TN EEE } j ‘The Weather Mostly fair and hot. Details, page 2. PONTIAC PRES@AK py x*xnwn«r ASBOCIL ATED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE UNITED PRess PHOTOS 113th YEAR heat with a summer dress and a Robinson of 1206 Tull Rd. tests an engine in the Hea: TODAY'S TEMPERATURES 6 a.m conn 2 Mam, ..... B TF B.BB. gocces 74 «11 a.m. . 96 6 OO. .ccikee TB NOOR ....50 93 9 a.m 95 - 88 F pum. occce- Temperatures threatening the 100-degree mark are slated for to- day and tomorrow after the mer- curys shattered an 83-year heat record yesterday and established a new high mark for the year. “The Weather Bureau said the temperature may reach 98 . de- grees hoth days. Yesterday, the _ downtown Pontiac thermometer’ hit 99 before 2:30 p.m., establishing Hew.83-year and season records. The year’s previous high, 93, was registered July 4. The mercury got off to an early start in setting the new records. | Starting at a comfortable 74 de- grees at 7 a.m., the temperature rose to 89 degrees at 10 a.m., then to°96 at noon. , ‘By 1 o'clock, it had reached 98 degrees, where it remained until the 2:30 rise to 99. It slipped back to 98 through 5:30, then continued to-slide through the night. Meanwhile, other parts of the ddlintry were experiencing some f@lief from the heat, thanks to | thundershowers. HAGHT RAIN FALLS Light rain fell along the New and coast- after heavy down- pétrs drenched many northeastern | Raiffall of 9.41 inches in hours was reported at Windsor | ; Reds Pull Surprise at Conference End - SGENEVA (INS) — The historic atoms-for-peace conference — at Wich East and West. exchanged 7 of their most closely guarded secrets—ended at Geneva tay with a Russian surprise. i [Fhe Soviets announced they | Would build cyclotrons as well as wesearch reactors in Red China | Zand the European satellites. The — ey will permit the non- Communist nations to | pursue their own research and in- | ‘vestigations into atomic energy. “Pacts signed by the U.S. with 2% free nations call for American construction- of research reactors \ Today's Weather: 40 Below Zero” j Py BABY, IT’S COLD INSIDE—While secretary Pat! cold room of. GMC Truck & Cqach Division's Dyna- Parker of 24 Henry Clay Ave. tries to beat the mometer Building. Asked through the intercom for | smount of $71,300. big fan, Carl J. 7 Locks, Conn. and 7 Boston. Showers were reported in’ the Rockies, the northern and south- ern plains, the Great Lakes re- gion, states bordering the Gulf and parts of the upper and mid- die Mississippi Valley. | But none are seen for the Pon- Coal Miners a temperature report, “About 40 degrees below zero.” Records PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1955—90 PAGES Fast Staggered by F as Death Toll Nears 10 Let Contracts for Linda Vista School Building February 1956 Is Set) as Completion Date for Structure Contracts for a new ele- mentary school to serve the area between Perry and Mt. Clemens Sts. and adjacent to East Blvd. were awarded by the Pontiac Board of Education yesterday after- noon. To be known temporarily as the Linda Vista School, the $305,000 contract for) the architectural trades for | this new building went to: Bundy Construction Co., of Cari replied nonchalantly: Smashed | area of the school district. |both days. | The Weather Bureau has | through Wednesday, at least. Low reading during the night | was 72 degrees. At 8 a.m. today, the mercury stood at 78 degrees, rising to 95 degrees at 1 p.m. Will Receive New $2-A-Day Pay Raise WASHINGTON (#—A new $2-a-day pay raise for many soft coal miners was reported ready for announce- iment today. | The boost, which would come in two stages, could set the pattern for the entire soft and hard coal industry. John L. Lewis, 75-year-old president of the United | Mine Workers Union, summoned his 200-man wage- | policy committee for a, late afternoon meeting, presum- ably to ratify a new coal labor pact. City Reservists: Leave Tomorrow for Ft. Knox The 90 officers and men of Pon- | tiac’s 703rd Tank Battalion are | scheduled to leave here tomorrow morning for an intensive two weeks | of field training at Ft. Knox, Ky. | The reserve unit, complete with | all necessaf} equipment, will leave Pontiac by train af 8 a.m., arriving the same day. A man advance party, led by Maj. F, D. Thompson, unit