tion in public schools here and had operated the Miller Floral Co. in Detroit for 42 years. He is survived by his widow, Elizabeth H.; one son, Tracy Jr.; one daughter, Mrs. Betty Wise of Amarillo, Texas, and eight grand- children. — Slayer of Three . t s /new mark of 202.32 miles an hour various planets,” she said, with | in Fyamination Detroit Truck Driver Wins Recess on Plea for Lesser Charge FLINT @® — A municipal court examination of Kenneth Kuzner, 30, accused of shooting three per- sons to death July 12 in a bar, has been adjourned until Monday. Judge Dale Showley ordered the recess yesterday after Kuzner’s at- torney asked the first degree mur- der charge against his client’ be reduced to second degree. Edward Dobreff argued the | prosecution had failed to establish a first degree case. Kuzner, a Detroit trucker, ts formally charged with first de- gree murder in the death of Said Farah, 28, member of a promi- nent Flint family, Farah, his wife, Jeannine, 6. and Mrs. Margaret Cross, 37,/ of Flint, were shot to death when Kuzner opened fire on them as The case of the missinz rail- sometime between Wednesday and rides for member's children, games the affair as beine scheduled today. | they sat in a bar, Another mem- ber of their party, James R. Dol- ‘lars, 26, also of Flint, was | wounded critically, | Kuzner was arrested 45 minutes | after the shooting in his truck out- | side a bar north of Pontiac. His |explanation was that the laughter lof the two couples irritated him. | He had never before seen any of the four. Witnesses described the shooting at yesterday's hearing. Russian Farmers Claim They Want to Go to Church AMES, Iowa —A member of the Soviet farm delegation de- clared that he and other Russians touring Iowa will go to church on Sunday it they are invited. Alexander Tulupnikov, the Rus- sian with uncombable hair and in- suppressible sense of humor, gave a live television interview—the first granted by any member of the Russian group—last night. Tulupnikoy said in his statement | which he read before cameras at the Iowa State College Station WOI, that he strongly believes that Iowans are the same as the people of Russia. The members of the Russian delegation last night walked about town here at their leisure in the relative cool of the evening. Tulupnikov. who is a Soviet ag- ricultural economist, held a uni- que seminar yesterday at Iowa State College. He answered a num- ber of questions put to him by faculty members for the school and students, * * * He declared that since the war in the Soviet Union he had not been able to obtain American ag- ricultural brochures and booklets and books issued by Iowa State College and other agricultural schools and experimental centers. Tigers Sign 4 From DETROIT (—Detroit Tigers an- nounced today the signing of four Michigan youths to minor league contracts. The quartet will report Detroit's minor league training camp at Lakeland, Fla., next spring. They are: Infielder Walter Pleznac, 18, Dearborn; catcher Dick Shedd, 18, Belleville; pitcher Dick Day, 17, | Plymouth, and pitcher Gale Tyn- idall, 18, Custer. With a convenient charge Fd : PONTIAC * eccount you're always able to take advantage of our specially advertised merchondise. You'll never miss the boot on savings if you charge whet you need when you need it, it’s a pleasure to charge it at... lhe ik’s UNION f LAKE o a ae x) PE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1955 | ’ ——wenn— THE BERRYS | a : | | : ; IT TAKES BUT ONE The first World War was prec the murder’ of ONE E MAN A i ter oak infect a whole crowd of good boys; a dingy. ill-kept house can ruin a neighborhood: leader can inspire an entire commaly. & & eonenese Here's 2 note worthy of your notice — OPEN PROM 7 A. M, to 8 P. M. You can easily leave your cleaning here before or after work, 5 DRESS SHIRTS It's — A brightly decorated house can change the aspect of an area. A beautiful yard along a street is a jewel on velvet. It takes but one person to set a chain reaction in a block; be that one person. Take the initiative, go to a paint store, choose colors | Bring them in today. Each shirt individually wrapped in cellophane bags.. BRING YOUR CLEANING TO our NEW DRIVE-IN AND SAVE 10%. WE GIVE HOLDENS RED STAMPS @, & SIPLE ‘be that-one. Senator Lyndon B. Johnson, (D- Democratic presidential candidate: XXV (his arms away from her uni-| ize Lucy was trying to — the VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME | Tex.) hospitalized from a heart Dear Lyndon: I am sitting on) Will Gentry looked over his! formed rescuer. Her” face was way for me. t-are bright cuenta and make your - : — : ——— -home a beauty spot. .. : | For Only $] 13 Cash & Our nurseries have blooming plants. and Adlai Bares Woes : conv a oe —— wear bin e oose Pp at will set your yard apart ; : a place of eharm. to be sdanired y coureell i hedon grote ged gy ie ie ona | NS and those who pass. 0 ric en ena or iH I ca a nee gegen | m) we'll Be a leader. Beautify your surroundings. zt - take the Sark: oot ot ‘washday. = 206 N. Percy Street Phone Fe g-an78 =f attack, has received this letter i my little farm rec uperating from | bowed head at Timothy Rourke, | streaked with dirt and tears. “The pay -off was her enene, ; Others will follow you. It takes but one— HOUSTON, Tex., July 22 W — =i from Adlai Stevenson, the 1952 : : . | ‘bronchial pneumonia. They are @nd neither of his two best friends) “jt’s all over, Angel. Relax. | last love letter. And to the very : ? | making hay out here. But now the knew what to say to him at the) You're okay.” end. Add those up to the other | PAINT DOLLARS G0 .< |tractor has broken down; the hay| moment. Rourke finally picked) “I knew you'd find me, Michael! | @urious words I pointed out that * J} truck is broken down; the hay Lucy's note up and studied it again | I knew you would. I kept thinking | [Lucy wouldn't normally use: | ‘wagon has collapsed, dumping 50 With narrowed eyes, then shook his , _ . when he reads my letter ..-| Boss, mazuma. Phony words or — ‘bales of hay in the middle of the | head helplessly. as soon as he reads my letter. ..| expressions for Lucy to use.” . driveway, and my farmer nas lac-| “Blessed if I can decipher any he'll know. But it was so long, _— y DRIVE-IN CLEANERS _erated his arm on a hay hook. Be-| cecret message in it. Listen, Will. | Michael! I didn’t know when he'd | fou said all that back in your. d sides, it is hot. I think I will just’ Don't you have an ex-Army In-| Show you the letter. 1 didn't know | ombeaet ee ae an 605 Ockland—Just North of Wisner Stadium | gu back to bed, cough for a while | telligence officer on your staff | how long we'd have to wait. And ay .. tell where meg ti nana | Call FE 4-2579 for Free Pickup and Delivery = a | "and take it easy. And that would) whose supposed to be a whiz at the air was getting worse all the | HERS / be the best thing you can do, too.! erypt : s codes?”* time.’ BERRY BROT | Cordially, Adlai.” (ed . “The last tetter of each line,” | | “Nuts to your expert,” said) 11’S ALL RIGHT . Venta Sh —| READY MIXED HOUSE PAINT EE Michael Shayne wearily. “I've, “t's all right,’ Shayne reas-| S on Bose and Svea ts r—SP EED— Ar ctic Testing | told you Lucy is no expert. Any-/ sured her gruffly. ‘It's ended. I} tair Street dead end!’ Go write thing in here is meant for me) qj J j : Tim. I Protects wood and metal Room Popular alone. Calling me Dearest Boss! giq figure it out. Nothing else home,” — . her?” i Branches: 328 N. Perry — 97 Oaklend through summer expansion §, wouldn't mean anything to your; matters now. I : . ‘ t was clever =| TH and winter contraction, Colors J at Detroit Plant © | code expert. He'd have no way! you, Angel.” ~~ TONIGHT 8:30 P. M. Ae { q seguhan ° Be BROTHER, stay new-looking longer, under of knowing she hadn't written me “Too clever for me to figure out r t H E id adverse weather conditions. | DETROIT While tempera-| hundreds of love letters in the Past | yee» said Rourke aggrievedly ntense Heat xpan s It's easy to apply. ‘tures rubble around 100, Eddie .. . any more than Switzer knew | trotting along beside them with | Span of Florida Bridge Y ates is troubled with icicles it. . the letter in his hands. “Give me, GREEN COVE ING 1 |b Ge | “Whatever she was trying to | the dope on it fast, Mike. I got ee: BIG EVENT Eddie is a technician at the De- | A hot sun wes too much for HOUSE PAINT . © say, she had to put so Switzer | maybe 20 minutes to get a story in the Shands Bridge over the St. | White trolt tank aigre He Neste iM would accept it as perfectly nor- | the early edition. How did Lucy) Johns River eaerdey. r * RECORD HOLDING CARS . | as = garage al under the circumstances. | put it in . . . and how did you : nded Gallon where they test tanks to be — =o ae had to trust me to get.. figure Saltair Street on the ey Soave tooery opus! * RECORD HOLDING DRIVERS > arctic regions. the nuances and put them te- | from this note?” traffic on the 2% mile bridge ae | “The Roaring Thrill-A-Minute Sport” Baecked by | Eddie was reasonably comfort-| gether logically.” He got up | Shayne grinned down at Lucy than 30 minutes. Several hundred |] Leading Business Men. Regular Admission Prices. “Better go easy on the brandy, ‘able yesterday. It was only 71. be-| . angrily and went to the wall cup- | and said, “It must have been plen-| cars were lined up by the time all ue all aint | low Zero. board for another glass. ty tough figuring out the right! the bridgetendér got it together PONTIA | “It drops to 105 below on cooler ; » | words on the spur of the moment | again. tf. days,” puffed Eddie amid a thick... wWioned Gent OTF while Switzer was watching you.| Shands Brid he onl . ry. “If you are so = ey o ge is the only cross f= ___ : 436 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-6150 Cote ae eer l 1 ‘certain there’s something hidden | ! told you and Will,” he went on ing of the St. Johns in the 55-mile | $ Miles W. of City Airport on M-59. is an amazingly popular j, her Jetter, you need a clear | blandly to Rourke, “that’a dozen stretch between Jacksonville and | ACTION. /guy at work during the curent head to find it.” things in the letter made me real-! Palatka. ™ Reet hehe | Michael Shayne laughed jarring- <— SPECI M EN STOCK | “Ev erybody wants to come down | ee Deg aoe vo and help us,”’ he says. ‘They vol- | “apply logic, the less you rely on . e , | LAN DSCAPI NG | unteer to do errands without pay.”| i 36. knowledge. On hunches. Eddie works in an Army arctic | Time and again in my own life, sop, | suit weighting 24 pounds. “Any-| [ye suddenly known something Shade Tree Planting—Our Specialty one for a beer?’ "he said. ‘The | was pare aad kee eed boys keep it on tap here—until knew it. It just was.” it gets too cold.” | Shayne paused, glaring at Will o Ue Y FARM Eddie has just one grip with | Gentry in defiance. “It's. here. . ; his job. Will.” He struck the sheet of 51025 Van Dyke Utica, Mich. oS to leave at the end of! paper with his fist. ~ day “She calls me Boss,” he re- Corner 23 Mile Rd. RE tte —$—_—_— minded the two men harshly. “She is Ford Giving $45,000 | says it’s her last love letter when lin Grants to School _she never wrote me a love letter WHERE THOUSANDS | | 9 senoo's Betore See ereen we eee SAVE MILLIONS DETROIT w—Ford Motor Co.| His harsh voice made a parody of today announced a new financial | the two words. gr&nts program to selected tech-| STUDIES LETTER nical schools sponsoring industrial | “There are a dozen more ex- participation plans. | : ” > Contributions totaling $45,000 | isnot pyle ro ony. were announced to launch the pro-| |, ; — f hi And gram. Recipients are Massachu- | — ae a = Lice , d setts. Institute of Technology, | ™27U™*" ‘i we ea rae $20,000; California Institute of ay pun en ioe a course. , - Uni j y . = Technology, $10,000; University of ‘Please, please realize, Mike, that | Toledo, $10,000; and the Univer- 11 i to tie sity of Michigan, $5,000 ove only you—even to very end.* ” Shayne lifted his glass, still staring down at Lucy's letter. His features tightened suddenly as his gaze fixed on the letter. In a choked voice he demanded of the other two: “Is there a Saltair Street in Miami?” Chief Gentry shook his head doubtfully, but Tim Rourke showed | alert interest. “Yes. I'm sure there is, Mike. One of those streets far out in the Northeast section that cross Bis- cayne Boulevard and deadend against the bay.” Shayne whirled on Gentry. “The Northeast section! From Hugh Al- lerdice’s story, that’s about where Switzer ditched Arlene Bristow.” He snatched up the telephone and shoved it at the chief of police. That New Car Pipe-Dream CAN Come True Finance Your New Car With a Though Rourke had never ex- COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK | perienced a faster ride out the , Boulevard than he had that night, there were already three — STRAWBERRY radio cars clustered together in front of the boarded mansion on SUNDAE Saltair Street where it came to a dead-end against Biscayne Bay when they arrived. Searchlights were turned on the : x isolated house; and as Shayne pulled up behind the police cars. AIRY CROWN two uniformed men came around , Pi d f . Sete aoe na cked fresh... STORES : nine figure. : 110 Oakland Ave, | Shame Need oo Tanto ight from your freezer! OPEN SUNDAY 10-2 Shop with ease in our large, mddern, self-serve store with lots of FREE parking at our door. Holden Trading Stamps No hidden charges — you know the exact cost with a bank loan. Choose your car, choose your insurance, finance both locally — The Bank Way. The Biqgest & Best in Town It’s a snap to keep beans as fresh as the day they were picked —in a home food freezer! -Home-grown or bargain specials, oe fruits and vegetables will stay garden-sweet for months. And they’ll retain all their health-giving vitamins and minerals, too. No doubt about it! You'll love a home food freezer—and the menu-magic it 9 Branches at Open Mon., Fri., Sat. Nights ‘til 9 P. M. performs for you day in and day out. PERRY at GLENWOOD W. HURON at TILDEN . KEEGO sins . — panne LAKE Aubu Fn > a nd 10 ° Mentor of Federal Deposit Insurance unaeea 4 : : ee ee vite ; sense ore _ ; 24 | ce ea Cli ete ne THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, J ULY 28, 1955 Basoert tl Adv. Mer, The re eS | ntitled exclusively t , for republication of all yy Ss Ws ad in hg Bm - —_ = paper as well as all AP news e Svailable b all in cat % Livingst 4 Lapeer ‘and $12.00 Mehira saat A in the United Baten” sb0 0.08 Lt sul tio: are ‘* nm ¥ Phone Pon’ PE 2-8181. = _— Tur Ponwric Parss is delivered 1 carrier for 40 cents service is not MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1955 Restoration of Freedoms Promised in Argentina One can’t help wondering what are the reasons behind Argentine President Peron’s promise of greater freedom for the people and the possibilities of ful- fillment. Doubt and skepticism are natural in view of the fact that only recently the dictator had to call on the army to suppress a navy revolt. There also are other factors leaving questions as to the “new era.” x *«* * After having stirred up agitation against the Catholic Church which led to his excommunication, Peron sup-— pressed violence against the church and made overtures to the Vatican. Though he rid himself of some Leftist advisers, the president took no stern action against navy rebels and finally came forward with his program for restoration of constitutional govern- ment. | x .& OO He declared an end to the state of = war, a form of martial law which had = prevailed since 1951. He also gave up the presidency of Argentina’s dominant = = Peronist party, the party he organized om SOCtHCHrANTeaT HUES ETEER EET ETE eeesaeeareet _ sit PePETERGUTETEREET ryegeEreegsegges me Cs ee ~ al Co Se &. ~~ wer - cd see tla eee eeeens : Ht £ atige first seizing power. It remains to be seen whether’ - that program becomes a reality. Peron’s actions will speak louder than his words. Meanwhile it should not be forgotten that be- hind his promises is the threat that if these restored freedoms menace his regime, repressive measures will be reinvoked. * * * The record of the recent past suggests that there is a question whether he | would be allowed to take such action Dangerous Economy A report “by the Citizens’ Advisory Committee on the Food and Drug Administration expresses justifiable * concern over the reduction of operating = funds for this important department. - Among FDA’s duties is the protection of the public against poisonous materials in food and unsanitary conditions in food processing. It also must guard against food and cosmetics adulteration, false and mis- leading food claims, dangerous ~~ drugs and misbranded and de- ceptive packaging. x & * All this, of course, vitally affects every home in the Nation. Yet the committee’s report says FDA is under- « staffed and underequipped for its work. ~ As a result it is unable to cope with ~ the growth in population and the in- © crease in the number of food and drug = planta. Our population has climbed 30,- = 000,000 since 1941. But we now have = fewer food and drug inspectors than = we had then. At the present rate of inspection, the statistics show, that -among all food plants any one would = be inspected no oftener than once in 2 § ~ * * The Chicago inspection area, which includes Michigan, Wiscon- | ae tape) amano outstanding figures in the fields of and drugs. The clear implication report. that ee Entered at Post Office, Pontise, Mich., as second class matter ‘ t these vaiand economies are dangerous, cannot be ignored without grave risk. | a License Slogan © Should Be Dropped There is logic and common sense on the side of a tentative proposal that the slogan — Water Wonderland — be omitted from Michigan’s 1957 auto. license plates. * * * According to Secretary of State James M. Hare, a committee studying the operations of his department favors this action. It also has been recommended by the National Safety Council and because plates will*have to be slightly smaller to fit new car designs. The Secretary added that the current trend is away from advertising and slogans on plates. 2 * * * In our view this new trend will prove a boon to law enforcement officers. Unfortunately, it didn’t develop soon ? enough to permit removal of the slogan from the 1956 plates. These now are being produced at the State Prison of Southern Michigan at the rate of 30,000 a day. From the moment the idea of a license plate slogan was proposed this newspaper objected to it as a needless interference with police work. Nothing should be allowed to reduce the visibility of license plate numbers. Ir’s A moot question as to whether the Communists are themselves soften- ing up or trying to soften up the Free World. The People’s Business Readies Campaign Williams All Set to Jump Into Presidential Arena By JACK I. GREEN LANSING—The Capitol this summer is ex- periencing its longest doldrums in about nine years—but it’s the lull before the storm. * e * The storm will break when, as and if Gov. Williams opens his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. It will be augmented, if he decides to shoot for the White House, by Republican attempts to regain control of the State House. Williams is in Lansing little this summer, but that doesn’t mean he’s sitting on the porch of the summer mansion at Mackinac Island and letting the breeze toss his graying locks. If he spends more than two days running on the island you can post a bulletin that he has a summer cold. ° ° » In between his perpetual appearance at cen- tennials and county fairs, Williams is sweating out a campaign platform and trying to stick in a post here and there across the nation for the political fences he would need in a presidential race. CALLS FOR ACTION He has every state agency under instructions to come up with a programof dramatic action for the 1956 legislative session. He is fishing for out-of-state speaking appearances with all the frenzy of a maiden lady watching the years slip by—and he is talking highways and safety like a county road engineer. ° s ° The first part of the program, the instructions to state agencies to shoot the works with tegislative proposals, appears to be designed to let Williams offer a sensational program to the Legislature in January which will capture the popular imagination and show Williams as a man of vision and action. Such a program could, of course, be head." lined around the nation, Williams thinks, as a _ selling point when he goes to the national Democratic convention. His second move, national speaking engage- ments, has already brought him some good and some bad publicity. ° ° ° He entered the field of foreign policy recently in a speech at Cornell University with a care- fully drafted. address which indirectly rebuked - the Eisenhower administration for ignoring, as Democrats say, the plight of peoples behind the Iron Curtain. WOOS MINORITIES This was well calculated to show American minority groups that he is on their side in wanting to rescue their homelands from the Soviets. * Ld ° Adversely, an attempt to get him a speaking engagement in Alabama recently awakened the “loyalty fight’ ghosts of the 1952 Chicago con- vention and stirred up the old guard Southerners against this laborite, liberal Northerner. And let no one forget that the depth of the Thirdly, Williams is apparently seeking one 6 en eS oe ore ee as a builder and a seer. All indications are that it will be highways— highway aes -_ — safety. - Educational expansion may well be the second string to Williams’ national campaign bow— but his advisers concede that this is so complex and difficult a. problem that it probably cannot ~ va a ) major campaign —_ HOW INCONSISTENT CAN WE GET? CONCERNING AN AUTOMOBILE 3M CONCERNING THE ETERNAL DESTINY OF THE SOUL: °. WORK our YOUR OWN SALVATION wiTH FEAR oi La rcegieg < Costliest Risk Clashing Interests Exposed at Geneva Big 4 Meeting By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER GENEVA W — The Big Four summit conference has proved to be just like meetings at lower lev- els in one critical respect. After all the smiles, handshakes and the glowing generalities about world peace, there had to come a point at which the interests of the leaders at the table finally clashed headon. That is the point of decision— like the third act of a cowboy drama just before the hero res- cues the girl from the villain’s clutches, That moment of crisis arrived at Geneva, as veteran diplomats expected it would, in the closing hours of the meeting. Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, according to Western of- ficials, played a key part in bring- ing it about. The showdown was inevitable. * * Sooner or later somebody had to get down to brass tacks. Presi- dent Eisenhower, Prime Minister Eden, Premier Faure and Bulganin assigned that tedious task to their foreign ministers. Yesterday and last night the foreign ministers locked over the problem. Their over-all job was to pre- pare a set of orders which the heads of government could then jointly issue to them for further negotiations in the months ahead. The ministers had to decide whether they should go to work first on the problem of unifying “ Germany, as Eisenhower, Eden and Faure had proposed, or wheth- er they should begin with propo- sals for creating a New European security system, as Bulganin has insisted, ; * * «& Bulganin and Molotov want to get all European states into a sin- gle big nonaggression treaty and destroy the North Atlantic Alli- ance, Then, Bulganin has said, they will be willing to see Germany unified. Western leaders think they want to isolate Western Europe from American power, opening it as was after World War Il to Com- munist conquest. Eisenhower, Eden and Faure want a unified Germany first. They are willing to give Russia new security safeguards and a de-, militarized East Germany to get that. But they will not destroy NATO nor weaken all of Western Europe.. And they do not want to grant the security safeguards until the time Germany is unified. * ® + Ag the foreign ministers wren- gled vesterday. Molotov for the first time at this conference re- vived the perennial Russian pro- posal that both East and West Ger- many be invited to the foreign ministers’ meeting tentatively agreed on for next October. Smiles Summer camps will soon be opening so the kids can be sent away tur their parents’ vacation. Some married women think that the only taste a man has is in his mouth. It's strange how people who al- ways shy just what they mean expect to keep their friends. The best light on what keeps you in a bad humor can be found through a little reflection. The courageous man _ doesn’t know. when he’s licked—unless he’s married. Find the fellow who writes the oil stock advertisements and you’ve found a real gusher. Your ambition might just as well give up these days—it's no match for spring fever. Unlike an ‘automobile, @ man doesn't make less noise when he’s well oiled. There'd probably be less teen- age crime if,more parents knew more about how to lose their pa- tience. A woman was cut by a mee fo. Chicago, a man was slashed by a teen-ager in New York—and they ~ say carving»is a lost art. wad wel | food Ty rey ce ur {/ ; / U. S. Secretary of State Dulles, British Foreign secretary MacMil- lan and French Foreign Minister Pinay—whose governments have persistently refused to recognize East Germany—rejected Molotov's demand, But the Russian kept coming back to it. Several Western delegates said Molotov was much more difficult to deal with than Bulganin. Pos- sibly he thought the same thing about Dulles, Pinay and MacMil- lan. * Ld * Lines of conflict had been sharp- ly drawn and both sides were hold- ing firm. But diplomatic history shows that such times of crisis do not necessarily wreck a con- ference nor render it a failure. sometimes one side gives in. Some- times a compromise formula, is found. It has become reasonably clear one of the Russian aims at Ge- neva is to keep East-West talks going for months or years. They want a breathing spell from the cold war, a cooling-off period dur- ing which they would not have to arm so heavily and could con- centrate on solving home front problems. It looked like a safe bet that whatever the summit meeting de- cided, one result would be more corifferences—and doubtless more, moments of stubborn deadlock. Voice of the People Two Lights Change Before Drivers Let ‘Great. Grandmother’ Cross Street - wilt be condensed when neces. ary case “ot lack of space, "Pull coat oe mesrmpac, ittern but be pv the letter \s ees 4 fia ‘ine I am 84 years old and the..other day I met a situation which I wish someone would solve. When the light turned green, I started across the street. An automobile started making a right turn and henked for me to get out of the way. Well, I stood still and let it pass. Then another This happened two times and I was still standing there. On the third light, I simply walked straight across the street and paid no attention to the first car. and he either had to wait for me or kill me. Well, he waited and here I am. But how am / to cross safely? Great-Grandmother ‘Zeigler’s Road Policy Forcing Democrat Vote It is a dirty trick for a’ beer soaker to throw his empty bottles over. in bis neighbor’s yard, or in front of his house between _the Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE How much does summer bother you... With rain or baking sun? . How much does late July affect... Your labor or your fun? . . Do you resent the torrid skies . . . That make you weak and weary? . Or are you in a climate where . . . You hate the weather dreary? . . Whatever your experience .. . This much you ought to know . . . There is no perfect climate, friend . . . No matter where you go... If you decide to stay at home... Or if you choose to travel ... . There is a problem which you must. . . Consider and unravel . . . You may prefer the constant heat . . . Or like the sudden cold . , . But don't expect the rainbow to... Produce a pot of gold. (Copyright 1955) Looking Back 15 Years Ago BRITAIN TO RAISE $13,868,000 war fund. U. S. DENOUNCES Soviet ag- gression in Baltic. 20 Years Ago ITALY DEVALUES lira to push war. INDIANA MILITIA uses gas to halt Terre Haute mill strike. Case Records of a Psychologist walk and the curb. Really, it is ion unto the Lord. May bod have mercy on his soul. A Christian ‘'Gator May Be Scouting Sites for Southern Pals’ I'm not particularly bothered by that alligator around Lower Long Lake. After all, what’s one alli- gator — especially when it’s 14 miles from where I live. But I am bothered by some- thing else. This spell of weather may start a steady migration of Florida ‘gators in this direction. Can’t you visualize a 1200 mile line of Modding alligators head- ing for red hot Oakland County? This current chap may be just an advance scout that has located a new frontier for the southern beasties. Once a Floridian. Days of All Faiths Grateful Sailors Build Miraculous St. Anne’s By DR. HOWARD V. HARPER Tuesday, July 26 is the anniver- sary of the death of the Virgin Mary's mother, St. Anne, whose famous church at Beaupre, in Que- bec, is known to hundreds of thous- ands of Americans and Canadians. This shrine, known as “‘the Lourdes of the New World,” attracts vast crowds of pilgrims from both coun- tries, particularly at this time of year. In 1650, when the little French colony of Quebec was in its eart- iest beginnings, a group of Breton sailors built a tiny frame church in honor of St. Anne at the place where the town of Baupre now stands. They did this because they had been caught in a vi- cious storm at sea and had vowed that if St. Anne would bring them safely to land they would build her a sanctuary at the spot where their feet should first touch the earth. Only a few years later (in 1658) the people of the village began the construction of a new and larger church, and it was then that the first of St. Anne de Beaupre's mir- aculous cures took place. A local man, Louis Guimont, twisted and aching with rheumatism, came and painfully placed three stones in the foundation. He walked away in perfect health, Since that time there have been thousands of heal- ings at this shrine. MIRACULOUS DISCOVERY The body of St. Anne is said to have been miraculously discov- ered in the 9th Century at Apte, France, when a young boy who had never uttered a word in his life suddenly spoke and said, “Here lres the body of Anne, Mother of the Blessed Virgin Mary." Behind this story lies the legend that St. Paul the Apostle had removed St. Anne's body from its original grave and carried it to Rome, Pope Cle- Mother's Treatment of Child in Public Reveals Raft of Bad Personality Traits Don’t think I am ezraggerat- ing when I describe Timmy’s mother. I am quoting the in- cident verbatim. And you teen- agers can profitably study this ease, despite the vulgar lan- guage, just to realize the wide differences amona American in this year 1955 A.D. By DR. GEORGE W, CRANE Case 6-390: Timmy, aged 3, re- cently entered one of our Chicago bay pphaai stores with his mother and grandmother, The mother reluctantly tossed her cigaret aside, for we have a city ordinance forbidding the use a cigarets in Chicago department stores. Seon Timmy was tired and lift- ed his arms toward his mother hoping she'd pick him up, But she just slapped his hand, irrit- ably. Timmy then turned toward his grandmother, but she gave him a shove against the counter, and his whining increased. Meanwhile, his mother found what she wanted and stood at the counter waiting for a sales girl. But the clerks were all busy.’ * * * “Why don’t you wait on some- body who already knows what she wants?” demanded the mother in a loud voice, but the clerks paid no heed for they were occupied. Timmy meanwhile reached up his arms toward his mother. “Shut up you little b. . .d!” his mother angrily exclaimed, ‘‘l wish I had never set eyes on you. And if you don't stop whin- ing, I'll slap your face good.” A few moments later she slap- ped him sharply across the mouth TEST FOR MOTHERS The reason I am giving you this true case, uncensored, is to show you the wide differences in ee ee eee We celebrate Mother’s Day in was no excuse for repeatedly. a weary toddler: and —— schools, you can guess as to his cultural background and vocaku- lary. * Ld * For when a mother uses such vulgar vocabulary among other women, you can be pretty sure her language is far worse at home when she is having a quarrel with her husband, My one brief contact with this mother would erable “me to write a very detailed character sketch. I could fill in a lot of things that might not be ee to men- tion herein, for all experienced doctors have seen the gamut of human personalities, ranging from the scum to the cultured, Christian types of mother. BAD ENVIRONMENT Timmy is very likely one of the hapless children growing up in a bad home atmosphere. And these bad homes where bad parents use bad psychology, are the chief cause for juvenile de- linquency. Although I didn’t see this mother using liquor, do you think the odds are in favor of her being ¢ tavern habitue? Do you think this mother is a virtuous woman or one who has been unfaithful to her hus- band? Did she belong to the Girl Scouts or Campfire Girls in child- hood? = Did rad attend Sunday school * * “If she has older children of TAT On coe on eee oe Do you think when her children What is the likelihood that she is a divorcee? —- . Those are just a few of the pertinent, questions that you cah probably: answer with a high de-. gree of accuracy, just from this ae ee “Tests for Good Parents,” en- closing a stamped return envelope, plus a dime. Use them for PTA discussion periods, always write to Dr George W_ Crane eee = of Led oe ~ Press, Pontiac cnigon: enclosing a long 3c stamped. self-addressed envelope ana a dime to cover MY art and printing costs when you send one of his paychological charts, (Copyright 1955) ment shortly afterward entrusted the body to the Bishop of Apte, who buried it at the place where it was found 800 years later. A part of the body, however—a finger—is housed in the Beaupre church, and will be exposed there today as it is every year on St: Anne’s Day. THE BLACK FAST Thursday, July 28 is the ninth day of the Jewish month of Ab, the darkest day of the Jewish year. - Almost every calamity that has ever befallen the Jews -has hap- pened on the 9th of Ab, or within a day or two of it, So this unhappy day has come to be called the Black Fast, although its real name is simply the Fast of Ab. There is a legend that says that by God Himself as a day of woe and misfortune te come. While the children of Israel were still wandering in the wilderness they sent messengers ahead to recon- noiter the Promised Land of Ca- naan, When the messengers brought back discouraging re- ports about how difficult it would be to conquer the land, the peo- ple were afraid and cried out, in spite ef God's promise, Be- cause of thelr distrust God said, “{ will make this an eterral day of mourning for you.” This happened on the 9th of Ab, There has’ been reason to be- lieve that there was a_ special curse on this day. The destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple by Nebuchadnezzer, the second de- struction of the rebuilt city and Temple by the Roman Titus, ‘the final failure of the Jewish Army to retake Jerusalem, the expulsion of the Jews from Spain—all these ca- tastrophes and many more have happened on or about the 9th of Ab. A good housekeeper never knows what outrageous interruption will turn up next. The patron saint of all housewives once had to stop her work and go and tie up a dragon because all the men of the com-,. munity were too timid to deal with the monster, That saint was Martha, the sister of Mary and of Lazarus, whom Jesus raised from the dead. THOUGHTS FOR TODAY And the Lerd said unto me, a conspiracy is found among the men of Judah, and among the inhabitants of Jerusalem.—Jere- miah 11:9, * * * There is little hope of equity where rebellion reigns.—Sir P. Sidney. Dr. Brady’s Mailbag: Athlete’s Foot Cleared Up in Days, Reader Reports By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Answers and Questions Truly like magic, in ‘two or three days, the recipe in your pamphlet on athlete's foot cured a condition I had tried vainly to cure for ten years.—(P. D.) Answer — Thank you. Send stamped, self-addressed envelope and ask in writing for the pam- phiet on Foot Itch. * * © It a person drinks three or. four cups of tea a day will it harm the kidneys? I formerly drank only coffee, but have switched to tea. Some of my friends say .. . (M. K. J.) Answer — Have another cup with me and tell your friends to quit kidding, be Ld * I have just read your C V D booklet. I think it is very good. I am 34 years old - have angina pectoris.—(Mrs, S. V.) Answer—If you were not a lady I'd say ‘Tell that to the Marines,”* but I must admit that ipfdiee A | I have noticed references to the color - Todin Ration for to gray hair. Kindly . . Send stamped self-addressed envelope and ask z think your hair doesn’t look so gray, there will be no extra _ charge, —“? * * So scared when, I have to read the minutes of the last meeting that my breath comes in gasps— (Mrs. G. H.) Answer—It might be more em- barrassing if it came in short pamphiet Stage —— _ Thanks mainly to the teaching in your “Little Lesson.” I have kept pretty well in the eight years = I learned I had diabetes, ind have yet to receive a dose ot eatin Ce. ) ArfSwer—Thank you. For Little Lesson 23, Training for Diabeter, send 25 cents and stamped, self. addressed envelope. * LJ * Unable to use shoulder for near- *.