executive officer, left Thursday for the southern camp to prepare —— eating and training facifi- Under the command of Lt. Col. Lloyd A. Gabler, the medium tank unit will be given concentrated training courses in gunnery, main- tenance and communications. Also on the list will be training on the M&4 medium tank, the Army's la- test. The 703rd, with, headquarters here, is composed of three Pon- tiae companies and to from De- troit. at the base at about 10:30 p.m. | ' The reported agreement | was said to call for a 15- cents-an-hour increase, ef- | fective Sept. 1 and a fur- ther 10-cent raise to take’ ‘effect next April 1. Lewis was reported to have reached agreement privately this e | week with Harry M. Moses, presi- dent of the Bituminous Coal Op- |erators Assn. 6 Moses represents northern commercial producers and the “captive” mines owned by the | steel industry. Similarly, Lewis and Moses got together secretly in 1952, made a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Seven Already Killed ‘in Michigan Traffic | By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Seven persons, four of them pedestrians, were killed in Michi- gan traffic in the early hours of another sizzling weefend, sands gory heat, its previous - prediction | ithat the het spell will continue | Pontiac. Mechanical trades | |awardee was Matt Conez- mius of Milford in the i | Located on a lf-acre site, the | new Linda Vista School will pro- | vide eight primary classrooms, | elementary grade rooms for this | Also to be included in the plan | drawn by H. E. Beyster & Asso- | -39 inches at tiac area. It's to be mostly fair; ciates, Inc.. of Detroit, are two orthopedic rooms. | classrooms are county in 1954, Although the special education | program will be administered lo- cally, the finances come. from the county one-half mill allocation for the construction of facilities and \for the operation of the program. Ballard Electric Co. of Pontiac took the electrical trades contract for the new school in the amount of $23,300. Following a policy adopted by the board of education, the school’s official name will be decided by the boys and girls who attend the school after it opens, Completion | date for the building is February | | of 1956. Riots Break Out in Casablanca Elsewhere in Morocco Three Persons Sidin in Demonstrations CASABLANCA, French Morocco (®—Rioting broke out in a native quarter of Casablanca today, sec- ond anniversary of the exile of Na- tionalist Sultan Mohammed Ben Youssef. Police fired on the Moroc- can demonstrators, Elsewhere in Morocco three _per- sons were slain in scattered dem- tions, At Oued Zem, 75 miles southeast of Casablanca, one person was killed and two wounded in a dem- onstration, Two others were killed at Boujad, 15 miles southeast of Qued.Zem. | , ‘In Casablanca and Marrakech— scene of bloody ‘rioting during the past six weeks—an uneasy calm was reported. Native quarters bris- tled with French security forces. Quiet was also reported in the capital of Rabat. French turned’ from France early this 4 strecSae aosbome Ae * 2 i . il 2 —_— ~;. ‘& | a ¢ -* rr — Bg _ £00 MUCH ATONE TIME—Water trom a broken loods + Flood Waters Sweep Away Pavements Pr operty Loss in Seven States Runs to Billions Thousands Are Homeless as Governors Declare State of Emergency By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Flood waters roared down —_— ~*~) | AP Wirephete | two kindergartens and four wer dam rushes down the business section of Thompson | and pavements were swept away by the force of ville, Conn. as a result of the heavy rains. Sidewalks the water. Father of Victim Says ‘He’s Not Happy With Court Verdict NEW YORK (®—Sgt. James C. Gallagher says he will go as high | as the U. S. Supreme Court if nec- shore. State Police who reached essary in appealing a court-mar- | tial verdict that convicted him of | murdering two fellow prisoners of | war, The court-martial yesterday an- | nounced its verdict after deliber- | ating five hours. In addition to the | unpremeditated murder of two Americans in a Korean POW camp, Gallagher was found guilty of collaboration with the Chinese Reds, mistreating fellow prisoners, and informing on them to vain fa- vored treatment for himself. The military court of eight officers then sentenced him to life in prison at hard labor, the maximum penalty, Unpremedi- tated murder is equivalent to second degree murder in g civil- ian court. The decision is subject to two au- | tomatic reviews, first by the Ist | Army comynanding officer and | then by a review board of the | Judge Advocate General's Office | in Washington. The 23-year-old Brooklyn soldier paled when the court gave its de- cision, but soon regained the com- posure he had maintained through- out the trial, In Detroit the father of one of the victims says he wasn't satis- fied with the sentence given (ial- Michael Jones, 54, father of Cpl. John William Jones, declared yes- terday that “if I'd had a chance to vote I'd give him the same medi- cine he gave those other boys. “T'd have fed him nothing, taken his pants away and let him go naked and when he got good and hungry and weak I'd hane him on) a nail,” he said. ‘Then I'd throw him out in the cold.” the camp sight this morn- ing reported “no sign of anything.” The site was un- der water. All 14 buildings in the samp — known as Cam; Usavicd -- were gone. SE Y™MOU &. (mn, ®-The rearing current of the Nauga- tuck River undermined more than a quarter of Union Ceme- tery here yesterday, Tombstones were upset. Ce- ord as a sex offender was held | Creek overflowed Thursday Hunt 40 Persons Missing \From Flooded Camp Site ce Scout Advisor Held in Slaying Ex-Counselor With Sex Offense Record Quizzed in Gorham Murder MUSKEGON «®—A former Boy | Massachusetts, rain-filled *rivers of the | Northeastern states today, | adding to heavy damage | already inflicted by the , | area's severest flood in his- | tory. The loss was estimated |in billions of dollars. | ‘The death toll, which be- '|gan to climb early ‘yester- |day, had reached at least 92 for the seven-state area. And the peak of the flood jwas still to come in some sections. The known dead listed state by | states were: Pennsylvania 41; Con necticut 30; Massachusette 11; New | Jersey 5; New York 2; Virginia 2; | Rhode Island 1. New reports of dams crumb- ling under the force of swollen streams added to the swelling to- tal of property damage. | The collapse of the Rice City |Dam in North Uxbridge, Mass., isent a five-foot wall of water | charging down the Blackstone Riv- er toward Woonsocket, R. I. already devastated by earlier floods. 4 STROUDSBURG, Pa. (P—An, extensive search was RECORDS IN DANGER launched at dawn today for about 40 persons missing | from a.private summer camp five miles north of here) that was completely covered by swirling flood waters. There was no indication whether the adults and pasement of the statehouse in an children in the camp were trapped when Broadheads effort to forestall damage to the night or made it safely to building and its valuable records. As the rising Delaware River swirled over its banks in Trenton, | capital of New Jersey, five fire | companies pumped water from the While downstream communities | built hasty sandbag dikes and | evacuated low - lying districts, | stricken cities upstream reported with relief that the flood crest there had been passed. Thousands were homeless and whole cities went without drinking water, electricity and gas. There was no news, good or bad, for worrted relatives flood areas. Telephone circufts re- ‘maining in operation were re- ‘served for emergency use. The governors of Pennsylania. Rhode Island and Scout camp counselor with @ rec-| Connecticut declared a state of emergency. ment vaults and coffins were | in the Peter Gorham slaying today. | ae ; State Police Sgt. Milton Swingle | BRIDGES WASHED OUT unearthed. In view of valley residents swho lined the river bank, cemetery workmen lifted | corpses from the upended coffins onto stretchers fdr burial in a bare hole on the far side of the cemetery, - PORT JERVIS, N. Y. ®—Press- men stood in the water yesterday to get out the Port Jervis Union- Gazette, which hasn't missed an edition in 105 years. The newspaper, its building sloshing with flood waters, moved its editorial operations and its As- sociated Press teletype printer to offices of the Tri-State Associated Telephone Corp., on higher ground. Copy beys hustled stories down the water-filled street to the printers, who stuck to their un- damaged linotypes and presses. Pressmen waded about, locking