¢@ 4 IF e? "Ky ii ait i . FF qi F. _ ' e ‘ a oe Ue eee 3 ood ( \ ork 5 & rey ay ; 5 ; é Ay fa f gee 3 Paes : . 4 Union Army Routs Rebels in Mock Civil War Fray ANN ARBOR (®—With Michigan soldiers leading the way. a brigade of Union Army troops took a battle and the Civil War right out of the general's hands. . The Michigan men, members of the’ llth Michigan Volunteer In- fantry, turned a “demonstration” into a rebel route at Chattanooga, sending the gray-uniformed men fleeing down Missionary Ridge. Their story is told on a broad- beedtiful texture finish and modern color at the seme time with— cast by University of Michigan radio stations WUOM-FM and WFUM-FM at 8:15 tonight, It is part of a seven part series. The Michigan volunteers were drawn from Three Rivers, St. Joseph, Sturgis, White Pigeon, Centreville, Quincy, Burr Oak Morenci, Coldwater and Bronson. . Here’s what happened. The Con- federate forces were strongly posi- tion along Missionary Ridge, over- looking the city of Chattanooga. General U. S. Grant sent one strong Union force against the right flank of the rebel line. Then he wr pushed General William Sherman and the main Union attack against | the left flank. REBELS GIVE GROUND Both attacks found the gaing tough. The well entrenched rebels |were giving ground begrudgingly, inch by bloody inch. Their artil- | lery raked the Union troops. bi * * * As a diversionary move, General Grant sent the llth Michigan and other units to stage a “‘demonstra- tion” in the center of the line. Under Capt. Patrick H. Keeganof, Deerfield, who had just taken over command from Major Benjamin Bennett of Burr Oak, the Michigan men moved into position with other units. Pee + “ : a _THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 23. 1955 - ASSIGNMENT FOR: oe rs o ropats Air Force Ordering JUNIOR EDITORS} \More Jet fichters WASHINGTON @® — The Air) Force has followed its recent ac- tion to speed up jet bomber pro- duction with a similar order -ap- plying to two faster-than-sound jet fighters. A new directive issued yester- day called ‘for accelerating the | — May Help You turnout of F101 twin jet all weather | | interceptors and F104 light weight | ~ fighters with money already ap-| — id k ; ’ roved by Co Ss. “ os i re ee ; Avoi Fa ers. The Air Force, which has been| | tight-lipped about most details of | — ‘these two advanced fighters, has | — Seiad laren naa Nate Pe ; 1, Deal only with firms whose dependability can be established by speed at sea level is, about 750 intelligent inquiry. Slowly they began their ad- vance, digging ‘Johnny Reb” out of their entrenched positions at the bottom of the ridge, under the gleaming eyes of rebel can- non. : . Gradually, the rebel troops began to race for the top of the ridge and the safety of their cannon. The like gloves, with your fingers and thumb moving the head and hands of the puppet. The Punch and Judy plays in England use this kind. Then there are joined cardboard dolls that can be bent in various positions, like the wicked pirate pictured here. Paste this page on cardboard. Color it with crayons or poster paints in the bright colors you think pirates would want to wear. so, too, They started wearing le- derhosen in off-duty hours, But the U.S. Air Force doesn't like to see its knees in public | places, It has banned lederhosen. The leather pants head a list of what the well-dressed airman agency the agency guarantees material and workmanship. BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD miles an hour. a“ F There have been repets te | & Be sure the salesman represents the company he claims to represent. | F104, made by the Lockheed Air-| | 3. Don't sign papers before you understand the terms and conditions ‘craft Corp., Burbank, Calif., has | ~ of the sale. . attained. speed twice that of sound. | — , ; “a The F101 is made by the McDon-| 4. Before you sign, be sure that the name and address of the firm is | nell Aircraft Co., St. Louis. ‘ printed on the contract. ° Pe 5.. If promises are made verbally, be sure that they are presented in Or der Airmen substance in the contract. DAY CAMP—4 ~~ . A Puppet Pirate ‘Not to Wear Retain a copy of the contract. wv Why not make a puppet at your home day camp?. ._Leather Shorts 7. When you are satisfied that the job is completed, only then should Boys- and girls living in ancient Greece played with puppets, so you sign a completion certificate. og oe eee when you make yours remember what a long history is behind it. WIESBADEN, Germany ® — : . ; ; Some puppets are like stuffed dolls with joints and are worked with Many young Bavarians wear leath- 8. Pay your bill by check or money order made out to firm. Don't pay RY ORIEL A EEE, ET shmety CT Shorts, called lederhosen, in cash to a salesman unless you get a bonafide receipt bearing the who heen be m > they are often large and tine'y summer. They're considered cool name of the company he represents. made with beautiful costumes. They act out plays in actual little thea-. .44q comfortable. ; ters and a great deal of skill is needed to operate them. Lots of American GIs and air- 9. Compare price quotations with those of other firms. Some puppets are calied hand puppets. They slip on your hands men stationed in Germany thought 10 Reware of tafenonces that use a loan is insured by @ Government in Stock . 90 cal ONLY 3 ou — OAKLAND FUEL and PAINT 436 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-6150 All Colors afraid to fire into the Union ranks for fear of hitting their own troops. The Union troops, apparently all on their own and contrary to Gen- eral Grant's plans, decided the saf- est place to be was chasing the Coast to Coast Moving | VOLLMAR “MOVING AND STORAGE CO. 351 N. Perry FE 5-8562 Crating cannon fire. MICHIGAN LEADS | Led by the Michigan 1ith.: they /clambered up the hill. Sgt. James |W. King, a quartermaster sergeant of Lansing, was the first trooper on top of the ridge. * * * vance carried them 20 miles past the Confederate lines, tearing the center of the rebel defenses. The Michigan llth had six cas- ualties: five enlisted men and Maj. Bennett. They in turn captured 639 prisoners, five cannon and split the Confederate army in half. An observer later wrote of this acy never had a chance.” It was a military lesson against | positioning men at the foot of a ‘ridge or hill. And it came as a | surprise to General Grant to later gained his initial obective: to throw ' the rebels out of Tennessee. DON’T— MISS THIS _ MODIFIED HARD TOP RACES Sanctioned by Your Local Land-O-Lakes Racing Association AT THE NEW GAY-DAY SPEEDWAY NORTH OF PONTIAC ON Loke Angelus Rood; Between Baldwin & Joslyn SUNDAY, July 24 Time Trials 5:30—First Race 7:00 P.M. Chills—Spills — Thrills - Don’t Miss This - Children Under 12 Yeors Old Admitted Free If . _ Accompanied by an Adult ADULTS $1.10 INCLUDING T ie a a rebel cannoneers, meanwhile were | rebel troops, and avoiding rebel | The momentum of the Union ad- charge in 1863, “After the battle | of Chattanooga ... the Confeder- | should not wear in public. Also| ~~, taboo are blue jeans, cloth shorts, sweatshirts, T-shirts and zoot suits. Airmen, says the order, ‘will re- frain from wearing attire which borders on the sensational.” Carefully cut out all the parts and fasten them together with brass fasteners which will look like brass buttons on the suit. , Slip the arms behind the shoulders of the coat, put the tab on the head inside the collar, put the legs behind the skirts of the coat. Then insert the brass fasteners in the round holes and bend them back. Now your pirate cap bend his head sideways, and move his arms and legs in every position. If you bend both legs at right angles he will sit down for you. - © You can use your pirate for acting out stories. Be sure to make your voice deep and booming when you talk for him. ~ Monday: Teuring the Country . of the . Pontiac Chamber of Commerce Waldron Hotel Bldg. Phone FE 5-6148 The U.S. Office of Education estimates that there will be a 12,293,000 increase in public school sh ‘ enrollment in 1960 compared with) ~-. * | Cir 1950. ¥ Bee: iy es fe Ai til Bates nan to Be RE i and the Men Who Helped Him Fight the Battles of the Wild Frontier _ Whose knife conquered the wil- derness! * JIM BOWIE + SAM HOUSTON * BUCK TRAVIS. * ANDY JACKSON You'll find exciting tales of frontier courage as you follow the life stories of four of Davy Crockett’s fellow frontiers- men. Follow This New 4-Week Comic Strip IN THE DAYS OF DAVY CROCKETT STARTS MONDAY, JULY 25 IN THE Who won independence for Texas! The last commander of the Alamo! ~The: frontier captain who became President! 7 7 sanchatacrety ' ‘ ’ : ; : i A & ; , j ae : : { z y A \ : ar) 3 : } 2 ‘ a { : i ‘ ee Bs , ' ; i 4 ‘ : . | ‘ 4 a ie Professi New In-Law Says Name Incorrectly Family Resentful of Bride’s Deliberate # ona EOE, ap & a | Women The second of the three leadership conferences being | right) Mrs. C. William Salton, president held by the Michigan Federation of Business and Profes-| club; Beatrice Patterson, director of field service and mem- sional Women’s Clubs, Inc. was held Friday evening at| bership, of New York City; Evelyn Burke of Ann Arbor, Rotunda Inn. Photographed at the affair were (left to| and W oe ilma Webb, mayor pro tem, of Keego Harbor. i | ; of the Pontiac f * ee ey ae Ss ee ae eee Se é * Attend Leadership Confab HOPS } Main Speech of Director. Is Highlight President Presents Outline of Group Objectives The second of three leadership conferences being conducted by the Michigan Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs was held Friday evening at Ro- tunda Inn. Highlight of the evening was an address by Beatrice Patterson, di- rector of field service and mem- bership of the Nationa! Federation of Business and. Professional Wom- en's Clubs, Inc. Developing the various aspects of the theme, “Aim High,” Miss Patterson stressed that the main purpose of BPW activity centers around the advancement and up- grading of the life of the indivi- dual business and professiona woman. The speaker pointed out that the federation program offers an ave- nue of information and action for each member, —~ Virginia Allan of Wyandotte, state president, outlined the ob- jectives for the Michigan Federa- tion in the coming year. CHAIRMAN REPORTS Viola Wolfe of Detroit, second vice president of the state federa- tion, was chairman of the meeting. Mrs. Florence Frostic, state chair- man of program coordination, re- ported on plans by local clubs. Mrs. Frances Leaf, chairman of district one and Evelyn K. Burke,— chairman of district two, headed the committee in charge of arrangements, Attending the second session of the Mich-| Frances Leaf of Cass Lake road, chairman igan Federation of Business and Profession- al Women’s Clubs, Inc. was Virginia Allen' (left) of Detroit, state president of the or- ganization. Photographed with her is Mrs.‘ of District I. attended, The session was held Friday evening at-Rotunda Inn. One hundred and | sixty representatives from districts | and II \ Visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Mert, The Rev, and Mrs. Howard Cc.) 4|Personal News of Local Interest Burgess of Hamilton court. She + - Ruth McCulloch Guest of Honor at Bridal Shower Ruth Ann McCulloch, bride-elect of James A. Traver was guest of honor at a miscellaneous shower given recently by Mrs. Everett K. Garrison and her daughter, Francis of Covert road, Watkins Lake. Ruth is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley J. McCulloch of Nel- son street, and James is the son of the Glenn Travers of Fourth street. The couple will be married July 30 at 8 p.m. in the Bethany Baptist church. . Invited to the affair, besides the S. Jennings of Wenonah drive for Artz and family of Dwight street | will go by boat to Skagway and 10 days is Mrs. Jennings’ father, are leaving Monday for Bethel | return in August Alex Sackrider of Fraser. ,Park Camp Meeting and annual | aaa 7 * «8 |conference near Flint. The ywill Mr. and Mrs. Don Milbourn of be gone two weeks. Visiting the Edgar Martins of | the State Hospital Grounds will When they return, the Rev. South Sanford street is Mrs. Ida have as their guests, Mr. and Mrs.| yap Artz will go to Thamesfort, | Hemphill of Bar River, Ont. She William C. Boyd and daughter. Ont, to attend a Sunday School | is also seeing Mrs. Harriett Storts | Others attending were Dias and rearrested the er of ‘of Prall street. She is the aunt of Fyien McJunkin. Ruth Schneider, \ priors est Church 8 | Mrs. Martin and Mrs. Stotts. | Mrs. Roy Timmins, Mrs. William * 8 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Martin ae = Socmap tecttiarre of Fort Wayne, Ind. and Mr. . ng, Sirs. Erwin Coming home Saturday from the and Mrs, Peck of Findley, Ohio |@"d Mrs. Roy Ward. Methodist Camp Home on Lake have returned te their homes bride’s and bridegroom's moth- ers, were Mrs. Harry Aten, Mrs. William Amstron, Mrs. Albert Simpsen, Mrs. Earl McJunkin, Mrs. Anton Bego, Mrs. James Conn, Lerraine Coon and Alice Bego. Mispronunciation BY EMILY POST e A sister writes: “My youngest : brother was married recently and his wife pronounces our family name (her new name) differently than we do. When p correctly it sounds foreign (which it.is) but she has anglicized it. “T, as well as the rest of my family, resent this very much and feel that she is ashamed of the name. I am married and no Lynne from Oak Park, Ili, Mr. Boyd is the brother of Mrs. Mil- bourn. The family wil larrive Sun- day. . Barbara Monteith of Avondale * ° s longer carry this name, but am still proud of it. “When introducing this sister- in-law to strangers, must I in- troduce her by the name she calls herself and thereby mis- pronounce my family name, or do I pronounce it correctly? I would very much appreciate hearing from you on this matter.” Answer: Very definitely you should pronounce it correctly. “Dear Mrs. Post: My husband will be starting his professional career as a chiropractor very soon. We wish to send out announce- ments to relatives, friends and acquaintances, and would like to ‘know just how to word them. Will you please help us?” Answer: Dr. So and So has taken offices at such and such a place and will receive patients between such and such hours. “Dear Mrs. Post: The other evening the young lady who was dining with me in a restaurant had to leave the room to tele- phone and I merely stood up whtil she had left the table. “Afterwards a remark she made was pointed enough t6 tell me that she would have expected a gentle- man to walk out of the dining room with her.” Answer; What you did was quite right. To have gone out with her amd then back again with her Farewell Party Chapter 34, American Gold Star Mothers held a garden party and farewell for Mrs. Olive i Among the officers attending the second | club; Mrs, Milton Penzien, past state presi- session of the Michigan Federation of Busi-| dent and a member of the Mt. Clemens club, ness and Professional Women's Clubs at\and Mrs. Ted Christensen, president of the Rotunda Inn Friday were (left to right) Mrs. Hugh Switzer, president of the Utica | Walled Lake club. Mary Kenrick Becomes Bride of John L. Cordes BIRMINGHAM — At two-thirty this afternoon in Christ Church Cranbrook Mary Margaret Ken- rick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Fay Kenrick of Surrey road, was fashioned sion yoke and long sleeves, and the full tulle skirt falling in a chapel train. “| Paul church at 9 a.m. nde i ‘and G. Kenrick of Onaway, cousin of the bride, James B. Brophy, of St. Clair Shores, Gerald Florez and William Klenck III. = * * A reception was given at Oakland Hills Country Club, j For her wedding trip to Canada | by motor the bride wore a navy |shantung costume suit with a | white hat. The couple will live in Gran- ville, Ohio where Mr, Cordes will complete his senigr year at Den- ison University, ‘ 1} Shower Honors Nancy Campbell Nancy Campbell, bride-elect of Wiliam A. Donahue Jr, was hon- ‘lored at.a personal shower given by Ella Powers of Nelson street. The couple will exchange nup- tial vows Aug. 6 at St. Vincent de Attending ‘the recent shower were Marlene Cook, Janet Fenton, .| Pat Kucera, Marsha Borer, Elinor Schutt, Katie Powers, Janice | Price, Marcee Hill, Honore Du- ross; Marge Hensel, Mrs. Collin Mrs. William A. nmr } ite t/ "| Sunday at% p.m. This is the third lin a series of four concerts, held for those who wish to enjoy good | music in the pleasant suroundings | of Oakland Park, . | partment would appreciate any Otiend Park Slates Another Starlight Concert Another recorded Starlight Con- cert will be held at Oakland Park The Parks and Recreation De- comments the public may have in regards to these concerts, - Sunday night’s program will be to the music of the Amster- Philadelphia Symphony Or- ehestra. — Selections. will include’ the fol- lowing: Peer Gynt Suite No 1......0.0. » Grieg Hungarian Rhapsody. No. 2...,....Lisat Don- Juan Symphon: fl Peer eee Group Hosts Picnic Group Four of OES held a picnic luncheon Thursday at the Barnes ties and the Big Rapids High avenue returned Thursday from | California where she spent sev- | eral weeks as the guest of Joan | Wharran, formerly of Pontiac. Barbara drove west with the Wharrans and flew home, ca * * Mr. and: Mrs. Loyal-Hodge and sons, Billy, Alan and Dennis, of Moline, fll., are visiting for two weeks with Mrs, Williant Hodge of Ogemaw road. a * bd Leaving for Camp Maqua near Hale for two’ weeks are Sandra and Sally Hilderley and Mary Jane | Kuhns. Sandra and Sally are the daughters of the William 8. Hil- derleys of Joy road, and Mary dane’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. RK. H. Kuhns of Loon Lake Shores. The Hilderleys will spend the weekend at Big Rapids where they will attend the centennial festivi- School Alumnae reunion, Mr. Hil- | derley is a graduate of the school. | Alaska with friends is Mrs. Olive Huron where they spent 10 days are Sandra Haire and Diana Butler. Sandra is the daughter of the Vernon’ S. Haires of North street, and Diana's par- ents are Mr. and. Mrs. Lewis H. Butler, also of North Sanford street. * cm . * Seymour Liebeskind of Argyle | avenue has been awarded a John Wallace Scholarship for a year's study at the Detroit Traffic Con- ference School, He is a member of the Detroit Traffic Club and is the first person to be given a scholar- ship in the history of the school, Mr. and Mrs, Ernest Huth- waite of West Iroquois road have returned from Douglas Lake near Cheboygan where they vacationed with her brother-in- law and sister, Dr. and Mrs, John H. Gardner Jr. of Bal- timere, Md. es * * Leaving Monday:for a trip to VIRGINIA, JEANNE , 4 Leon M., Abbey of Naples, Fla., announces « the engagement of his daughter, Virginia Jeanne, to Dr. Bertil F. Larson, son of Mrs. Bertil T. Larson of Oneida road and the late Dr. Larson, She is a graduate of University of Michigan. He graduated from. the University of Michigan Medical School, and cy | Bride-Elect after vacationing with the Edgar Martins and attending the Mar- tin reunion at Avon Park in Rochester. Nearly 60 relatives were present for the cooperative luncheon. Mrs. Edgar Martin was elected secretary and treasurer for the coming year? * Mr. and Mrs. Francis C. Sears of Home street announce the birth of a daughter, Margaret Ellen, July 21. Grandparents are Mr, and Mrs, C F. Reilly of Mariva street and Dr. and Mrs. William A. Sears. of Howard street, Cocktail Party Honors August Mr: and Mrs. William D. Kramer will be hosts at a cocktail party Sunday afternoon honoring bride- elect, Jan e Woodhouse and her fiance, John Kontz Hopper who will be married in August. Mrs. Kramer and Jane are sisters, Mrs. Edgar W. Dare gave a shower for Miss Woodhouse on July 12, and next Thursday, Mrs. Claire Greenlee and Mrs. Ham- mond Baker will give a tea and shower for her in the Greenlee home. Jane will be married in Christ |. Church Cranbrook, Aug. 27 and a reception will be given in the Woodhouse home on Lakeside drive. Alison Woodhouse will be her sister's maid of honor and brides- maids will be Betty Earnest of Atlanta, Ga.; Barbara Rankin of Stone Mountain, Ga.; Carol Bow- en of Grosse Me, and Elizabeth Cole of Detroit. William R. Hooper Jr. of Plain- ville, Conn., will be his brother's best man. : Helpful Curtain Hint Light thoughts for a\ change of curtain for summer, and inexpen- sive too: cotton brocdcloth,: poplin or duck. Just stitch in a good deep hem and they'll drape like the most. expensive of winter fab- is interning at Chicago * Wesley Memorial / |Coming Events rics. Hospital. r ABBEY | yt sect Monday ot 1200 pom et the We Seni ems Grea a | Li * Pontiac Press Photo aa Jack Fleck of Daven. Port, lowa was photograph at Meadowbrook Coeate Club where her husband, the current National Open golf champion, is competing in the National PG champion- ME ete rN, . oy i \7s ; f ¢ ences,: an, ae eg ~ ¥ a a + ae j fs c \ /, ; j os ts ff ‘ i “THE PONTIAC PRESS, | / SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1955 Girls Have No Right ‘to Invite oer By ELIZABETH WOODWARD - s the heat that works up days if it's not one thing it's an- other, Everybody's personal iife seems to be on the rocks. The boys are too languid to lift a finger. Girls dream in vain that they'll get all dressed up and go posh for their benefit. Temperatures and patience are short. Words are said in haste and regretted at leisure. It's sticky hot and rugged on sweet dispositions. So puzzles crop up like freckles. But puzzles, thank goodness, are easier to get rid of. Take this one, for instance. “Dear Miss Woodward: My girl friend and I like two boys who are very good friends. So one Satur- day we asked them to go on a pic- nic and to the drive-in with us and we had a wonderful time. “Then we two girls were ‘n- vited to a wedding reception, so we asked the same boys to go with us. One said he'd go if the | other would, “That prompted my girl ‘friend to say, ‘Never mind, we'll ask someone else.’ So right away they both said they'd go. “Later I was talking with my boy friend and he: said that both | boys had -been invited to another wedding and he didn't think the other boy would go on our invi- | tation, “So it was left like that, and we're wondering if we should call them to find out for sure whether they're going with us, or not?” Answer: Unless you two girls had a very special brand of wedding ed to come alone. Provisions have not been made for all odd girls tb bring along strange escorts. ~ your hostess. wanted you to invite a friend of your own, she would have made it quite clear, That would make it a special deal. So, since you girls spoke up and issued invitations you had no real right to give, you'd better say nothing further about it and begin to hope fervently that your boy reception invitation, -you’re expect. | friends go to that other wedding. Life should be simple in the summertime, not complicated by ‘fancy tricks that lead to more fancy tricks. Take things calmly and easily, and don't boil over. That's my advice to this girl. | Jeanette Marie DeClerck, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Victor J. DeClerck of North -Roselawn drive, became the bride of Phillip A. DeConick this morning in St. Vincent de Paul Church. He Swim Suit Care Helps is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony DeConick of Walled Lake. Good Looks Now is the time for swimming. And no one knows it better than) today’s teen-ager. Many ae lifeguards and coun- selors, many are enjoying one of | their last carefree summers by entertaining themselves around town. Some will be at resorts and camps where swimming is a daily | activity: The care given suits between dunkings can greatly lengthen their lives and keep their looks up to par. Chiorine, salt, sun lotion, sand and perspiration can damage, fabric if left in. Before leaving the beach or pool, unless you're wearing your suit | home, rinse it out in clear water | and roll it in a towel. Don’t wring or twist it because sand can in- jure and cut the fabric. LAUNDER SUIT When you get home, launder your suit if it's at all possible. Build up a good lather of soap- suds in warm water and squeeze them. through the fabric. Use a soft brush to remove grimy spots. Work with the weave or grain of the fabric and don’t rub it against itself. Rinse well, squeeze and roll in a towel, Then shake out wrinkles and hang to dry. Dry fitted suits inside out and hang skirted suits by the trunks. White cottons go in the sun, colored suits in the shade, Tiny Perfume Flasks Ride Nicely in Bag Take your choice: drown your- self in perfume in the morning to retain a touch of scent in the evening or apply it lightly all during the day. Putting on more during the day is the choice anyone would make, unless she relishes bowling over the bus driver on the way to work. This means a purse perfame Now comes a selection of four favorite scents by a French man- ufacturer that can be bought right in the little bottle to begin with. For those who accessorize their pocketbooks with the same loving care and good taste that they do their dressing tables, this is a boon. If you wash your hair at night, don't go to bed with it sopping wet, It will lose its luster very The couple will honeymoon in northern Michigan. MRS, rose pointe lace over satin was worn by Jeanette Marie DeClerck | this morning for her marriage to, Phillip A. DeConick. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Victor J. DeClerck of North Roselawn drive and Phillip is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony De- Conick ot Walled Lake. The lace jewel neckline of the bridal gown was filled with illu- sion and the bouffant skirt was designed with a sealloped band of pleated nylon tulle and rose pointe lace. The pleated tulle was carried out in fe headpiece of lace and pearls, which se- cured ber veil. IF “cute” type bride— Emphesize “‘little-girl look.” Leave the toll silhouette thot develops from elongated lines fo tall brides. Miss T. B.—‘The little girl look” is individual with perky little bows, picturesque necklines and delicate skirt motifs. Here hand-clipped, chantilly-type lace over wide rows of blush satin and scattered satin bows accenting chapel-length skirt. Egg-white will remove chewing | gum from anything, including hair. _ quickly this way. without leaving a trace. A princess style bridal gown of | PHILLIP A. DeCONICK Jeanette Marie DeClerck Wed in Morning Service She carried a prayer book and an arrangement of sweetheart roses and stephanotis. The Rev. Donald Koontz, of Visi- | ‘tation Church of Detroit, per- | |formed the 10 o'clock wedding, ceremony in St. Vincent de Paul Church before an altar decorated | with arrangements of white stock, 'gladioli, roses and blue and white | ' carnations. | WEARS ‘YELLOW | Mrs, Robert Rosenbaum of Chi- ‘cago was matron of honor wear- ing a yellow dress of crystallette fashioned with ballerina length | skirt. The empire waistline was | topped with a pleated bodice with cutout sleeves and Peter Pan col- lar. A matching jacket was worn with the dress and she carried a colonial bouquet of turquoise shat- tered carnations. * * Ld Other attendants were Mrs. Kenneth Hahnefeld of Walled Lake and Mrs. Charles DeClerck of Drayton Plains. They wore simi- || lar gowns of turquoise crystallette || and carried colonial bouquets of | yellow shattered carnations cen- tered with turquoise flowers, Each | attendant wore a headpiece of tiny imitation flowers surrounded by net. Kenneth Hahnefeld of Walled Lake served as best man. Charles DeClerck of Drayton Plains and Charles Prue were ushers, A breakfast was held immedi- ately following the ceremony at the Amvets Hall on Oakland ave- nue. A reception will be held this evening. NAVY AND WHITE The bride's mother wore a navy dress trimmed with white lace and a white lace hat. Her corsage was of pink glamelias. The bridegroom’s mother was .at- tired in a beige lace dress with beige hat and brown accessories. Yellow glamelias formed her cor- sage. When the couple left for a honey- moon in northern Michigan the bride was wearing a turquoise and black dress topped with a linen jacket and a white aaa They | will reside in Walled Lake. is a student at —— of De- troit. Gardening Hobby Develops Into Job By ANNE HEYWOOD “T have always loved garden- ing,” a reader writes, “and now I have an excellent part-time job in a nursery, waiting on custom- ers and selling them trees and shrubs. And in addition to the fun and satisfaction, I make a nice salary.” * * * Here is how this woman got into the field, “When I was first married, 1 had my own ‘garden. 1 had no | training at all, but I learned by | ox . it was my big hotiby while the children were little, “Also, of course. 1 did flower for the woman's club and waa. always on the. garden committee. In my own garden, I po praend a. kinds of plants and got really good at it. “Next, of curse, I got acquaint- ed with our neighborhood green- house owner, since I was a good customer of his, ASKED TO WORK “One day, he asked if I could help out on a part-time basis during his busy season. “I did, at a very low salary, and loved it. After that, he kept calling on me when he was rushed and I kept learning more and miore about the field. ° - oe w “Then, out of a clear blue sky, he announced that they were ex-, panding and starting a huge nursery. He said he wanted me to. be a regular employe, on a part- time basis, and that al would pay Me a salary. oe top of that, me, Prosetand : f ot > Me Ae te FEY to give me a percentage of the beautiful, I feel that I’m doing People a favor!" ® * | Pggple think of ' job-hunting pi |@ grim, businesslike process, ‘actually, it frequently Pian about from ‘pleasant social cor- tacts. : If you, deal with any shops or tradesmen as a customer, and they know. and like you, you might think-6f them as potential employers if you ever want a job! Omens F different colors, or at least have “And now he's playing hard-to greta tg Relodeg lgaed Hainan see it may excuse his brevity of con- versation. However, you needn't let it deter yo. too much, But don’t think playing hard-to-get will impress him, He’ll just think that you're over your craze and maybe say, “Thank goodness.” Go right on speaking to him every day. Add more to ‘‘Hi" and | turn it into a conversation. But keep it casual. Friends ought to be able to talk together without boil- ing over or turning on the ice. * * * z Don’t make any obvious plays get by you without talking to you. And since he’s shy on words, speak up first yourself. In time he may get used to the sounds of your two voices, and start the duet himself. Copyright 1955 Vivid Shades | Spark Sets | This Autumn PARIS (INS) — When this au- tumn falls, you can plan to com- bine odd sweaters and cardigans ‘into striking twin-sets. * * * Advance autumn sweater fash- ions, now being shown in Paris, indicate that same-shade sweater- sets will be rather flat and tone- | less after the summer holidays. The new models will be in two some trim of another color. A pink sweater, for example, with a pink-edged black. cardi- gan. Belge will be blended with brown and charcoal-grey with lighter grey. Patterns of pin-stripes, horizon- He}: \tal, will be more fashionable than the unadorned sweaters and cardi- | gans. A black and white pin-striped sweater may be worn with an all | black cardigan, or a black and grey striped may be worn over a | simple gray sweater. The classic sweater and match- ing cardigan will have. slightly dropped shoulder sedms and nar- row, long sleeves which won't be “‘pushed-up" any more. * Ld * For sportswear, a new idea will be to wear a short-sleeved fitted sweater with a high neck under a loose pullover with a wide and deep V neck. The under sweater will be visible from the ¥-necked pullover, like a bib. A white sweater worn urder a big red over-sweater is one typically striking combination. | ‘This lovely ensemble is designed Pattern 4758: Women’s sizes 36, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50. Size 36 takes 3% yards 39-inch fab- ric; ‘bolero, 1% yards. a tor this | each pat- =. ma Wa oA nt ste = ee Ta er... . ‘ta, * ene TTA ~ BM, ‘ Van We bes ee SSS W\\ Allin aa 5 \ \ hee WHXwiy WY 1226 Moitini Deminutive by plow Re Our Lady of the Lake Church at Waterford was the setting this morning at 11 o'clock for the mar- riage of Kathleen Shields and Her- man J. Nelson. The bride is the daughter of Mr. jand Mrs. Edward R. Shields of iDrayton Plains and he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman S. Nelson of Lochaven road. Two hundred guests witnessed the 'cefemony performed by the Rev. F. J. Delaney before an altar decorated with white gladioli. Marie Borkowski, aunt of the bride- groom, was soloist. The bride wore a floor-length gown of French lace and nylon tulle. The shirred tulle bodice was overlid with a scalloped lace motif which fashioned the neck- line, Her finger tip veil was held by ‘a headpiece of lace and pleat- ed tulle, embellished with seed pearls. : She wore pearl-earrings and a single strand of pearls and carried an arrangement of white roses and stephanotis. AQUA GOWN Marilyn Schmidt of Port Huron was maid of honor. She wore an aqua gown of embossed crystallette featuring pr@hcess lines and balle- rina length skirt. She carried a bouquet of yellow roses and white carnations. . * Ld * Other attendants were Mrs. Gary Shields, sister-in-law of the bride, Mrs. Paul Mitchell and Shirley Taylor. They wore gowns identical to the maid of honor’s and carried arrangements of red roses and white carnations. Patty Seeterlin wore 4 yellow taffeta dress for her duties as flower girl. Mark Shields, nephew of the bride, was ring bearer, Donald Nelson served as his brother’s best man and seating the guests were Lewis Shields, brother of the bride, Don Seeter- li, and Philip Christos. A reception is being held from four until seven o'clock at the home of the bridegroom's parents. A wed- ding breakfast was held at Rotunda Inn. WEAR LACE Mrs. Shields wore an aqua lace dress with white accessories for _|her daughter’s wedding and Mrs. Nelson chose a light blue lace dress with white accessories. When the couple left for a honey- moon to Niagara Falls and Canada the new Mrs. Nelson was wearing a light blue cotton cord suit with white accessories and the corsage from her bridal bouquet. The touple will make their home in Birming- ham. athleen Shields Mere Herman J. Nelson Today MRS. HERMAN J. NELSON + Mattresses Need Surface Washing NEW YORK (INS) — Mattress surfaces need cleaning once im awhile, even if they, are protected by a washable zip-on cover. Fol- low these steps to make the job fast and effective: 1. Vacuum top, bottom and Sides to remove loose dust. 2. Attack spots or stains first. Scoop “dry” soapsuds ‘(made by beating soap and water into a thick, meringue-like lather) onto a sponge or brush and scrub the spot vigorously. Keep the suds fluffy so that moisture will not penetrate the ticking. Remove suds with a cloth wrung out of warm water as soon as they begin to die or show soil. Repeat with fresh suds and rinse until the spot is gone. lightly and quickly over a small section of the mattress. Rinse twice with g warm cloth wrung out of warm water. Repeat in overlapping sections until all sur- faces and sides of mattress are clean. 4. Dry as quickly as possible by placing the mattress in the direct line of an electric fan or air cur rent. 3. Then sponge the dry soapsuds | | Will be free of dust and dirt when you send them to New Way Rug Clean- ers. Dry-cleaning will re- store the lustre to your home sparkle like new] . Your Rugs Rid of carpets and moke your § lrner Dust , reg Additional Dress Lines Are Scaled for Shorties “Sylvan Rich Offers High Style to Girls 5-5 or Under Miss ‘'5-foot-5 and under’’ has a real friend in designer Sylvan Rich who creates truly flattering clothes for women of below average height, shorter waistlines and full- er hips. This easy-to-make dress is a perfect example of his talent. for sealing high feshion to Martini Diminutive proportions for the little woman Observe the lengthening line of the bodice, traced by rickrack trim; the darts gently shaping the figure through the mid-sec- tion; the skirt made of four gores, tapered to eliminate any bulk where it is softly gathered to the lowered waistline. The sleeves are brief and eased with gussets while the simple neck- line is coolly cut in Vs For luncheons and afternoon bridge on the club terrace, you'll enioy wearing it all summer ‘ong, made in one of the beautiful new cottons and trimmed with gay No embroidery—just fron on lus- cious roses in two des of rich red with soft green leaves. Beau, tify sheets. pillowcases, towels, scarves, spreads and many other items! - Pop ‘em in the wash—- colors stay vivid and glowing. Iron-on! Colorful! Washable!