forms on the presses. Tons of newsprint was soaked and ruined, but the paper came out with a six-page edition, instead of its usual eight pages, plus an advance-printed four-page supple- ment--and right on time. . Guards Help ] GRAYLING @ — A volunteer force of. about 500 Michigan Na- Ce ee Chicugoland Must | ward through the woods. Fésuved, was ehgeoeed to draw Ce ee ee a some 80,000 persons to Soldier 125th Infatry Regiment of Field tonight. Sh ee : z ih t #5 i | i z a sé Hi i i i : seeseveceeeenceees 6 eee eons TEC eee 4. «| "They were scheduled to leave for Fire at two weeks of summer training. four hours, It was estimated the last of the men wouldn't . leave camp until mid-afternoon today. A scheduled critique and award , customarily held the of trainng, had to be post- | poned. \ Grayling | of the Grand Haven Post said the | |jman was arrested in the Trav- |erse City area yesterday and held for questioning. Swingle said the man, whom he did not identify, formerly was a counselor at Camp Waba- ningo, a Boy Scout camp near Muskegon, ‘The 12-year-old Gorham boy dis- appeared from the same camp on a hiking trip with a group of Scouts July 5. His body was found last Sunday in a lonely woods about five miles south of the camp. He had been shot through the head. LIE. TEST GIVEN . Swingle said the ex-counselor “could. not account for his where- | abouts” on July 5. A lie- Police said Bailey bought the Lions Cun chan will hold their annual picnic Aug. 24 at shotgun yesterday and planned to kill his estranged wife, Linda, Springdale Park according to mem. ber Roland W. Reese. The golf mother of four children. tournament between the city’s four Krueger was shot at point-blank | service clubs is scheduled for Aug. range as he and other officers in-|3) at Brookland Golf Club on vestigated a complaint of “family | 4 Rochester Road, Reese said. bis 1s wosrrraL Death Toll Mounting in Eastern Floods — He was shot in the left side of | (Continued From Page One) the chest and died on a Receiving | Hospital operating table while four surgeons fought to save him. Following the shooting, tear gas | was thrown into the apartment of Bailey's sister-in-law where he had | the Pocono Mountains, was left come searching for his wife. i tts —_— and main —_ | we away re was no drink- Moments later, four policemen | ing water or household gas for charged into the reom and Pa- heating and cooking trolman Gerald Jamieson fired | < 6. oe shots = — was | While Stroudsburg began the yotched = . |messy job of bailing out, cities Jamieson said: |further down the Delaware River “He was lying on the bed near system awaited the full fury of the |the front window, apparently try-| torrent. At Easton, Pa., 40 feet of ing to get fresh air. I told him to water broke a 53-year-old Dela- give up. He suddenly swung the ware River flood record of 38.6 gun around and tried to get up.” feet. (6 SHOTS HIT MAN | | All Six of Jamieson’s shots hit’ The new agreement would replace | prukeagear Day per estate dead jw im Rece Hos- | pital department heads be invited that three-year-old contract. : 7 — Mi ohn | pital, 59 minutes after police were | to meetings ‘‘so they may know the | iners now make an $18.25 basic | | first warned of trouble in the| problems faced.” He said such an daily wage. = etapa 44 | apartment, arrangement would result in “bet- i pg ey this to $1 |_ Mrs. Bailey left her ieshand tn! ter understanding. Rogen hen on April 1. Shelbyville on Aug. 11 because she The regular board action, Bab-| The Charleston, W. Va., Daily | said he was “mean to me and the cock named members to four Mail said it learned details of the | kids” and returned to Detroit. standing committees. They are: reported new agreement from) Finance — Harold 8. Goldberg, highly placed industry sources. | wh chairman; Charles E. Yeager, The newspaper said. the deal Car Hits Boy, 5, into Woonsocket, flooding Harold’ B. Euler. House Adminis- | calls for time-and-a-half pay tor T Ri | le ent sec- iding on ricyc ly populated tenement tration — Joseph Jones, chairman; vee : Mrs. B. B. Roush, Euler. Medico- | romana angie OF en | Five-year-old Andrew James Wi- I tion of the city. Five hundred fam- gent, son of Dr. and Mrs Ralph ‘lies were evacuated just before Administrative — William P. Bab- | cock, chairman; Willis M. Brewer. | of vacation with $140 in pay: D. Wigent, of 101 Mohawk Ra. the churning — moved in, was treated and released at Pon- Pentiae Press Phote short-clad Pontiac En are, left to right: Bill Dickinson,, W. L. Pipe, Don Roberts and Collis A Scott, < Dickinson's Men's Wear store: —————_————EE , but they cool, ‘Ber | Is for Year the best possible employe and pub- lic relations." . OFFERS PROPOSAL Babcock offered for the board's New Pay Raise (Continued From Page One) , deal and the rest of the industry | accepted it, although Southern coal | *mine owners did so reluctantly. * * * Further downstream lay Tren- ton, capital of New Jersey, report- ed already in “bad shape,” With | worse to come. Water swirled into the city’s. streets and civil defense officials declared an emergency. Beyond that was populous Phil- adelphia on one side of the river and Camden, N. J. on the other,, | both anxiously watching the on- | cotning mighty flood. | * * In Rhode Island the rain-swollen — and Mill Rivers burst Horseshoe Dam and through | poured a dense’ | i | | | \ | | i XD miss the boat Property — Brewer, chairman (re-| Few miners work Saturdays or | AMENDMENT READ requires premium rates for Satur- First reading was given a pro. ¢4Y and Sunday work only when a| tiae General Hospital yesterday | At paweachet he down- | by-laws which would establish a work that week. One week of vaca- | by a car driven by Mrs. George | along the Blackstone's banks. | fifth standing committee. the nego- | — $100 in pay is now pro Bisbikis, 39, of 133 Mohawk Rd., Hundreds of children at summer ot = ae Mee a to police. Bas were evacuated to hich ground by mtreduced by Mrs. Roush, royalty paid by mine owners into| Mrs. Bisbikis told officers she | ¢licopters and rescue boats. amendment calls for the new the union's health-welfare fund yee aie | ter at the confluence ie ‘aiaie ebaaaehed did not see the child until it was | °°? : ol Sgyaanad ermasigesl opr re \ttact. It now stands at 40 cents @ | too late to avoid hitting him. She | Deleware sod. Beversnie thvets F rat moré than a million dollars aft- agreement changes or his tricycle. loode | made by unions or workers’ as- = pases industry this year began ler both neers fl . a = town, are some of the ‘prosperity | The devastating floods first start- Referred to the finance commit- common talk that Lewis — who, When Strikes Are Called ee Ww nmendation by Lau- | ¢ heavv rains that poured down alt- as.a recommendation by Lau- could have sought contract | BOSTON «®—The International er Hurricane Diane wore herself admission fees be increased. Miss | wait no longer. This was particu- | = | Pal sai they were vo ncreased lary singe subtanial wage br Sraygt Geers | The rns swe thruth Pe A recommendation by Dr. Aben, this summer in the auto and steel “Hoekman that air conditioning |i aieetvien. The union's 97th annual conven-| into New England. Record rain- tion voted to continue the union | ‘falls all along the storm belt soon rooms was referred to the — ty and finance committees for i oe majettts ae id on pre GRAND HAVEN Ww — Two y im a com | run-off into the larger rivers bridges costing some $6,500,000—~ The majority report said the | floods. Jailed for 90 Days | —will be built by the state highway | jmien newspaper is “the most ef John Nault, 26, of 265 N. Perry | department at Grand Haven. defense in monopoly situations,” | about 23 electric lights. j the Oakland County Jail yesterday | BP aS after pleading guilty to a charge | GRAND RAPIDS Glen Jami- with a minor. ‘son, 54, of Grand Rapids, was White Lake Township Justice car while crossing U. S. 131 out- Fredrick Stephan. ' side-the Grand Rapids city limits. at Pontiac State Hospital The annual picnic for patients | appointed); Euler, Yeager. | Sundays. Their present contract | posed amendment to the hospital miner has already put in five days | for a head injury. He was struck | stream, sandbag dikes were raised tiating committee | while riding a tricycle, according "camps in southeastern New York There was no indication that the | Port Jervis, N. Y.. railroad committee to negotiate any WAKE | \ouid be changed by the new com was backing out of a driveway and a vestigate and review working | said the impact knocked him from | W"s left with damage