- rickrack or braid; in faille or silk crepe with satin or velvet ribbon | ‘dress for fall. Pattern 580 has 14 motifs in’ com-, bination of red and green: four trim, it will be a perfect late day | roses 4x4%; four roses 1%x2%; six’ This pattern is cut to designer measurements, not standard pat- tern measurements. Bust Waist Hips Sizes ™ rh 35 thehes 160 35 24 96 2 MY 27% sti ined: 8 “4 34 29 39s inches 6 40 a1 41. inches bt Size 12 requires 54, yards of 36-inch material for dress and one-fourth yard of 35-inch ma- teria) for interfacing. To roder Pattern 1226, address. Spadea Syndicate, Inc., P.O. Box 535, G. P. 0., Dept. P-6, New York, N. ¥. State size. Send $1. Air- mail handling 25 cents extra. Amerjcan Designer Pattern ‘11 is available for 25 cents. If paying by check or money order, make it payable to Spadea Syndicate, Inc.. and add ‘four cents for handling. (Copyright 1955) MOMS Group Holds Meeting Mrs, Malcolm Scantland and hostesses for the Thursday meet- held in the Fire Hall. Bi s of Mrs. Frank Po- lasek and Mrs. Duncan McVean were ebserved. meeti Hei; birthday fund and sent to the vet- pital. The August menting will be an election of officers. and Mrs, Mary Sickman were co- | ing of Zone Eight, Past Presi- -| dents’ Club, MOMS of America, Inc. » ‘ Husbands- were guests at the Auburn erans at Dearborn Veecem= Hos- | | |reses averaging 2'4x4 inches, | Send 25 cents in coins for this, pattern—add 5 cents for each pat-. tern for lst-class mailing... Send” to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft, Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print? plainly pattern number, your name, address ahd zone. Velvet Makes Extra Elegant Pillow Cover NEW YORK (INS)—A combina- tion of practical do-it-yourself. know-how ano luxurious velvet can add an extra-elegant and very fem- inine touch to a bedroom. Velvet's a tapric that makes most women practically purr, with de- light at its-smooth texture and For example, a decorative scat- | ter pillow covering was shown with |a harlequin pattern in four velvet ' tured a circular pillow in crimson, with an huge felt “H” sewn on front and back. | There was also a webvet-covered SAVE 5 PARK ING REAR of STORE waste-basket in Open Tonight ‘til a Sunday § 6 65% | On sanes a Huron at Telegraph Exclusive Sportswear for Ladies for a Limited Nu No Obligation to Purchase, Free One Hour Band Weekly. Free Accordion While Learning. Hear Our Band in Action! —Drop in Any Monday ot Tuesday Night! Private Half-Hour Lessons §2 Attention Chu our band wil play GALLAGHER’S SUMMER ACCORDION SCHOOL mber of Students Join Now—Ages for 4 to 60 scnoom Lodges, Service Cube, ee ee oo GALLAGHER MUSIC NEW WAY RUG and CARPET CLEANERS y 42 Wisner Street, » FE Z-7132 | \ i 9. : 7 _ oa ee ft 18 E. Huron St. ’ Phone Fi Dept.. P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea - colors—bright pink, light blue, em- «AANA Rs ile f } St. Trinity ) Lutheran Church | , &ebere Ave. at Jessie | Missouri Synod i Rev. Ralph C. Claus SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A. M. Ist SERVICE 8:30 A. M. 2nd SERVICE 11:00 A. M, | Springfield, Mo. They are on a na- in Pontiac Unity Center will be _ tion-wide tour. Mrs. August (Blanche) Joki of | ‘The Rev. Wesley Wibley is, Oakley Park. pastor. : For the past six years Mrs, Lorraine The Common Serviece....11:00 A, M. Sunday Schoo! .........10:90 A.M. Gee. L. Garver, Paster FE 2 7508 urday at 7:45 in First Assembly | ‘What Do You Want? | of God, 210 N, Perry St. Will Be Subject of Talk The program will be. given by. Ps the Liberators Gospel Quartet from by Mrs. Joki Sunday. Guest speaker at 11 a. m. Sunday Assembly of God Bible College at | Joki has been leader of the Bir- mingham, Ala. Unity Center and previous to that time was affiliated with the Detroit group, “What Do You Want’ will be her subject Sunday in the local center i rooms, 7142 N. Saginaw St. Mrs. Rev. Collins to Speak; | |Pictures to Be Shown In the absence of the pastor, the Rev. Richard H. Dixon, guest ‘speaker at 11 a.m. Sunday at | Trinity Baptist Church will be the ' Rev. David L. Collins of Detroit. At 7:30 p.m. Group 15 of the an- | nual Women’s Day Committee will | | present a Travelama, Mrs. Luella ‘Fultz is chairman of this group. | Joki has been guest sBeaker here several times in past years. the children at the time of- the morning service. Mr. and Mrs. Joki have recently _ returned from a tour of Europe. Services at 9 A. GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Corner of Genesee and Clendale Rev. Otto G. Schultz—Speaker Sunday School—9 A. M. and 11 A. M. Clergyman Advocating Russian Bible Society M. and 11 A. M. and Russian Bible Society will soon be formed and become affiliated with the United Bible Societies was voiced hereby Dr. William J. St. John’s Lutheran Church | American Lutheran Conference (Nations! Lotheran Council) Bev. Cari W. Nexon, 6. 0., Paster | Platt, general secretary of the British and Foreign Bible Society. | Dr. Platt disclosed that the U.B.S. Hil) Street at Cherry Street had recently received a member- Sunday School ..... sesies asaeans 9:45 a. m. ship application from a Bible group Morning Worship . 11:00 a.m in Hungary. He added that the Parsonage: Owege Drive seeeeerreeeeeeee Press - British and Foreign Bible Society has been getting Hungarian Scrip- tures from that country for cir- 8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion, Nursery thru Third Grade. WILLIAMS STREET AT WEST PIKE The Rev. C. George Widditield. SUNDAY SERVICES: — All Saints Episcopal Church |, 9:30 AM.—Holy Communion, Infant 11:00 A.M.—Morning Prayer. , Sermon by the Rev. Lewis Towler. Summer ‘culation among Hungarian-speak- | ing people outside their homeland. » er @ FREE @ METHODIST CHURCH 87 Latayette Se. (2 Blocks West of Sears) Rector Church School, infant Nursery through Third Grade. | ST. GEORGE'S CHAPEL ST. ANDREW'S CHAPEL : MILFORD MICH Minte Highwev Near Sachabaw 8:00 A:M.—Holy Communion 10:00 A.M.—Morning Prayer Sermon ov the Rev Robert J Bickley Vicar Eg Ps : . Morning Worship 11 A.M. 8:15 A.M. Holy Communion Rev. R. H Whitaker, Celebrant 10:30 Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rev. E. H.. Eckel 8.T.D. Bervice conducted by The Messrs. Robert Richardson and Lioyd Walker Burton Artz, Director Howard C. Artz, Pastor “The Light of the World Is Jesus” Central Christian Church 347 N. Saginaw Chas, D. Race, Pastor FE 40739 }. Phone FE 2-9955 wrrTvVrvVvvVvVVVVVVvVvVVVVvVVVVVVYTYvYvVVYV TY LONDON (RNS)—Hope that a; NEW TABERNACLE — Guest speaker tonight at|a. m., 2:30 and ithe new tabernacle of Pontiac Holiness Association through July 31. Sunday School will be held for will be Dr. George Bennard, author of “The Old the group has 194 acres under development for a | | ‘Rugged Cross." He also will speak Sunday at 11, permanent camp Will Attend Camp. and Conferences The Rev. and Mrs. Howard C. ist Church will attend the annual , |thé denomination at Bethel Park mw inear Flint. The camp will open Monday and continue two weeks. Bishop J. Paul Taylor will preside at the con- ference which includes 95 churches. Also going from the Pontiac church will be Miss Burtolla Green who will represent the church as delegate and Mrs. Verda Pratt at- tending as a Sunday School and youth delegate. OU 4 7:30 p. m. Meetings will continue Located at 2800 Watkins Lake Rd. site. Quartet fo sing Twice Here The American Collegiate Insti- tute of Izmir, Turkey is the desti- oe nation of Miss Esther Carhart. Well Known Musicians She will teach there next year un- to Present Concert der assignment of the American Sunday and Monday Board of Congregational Christian Churches. The Northwestern College quar- | Izmir was formerly known in tet will appear in Pontiac in two Bible times as Smyrna which will nes 5 : ret? | add to the interest for Miss Car- churches. Sunday at 7:30 p.m. they | hart who is the daughter of George i i irs ist Church | will sing at First Baptist urc \ Carkact of Hadecll’ Ra. and Monday at 8 p.m. they will| ! , present a concert at Perry Park This will not be Miss Carhart’s Baptist Church. | first overseas experience for she hs . ,.' taught for 10 years in the Ameri- The group is a daily radio fea- q : : ‘ture on a network of four stations, C@” School for Girls in Lovetch, Ae : oa | Bulgaria, under the Methodist and is officially known as the ‘‘Tes | Board Uauring (a) (period which a, Time Radio nasig Der | covered World War II. were © Oe | Although’ born in Massachusetts < duets ——— Ses oem ane /most of her childhood and youth ome hae Evening Worship | tended St. John's Provincial Sem- | > inary in Plymoutth. He will take the place of the Rev. William Rademacher, who was transferred. A Friendly Place to Worship 7:30 p.th. Youth Fellowship 6:30 P.M. s Wednesday 7:30 P.M. > Prayer and Study Hour FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Corner East Huron and Mt. Clemens at Mill St., Pontiac (Opposite Post Office) Lawrence D, Graves, Asso, Minister POPS eereeeereeoeeeaereatae «4 of, Kan Malcolm K. Burton, Minister ¥ Sunday Morning Service, 10:30 A. M. “WHAT'S GOOD IS BAD” THE REV. MR. GRAVES, Preaching > SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY ZION CHURCH of the NAZARENE “ ” APOSTOLIC CHURCH focglne ann OF CHRIST 10:00 A.M. Sunday School 11:00 A. M. Worship Sunday Sch 458 Central Young People 6:45 P.M. . Evang. Service 7:30 P.M. Rev. W. 6. Vartan, Panter Lavern Sheffield, Mustea! Director hele mcsroalf tr Services Sunday, 10:00 A. M. Tues., Thurs., Sat., 7:30 P. M. Reading Room| 2 East Lawrence Stieet Open Daily 11 AM toS PM Friday to 9 PM. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Lawrence and Williams Streets WESLEYAN METHODIST 61 NORTH LYNN STREET P j 10.00 Sunday ) . 3 , W. Y. P. 8 OS Pt “Strength Available Right Where We are Apostolic in doctrine, Baptiem in jesus : 11:00 Worship Evangelistic 7:30 PM. ¥ cK ou Are” for the Sick. w ; — vias pes a ‘ i- i Rev. Cc. D. Pastor _* Z Station W: ue Ke, Sunday 9:45 A.M Z | | f 4 : | i / | S i f +! : ‘| ' | HE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, J ULY 23. 1955 Ord a Soldier i in War Finds Goda Constant Rarapariont in Com at Youths to Hold ‘Saturday Rally Well Known Evangelist and Wife to Be Heard by Oakland Fellowship Jack Van Impe and Mrs. Van Impe will be guests of ‘the Oakland Youth Fellowship Saturday eve- ning in Perry Park Baptist Church. Jack is a graduate of Detroit Bible Institute and his wife is a former Pontiac girl and a member of First Baptist Church. They play the accordion and sing respectively. Together they form an evangel- istic team which has toured this country and held campaigns in 10 countries of Europe in two trips abroad. They also have appeared on TV for the past five years and also | have been heard on radio. All young people of the area are invited for this outstanding pro- gram. Refreshments will follow the service. ~ The Rev. Hilding Bihl is host pastor. Father Bayne New Dean of U. of D. Law School DETROIT (RNS) — For the first time in its 43-year history, a pries# | | FELT GOD NEAR heads the University of Detroit Law School. Appointment of the Rev. C. Bayne, S. J., as acting dean was announced by the Very Rev. Celestin J. Steiner, S. J., univer- sity president. _actually pray. David | | Confident Living GI Knows How 6 Feel Real Presence at Will By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE Not long ago, on the West Coast, I met a soldier with whom I had corresponded when he was in Korea. He's not the kind of boy whom you would think of as engaging in regular correspondence with a minister. As a matter of fact, he's a little on the rough side—but he's very real and there's no nonsense about him. I like him tremendously. * *« I first heard from him after someone had sent him some of my columns. He wrote me that he'd read them. He said there wasn't much else around to read; so he had made a thorough study of these columns. In one of them the point was made that God can be’ with you at all times, right by your side. He'd been brought up as a churchgoer, but he really couldn’t believe anything as “preposterous” DR. PEALE or — else, Then, one night, s was in the lines assigned to a lonely guard Sey only yards from the enemy outposts. ‘‘Frankly,” he told me, “I was scared to death. I was cold and couldn't get t warm. I was filled with fear. The next man. was quite a distance from me and I couldn’t talk to him.. I couldn’t even smoke. And then I happened to think about the idea of God's presence with a human being. So I thought I'd practice your suggestion and see if there was anything to it.” as the notion that God could be right beside him | + EUCHARISTIC CONGRESS OPENING — Bene- detto Aloisi Cardinal Masella, the papal legate, sits| Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Standing at right is a Swiss in the pontifical throne at the formal opening Tues-| guard who accompanied the prelate from Rome. | day = J 36th International Eucharistic Congress at | Others are unidentified. “AP Wirephote Canada Mining “So I talked to the Lord and said, ‘Can it be true that You can be | with anybody, really with them, just like another man from my outfit here by my side?’ I stood there and talked with the Lord. I didn't with me. All of a sudden, right there, in that cold, inky | black night, I felt Him. It was just as though there was another human being with me. I could almost touch Him. And = that | minute on, I felt peaceful and not nearly so scared and lonely.’ It was two years after this that I saw him and I asked, “What do you know? “Do you \At 36, Father. Bayne is one of | still feel the Presence?"-—- - - the youngest law deans jn the | country. He is a graduate of the | University of Detroit and entered the Socjety of Jesus‘in 1941. He re- ceived his bachelor and master of laws degrees from Georgetown University and his doctor of laws from Yale University. Dr. Pitt Speaks at Kirk “Not all the time,” he answered, “but I know how to feel Him, I just forget everything else and tell Him that I need Him. I. admit to Him how ‘bad I am, and how much better I want to be. I just ask Him to come and be with me, and then I know He is with me.” Here was a big, tough young man. But I could see a light shining in hig eyes. I knew that what he had experienced about God could keep him forever master of his fears. The late Ernie Pyle, that great war correspondent, told the story of how, in World War II, a storm periled the assault landing at Salerno, | In the absence of Dr. Haroid C.| jraly. The flagship’s chaplain asked permission to lead the men in DeWindt, who is vacationing in Europe, Dr. Frank Pitt will preach | Sunday, Dr. Pitt is pastor of Grosse Pointe Memorial Church. First ve Spiritualist Church 16 Chase Street Sunday Evening Service 7:30 Mrs, Beatrice Girtner, Speaker from Detroit. Midweek Service Wed. 7:30 FP. M. CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH Gervices bvetng held at the WATERFORD TWP. HIGH SCHOOL 10:00 A.M. Bonday Kehoot 1):00 ALM. Merning Service 7:30 PF M, Evewing Service Rev. H. R&R. Wrebbel CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 30 Whittemore St. H. JOHN DRAKE, Paster SILVER TEA Wednesday, june 29, 7:30 p.m. “SCOTT LAKE RD. ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1002 Scott Lake Rd. w. woley. Paster 11:00 A. M. Sermon: “What Do ° You See” Rev. . e- Evening Rally, 7:45 P. M. Sermon: “False Friend occemeeenmemneneemaeenll SINCSPIRATION “July 20, 7:45 P. M. BERATORS RTETTE ag ery rec You Are Welcome! TT, FIRST | - ASSEMBLY OF GOD 210 N. Perry: St. WPON, 8 A.M. Sunday “Visit the Charch of the _ Old Fashioned Gos; | Book of Isaiah: sic. | prayer that God be with them to still the waves. The commanding | officer smiled indulgently, but gave permission. The men prayed and, at sero hour, the storm subsided and the landing was made successfully. There was no doubt in the minds ef those men that God had been beside them that night. And who can say that He wasn't? The greatest of all antidotes for fear is the faith that God is with | you wherever you go and whatever you do. That promise is spelled out clearly in the Bible and you can read it for yourself in the “Fear thou not; for I am with thee; be not dismayed; | for I am thy God; I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee, yea, iI will uphold thee with the right hand of My righteousness.” Men in every generation have been made courageous over their | | | fears by faith in the ae to 3 Methodist Churches Three Methodist Churches in| Wednesday night at the home of Pontiac are cooperating with the| George Carhart for the Junior program planned by the general; group. board of the Methodist Church, | Thursday evening a _Picnic will Nashville, Tenn. be held for the The program is known as “The | Young adults at a Seventy Evangelists” (70-E) and place to be an- nounced. Sunday evening Central Methodist | 31 according to > Church, | the pastor, the On Tuesday > Rev. Kenneth A evening they > . Stephens. | iN will have dinner ' ices will be at a - with the Single _ 7:30 each evening.| Group and discuss with them the The Rev. Eu-| ‘9.6 Program” and “Why I gene Maier will | be the s pea ker andNorman Pease will have charge of the mu- Entered the Ministry.” Wednesday and Thursday eve- nings a public worship service will be held in the * * * Se ee any way that they can that will| field Hospital, help the particular need of the}; Woodward at church to which they go. = Lake The young men, who are sem- meeting : inary students are engaged in | be open to the thig program all over the coun. | Public. try wherever a church will take Coming to assist the pastor will | them in and use them for one be the Revs. Har- week, ‘old Babb and . 2) * Barney Johnson. Six young men are coming to * * @«& Pontiac, two of . The Revs. Ko- which will be at ~ guke Koyama and Galloway Lake the Rev. Ed. Kil- for special meet- patrick will be at ‘to Hurt Eskimo I just talked to God like he was in that foxhole Labrador Bishop Warns | Against Rapid Growth | of Native Exploitation MONTREAL (RNS)—Mining de- , velopment in Northern Canada will | bring chaos instead of civilization |to the Eskimo unless he is care- | fully conditioned, Bishop Lionel | Scheffer, Vicar Apostolic of Labra- dor, warned here. The Montreal-born Oblate, who will leave soon for a two-month tour of the northern sector of his 35,000-square-mile jurisdiction, said “the Eskimos are not yet ready to be assimilated, and they must not | be abruptly pushed into our way of | life.”” Warning mining companies against exploiting the Eskime, he noted that the latter is “‘child- like’ without any conception of the value of money, and the idea of “saving is beyond his ken.” Bishop Scheffer said he hoped that through an increased mission program, the Eskimo people can be adequately educated equipped to meet the immediate j challenge civilization will bring. | On his visit by plane, canoe, | dogsled and automobile from Hud- son's Bay to the northern tip of Ungava, he expects to contact ~ some 2,000 Eskimos. Six College Men Coming The prelate, in an interview | here, said the ““Eskime is a sim- ple man only in the non-com- plexity of life. His mind is alert and quickly grasps the meaning of things with proper guidance, but if left to fend for hirnself he cannot be expected to understand the new environ- ment."” even the introduction of machin- ery and modern methods probably -|won't change him perceptibly for| another 50 years, Bishop Scheffer . | | said. ' Pontiac Unity Contes _ 1% N. Saginaw 8 Sunday School 11 A. a Sunday Services 11 A. M. Speaker: Mrs. Blanche joki “WHAT DO YOU WANT?" First Open Bible Church 1517 JOSLYN Rev. T. H. Staten The First Church of the Brethren 46 N. ROSELAWN Sunday School 10 A. M. — Paster 1i:@e A. {hour 10 minutes carrying out the | and | A The Eskimo has lived much the | jsame for the past 500 years and | Thousands Go ‘to Communion in Rio Today RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil ‘P— Thousands of Roman Catholic men | received communion early today | in the climax to seven and a half -hours of continuous services at |the 36th International Eucharistic Congress. A midnight Mass préceding the | communion was celebrated by Francis Cardinal Spellman, arch- bishop of New York. He spoke before an estimated 150,000 per- sons in Congress Plaza. The cele- bration of the Mass was Cardinal | Spellman’s only official’ duty dur- ing the Congress, which opened Tuesday. There was no estimate of the number of men who received com- munion, but 200 priests spent an service. A special communion for wom- en was held Thursday. Confessions from 50,000 children were heard yesterday in preparation for com- munion today. Speaker, lea, Picnic ‘Are Announced The Rev. Robert W. Hoover Jr., |son of the assistant pastor at Newman .A.M.E. Church will ;preach Sunday at 11 a.m. The _ congregation has returned to the ‘new church at 14 Auburn Ave. for services. From 4 to 7 p.m. Sunday the | Pastor's Aid Board will have a ‘silver lawn tea and children’s fashion show at the home of Mrs. John Womack, 630 Ditmar St. Mrs. Edward Harper is president. Plans are in the offing for the annual church picnic which will be held at a park in Toledo on Aug. 13. About 96 per cent of the physi- cians in the United States are men. Pontiac Bible College For Information Ventact Kev. Frances &. Myer or Sev. Oo. A. Pawtey n American Church, loca Universal oe Sunday School 9:30 A. M. THE CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH William E. Godin. pastor ted on Crescent Lake Road, at aterford Township, to serve the entire community. Baptist Conclave Closes Sessions With Graham Talk LONDON (#-The 50th anniver- sary conference of the Baptist! World Alliance closed last night) with an appeal by American Evan- gelist Billy Graham to remain) true to the Baptist faith. Graham told about 45,000 pe sons in Arsenal Stadium the next! five years. may be “the most tragic: or the most glorious in history.” “Intellectuals and scientists are | at the end. of their tether in strug- the world,’’ Graham said, * * * tists.’ manitarianism and strengthen the church. Graham, who works with other Christian denominations in gling with problems which beset “God can use this crowd of Bap- | The evangelist urged his listen- | ers to remain orthodox and sim-| ple, practice evangelism and hv- | his evangelistic endeavors, spoke last night as an — sit clergyman, * * * Dr, Theodore F. Adams, pastot of the First Baptist Church of Rich- mond, Va., who was elected presi- | five-year term, preceded /to the platform, He said he would | devote his presidency. to an effort ‘to add 10. million more Baptists | to the present 20 million. BULLETIN For Saturday, July 23, 1955 Corporate Communion Sunday, July 31, 1955— 17:30 Mass St, | Vincent de Paul Church. Breakfast after Mass in the Parish Hall. After breakfast we will hold our Annual Golf Day at Pon- are welcome to play. You do not have to be a member of the K. C. Golf League. 9:45 a.m. Sunday School FIRST CHURCH of GOD 23 East Boulevard — South of Lookout Drive 7:30 p.m. Evening Service For Transportation Call FE 5-7768 or FE 4-1782 © HH. Eugene Ramsey, Minister — Gen. Offices; Andersen, Ind, 10:45 a.m. Morning Service - 9:45—SUNDAY SCHOOL 11:;00—MORNING WORSHIP “The Christian as a Missionary” Missionary Contest Continues FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 135 Prospect St.—Geo. D. Murphy, Pastor 7:30-—EVANGELISTIC HOUR “A jailer Finds Christ’ dent of the World Alliance for a Graham tiac Country Club. All members — % SUNDAY, JULY 10, 1955 > Sunday Schoot ........... 9:45 A.M. as |? Worship Service ....... ... 19:00 A, M. 7 a AS ee ve eeeees 6:30 PLM, , > Evangelistic Service ........ 7:30 P.M, ‘ > Midweek Prayer ond Praise ; y Service Wednesdey ...... 7:30 PLM. * "cee 4 > ; BEULAH HOLINESS CHURCH | ‘ Osmun and Going Streets Worship of God 10:45 A. M. All Are Welcome! Includes College Age Y 7 Large Classes for Combined Public Worship, 10:30 A. M.. Sermon: “What Is Essential in Religion?” THE BETHANY CHURCH The American Baptist Church, W. Huron St. - FRED ROBERT TIFFANY, Pastor Complete Sunday School, 9:30 A. M. Folks, and the NM Adults Sunday . EVANGEL TEMPLE Y.M.C.A. Side Entrance Sunday School .. Worship Service Evangelistic Service see eee Evening ..«... wrvwrvrvvevevwyTyrTyYTeYveYwTreYwrewrerereYreYrerewrerereVTrewTewrwTewTyVTVT YS PC CCC CCC CCC CUCCUUCCUT CCT! VEO eT Sunday School - 10 a. m. Young People - 6:45 p. m. | Eve. heme 7:45 p.m. Rev. Rose L. Davis, Pastor 306 Midway—Off Sanford Junior Church - lam. | eee ee ae Revelations” Service, 7:30 P.M. FE 4-9652 Sunday School ........ Morning Worship .....1 Evening Worship ...... Wed. Prayer Meeting. . Young People's Bible Study REV. A. H. MULLINS. Pastor First Southern Missionary BAPTIST CHURCH 365 East Wilson Ave. . 7:30 P.M, Attiliated with Southern Baptist Convention 9:45 A.M. | 1:00 A.M, 6:45 P.M. 7:30 P.M. | 8:00 P.M. Phone FE 4-8574 11:00 A. SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A. M. KENNETH A. HUTCHINSON Minister M. MORNING owena 7:30 P. i. EVENING SER ARTHUR HUBBS, Minister of Music YourH SERVICE 6:30 P. M. Daily 10:30-2 JULY 21-31, 1955 :30 and 7:30 THE PILGRIM HOLINESS CHURCH BALDWIN AND FAIRMOUNT Morning Worship 11 A. M.. Pilgtim Y. P. S. 6:45 P.M. Evening Service 7:30 P. M. . Sunday School (All Ages) 10 A. M. GOOD SINGING — BIBLE PREACHING “The Little Church with the Big Heart” Rey Overdaugh, &. 8. Supt, £. Ci Swanson, Minister : SPEAKERS—J. M. HAMES, J. ¢. BRILL HART, L. RB. DAY @ Tonight, Dr. Author of “The Old Rugged Cross” Also on Sunday, 10:30, 2:30 P.M. Geo. Bennard, — SINGERS, REV. & MRS. W. T. STONE 2800 Watkins Lake Rd. ALL WELCOME — A: ]. Baughey, Pres. Emmanuel Baptist Church Telegraph Road at Orchard Lake Ave. Bible BROADCAST OVER Dr. 11:00 10:00 A.M. Auditorium “JESUS IN HIS HOME TOWN” Tom Malone, Teacher “OTHER LITTLE SHIPS” Class WCAR 10:15 - 10:45 A. M. | : AIR-CONDITIONED AUDITORIUM | 7:30 “NOT FAR FROM HEAVEN” Departmentalized Sunday Schoo! for All Ages 910—Sunday School Attendance Last Sundey DR. TOM MALONE Speaking at All Services P.M. A ee ae ee: Pee ge ae eh ee ee ee ee Oe ee ee eae i Fe id e es, . i er ae te Sen eRe = i b | f ‘ E : t ; Reve RY | i 52 j 4 : \ \ ' 1 i a 2 } x : \ 1 : i : ; ; , ia : : is : \ oe . | : Pr if ) Jack seat “The: Purple” Plain,” PAY DEBTS PROMPTLY a. Ou ain, Yer |Se'say eat sos Eisenhower Day 5, Con Theaters |*- #7 nai" "| toy moses wy ling toe Jotins “Chought sprin opossum springs. a i. | wae’ using. To place For Civie—Farmingten Sun., Tues: “The Glass mine: you're not ig. es ee = fat: “Thing trom Anotner World:” | “lor. Leslie Carson, Michael Wilding. || Sale ads in The Pontine F Press dial on Brit Scott and Bar- nicolor, Dan Duryea, Jeff Richards. FE 2-8181, ‘ ton. Sun,, Tues: “The Violent Men,” color, Cinema8cope. Glen Pord, Barbere Stan- ond “Escape to Burma,” color, Robert Se capeaageenag : Busy in Geneva For Your Fun Time ti Malin eke DANCING fh cries, i Ryan Wed., Fri: “The a Gray Line,” | | color, Cinemascope, Fy rome’ Power, | |Maureen O*Hara; Rode West,” . Reed. Sat: “The Clown,” Red Skelton; “Ride | | the Man Down,” color, Brian Dohlevy. | Hills—Rechester Sat: “Pirates of Tripoli,” color, Paul : Bonvets, Patricia Medina; “Treasure of | | By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH y Bits” Zachary ‘colt, Carcle Mal , i. TWO SHOWS GENEVA (®—President’ Eise- Sun., Mon: “Violent Saturday,” Color, NIGHTLY hower is keeping busy as a beaver Sidney _— — eye during the summit conference, but cole, Cissmaienge, “metty_Onbee he still manages to crowd in a pith, Oat: “Women's Prisca,” Ida ee ee , Wednesday thru = ear golf shots daily to Won” duke tant. Devclie ‘seen on oe 2 Sag & = e « ; ee Sunday! ecaseseiati tee aoe eee scott “ee, Boon, tanta, Randle ig New Entertainment of the Big Four has given the Chariton» Heston, Fred” MacMurray Hax & Hounds Iun . . President one of his heaviest Donna Reed. ’ Policy Featuring schedules since he took office. De- piu Wed: “The Marauders,” Dan ae SK ees epagiie ope Woodward Avenue in Bloomfield Hills Mickey , Rooney; Walt Disney's LUNCHEON and DINNERS DINNERS: Monday thru Saturday 5:30 to 11 P. M. SUNDAY DINNERS: from 1:30 P. M. to 9 P. M. LUNCHEONS: Served Daily 12 Noon to 2:30 Art Siefert and Al Lloyd caecie a typical Eisenhower day at the summit—the one he Hotel Commodore Show Bar Wee 7727775, ne vvesttaea half an hour later with his son Keege ’ Sat: “Untamed.” CinemaScope, color, Tyrone Power, Susan Hayward; ‘Ten , | Wanted Men,” color, Randolph Scott, ‘| Jocelyn Brando. Sun., Tues: oP a Lightfoot,” CinemaScope, Rock * Hudson; “shotgun,” ay Nelson Rockefeller conferred for . a re Half oe * 20 minutes with his chief. Then for the the President got out his camera | and took pictures of staff mem- bers and the villa grounds. , A few minutes later guests be- . NEW LAKE TH EATER |gan arriving for a luncheon the LADY AND LOVE — Walt Disney gives the dogs their day in ‘‘Lady | President and Mrs, Eisenhower | and the, Tramp,"’ Technicolor and CinemaScope cartoon feature now | gave for Swiss president and a showing at the Oakland Theater. The yareiae musical score is com- | government officials, ___ = : Ope The luncheon lasted until 3:10) ‘Holl Headline ~ - Deors = m. Eisenhower then conferred | ood Ss Sunday — Monday — Tuesday ee with Rockefeler and other dele- = : a feaytmeine oot ore JONNNY Carson Expected L : mus im” | ernment. The President was given) TO THe yaar , a report on the moning meeting tO Become Big Hit on TV —j|N— of the Big Four foreign ministers "G RAPES | The session with Eden, Soviet By BOB THOMAS from. He was one of those life- | > Premier Bulganin and French {-the- ‘ . HOLLYWOOD (—Last year the | of-the-party lads who could do fun- | » Premier Faure lasted an hour 15) | boy most likely to succeed in TV | ny routines and ventriloquism. But |} “WR ATH”. minutes. |he made it pay off. was George Gobel. This year it | He Pp Pesci, fagenarvintglleoralen ott | appears to be.Johnny Carson. | “I toured all over the* Midwest | villa, After dinner Eisenhower | Carson is a slender, good-look- with shows,” he recalled. “Often talked with Dulles by telephone |img young man with an uptilted we would do the show on the back | as ged a breskiast meeting | "9% and a casual comedy man- a a truck bed. After you've en- with him for today. ner. When his Thursday night | tettained those audiences, you can face anything.” Shortly before 11 p.m. he went to CBS show premiered four weeks y e il p. ago, most critics compared him! After a wartime Navy hitch, he | jw bel. worked for radio stations in Ne- ! ag That appears to be his fate. braska, then detided to tackle Lodge Again Named| pees hen he arrived for a lunc heon | Hollywont. on ty Prager pies hat, the man in the next booth hia 'c ent 26-week network deal. 'to Head UN Group em Gobel Feloeeliette “It was ee that I woukd | SUN. WASHINGTON (®—The White | be compared to George,” ob- | MON, | | House today announced the make-/| served Johnny. “From now on, any | TUES. | up of a 10-member U.S. delegation | comedian who doesn’t do a violent | : | President Eisenhower intends to! kind of comedy will be called ‘an- Continuous Sunday Doors Open 1:45 P. M. Dixie Hwy. (U.S.) 10 1 Block N. of Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4500 Open 7 P. M. VISIT OUR BEAUTIFUL NEW MODERN CONCESSION NOW! 2 NEW BOX OFFICES — 4 LANES! TONIGHT! 3 BIG FEATURES! APPAR APPL LL POY 4 q 4 4 4 4 q 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ‘ 4 , ; COLOR! 3 » 4 ; OWL ; ; ; 4 SHOW | F 4 4 q q 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 en GREAT! HENRY FONDA GENE TIERNEY |; li i i i i i i li Ll Ll Ll li Ll i Ll, Ll Mi Ll Ll Ml li Ll i Li Li Li hi hl i Di i he —SEE— ) “THE _ COWBOY” RR RAR ere a SUNDAY! EXCLUSIVE! FIRST TIME SHOWN IN PONTIAC! TECHNICOLOR — VISTA VISION li Mi Mi i i, Mi Li i hi di li Li hi hi i di di Li | nominate for the 10th session of! other Gobel.’ |the U.N. General Assembly, open-| “Tt has always been that way. | ing in New York Sept. 20. |When a new personality comes) These nominations are subject. along, critics need a point of ref: | | to Senate confirmation. erence. A James Dean is com. | Heading the delegation would be | pared to Marion Brando. A Mamie | Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., this coun-| yan Doren is automatically called try’s ambassador to the UN. another Marilyn Monroe. “Sigoed regular members would) «1m sure when Gobel was first 9 Reps, Brooks Hays (D-Ark) and — seal cal tp called an- PAY CUT g . Chester E. Merrow (R-NH), both|"Golcon hooted at the idea that peerage ed House Foreign | such stars as Gobel are overnight airs mmitte. successes. He pointed out that if you are 7 debts or dilie when due, Dennis J. Roberts, former gov- Lonesome George is merely reach- see MICHIGAN aN CREDIT obuned Ons on arrange for payments ad Colgate n,foredrarm i ice ad with the you cam afford, regardless mech or how many reo owe. ernor of Rhode Island. me a lerger audience NO SECURITY or ENDORSERS REQUIRED Colgate Ww. Darden, former gov- comedy talent he exhibited for ONE PLACE TO PAY — BONDED AND INSURED ernor of Virginia and now presi-|Ye8™s 35 a child hillbill star, . |dent of the University of Virginia.|AT™y entertainer and night club Let 9 = 3 of credit counseling experience assist you.” comic. Hours: Daily 9 to $: Wed & Sat. 9 to 1; Evenings by Appt. | Riders on thn Madrid away e , * vy start APTAIN MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS average 241 rides a year compared Johnny was another early start-| E IGHTFEOOT with 199 on New York and 223 on/|‘°": He was born 29 years ago in ~ 41% South Saginaw St. FE 8-0456 Above Oakland Theater Gat rarslaeaya Corning, Iowa, which he admits is : No place for a comedian to come SATURDAY - al! COMPLETE SHOW STARTS 10 P. M. || Sheriff's Sale Roster 1 CAPTAIN UGHTFOOT - ape - Technicolor | “UNCHAINED” ELROY HIRSCH - BARBARA HALE Includes Big Python a TITUSVILLE, Fla. —Sheriff H. T. Williams has a sheriff's sale coming up but he says he refuses to touch one item on the list. It’s a nine-foot python which | kills its food by crushing rather FROM THE HEART +.. Sacajawee of the Shoshones... She lived tike a man... fought like an indian... loved like a demon... and ted Lewis and Clark from the wide Missouri to the broad Pacific! THE FA re than by bite. A Melbourne man obtained a Doors Open deficiency decree against a man - OF a coroes SUN. 12:45 who lives in Malabar on an unpaid bt for $1,000. One of the items =a HORIZ ENTERTAINMENT —° MON. Pretec” [rot sic the tac MASTERPIECE! AND a TROY DRIVEN THEATER a mew cea 8 é. Mae (15 MILE) A srerpimenone PHONE MU 9 LAST TIMES SATURDAY! “The Bamboo Prison” with Robert Francis “Violent Saturday” with Victor Mature BEGINNING SUNDAY f ‘roe KIM NOVAK IN THE MAKING... MewACE WMH of the FBI's COUN- TERATTACK... 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 é ‘ HE STREET E A NEW -ré OF {: 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Michigan: 8 scent Curved CinemaScope Screen! Free Kiddie Land — Mechanical R noe i j ; P ! ' i | / fj? f ‘ fi i : q j % TT wrrrrCrlULT]!h , wx il iia Sinn Ml in Ml lA, ln Ln. i nn ln Nn Mi Ne Mn i Min in i li i Sp tn i ho a tn tp tp tp i tp tt i i th ee ee aOR FUNC OLD CPD Bom EI PER, EY ones aa Pi i é ShRY a : ? id Sebeacwee i srnare eee GeesGSeadieresetae a ~—s eeSeuteuewS i aensGeaavad FBSeREE BRSPeEReSeseaswserysnesay saseuBausesescuseusssitss i | | Averages = Bg heeeee HS ts | SRecatkes * BSsSREEREuu ee 2SS2ssNAnsraacc” Pert Lie ete ee 8s. saustaxasysues.cl _ BESSERERS pba? ‘oat onal Ba2Ecks —~ ~ FUSUWeSecksee na mg o = , : - ei: at ae | 4 pa . ey cuit, THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1955 : | PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, a ee ” Ponting Press Photos = TTCHEN CENTER — Central unit of the living the windows. Pink colors the door. Tongue and grooved redwood is ‘the other exterior section of the Arnkoff home is the kitchen with its free standing walls, One exterior wall is in white brick and the kitchen is done in driftwood finished maple cabinets with pink used for the counter tops. OUTDOOR LIVING ROOM — The living room of the Arnkoff home overlooks this lovely formal garden and terrace. Note the entire wall of 7 by 3 foot glass panels which are framed in white. Gray is the color used for the overhead panels and those beneath wood. Your Neighbor’s House @ New Contemporary at Home in Pontiac . FACING ILLINOIS — Completely ‘“‘at home” in a traditipnal styled neighborhood, _ admit light, but give the maximum $f privacy. the new home of Dr. and Mrs, Harry Arnkoff has high windows on the street side which sie f titi i Fs i i if ge az ie sp* g et : ‘ fot 1 i ety: set fe! z e abies : Gt Bm saben ee ee nee ee HOUSE OF WINDOWS — Overhangs on the Arnkoffshome admit the light but are placed at the right angle to shut out the sun. . pou = E Dee seh. fg es e + « Beg FAMILY ROOM—Young Susan and Diane Arnkoff play Monopoly type. Colors for this room ‘are turquoise, deep purple, mauve and and the palest of pink provide the , in the room. The coffee -table is topped in Belgian red Travertine on the floor of the family room.. Note the alternating grains of the — black arid white with the floor in Granada tile. ne { | marble and the lamps are white shaded with brass bases. . Japanese ash panels placed on the end walls whict are studio ceiling r og ya me ruitwoe ind ee ee ¢ ‘Mecessary will help you get the most for your property, - SYLVAN REALTY, FE 5-9418 Hh —s«2883 Orcherd Lake Reed, Rt. No. 5 | ‘The eristocrot of building stone is marble. . . and the _ artisecrat of marble is... | MARBLE (craigma:) Choice of Colors: y Colored Montotones * Pink * Cedar comes from same quarries produced mere thas See cree ee eeta ensh te the Metteant Goueey ot inate Welt, ; PONTIAC CUT STONE M-59 (1% Mi. West of Airport) Ph. OR 3-1594 — _. / 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SA’ SUTSEE ; lit atk re iste [se Hf ; : F H a E ¥ 4445 wuts ek stakes a Frorects 3 WAYS / Pittsburgh SUN-PROOF HOUSE PAINT 5 ‘633 We Have a Complete Stock of -PLATE GLASS and WINDOW GLASS Call FE 5-6441 for Free Estimate! If You're Driving . . . Use Our Rear Door PickUp Service PONTIAC GLASS CO. 23 W. Lawrence St. We Deliver | { Richmond Knolls : HIEFTAIN MODEL HOME 398 if od LA S = Phone FE (6-644! | Use Linoleum Lining 44 y } f ” gully talamake WATER SOFTENER H. H. STANTON 103 State FE 5-1683 NEW SECTION WALLED LAKE AREA! HOUSES 6 Model at Tri—A Subdivision on W. Maple Near Pontiac Trail Open 1-8 COLWELL © HOMES, INC. Mi 6-2022 4057 Meple Rd. Birmingham “SAVE fitr E Use odd pieces of linoleum to| . PAUL A. KERN | Realtor 31 Oakland. FE 2-9200 Where the BUYER and SELLER Meet se Since 1919 CONTRACTOR Licensed Stete & City WIRING INSTALLATIONS e NEW FEDDERS ROOM. AIR CONDITIONER ~ §CHICK’S {fl 331 S. Brosdway, Lake Orion ‘50! IN YOUR - HOME MY 39711. 