eximated After a period of sagging sales, sociations. ITU Will Work Papers enjoyed by other industries. It was ed in Virginia on the heels of retta Paul, hospital director, that, — changes two years ago — would, Typographical Union has voted to out in the Carolinas. | when rates were aised th ve wen ® recently. | creases were negotiated earlier) strikes, 'sylvania and New York and on units be installed in the surgery newspaper it calls UNITYPO on raised streams and creeks to dam- To Build New Bridges vestigation and action. mittee. that drain the area, bringing crisis one for cars and one for railroads fective and cheapest means et An average new automobile has St., was sentericed to 90 days in’! Man Hit by Car, Dies --@f indecent and — conduct | The sentence was “imposed by killed friday night when hit by a at Pontiac State Hospital, “Spon. Larson said. ‘that the. staff and With @ convenient cherge account you're always able to take advontage of our specially advertised merchandise You'll never miss the boat on savings if — she asic at pa i's a pleasure to charge it at... * } cag het ae By ELIZABETH WOODWARD Force of circumstance, like a sharp-bladed axe, can separate you. One of y to go away, to » tot y, or to a new . His family decides to ¥ move, perhaps, 4 Or your father is transferred to a different city. The blissful tenor of your ways is disrupted, sliced off clean, * * * You can, of course, do the next : best thing with letters and phone : calls to keep your love alive — 4 it the two of you want this sep- 4 aration to be only temporary. $e. bie ‘ But there's the break that has q all aspects of being per- manent: For one perfectly good reason or another, it doesn't : seem wise to try to keep the pot ! boiling, When one’s heart is in- | volved it's downright difficult to understand the reasons and be philosophic about the results. Here's a girl, for instance, who sees separation staring ner in the face and is being forced to settle for half-measures. She writes: | “Dear Miss Woodward: I've been ! seeing quite a bit of him, and just when we'd both taken quite a liking | to-each other, he announced that he had decided to accept a job that had been offered to him in a distant town, He told me not to get too stuck on him as he would be leaving this winter, “T guess he feels since he's going away that I should forget him completely. So, to make it easier on both of us, we've been ignor- ing each other, and only speaking when it's necessary and proper. Is this the right thing to do?” Answer: Separation seems to be inevitable. So it might as well descend on you sooner as later. It’s too bad that this attractive new job had to come along and tempt him to leave town, just But he apparently feels deeply that there would be no good pur- pose served in continuing to cul- tivate a friendship that would be i a sotrow to you both when the a moment came for parting. So he figures it's better to nip it off now, clean and neat before it gets too tough to do. Had you both been able to count dm your ability to main- tain an even keel — keep your relationship just friendship — you might have continued to seq - each other amicably right up un- t til the day of goodbye. And been i able to say it cheerfully with no strings attacked, But he couldn't count on that. So he has already said goodbye. And you'd be wise to consider it said. Don't make an issue of ig- Get yourself completely involved with other people and other things. of your very thinking, You'll be happier if you do. # i E ppili i z 3 Rte #2 iF Get Used to Ine ‘iher hair. A tie is worn went and that he told her he liked me. She said, too, that she'd. asked him to write to her. But I'm afraid if he does write to her he might take a liking to her, and I don’t want that to hap- pen. “I¢ she's trying to make me jealous, she's doing a good job of it. She's broken up other couples before. Now I don’t want to start a fight with her, and I don't want her to see that I'm jealous. So what can I do?” Answer: You're much more con- bye, and he said he didn’t want any girl to write to him, Which put a period on things for you. He’s not likely to write to any of the other girls either, no mat- Two outfits for the price of one, is famous American designer Toni Owen's “specialty” for you. Here she shows two skirts — a slim and @ full — and a shirt-waist In the center front and in the back of the skirt are inverted Ties for Paris’ Newest Fashion PARIS (INS)—A raid on your dad's, brother's or husband's ward- A man’s tie, according to beauty expert Fernand Aubry, is the la- test gadget for a girl to wear in Nothing has happened yet to make care . ‘ you really jealous. It's yoyr-im-} aa agination and your fears at'work.| ‘Dear Miss Woodward: We've And they're working overtizne. | been in love for months, but last Wait a while until your boy| week we broke up because I had told him that ages ago I had had a date with another boy just to spite him. “He had just told me that he loved me and would never leave me. Then I hurt him and he said nas ape love me any more, I does, So what can I do to get tin beck?” Asnwer: It's hard to believe #4 in Tasty Leftover Dish friend gets squared away, and see were jolted. But I can't believe it's perman- ent, Not if you won't let him nurse a grudge off by himself. Get in touch with him and try to patch things up. Undo the hurt. Bring a quick end to the sorrow that is your temporafy parting. (Copyright, 1955, by United Fea- ture Syndicate, Inc.) |Don’t Carry Mourning to Extreme Video Ban Unfair to Children After Relative’s Death By EMILY POST A distressed wife tells me:. ‘My husband's mother passed away two fweeks ago and he has forbidden our children to turn on the tele- vision set, saying that it would be Wery disrespectful to do 80. “I can't see any harm in this and think he is being very unfair to the children, After all, we can’t just sit home and look at each other and to watch television Miss Jones. Vacuum Slipcovers autumn. Hubert DeGivenchy | tablespoons sugar and mix well. Before Washin a super-size flat bow of} Mold, chill firm in your automatic 9 rrp Sage teed pr black satin to be pinned to a chi-| refrigerator, unmold. Serve plain| Slipcovers should be vacuumed csbam cults with eolermatched gnon as a modish -time jor with cream—makes four serv-| thoroughly or shaken to remove! cosamere skirts, into jackets and trimming. ings. : loose surface dust before washing,| eagelets, imto. seven-cighths giving special care to bindings and — full-length daytime : s seams. : ‘ Joanna Lang Kindley Wed "cre: sores, 1 ary. remove| ‘tn eilegto, clot ‘8 confined to . stains and baste pleats-in place to/ the colors that nature and muta- BIRMINGHAM — In the First} Her only attendant was Jane | make ironing easier. Use a sudsy|tion experts have developed in Saturday after-| Ann Kohr, who wore a blue and | brush on bindings and spoiled spots | true furs. At moment; colors at acs Eee ng tens Waeiion, tae amen wane Rinse roe dint eg ogee ore “ were thoroughly. beige anna Lang Kindley, daughter of| yellow daisies and ivy. = ~ = Mrs, William A, Kindley of Kenne-| po.si4 Bonate’ was Mr. Bird’ ; saw avenue and the late Mr. Kind- |, 0 /" a, nd he aateed Richind — L. Philips, a cousin of the bride, : The bridegroom's parents are _— —— De. and Mrs E A smal] family reception was ‘ . yo Ag Bird of teats tn thew bald’ ; The bride wore a summery white © embroidered street length dress| After a wedding trip to northern . tg: a and a tiny white straw bonnet) Virginia Mr. and- Bird will pe : and carried white live in Warwick, Va. 5 O " Tonight til ? titi i A | “man-made furs.” It's a blend of Martin Smith of Dakota street will be in- | stalled as president of the Congregation | B'nai Israel Youth Group Sunday evening ‘8 at a dinner dance. Shown with Martin are Prizant, of West Iroquois, chairman, (left to right) __MAKE( THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1955 vitable Separation ton, co-chairman of the affair, and Helen 4 Lorell Kornov, Robert Jane PAS. Paul Kampner to Ceremony The Congregation B'nai Israel youth Group will hold a dinner dance Sunday evening at the B'nai Israel Synagogue. i * * « Paul Kampner will act as master of ceremonies for the event. David Utley will serve as installing of- ficer for the governing body of | the youth group. Officers beginning a new term will be Martin Smith, president; Helene Prizant, first vice presi- dent; Dennis Coffman, secénd vice president; Leah Berg, recording secretary; Barbara Berg, corres — sponding secretary; . and Michael Newhouse, treasurer. Co-chairmen