4 : et Y,.. a ©, cae HEATING EQUIPMENT ee Bs THERE'S NOTHING FHGR BURT! Dr. Amkotts stu. | OTTO A, TRZOS BLACK AND WHITE aaa as ah ieee 3101 Orchard Leke Road in black and white, Bookcases KEEGO HARBOR and cabinets built into the wall FE 2.0278 have a bit of brown added to the Geni © See CALL MA 6-6247 ergs ft 3 it oe qe EE oo = 2 Z critals af KOOL VENT Aluminum Awnings CUSTOM MADE WROUGHT IRON RAILINGS wel ened Be tes Paes ~ Concrete Block Plant in Oakland County to use .... HIGH PRESSURE STEAM CURING! a dy oor A y Px E ' = _— Hl PRESSURE . <—— “4 ; fh ox 4 es) FPyf. Hl a feedy fer immediate we when they leave the having Deen } & treatment equal to at least ' fe tnstell Migh | @ustemers they are a . , ‘ ” : e fae ' ~— . : * H. A. Financing | i * os F. Now Available in . Plan to See This Most Desirable Subdivision This Week-End! Model Homes Open 1 P.M.-8 P.M. - Featuring: Paved Streets—Water—Gas—All Brick Homes. Full Basements—Sidewalks—Concrete Driveways. Large Lots—and Ceramic Tile Baths. To reach model drive out US-10 to Watkins Lake Road then left te Lakewood, then right to. property. Wm. Kennedy WATKINS 3097 W. Huron FE 4.3569 Your Dream Kitchen Measurements! Built of Matched Panels Belect Birch } / Finest Quality Modern. {Colonial or Contemporary j Hardware - end Bathroom Vanities for your new home or to mod- home, Prices include complete installation. The CABINET SHOP Open Monday and Thursday Eves. “il 9 9088 West Huron “ee as YE 5-8331 | GREAT NEWS FOR HOME OWNERS- or eeee Swe ot. © __ | HOUSE-MASONRY PAINT. BLISTER-PROOF! “ * & 40 ee ee ee ee ee ee eee eee ee ee eee ae Businessmen Ada pt Lawn Ornaments to Advertisingt iia cid, Outside White Paint... .ca $ 495 Shower Enclosutes for Tubs. . 49.95 Dunalap Cedar Shakes....... 15.95 Thick Butt Asphalt Shingles. 6.50 ¢ 1x12 Velvet White Pine Boards $95 : Rock Wool Insulation . Melee YA |) 4 Chloride, 100-Ib. Bag ........ dxf" Fir Plyscore ........ .2. $5.95 4x}" Fir Plywood .. ,°",. 1». $3.95 Above Prices All C. & C. FRE 100 FT. its QUARTER ROUND WITH $15.00 PURCHASE! COME IN TODAY See Cla Burmeister. or list pe apsrincer ss ioe tes tae peecsigomey Remember, price means nothing without quality and Burmeister has BOTH. : REMEMBER: ... There Is a Material Difference! w= MULTI-LAKES REALTY ||; 5 2 tate Rend, ¢ MArket 4-1050 ~ EMpire 3-4109 . Peet val _.__, Custom Bal by Se Te 4 take Rost to _ Harold Young Building: Co. P Peay: | » MODELS st ye eee 1-8 ig. ye ba "plies a } y BA F s a Mf ry ye 2 ye / ; j 4 eR y i A hy : SATURDAY, J VEY 23, 1955 Home Improvement Center | ca ae @GARAGES — RECREATION ROOMS @ ADDITIONS FE 4.2575 MIDWEST SUPPLY 9 N. TELEGRAPH SWIMMING POOLS Now Every Home-Owner Can Afford One! Made from the finest reinforced steel, Sizes to meet , Complete witb 162 FAIRMONT | MODEL HOME 162 Feirmont Phone FE 5-4731 30 DAY OCCUPANCY VETERANS -- No Money Down 5 0.” ptincipal & interest nn Oa MONTHLY PAYMENT Open Daily and Sunday | P. M. to 6 P.M. 3- Bedroom Homes Shown at Hy-Haven Hy Lieberman oof the Hy Standard Builders, believes that one of the greatest needs on * Twe Bedrooms ® Full Basement © 4 Styles to Choose From © Luxaire Automatic Oil Heat ® Steel Casement Windows DAN ROSE REALTY 20030 JAMES COUZENS PHONE BRooedway 3-1001 pontiac folks — aleomaal role) sa | F—majole. 78 per mon full felale: civilians— 1,400. v000 = ar = 30 YEAR FHA MORTGAGES Here is a floor ‘plan that { makes the most of every inch of space . +8 plan 6 exteriordesigns — Spaciin ana bent Now ideal floor plan. gun ele, = Ps “eastview” this’ weekend to really appreciate its beauty. ?) | ae '\ FEATURES: __'THE PONTIAC PRESS, + Development Hthe—heusing market—teday—is—the+— three bedroom home below _ the $12,000 price tag. His answer to this demand is in the new Hy-| Haven Development on Sashabaw road in Drayton Plains. * *,.¢ Offering more than 1,200 square feet of living area, each home is built on a 100-foot lot in a com- munity of 200 homes where there will be paved streets and side drives and a community water system. MAPLE KITCHENS A 23-foot living room, kitchen with utility room, dining area, bathroom and three bedrooms are included in the floor plan of these homes. Natural maple kitchen’ cabinets, 10 big storage closets closets and fully tiled baths are | other features of the homes. |. Open for public inspection, models of the two elevations shown | gate are on display in Hy Haven. Cheap Grade Floors Used for Cottages There is q grade of hard maple | flooring which will lay a service- able floor in summer cottages, at- | tics, storehouses, farm buildings and playsheds. It is nice wood to work. with, and it is recommended to the | saga floor-layer looking around | for inexpensive hardwood floor:ng. | | In laying the floor, some cutting | |may be necessary, but the chal- jlenge to the do-it-yourself “tech-7 nician” has its satisfactions— a_ utility hardwood floor at the bar. | gain price level. ols) @aalelace alo] Uh-1- i folge Zolelmaalolal=s" Tale == faalllotamaale! a= compare “eastview” feature ‘for feature with anything you've seen before — *brick construction *automatic gas heat *agutomatic hot water — view The National Bureay of Stand- ards says wood shingle roofs have a life-expectancy 43 per cent great- er_than asphalt shingle roots, Herb Window | Bones | Add Scent fo Home Readers of Sarah Orne Jewett's American classic about village life in Maine, "The Country of the Poinfed Firs,” will never forget the marvelous descriptions’ of herb growing. Modern homemakers are over- looking one of the enduring pleas- ures of gardening if they aren't familiar with the scents, tastes and lovely blooms of herbs. Why not plan a small herb gar- den right outside your kitchen win- dow? If you're lucky enough to have a kitchen window-wall, a small indoor garden is practical | . You'll need a waterproof sur- Willis M. BREWER ‘35 N. Parke St. FE 4-518) 62 Years of Fence 8B FE 5-7471 Ist PAYMENT | 36 MONTHS IN OCTOBER TO PAY ~ +. in any climate. Alsynite can be used to advantage indoors and out © Carports © Paties ® Skylights © Awnings THE ORIGINAL TRANSLUCENT FIBERGLAS PANEL Alsynite is the perfect translucent build- ing_material .. . , glare- reducing, light diffusing. Alsynite offers ' unlimited opportunities. 7 © Sun-Wind. Shelters © Showers quishly end easily out © Walls = FENCING MATERIALS PICKETS = [P5* turey 4 Foot Redwood | ¢ SUPPLY PICKETS = 20° uss Cleaned Peeled Sq Square Top 3"x7' CEDAR POSTS *" 45. 4 NEW csudersen FLEXIVENT Window Unit WY ¥ Whang ) Went 7 \ \ \ ho hh WANA \ ee , KLISE - EB CARVED WOOD MOULDINGS Ideal for do-it-yourself wood workers. Gives real “pro” look to home workshop projects. Make picture frames, finish plywood edges, dress-up valances, tables, cabinets, shelves. | into refrigerator doors . NOW—A BIGGER KITCHEN WITHOUT REMODELING With _ SPACEMASTER FOLDING DOORS Put im “Spacemaster” folding doors {and you can do it in 15 minutes with 2 screwdriver) and forget ail about the problems you've had with doors that swing « that stand dangerously ajar . . and that have to be moved before you can get to Certain counter top space or to cabinets. HARDWARE © COAL © BUILDING SUPPLIES ‘a — FE 4-1594 © led ; ‘ ‘ f . = puede RES Soe Cer : site. pd Lae Rate Eee oa iets s. ) Aae ee ome nA ae red ~ *. ee ea pores Pe a a ee, u & _THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. JULY 23, 1955 - wy, Teomewhat more difficult to keep Interior Walls . |rre en es sctly smooth one | | it will at least be a big improve- ment over what you had to stact | Another suggestion is to give the : a - ee ac acca on COMMERCIAL GUILTUP pays by brushing on a coat: of wall ROOFING y iw paint and thén, before the paint is nd covered a son ee hard, over it with a stip-| With boards. Pnene OF Geiabiianeg. (90 inc pling brush. brush has rather eee Get An tntimals ‘Vitnout Obtige stove by means Figid rises and aside from cov-| Althugh meteors often, bave |] UGUS-MARSH stippling will also hide a good|® Dumber are composed wholly of noormng ©? many other evils, . ‘The only disadvantage to these : a two finishes is that once they 9 zraeec==| SPECIAL AT BURKE'S : extensive panding or scraping ae operation. : : — ey ol fal ond stsch con protien] pune tae ald onalte ¢ emote ee o | . Y oe uch can pare the wi @ smoot \ j an attractive job. finish would also require this _&§ ig Built in Home Workshop seas ma pte pnt sat 5 : : giant ) 4 A. backyard ides fun] Cut the braces, as shown, Sane 6 Wainy Cie Nie : a foc sal hilsen, (with eaw and ciel make te os| itm, SM, 708 sety ith |] Te Bor or Sol Rout Ente Se 7 A speamt |) ’ Announcement Ce lin the uprights. Fasten the braces | tured elther with » special brash |] Bateman and Kampsen s : Merle ogy soeagesae — with three No. 8 screws at each | or with your fingers or a sponge. Realty Company GENUINE A\l- of : joint. This of fi l é Kiohens . nis. type nish will com- South Tole; . 3 N EW PROJ EC I abayhp poy inch | Hd Round all sharp edges and cor-| pletely hide the flaws in the wall sf rt ho gaa @ X | ia and fastened with’ 4-inch | 2¢'s by rasping and sanding. and while a textured walls is gt gin I | ‘ : } : S . : ¥ rungs, pinned in place with 6-penny . CRA-MI N- AN finishing nails, THE Re Valve ca 154 Fasten the upright ladders to GOOD | ae DING * BUILDERS - BEANS ths ase with tinh ol e e- (\s5 QE irs Fasten it jn place with two 344- ee SHOP JULY SPECIAL! §<~"........ :s EXTRUDED ALUMINUM. (icea2e"S5m COMBINATION DOORS §- teaped Disquise Defects Serene ge With Quick Paint oy = free ite, quality end s Be ag ; ‘Camouflage Job _ : Wag ho on AM Doo Sdnon Une DIXIE LUMBER, CO., Inc. B22 oe Buy Now! Easy Terms! $31 Osklend Ave. exactly things of beauty. Some Seamer mammerel 1} | | A] §2-GALLON ELECTRIC pe ei gee Gey ao aides \ TORIDHEET Duo-Therm Seren Water Heater Custom . . . Single Bow! . . . Double Drain Board WALL-FLAME OIL HEAT \ fd poe nbaggeten So gen ONLY 6 OF THESE LEFT AT THIS PRICE ; for the Tops \ weren't talking to each other, Completely ce Cees oe os Ml SS ree See rainaaond @ a a as BN etal | bon at Str 95 \ _) Pen Pree Heating Survey and Estimate. Cail \ et Se Se New Low Price... N AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. \ <%=)" cri Reqlar £12695 es j , the chimney ‘so it won't be too : \ ___, $800 Successtul installations in Area \ wionetin. § Co Peers: ye s AL Orchard Lekg Ave, ~_—*FE 22-9124 Fes | | eS ieee ) ie : So astro one 2 | | MODERN-COMFORTABLE-LOW cost |'""°'” GOOD HOUSEKEEPING 2 : trating lig, rwd : : co, paint them all with the same NATIONAL HOMES [scr Sr |] 51 west Huron stroct com wenty sn tie, 100 Phone FE 4-1555 “a : a ( peor broken up oT = 5 = — —_ _ = A HOME YOU CAN aggro ond 6 — Bigger eth. , | Sow. corte co Sashsbaw'te Maries wa. - Mon. thu Fri. masts chan earn te tat | i | went oe oe OnE PARE DRIVE from 9 until 5 er Set ey et : ° JOHNSON CONSTRUCTION |) Mov sie tonn moet 6d FOR YOUR RS Model Home Phone OR 3-2757 Office Phone MI 4-0328 that produce a very strange effect. : The remedy here is to paint the window trim and sash the OME F PAIR Northern Pontiac's Finest Subdivision Area Featuring ‘Custom-Built Homes of Distinction MODEL OPEN 4212 Ledgestone Drive Sundays 1:00 to 6:00 P. M. or by Appointment DIRECTIONS: Off Dixie Hvwy., near Waterford. Turn on Cam- brook Lane to Ledgestone Drive—right to Model. HELTMAN & TRIPP Builders and Developers ot Westridge-ot-Watertord 22 W. Lawrence. FE 5-816 j SRE SE Ae Little Expense Here Hotel owners report that there ig little or.no maintenance ex- pense connected with wood panel- ing. An Ohio hotel owner, who had wood paneling installed in his = =| 8 OR ADDITIONS . . . PORCHES .. . BREEZEWAYS.. . ROOFING . .. SIDING (ALU- MINUM, ASBESTOS, INSULATED, WOOD SHAKES) CEMENT WORK . . . ALUMI- NUM COMBINATION DOORS AND WINDOWS .. . RONDEL FOLDING ALU- MINUM AWNINGS. require touching up or repainting every year or 80. -RATSMAN | TRANSIT-MIX CONCRETE ae VAL DIOS in our trucks * You can depend on us for for F DELIVERY! QUALITY .. . SERVICE... as " SATISFACTION! ! | winnie Let us build your gorage for you. Any size FEderal and any style. Our representative will call 2-121 1 at your convenience. No obligation. It costs far less than you thigk, and it can be easily or FE 5-9236 financed. 1G & M Construction Co. : | ER } _& OPEN SUNDAYS 12 NOON 2260 Dixie Hwy.- i ae > CO. “Where the Home Begins® == 4498 Dixie Highway in Drayton Plains -OR 3-1211 ‘a he ee oe oo 5 i" weet i bey od J ; j a a 4 i ie \y (> * j ‘ j ne ! ) y i ) y psf , = f * j ; i eo] if id | ny { fo * | a, f THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘enue JULY 28, 1955 f a BUILDERS’ SPECIALTIES CEMENT & MORTAR CEMENT COLORS SLIP SEAL SEWER PIPE DRAIN TILE LINK— Bond's Plaster or Concrete SEs 140 N. Cass Ave. FE 5-8163 ~ “_—eweweeevrererrrrrererrY T Exhaust Fae Help ae Excess Humidity Moisture ‘Condensation Causes Paint Peeling, Blistering Damage By HUBBARD COBB So far in this little series on blis- tering and peeling outside wall paint we have brought up the fact that this condition is due to moisture and the cause of the moisture in most cases in conden- sation—moist air inside the house flowing through the interior wall surface and turning irto wa- ter when it strikes the cold siding. Once the wood under the paint film is damp, you can expect trouble. Today we are going to discuss various means of reducing con- densation by either reducing the moisture content of the air in the house or by getting this moist air out of the house before it can cause trouble, Humidity is strange stuff in that it takes it only an in- stant to distribute itself evenly throughout all the air in the house. For example, if you put a saucepan full of water on the range so that the water boils, the steam coming out of the pan will distribute itsely at once through- out the house so that the entire air in the house will show an in- crease in humidity, Therefore, we can't allow any room in the house to be the source of increase moisture whether it be nae bik per@aa OIA, ORILL 4F cnn ¢ PLATES - | , i } == —= Se a oe TYPICAL EDGE : ; bad j SECTION ar ¢ oe toads Made Simply by F ollowing Directions A lazy susan server is an at- tractive table-center piece. Use finish lumber agg thick. of all pieces, ag shown, Center the piece on the under side of the tray and glue it in place. Center the 38-inch | dise on the 11-inch dise and glue the two pieces together. When the glue has set, bore a center hole 3-16-inch in diameter and 1% inches deep in the bottom of the tray assembly. Bore a ¥%-inch hole through the lower as- sembly. Finish the wood parts with stain and varnish. Make two Ginch pivot discs of 1-32-inch sheet metal, each with a %4-inch center hole, ‘Ceramic Tile Surfaces Effect Double Purpose Apply non-melting grease spar- ingly to the pivot discs, Assemble the lazy susan with a %4-inch lag screw, 24% inches long. Use rubber headed tacks for legs or cover the bottom with felt. Economy Still Essential Idea Despite Boom Economy is still a favorite word One of the best economies that can make is in the proper selection of proven building materials for their new home. Well-seasoned, high-grade lum- ber, now more readily available than during the postwar building —. should be used. Paint that is specifically designed for exterior use is a “must” for outside the ihae, Plumbing and wiring ma- terials should always be of proven brushed on and then stippled with visual defects. , It’s thicker than regular paint, is a brush or sponge, Almost six million American r school children suffer uncorrected oxen Most 5 ior Come Unpainted Furniture Pick and Paint Store chai ~ Waterford ~ Clarkston ‘Ares } 5660 Dixie Highway 143 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9362 To Buy or Sell in the . WHITE BROS. 1 = te ESTATE a MRS. HOMEOWNER Cast-O-Sone is nature's own product — so now instead of painting or siding your home take advantage of turning your DON’T PAINT YOUR HOME! ! tee santos THOSE WHO KNO 3 $ 2 $ 3 $ = > $1 BEAMS—CHANNEL $| the bathroom, kitchen, laundry or} A wortliy suggestion for adding home into one of $ | basement. esthetic al to the small, 8 3 ANGLE—TEE ¢ One ef the most etlective ways a house, often be barren in ap- beauty and value. 4 $i to remove excess water from rance, is to ce ex- 3 REINFORCING BARS 3 air at the source is with exhaust | terior with quietly colorful_ ce- Make your dreams come true! 4 >| fans. For examle, a dan in the|ramic tile in patterns of small, $ 2 | kitchen or bathroom will push this | complementary units. Let our designers show you a $ HOT ROLLED AND 3) moisture out of the house before it It's practical, too, because tile design which will fit the archi- 3COLD FINISHED BARS$ ~ od hac ps ceed bg cer hw nape Bree Bs tectural lines of your home at 3 sores Oe $ The same thing holds for a |changes, Just by surfacing » cow no obligation or cost. NOW YOU CAN GET the LUXURY of STONE for YOUR HOME fetetion Gecoves ‘ 2| basement that has = tendency to eaterior < 3 $| become damp at certain times of | Whole home can be given new life. Regardless of whether you have Pri $ 2| the year, If you hang wet wash = aot yo rices Sorting at SHOT ROLLED SHEETS$| to ary in tne basement, then it |] STEEL SCAFFOLDING for a —frame—stucco siding — 3 LATES $| should be fitted with an exhaust every requirement. Roll- or a block home. ; ANDP $| fan and if you have a clothes ing tresties end speciel $ }| to the outside so that the moie- con * ast-O-Stone is a genuine $Pontiac Welding &§} ‘wr sve ot x: me cvtees sre] YON, wt iobbicn, ||| Pulverized-stone re-formed to $ Machine Works $| coment o the house sir. fit the individuality of your wey $ 2] we must also check to see that|]| SYNTRON ELECTRIC home. $54 N, Parke FE 2-41219 | devices such as gas heating cquip-||] HAMMERS. Tools for POF SOOO OTT Te mt vented for un- need. ee ee ee ae less Pr are, they'll add Bers to ee 4 More complete Cast- O.- Stone |the air. In some cases, too many|}| MALL CONCRETE SUR- homes than any other type — PROTECTION’'S | rowing plants Indoors con be tei] ACERS © GRINDERS. there must be a reason. f2. have more on this nest week. || CARLON PLASTIC NOT A NAIL-ON SIDING Pp. , | ——————— SEWER PIPE heey | en New Wood Cabinet || seur sanpens—suit ona 20-YEAR GUARANTEE aves CEMENT PUT ON LIKE TILE Mell. ting Water | Helps Sale of Home e hens Reowooo i ee © FIRST PAYMENT IN SEPTEMBER! gvere amen Pipa padi scadysoerpe habe LL © BANK TERMS = UP TO 5 YEARS! INATURAL COLOR 0O,/\ kitchen, the National Lumber|] RAIN BIRD CA BUY THE BEST “COSTS NO MORE” | ' REDWOOD Manufacturers Association advises. || Sprinkling Systems lando ; Apply & Yourself! developer i at wtne ot the || WHEELBARROWS OR CAST-0- STONE ' 2536 Dine High. Pontiec, Mich, DEALER'S NAME HERE cee 8 eit Som, a HYDRAULIC JACKS 9.9081 : EEE i SICKLEBAR MOWERS qree Estimates 2536 DIXIE HIGHWAY E Dhime!”.\ ... geciearahsses codeine : : ! - Mixer Park, Inc. OPEN SUNDAY 10 TO 6 f Address cosceesserseessssafecn me 5-878 IN BUSINESS 20 YEARS : DECAY, Fee Sluis SHRINKING, WARPING, CHECKING © TREAT IT YOURSELF I Pence Pests e Pencn FORITURE © srmme: Es o ROont Of Any NEW woos consTmEcTION SMEXPENSIVE AND LONG LASTING Ral Protection for Masonry 1. DRY, STAIN FREE WALLS 3 Bedrooms, 18-Ft. Family Room 2'4-Car Recreational Garage ONLY "28 690 Complete Including Beautiful Acre Lot ...., Landscaping ... and all Utilities | Featuring; All Brick, 1% baths, Radiant Heat, Plastered Walls, Natural Fireplace, plus many, many other features. 1630 Sq. Ft. plus 2'4-Car Recreational Garage Duplication Price ...........+++++.$18,990 See the “SORRENTO” ) model at Christian Hills Estates DIRECTIONS: Drive out Woodward to 14 Mile turn right to Crooks Road, then left to models. Resa, | turn CHRISTIAN HILLS OFFERS YOU: © A rolling, weeded subdivision e 255 picturesque lot sites us A controlled community . ° Casio ot 38 ccna 4 end'@ debe di Color coordinated interiors and exteriors. Close proximity te schools and shopping ee ‘b MFG. CO. 17419 S. Perry St. FE 5-6184 ue : is j et ee ae re " ¥ i = MSS aa ee haa a ee ig ee ae yi wees 2 my Pian 5 ° : f NO f / THE PONTIAC PRESS, | SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1966, se ¥ Peay iat MI Tile Bathroom wis nae | and playroom lors, ‘Thee i Bag as this tough-fibered t Re al Can Be Hosed Down wood won't sha or siner wer] Ray QO Neil ea state | ee ie aes ay warm and stays lastingly smooth " eanaideignae dare [2 - A bright idea for quick clean-ups ™ ‘ABSORPTION FE 97103 t § in a tiled bathroom or kitchen is REFRIGERATION 75 West Huron E = to install a handy spray-hose right | in, the wall. fe is : REFRIGERATION : —§ Fy floors and walls are su Be: a E na a —_— like tile , { | | all bs aviCe A Step in Beauty i. can down entire area ; ypee——All = rtaled by y pitas Experts. eu jiffy and let the water run ofi| | STANDARD CAST Commercial and Residential ORN Da ineAt IRON | 3 FREE ESTIMATE in a floor drain. IRON BOILER - DAY OR NIGHT Ste ) id No MONEY DOWN — 36 MONTHS TO PAY When remodeling either room, CONVERTED TO SERVICE Corner Columns Flat Columns Concrete Steps 13 * i Call TExas 4-6282 will save a lot of back-bending HOME HEATING . " Aethesioed ; > ‘ effort.. With tiled surfaces you mSULATED Po don't have to worry about where T : Es / Pittsburgh Fence Company fie rie for Gee a mop or| wearing LJ HEAT aanentatn tices | L. & 12345 Scheefer Hwy. Detroit 27 9) cloth to wipe the surfaces dry. In| B EXCHANGER a or call Farmington 311% most cases that’s all you need to FE 2-6400 i . ti keep tile looking bright and fresh ues 461 Glizabeth Loke Road i —_—_—— = ams = ; ps é pata a | + ATOMIC ‘ : Oregon Town Trolleys a B = REACTOR | Fac Finished Maple Sree Ran on Wooden Tracks be — i PE | Now on Display at Pontiac Millwork Sales Co. | Ever heard of woolen street-| “criss is how atomic bome beating and cooling aystem would work. | well. they had ‘em in Salem This design by the Institute of Boiler and Radiator Manufacturers | Ore years and years ago "| would provide hot water for heating, washing and driveway snow | In fact, workmen digging a wa-| Melting, as well as chilled water for summer cooling. The cooling ter main ditch in Salem recently | unit would work on principle of gas refrigerator. unearthed a stretch of wooden streetcar racks vhich ant been Atomic Heating — Cooling i used in 40 years, The men said the tracks were still in excellent | condition Plants Being Developed Is there a place in your home |terior columns. Even its windows for a little invisible, splitable | may be simply —- patch- atom? There’d better be! es of its skin «. Check These Features: @ Non-Skid to Prevent Slipping FE 5.0283 | | Atomic heating plants with sum- mer cooling system are just around the corner. They'll cost ‘you just $50 a year to operate, | save an expert. And you'll build your house ‘with plastic, subjected to atomic radiation to make it stronger than | ‘steel. Will this replace lumber? As for that pesky bomb, which wipes out cities when it splits the infinitestimal atom, a Yale ~ which In the meantime, the threat of that atomic bomb and its gar- gantuan relative, our houses. Lincoln H. Lippincott, director of safety for Yale Uni- versity, says tests have emphasized the protec: | tion given by basements against | atomic bomb blasts and radia- tion.” . Probably rn skin game in "you, for a change, will win. * * * “HH,” hangs over “the Yucca Fiat, THE ROTARY FIRED FURNACE meons faster heating of | @ No Sections to be Forced Apart by Frost or Settling @ Rich Vibra-Packed Waterproof Concrete @ Stee! Reinforcea UP TO 42 SQ. FT. OF PORCH SPACE We Deliver Anywhere CONCRETE STEP CO. 5380 Dixie Highway OR 3-7715 IT’S SMART university expert says basement Lippincott told a Boston meet- bomb shelters will soon become jing of the New England Building your home. TO BUILD as standard in the design of our | Officials Conference that a base- . . houses as bathrooms and kitch- zag a cee of proper de-|] » ° a s wih | “| William Lech CONCRETE —_ age el fam Lecnner ail rice All we are waiting for when; Well, if the atom can rescue us FE 2-182) | sa s FHA & Bank Approved $] 0 50 or CINDER it eaaaa' i economical home heat- saying pes amend ee 27 WN. Cass Ave. tte ‘Maney Bown, D6 Menthe to Por! i BLOOKS ‘ota large source of fissionable crus) tue il mimay be we can = See the Famous r 4-4570 aterial, says Robert.E. Ferry. | : Pontiac Millwork Sales Co. | g-0332 | several manner of the insite ree wr fom mie tthe | of Boiler and Radiator Manufac- . u t e Geil pessiapde gana air SF) SELLING’S SIMPLE through apes , Classified ads! Cars, real | Ferry was speaking at the re-| rurniture—anything! Call FE 2-818] cent 40th anniversary meeting of | fo, an ad-writer. his industry at Absecon, N. J. He FE 5-0283 2005 Pontiac Rd. FE 5-0283 Yourself Headquarters VAN HORN| é said that all of the parts needed 2 Should We Own a Water Sottner and SONS |e: es< (—specieters in craTaat aeATine g plant are -now av le 19 Maden et |S ar 'a| Re Modlingt | FURNACE RENT ‘ON E? small atomic reactor to replace | ELLIS CONST. CO. 1} fuel. | A - ¢ se aan ard And find out why this This missing unit, hermetically | fine modern furnace and a <= sealed in lead and about twice | the size of an automobile battery, | ‘should cost about $300, according | to Ferry. It would be good for six For Only Pennies a Day We Will install a Genuine Reynolds- top quality installation add up to the LOWEST PRICE for your heating SPECIALS and then would be replaced. : P Shaffer Boll-O-Motie AT THIS VALUE! @ xe cct: $50 per year, no chi “er an ere coos ws if ney; no ashes; no waste energy. leating offers the finest quality merchan- 30 Softener ts 0 3 $0,000 wt | aoe plang amore ‘install dise properly installed to guarantee your heating satisfaction. Only a Rich Man— Can Afford a Poor Furnace! See It at Your Heating Super Market GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATING Soil Pipe Sewer Crock Drain Tile end the dependable automatic fea- tures needed in any water softener! it is extremely easy to take care of. with DOWEX MINERALS | STRONGER THAN STEEL The potential strength of plastic has been demonstrated with a new | hammer now on the market. It) has a brilliant red handle made of | plastic reinforced with fiber glass. | |CHURCH’S, Inc. Seed like to aad cat t FOR ONLY This handle is stronger than steel, enne FE 2-0233 we will allow the (ull credit yet it has the resiliance and shock F 107 Squirrel Road ( i nig pally ite pod agpryot ay ittings ye Sq = 3401 West Huren. (Cor. of Elizabeth Lake Rd.) FE 2-7849 The Unit Shown COPPER TUBING and FITTINGS @. UNION LAKE LUMBER CO. . ‘40 PER MONTH | Including Taxes and insurance Total Price $7400 FHA TERMS se ngsh aimee 9 tmetn Sells for . ot Termal sia ] Architectural Forum recently iat explored the prospects of such P radiant-treated plastic for the bene- |} Call FEderal 4-3573 fit of designers and engineers. It ae : concluded that today’s bulky posts and beams, serving as ribs of a building, will be rétluced to a mere | fold or seam in the skin of the| wall. | Big 84,000 B.T.U. Oil Forced Air DELCO FURNACE $3000 ONLY 1 47» Save $82.50 , Includes All Necessary Controls ovc- | Oil Conversion Burner || Including 75H All coma 110" Model F 165-1 ! 3465 Auburn Avenue Auburn Heights, Mich. snes ee - 514 Third (Of loslya) ts cee “Temevews aremmei| 7204 — a Open Daily and Phone Sanday Built by BVG investment BEST WINDOW DEAL IN TOWN! 1, 2 and 3 Track Double Hung Casement and Sliders. 40% Off List Price! Sey: 38 DELCO-HEAT We Give Holdens Red Trading Stamps ONE CAR, TWO CAR OLD CAR, NEW CAR? A GARAGE By Bob’s Building Service Will Make You Money “There is no substitute for experience” OPEN SUNDAYS 12:00-4:00 ' + | | * ; our . | 207 W. MONTCALM | Robert E. White’ FE 4-9544 =A. Murray White = bookiet FHA Approved! No Down Payment! CALL FE 6-2102 TODAY L&V | 163’ W. Monteaim |NO MONEY DOWN- 36 MONTHS TO PAY!| 0’ BRIEN HEATING & SUPPLY | } ANY STYLE—FULL THICKNESS | 11 A.M.-5:30 P.M. INSTALLED het NO MONEY DOWN $418 $4395 | NO PRESSURE CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES! ALWINDO CO. Siete talvrenh a. j Johnson Bldg.) FE 5-9728 | i ‘\ Authorized Oakland County Distributor: 371 Voorheis Rd. | FE 2-2919 a oe a ste % f wa Pinte, som ae SS sine . 2 ~ —— THE: PONTIAC PRESS. SATUR oy es ae ol ie suLy 23, 1955 4° ‘ a SB } Fi §” i =f Saas ease el HOG Adcitons | Ss sunt ss Made by Owner 2 ant » Ban Goins mae is sa ye Modern Householders oN mpi Improve Own Property ‘ = by Themselves SELL, RENT, HIRE through 3 u : 8 VISIT EASTWIND MODEL HOME Furniture by STEWART-GLENN CO. Featuring Contemporary Furnishings for Casual Living Quality Furniture Since 1917 Shewart-Glwn Ca. 92 South Saginaw St. THE ALL ALUMINUM Built to last... doors can’t worp or rust — Never need painting Serve a dual purpose .. Screen door in summer, storm door in winter. Combination these CALL FE 5-2102 TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT a" Installation Plus ONE WEEK ONLY! 1S FE 5-2102 & AWNING COMPANY 163 W. Montcalm Lake Privilege Lots From 3125 down $25 sate $125 Down $25 MONTH Alo Remaining 3 Lake Frent Lots Easy Terms Open Every Saturday and Sunday to Selesman! 345 Oakland Ave. Drive Out Joslyn 3 Miles North of Walton Bivd. WRIGHT-VALUET FE 5-0693 FE 5-9441 Not so many years back about all the average homeowner ever cal apuek t0 Waldir wan tense ce ene ae bay See Se * * * Now people are a good deal more ambitious and think nothing of building a partition, an enclosed porch or maybe even an addition to their homes. Now this sort of work is not very difficul, if you have the ordinary skilis, bat there are cer- tain standards of construction that you should follow to insure a solid structure and one that ean be insulated, sheathed and covered over with interior and exterior siding with o mintmahs of waste, . Here are a few general pointers: center in this case is the narrow 2-inch edge. Studding should be nailed at the bottom to a 2x4 inch plate which rests on the subfloor or sill with the wide face facing | up and down. USE TOP PLATE At the top of the studding two 2x4 inches are used to form a top plate. Where you have an opening for windows and doors, the stud- and bottom of the rough window opening. For door openings you only need them at-the top; The floor joists which support the floor are made of 2 in. x 6 in. For rafters—the boards that sup- »port the roof, 2 in. x 6 in., are adequate in almost all cases al- though on short spans such as 2 in. x 4 in, are often the strength of framing is the re- sult of good fits between the various members'so be sure that your cuts are smooth and level. * * J | Also be sure that each joint is | adequately nailed and don't use so | many nails that you weaken the | joint because the wood has split. Industry Is Farming on Rural Plant Site WEST UNION, Ohio ®—When an example of what might be achieved under sound n and re- forestation. plant hay on cultivated hilltop land that has been eroded badly.” Fire lanes have been cut on existing timber areas. Other areas will be planted to trees. |Kitchen Cabinet Colors ‘Blend With Decorating Because of the choice of colors in which many stee] kitchen cab- NEW 2 BEDROOM HOMES Full Price $6995.00 sive °345 DOWN Close to School—Bus and Shopping Center Featuring Oak Floors, Autoniatic Hot Water, be Forced Air Ducted into Each Room and Tile Bath Features. NOW AVAILABLE FOR VETS 3 BEDROOM—FULL BASEMENT / LOW DOWN PAYMENT — LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT 18 E. Ypsilanti — 1 Mile North of Fisher Body East of Baldwin Pearl Building Company FE 5-7923 = PRETTY BARROW—This jaunty little man with brightly painted sweater, jacket and trousers ‘is bursting with pride over the hand- | some plant stand he wheels onto your lawn, He is so full of good | humor that your neighbors will | wish he had paid them a visit, too. | When there are no blooming plants | for the barrow, fill it with ever- | green boughs. Tracing diagrams for sawing out the shaped parts and showing the exact positions of each color on the figure are on pattern 365 which is 25c. Other lawn figures are contained in Lawn & Garden Packets, No. 1 and No. 2 which are $1 each. These packets may be returned FUEL SAVINGS UP TO 50% OWNERS REPORT Genera @® erectaic eR REV ware ome oe oa ry 56973, 351 North Paddock St. jaca Set mes Wire Brush Cleans “" Paint-Full Bristles Write to W Prean, Botton’ Hills N.Y. Air-Conditioning ‘Ton’ Explained by Engineer If you've been confused about what the engineers mean when they refer to the cooling capacities | of air .conditioners in “tons,” | here's an explanation by heating | engineers. Simply speaking, they say, a “ton” of refrigeration means cool- ing equivalent to that obtained a ty the molting of a ton of ice | wire brosh. There sew 24 hours. For the average-size | brushes made for the job but an | residence two to five-ton capaci-| ordinary wire brush with bristles set fairly close together will do the trick, Run the comb with the bris- tles—not against them. ties are adequate. Large custom- built homes may require as much as ten tons. paint from the base of paint brush bristles is to comb it out with a About the best way to remove aural : PAYMENTS gone 4AS US MONTH including taxes and insurance YOU PAY ONLY _$700 Down Crestview Homes, Inc. Sold by HANNAN FE ~3-9356 Special SUPPLY THE MATERIALS Sells only proven Quality Merchandise and Nationally Advertised Guaranteed Materials. DON’T WASTE YOUR EFFORT AND MONEY ON UNPROVEN CHEAP : MATERIALS. BALSAM-WOOL INSULATION STANDARD THICKNESS 6° Sq Se ee » GET YOUR COPY OF THE LATEST POPULAR HOME Featuring * 6 BEST REMODELING | BUYS! * HOW TO KEEP YOUR HOUSE COOL * 7 FREE PLANS on out- door living projects! DOUBLE THICK .....'.8¢ sq. ft. INSULATE YOUR ATTIC with ZONOLITE* the famous 0 VERMICULITE | ise INSULATION begat oy ~~ yaaa COVERS 17 SO. FT. 3 Inches Thick *L) hee == CASH end CARRY 3360 Ww. Huron: See these * LAKESIDE ranch homes on half-acre sites. Each home worthy of its place in this natural setting— outstanding magnificent cS LOTS on . HAMMOND and UPPER : LONG LAKE also available— saber of are fon tet FULL PRICE From *22,200 Including Lot! ; Carpets & Draperies by MOLL'S @ Lake privileges. Private «ewan , boating, fishing = age betes IR = FEB | = garbage d . @ Three large s. @ Three — wi closets. . » Vanity in master * wanes waset @ Radiant-perimeter heat. e eg pg center @ Lets 150 ft. by 150 ft. IND HOUSEMAN-SP MODEL PHONE: FEDERAL 8-1331 Om Daily and Sunday ll a.m. met ee m.' Lr My oe ak Se _ eee ie decd i Fe 8 = a seen te aes ne se fe Si eee ae. Sea sr as * y eR sites Re S ¥. Se ey ee Paes SE ee eee ee eae ee eS :. Bale te . ap a e Pes 3 a ‘ ‘ a aes he : ie ie A Tega = 1 5: fs f ; } f ; : jy ieee ‘ acs i 4 f : | i o3 ee iy i f so ‘ Fi ‘ e. % ¥, g <) | "QE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1955 etal court against the clty ot] Give & Leaf for Relief | NICK HALIDAY _ for injuries suffered June 12,/ls Tobaccoman’s Slogan 1983, by Martha, who fell after) waycposs, Ga. —A fund for sidewalk, crippled children. in 25 south ‘| Georgia counties calls for. tobacco | . ; 38-year-old , farmers to contribute “a leaf for pay Pees Mrs. Alice Huntley, ‘We Want Ike’ Parade a crippled child's relief.” is the nation’s top secretary of Starts Rolling in South The Waycross Junior. Women’s 1955. NEW ORLEANS «® — Louisiana Club, sponsor of the Crippled Mrs. Huntley, a blonde, blue-| Republicans last night organized Children’s Clinic, is conducting the - eyed mother of two young girls, a “Louisiana Wants Ike" commit-| drive. It took in $302 yesterday. was elected “Secretary of the}tee and said it was the nation’s; ‘The league hopes to raise more Year” at the 10th annual National | first statewide movement to draft than $1,000 before the tobacco auc- Secretaries Assn, convention, President Eisenhower to run again tion season ends. The clinic serves Mrs. Huntley, native of Okla-| in 1956, , | 624 patients. homa, en the Leergel of J, Y Nearly 100 GOP leaders from) 0 Kindelberger, rd chairman of every congressional district set) North American Aviation Inc., in Oct. 1 for a statewide “pg” SOS Out for Harvesters Los Angeles. Her husband, L. E.| (Draft Eisenhower) day filled with) MUSKEGON (Rolland Kelly, Huntley, who accompanied her radio and television speeches, dis- farm labor placement officer in woe, here, is a Los Angeles insurance tribution of “Draft Ike” literature the Michigan Employment Secur-| aL ],.EY QOP company representative. and petition signing. | ity Commission office, says pick- CAPTAIN WALIPAY, — } O 7 E END OF YOUR JOURNEY! — /ers are needed in the Muskegon ieti CAREFUL PHRASING makes area blueberry plantations. He Couple Sues Manistique }your Classified ads bring better said the need for pickers is speed- GRAND RAPIDS ®—Beryl and results. Ask an experienced ad- ed by warm weather maturing of Martha Zirwes of: Toledo, Ohio,| writer to help you word your ads. the berries. Growers are reported have filed a $25,000 damage suit in Dial FE 2-8181. paying 6 cents a pound to pickers. BOARDING HOUSE —_ Gy VL THAT SOUNDS }f I Like 1X HILARIOUS AH, OUI, PIERRE! Y» oO me! DC ; E PETIT pec ANEC LES POULET ‘il ARTICHAUTS TRIANONS | BRING IT &4 FROGRAM Z\ PERMAN=\I||b EN SAUCE BLASE, oe 4\ GANATE, 7§$MASOR2/ CEST oll i POMMES DE TERRE) D'ARTAGNAN, ET ZZ! LESSENCE U7 & oe CLEMATIS EOS nee BERCYw h\\ OF PARIS! HAR-RUMPHS \N ee, =v NANCY ' > + Ef WHAT'S GOING OO e Mit e ay J By Leslie Turner WE'VE LOST 40 MINUTES, Y AFRAID YOU'LL BY THE TIME We PIC~/ BE WHITE SANDS, WE'LL JuLy-25 One OF HIS CLASSICAL MOMENTS = 9.23 OUT OUR WAY I HAD TO DO SOMETHING / —— STUNTSIEVER |7/ YOU BLANKET Po SAW--WHUT'S PULLERS WERE == #\ TH RIDGEPOLE /|ywi\ SANDPAPERING ——_— Cope. 1955 by WEA Berview, ine. T, M. Reg. U. G. Pat OFF. WELL, OF ALL ‘TH’ CAMPIN’ il iil ae eagle eng eat eam C7201 SR ee mai oe ( él: Fy [HEXENE wow NICE MY DEAR THIS 4 : NOU 5 IS MISS Wien. Ie : MEXENE PLEASE Saal) FROM AMERICAS |1,) BEFORE YOU SS ye. ; & yore ‘ i, O° Tail ms, , TO RWILLIAMS ROLLER BEARING us srintec. 72° E » PLAYIN’ [1 I'LL HUSTLE HOME AN’ TAKE LL SURELY | [ALITTLE BEAUTY NAP BEFORE 'S R, AN’... \ Ta an ee | =o es. "AND YOU KNOW FF Aw, NOW WAIT WHAT MISERY, A MINUTE-- LOVES 7 DO IT YOURSELF la) i 7h *e 4 OO aay . i be ( Ie } ; | y — : on TES bi: Vay } eA v , io {i 7 Ne __ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY. 23, 1955 — Study Favors Proposed Site at Rochester Pontiac Deaths ‘Alexander N. Craig After an illness of six months, Alexander N. Craig, 59, of 16 Fid- dis St. died at his reidence at 3:30 a.m, today. Born at Beachville, Ont. Sept. 18, 1895, he was the son of Nelson and Elizabeth Barnett Craig. He came to Pontiac 39 years ago and mar- ried Elizabeth Barnett here Feb. 14, 1917, He was a pipe fitter at Pontiac Motor Division. Besides his widow he is cavives by three sons, four daughters, Law- rence, Ernest, Mrs. Odis Tucker, Mrx, Lynn Adams and Mrs, Don- ald Guilds of Pontiac; Nelson of Canton, Ohio and Mrs. Frederick Ferguson of Rochester. Also surviving are three sisters, Mrs, Walter Clark of Innerkip, Ont., Mrs. Ina Vance, Vancouver, B. C. and Mrs. Edward Erickson of Star City, Sask. and 15 grand- children. Funeral will be at 2 p.m. Tues- day at All Saints Episcopal Church of which he was a member. The Rev, C, George Widdifield, his pas- tor, will officiate and burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. The body is at Sparks-Griffin Fu- neral Home. E Charles J. Long, Sr. Word has been received here of the sudden death of Charles J. Long, Sr., 73, in Clearwater, Flor- ida yesterday. Born in Pittsburgh, Pa., Dec. 14, 1881 he was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob C. Long. He came to Oakland County in 1919 and had lived at Keego Harbor until recent years. Mr. Long was former employe of Pontiac Motor Division and a member of Lodge 121 F&AM at Commerce. Besides his widow, Adele, he is survived by two sons who are local attorneys here, Charles J., Jr. of Pine Lake and Robert D. of Pontiac, Also surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Sarah Conner of St. Peters- burg, Fla. and Mrs. Belle Conner of Philadelphia, Pa. The body is being brought to Farmer-Snover Funeral Home. rs. George Wheatcroft Funeral for Mrs, George T, (Eu- lah Helen) Wheatcroft, 30, of 1820 Hillside Dr., will be at 1:30 Mon- day from Huntoon Funeral Home. The Rev. Wiliam Miles, of Gin- gelville Baptist Church, will offi- ciate and burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Born in Decater, Iowa, Jan. 9, 1925 she was the daughter of Harry and Hazel Wright Plummer. She married Mr.. Wheatcroft in Oxford in 1946. Besides her husband and parents she is survived by two daughters, Cheryl and Sandra, both a home. Also surviving are a brother and three sisters, Charles Plummer of Des Moines, Mrs, Arlene Norman of Terre Haute and Mrs. Jean Phipps of Decater, all in Iowa. Mrs. Wheatcroft died at Pontiac General Hospital at 8:15 p.m. last night after falling from an auto- mobile in which she was riding. Eaton Buys Factory COLDWATER ® — The Eaton Manufacturing Co. has announced the purchase of a vacant Cold- water~factory. The auto, aviation and appliance parts company said the factory will be renovated by mid-Aubust. It is expected to em- ploy 375 persons when peak pro- duction is reached within a year. Meet Your Friendly Life of Virginia Representative HARRY E. MILLER Ged Lite Insurance Company of Virginia is proud to have Mr. ‘Willer as one of its Pontiac representatives. Mr. Miller has a family of three children and has lived in ——— tor 32 years. Harry is active in his church, the PT and a member of the Oak- Sportsman Through one of the nation’s oldest and largest life insur- ance companies he advises and assists individuals, fami- lies and groups in their plans for financial securit ¥ ° Craun- Hartwick Wedding Today at Auburn Heights ROCHESTER — Beverly Ann Hartwick will become the bride of Richard David Craun this evening in rites at the Presbyterian Church of Auburn Heights. Guests numbering 400 have been invited to the 7 p.m. ceremony. is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Basil Hartwick of 2956 Hartline St, Richard is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Russell Craun of Ceresco, For the ceremony the bride has chosen a billowing gown of nylon tulle with.a brush-length train, and front and back panels of Chantilly lace. Maid of honor will be Joann Zemke of Deford, and bridesmaids will be Rhea McCaslin of Roch- ester and Doras Craun of Pontiac. Sue. Ann New of Kingston will be the flower girl, and Eugene Curtis of Marlette will be the ring-bearer. Attendants for the bridegroom * are to be Chuck Miller of Pontiac, Bob Craun of. Auburn Heights, and Kenny Goltry of Rochester. Following the wedding a recep- tion will be held in the Legion Hall in Auburn Heights. After a honeymoon in the west, the couple will reside in San Diego, Calif. Mary L. Dungey Becomes Bride in Thursday Rite IMLAY CITY—Mary Lou Dungey became the bride of Donald Erla Thursday morning in Sacred Heart Catholic Church. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oren Dungey, chose a waltz- + length dress of white organdy over taffeta and a finger-tip veil. She carried a nosegay of white carna- tions pink rosebuds. Marlene Strump was brides- maid, and Dan Earia was his twin brother’s best man. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Eria, Cass City. A breakfast was served to the immediate families and attendants at the home of the bride’s parents. A reception for 90 guests was held on the lawn in the evenirig. After a wedding trip in Northern Michigan, the young couple will reside in Flint. Testimony Time Quartet to Appear at Rochester ROCHESTER — The Testimony Time Quartet will appear at the First Baptist Church here at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, the Rev. Donald Olsen has announced. The singers include Don Lord of Pontiac, Dick Edstrom of Minne- apolis, Walt Gillingham from Bing- er, Okla., and Bill Eichhorst from Yorkton, Saskatchewan. They will be accompanied by Mrs. Don Lord. |Rochester Style Steppers Annual Picnic Is Sunday » ROCHESTER — Styles-Steppers Square Dance club will hold its annual picnic at Bloomer State Park Sunday, beginning at noon, with potluck dinner served at 2 p.m. Members, their guests and fam- ilies will participate in an after- noon of games and activities. Kingsbury School Camp Opening for Five Weeks METAMORA —The Kingsbury School summer camp will open Monday for a five - week period, with an enrollment of 55 children. There will be a full program of swimming, riding, nature study manual training, crafts and sports. There is still room for a few more children, according to Camp Director Mrs. Helen S. Glover. County Deaths Howard A. Michels LAKE ORION—Service was held in St. Joseph Catholic Church here this morning for Howard Anthony Michels, day-old son of Howard and Joyce E. Phillips Michels of 540 Newman, Lake Orion. Burial was in the St. Joseph section of Alfred Watts AVON TOWNSHIP—Service for Alfred Watts, 77, of 2740 Leach Rd., will be held at 10'a.m; Mon- Suzan Ball Improved DUARTE, Galif. «@ — Actress Susan Ball, under treatment for BEVERLY ANN HARTWICK | Auxiliary on Tuesday will be Ione Royal Oak Man Is Honor Indian Chief PETOSKEY —A man, honored seven years ago with the Ottawa Indian name of Pak-o-si-gon, today sits at the Geneva pow-wow as President Dwight D. Eisenhower. The name, bestowed on Eisen- hower in 1948 when he was presi- dent of Columbia University, was taken from the tobacco used in tribal peace pipes. He was honored in absentia at the Ottawa pageant and naming ceremony for his work as conn’: mander of the Allied forces which brought peace to Europe. Five more prominent men be- came honorary Ottawa Indian chiefs last night at the 2-day pageant and naming ceremony conducted by the American Indian Foundation, ¢ The event is at Indian Stadium, overlooking little Traverse Bay. The new honorary chiefs are: Rear Adm. Emmet P. Forrestal, commandant, Great Lakes (Ill.) Naval Training Station; Steven Bartush, food firm executive of Detroit; R. W. Hyman of Chicago, president of Harbor Point Assn.; Maurice A. Klausen, Detroit attor- ney, and Charles Berger of Royal Oak. Madison Heights Charter Group to Meet Tuesday MADISON HEIGHTS — Acting Mayor Virginia M. Solberg has called a meeting of the charter commission for 8 p.m. ed in the Madison High School This will be the first meeting following a ruling last Monday in Planning Board Has Ist Report Geer Associates Call Site North of 6th St. Satisfactory Location ROCHESTER—A zoning change in Rochdale Subdivision was dis- cussed and favorable first reports were heard on the proposed com- munity center site north of Sixth Street, in the Avon-Rochester-Oak- land Area Planning Commission meet this week. David Geer, of Geer Associates, Bloomfield Hills, said it was the opinion of his organization that the proposed 12 acre site was very satisfactory as to central location, fitting well with the Park system along Paint Creek, They advised that attempts should be made to obtain the Higble property north of the New York Centra! Railroad and west of Elizabeth Street Geer added that five acres would be needed for public buildings, leaving about six acres for land- scaping. Robert A. Slone, planning com- that there is a great need for another baseball diamond and play- grounds for small children of the area. A letter received from the Parke, Davis Co., compliment- ed the commission on the High- way Thoroughfare Pian, relative to properties owned by Parke Davis east of Rochester. They stated that members had done a good job in laying out the pro- posed highway and thoroughfare through this property. George Markley presented a pro- posed plat of Christian Hills Sub- division No. 3, located in Avon Township. Max Hartwig was present, re- questing a change in zoning from residential to commercial for lots 10-15 of Rochdale, in Avon Town- ship. A number of residents in the subdivision were present protest- ing this change. Clarence J, Ca- dieux, President of Rochdale As- sociation, acted as spokesman for the group. He stated that he felt it was the desire of the persons pres- ent that the zoning be left un- changed. A communication from Donald C. Baldwin, Supt. of Rochester Community Schools, stated that the Board of Education passed a resolution at the last regular meeting asking the commission te recommend that the soning of these lots remain residential. Hartwig asked to go on record in stating that the property in question would be rendered useless unless the zoning was changed from residential to commercial, due to deed restrictions that stated they would be used expressly for a shopping center. Hartwig also Oakland County Circuit Court which | blocks election of a new charter commission, Mrs. Solberg said yesterday that the old charter will be re-. to make it acceptable to people, original charter was defeat- 82 votes last June. that he had contacted the league’ 8 attorny. Clark Adams, but no fr- — action would be taken at this me. To Rid Lake Orion of Remaining Weeds LAKE ORION—Additional chemi. cal spraying to kill weeds in Lake Orion is planned, Lake Improve- ment Association officials have re- lated. Biochemist Dr. B. Domogalla is returning to the project. He spray- ed portions of the lake earlier this summer, in the drive to rid the vacation spot from the nuisance. Working from a barge, the spray- ers shoot the solution to the lake bottom by high pressure. It then kills the weeds. Belgian Congo | to Be Topic at Sunnyvale | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP— Guest speaker at the July meeting of the Sunnyvale Chapel Missionary McMillan. The meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at the chapel. Her work and experiences as a missionary in the Belgian Congo will be the topic of discussion. Earl Perrys Announce Daughter's Engagement stated that if the zoning was changed to commercial, the pro- posed use would be of a commer- cial type, but he «lid not know the specific use at this time. The Zoning Ordinance of Avon Township went into effect a year before the recorded date of Roch- dale restrictions. The Planning Commission disapproved of the change of zoning at this time. Their decision was based on all available information, - Roy Whims presented a second subdivision plat on his North Roch- ester property, to be considered at a special meeting to be held on 2nd City Aids Policeman by Moving Town Line AUSTIN, Tex. ®—Police Officer R. H. Wallace had his new house in the suburbs about half built when he learned about a civil serv- ice regulation. The rule is that city employes cannot live outside the city. Wal- lace’s new house was more than a mile beyond Austin’s limits. He asked the City Council for help. This week the council stretched its annexing arm out one side of Manchaca road more than a mile, citcled Wallace's lot, then returned down the other side of Manchaca Road. Now Wallace’s house is ‘‘in the city.” Rising Gasoline Tank Floating, Not Booming CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. — When an underground gasoline tank suddenly burst through the concrete driveway, Cleo Milstead left his service station at a dead run yesterday, Firemen discovered it was a case of floating, not explosion. A water main had broken, flooding the sub- soil around the nearly empty 12,- 000-gallon tank, which naturally started rising—right through the concrete. * U. of M. Will Organize Mental Health Courses ANN ARBOR ®—The University i 5 9 2 i + ROMEO — A double - ring cere- mony united Shirley Soule and Wil- liam Martin Edwards in marriage at the First. Baptist Church here recently. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Martha Soule and the late Mr. Soule and William is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Edwards. In a traditional setting of palms, candelabra and baskets of white gladioli, carnations and daisies, the young couple exchanged their vows in the presence of 250 rela- tives and friends. Shirley approached the altar gowned in imported lace over taffeta with long lace sleeves and a skirt of nylon net and tulle over Martin-Soule Ceremony Performed in Romeo ¥ g 5 white orchid on a white Bible. Assisting the bride as maid of honor was Shirley Roe of Chicago. Bridesmaids were Thelma Ed- wards, sister of the groom, and Violet Soule, sister of the bride. Best man was Howard Shields, and seating the guests were Robert Dahlgren of Cadillac, Stanley Ed- wards, brother of the groom, and Arthur Soule, brother of the bride. After a reception in the church parlors the young couple left for a honeymoon at Rothbury. Upon their return they will make their home at 62130 Schoenherr Road. Capital Shows New ‘Viscount’ Newsmen Get Preview of Fast, Turbo-prop Passenger Plane Press City Editor Southeastern Michigan newsmen were given a preview of Capital Airlines’ new turbo-prop transport —the English-made Viscount—yes- terday at a press showing at Wil- low Run Airport. Capital will be the first U.S. air- line to operate jet propeller planes in passenger service when its Vis- counts go into scheduled service next Tuesday. fast, luxurious airplane, the Vis- count also has many new safety aaa including anti . skid brakes, Outstanding among passenger comfort features is the | complete lack of vibration, a characteristic exclusive with the turbine engines. Capital purchased its first thre Viscounts June 3, 1954. At that the many 37 was taken. This option was exercised Aug. 11, 1954, at which time an option for 20 more Vis- counts was granted. On Dec. 1, 1954, the latter option was taken up, making a fleet total of 60 pur- chased. _ The over-all cost, including spare engines and parts, amounted to $67,500,000, Girl Drowns in Lake time, an option on an additional | News in Brief Earl Gruber, of 48 Augusta St., told Pontiac Police fender skirts valued at $15 were removed from his 1954 model auto while the ve- hicle was parked in front of his home. if your friend’s in jail and needs bail, Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA 6-4031 Chrysler to Resume Union Talks Monday DETROIT & — Chrysler Corp. will resume new contract negotia- tions with the CIO United Aute Workers Monday. The talks were recessed last Monday to allow the union to study the company offer, Neither side has disclosed de- vided for a layoff pay plan, in- creased wages and pensions and other benefits estimated to cost 21 cents hourly for each employe. The current Chrysler contract, covering 161,500 hourly rated work- ers, expires Aug. 31. Business Notes A new ty record was achieved at the Detroit Edison Co. when the company’s 11,500 em- ployes completed a full month of work without a single serious acci- Father Coughlin Living Quietly Onetime Famous Priest Grants No _ Interviews; Shrine Attracts Many By WAYNE KLEIN United Press Staff Correspondent ROYAL OAK (UP)—The Rev. Charles Edward Coughlin, the Catholic priest who once stirred millions by radio each Sunday afternoon, now is serving quietly as a parish priest in the same Shrine of the Little Flower where he originated his radio talks. The same energies he once de-' voted to stirring up millions in the turbulent 1930s have gone into making his parish one of the finest anywhere. But Coughlin himself lives quietly. He doesn’t talk to news- men, he doesn’t grant interviews. His statements now are confined to those from the pulpit. In those he still gets fiery at times in advising his parishioners. The shrine itself, a beautiful | edifice of marble, real gold and other expensive items, attracts thousands of sightseers. It no longer is the “‘poor parish” he talked of over his radio net- works. The school is one of the best looking and biggest in the state. The probable estimate ‘of the church and school's worth ranges upwards of $5,000.00. It is thought of so highly in the Detroit area that persons seeking to sell their homes con- sider it an asset to advertise “Shrine Parish” in describing the home. Coughlin, now 64 years old, was sent to Royal Oak in 19% by Detroit Bishop Michael J. Gal- lagher. The bishop decided Coughlin was the man who could establish a varish In Roval Oak, a community which hed much anti-Catholic feeling at the time. He made hic firet radin hroadcest in October of 196, seeking funds for hie shrine. His first broadcast hroneht in five letters with contri- butions. By 1930, he was broad- casting over a network of 18 stations and a network finally picked up his talks. About that time he switched his subiect from seeking contributions for his “‘poor parish” of some 50 families. The depression had struck the nation. And the radio priest switched his subject to nolities and world affairs, leveling his brosdeasts at Russia, prohibi- tion and Wall Street and interna- tional bankers. dent. From June 21 through July 21 more than 1,700,000 accident- free man hours of work were performed. The Equitable Life Assurance BELLEVILLE (® — Erma Mills- paugh, 6, of Wayne County, | drowned Friday while wading in/| |aunt, Miss Doris Russell, who was _| He started as a sprayman in 1936, _| year as a paint contractor, and Belleville Lake, The child was on) an outing with her mother and an/| aunt, She disappeared when the watching the girl, turned her back momentarily. EARL W. JOHNSON Former Pontiac Man Promoted to Dodge Post Promotion of Earl W. Johnson to the position of superintendent of paint division was announced —— by M. C. Patterson, general works manager, Dodge Division, Chrysler | 5 oon Corp. Johnson, on special assignment In the Dodge works manager's office since joining Dodge early this year, has had more than 19 years 7 in the auto- motive paint field, 15 of them as an executive. Prior to joining Dodge, he served in the paint department of three other automotive companies. | £""%* and worked his way through suc- cessive promotions to foreman, general foreman and superinten- dent. His experience also includes a service as Methods Engineering | Counsel following graduation from | DeForest Institute in Chicago, where he specialized in manu- facturing methods. He is a former resident of Pon- tiac and is a graduate of Pontiac ‘lion dollars to $23,400,000,000, Society of the United States en- | tered its ninety-seventh year today with the best semi-annual sales _record in its history, according to Ray D. Murphy, president. During the first six months of 1955, new paid business in ordi- nary life insurance amounted to $728,673,000, a gain of 41 per cent over the same period last year. New paid for group life insurance came to $496,088,000, a gain of more than $260,000.000 over the first’ six ae of 1954, Insurance in force rose more than one bil- Alpena Lad Drowns ALPENA (®—Michael Zadow, 7, of Alpena, drowned in Lake Huron Friday when he lost his grip on or ed tube while playing in the | MARKETS Produce , DETROIT PRODUCE DETROIT, July 22 (AP)—Today’s De- troit Produce Terminal Moderate supplies of feat frults and bles met with a moderate demand ee Large yellow onions, red es green peppers were higher " Camembers were lower while tatees, eontinued weak. Other staples were mostly unchanged. Apples, eastern, bushel baskets, 0.8. No. 1, 2% and 2% inch up, early red Men 3.50-3.75; early green varieties Cucumbers. New Jersey, bushel bas- kets 1.25-3.00 auaes: Iceberg Spe. < pack, Calif., en sme Sp 3.00-3. ‘anada crates, jon Onions, 80 a sacks, Calif. yellows, medium, | 1.85-2.25; large 2.25-2.75; Mich. Yellow Globes, medium. see lows Yellow Globes, medium, 1.¢0- Peaches, New Jersey, bu. Rate early ted frees, 2 in up, 4.50: Calif. boxes, early Elbertas, 4 smaller, 2.80-2.65. North Carol! bushel bas- ‘alif, Wonder type, medium-large grat eae 100 Ib. sacks, Long pderries, ich Red, 16 quért es 6.75-7.00; a quart crates, 10.00- 0 oe RP SES nae, . ( » f.0.b. included, “federal-state meg gpd at faesroe et wore avera large 43 wtd wid org th $a mec medium Hy wtd iC. tt 41-42 wtd avg 41%; pee- — ne—Orade A ia’ 43, medium 37, smell 36-41 wtd avg 38; grade ra tal weekly receipts 9,811 cases. Commercially A extra large 46 38-47, medium 31- Ss! grade B = rade A ‘estre large 4 large 37%-41, mediumi 36; grade B large 32% = sp a wtd « nde "Hares Poyltry DETROIT POULTRY 22 (AP) —Prices paid roit for No. 1 quality . fight 18-19; aot Bee}: “Rocks ‘ez (621 Bloomeret Dr. Northville.” It was after he called the tate President Roosevelt a “great liar and .” From then on his influence declined. The start of World War I drew a curtain over his political life, just as the had Durine the peak of his pre-1940 ponularity, the Royal Oak post office carted two truckloads of mail daily to his parish. .« Now the parish, located in the booming suburban area which has grown by leaps and bounds in recent years, is made up of middie- class families. Visitors in the city often go to the shrine, which is unique and beautiful. Others, passing down busy Wood- ward Avenue glance half-curiously at the church. Many just vaguely remember Coughlin. Some 15 years after his decline as a na- tional figure, he remains only a dim memory to many people. The church he built as a parish priest promises to remain a better- remembered monument to him | than the Sunday radio broadcasts which once were a well-known part of American life during the tur- bulent 1930s. Detroit Lumber Yard Destroyed in Blaze DETROIT @® — A $200,000 fire destroyed a block-square lumber Po yard on Detroit's northwest side last night. No-one was injured. The fire was at the Simms Lum- ber Co. The entire front of the yard was ablaze when firemen ar- rived. Freight cars, trucks, sheds and stock were burned. - Firemen extinguished the blaze before it could spread to nearby buildings, Famous Peruvian Singer | Now American Citizen LOS ANELES ®—Yma Sumac has something to sing about, now. She became an American citizen yesterday. The Peruvian-born singer, fa- mous for her five-octave vocal eq | Tange, was one of a class of 150 “¢ | granted final papers in federal court. Her husband, Moises Vi- vanco, became a citizen last year. Their son, Papuchka, “Charlie,” was born in this country. U.S. Steel Hikes Pay of Salaried Employes PITTSBURGH W#—U. S. Steel Corp. has given bi-weekly pay increases ranging from $9.20 to $22 to all salaried employes. The SUZANNE RABIDEAUX Mr. and Mrs. DeVern Rabideaux of 1807 Glenfield, Ortonville, an- nounce the engagement of their daughter, Suzanne Marie, to Marine Pvt. Dale Bruhn. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bruhn of 1930 Fay Rd., Ortonville, No date has been set for the wedding. Insurancemen Will Do Anything to Prove Point BUENA VISTA, Colo. @®—That knee-to-toe cast that Charles Herrle is wearing is a wry tribute to his energy as an insurance agent. While showing a prospective client what his policy would dover, Herrle fell off a wagon and broke his left leg. CRAIG, JULY 33, 1955, (ALEX) 16 Fiddis Street; a itt oi i. in i 7 i Z cof i 3 i Mr. and dear mother of Cheryl and Sand dear sister of Charles Plummer, Mrs. Ar- lene Norman, and | Mrs. Jean culoee. il be held = rol A - £ 30 p.m. et Rev. Bill Miles officiating, “Ine ment in White pel a= The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to § p.m. All errors should be wba ommend Phat sibility tor orrers ot er cha: CASH WANT AD RATES Lines 3: Re? ory ee 8) Pag 43 4 1.60 13 4 § 2.00 3.40 x (ig i i ie ta Death Notices — mi i ah i gd Stamp Ae ene Pa - Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Female 7 mehcesSivle FUNERAL HOME Amouniance or Motor BOX.REPLIES At 10 a.m. Today There were replies at the Press office in the following boxes: 9, 13, 15, 16, 18, 19, 20, 21, 24, 25, 26, 27,.28, 37, G1, GO, 87, 89, 91, 99, 100, 101, 103, 105, 107, 116, \§ 148, 119. i EN Sian Help Wanted Male Automobile bumper and 3 - metal finisher wanted at y once. See Mr. Cordray, | Central Lincoln-Mercury. 40 W. Pike. ALL AROUND MAN TOR FUR- store 42 Orchard Lake ‘Counter Fy we tart... eo é ft) Fi) Mendicapped gennes office work- com- BOND EMPLOYMENT B-1 RIKER BLDG. re BORING MILL OPERATOR MUST BE EXPERIENCED ON LUCAS OR GILBERT MACHINES 6 HR, WEEKLY PAID INSURANCE BENEFITS. PHONE OR APPLY IN PERSON Detroit Broach Co. 950 S. Rochester Rd. OL 1-9311 2 MEN WANTED To train in the beating perso Sgt hg BARBER —) sn eves. atler ». On 3 1380. BRICKLAYERS oor apete good fast veneer el MY 34500. A weekends. MA 4-1545. Pecking House Super = time oxide ied “| TIME. APPLY _101 W. HURCN. ‘Comb. Bumper & Painter Smith Service Mar. PE EXPERIENCED STEEL Gos tee oo. ton dee Pe basis, Trans-American Free Eines. 201 south Bivé. East. FE a ts Lake Rd. Gabriel Pham be uper ‘AL, mean. Industrie) work. 5454 Dixie Report between ®.m, Sat . ern Call for evening work, FE es of Square Lk, and < HOUSEHOLD os FINANCE CORP. HOUSEHOLD _ FINANCE CORP. » souTH SAGINAW ae va ne ae, 2 Spline Grinders ~ . Must have Broach Co. experience. $0 hours weekly, good wages. paid insurance benefits, etc. Phone or apply in person: Detroit Broach | # Racheat 950 8. Rochester Rd. Mich. Phone OL 1-211, TANTTOR FOR TEMPORARY. Avply Standerd Elcetric Co.. 175 _ 8. Saginaw. MAN WITH | LATE MODEL CAR for 4 hrs. work | each afternoon from 2:30 to 6:30, om delivering napers to homes in the vicinity of _———— Hills Apply in person to Mr. McCully Circulation Dept. THE PONTIAC PRESS Ask for Jack, Revere = pe ase NTS MACHIN EXPERIENCE ON: LATHE, MILL, AND RADIAL DRILL REQUIRED THIS MAN MUST be able to read blueprints — do his own tayout. High scheo] graduate pre- comely Age tianit 6% to #0. ca oe only. Mi CARGILL Detroit Corp. 2254 Coie, Birm MAN FOR Mater AND —— bery work. Part time Write Pon- tac Press Box 107 giving expe- rience, Day and time available. MIDWEST JOBS FOR MEN Midwest Employment 406 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. FE 5-0220 es confitential, Write Mr. C. foe. ein w “Vanen nae Gutcags a “ni “go a ‘AN TO help cars. [a ae Write Pontiac | Foundations base nent —. driveways, sidewalks and chea ‘anor MY 32-0702 ‘all | anytime, CABINET MAKER AND C CARPEN.. Kitchens « specialty, FE | | ceEPENTEIRN-: AND CABINET | work new and repair, D. B. dock, vr 2-768). ELECTRICAL WIRING AND var. maintenance Licensed PLUMBING WORK WANTED. PE $ wn HAND | DIGGING. LIGHT HAUL- large grass, weeds and bushes Works shrubbery and flow- er beds MY | MY «3603. PAINTING WANTED BY ELDER. ly man. PE 5-6838 Work | Wanted Female 11 Peale N DESIRES DAY 2 WOMEN WANT ~ $x cleaning. 5-3034 or $35 yest. plus wort. 67 day 0 fare. References. 8, FE 4-740 Experienced woman would like kitchen work. No Sunday work, Please call _FE 4-4752 after 4 :30 p.m. 503 a ia XR. OLD Se eas oop BABY. 2. School eo aaa — FAMILY LAUNDRY, BUSHET. Sosa Shirts « specialty! . Experience contehon, one hee ‘AP. Rikpie ire Bros., 190 W. Aple. Piirmiagness. GENERAL OFFICE OR RECEP. tionist, —_ typing, ete. 7 yrs. exp. as secretar: office ma) and sales. promoting concern. Gen- | eral know = municipal — and gs Preter any similar - ct ied positions FE 8-0282. TRONINGS, | ay A SUSHEL. 1 DAY service, Exp, /E 5-147) TRONTNOS AND SIMPL, gS MEND- —ings. 217 N Cass. FE TROT: $3 __ ONIN se IRONINGS. GOOD WORK FIN- tah 1 dav 83 « bushel. FE fRONINGS, __ bushel. |. FE 5 = iRONINGS GOOD WORK. 8) A _bu, FE _5-2306. : MIMEOGRAPHING TYPING SEC... retarial service EM 3-2842. PRACTICAL NURSE WANTS = near Pontiac. FE RELIABLE GIRL. WISHES B Weber pn onl dautrtet . Retf- PE 2 28201 SECRETARY, STENOG! ence, with la: expert rr 25, Dependable ay 1 DAY SERVICE. $3 5-6002. corporation. Age erence, own transportation, — _ Press Building Service 12 ALL MINOR eerie AROUND THE HOME. GAR. DOORS.» bf Reparied & usted. also repairs on doors, Mh - yws, leaky faucets broken or loose furniture. and all types of elec. lamps. EARt 8. RABY FE 4-1961 RELIABLE LE LADY “Fo BO THOR: cleaning. 1 dav every other week. —, oft hheero Harbor, - efter Sunday, FE APABLE of of ee handw rit _— _ Poses A CARPENTER REPAIRS AND} alterations Quick service, OR si eves. : ~A-1 CEMENT Mei LLOYD MONROE | ALL AIR SPOR S TGEATOR BRICK. FE (CUSTOM BUILDING, FHA Fi- \OOARANTEED Mur Jecomes | owed TYPES MASONARY WORK, fireplaces and — oo Free Esti ~~ 12 ... and this is our song. Hear it?” A-1 GA MOWING— BULLDOZING EDMUNDS & SON - OR 3-5289 or PE 8-1427 Garden Plowing PP re « : tiACc és, ATURU SY. JULY 22. 1955 i A erat THY PONTIAC PRESS, SA’TUR LY 20.1995 by: Jay Alan 16B OP ARDEN PLOWING and fireplaces. FE 2- K \ND CEMENT — Also vehimneys. No job too lar, a * Guaranteed work, Ph. FE oly. On3-96330 rM AS-4608, job. OR _3-0873 or MA 5-4608. i €USTOM BRICKS AND STONE | — work, veneer and ‘ireplaces. FE 5-9679 after 6 o.m CONCRETE BR BROKEN BY HOUR _or «0 Free estimates FE 2-0077 CEMENT r & BLOCK — work, F. 0782 CEMENT Is OUR & SPECIALTY. _floors, basements, EM 3-487 CEMENT WORK REREDESTTAL and commercial, free estimate. _Raymond Commena, FE 4-066. CEMENT WORK. PLOORS, drives, etc. Reas 2 es estimates, Jensen, FE 2-2310 _nancing. » Modernizing, FE 45470 | RS gi DOORS. D. E. j|ELECTRiC AL WIRING. A ceased. Ed Murray FE 2-865 | CARPENTER REPAIRS AND Ate vecvice, Weather- FLOOR SANDING. LAYING FIN _R. Gardner, 491 Central, PE 2-7518. 'FLOOR LAYING. SANDING AND | _ finishing. C. Bud Bills, PE 4-921. | PLOOR SANDING, OLD FLOORS 4 | _specialty Cr} Bills, PE 2-5189. | _!| > ROOFS. “ALL | ie us, 383 | | | | A inds, Est N. Cass. PE 2-3021 (HOUSE a CALI FULLY _equipped. PE .-6450, L. Young FLOOR LAYING SANEING ~ AND finishing, te ony Legere Modern equipment, Guar, work. Free estimates. John Teyior. OR 3-1616. MODERNIZE | With Heensed butider. Discounts ter wo wie J. tions. Violations corrected. In- | sured workmen Tea M BUILDING SERVICE rE 28240 , FE 2-7004 | m0 BE. Pike Eves, OR 3-2276 poteg hanes. 156 Edison, Ph. FE MASON & NT WO FREE estimates, Our work guaranteed, A, 4. a 3-040 Webste ‘ 3-402. PLASTERING - NEW HOMES QUARANTEED REPAIR WORK. P. G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING sanding and finishing, Phone FE TUMPS BLAST Quick, safe, efficient. Improve lawns farmo, building sites. Call OLive 16643. Business Services 13 ee A-l TRENCHING 8” TO 18” CUT- ters footing, — tile septic tanks and field ation a a Hern 4 Gredinn ‘OR 37318 or ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS by factory trained men at our store General Printing & Office Co. 'T W. Law- _tence St PE 23-0135, A & B TRENCHING | DRY WALL BY MACHINE FREE estimate. No job too big or smal, FE 5-4628 EXCAVATING oil ae 5-4372 Ton _soi SE WE rR R CLEANING inks-Sundeay Serv, ‘ FE 42012 abiet Ee TRI NG & RE- ry Ph FE 56-6509 or OR klectric—Sewers Cleaned 24 hour service No results, no charge: chemically treated at no extra cont. Roto-Re Sewer Cleaners PE 8-1317 OTOR fewinding 218 & roe. Furniture Refinishing 16A altera- — _ at CUSTOM 18-4 TREE SERVICE. CUT-, ine. Pr -s0a1 fast service, chain | 4-508]. GENER. LANDSCAPING GOOD'6y an nursery sod. snd seeding Free ote R wonan! ourice FE LANDSCAPING Het ) LIGHT HAUL- ae TT nEeCaPInG SERVICE. Compiete ‘awn maintenance oat) FE 2-8712. ¥ Moving & Trucking 19 AA-| MOVING. TRUCKING. PICK- up and onenense rates. FE 4-1603 any- _ tim rs vo CARTAGE CO _ Moving — BEDFORD MOVING Local 4 DUMP FOR “HEAVY A AND LIGHT HAUL- ing call MY 3-7362, AND HEAVY TRUCKING. Rubbish hauled. Top soil, sand, irt and FE 20603 LIGHT HAULING. CDD JOBS. (1GHT fill a _ Cheap, INCINERATORS CLEANED. | P TRUCK SERVICE. BLACK PE. 0811 and fill dirt Sand and gravel. delivery Good service at & pickuo FE_ 2-4750.__ _Long_ Distance—FE 2-8787 gravel, _ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a NOON INN GG, I al AAA PRIVATE DETECTIVES DOMESTIC CRIMINAL, COMM'L. 30 yrs. exp. Bonded. PE 5-6201 ANYONE KNOWING ° THE WHERE. abouts of Mr. B. Morris, please notify his cen. Mrs. Fred = ema _ 7B, P ~ Aerotred. Knapp | ‘Shoes I have purchased the records of Knapp Shoe customers from the former Arthur Sweet. OR 3-1592. ® friendiv adviser -ontact M Verpon Vie Phone FE 2-87 The Salvation Army. AUDIVOX ‘HEARING AID RM 10, 101% N, Saginaw. FE 4-0539. COLD WAVE SPECIAL %6.50 _DO- rothy’s, 500 N. Perry, FE 2-1244. FOR rhiy DEMONSTRATION OF new modern Spencer Foundation Garments and Bras. Call Rewis- tered Spencer a per Mrs. Dorothy Schertzer, FE 4-3105, IPS GAGA Glaxo water clear linoleum reread __Wailte’s Notion: KNAPP “SHOES — Ellsworth rs. uM. ABOUT lastic type Os waxing R. $04.8. Sanford ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, July 23. 1955, I will not be re- sponsible for any debts contracted other than myself. Lau- Spicer, 585 8. Joslyn Rd., Orion, Michigan D -AFTER THIS DATE. July 23, er than myself. Robert Tebeau, _1324 Holland, Birmingham Mich. __ FE 5-6720 | T | I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by any | $500 REWARD All information held in confidence. For information lead- ing to an arrest and conviction or recovery of billfold containing 3 $500 bills and a number bills stelen from customers desk obs Street Branch Community National July 12, 1955, Tuebor Detective Agency E . Lawrence, Pontiac FE 54-7511 or MA 5-0586 DAINTY MAID FOR SUPPLIES. Mrs. Burnes, FE 2-6814, 93 Mark. 100 WEDDING aren Balad 50. Sutherland Studio. 18 W. Printed napkins - fast oli teas . PICNIC PARK. TO RENT. AVAIL eons for July Aug., & Sept. OL PAY CUT? 15‘ FE 7-01,1. ASH | or rubbish hauled. Clean up. FE _ 51k O'DELL CARTAGE -| Lecal and Long Distance Moving. Phone FE 54-6806 “UDDEN aeRvice. {ASHES RUB bish and RE Large _ Moving. FE Trucks to Rent Tt AND EQUIPMENT “4 Ton light trucking FE 5-5933 DUCED RATFS van» serve vou, Smith _ 4-4864, RUCKS TRACTORS Pickup 1% Ton Stake and Dump Trucks Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 225 8 &. Woo | Open Daily rE ~ WILL HAU!, ANYTHING — PE 51306 Painting & Decorating 20 A-} PAINTING PAPERINO Mason Thompson, FE 4-8364 ' wu mate terior Cuarante POIRATING — PAINTING end wal) oanerineg Cal! for extt Pr 40788 Ai PAINTING IN TOR @ EX: ‘© per cent dise nteed for cash Free est 4-9205 4-918 &-) PAINTING PAPERHANOING per remow Cet) mates. __5-2860, INTERIOR QUALITY P orating. WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING OR_3-2284 or OR _}-0404 Painting & Wall Washing Hall’s Wall Washing * Paintine Reasonable FE 2-2708 OR EXTERIOR PAINT- | % Evert Agelink, Edison 23-0724. JOHNNY JAMES Painter and decorator Interior nd exterior Brush vy and sober bendable, FY 2-2 PAINTING | INTE! INTERIOR AND wall washing _commaion FE 2-4233. © PAINTING PAPERHANG'NO CLEANED . “od spray, and de PER OR 3-706) PAINTING AND ba ~'= Reasonable rates. Fe psee water tile. Field tile. Pree estimates FR 8.2211 ~ a ____Physiotherapy 21a t “~ “ry - _~——~ APPLIANCE SE RV ICI E SWEDISH MASSAGE & THERAPY We service al makes of refrigera- | Special foot technique. 12 Elm leo at types ot — smmare st Pe 42081. fl a of sem: * ances HOY'S, ¥ Osiinnd "Ave FE Television Service 22 = eee Seek eae ee cages Day OR wIOQHT TY sravice PLASTERING PE 46-1206 or PE 56-9900 | PE 606% FE 5-0025, Leo Lustig | M P, STRAKA BLOOMFIELD WALL, CLEANERS. JOARANTEED TV REPAIR ANY Walls and windows, heasonable. MAKE FE ¢9736 CONDON'S Free est, no oblication. FE 2-1631. | RADIO & '« 127 8. PARKE _ST. ~_ Typewriter Service 2 22A Se i ee AND — a. iring. Expe wor! Greer ply Co Mitchell's ‘a Upholstering ‘x. ond 0 Otte Sup "Ww wrence, RE) Saginaw st 23 48 Tf THOMAS SLIPOOVERS vei STERINO ORAPES & SED ELEGR H ire FE 4-6866 - “Pe tf VR or FE 4-0032, . t, eens FE 5-0162, FE ofisa FE FE, fr: oe AnD GRAY PARA- keet. Distinct m Long ee CASH: — ‘Ads! about nec ral "les: ORTCUT TO “| WE = | MICHIGAN CREDIT | | IF SO, Let US Give You | Place to Pay Kase Your Mind Restore Credit ARE NOT A | LOAN COMPANY COUNSELLORS 41'% South Saginaw St FE 68-0456 Above Oakland Theater | THE LOUDELL CATERING SERV- ice. Cater to parties, and tunch- peal lerve or small MY }-7463 OA &-3807. WILL PAY CASH REWARD for information on Gerry Holm- ‘uist and George Corneail. Call ‘ohn Leonard. PE 2-8285. Wid. Child, to to Board 2% —_. OR SMALL CHILDREN BY eek. OL 6-1792 cmpaRn _LoveD “AND CARED for, FE 2- EXCELLENT. ay IN LICENSED FE 4-6504. Wid. H Household | Goods 27 LET US BUY rr OR AUCTION IT for you. OA 3-2681. FURNIT URE NEEDED re home or odd lots. Get the too dollar, ‘wil et 3 outrieht or strictest | | | ON Reality Co. NOTICE LANDLORDS Ade .° °K 2-1063 Hes mang tenant« waiting for your rental This service. is free | te tandicrds HURRY! Call petal vou have your equity Call now and tel) us what you have. Fdw. M. Stout. Realtor TIN. Saginaw St Ph FE 5-8165 Open Eve ‘ti! * 30 Wanted Real Estate 32A FAST ACTION! hak you have the contact—we have the ready money. Clark Real Es- tete Phone FE 46402. Ask _for Mr. Clark, CLARK NEEDS PROPERTIES We have sold most of our listed and desire listings on | of "| Sam F PONTIAC’S LARGEST » furniture buyers, Cash waiting. _PE_4-7881. WILL STORE YOUR PIANO IN return for use. FE 5-5567 WANTED FURNITURE lf you have anything sale and want oro’ «t cour- teous service one th e JAKLAND COUNTY'S LARGEST USED FURNITURE BUYER. peer «IE... . ne I PAY CASH POR SMALL RADIOS _and portables, FE §-8753. __ Wid “Miscellaneous 23 NAR MRAR BAA Aw EXTRA LAROR bee 40 OR “o in, OL 1-4556 after PILL DIRT WAN. :D_ a rou can deliver Call PE 3-9356 D UN. 3-2552. HAY. "WANTED. NEED IMMEDI- ately. Clover or Clover and tim- othy. Must be -reen and not or rve straw Wire bales ore- rred fe . Trv ws for price a a quick sale Buss Hay & Feed. Fraser, Mich SIDE WALL TENT. nad, “OR 40344. wit ‘BOY soy —roRRTORE AND _ise. odds & ends. FE 40786 Wanted to Rent 29 goto R DECEMBER, ? BED- rtment or house with furni: kitchen. 2 children. FE __ +3714. Couple desires furnished apt. or flat in Pontiac, by | * Aug. 1. Reasonable rent. FE 2-9542 after 5 p.m. Manager, Waite all between 9 baby would like to rent . Re ona ent References. Phone ib48. yea! fare nished " Drayton Plains or six miles out, OR 35137, call between # & 2. Ky. FB _ Pontine TUEMAN WAREE_ GON | Press, . MAN AND wiPe 1 Gh Wie | , © rent modern 3 bedroom house, good ? rties for the present mark ‘e have many clients with subustantial down payments - and some with cash for espe ped ea Uf you plan to sell or epi home, now is an ideal tme on the ven bi e will be gh 1 estate problems with CLARK REAL ESTATE 1362 W. Huron poly enings Co-operative Real Estate Exchange GREEN LAKE OFFICE NORMA 107 COMMERCE 2D __ WOodward 5-7744 ines WHITE BROS. CAN 3ELL hla Bag i! OR PRO Age) re oe AVE SOLD 1 FULL Sete eget SALESME TO GUARANTEE You ACTION OR YOU CAN CAN- THE LISTING. CALL US CEL TODAY AND STAKT PACKIN YOUR BAGS! _ HITE BROS. REALTOLsS 8660 Dixie Hey Phone OR_3-1872 or OR 31760 EM 3-4412 _here oorvises fa suaiitied be as yi ro Will © oav cash for ert! « in « mati es Boge RILEY BROKER FE 7-006 PE Johnson i A. JOHNSON, Realtor 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 Office Open 9-8 LET OU nave arate eeu. cou ox remo ST cr enh tacks " of trade. a. full a eae anlesmen to serve today move tomerren Russell Young |*: : REALTOR a2 W ee san (Oven © on bets 5 CRETE : ‘ PE 44598 ain ns 1T37_ Baldwin 65-8183 | | vour contract or call | FE 41157 | buy land contracts. PONTIAC REALTY FE-5-6275 Rent / Apts. pts. Furnished — 33 2 ROOM. ADULTS ONLY 60 8. Parke, after ee |2 ROOMS ag BAT RANGE | refrie.. beat and liehts fur- | _nished, Rea. 3 Murohv i? ROOM. PRIVATE ENTRANCE. | Laundry facilities, Adults only, 175 Auburn Ave 2 ocean tal al ~FUR- nished Minutes walk from town. No fom er children Fairgrove "2 ROOMS 6 241 W. PIKE ST. a _ FE — - — 3 inn ep ONLY. 2 ROOMS. NO CHILDREN. REF- erences. 240 State St. 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE, | gentleman only. FE 5-4438 |2 ROOMS. CLEAN BUS a 3 | _men, 319 Orchard Lk. Ave |2 ROOM BACHELOR APT. wire orivate entrance. FE 2-4776 FE 4-5655 2 ROOM APT. No Children. S354. “1 OR 2_ "2 BEDS. Reasonable FE ROOMS. } NICELY Fi FURNISHED. _Clean _Adults, 22 _ State =— eernEC SHOWE! MY 3-3202. ~ 7 Soon cLaaW “BaTH "AND PRI- _vate entrance. ‘Adults. \. FE 5-1400 a ROOMS AND I BATH. | Pavers ulet middleaged cow N _dren ix C} wie. No chil 3 gg FURNISHED LOWER apt. Suburban .oc socation, fireplace, bocseasion, ae details 4 “Bud” icholie Real Estate, or FE 21372, — 3 ROOM FURNISHED WITH PRi- 5 bath, Adults. inquire 42 W. ry pay APT, F' FURNISHED | _two. 179 Auburn Ave ron Call after ROOM CABIN ON LAKE. On 3-178. 4 ROOM HOME ON PONTIAC “vane furnished TU 425 - $85 per month, 4 ROOMS. SUITABLE FOR” adults. No child iY 2) __References. — APTS, FOR WOMEN. CHILDREN _ Welcome. PE 5-3 ADULTS (ONLY. staan $ ROOM. gp p rnished. uoper fiat. 101 ATTRACTIVE : a ROOMS” 4 AND Lakefront, 43300, ite entrance, gas ga ed warm $85 ma, incl nate - heat. EM 3-251, Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 NOL PLL AL API POLLAN P in Pragprst 2 LA aoF ROOMS AND BATH. * ONA Rent 98 ent 418 per month “Kauts, 8 pm. FR erator, 244 8, E, RE- 7 Rooms, 45, PRIVATE EBATH oT 3 ROOMS, B AND a whaed. "5 “Biove and 24275, re B ROOM AND BATH. _Weekly. EM 34390 oe 3 ROOMS LY eat jet. Couple tty SEN aND foot Inquire caretaxer. m: SCREENED ae8 R WIL- rear Te der 16. $20 o * Par : i 299 Bane. aie Povier Toetieé details, Fe sit atin, eh Saiate. 7K NEWLY I DECORATED, HOT WA- _ter. Private bath. PE 2-1050. gn py . 5 ROOM FE 4-1501. MODERN 3_& BATH. OIL HEA Close nn sich f 2-7425 EST SIDE. 5 RM! 18T | if, maladie ccd couple only. | Reply Pontiac Press, Box Rent Houses Furnished 1 35 COMPLETELY rooms, livin, en & dinette Swimming and boating. 415 Lake | FURN. 3 BED- iF _t. MY 32-4161, RM. AND GARAGE. 0471 PON: —tiac Lk. Ra a Rent Houses ‘Unfurn, 30 . OS w 3 ROOMS, BATH AND SCREENED | porch Stove and , refrigerator furnished $75 per ‘month. FE 2-6275 J BEDROOM HOUSE FULD BASE- ment, out of town, beet References FE 5-2368 after 3 BEDROOM acces FOR RENT with option of buying. Including _turniture. 16: Ellis Ave ROOM MODERN BUNGALOW PANG i as mee Call He 7.00 = Eliz. Ph. Ortonville 132, Reverse Chg». 5 ROOM noose LOCATED a can een Lk. Ra and Telegraph Rd. FE 4-4154 | DESIRABLE -}_ BEDROOM HOME ~ and adjoining wie suite, was Sonotone. FE 5-2487. 355 e inaw. XCELLENT FARM Eaves Pontiac and Rochester 7 acres, Good bulldings & fences Opportunity for honest, energetic couple with own tractor & know!- edge of & interest in stock or horses. Ready about Aug. 10. Give qualifications & references | _'m_reply Pontiac Press Box 91 NOTICE | We have rentals of all types. Per- baps we have the one you want. | Please cai] in only. ADAMS REALTY CO. burn Ave. _ _ wOVELY COUNTRY HOME, 2 baths. landscaped Reas Two re- sponsible tenants. Also barn and asture. 1410 Hickoryridge, Mii- ford, Michigan. person TWO FAMILY HOUSE. CLOSE IN Automatic gas heat and hot wa- ter te wes completely furnished immediate possession “eferences and deposit required. Call Mr. . Smith at FE 4-5203 o MA $-6431 WALLED LAKE. 3 ROOM DuU- plex Purnished end heated peat MA 41450 Rent Lake | Property 360A 1 BEDROOM FURNISHED APART- pee Modern ranch style bulld- “a North side of Union Lake _ 1651 Playstead § ROOM FURNISHED HOUSE ON private lake, available trough La- bor Day EM 3-2601 BALD EAGLE LAKEFRONT COT- ‘agettes. furnished complete. Gas electric, refrigerator shower. boat $25 $30 835 oer week Waid- bauer'’s. 7 miles north of Clark- _ston Ortonville 17F2 CABINS MODERN MOUSEKVEPING Water- front, good fishing wonderful vacation spot. Other nearby lakes Rates $22.50 tq $3650 weekly. Norman McCabe, Grayling, Mich. _ Star Route. _ | LOWER STRAITS Lh. Modern furnished lake cottages 3355 Fox St, or Ph. EM 3-4005 LAKE ORION 2 ROOM CABIN Sleep four Beacon = week or month MY \-7263 ONE 4 ROOM SUMMER Cor. tare 2 bedrm modern 3 dren welcome 4571 Hiilerest, Woodhull Lake MODERN CABIN BOATS BEACH East Highland MUtual 4-5813 QUIET. Ct. EAN MODERN LIVING Pon for vour vacation at tac Lake 10 units Sandy beach, good fishing Complete kitchen aK Cabin Bay, OR_ ye A PONTIAC LAKE New motel, sandy beach fine fishing bv the dav or week Pontiac Lake [u ninth Courts 8230 Hiciand Rd OR 3-7700 SPEND - YOUR VACATION AT | BROWNIE’S CABINS on Six Mile Lake Write Mrs Conley Brown R No 3 East Jordan, Mich- igan Cali Central Lake Kimball 4-3379 For further information _ call FE 2-737 ee WALLED LARP LAKEFRONT Modern 9? biecks to PRIVILEGES Laree protected lots Anderson windows GOOD Price open. Coz 7 rs Co 15-0143 OPEN 7 Sunday 1 TO'6 PAL at 82 NX Johnson, Pontiac fine income producer. ts this per month “from the room. Excellent Lage Terms | to NETENTI bu: =NTION GI's Open Sunday 1 to 6 pm Drive out to Middle Straits Lake at the commer of Green Lake Rd and Welland Dr. 2 bedroom frame with large living room and ae Pate’ big corner lot and garage ake ences Takes about v' per Ap- pres, re wi LOTS! Lots" “LOTS! Your selection = | ae buildin: Hes (aay pew me on roll- “tnd izome, with lake | oasnere AG ELLIOTT. & SONS SUBURBAN Off Northwestern Hwy. at Middlebelt Ra JO 46121 MA \_ 6-2503 3 Bedroom Home _Immediate Possession Bud” Nicholie- Realtor s FE 4-0528 | Eves, & Sun. i Close in north side location, large 43 St ACE OF HAM 8 long. make your Seoknie pal to- | or use ' $1500 down or will consider with or Amopee eee . “ block cBent ce sesadte- For Sale Houses 4s WATKINS FILLS | Tie SUBURBAN Liv We EINES BRICK RANCH HOMES PRICED FROM $13,900.00 FINANGED BY F.H.A. - V.A. OPEN SUNDAY 1-8 P.M. To peeen cabo aide sive out Dixie Highw. ‘Uo 8 10) to Watkins Lake fod then lett to Lakewood, then right to model and sub- division WM. A. RE R OPE TIL 8 3007 W Huron PE 4-3569 ro BUY To SELL _ REALTOR | ird’™’ to se Partridge is the YEAR AROUND HOME. 48 on White Lake 48 ft on Ormond Rd. Lot 585 ft deep Priced to ; mend Ra iliord ‘AUBURN — HEIGHTS. Excellent brick. fireplace. s ‘ya @c | 3 eae! 1500 acres parcels location 3 bedroom, 2'2 car attached garage full basement, $19,800, wn 6 rooms, breezeway and Sgarage $2,000 down im large and smal! with build: . Broker, . som ings 14458 E _Dial OL 2-08 , — &. — | A Home of Your Own gpl JESSIE STREET ¥. meas six room frame home 3 and bath up, full base- rooms ment, Only $1500 down WEST SUBURBAN Just off rere TB Hospita ing. Only $1000 down o $ 8 * cae Rd Near bedroom frame nods some minor finish- Immediate possession as owner leaving town. has living | | 2 bedroom west suburban home ! aay | $500 — § —— epee ARE. $2000 60 DOWN | — tubirben locations Sol exe terse rooms. Move in five semad full hese ement home l'» oonees Jarge lot, oil heat. ished recreation room | fet qr ery 2 and | semi- | equals | $100 DOW rooms finished homes rough plumbing insulation and enn ro = ediate pacteacion WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS NICHOLIE Exterior pos ineludin, well, complete Tokssactes | floor are al- a io buy. Im- East ole near Longfellow see I 22 x 40 shell lot. You can be living nicely this home by the seneet term starts. Makes 3 house with see | * | time aT ot & HARGER living room, separate dining room, Open 8 30 to 8:30 kitchen with cate space. 3 bed- 33 W. Huron Ph. FE §-8183 rooms and bath up. full Lost | WE wit, BUILD ON f ger oT ment, gas heat and hot wate 40x22 pat candid I" oer > feree Reasonable dove | Com sou $4100 perm ‘om peym our — ecar | 30 Acres New, ultra modern brick ranch home with large carpeted living | room and dining area, ettractive kitchen with lots of cupboard space. ? spacious bedrms., color- ful ceramic tile bath full base- ment. finished reereation room fireplace. asphalt tile floor ex. cellent hot water heating sys- tem. 2 car garage. attaching breezeway. By appointment only. Real Estate and Ineurance St. rE 49 Mt. Clemens $1201 | 8773 'Eve. Mrs. Kelchner _FE IONEER | HIGHLANDS “EOME 2. St | _— ee A Real $ Sect for Ges Any Family! a home that’s located heel e new subdivision ory black- ree een ead master. heat. ane pviieces #4000 dow 21 PERRY PARK i, bedrooms Large iv replace, kitehen d tut bath, automatic ating plant. Oo a beautiful shaded Price 7.950, terms CLOSE IN kiteh- FOR COLORED 2 bedroom nome Tile bath, well- janned kitchen and dinette, teres tec: room bar. hew ‘as furnace and Gasina- tor. Aluminum siding on house garage laa | landscaped _Call after o FE .-7658, FOR SALE BY wuse, suitable SEVERA, GOOD MODERN 6 TO Say, terms P. area, _area, By owner, BUILD ae fis rs frees” ‘our Bir our bed Big fora Waterfo: — Estimates rd freely or yours. . HERBERT C, DAVIS 5924 P-ntine Lake Ra. re THE ANSWER TO ‘YOUR PROBLEM: | Want Ads! To sell, rent, cy ihe as it’s FE 2-8181. i 2 ho ta 3 kitchens partially goto parle sv terms. FE 2-653! FE 54-6634, 5-2033 — nab L Sat & Sun. 2 to 6 365 RIVARD— Brand new Lk. to open sign. RAY O'’NEIL, Slee bid 2 pee This Coss 9 ae Real IEstte 5-T209 4 1, N xchange Phone PE ah i, if a a fa Le f f fe 3 | en, eats, - full ipasesuaan and new as — fing plant. room, Price, $7,950, Por informetion cal) Perry C. nosaten a. NOT. REALTOR 170_ EB, Pike FE 4-5005 Beautiful Lakefr ont Home OWNER: LARGE for aati wo! or | Brick Cape en living | m rec. room with 2 ae From Downton ome suitable for a for ehanen | Scott Lake 6 room rh home on we rm., dining . heater. only § sabes co cere. Call today. lone Irwin 1 soy i s otfered with trutt & shade son, 100. Lu vine m, 2 bed- w "Eve. 3 iy they rey Red Horse | Gone ““ntnrmation contact | 5019 Cass E _FE_ 42252 or i Piet __ | My aim is not Riches | or fame, | | i But a spot on earth No other can claim. phar tTe's top stre 3 large sees For $2,900 this aim can be complished. 2 , full basement, 1 block city bus. ee co $i0.s00 Call lake ori ieses e ana through . ba! living room with vestibule trance and picture window over- | look = large kitchen, 1 block to school. Pull | for eppolmt-— | reets and large 1 on oon no traff! bedrooms. Pienty of an throom . cious en | care para faepentd Attac nea. ° cor e. Aili Meeten | c c | exterior, Pull TE terms. | BROS. REALTORS = Phone OR _ 3-1¢72 oR 31760 | OR_3-7118_ or OR _3-2081 FOR SALE ON TERMS © ‘Jot, Landscaved garden, ge R WILL for Northern Michigen Near Dra 16. Phone tonight | aT ful din’ for eae Immediate possession - Relax in = dream home nothing else to fesse in well ano storage — Larne “muiity dcreenec %, enclosed back yard. Eiteecee rill Entire a Moodtighted TH EMA. M, FELWOOD ALTOR 3 Casubinsoets Lke Rd. 284, FE 4364; Open ie . ELIZABETH LAKE livin: Cheer- arranced Shien and e. NE ‘attached cat porep pep had en This ho asy upkeed ai ve 8 on excellent , Almost 9 ten aoe For Sale Houses PRA Templeton SCOTT LAKE 2 bedroom ranch type. Living and dining room. heated breezeway finished in knotty pine. 2 car ga- rage. Basement forced air ail heat. lot 100x200 block to nice sand beach Priced at $11,500 with | terms. Discount for cash to mort- gage. . ; 16 ACRES Large ranch type with attached garage 2 bedrooms, full bath with shower large living and dining | room, utility room. A very lovely spot nicely landscaped. truly a Pondertul uy at $0,500 with $1,000 | 2 ACRES 4 bedroom home in Oxford area Very privately situated Close to schools and stores Beautiful kitchen and dining room, Large living room, full basement, forced air of] heat Recreation room with bar Idea] piace for large family Call for appointment. Cash to mortgage or trade for smaller home in or near Pontiac kK. |.. Templeton, Realtos 2339 Orchard Lake Rd FE 44 After 6, if no ans. call OR iy _or FE 29502, AUBURN HEIGHTS. 2 , BEDROOM ranch style. Full basement . with recreation room, water softener - heat, lot 200 by 280. $17,500 arge down payment. FE 5-003i _after 3:30 D1 HERE IT IS! | Maceday Lakefront 7 rooms partly furnished 4 bed- room. 2 rowboats, 1 speedboat Beautitul lakefront with screened in front porch et break- water Sandy beac 2 patios. Large beautiful shaded lot. Ga- rage iso extra jots Many other features too numerous to mention See it yourself — only $9,500 with $2,500 down. $60 per balance No — this is not a misprint! the price again with $2.500 down. $60 per mont! WHITE BROS. REAL ree 5660 Dixie Hw Phone GR 31872 or LAKE ORION ‘Ranch home. breezeway. doub serene, knotty pine — wooded lots $10.500. MY 3-287 $500 DOWN are jake cottage easily year around home ‘OR 3-169 con- | ATTRACTIVE. RANCH — For Sale’ Houses 43. For Sale Houses 4 TYPE hear Cass Lk, cedar shake exterior, perimeter condition ft. lot, ft. % b to be finned snaide ice as petra $2 000 down, Owner. PE 43 236 N Sgainaw | Near oxtre large living room, kitchen | dining space 2 Bath ith §5 $00 can ee cussteamens valent CRAWFORD | 812.500 GENUINE VALUE — Well constructed ranch home. Large two car gar. and attached breese- way. Fireplace ement, i an acre of land. If you want value received. look e 4 3 s "$5 se 8 Lad 3 ‘4 = Hoyt will be im charge. L. H. BROWN, Realtor 1362 W. Huron FE 2-4810 , Member Co-op Rea! Estate “Exch. TO CLOSE ESTATE ~— Good house. wood location Bar | _@ain. Cash or terms. FE 2-1842. CLAWSON Mer total down payment. GI own- er leaving state. GI mortgage es- established. 1 wk ssession. New 2 bedroom, small attic bunga- low. On 506x150 ft. lot. New alum- num storms & screens Ideally es on eres St. Call Lin- coln 1-7 LAKE er hew 5 room obrickette hous¢s Oak floors painted wa!!« fireplaces. bath nicely decorated Ideal] kitchen & acres. mall houses —. "McLarty FE Established 1916 NOTE THE LOCATION! Close to grade school city bus and stores: waiking distance to Poh- tine Motor 4 rms and tiled bath, gas heat Garage, paved drive grill in shaded rear yard. Paved street. $9,750. terms. ONLY $050 DOWN. Near Water- ford. 4 rms bath Ca | heat. a ee walls, living rm. | 100 x 183 ft fenced | $50 total price QUALITY BUILT HOMES | “BRICK & RANCH 3 bedroom home Full basement the and or Fee price of Custom built = your lot. Many r lans choose from. Priced . Model home open ft pm. We ar- range —s oe us for : pg ~ Fra Obligation. Consult and buy from Kent — serving Pontiac home-owners for nearly 40 years. $1, —— For this 2-bedrm. a, ooty ‘Breakfast nook, full bath with shower oak firs — suburban, lake ‘privileges | Owner furni- | cludes ture at = = price of $6,950 and worth it. See it! “MPAMILY Pie business frontage Ave. Extra large . i. oe. and i heen gin soy need yi ent, furnac several aren, ade trees, ia $10,500 with $3,000 FLOYD KENT, Realtor uw. Neat Es"Soarimere Bytes eves 1345 Union Lake Rd Eves . 2 tots Lake arivileces i West 28 W Huron “WEST Oxford. Mich \ { 7 | a (eo hi ‘4 ~ THE DOOR is OPEN! You are welcome to come in and & terms on these homes. Owners want action, We will submit any rea- | sonable offer on down payment. | The opportunity is yours. | CEDAR ISLAN Has liv room. 2 bed- Kitchen. Utility and sun rch, Rpg he pet as schools and Searches rite Cer $5250 MERCE On 100x187 lot Solid masonry construction ' bedroom = Livin room, kitcher and utility a ¢ buv at $8500. . OXBOW AREA aew — frame 2 bedroo tifully finished closet space Utility. nace Priced right at FMBREE & GRE ce = 3-4393 tinton Lake Ville EM _ 3-3705 or EM 33197 INCOME Purnisned & rooms Im home with $200 per mo Owner has other in- terests Oniv 88950 with $1950 down » SEDROOMS wae fur- 1 tot tac. ine on blacktop street Stool ' shows, Large utilit) room $6ag0 | term CUCKLER REALTY FE 4-409! DRAYTON WOODS A limited number rf excellent lots are still available in this beautiful subdivision Protective restrictions. FHA approved. Con- venient terms tore sh parraaued to meet individ HOLMES- BARTR. AM 4392 Dixie Hwy _ OR 31950 Eves) OR ANNETT OFFERS 3-0006 . 7 mmediate Possession oak bath f rooms. 4 bedroo floors. oi] heat. ful automatic hot water. lava- tory in basement. 2 car gerage 3 blocks from down- town. $9.000 2 Acres—Davisburg Ideal 2 bedroom large bath, bungalow. Full base- ment. new oi] furnace 2 car garage Beautifully land- scaped. fruit trees berries $11 . $2700 down. etnies New comfortable § room bedroom. full basement. oi! furnace. aluminum storms & screens 1", car garage $12,500, terms \ ebster school 6 room modern home on jot $0x150 Living reom = with | fireplace dining room care | room. dowauaiss all carpet- ed bedrooms, bath up. | Full basement, gas beat 2 car garage, $13,000, terms Clarkston Large attractive 5 room & bath bome. living 18 x20, dining room l4xlé kitchen 12220, enclosed porch Full basement, as- phalt se floor 2", car ga-, by days possession 000 ere, Side 7 room brick and tiled kitchen & dining Full basement, tiled recrea- tion room, oi] heat. per- manent water soff®ner sys- tem, hardwood floors. car- peting & drapes All isi a screens storm windows, ful- lv insulated 2 blocks from bus & shopping center, close to schools. $21,500. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. Riviera Located in Elizabeth aeol| , terms. Elizabeth Lake Road trom Pontiac to Riviera near | the Pontiac Country Club. See Open sign j OPEN SUNDAY 2-4 P.M. | 3675 Ward Pointe Drive frame home‘ with | lake from every Brick & . START BUYING! GI’s—$250 Moves You In! 45 BY OWNER: 83 N Telerraph Co-operative Real Estate Exchange | 345 PE 5-0441 Co-operative Real Estate Exchange shingle home, 2 bedrooms and tile | STOP LOOKING i¢ gas oF heat Approxim ‘-iv "0 a mo. in- cluding everything Model open RR, ps VALUET. Realtor. daily from 10 am to 8pm On | 45 Oakland Ave East Bivd just orth of Mt. tt J Clemens 8t Co-operative Real Es’ Anchor Real Estate XFOR oe For further informat’on call Mode! | Here is a lovely, Home oe ORI oath secho ey Lake ® 4 = gas hot —— * wy inpdacaped room. lot, Priced te ns for $16,000 $2,500 down, DRAYTON PLAINS In the edge of Dra i ate teen “5 Pocaes type home with blue cedar ern trimmed iy a a 24 ‘Toe 8 Cath: Galt floers Avtomsaate _air heat 62 gal. clectric hot wa- ter heater. Large utility room, ood buy at $7950 with soase "OPEN. FOR INSPECTION See these new full basement homes this weekend at 1176 Genella St Sell for $10.- 500 plus your ‘ot and Genella St. selling for $14,950 with full fireplace Will duplicate same Salesman on rty in our Watkins Pontiac states & = re ae ake Rd. near Cass [. AKE PRIVIL EGES Here is a lovely 5 room. 1 story bungalow with lake ays ee oa Walters Lake. This 2 Be 18 moder’ kitchen. Pull tiled bath and shower. Automatic ofl forced air heat ac hot Wa- w ter heater. -4 us 1 room, This is a new hom wilt km pole sottna or $13,500. with §3,- 1 oe oot \KEFRONT Here is a lovely -tri-level home q i} Lake. This home SMALL, HOME. BUY of land. Thi» 3 5 4 rooms a bath plus 2 room rooms, possible 3. Large liv basement apt All modern Auto- rm, x 20 ing room is 1 matic ges floor furnace. Full base- x2 iern hen is @ x 20. up w et and sink in base- 2 full baths and showers, Pilas- ment 53 McKinley Dr. highest tered wal ik floors. int in Pontiac. Always a nice Fully insula o glassed in eee tue aie $1500 sown. $40 rches i’ car garage. Bea 6 than , ; ~ > < festures too numerous | kK. G HEMPSTE. AD [neta ober dy wy | Sai. 102 E: Huron FE 4-8264 ing or guest house - 2 at $22,000 with terms availa’ 2 $750 DOWN LAKEFRONT odern, newly dec- Here is a lovele 5 room, 1 story room bungalow with frontage oo take Ee Ay 9 omamete inege bor porctes ares a ah em and B oa rend a aan LADD’ S, ee = oR Ba Sasel i ottake Lapeer Rd. or M24 Pere 41008 ONE YOUNG OR OLD ou" enjoy the cool comfort 4 WEST tive 2-bedroom room _. dy * Some tor to be move quiek, Salesm will Sunday noate to 8b State. Wide Rea! of = Call Feiev or Gordy — Cedar _4-5641_or Ceder 17-3716, COUNTRY HOME tn W51 Hens * bought our ¢ bo country home = fortune =m ” ourous but nfill Ceening the quaintness, Im - ms, 2 with private baths 2 with ba A kitchen ar ‘fireplace, a huge fm studio ii room in the English style with «a window wall over the country side, T.V. room and = powde: toom. Yer coon right — end er room, Peg . Beperate wash house ‘heat- ed: for deep freeze L washing. ba iT your horses, Lerge sheds tree ¢ just $35,- Ex ve —_ hes jore land other interests. evatlable if you want ft, PAUL A. KERN, Realtor n Ne Ave. re 1 Estate Since ise" OP Sunday 12 to6 169 Alice Street BRICK -— 7 rooms. down never seen stand in 4 = m4 a ; ¥! i. tes am dinin, "ry room, kitchen with tile features fast Re nO as tet a é ESP Rae: by iese Sie a i. t 43). For Sale H ies et ¢ Houses 43/_ For Sale Hou ee com Houses 43, FUN PONTIAC PR N uEACE GO. 9% ACK 1 NY BUSINESS — ESS, sa Conditioned farm home, room, TURDA , ad ag Pe eS _by. Hersht Y, JULY as Sunda service 2 car § : 5 * . vy 2% AKEVILLE. dr, $15, garage + ; 4 SUN Ae 0 6 . ESTER NORTH 000, terms, For Sale ‘ « * x DAY 2-5 NEW. Eaten Saenger ke Lake Prop. as W: FHA nm with 150° See o. 44 F pct cage , sAlODEL yt ng ol i * uli ee Don or Sale Resort P ield 3 BEDR HOME pa -eotow me, 2 replaces 4°. 4 Yh at esort 44 I ee : is Woods kitchen re large liv play oa eee ail ' GARAGE fen 0 ‘ecth et Ay ___ For Sale gh ee =, your inv with se A yaw ps Fagg eon oe Hj 4 a seoeet aoe sec 1 troote j EE t - ee i / foarete be itation to and leundry ag aera. ange ‘oe on yn ney = ete, tee ake I pe A ge 47 47 ae: ‘ oa frevaganes "ive sa ex- FLOORS “AND Auto. ot we- 21,300" terms. ring AK BW oe Sens svimmins and ¢ Orion Sale Business Property : ipchocine 3 ft % Priced at AND x’ heat, ok is OPEN 6. ing ” eh aie < x =« | Call Mr, ~ Terms — Mrtive tree - cs ' 0 - ht down $7,950 with e SAT. & \ \ “powman=! KEnwood 1-8700 —2 vered island CI GROCERY i ~ pt ay > only $1,300 & SUN, 1 . 4 1-870 dock ; home. Has with LOSE IN Completely STORE oth en ace costs. ‘Lo- M to8 P:M./\" Me en Hoiis for tun P everything boat 2 ; pion apa Be cquleed, ull bane price n apis. ve Ave. Wat west ot | | 808 MON. 4-82 PM eS 7 nee nies WILL 1@) se = mainiand _ you need ACRES Mine). Rea ation ‘Proved, Gold financing ‘with SYLVAN ern homes at. Whi bedroon yy Zz ew snd IAMS LAK ay, foot, bridge’ te oie ong ott) re wooded a nacate ha ie. Seege Serr F meat i evees 3 bedroom \N VILLAGE fving "room, "with sake.” inet | Fy: AO meme, d charming. 3. tar ge tor $10,000 terms Shenise hake el within =| foent es NEAR MILF | to Liteht to ing x. le eee clos kiteh ure windo y eaten" z “ 2 uy od- Lak city r Lar se rT area tee ti et en, wife ae

Cc AR FE for roe gp = Soon |e gee ea ,Realto igs nese gretentsaene’ ||) pane OTE 1ING D DOWN = nee EEFWONT COTTAGE. AT Weta tolerance sit ib paces E ne . | Toute ALE TN eM BOE: cal yet economi- Sele Street r Paddock. US ROO! ti sement on hous ter rooms, room, kitch- TN OL 308 & Tie: lightly roili: acing on lock | ims and ving restau sale food on, ag 1 61 or vu tan Eves. bedrooms neat in & ary 4 s. oe Geaiase lot, mao etlece | terrace, "Beautifully amalireae F OL 20891 — Ley a: tag. ny oe a 2 eee twice ro Cpe Easaunens drive SS Baa bath, tinder | EAST “y garage. Lot 90x15 bess | can my tow ait eieeraenil hed | Seer Pontise Be Tables Dr. or Sale Lots oe cee one “oy at $23,400 ono Reply” Pontiac Pi Tabac 6t = > of = E as 150. SY own OR will build | ach. r., 46 , OCERY ress = A Large A bi = i cour 3 two Has | o 3-2837 . 2 € 8TO Box 9 y shade. trees, it wit tre thee tee eben Desirable home. 7 ven at ieal a. tments | ance styl NEW 4 | LK. PRIVILE Finoargindebedichel ocr |. eo reds © BRE pep gore ete “IN VILLAGE dict Set ere fo scree Tenens seen | a ae a Spe coe| te Tineliae tate. TS) Go? VILEGE LOTS |~"F; maron Svcs ate, sta tied Eien ce “esp oe guttces “urge tare et ~ » you space. . Lee kit. wn, 1 | bedr The ho lots, HARD ss down.| jeaes by 50 ft utility roo 2 | only 2 block plenty of f : after 5 p.m with about } ‘and, s deep. | vicinity. 81 eal Estate r will a Lake ‘cohtrake ALSH ris ee, eat- none abodes aes wren bone FE LES, Realtor scaped won Maceday Lake” | meee at 48 bod ctl tams ae mr acasive Hom : rer redid pe Men of foe —Mich._ peaks ha. Bread, Deter way sh golf course, Gate. a" 8. BWOODWARD, rae yard | painted room pe. bate down ; seissanias 4-0521 ee doa Of 343 Lake, Land- nce payable ar use . boomed | In beautifu: Forest L meas limits. Pr port subdividing. Just lene OROCERY - — sfORt ie Sata P signs D. BIRMIN ASEY pleest closet. over vlaster, joors, | 17 OR home phones 28. Call af er mo. Orchard es and F e Country at $42,000 w c ety Doin, lease. Stock . iG n, w Lyi 3 es ter C. Also ‘orest | ith $11,- g good & HAM out A all it ‘nicely “decorated, th jit Aare sind . Zelegraph oh OR — & GE A «| F’, Wood C noel, wo ee! Koalis Lot “eubdlyi ‘L ‘ADD’ 1. pois, #3500 dow Beer =< e. 8 ement ch- |G 3 BEDROOM te ves | Rew ° autif S. | PAUL e avail: Pe BROW od ae, water heater. vareame! "gow, PERRY yaaa Sane YLOR! (On F125 Office 0 | aed NE sok Rear ald a Inc. MGW JONES REAL a Shown pA img y+ om HANNA AND KETTER: After __5_¢ sb Sundays a.m. to 6 ey wosarvon Fas —— ay reeea es: +3808 t bv $13,950, er tl 44900. R- | LAKE call; OR_ n 9-6 rom 1 to p.m. 3496 Pon’ n iains | sho’ TION, ——— Hills Br $1085. DOWN —B N i tment ‘Would ° TY RONE ARE COLONIAL HOME | bedroom a reOeT arLit LeveL, 3 3 A. JOHNSON, R 6 p.m. eaves oh ei eeeters theckfare GARAGE axb Onei ick pen new meas | nished te P sen an ideal me that and automatic Je led kite 1704S N, Realto , rE . or M2 ex nobiles, im enty of room as ida t. “Ete 2 we | St morn Pully idea} convaies would m ceerorie a femitia') Kame S. Tel r by gt tot eee for : Modern bain = pope noe ee is 2 bed tur-| easi ee ttn | ural firep reened washer elegraph R le MY rey ; ing to the + Gh completed pa Real b AN COUN closed sum room home aeert alsa an incom amily | —$!2,000.. $ lace, oth etn nat- | FE 4-28 p d, == 12-8241 oF ‘Gowul wih i Three m snd minute — tiv ter and by a + wired, pow gos wn “ $0385 and price $8.450 ch on lareve with ep-| b iss lav 10 roo! e very | 52,500 cown. FE 71-9842 el fe -2533 ————— | Pay FE 23-7446 ; . . &, lot | bas av m FE || POR BE ® P oo hes en ete ou eae wad ‘tetertec ceebalne’ 3pe bath full on jot 1 modern 2 HT. 4 ph te wee downs | ex pool od “neat Shower is ‘Lake: re cere 5 Acre Co Paint & Window S fan. arith, Formica tom ileges. construction.’ . baocreer heater a se 8 ps Realty Go extra arse. ona Everything | rontage CHEROKE 3 | . prague fe Estate | Store ow Shade wg dy end windows $5650 FULL Toad. eo oak "Pentea? Mai gt : 21 scaped jot. You" MALL . Early kuae xdeled 10 Full line : inspec heat. clean.” PRICE - ° Et ry! rch Ph Fenton | Mi $1 Call N tke ¢ St rican hom room| mad of dra 4 West — : fine iacwer. Feened porch. Loea bungalow and] py mcg ext dada so ae 9 eter as Seven room 2 $1,900 Down Ei Ticakes 7 bowdtbcedsh moe ro eee | awnings made Lanett td ertacgs w i room ESTATES =*\T im, * * | se 8, B ry. Peiloe Onsite $13,800 Fou hocated a Krewe tered wee ons benoulow. 0 FEN SUN DAY __| aon boy arate tocome home. ges |S eoewees a lc toserae rane aon w Beet Bi Sop oes “Oi | come een vanrite Long | atema R BEDROOMS -— rms yh m. dining carpeting ites pias- TO5P 4 | close in. mth large eto, apart. treaties e heater =< perches, | ARL W | ae alot i dina = Seal fave riced with ss ine : n & K wae at Noor, 5 jay 6 6wel) - ell and livin, ec z Re) I _M ‘ today. is will sell lot | fenced jot bath at- | 903 oad “ BIRD | possess e trees. “Im , terms ntory at o7 equip- : ampse and ¢ : yenme Up. Tes hace eee luded. 655 EDGEW : quick Call | oo completely | Community N , Realt 4A = : nly $19.- i Realtor n oo one ee . Two | &85 fore with recre itehen, fu out W. Ht 1E WOOD | ROLLIN | oe retaining Ww eh cette cone | + National Ba or; 7/ cres—N s car basemen te ed al ation n OT Huron B GQ KIL y at $0,500 all. An con- | PR 4-42) nk Bid: ; Newe } " it, et. Wend ts hea a urn | (M50 eautt LSIDE | men Sh excell Hit. PB 4-421) 8. 4 r Rane 377 8. Telegraph FE 4-0528 paved ‘siren. ¢ me ar. and ue cameeian asereaal: x 130 bear en on Bagenod Pees lene ‘on wptel be tect CP peed | Hol MES el i eppoint rie? Sponge SITE bathe. is ices anh | | Df Annett ] n e Co-operative Eves, adition. and Seema) nea rome a iy ieesbes | cree rosapwianigiectets an hee | 2S-BARTRA hed ena tree ment. 600 ft. dee! plang carmen serene | 0 = REALTO Cc. WaATI Estate & Sun. ort a0 — DONELSO CLAR’ eee = cay 11.900 sheds. uealiSisarae)| com cmon. oe drosines! _ 4392 Dixie Hw AM {i rms. MA 5-4 oe see, sted lame reom t. larve pan Open aan i 9 bethe—Dasemont be IN APRK Fe ee REAL 6 compact heay Gael aiden tea FORES On 51008 * TRACTIVE a & ove ~- enor mnagarooed || oe stanag! @ Men Gre, BI fly 8 ROOMS Bea jw. New — Bric ESTA Otties Ope ry attractive | is for andy kite ranviceiows it; T LAKE. BLOC buildin YLVA} peeves | 'etee mador stove | un 1 to 3 | Paha ae Soe canes Se eae nice ati Se Peace lw ws ie | ee "Scoourmers |", 10h Se Sta, cae | Ot am ol , | | . 4 toe GE boas Shen Zoe, attached — ra, bedrooms up. He Room e Real Eatale Exchange | 3148 d Snyder Carenden| for “isis, Terms. “** cease Gar finished = eee ee | os ht “ACRE Pai “PARCELS . * Soe, ee ' Ae ms oO. the trade for location’, re is Orr nge w. TOR er | Cub I recreation re tee bui | Built or this 11 es. Ideal | x : ie OPE you'll a 1cE ‘Huron Y tub D rm. Pon iding site, in 1954 0 ranch hor bes : an 7b stm og Realtor L. SUNDAY 10 vere. NEW GT. i = Lae fr edb ROOMS, ROUSE BULL i 24411 | | ( : paged Lake Prestege spe en co irk mu — of Man ilar I ] ‘> : ; Ra H. - 4 Situ NTs - ox off months LL BATH, | : 1965 : won 500, dav IS THE - ‘ OR 3-1068 Waterford BR meg al. = 3 W Man! 1212 Dec \ alc uees D term BIRD" : Bo wih terme BSN, Be a mae et oe BRET Bales | 136 Y , WACEDAY LAKE SaSeeEtnauett Lane Jha Roy Ann TODAY'S SP voses : 3 760 LARGE 6 . Real Estate 24010 casemente, Gyngelows — Ideal OPE ; FE ‘PIKE rab td bedroom ach | HOMESITES ewlliag name ett Inc waar S SPECIALS Th peed} omnes mOUSE. ebpointments 411.430 outstanding | Co-operative ese 9384 —— yo trontage, "located views 120 tt and a | Oven Ever “ro FEA res cH eons & BAT N e Call ial 4048. busi- on ie wm s per SUNDAY 2 TO | POR, SALE —— ss Exchange ener, — deep le- Likes or Pleacamt ‘a ger with Ace culnas and bends’ 31183 | largest ake,” Watural” ane . ~ NELSON : 015 8 base unfinished DE. « with rge room .| end ke in W Es 6 includ acr beatae: or thr BEAUTIFUL, BUNGAT ap Hes Ey Rir* pasomens lake he ¢ room. ful = eee roped as Wis ae 9500 a = TS eo 40,000 "on. room. mod the lake ge art Attractiy Se, SERCALOW A Seautien FARM trailer Of By wo Btn 7 ones. “411.080 canT Sapoeintment $25 DOWN Hine0 cash PE Be TuRAST GA on term era bem: iow cane cee ADE soil 1 farm BY OWNE cash to mor $06i, . 8 STATIO Big rl ge ten aoonente ohin . a micel moseigd. gosem uaa. 3 | BEDROOM A j ner of ma N & HOM er 18 t ent. ga a- ingle home y remod ¥ good ent. PONT ttent . easy in hi * Sionicon Misa Ever vm “umes oe | rat Shag ofc | Rema Tin ayneereos ee eee = A) OSINE Ea Orse | fs anneal (eae Ge yr room la iw a 00 + with STR state ve VACANT * situated on’ beatin roughout aeauun Gove wil landscaped G pte lde oe Boy Magy paver PP tas or PE miles eorthwest lake frontage downtown Peatne Ons Th . West side $1, 900 shade | shrubs iful lot it. ments r « ont . Can be bd t. Id or FE Ra go. of 4 sell due tiac RANT + Mod Finest in — location just Dp N. or 7 ek a pa A ol * on te hone AYS t on eel 3 FOR COLORED rane information call Ae} a6 pot gs a pootechciem tol pre igg ik fk tor) . ‘ * ern Livi | $8,900 Large lot. rm Eliza- e on two f 13,068 AND TUR. ro RD O bevond ¢ Fre ILIES alter, A. ated TAV sacrifice for on iving with $1 i . FOUR amily 5 KN N NORTH RD Priced ity limits. Co: * t ERN & cash, Our newest 4 be INCOME =r) ae MONTHLY INCOME $14,000. cash ta. m cert. PPINESS Corner -. Wood Co corner - Ss. eae Sale Farm we.oed Deighverhood, Ores in a . . : : ments v 2 ortgage. | Sort OR 3- ms Lake . nea 8 i - ay w s near bri edroom| of Fun —HOd Pato die bedroo SOUN 1235 Ra sents. Fries Su.enen ne BY 48 eek. $6, ck 1 on IE co! large m apart IND V. : Afte . & Mbo For info: $2, — NE. 500 r Pontiec om eh mplete! 3 room - 1 j, > rs r 000. barn. R, ~ | BU ‘ ‘ anch homes ar plus! sito ~ wins road north arate ‘en electric farmaheg tt: wear 8 PERB /ALUE For Sale Resor OR *een ° - 6 ee call ant come Man arn chicken "house, 40 PANTRY, now opetstiny STREET OR sasha avail I ba Mga aay - me| heat 2 | tegen ts Co p- SUNDAY _ | bats ae wane tee Seeetltites “4 7 W. Pik L A. NOTT. = Oa. Pace Ot 3 hannaieaton: aretanrd wd ee Bed t able with lo V ARD E. $5,000 vp oy Sonea saan new exterior entals. = Kempt ea? 8 roo! ke room thd room Aad an A | LAND are boo gre! ; OL 6-0192. ated bl quarters, ei: er n, hstantial 8 Mt a livin bath e with we | sen ton ter ee ¢-6005 7 ms, low co g | REAL’ TO Pz ARTRIDGE SIx income ing. A On custom built wy ——_ dining down. Carpetes a | sites for aa E FOx SUBDIVI- A FARM . amo ak NOW ON TH I st GI | 43 w. R E BEA ACRES 8 36x26 in shell ho red javato! . 2 room. _—— industrial use ple com e buildin 80 ER SF BUSINES: NY OTHE ES: “IA financi and | ¥- Hares 8, Opea Bre Tee | | SuMPUE swoAtSR yall aa le eng hie Slt ior sme: | “le oes mae ee iy opFontuiTaS" 23 cn m Eve. in OR LOW se » storm ent. Cr hii ew ta, i. Mc J = = mwree See io the RIGHT ON CSASHABAW "itron | fered ot sously "used 2 er eneens Sunday ylvan “apes RL ved 4 lane WARD E an 2 el O 1300138 odes, 6 om | room: in nsisting of Sieg been a LOCK. eet or IN UND TODAY’ $12.980, terms, SEE e. New ae 6 p.m Real than er, build “these ae barn REAL TOR -PARTRIDGE ; . © ’ bat ‘i : tod Pah ia ‘ “ Daily and Sund pen avd 138, Hous ag ay mo. ultra modern fatal ins — C Hi APIN- BIGE YOUR FAM “Dream Fines 238 ORCHAR ty able acres, per acre. 40 @ W. Huron st FE 2-8316 Pian lots, e AR ” RCH. Open Viewers” Sunde tf pel sis acd age, ad many other outabe- Bete BIGELOW AUBURN. MEIOHTS eEerton | Tpream’ olne! “ranet aT imogtegeet most. "Sood prossctireNevei | TRO, BA Bees Flee Us. v any 8-11 Lake and ba wood Schoo ON Pruly jome" coi ront 18 x : Bay: oon Iagnwayy Ponting ae Staal have IN a Fe oes iseuat dsen ee een een) | I aes ely finest and 22 BUILDING Edw. M.S piaen Yoo SERVICE STATION conve road. ten Ande: DOR E TRADE | Sir NVESTMENT refegped, porch, Shady i ne with | sale A Brick ml, ebetret ter aren with down ‘arments fs | Open Leb ob GSE BS yfaeorer lease ee & aa Garastion tern le hal RIS & SON 3 bt = Laree buildin 1. cae i ome Been oed size I ra ered for acres with Also pollen th Bao as mn to 8:30 cs FE 5-8165 To eee Pee. ee tenes GE ns for 6 TORS ON pleted odern eastaseat with gioco r gerage, oo oe ppg «let: car Pepa ahr ro ioe pa en ema =n <: 1 to 10! a Sun. 12 to 4 PARTRIDGE ‘ak WM. A 3B Sun. 1 to 6 Fees ve Real Eats is asst | Motioo. This ica" wonder: ‘2, more i a baacadal Sean last year CRAWFORD =e “Sal Troe is THE “BIRD KEN ED . soo Ranch H << 3300 y DOWN meee an. Preod, er Year re ertel spot as {OME E—HAPPIN bematif with view ot a? hed 70 TOWN with ‘ront a as = — nd Contraets § N Full B ome ment, room *. vy $7,900 rent- Ne ESS rom ev wood Li of LOT 1 es. MY FE +1 wo roads frontage ane s 5 erase Y | Bar staue te, es oper s ae ast eevee tos a | mae ees > Eaphattne vo) Ee Re poston | pe eae a oat ng NGS ‘TI sign: se doko a| Ddieted room and 4 ft ties bathe, FOR M IVi- ul ™ vaca} ent. $3900 ILp- TIL turn + dri Wil. mod near! rane bedroom 4 room . Livin bath SA lrose bath, inter be a NEAT WATERFRONT ier ee tans are ser) Sar rome a ee Sar sage ene Gan ake ee Sue get ot buds. Grops | Sy ee RONT je St, ac Lonawerte: w 950 with $56 m pets games cugbera attractive 3 ide Master a oe OA! le home site. MY 3-27 130 Suit- Subdividing an tee reed ° evenings. dis- me, Keeto ak Toss the and Wi)- e have a month- ofl spac iteh~ pes w wood MANO! tL syd. Pul' pric possibili bd \ = ca Harter th [ A a Sadiceme eee tren ae eee Venetian bilm screens, tu dens. D paneled bedrooms. ee aa 2 Po ei r “ada . wire oleae | ak Me come" th shat meee ereeee ee ome, Geir 5 a i ie | fan eee es | Watkine Ps moses) ag Et Seb sa por owt tet sey 7 a Be h. This Vanity. aan tiled ts. Laree Nort! . Doro ce Open 2 to . a term x2io ft i fi nd garb tric range er- W atki 1. ve 50441, saveskarean cent tn- LOVEL Xr email | in bess large ‘kitchen wi 2S AY Side thy Snyder larend HOME iw Loess mi ue. rations oll 100 x ins- Pontiac Est PAUL A. KER t, call FE : basement — ter with m hous room, | a40 ven To LOCATION a © | Was eat, Th: beautiful net build states | 3 ; 7RN 22% room, Fu ideal { io te 8 ake Ideal fo: 2 bed- We. Huron er | you Buy—To Se . ecora professiona is shea) | Oakiand A N, Real : DIS . ND staat arias | Peat Si re teea-naeee | ante seca sibel tt | PRS eis ance "E e ae ESOT yo. 900, terms car ga aS . nice 2-411 tt INSURE trave ao dranetien pee: bus se POR F Since 19 tract fo discou from back. z E IT lent Tse rod peries : es. ice, AR ae bedroo r $4,035 nt nets sale. ~~ beck jomt sand beach is, Excel- 1s ae roads. Rutied ge ys a ae bedroom west 12: k «gon, 00. price Ss good Wat : S\N 211) FE ith fur suburban ect 2 Tinvswedi ores, too. SUN 4 Directions 100 x peed! down ak TALL 7 e 4-000 FE con en SUN ) il arg il Daeg 192 C 30 TO 6 Rad. just past. Lake Orion” nice ™ nelghborsood (Ra Here la-@ lovely, room C. W . ] to 6 lea att Eee ssion edardale S Co-operative. woe tae Ake Orion. mgr pe : very; 13 .—— m , stery Cobar ood Co. LAK City." House ar ee Ho (Off Earimoo: t. Es Real Retate cn oan Indian- "$60 with $70 down. Soate = is chiehan Bouse sere | OR 3.1395 O. New al \KEFRONT © cleciric stove." Storms for ren Colored F FE 2-02 imagenes | ee eas coun ae fous. £2 barn. le x2 carace Bem 18 —_ Aer 8 Sttice “open . This is ym included. and MO. Axouy amil : : agi . Mr. Es- 180. buildin, s flowers with Beauti- GONTRAGT ghetto ae “iS se: sere = fb ed home | fonpy ve are ‘only 0700. ba TAXES y nexr Rook’ vate : : roads, > the bus ¢ sites. 100 x satirely = rubs. preratoums. dive. $50 $083.60. ) A. well north . Located have it over. 0. See this POST TO B $505 se to | 3 now rty is rest. LI month. 6 R CENT 7 door landscaped aeons 5% $7450.00 room, 1 oe and 4 NCH P do ed at dite is Hamed 17-0423 alter per ‘anh on 3 ae oul © son = 3; Usbee Full Pri Youn with ar oe INCOM 100 erry Ac with $5.00 20% Pm eiicnttaeecs| E bad ae sie | Se, era nny wn tes mes | Sa a pe dee lene gq tg a 3 lords ime w oe sell gas Ad ‘ . Pally 670 oe one tomes s. High! 2 bom tract ! road er, : e look te he fu w, and ranch y | § room. es = t erty beg herp aa, wood ‘coun |e cee ed. ‘at this Ler to os m7 incom = se thee City Ih miles north goon rooms at y ieone anf month, Payments ‘$52 from tnd just “2 rty | room’ that porary wer oom % fo "oe fete pogh fa on Boo entuned vecena'f e with 2 rest Con ‘terre e ee, ; vedrooms’ wi ayy Ay ful length ‘pi Bagh bo Ask ALSO really Bon Guitkhow' cay oo Rage 2 more in wo hee living ~ 3 he Ce jecure guaee, home “auto ue 2 WILLIS 100 Dunn Fa with brick firep! - Uae iP) basement. “Exce pews a large | Youn shee weak, yard. Oni . beat deady Fenced M. BREWER 100 x 378 ft. rms a Oak foore, ment, ellent it tne a bags | more atttasey on and monte inate ryt Aly FE 45181 EM 3-4900 ‘Eres limits. pte ape gh om te £ with attached inves mic til: , ulasaee inca er month including insureney | SEE gies ay planned trot Pontiac “eis ving room.” prone. @ moll RAY O’ ali “Pua Coram and foeeree CECI . JAMIN & WHY aires Soe, ene, living. “f pom | — 4 -— 6. kitchen. NEIL, Real sure te tied | back payments L HM LET "EM 8 ENS, inc. |A PAY. = as low a Beez its, Priced of shower, | phone FE aitor dar Yh Geeta 3m We stg BoE |A SUMMER COTTAGE LA Pha] Se oneredt BR this. sie R ' _ When 6) DD’ = I : 22 a | 92 Ez we TT “W ALTY CO. MER COTTAGE | op'agt*? >, Inc. meen ACRE FARM Bue dor DISCOUNT HI" bed- _ m lovely bedr Colonial ract ill discount ; a PAY oes, Wy einen 2406 Pontia Ss colon. oF ge Sg — Seem Gent ee $5,174 con * PE e-Ti74, Culored. ie ROOMS, — c vs massive condition A is ine with ttl west suburban tunralow (= : ‘4 NEAR _tighborhood. peer Rd. or M' “4 SR 15 x 1. utiful | 8¥ and Wittoo, ke prvtieees built on larne a ¢ rooms gad beth. city : F "em ire to ide ¥ 33 livios Be agen Witeme Inne” wane “ watt, Ge ment, 2 car or Saie Acrea “west home rt at fnctuded | F, * . : ie maoy po Sed ge 47 living Ld ¢E tenant t bedroom _W fe) Phone | see Dine Neal w lv rooms, showe se a ses thn full bath. ith | Corne: od i ; OR oe = carpeting in room, wall 4 fa in St shine <2 ape aite The OR er Wiliams Le GC: ue ie or : room living room pn — ard most on | ke Rd, boat f +1 .. $800 and CLA re © = scan sort ev laws a. Afler 5 call fice & Moe aces i 5-3578 sc ula aaa 25 PER to cal OR 3.3000 ‘whom 4% MILES i, Mesty 94 FO gal aR CENT Disco wet £3. Price $1, . "7 v we pa UNT 850. with $7 . 6 per vable #360, ON. $6, Clas. I i 660. p Baad interest, m sified A bungalow eat, Cost to you what you is! To swap cP (room ‘mod: what you nt, need for f° 2-8181: jo, call | & i pl | Ni oie THE PONTIAC PRESS, deriva. JULY. 23, 1955 ° Buckner’s to here CASH “to $500.00 2nd floor Nat'l Bidg.—over Wal- ereens Pontiac -e 12 Dixie Highw: Dravion Pisins Barnst,, (next to banky ‘allied Lake : ABOUT ANYTHING (YOU WANT CAN BE FOUND AT L & 8. End , $1, i; Bew book ub, ats Sa aan ms up; chests, w sees livia room sues 12.68 wpe din: ing room suites. $19.50 hoes | Use OUR EASY PAYMENT in We buy, sel BOTTLE GAS: tor es ne cemece sans Pu R 3-2491. . elgas. Roose en AND ‘xia WiTH pete; new $xl2 kitchen lineoleum a $28 to omer toin to $500 tress: blo blond parery chair, new; 3% EB. LAWRENCE FE 27131 IENDLY RV CHINA CABINET SorrEY GooD “GET MORE AT BENEFICIAL on. Must sell. FE 4-5772. “Yes” - CHROME DINETTE SETS aS- mptiy to em loyed en and women, PLUS a ‘BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. Poet Lean Co 7 West Lawrence Bt. FE 23-0240 Pontiae GET CASH QUICKLY JP to $500 to 1953 cars. Bring vour title mp deals Gued 30 minutes. iso made * furniture. youd al and other securities. Oakland Loan Co. FE 2-9206 202 PONTIAC STATE DANK BLDG. LOANS $20 TO $500 gnature Only ti 1 OU FSEHOLD FINANCE CORP. OF PONTIAC 3'4 8. Saginaw 8t. FE 4-0535 TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202N. MAIN ROCHESTER, MICH. LOAN 825 TO 9500 LIVES HOUSEHOLD GOODS Ph. Rochest er OL eos) OL 14791 _ WHEN YOU NEED $29-$500 can eet it quick!y on vour cienature — us furniture. No en- beaeet, We "will e « you with your money ~roblems. FINANCE CO. FE 4-1574 102 Pontiac State Bank Bide. Need $500 or Less WITH QUICK SERVICE? Then Home mh Auto i — place | te come Most on vour ture or signature rf repay lan suited so vour needs Vv courteous service awaits Fie ar er, Leslie Berkeley Voss, Presid Ph. FE a Home & Auto Loan Company Hours: 9 to 5; Saturday ® to 1 _407_ Community Nat'l Bank Bidg. ____ Mortgage L Loans 54 meade ~~ LOW INTEREST Unitm ited: fente - single family | dwell rterer canceled reer die, hould ‘borrower die. see “HH. G. PETERSON 310 Pontiac State Bink Bide, | Phone FE 5-0406 or FE _5-6772__ LOANS ON HOUSES FE +4 Swaps 55 __ 8175. Tr Bas SB Ror olan LARGE 6 HOUSE ALL modern, w swap land contract or vacant w Cooperative Real Be v3 5 cow. | dition, Will swap for 2 wheel trailer, cement mixer or cash. ¥ ae MOTOR AND = ol aes. Com- iid penegg ay plete like D —o pan he outboard wr o cheap. FE FoR SWAP BOUITY IN 5 ROOM FOR SWAP, TE esas = paras 1960 RUNS For 14 ft, boat, window . oF r what, -! a noo HOUSE MODERN. City. Trade for modern 3 bed- room brick on lake or jake privi- jeges, FE 5-6376 after 4 p.m. TRADE YOUR LAND Cc egy RACE furniture. Se ater for Ph Sitted chen soe EXCH * ‘cz mre vag Lig i ag down, Terms if desired. FE For Sale Clothing 56 . FE Sale Household Goods 8? 57 DAVENPORT AND CHAIR. 4 sneen. OR_3-1735. server; curv Sasi D ix), PAIR OF v1 RUGS. 5 bre AN migcton ain OF Shaver | { For aie dryer D> ta’ And eve semble these yourself and save. Four chairs and table. $69.95 val- ue, $30.95 ese are brand pew 1955 models. ."amous make, For- tops, all popular colors. , look. compare and convinced of these extraordinary bargains ray Fluorescent, 303 S oiard bake Ay 0.5 CU ph Rad: onograph, high fid Sideiny blond console. Rem- ington deluxe shaver. new $10. 65 8. Francis. FE 4-4007. DEMONSTRATOR DORMEYER double basket French fryee, $35. R. B Munro Electric. Wé0 W. Huron, inette. Teeter- frame, OR %-6031 ex thaggth ie ome stroller Bed ee. Dressing ‘able, $7. “SHELVADOR REPRIG- Sacy and iate "model, $75. L) Chosl ey DARK WINE AXMINSTER RUG 13 ft. x 13 ft. Can be seen at fees Meadowlawn or cal) FE oa FREEZE. t UPRIGHT. ONE of a 8 best perpen Freezer a r y $405. for $278 Blightly scratched in transit. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave. ELECTROMASTER FTOVE. GOOD | condition, $30, OR 3-1777. 2941 _ Silverhill. EXPANSION SALE | On al) new and used furniture. Fitts i. 0 60 per cent, reakinvt set, $15. Go ir spring. bd cotton mattresses, $9. Ne saormeees mattresses fis.se. Cc binets, 625 $35. | 2 pc. sections, living "oom suite, $20. | Apt. size electric ators $30. | B. le ‘ange, $29. thing for your home. We buy, sel] and exchange. Come in and be convinced. . OAKLAND FUR NITURE 104 8. Saginaw FE 2-55 ELECTRIC REF EFRIGERATOR, ott Ceasiton: ft. Mi ELECTRIC STOVE $20. BOOK- $5. Dinette set, $30, like oon, Telephone stand, 88. FE 5-2766 ELECTRIC RANGE. FULL SIZE. BABY CRIB, BASSINETTE, BATH- | For Sale Miscellaneous 60 Sale Household Goods ‘37 9x12 LINO. RUGS, .$2.98 ELECTRIC ‘Shite, condition, reasonabie. EM NORGE “aL FURNACE 1 IDEAL Solid beg + peat, Maple —* wal: _glasses. odd aie hes vias. »” RAN Rs ~ 9 __g00d condition, MI 4-6800 Oak DINING SUITE, HOLLY- wood b chest, apt ei =e “(electric), refrig. chine, other eens, 4003 Sestead: Drayton Plains. Phone OR 3-4466. wo A ne MIRAL COMBINATION, *WALTONTV \ Walton, Cor Josiyo PE2-2257 | NEW “AND USED PURNITURE | Stoves and refrigerators, Every- Baldwin reduced in price. 1220 ‘: Baldwin PENNY PAINT SALE Flouse Paint, 1 gal. ......+-0. 63 98 2nd gal. at lo ...... secccscsce 02 Two gals, f0F ....ccccecsivere 63.00 Rubber base — al. ...0. 03.89 repay along te ral SES i pain < 0 : FLOOR SHOP Ope 59 a : a at REPRIGERATO cu. _Norge. TEs 188 S Chamberiain. _ REBUILT MAYTAG AWN DEAS __ spin dryer, | guaranteed. FE 4- 4-5160. ROOM AIR CONDITIONER. FITS ene window, Like new. FE 164 REFRIGERATORS, LAST YEAR’ s| One of America’s best brands, Perfect, new, guar-_ anteed for § vears. Buy a new refrigerator for a little more than a used machine. Michigan Flu- orescent, 303 Orchard Lake Ave. SERVELL REFRIGERATOR. RUN- _ning _ condition _$%. FE 4-2436 2? SMALL RUGS AND RUNNER. 1954 models. upholstered? chair. metal wa robe, fireplace screen. PE 5! §-8787 STOVES BOUGHT SOLD. _ EX- changed Ropes 602 Mt. Clem- _ens FE 2-080 SAVE — Paint It Yourself COMPLETE BEDROOM OUTFIT ‘Artists’ scovliee, hobby _ supplies--check our clas- sification “Hobbies and Supplies” No, 24A. ADMIRAL © x CONDI- tioner, 1-3. h.p. $150. 49019. | aruet Wawa i 2 Se 4lM0ST NEW REEAM WATER softener with borin ik and 1 handle control valv: e. 000 grain unit Condition excellent Neat __larger unit. PE 4-4025 after 7 5 m. AIR COMPRESSOR. tor, EM _ 3-4827. ACCOUNTANT ~{NVENTORY. < OFr- fee furniture and other Bar- min 65530 oa Dr., Walnut ake, MA 6- AIR Seeeaced, JACK HAM- mers, power ——. chain saws, CON E'S RENTAL 1251 Baldwin FE 20077 ANCHOR FENCES No money down. FHA approved _FREE ESTIMATES 56-1471. ~~ AT BIG SAVINGS Good stre' nt ased tumber 2x4— 2x6—2n8—2n12 “ust acrve a car of 2x4x8 and x6 tr Sh eating New lush 7 Fecha trom $550 up Windows made to your order R ck woo! tnsuiction—Tec-bag Resdimis corcrete and mortar. pus ingles-roofing-nails and many otner oullding seeds. [amsere lead ca of ae Ib. — . gener op "your c mplete } SUR PLUS. L .UMBER Bales (se OR 37092 : Ol. and steam soilers, antounstie water heater. ware elec! . galvanized co fittings Lowe ; ieicurs 3 SUPPLY 368s Perry Y BARBER cuares 5 LOUNGE chairs. Sterilizer, ete FE 5-3331. | 16 * aA TENT GUITAR. BLOND baby bed. Girl's = roller shates. Size 5. FE 4 BUILD YOUR OWN SS AND AVE ore R HA wb Tare . Lem oo restricted su pea) We ll furnish lot and materials for as low as $1,000 nee or build to your — re c . ies and 2x6". No 2 short oak flooring $122 M Sheathing board $75 to $100 M. De wl . x An aluminum Ccounieahien RLACK ETT'S BEDG, SUPPLIES 8161 Dixie Hwy Clarkston MA Paint. COME AND GET IT Newlv fallen oak trees for fire- for immediate Wat- Place wood. Free removal 4365 Forest Ave. 1 Sliding door peatieerd -» $14.95 | 1 Hollywood frame ...... 8.95 | 1 4dr chest, yonzte3s | sone 34.95 1 Vanity a00) 8 95 1 Vanity bench . : 3.05 1 Mirror, 20224 10.05 | COMPLETE $62.70 | Box spring .or innerspring mat- tress, any - ome, Liss $34 50 value) ...... 4 24.50 PICK & PAINT STORE, 143 Oakland Ave 5-9662 SEWING MACHINE. ora UM bags repairing, rebuilding. FE | SALE Used washer. $14.95 aod up. Auto, gas heater, $10. Ot) auto. heater, $15. Used sees range $10.05. model Hoover, $40.95, Ploor mode! eo range, regular $239. $170 06 = floor smedel freezer, Was $429.06 "CRU MP ELECTRIC | | pearly new, Coleman floor fur- | condition, Terma. 6180 | ‘ELECTRIC STOVE BENDIX Washer and dryer, EM 3-2060. le ELECTROMASTER | ELENTRIC Tange, $35. FE 4 POR SALE COARAWTEED RE. | frigerators $30. u Wringer ones Sielelsiers acuum cheanetp . Roy's 96 Oakla nd” 2 SMALL RUGS AND RUNNER, upholstered chair. Metal ward- Trobe. ne fifeplece screen PE S-8187 6 CU. PT. NORGE .EFRIGER- ator, $36. 197 Washington. |GENEVA KITCHEN CABINET sink, 54 ip. Suitable for cottage. $12. MI 4-0005 GIBSON REFRIGERATOR $49 50. Maple cest, $35. Twin size box | spring on legs, $20. Double bed, box springs, $15. 3 table lamps, $5 each, floor lamp, $10, Loveseat, | _ $65. FE 23-1068. | 54@" SOLID OAK DINING BUFFET, | Se et Conway piano, $50. jawekats - ELECTRIC STOVE. Large sofa, $0 gal. electric water _heater, FE 5-466, 00 Gas STOVE, GOOD COND, Large ‘t. fan for office or home. Mi 64 6-1575 ° Napla cost REFRIGERATOR. $65. spring (om logs. 80-3 tabi jam ps, lamp, ‘ Loveseat, PE 2 a - HOOVER ‘vacuUM. NEW, 14.90 New Hoover unrieht and nk, 860.06 rts, all JULY CLEARANCE $50.05 chairs es c LAYTON'S © Furniture, Appliances er, $130. 1 GE 2-door. 10 cu. ft. refrigerator $300, 1952 Ken- HioterPuprieh sweepers 0 13 joover 8 . schester. OL 62511. KELVINATOR REFRIG. REASON- able, FE 5-797. KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR. Excellent runnine condition. $25. 6452 Carrol) Lake, Sone Com- __merce. KROEHLER 3 CURVED fas sectional. cua 3 years old. 40058. ee LEAVING STATE 6 ROOMS OF furniture Including TV stove frigerator washer. All day Sat. and Sun. weekdeves after 5 Raeburn es LARGE RanD CR BED- o— — eee oe jesenee eather, $20. bt fter 5 p.m. \SPECIAL PRICES = 5 pe. wood dinette, $24.95. uw Swivel commer 4b $00.88 for spel a7} | soot = twin beds. 00s s . Roudete eo ofl Ono ercoer as value floor lamps, $3.95 up. ve gas y = EG IS gees here. 4ulsbrook ae Regular ina, $200.05 now ............. “fies WYMAN Ss Table lamps” up 8 W_ Pike only 465 Auburn Rd PE 43573 | | SIMMONS SOFA BED. $20; 2 PR. paberythed drapes, size 45 x 84 and aot ee TaEae | SPRINGS, $10 AND MATTRESS, | Sec for double bed. Frame with | «8 oq 3B FE 23-6687, 2505 Sylv _ Shores Dr 1 USED BENDIX AUTO, WASH- er a0 : 1 used Launderall Auto, washer 040 1 Savage Comb. washer “and *Feow. 2 $108 value for caly 000.26 | oew, « $165 ¥ or only | : “PaSY TERMS WYMAN'S 18 West Pike Street BRAND | HAR- VES RS 16 FT MODEL 6310. 20 FT. MODEL 6350. KING BROS. CREDIT TERMS 4 FE 1112) YOUR 1-B DEALER PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE CONDE fHROW RUGS, APARTMENT ons range, cooking uteusiis. PE 96116. TRADE Ons RANGES POR ELEC. trie R Munro Electric, 1060 Ww. coe GSED WASHING MACHINES, $23 9° and up. R. B Munro Elec- : W.HAuron USED TRADE-IN DEPT. REBUILT WASHERS. GUAR. $29.95 Rosen. Leg guar,, $69.95 up. 2pe, living room suites, $14.95 up ire USED TRADE-IN DEPT. Lounge chair [4 Studio co Electric fr $40.50 re 4 feet table and 4 = chairs, hefrigerator with freeser chest, $90.50 Automatic —— 2 yr. old, —e THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE Co: 361 8. ae st. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN __ USED TV $29.95 UP USED RE- frigerators $4095 up Sweet's! Pe eit M geremens 422 W Huron “VERY REASONABLE + of all PF E. How _kins Lake CLOSING (¢ OUT $495 PAINT 1c TILE 9x : INLAID | LINBOLEUM | SMT HS 27S. ae COTTON CANDY MACHINE AND | stand. Very reasonable. OA 8-2082 CEMENT FINISHING MACHINE Whitman, 36 ‘n., like new. Cement os. 1 bag. also like hoes. wheel bar- _tows. etc, $1500. EM 3-48: 3-4825 2 WHEEL TRAILER FE_5- CLEARANCE SALE 50 NEW POW MOWERS REEL new ERAL GOOD CREDIT TERM B. P. EVANS Lana bor 6507 Dixie Hwy A &-TH7R 1.000 USED BRICK ean ady to — bape for out- _side grill. 4-1432 000 CoaMan 0 furnace, thermostat, _tank. $100. FE 5-0940 _ CATERPILLAR. dover. 2-4087. L FLOOR | fitter, 220 | D4 WITH I 1945, Good condition, OL CASH FOR FURNITURE BR +1 | DIVING TI Lung acon > CONDI- tion, EM 34537, 0 “DRAW “TITE E HITCHES CHROME OR CADMIUM PLATED The kind that bolt to the frame Bm of cars . 346 Jixte Hw, ee i456 — DUO-CONTROL OVERLOAD. springs, Will fit ‘40 to ‘54 Chev _“s price, FE ¢6769. 2 ELECTRIC STOVE. 5130 LEATH- er bookcase, bed, inmer spring mattress with box spring, ay! sie” and stroller FE FUEL OIL TANKS 275 gal. 18 In. lees, cauge Ne fill at Delivered %35 50 Fon SALE 30 PE RUBBER FOR: peo rubber belt conveyor Price $1 H. P. MY 12 95 “en ie with oe mew Sh cae taken —- tory vecende— “SORtY Sey “gage 8 . Sala tet CUPP sae FE 56-7433 on Tel CHURCH S INC ALUM. ap Re DOORS, $34.95 vor oe mp 6 CHAIR. Dixie — we ro GRRL aes 115,000 D coumtes flow Complete oa cortrols Excellent cond Saoa Stan Garwood Heating —M _ GARAGE OR ELECTRICAL MAIN- ance. Tool box and tools jn good condition, First good offer takes them. FE 2-4564. _ Se ke “USED 3 ms %. 24, 30 ft Others 8 and 10c per ft ge? Hal annex, 36 «Hill "oe. 27 GARAGE DOORS. 8 FT_X 8 FT. Fine condition, $5 each, FE 2-3334, GIRL'’S PLAY CLOTHES | Lake, near near Telegraph G&M COM PANY SAWS AN!) MOWERS py ee to Forced to sel] 3 yr. old furniture, like new, because we are moving. 3 Piece bedroom suite in blond wood. j Twin beds and dresser in ma- | hobany. | Lo chair 430 ri Soc Asson aL Baby, bed tai a $15. Spe pn sreeeap use. toon | e en ir ms ke new, FE 52766. J Lega mahogany dining room Call Birmingham, MT 4-6202 Mon- Lord’s Specials 1 pony beg oom pve ee 2 Be: soared e200 $88 | WED! FORNITURE Used TVs from €94.96 .. pb ete up “Sisne cad oats tb cna. = mm oeeeners Used gas stoves eo ‘00 " WAYNE GABERT’S Waa SPEctals Furniture and Appliances er PE Kew pare take ba. 128 Ww. Woes 0 Does 2 Be = TV, 16 in, New — tINOLEUM AND PAINT SALE Maytag automatic washer. A-1 e at Jack's 277 Baldwin. . —_ ae ee Linoleum, 9x12 sisieins $2. 49 dover ‘cleaner. ays shape $8 SURPLUS PAINT ......... $1.40 ne ‘ Seacsbassss 00. EASY TERMS White Hamel ee Fe NX, Saginaw 6180 ME icccsesstecsiec SED . ELECTRIC RANGE : us a weesecwe nun ss me $40. RB. Munro -Westinghouse 30" electrie ranve ~~ wide oven. A real buy 1x only 49.95. 1960 N. “ovighe ase, homies A For Sale Miscellaneous 60 AIR COMPRESSOR. 8TOC. NT aoe TACKLE ETC 2 PER | OF CENT OFF FE 5-7635 __ 2255 | 30 Gat, POT iT fYPE WATER HEAT- 50 fal drums, copper Semen “and ittings, $30. Lawn mower, $3. PE 45489, HOT wate kate . 360 GAL. as. New, approved for use on onsumers’ es, $08, and $119.50 . $40.50 50, se are slightly marred. Also electric, off bottled gas — era at vw on 303 “Orchard Lee ve, HOT POINT AUTOMATIC W B. oe table top both At 4465 Motor- le "bers By #31 95 BA 1 eet ao w St. NSIDE P wet 4d 4 eet = eons se | FE 21033 f Der vive and | BULL. | £ __Waiton | CARNIVAL ~ * . by Dick Turner bi Gopr. 1958 by NEA Bervice, ime. 7. M. Reg. 0. 8. Pat “What a system! We spend money we don't have for things we don’t need in order to impress people we don't like!” For § Sale Miscellaneous 60 60 -KENTILE Six marbie colors, 9x9x% inch, rig _ 393 Open 0-0 KITCHEN CABINET CENTS EACH FLOOR SHOP 9 8 Saginaw St. uorescent, 393 Orchard For Sale Miscellaneous 60 REINFORCED CONCRETE SEP- tic tanks. Ph FE 46426. ROMEX, | Siac FT. 250 FT. COILS. G. A,_ Thompson. 80 8. Perry. 2i_+IN. R.C.A. CONSOLE TV. % bed, bed springs, Sealy's in- nerspring mattress, electrical cooking appliances. 122 Lafay- ette, after 5 p.m. Go upstairs. STOP een Evicted 4 Heornte it's @ JACOBSON Now at eee EQUIPMENT 6507 Dixie Hw LARGE \ ara PUMP Heese! ein — _engine. FE 5-2 LAVATORIES, tolletas terrific values. These are crate marred. i core LETE WITH $24.50 value $14.95. Also “pathtubs, shower stalls at Fluorescent, Orchard Lake Ave. _ se| LIONEL & AMERICAN FLYER TRAINS ‘ED FACTORY SERV. “LUMBER ASH AND CARRY Ced A st al) vew Plasterboard oath t Bi - ft $7.96 up. nsulation, tem. rock Wool bag. $1.00, Oak foo ea. Me rde, 7 Rocfing No, pos La td Lan wiasowe t ne . ywoot ola “sgosiing Conbinat oy m= oy be, cr bp poet A og tile, t Lom! 6120 Bogie La! ska Snoones “au NEW aND pen FURNITURE Petrigera’ and electric. heating eoun * and wa- ter heater, oot cottares Term TRAILER | EXCHANGE. PE 2- MYERS PU EU FS nanny 15. Lo hee p shallow poy jet with 1) eal Reeular $125, oh vot ees fet with KEI 3994 Auburn Heiehts FR 28801 iank Sere LLY'S HARDWARE «* Adams Auburn PAINT SALE 1947 arden 1503 8 retogs Mi i Pir preeeteeees $3.36 ie AINT GRADE asa WACCERTY LUMBER t CO iene a one available W we (Ni le Rad., Birmingham. Arnason NEW (GALVANIZED PIPE PE 247 ies 630 Oakland 1 PLUMBING SPECIALS 3 piece bath sets. Ao com) , $115. eel sink. ay to é: Sun. 10 to 2 cA ae g g Supply 950 M-15 Ortonville Phone 130 We _ Deliver All PLYWOOD kinds at lowest prices, Also Cabinet Hardware, wholesale and Ponting Plywood Co. Tat ‘aidwin Ave. FE rd B SP partment 950 M15 Ortonville a 130 We Deliver — “|Save Money at BURMEISTER’S LUMBER 800,000 Foot Gale Buys in lumber now oing, on AT BURMEISTER'S OUR PRICES ARE NOT O Low. ah OUR tence Ly 3 YARDS TO SERVE YOU = en eS. aceuee &. sheet ixe od, “pine ‘bas M. 1x wp s. per 1x12 std. w. > hs 5 ws a Fe $° 2 «a 5 > pal ae H R ES . 3 3 K “3 cs ss 40 power mowers, from .. i 3 pe. colored set, all fittings, seat, cast iron tub $140. BARDWARE ~- PLUMBING DELL PAINTS ARE BUILDING A VE OUT BUR- ND 8A UP TO MATERIALS MAKE SUR IT'S BURMEISTER Northern Lumber Co. 8197 Cooley Lake Rd Pontige <5 can EM 33747 ous PL 11-4184 STORM SASH Aluminum comb and doors, LOW FE 4-6089 9 am. w 9 p.m. SUMMER PRICES ON COAL M.A. | BENSON suuMEn PRICES ON COAL N Saginaw me 4-362) 3: * ‘LL FURN. $5, F E “9-9602, STEEL _and controls. | om UM iM ERSALE _ Ine, offers a prices won't last, Get Your paonerie’s aow, Later ” 40¢ iin sive score 4x8x' eh aon _ | Cement Noe per Doors, windows. co Dereon. radiators, -_ kinds of "TAK bidg. mate E ADVANTAGE OF THIS SALE Brine vour truck or trailer, ‘Cash and carry only) UNION WRECKING CO., INC. 1445 W. 8 Lv “Corner Orchard i DAILY a) ee 8Ue 0 2 KENWOOD 5-0200 i2 x 14 SIDE WALL TENT WITH fit . Good condition. Price on aa PIPE, CRT nt ~ WAR lL, SHOWERS - pe ccatenetes a faucets and curtain, 50. Terrific value 3 puavek ries, om w chrome Sarva. p00 Foitets. 38.95 val- we $10.05, These are factory sec- onds, Michigan Fluoresce 303 oO ¢ Ave, ES POSTS, EA. $6.50 Ready Be Cement, per sack En) Tn Brick Mortar, per sack ..... $1 peding | Ga pall ne BLAYLOCK COAL & BUILDIG SUPPLY CO. $i_Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-101 276 Garage Doors ae For Sale Miscellaneous 60 60 Und Bie Materials of All a Lumber, “Goer. "indows, pide. * Open Sunday “ Pachoud Wrecking Co, GRED F FURNACES on} BURNERS, wers eee Beating a we Be ond OL, 30211. UsED LUMBER “IMBERS. dxés, picnic table material, FE 29-8745. fiat Meadowlawn "For Sale Pets. 69 AKC REG PuR- een pion Eberie” ee ae 8 i es new home at 3il + ae DACHSHUND PO PUPPIES. BMA __Size, 2 months old, MA 4-1485. 3 FEMALE | GERMAN SHEPHERD months old. FE #- WALL CABINET ’ KITCHEN IN, A $30.50 i . _orescent, 393 Ore a SINKLER t, WALL | FURNACES i Saee 2m eal DE DRILLING RIG 25% DISCOUNT On remaane 7? Williams Secentions* colors of Cem Glo of! base flat paints. Oskiand Fuel end being _436 Orenard Lake Ave PE 5-6150 Do It Yourself aad FC IR RENT Floor sanders ~ hand sanders - wall paper steamers - Wwaxers and furnace I . Oak- land Fue) and Paint, 436 Orchard o-6150. ee USE OUR TOOLS YOU OWN plumbing. wiring, repairing. Com- plete stock sol) sewer crock e ox ry Thursday, WHY PAY THE HIGH |F% DOLLAR FOR PAINT? HIGH QUALITY FULLY GUARAN D PLYCOTE PAINT PER GAL. $1.95 UTCHCRAPT GAL. 5 FR. PER GAL. $3.05, are $-ENAMELS KING BROS, 0 gal. mag gan heater ... $49.95 Cab. fittings 1.50 uy na Csundry 5 —, faucet, $2), SAVE vey 5. Saginaw St. Talbott Lumber = wae Paint, also Spread nd Gold Bond rub! ber base, oe rE 4-0734 PE 41112 PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE Cameras, Equipment O1A 8 MM. KEYSTONE MOVIE caM- era ond peed jector. $50, Call be- fore 5, 3-4880, GTHER CAMERAS & EQUIPMENT under “Hobbies & Sup plies,” classification number 24A, Sale Musical Goods ‘ 62 ATTENTION SUMMER vacaTiow- tet Learn to pilav the accordion the. apiece a easy Way at, SE cord le h tog G eshte cise Sup" sare TABY GRAND | PIANO. ANO. USED. made by Baldw $250, John Quitmeyer, OL 23-5036 BEAUTIFUL SMALL 8 SPINET P7- PI- Like new Save $300. Gal- _lagbers. FE 4-0566 CABLE SPINET PIANO, RESPON- sible party to bas ever monthoy _payments op $18.50, FO 6-5608. PIANO fUNiINY AND REPAIR ing. Oscar Schmidt. FE 23-5217 STARCK BABY GRAND | LOVELY _finish, Excellent tone, OL 1-6374, SMALL APT. PIANO. LIKE NEW. Priced 9 ® quick sale. Gal- la SUM MER PIANO SPECIALS Pianos great'y reduced for quick sale. From $75 & up. Gallaghers. FE 4-0566. VALVE TROMBONE. _rel_ Rd. Auburn Hr'-bts NATIONAL CASH used im service station, dition. Call afte: ot . #76 SQUIR- | Sale Office Equipment 63 Good con- 6 pm OR BABY ‘PARAKEETS. PE ¢-1018, 100 Fs NN PUPS CHAM- pion . Make excellent house Y + —o POINTER Pore FE cs NG, SETTER. BIRD DOG. PUP- pes Oe $5 oe up, One § mo. male. — STE FREE, ee Ae KITTENS FREE TO GOOD HOME. FE 41665, | PARAKEETS "A AND oe ANARIES. _2489 Auburn Rd FE 4-6510 PARAREETS 8 OPALINES; CA- nartes, 1304 At. Clemens. FE ARA, CANA a food. 1927. 584 Oakland Ave, PARAKEETS - PET SUPPLIES. Dancey’s, 338 Voorhies, PE 5-5831. and | “PONTIAC PET SHOP 373 Auburn Ave. Aa 4 —o birds and RABBITS. ALL SIZES. _bred does, also hutches. FE FE 5- Saner, REGISTEREZD BOXER. 677 JOS- _lyn. REG. AKC REG. DACHSHUND. Beek, ‘and tan female. 3 mos, old. 2-6154, Tropi- pets and sup- ALE ae St ae cal SHAWNEY¥ “Ae aa ae a won Farmin: ton 2043 or wd *5r “FORD sy Rice POWER ft, 6 ft blade. 1 draw bar, perfect condition, A se cee “Auction Sales -77 AUCTION ‘TD buen acle Porm, For Sale H | 78 aeonrane TOY FOX TERRIER _ puppies, OR 3-2568, REGISTERED > pest ‘ood line €38 _Sise" orchard ‘bak Rd, PE é SOFSTERED BOSTON BULL Lv and «ros for sale. 16206 wy net to Parkwav ed This A Aa Worth. WP 400 of. a 591 4th srakeet Cag cic Sun. WHite MIC HAMSTERS, ALL Pet Shop, 69 8. Astor. PE 4-6433. Dogs Trained, Boarded 70 NRL ce ll BOARDED. and de- PPO sLL BREEDS Trained, BOARDING. BATHING AND > CLIP- ping. 74 N. Per FE 2-6113 DOGS. ATS BOARDED. LOGS Oparrenell. 3% 6, Tele Ci _Hay, Grain & Feed 71 “its ALL KIN OF HAY AND CORN. 37 ACRES ALFALFA, READY As) cut, Cheap. ba | «ae Bilvervel Rds, ose helore . om, . 1 >. ‘ttle horse Sd if ea oy, ter's, 2104 Silverbell Corner Joslyn, FE 54-1039 CUSTOM COMBINING WITH SELF propeller com Make arrange ments now, “eas 62179 GOOD @ 7: A A, Brome ae Hoge Will deliver. _ Reasonable. ME 4-3075. HAY CLOVER AND TIMOTHY | — Round bales, 30c from e field. J. Todd, EM Bs Williams Elia, Lk. Rd _Ra. Lk. Rd between and Cooley Lk. eens MOBILE, APARTMENTS With storm & — many ee ae ore, Qeed colection Ber or ‘e will Se et eee on fur what have Oxford Trailer Sales | “GOOD MILKING COWS. "rm and s tested. Holstein. “Sale Sporting Goods 68 12 GAUGE PUMP J. C gins, used twice, 5% h.p Johnson motor. Used about ts hours. $175. MA 6-2577__ BURR-SIELL GUN SHOP. BUY. Sioa 3% 3 «Telegraph. FE. ~~ GUNS - BU ADE Manley leach, 10 Segiey _ JOHNSON me ag = 2% WP. _ $60. 832 Ann St. Birmingham. | TWO 3 2 ) CALIBER . One all WANT .270, NO 0, Tats, : HAVE KY. long _rifie. s Sand, Gravel & Dirt 6 Al 1 TOP SOIL, CRUSHED STONE. vel fib. Lyle Conklin. FE Fe bfi2 or “1 TOrech. FILL DIRT, SAND gravel EM 3.8742. ee DIRT 6 aL + ate ravel, clay, or Pe ba343 BLACK DIRT AND GRAVEL BY yard, FE 17-8003 ee and septic ake yall A Sand and Gravel Davs FE 3-01 Eves. FE 41072. FOR SALE: FILL DIRT. WE CAN a and ae EM 3-6376. 1270 | FREE MAN TO ANYONE who we Sainerone __and Square Lake FREE PILL Las 3 . w. HURON _across from PIT RUN aon SIV PROC- ess road gravel, a dirt, field sand. Washed 60.- rete ‘TOA ws rarel, pea —- lack dirt and m 2-1768. C. Price Prepared top soils mixed to your — specifications. Peat-sand or clay loam as you desire. $15 per load delivered. FE 4-4597. ss ook SOIL And Ly load, _ 810 de Quevereh 4-008. = ROAD GRAVEL 5 yards, $7.00 delivered. FE 46888, WaSHED SAND AND GRA Mike Jenk: OR WASHED SAND AND GRA Durham. J | Burns €20 Rochester Rd, North he) — of Lakeville, PLa- __teau 2-2 SALE; 3 YR. OLD Laer colt very coats. Cole, Hixon Rd § mi. N, at Roch- ester & 2 miles east. OFFERING-15 HEAD’ OF KEN- and Tennessee sad hors- poeteding a% ble ‘tor Sphaees ts met res sible party. L. E Pain. 5135 Thomes Rd., 3 mi. = pecprese Be 6, . months. Priced right, Phone _ 43606. 3 MOSTLY |B HOLSTEIN | KE HEIFERS. b fresh and Ralph _huckmou df. OA. 82169. Oxford, 3 BROOD sOWS 1 WITH 9! Excellent animal. FE 7: For Sale Poultry 74 hens; vers. after 4:30 p.m, 26 Goldner, ‘Sale Farm Equipment 76 we STEE'S § Sales & Service” FE 3-9830 eat Mt. Cemene $450. A vicpe OO ed delivery rab. $80. sevice te. EY TRACTOR 200, 80 8. TOILET ey ta VALOR ae $3.05. PORCH “LIGHTS IN “EARLY American Lanterns. Old ogg - designs, m2 ody eens vgiver, Mich Michi. ‘2 ee oh com Lantern —'s ae ~ complete | all colors a lnatic eng) peur seats es, Michi- . ecm 3 Orchard Lake Ave * For Sale Pets 69 i PR. OF YELLOW FACED PARA- __keets with cage. $10. OL 1-5066. AKC REGISTERED PEKINGESE. _7_mo, old, female. MY_3-4331. NEED A FINANCE- Wi FIXER? Order Classified. ‘ads to sell, rent, find a Want Ad number! good job. FE 2-8181 is the! so, cuore rao. | it “Biniat ta Balairy BOS | Stuttg? gaat. saache SPECIAL po OR 3-1534 me A of disc, harrow, Berry al) stee: fully teed “ lawn mower. 090 From, #38 and Estimates on WE GOT IT chester Rd. . a1 8 . 29-0203 | Flack dirt and peat delivered. 5 ee BEANES UN URACTOR” gaan yds, 1.50, Stout boys. FE 6-200|3.H.P. PLANET JR. TRA die Si pate, Cor OO Le ; saving | BARVEST TIME COMBINES, MOWERS. RAKES AND ee ne ne eA EADY. To a BUSINESS EIN — st WE JAKE TRAL TRADR- —_ BROS ae moos For Sale Livestock 72) Hisignts wraier jee. | Auburn Pe) rE 1054 ere 2 closet. omey modern rye Rad. Lot NTIAC CHE MOBILE HOMES bi] Also we cow neve a ies gape Hutchinson J railer Sales eks_ old. Downs |, Ay pore ee ony ‘oan 29 Mile Road, Auto Accessories 80 Some Michigan. Phone PLate : : a ware Rock —pottets | _ Auto Glass Service | Ready to ee each. Call | When you gy a itt Have wore Zon vans | —after_4:00_ OR 3-1478 our, service? lane rance tnatadled, whi ‘arm rod work 1 bh. Sale Farm P P pauce 75 of haga md to : custom door or windshie A-l GREEN AND iD WAX BEANS Spen Saturday Until 4 and sweet corn jor canning and B AUTO G co. freezing. Robert OA 86-3339. | 122 Oakland Ave. 47008 SLACKBERRIES—GET ‘¥OUR OR OR-/ DUAL EXHA der in es Phone, write or ™ rs. tail pipe exten call R. B. Wilcox, 10308 Oakhurst | sions, and accessories for all Rd., Holly, Mich, Phone MElIrose| makes and models. 4-5854. HOLLERBACK'’S AUTO BLUEBERRIES FOR SALE. PICK 40 Baldwin rE ‘our own and a? py” amar ATTENTI N! a. on We are wrecking 1948 to (STL. oMITH * poste take Re cars and trucks ihe have soteen eral a ™ Open daily &@ Sunday, OR3-4848., gines Transmission neat CHERRIES PICK Y UR OWN.| @xles and Frat ees Pi be ad 8 however genera’ voltage 4670 Middiebeit Rad. SCHI RA M AUTO age i 2539 Dixie Hwy, Loom fe aur re starters yg Tt ese Lots ot “used paris tot” “4¢ ‘care and up, ts Ounling_are___Pa_YE sa fowers| For Sale Tires 80=A BARGAIN; USED TIRES, 180 TO choose from. All sizes. White wall Agvarn ot Opt C & G service, Auto Service 81 ore ee | SP EREE ESTIMATE = | eae SALES ae living. ee: Senet rimotite Nghe al trailers as low as $50 down : ésee Sales, 21) . HUNTING & =| a pice, Matt i Se ee : be th we’ G 7 ° wo Trailer Park. 1961 a m rm 2 Sacrifice Sale ‘Number D. West 13, 2300 Rad. Purl isa Si PT. | extras. 5 sale. Call Northville : 2 "82 MODEL. A le 2 Excellent condition. east | apartment tn tite limtle Phone 1064 MODERWA new. ilies Saale al _THE PONTIAC. PRESS, SATURDAY, J ULY 23, 1955 Wanted Used Cars 88| For Sale Used Cars 91 fer kiky sad Cove 1 _For Sale Used Cars 91) ~ Boats 3 Accessories 85 sna ors O REEL L (NEW) i” CABIN oe a Tra 80 Cot- ‘oop TE one So Cas poo Sishiends subdivision. across the bey from French's _landta _ French's landing. ALUM, BOAT — ARKANSAS so ner ny New. Reasonable. MI 6-4075. i SAIL BOAT 5-8 ¥R. OLD. | 6-4075, ® iP JOHNSON a CYL. PER- tect. MI_ 6-407 —_ LED ny ~LOA ahs Wolverine face Ale nul truc ik xpect ano! ‘aot ey next week. Save ard Loomis a HP. ELG Loni 000v roe ill trade for 18 or c. Pay difference. | EM 32118 | CHRIS CRAFT OR MiRonda Correct Craft Outboards, - in wood Lone Star in slteae = in steel, Alu | r sailboats, stello's Boat | oa mn. MY_3-3732. _ i FT. CHRIs CRAFT oS H F | 9:0 & 9 pm SCO! LE E ON § NEW “ROow- | “ Meats, 1600 Elizabeth La Lake bes ¥ | RR NE , | lumber, a | 3-3683. _ fon S00, $100, E & “EVINRUDE © MOTORS | Wolverine an’ Feather‘ raft i id Town and Dr oman Canoes. | rling trailers Marine supplies. Onen naeere and evenings. Bank Term BOAT WORKS: wt ghhINOTON v Se 16 yr. frmoar: D BOAT, V8 EN. | Trailer Best offer. EM | “BOAT AND MOTOR. $175 | ay §-2143. Keego Harbor. 2436 | Hefter_ Court _ ia Fr. wiirbing ded BOAT. 2% Horse motor. oe cree oe ulpped. $450 9755 ge Tra Oxbow Lk, EM 3-2768. 17 FT. CHRIS CRAFT UTILITY | runabout. Ao) pes excellent condi- for skiing. Siay- JOHNSON Outboard ae USED MOTORS SLAYBAUGH'S 630 Oakland A Ave. ah ee 135 CU. a arDao “HOT CE. “Bag aes Deve diel” = “vsED Oe PEEWOOD BOATS. ALUMA-CRAFT BOATS EVINRUDE MOTORS PENN YAN BOATS tion. baugh’ MARINE M aah outboard life- O ef condition. Call FE 16 FT. oe BOAT fe] . or without teering whee windshield Ma's 3-1028. KELLY's ‘HARDWARE \dams, Auburn 1, SALE: WOLVERINE RUNA- condition. Doesn't food a a $75. FE 4-3326. io PER. Cant OFF ON ALL LONE boats and Owens cruisers. Star now tn ‘tock OWEN'S .MARINE SUPPLIES rd Lk. Ave, FE 3-8020 oO tor_and controls, OL 2-301. roel ohm seers ween oat | \ ‘ erecury, season, $700 complete, Holly, ME EVINRUDE MOTORS Expert revair service Chris-Craft t ene kits Trailers. oe pe arine Orebard Lake Oven _‘tfl_§ __Phone_F $0112 12 FT_RUNABOUT el HP. MO- . FE 2-5876 after 14 % HP ME Mescony ~ (ROCKET) MO- . Call EM 3-3070. _after 6 rv NEW SEARS 12 FT, VARNISHED rowboat, $132; sell $85. MA Mercury Outbvard Motors Genuine Parts, Sales & Service @orty Hook's Place at ___Dial_ PE ROWBOAT WITH OARS. AN- Gor. eto rack, Good condi- Transportation O' Offered 87 MLearine July 2 rE , gees. Wanted Used Cars 88 RE LRA SIGH 6. ere eon SCRAP CARS. or THE HIGH SOLLAR Por high Gute used cars. We ‘them, ive extra miles, will pay you well. 4540 Dixie H. J. VANWELT OR }- R pg "BILL, SPENCE an CARS PE ¢7333 one M&M Motor Sales se late mm R pare. Garaee rcreporn 2p DEALER | dave best buy. | Oakland County’s Fastest | DIXIE HWY. AT M-15 MAple 5-507] eg TOP! LOOK! © acer a a ae a. ae Piet Ay — => AND ND JORIS “COMM UNITY MOTORS 803 N. Main, Rochester OPEN mF ‘PM “For Sal Sale “Used Trucks 90 ne aaa mae | 1952 CHEV. % TON VANETT IN ood sha Call ener 6 p.m. _ Er" s4oat™ 1050 DODGE 2 TON DU EX. cellent. tires. Mechanically per: | fect. FE4-0119 after 6 p.! iss¢ GMC 6399 DUMP ans + | wheeler age hd shee — year | round job ioe MODs, Aas! _FE_ 17-0660 New and Used TRUCKS WILSON GMC OAKLAND AT CASS OPEN EVENINGS — | | FE 2-9203 he 4-4531) | DODGE 19st. | 3, TON EXPRESS | pickup, 4'speed transmission. Ex- cellent condition throughout. To- | $605 full nrice. Just vour car or truck down KINS Chevrolet KUP Growing Dealer 1940 FORD PICKUP (OOD TIRES. runs good. 197 8 Johnson. $1 FORD % TON Ids “GOOD condition. OR 3-00 1952 pale eo % TON pickup Good pews a tires | _ King Bros., 1948 International PICKUP o145, LARRY JEROME ~ Rochester a Dealer PH. OL “FOR MORE THAN 3 30. YEARS A __ GOOD PLACE TO BUY" ae and Used| TRUCKS. WILSON GMC OAKLAND AT CASS OPEN EVENINGS (046 Cheve. 50.00 1950 Kaiser ‘ at) 00 1946 Ford, Bad motor $29.80 ig7 Jo. Johnson 1949 CHEVROLET 4 RA- Set _tires, FE 2 FE 2-9203 FE 4-4531 | For Sale Used Cars 91 HAVE A HAPPY WEEKEND AND BE SURE TO ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR ” CHOICE ON SUNDAY OLIVER BUICK 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 1950 inti 4 DOOR RIVIE ae Full deluxe equinment, Like new, MA 42606 or MA 4. . 1063 ¢ DOOR SPECIAL BUICK. 18.000 miles. Very clean. 12 ex- tras, PE 56-2743, Caroline St. Auburn Heights. KELLER ~ KOCH 1954 Nash Custom Wagon, Red with —* grain finish, Radio, heat- er walls and luggage rack, Like new $1 595 1954 DeSoto 8 2 tone blue Club Coupe. Equipped with power steer. ing, radio, heater and tinted glass. $1895 1954 Ford 8 Crestline 4 dr. with 2 Whe blue finish. white walls. | vadio, heater and Ford-O-Matic transmission. $1395 1953 Chevrolet Carrvall 3 seater, thet is in perfect condition. $995 1952 Tt Hardtop, Grey top een bottom uipped with redion Sneaker and —— transmission. A 1 owner tri 1095 1981 Buick. 2 tome zreen with radio, heater, tinted glass and Dynaflow mission Like new. neds ne bronee Windsor 4 Dr. 2? ronze with radio, heater and $645 PAY HERE - IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 00 MORE TO CHOOSE F ‘ROM KELLER’ KOCH 9-45.85 Car Depa: Tiaveas 7% Rd. and ‘oodward _.. (Opposite the Bio. BOY) so si { . CAN BE SEEN 8 DR. SEDAN. /RADIO heater, Dynafiow, r ble, Ex ellent ' . ” See coer Mrcipped. PS ibe BUICK FT A DR mm 810 D 9 DOWN AND ward. Dire West Side Used Cars Drive ou’ where gverheed us low o— — the § difter ay etl cen modes *o wy est t Side Used Cars 923 Wo oUron - CADE SAC ‘ wer steering. 1, _fondition._ $2,000.17 W. eurce.__ Guaranteed USED CARS 1950 Ford tudor Fordomatic v-8 $545 1947 DeSoto 4dr 1953 paeas vsier Windsor 4 dr Radio ater 5 new white walis $1,205 | $1 DODGE | Club 2 ar. 5 t | 1954 Hudson 1 1947 Cadillac 4 dr, $445 nice Several good 1944 through models to choose from. 1950 CLARKSTON MOTOR Se 2 — 32 oC YSLER: PLYMOUTH to 8-pm. Dally we ‘buy “SELL AND TRADE 5-5141 $3 CHEV. 210. WILL TAKE cE TRADE. 434 Cameron 4-268 CONVERTIBLE 50 SSS ed Power Glide. Excellent condition Sharp jooking. 75 _ Menominee. REPOSSE ask D c 2 DOOR dio, heater, snow tires. Excellent _condition, $275. MA_6-2152. , 1941 DODGE | SEDAN i BODY AND 4 FORD 2 ‘ New Credit Plan RAVE YOU BEEN TORE DOWN WHEN tear To BUY A CAR cA EMPLOYMENT NO OF CREDIT, WE HAVE 4 GOOD LEcTiO: F ‘46 =~ «'S1 ~AUTOMOBILES Feat eee poWN AND OF As WEEKLY ee LITTLE As ‘No Co-Signers! Immediate Delivery | Deal Direct! No Finance Co.! Buy Here—Pay Here Y'ALL COME | TO 171 8 Sagiraw NATIONAL MOTOR SALES CONVERT. RADIO, heater. white side wall tires, $595. pate. see to appreciate. FE | 32: Reli- able ; ronreneiee $125.00. FE PAULSON ~ MOTOR SALES 66 8 Perrv 1953 Chevy 2-door $695. ‘49 Pon- tiac 2 is open daily 7:30 a.m. $200 Dn. & $29.70 Mo. to 10 p.m. Free esti- _ or mates cheerfully given. Your Old Car Down No money down on our or easy budget plan. “Re- move the Guess and Get $10 Down and Slightly the Best.” Higher Payments Harold Turner, Ford 2 BIG LOTS MIdwest 4-7500 Llberty 9-4000 JOrdan 4-6266 Liberty 9-4001 « Immediate “Spot” Delivery Low, Low Bank Rates—No Down Payment at 1—Victoria "CY OWENS" Your FORD Dealer 1955 Fords 1—Convertible 1—-Fairlane 4 Door 1—Custom 4 Door 1—Business Coupe ~2- 1952 Nash 4 Door Sedans ~2- 1954 Chevrolet Bel Air 4 Doors SPECIAL 1955 Mercury Montclair Conv. Like New Going Fast At These Prices’ Call or Come In _ "CY OWENS’ FORD DEALER , 147-150 S. Saginaw FE 94101 5 See to9 PM. FES- Here Are More REAL BUYS! 1952 Studebaker. Coupe 22.2... ee oe nies si $435 1950" Mereury 2 Doors... «02-5 1. eee $225 1951 Lincoln 4 Door............0ecceeeeeees $495 1951 Ford 2 Door........... cc cence eee eeees $395 1950 Pontiac 4, Door.......0.cecceeeeeceeees $350 19ST) Plymouth (4) Door tne eee cee ee = $345. 195i Heary J 2 Deo-- 2-2. e ee eee eee se $125 1952 Buick Super 4 Dr....... aS AOR ABOGOUE +» $895 1951 Chev. Club Cpe........ ba cnnccesscnecss $425 1954 Ford 2 Doots.. cece sce eeeteeeaacen $1095 1950 Nash 4 Door... .2-5.ce- cece e cece eens: $125 1950) Studebaker’ 2 Door.-..2..........-.+-- $195 I9SL Mercury 2 Doots. ec. 22 scence ose $395 “$988 i é COLD FACTS Hot Weather the deals are better at the RETAIL STORE 1953 PONTIAC fdr sedan with radio, heater and Hydramatic transmission, $1395 1933 PONTIAC 2dr sedan. Radio, heater and Hydramatic, 2 tone green. $1295 1953 PONTIAC Station Roe genes with —— and "$1395 1951 FORD 4dr with radio, heater and Ford - O ~ Matic. Sharp. $645 1953 FORD % T. Pickup, Radjo, heater and 14,000 eoteat miles. $845 1952 STUDEBAKER with radio, heater and auto- metic transmission. Real nice. $095 1951 PONTIAC tdre with radio, —— and Hydramatic. | owner. $695 1952 CHEVROLET 4dr with radio, heater and Power Glide. 2 tone. $795 1950 CHRYSLER Club Cow hea! Fiala Deiee (rosanenens” 4 $945 1953 PONTIAC $1050 1952 PONTIAC 4dr Radio, heater, Hydrama’ 2 tone and sun visor, - $995 1949 PONTIAC 4dr with radio, heater and Hy- dramatic. Transportation special $159.50 1952 DODGE 1949 CHEVROLET a ee $495 . $79.95 We have one '55 Pontiac Star Chief Convertible. A demonstrator with radio, heater, Hydramatic, powe steering, power brakes, whitewalls, and ully loaded. $800 below list. Also, one ’55 Poutiae Star Chief 4 door with radio, heater, direction signals, whitewalls, power steer- ie ee brakes, and more. Let it go at only 100 More Cars to Choose From | PONTIAC RETAIL STORE "Goodwill Used Cars” 65 MT. CLEMENS ST. FE 3-7117 4dr sedan with radio an ic er. Priced to sell. oot 7 » THE, PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. JULY 08, 1955 wae -- «Today S Radio Droghestie: -s Programs furnluhed by stations tated tm thie columa are eubfect to dhange withoot notice ag | the United States, Win, (em URLW, wee Www, «se Wuas, (1190. WZ, (18%) 8 =«6WdJUR, these) =©=6-WRUN, (1468) : aT TBA j tl = Joseph Hainline| CKLW, TBA Wron, hews’ _ 4wiBK: News. "Proiie were, eekend Music JBK, Album Time WCAR, F Sd be American WCAR, TBA SUNDAY. EVENING WPON. 8, Music CKLW, News and WPON, TBA : oan wR Voice of Agriclt. WJBK, News, 6:00—WIR, Gene Autry WWJ, Bob Maxwell WCAR, News Ace “wwae Pa Parm Review WWJ, Weekend M WXYZ, News, Wolf Whee e Wi, Faith in Action WATE enter Resdines | Caw. iy 6:30— ids cu , Ww, National Fo CKLW: TBA 7 WJBK, News, Saunde wane’ Genk, wath, amin Poe WIBK. Albom Time” wae — wor tw Eee CKLW, Parliament Hill WCaR, TBA WPON, News 7:00—WJR, Ji ~ Vinall WJBK, News, Frolic PON, News, Music :36—-WJR, Summer ww. Maxwell WCAR, Music All the Time 1:00-—WJR, Favt, Hymns WWJ, Monitor WXYZ, Osgood News, "Wolf Ww mi, wi, Monitor WXYZ, Episcopal Service CKLW, News, Tob wid 7:00--WJR, Jess Band XYZ, TB. KLW, Bob dine WJBK, News, Frolic WWJ, Mon CeLw Wildwood Chureh WJBK, U. of D. Showtime} WCAR. New WXYZ, News, Sandlot‘ers WJBK, News, MSU CAR, Scores, News WPON, News, Rise. Shine CKLW, Family Theater WAR TBA" WPON, Hour 2:30—WJR, Music Hall WJBK, News, Frolic WPON, Nastrene Pulpit 7:00—WJR, Juke Box J WWJ, News WCAR, News Ace 1:30—WJR, Laymen's Hour | ‘Ww. Monttor = OUT) wxyz. News, Wolf ; Gib Shanley WWJ, Monitor WXYZ, Showtime R ckuw- News, Toby David 1:30—WJR, Concert WXYZ, Music for Sunday| cuytw' Wines of Heeling | WJBK, News, Frolic wate an we oc ao WIBK. News Serenade | WCAR, Coffee, with Clem CKLW, Magic of Music WCAR, TBA . wean a ‘en. hen Sane JBK, News, WPON. General Baptist . Spanish Hour WWJ, Bob Maxwell ~ WCAR, Music All the Time | $:00-—-WJR. News 7:30—WIR, Juke Box Jury | wyyz Osgood News, Wolf WPON, Gib Shanley WWJ, World News Roundup | WWJ, Monitor CKLW, News, Toby David $:00—WJR, Hollywood Race WXYZ, Rasie ible Clase WXYZ, Valentino WJBK, News, WWJ, Monitor CKLW, r Worship Hour| CKLW, Radio Bible Class | woar’ News News, Dancing WJBK, ea: Album Time| WJBK, Freedom Story Whos New: CKLW, Whee! of Festene WCAR, Bign. WCAR, Music All the Time! 9-39 “wor, Muste Hall WJBK. News, Frolic PON, Assem of God WPON. Hour of Charm WWJ, Bob Maxwell — WCAR, spre All the Time | 8:36—WJR,~ mentee Valley $:00—WJIR, Our Miss WXYZ, ‘Wolf WPON, News, Zee, Orville} WWJ, Monitor ww, W, Toby David 8:30-—-WJR, Concert Band WXYZ, Light" and Life WXYZ, America's Meetin WJBK; News, Frolic a E Detroit Symphony CKLW, Pontuac Church CKLW, Melachrino Strings WCAR. Coffee with Clem WXYZ, News, Dancing WJBK, Ave Marie Hour WJBK, News, Serenade Rise Shine cmLw, Bounding Board WCAR, Back to God WCAR, Music All the Time| 9:99—wr William Sheehan wJB: ews, Frolic WPON, 8t. Jona Lutheran | ._WPON, Concert Hall WWJ, Minute Parade WCAR, Sign Off 9:00—WJR, New 6:30—WJR, Gery Crosby WXY¥z, Broaktast Club WPON, News, Zee, Orville | WWJ, Crossroads Church WWJ, Monito: CKLW, News, Toby David 9:00—WIR, for Money| WXYZ, New WXYZ, America’s Meeting | GREW. News. Tony vereet WW), Detroit symphony CKLW. Bethesda Temple CKLW, The Quiet Hour WCAR, News Ace WXYZ, News, Dancing WJBK, News, Interlude WJBK, Answers Guaranteed N, News. Music CKLW, Hawai! Calls WCAR, News. Rhythm. WPON, Concert Hall 9:30—WJR, Mrs. Page WJBK, News, Don McLeod; WPON, St. John's Lutheran 9:00—WJR, Music Hall ww, Theale Pa: Parade WPON, News, Zee, Orville | 9:30—WJR, Hymns of Paith| WWJ. News. by Lawrence | wyyz Breakfast Club 9:30—WJR, Jamboree WWJ, National Pulpit WXYZ, Walter Winchell LW, Toby David WWJ, Monitor WXYZ, Voice of Prophesy | © rosse Pointe WJBK, Sunny Street WXYZ, News, Dancin KLW, Hebrew r WJBK, News, Serenade WCAR. Rhythm Roundu W, Lombardo Land WJBK, Detroit Pulpit WPON, Liberty Baptist w ft Wisk, Don McLeod WCAR, Rhythm Roundup | %30—WJR, Music Hall 10:00—WJR, Arthur Godfrey WPON, Zee and Oryille N, Silvercrest Baptist | WWJ. Catholic Hour WWJ, McBride, Peale 10:00 WIR Country Btyle | 10:00—WJR, News WXYZ, Dean Manion WXYZ, My True Story WWJ, Monitor WWJ. Monitor CKLW, Dr. Barnhouse CKLW, News, Homechats YZ, News, Top of Town | WXYZ, News, Israel WJBK, Evening Serenade w. News, Sunny Street CKLW, Wayne King CKLW, Radio Bible Class | .WPON, Gospelair WCAR, Bethesda Temple WJBK, News, Don McLeod | WJBK, News, George 10:00-—WJR, Pace the Nation WPON, New WPON, News, Zee, Orville; WCAR, News, Rhythm WWJ. Monitor 10:36-WJIR. Arthur Godfery 16:30—WJR, Your Hit Parade . N WXYZ, Paul Harvey WWJ, Second Chance WWJ, Monitor 10:30—WJR, Chapel Hour CKLW, Hour of Decision WXYZ, Whispering Streets WXYZ, News, Top of Town| WWJ. Monitor WJBK. News, Wayne Univ. cCxLw, Mary Morgan CKLW, Quiet Sanctuary WXYZ, News, Choi WPON, New Ww. Bunny Street WJBK, Don McLeod CKLW. Voice of » Prophecy 19:30—WIR, Pacts Forum -WCAR, Muste All the Time WPON, Zee and Orville WJBK. Tom George WWJ, Eternal Light w WPON Goes Calling 11:00 WAR, William Sheehan | WCAR, Bible Class WXYZ, Revival Time u: 1 WIR, Arthur Godfrey J, Monitor WPON. First Methodist KLW, Back to God WWJ. Strike It Rich WXYZ, Hotel Statler L1:00—WJR, Tabernacle WJBK, WMCA Forum WXYZ, Companion CKLW, News WWJ, Bt. Paul's €'th’drl. Piphelced eects CKLW, Keepin’. Company WJBK, News, Don McLeod XYZ, Music for Sunday , '1:0@-—WJR, Jack White WJBK, News, Sunny Street WPON, News and Sports CKLW, Pontiac Church WWJ, Proudly We Hail WCAR, News Ace 11:30—WJR, CBS Dance WJBK. News, Tom George | WXYZ, News, Moods WPON, News, WWJ, Monitor WCAR, News = CKLW, J. VanKuren, News | 11:36—WJR, Mane. Up Mind wxyz. Top of Town PON, Central Methodist wren _—— a WWJ, Phrase That Pays . m Dun :30— . other's Album WXYZ, Curtain Calls WJBK, Don McLeod WWJ, St. Paul's C'th'drl. | !: 30 WIR. “starlight “symp. CKLW, Queen for a Day -WPON, Manhattan Melodies| WXYZ, News Music WWJ, Movietown ater WJBK, puany Street 12:00—WJR, News CKLW, Anglican Church WXYZ, News, Beyond Stars) wear, Lady of the Day WWJ, Music Til Dawn WJBK, Don Mc CKLW, Mt. Zion Church WPON. tine WXYZ, News, Top of Town | WCAR. Radio T WJBK, Protestant Hour 12:00—WJR, Jack White CKLW, News, Jim Dunbar| WPON. Central Methodist WPON, Music to Dreant By | wwJ, News by Coderberg WJBK, mere Don McLeod | 12:00—WJR, WN WXYZ, Cur’ WPON. News, House Party| WWJ, News MONDAY MORNING CKLW, News, voy ~— N SUNDAY MOBNING WXYZ, Music for Sunday | 6:06-WJR, Jim Vinall WJBK, News, Sunny Street —WJR, At Dawning CKLW, Labor News WWJ, Bob Maxwell WCAR, Music All Time “Nwe Monitor WJBK. News, Don McLeod WXYZ, News Ace, Wolf WPON, News -- Today's Television Programs - - Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WW4-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00—(7) Jumbo Theater. Cesar Romero in “FBI Girl.” (4) Sat- urday Edition. News. (2) Gene Autry. Champion loses a race and helps Autry to trail gang of of bank robbers in “‘Sixshooter Sweepstakes.” 6:15—(4) Pro Golf. Faust Bianco shows how to play difficult holes at Dearborn Country Club. 6:30—(9) Temple Baptist Church. Religious. (4) Horace Heidt Show Wagon. Musical variety. Lionel Hampton, guest. (2) Beat the Clock. Quiz with Bud Collyer. 7:00—(7) PGA Golf from Meadow- [ brook Country Club. (9) Dial 9 Theater. Lee Tracy, Julie Bishop in “High Tide.” (4) The Soldiers. Comedy with Hal. March and Tom D'Andrea. Soldiers have to pass psychiatrist's test before going on dangerous assignment. «2) America's Greatest Bands. Art Mooney, Count Basie, Rudy Vallee and Xavier Cugat and their orchestras. with host Paul Whiteman. 7:30—(7) Story Studio, Film TBA. (4) The Dunniger Show. Mental- ist performs his feats. 8:00—(7) Lawrence Welk Show. Novelty numbers by male vocal- ists and accordionists. (4) Mu sical Chairs. Musical quiz with - Johnny Mercer, host. June Christy, guest. (2) Two for the Money. Quiz with Sam Leven- son, $:30—(9) Million Dollar Movie. Rex Harrison, Lilli Palmer in “The Long Dark Hall." (4) Star Theater. Jimmy Durante audi- tions Cass Daley for his Club Durant. (2) Down You Go. Word game: with Dr. Bergen Evans, host, Jack Parr, guest. 9:00 — (7) Hollywood Premiere. Ann Richards in “Breakdown.” | 9 (4) And Here's the Show. Com- edy with Ranson Sherman, Jonathan Winters. (2) TV's Top Tunes. Eddy Arnold, Priscilla t guests of Julius LaRosa. . 9:30-1) Your Play Time. Ad-' venturer finds himself involved in escape of political prisoner in Morocco in “Rescue’’ starring Brian Keith, Dorothy Green, Ste- phen Bekasy. (2) Man Behind the Badge. ‘Tattooed Man,” mystery 10: o_o ‘National News. (4) Sol- diers of Fortune. Tropical island visit brings adventure with voodoo and death of girl in “The Drums of Far Island.” (2) Big Town. Mark Stevens in “Shield of the Kil 10:10—(9) Hoot Gibson. Western adventure 10: 25—(9) Foy Willing. Songs. 1¢:30—(7) The Explorers. Jack Van Coevering, Free Press Wild Life Writer, shows films of “Fishing in Michigan.” (9) eee Square Playhouse. Alan owbray in “Confidentially Yours. * (4) People Are Funny. rabbit as a front. 11:00—(7) Championship Bowling. Films. Joe Kristof vs. Don Car- ter. Woods, Louise Platt in “For- gotten Girls.” (4) Hollywood Offbeat. Steve investi- Daffy Duck. Doug: | #2337) Today's Carnival, heritors.” (2) News, Final. Jack LeGoff. 11:15—(2) Miss Fair Weather. | Bette Wright. — 11:20—(2) Wrestling from Holly- wood. Bout to be announced. 11:30—(4) Saturday Show. David | Bruce, Cleatus Caldwell in) “Susie Steps Out.” SUNDAY’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00—(7) You Asked For It. (2) Pride of the Family. (4) Corliss Archer. 6:30—(7) Chance of a Lifetime. (9) Meet UAW. (4) Do It Your- self. (2) Private Secretary. Susie. (Ann Sothern) proves to her boss that progress is here to stay, whether he likes it or | not. oe—(7) The Huntress. (9) War on the Air. (2) Toast of the Town. Featuring Songstress Polly Bergen and Ventriloquist Worsley. (4) Colgate Variety Hour. Among the guests will be Jack Webb, famous for TV per- ronerstire of Joe Friday of “Dragne’ 7:30—(7) rama (9) Playhouse. 8:00—(7) Walter Winchell. (9) Mo- otion Picture Academy. (4) TV Playhouse TBA. (2) GE Theater. “Man With a Vengeance.”’ Story of a ruthless film director intent i Playhouse. 8:30—(7) Stork Club. (2) Stage 77. 9:00—(7) Break the Bank. (4) Cameo Theater. “The Grown, Ones.” Story of friends and family’s intent on frustrating the girl’s intentions of marrying & man she met on a brief summer holiday. (2) Appointment With Adventure. ‘Desperate Game.” An escape from behind the Iron Curtain. :30—(7) Jumbo Theater. (4) Bob Cummings Show. Shy but de- termined sailor wants to meet girl whose legs appeared in a magazine. 10:00—(7) Jos Palooka. (9) Yes- terday’s Newsreel. (4) Badge |, 714. (2) Bandstand Review. 10:30—(7) Karloff Mystery. (4) Carpet Theater. (9) Follow That Man. (2) Willy. 11:00— (7) Hollywood Premier. (9) Crown Theater. (4) Sunday News. (2) News Finals. 11:30—(4) Hollywood Off-Beat. SUNDAY MORNING $:15—(2) Christophers. $:45—(2) Facts Forum. 9:00—(4) Church at Crossroads. 9:15—(2) Court of Health. 9:30—(2) This Is the Life. (4) Frontiers of Faith. 9:45—(7) Comedies. 10:00—(7) Action Theater. (2) De- troit Pulpit. (4) —— Car- hival, 10:30—(9) How Garden Gon (2) Barker Bill Cartoons. 10:45—(2) Sausage Sinema, 11:00—(9) Church in Home. (4) Adventure Ho. (2) Porky Pig. SUNDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—(7) Action Theater. (9) Wild Bill Elliott. (4) Double Theater. (2) Victory at Sea. |12:30—(7) Auntie Dee. (2) Wild Bill. '1:00—(7) World Adventure Series. (9) Million Dollar ‘Movie. (2) Buster Crabbe. 1:30—(7) Cowboy G-Men, Sunday Show Time. (2) |2:00—(7) Laurel & Hardy. (9) Mo- vie. (2) Sunday Show Time. 2:30—(7) Laurel & Hardy. Mich. Conservation. 3:00—(7) Chico & Pablo. (9) Jus- (9) tice Colt. (2) Sunday Show Time. (4) Understanding Our World. 3:30—(4) Zoo Parade. 4:00—(7) Super Circus. (2) Face the Nation. (4) Big Four Report. 4:30—(9) Theater. (4) Captain Gallant. (2) Lets Take a Trip. 5:00—(7) Jimmy Wakely Show. (4) Annie Oakley. (2) Lucy Show. 5:30—(4) Roy Rogers. (2) Sun. Theater. MONDAY 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 @) Home. 10:30—(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 11:45—(2) Guiding Light. MONDAY AFTERNOON 2:00—(7) 12 O'Clock ics. (4) Ted Mack's Matinee. (2) Ladies Day. - 12,15—(4) TBA. Q. Lewis. 1:30—(4) Jean McBride. (2) Link- letter Houseparty. 2:00—(7) Stars on Seven. (9) Myrtle Labbitt Show. (4) Ted Mack’s Matinee. (2) Big Payoff. 2:30—(9) Shopper's Show, (4) It Pays to Be Married. (2) Bob Crosby Show. 2:46—(4) Concerning Miss Mar lowe. $:00—(9) Monday Matinee. (7) Hearthrob Theater. (4) Way of the World. (2) Brighter Day. $:15—(4) First Love. (2) Secret Storm. 3:30—(4) World of Mr. Sweeney. (2) On Your Account. &:45—(4) Modern Romance. 4:00—(7) Captain Flint. (9) Take a Look. Puppets. (4) Pinky Lee. (2) Sagebrush Shorty. 4:30-—(9) Howdy Doody. (4) Howdy Doody. 4:45—(7) Ricky the Clown. 5:00—(7) Auntie Dee. (9) Justice Colt. (4) Rocky Jones, Space Ranger. (2) The Early Show. Feith, (2) Con- test For doy i, uN &:30—(7) Wild Bill Hickok. (4) Ten- nessee Ernie. AA Authorized Hay Fever Season Coming , | By ALTON L, BLAKESLEE Associated Press Science Reporter Run, shoot, and hide are the three main defenses for hay fever sufferers. They can travel to areas free of ragweed pollen for their August and September vacation. Or they can take “shots’’ to build up resistance to pollens causing their trouble, Or they can hide behind .effi- cient air-filtering devices that trap ine | Offensive pollen, and give them a room with air safe to breathe. Pollen from ragweed is the main cause of hay fever. Some half million pounds of it are re- leased into the air each August and September, Some parts of the nation have very high pollen counts, others low counts, or are even free of the rehumy stuff. A free pam- phiet, ‘“‘Hay Fever Holiday,’’ com- piled by the Pollen Survey emy of Allergy, lists the average | pollen count found in some 600 cities, towns and areas ~ ada, Alaska and Mexico. FR aay Durham, Abbott North Chicago, Ill., mittee chairman. * * * Generally speaking, as the ac- companying map illustrates, air- borne pollen is heaviest in the intensely tilled area of the Mis- sissippi Valley, and lightest in the area west of the Cascade Moun- tains in Oregon and Washington. Pollen counts are low in many areas of California, in the deserts and forests of the Rocky Moun- Laboratories, who is com- 4 tains -and in the inter-mountain States of Idaho, Utah and Nevada; in the central] Adirondacks, south- ern tip of Florida, in the woods of Maine, New Hampshire, northern Minnesota, and extreme northern Michigan. * Next to ragweed, the heaviest load of pollen spread through the summer and fall air comes from two closely similar weed families: and firebrush. Amaranths include Palmer's amaranth and western water hemp. These pollens are concentrated in the middle states, as the map indicates. Allergists estimate 10 to 15 per cent-of hay fever and asth- ma are caused by molds and spores from grasses and leaves Committee of the American Acad- - can be obtained from Oren C.. Here’ s Pollen Picture Across, U. S. j THE RAGWEED SEASON IN THREE | OCALITIES DISTANCE BETWEEN HORIZONTAL LINES INDICATES ABOUT 100 POLLEN GRAINS PER CUBIC YARD OF AIR | evap ‘n’ Indian Thriller Due on Television. Soon By JACK O'BRIAN NEW YORK (INS)—Bert Wheeler gets a big role in Roy Rogers’ Bert plays “Smokey Joe’’ in the first such series to glorify instead of horrify our early American red- skins. Keith Larsen stars as Brave Eagle. * * * « Marion Marlowe's a grandmom (step-grandma, that is) . | i a i | | x i Fi . . : - - t=] : i ; 3 Bo Fa : i z 3 r : } fi f i eT HU h Shirley Melaine danced and Duke Ellington played some of his super- ior compositions. ‘Frankie Laine was better at singing than reading lines from % con FE 4-1515 cov TV Pontiac 993 Mt. Clemens % j | ‘ ; i / fe i Freedom of Speech ..» FOR REPUBLICANS ONLY? EMIL-MAZEY SECRETARY - TREASURER, UAW - CIO HAROLD CRANEFIELD LEGAL COUNSEL. UAW-CIO 6:30 pn Comorrow! ON “MEET THE UAW-CIO” un Channel 9 Ray |- cue cards, but struck a neatly honest note when he donned his spectacles, suggesting false pride might come before a fall into the orchestra pit if he tried bad hide As TV entertainment, it was a purely straight variety show whose loose ends tie together tidily but aside from Dick Van Dyke, nary a new nor especially nifty notion in the hour. * * * Sid Caesar's limousine (with chauffeur 'fcawss) is so thoroughly air conditioned, one of his aides advises us, it only could do justice to frozen beef . . . Sid is driven a whole half a block via air-chilled limo to his offices each morn- ing . . . where he listens to writers tick off the jokes, the ones which meet Sid's disapproval getting a round of imitation machine-gun fire with Sid delivering the military rejection sounds vocally, himself. National Guard Field Police Hold 2 Men’ in Torture-Slaying MOUNT CLEMENS (® — Police today held two men, one a prisoner in St. Joseph Hospital, in the tor- ture-slaying of a well-to-do Ma- comb County. poultry farmer. Undersheriff Lester A. Almstadt said yesterday Thomas Henning, 47, an ex-convict from New Bailti- more, confessed a part in the death of Gentiel Van de~—Ginste, 59, after attempting suicide by slashing an arm in his cell. Almstadt said Henning's com- panion, Joseph Burrell, 31, of New Haven, made a separate oral confession. The two were arrested Wednes- ‘INCORPORATED CRAFTS 53% Union Street . Phone FE 4-5139 day night after aVn de Ginste’s body was found in the yard of his farm home at New Baltimore. Almstadt quoted the pair as say- ing they beat aVn de Ginste with a fence post and garroted him with baling wire in an effort to make him tell where he kept his money. Unemployment Claims Camp Begins July 30 LANSING (®—The annual field miclelt Te [1 UT Sie OlO RINT AR RiAIR is) Pigier Ay iPiAis) ACI MiMi | 181) iS aei Alc RICO Mi BIC Tr a HE JAILS j Reach 2 Year Low BASE- BALL TIME DETROIT TIGERS WASH. SENATORS , Double Header Saturday = Game Time 1:25 p.m. Sunday Game Time 1:55 p.m. W-CAR 113 on Your Dial bbb A AAA Abbe Pe Featuring These Famous Make TV: RCA VICTOR — PHILCO ADMIRAL CENERAL ELECTRIC SYLVANIA — DUMONT EMERSON — CBS HAMPTON-TV 825 West Huron S$. 68 4-2525 ll i i ll td hth i hh hh USED TV SETS Only $5 Per Week! HAMPTON Gy as 825 W. Huren SYLVANIA TV FOX TV & sirvice All Makes TV ons inn ad. Cot, ena sery OR 3-1647 television service. BLAKE'S RADIO-TV .. ooneoe MAC RADIO & TV..... FRANK'S TV SERVICE Attention TY Owners! Do not be misled with low price bait advertising for The price will not be as low as think when the final bill is presented to you. lay it safe and call any of the firms listed below when you need service on your TV. be deceived and you will pay only for the quality work that you can be sure you will receive. - PONTIAO ANDY CONDON’S RADIO-TV......127 8S. Parke, FE 4-9736 AUBURN RADIO & WV icccevccces-« -ooe. 3149 W. Huron, FE 4-5791 BUSSARD ELECTRIC SHOP .... CHRISTIE RADIO MAINTENANCE ... 36 C & V TV SALES & SERVICE. 993 Mt. Clemens, FE 4-1515 HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. ....... 825 W. Huron, FE 4-2525 HOD'S RADIO & TV..... 710 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-5841 JOHNSON'S RADIO & TV. .cce00.45 E. Walton, FE 4-7601 OBEL RADIO & TV........00-+00..+.46 Oak Hill, FE 4-4945 RICH & PURSELY TV .............2141 Opdyke, FE 4-0221 STEFANSKI RADIO & TV........1157 W. Haron, FE 2-6967 SWEET’S RADIO APPLIANCE......422 W. Huron, FE 4-1133 WALTON RADIO & TV......c00008-- 1430 Joslyn, FE 2-2257 WKC, INC.. SERVICE DEPT...... se N. Perry, FE 2-0711 BOULEVARD RADIO & TV SERV...512 Osmmn, FE 4-7723 WEST OF PONTIAO .+..1515 Union Lk, Rd., EM 3-3072 BIRMINGHAM ELECTRONICS SERVICE CO., 1287 8. Woodward, MI 6-1022 CLARKSTON LAATSCH’S TV nay sevceeseses6738 Dixie, MA 5-5311 LATIMER'S RADIO & TV... 2800 Sashabaw Bd, OR 2-908 PHELPS ELECTRIC SOC HH OH OHH e oS OxFrorD OXFORD RADIO & TV SHOP, 40 S. Washington, OA 8-2023 | ROURESTER ROCHESTER RADIO & TV..........480 Main St. OL 2-214 DOBAT TV & RADIO SERVICE . 106 W. Sth St. OL 2-4722 AVON &@ TROY TOWNSHIP denver e + SBS Alida St. FE 44-1546 WALLED TOWNSEND'S TV SERVICE, 8081 : WILKINSON'S TV SERVICE, 3970 8. Commeres, MA You will not ... 89 Auburn, FE 4-1655 4348 Dixie Hwy, OR 3-1217 R4., EM 8-2927. 44-2665 sen ig Pe ea ve “y eG Wee Cy 2 geatuancy! PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1955 om FV. Hi Maose econ Saas Dh lin nt de - : P aT po ; oe { ff ! is ‘ oS : . sate ,€ . ; ; aes oe oe | + ; r ’ / — ’ . States illegaly ‘because of a tech- man C. B. Killean last night after Operator Drive-in | ) De rlation Off ar ies cael aes oun war ws Oe WHAT’S MY LINE? other Clears | | she had called police with the) POP *, Min Tou | ” | a ae ee one ee ON fT curtains lech card %: inleied ow wah. / message: “He's going to kill us.” Draws Fine tor Minor ave “ country permanently if she leaves aor ap Sbseetbyps cg “he poe She referred to herself and the) yiovq w, Strong Il, operator of . Adj sted ! . by ~ 0nd then returns cn an) | OUP a9" pu tan d — a aw . * _- | bey's stepfather, Ronald Connors, : . OF ) | ~ or eo. y oe Severe. 42, at whose home the tragedy|@ drive-in restaurant at 2156 Cass ade $ aoe ee Op in ooring occurred. Lake Rd., Keego Harbor, yester- © Cleaned oe . Her father says he cannot coger . & — - Mrs. Connors told Detective Lt.) day was fined $100 plus $25 court © Regulated Immigration Rulings oder one pe am eon! VE Officer Kills Her Son ®: ©. Grundish Ta Oy ee eg | coms by Sylvan Lake Justice J. ici . . iting and asked for a bottle : : al agente iene In Ws atitoment, Swing tndieated a 2 in Self-Defense Move liquor. Grundish quoted the mother | J Meeyy for Mngaliy enploying Ex j ust eye he still expects Thomas to take | . ~ as saying she refused and the, 4 minor, : pansion . ¥ | steps under procedure which per- | 9 3 When Making Arrest 'youth left the house and returned Strong was charged with employ- : . . ' mits an American citizen to apply | | with a gun. ing a 16-year-old girl who had no Watch Bands |) wrsuncros o < toga forte ane bear ira) | ARE! [_PAYTON, Onn wate mater! ET sw MEL EIR Te Ladies‘—Men's | Ohio Ay PLS Guparentis net | Permanent resident visa for his | 5 ;Of a youth who w&s shot and | She told police he terrorized and Grace Olsen, deputy inspector for $ aes ‘Tmunievetion ———- press it | vary thea gO e i an oF | |killed by a policeman last night | threatened and she then called po- the State Department of Labor. 95 /wants the Italian - born girl's | consulate Swing saaniae could | | said the officer “was within his lice. . Minors under 18 years old must Special! | American father to qualify her for je done in a one . day trip to| |Tights.”’ investigating police re-| They found Roberts pointing the) have working permits, she ex- . citizenship. : | Canada °_— = Jae : 6 ported. _ | gun at the stepfather. - plained. With permits, those be- G N ts * + * |: oo ees 1 LADPE 7 2 = '* Grundish said it appeared that| tween 16 and 18 can work until corges- ewpor Tauminration | Gommmisnionerny 378 1 ve 2 NRISTG 7 EES Mrs. Vera Connors, 37, mother Killean fired in self defense When| 10 p.m. Minors 14 and 15 years Jewelry Dept. ' Swing oa yesterday no action 2. 3 SABS of Arthur Dawson Roberts Jr., 19, the boy then pointed the gun at) old can work until 9 p.m., if pos- |would be taken “to deport this | oney IC e | 4 NORTE : witnessed the shooting - by Patrol-‘ him, ° ‘ sessing . permits. little girl’’ who was born in a U.S. | 5 TONE x ’ | Army Hospital in Trieste while her | ; ee HUTCHINSON ‘father, Leslie Thomas, was sta- | Racket Smashed ¢ getty 10 . : ; tioned there. He married an Itatian | O/] B ° k j Treker Seles cea ! @ PONIA iver Buick Introduces... gruel jeonp li ielg | It was disclosed several = aye Detroit Police Arrest 0 Renn Yesterday's enswer: apPly, diAmond, Wotch, it . $0000) Gages trate as Alowencs om Immigration Service officials’ cotiers of Counterfeit | UNele, Broke, Ring, gOld, ticKet, silvEr, chaRge, have said Jane is in the United | © 1953 What's My Line, Ine mumnenerae a : Sc * J, . 7-23 ae | Field Day Ducats “BIG On the Big First Event County CHAMPIONSHIP RACES SUNDAY, RACE TRACK PARK MT. CLEMENS Michigan's Only Sanctioned 1% Mile Track! Located on Broadway, 2 Mile North of 1 THRILLING RACES — CAR Vz Mile Track JULY 24 at 2:30 P.M. Building Pho “Reliable INSURANCE Protection” Wm. W. Donaldson Agency 714 Community National Bank ne FE 4-4565 | ——————_|f DETROIT (—Police . today Ch M d S iB laimed to have shed a ring | “claimed to have smasned s rng C DAaTrGe Murder uspect } | weurthiot bogus firemen’s field day Despite Many Looge Ends ; Harold Goheen, 30, a former | ee tpeer aera Detroit fireman, and Robert A. eee Calif. Reynolds, 29, a member of the : fire department, were heid for | investigation in the swindle. Two other men were sought. One was said to be a fireman. | (®—Burton! Abbott's wife and brother talked | Abbott has been formally to him briefly today at the hearing. | charged in the kidnap-slaying of Th I ; : e brother, Mark, an efficiency | 14-year-old Stephanie Bryan, but! expert at the Alameda Naval re authorities said today there are. : Station, conversed with an FBI, still many loose ends. in this agent. ‘There was no_ indication | | SMrange case. what they talked about, Goheen, who resigned last = In a brief preliminary hearing “ * «& | Ff March from the department yesterday, Municipal Judge Louis Mark contends—as does Burton | - while facing charges of being | J, Hardie continued the arraign-/ apbott’s wife, Georgia—that Bur- @ absent without leave, was ar- | ment of the one-lunged accounting | jo, ig tbo eeek piajaicalig ie bace|) rested last night after he ap- | student to July 29. done the violent things that Step-/ proached a fireman acquaintance | Abbott has denied from the out-/|hanie’s killer presumably did ~| and offered to sell him several} set that he knew anything about | overpower her in Berkeley, take of the bogus ticket books. The | the disappearance of the Berkeley|her 200 miles north to Trinity fireman called police. High School girl last April 28. Now, | County, bludgeon her or strangle | Police said they confiscated 125 | under instructions from his lawyer, her (the coroner says she’ could | books from the trunk of Goheen’s , he has stopped talking. |have died either way) ahd then | | car. = * * ‘haul her body 335 feet up a steep | Police said Reynolds, who was He was arrested Wednesday ridge and bury her if a rocky | j arrested at his home, admitted | night after the girl's decomposed manzanita thicket. / | paying $480 for 65 counterte was riaig igen the pees / ticket books. family’s cabin in Trinity County ° “ne Police said the books were ex- 200 miles north of Berkeley. Assets Rise $15 Million cellent counterfeits of the legiti-| Alameda County Prosecuting) FRANKFORT,/Ky. (UP) — As-| | mate tickets good for the field day | Atty. J. Frank Coakley, who yes-| sets of state-chartered building | | Aug. 6-7. Officers said each book | terday filed a murder complaint | and loan associations in Kentucky | | contained 50 tickets selling for 50 against Abbott declared “We have increased more than $15,000,000 | cents each. , ample evidence that Abbott killed | during 1954 and totaled $123,945,- Reynolds was ordered suspended | Stephanie Bryan.’ The complaint | 022.64, thé state banking depart-| Jf immediately from the department. | was signed by Stephanie's father. ‘ment said. '@ In Our New Building... Call FE 2-910) for a Demonstration Ride with Dave Oliver Buick 210 Orchard Lake Ave. The Home of the Good Deal PLUS a Good Deal More 1* BUICK SALESMAN Dave has lived all his life in Pontiac. At- tended Pontiac schools where he excelled in his favorite hobby of singing. He mar- ried Virginia Root arg they have a son and daughter. Home to them is at 190 Oneida road. 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