working under chairman Helene Prizant and Patricia Steinberger are Gerald Grumet, James Schmidt, Toby Gilbert, Barbara Berg, Berg, Delores Surowitg and Marie Zworin, Others helping with . arrange- ments are Michael Newhouse, Bonnie Marlowe, Michael Walker, Dennis Coffman, Martin Smith, Ellen Niedleson, Adrienne Ressler, Bonnie Marlowe, Joann Walker, Melvin Nosan- Sehmidt, Ejilander, =» chuck, Richard Serwin, and Ber- nard Toby. &. hs Pontiac Press Phote Patricia Steinberger of Farm- By ANNE HEYWOOD lyric that begins, ‘‘Things are sel- | dom what they seem.” * * * I think of it often when I'm meeting new people, women par- ticularly. The tense, harried, busy- looking woman usually turns out to be one who does nothing much to speak of, except worry, gossip and complain. And the serene, calm, easygoing woman usually turns out to have a st of accomplishments a mile long and a schedule that would curl your hair. Bobbie Waters is such a wom- an, She looks as if life were just.one long holiday, but the truth is something else again, Bobbie Waters first came to my attention because of the lovely cos- tume jewelry she makes at home. Her work is delicate and beau- tiful, but her prices are very low, She makes jewelry with business girls in mind, she told me, and wants to keep prices in line with their budget. While I was examining the sam- ples she brought—colorful pins and New Furs Offer Slim, Fluid Lines NEW YORK (NEA) — Warmth without weight. Fluid lines. Eco- fiornical upkeep. Mothproof and mildew-proof. These are some of the advantages of rics. * * Orllegro is typical * of these new | Sunday 3 College or _ Career Clothes : « the riew fur fab- Serene Woman Finds Gainful Craft | earrings, with delightfully original | ally pitches in and helps her when There is a Gilbert and Sullivan | designs—she told me her story.) there's a rush of orders. HAPPILY MARRIED Bobbie is. happily married, with ;a husband who not only approves | ‘of her jewelry-making, but = Thrill your little boy or girl with this lifelike “Davy Crockett" doll! A youngster’s favorite hero—now a wonderful playmate, too! Pattern 821: “Davy Crockett" doll! Easy to make—ISinch doll clothes, “pretend” gun and pouch! Pattern, transfers, directions. Send 25 cents in coins for this. pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for ist-class mailing. Send to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly pattern, number, your name, address and zone. Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea | In addition to cooking, keeping | house and making jewelry, Bob-| bie has a nine-to-five job in an) advertising agency. On the side, | she does such things as teaching | Sunday School, raising plants and teaching the art of jewelry-mak- | ing to other women who want to learn how! | “How did you happen to start! making jewelry?” I asked. Bobbie, and then out came the most re- markable part of her story. Years ago, she sustained a bad back injury. It meant long sieges in the hospital and th in hed. There were several | years when this active woman could hardly drag herself around. It was then that she met a little old lady who made jewelry. “1 asked if she would teach me,"'| Bobbie said, “because | figured I'd go crazy if there wasn’t some- thing I could do to pass the time.” A JOB IN ADVERTISING — From the beginning, Bobbie loved jewelry-making, Years later, when her back was all cured, she ning right out and getting a job in advertising. I started to sympathize with her over those tragic years in bed, but Bobbie Waters just smiled and. said,““We've practically for- gotten all about that by now. Alt- kept it up—in addition to run-}-- Washable Glove Is New Leather On view at a research laboratory in Cincinnati recently was a white leather_ glove which has been washed one hundred and nine times, The glove, newest in the series of new washable leathers called launder-leather, stil] looks fresh as new and will take any number of additiong] launderings by hand or washing machine. * * - Although launder-leather gloves were first produced several months ago in all fashion colors, white ones posed a special problem. Now, the production bugs have been overcome and = glistening white launder-leather will soon be avail- able to American women. The new white gloves will be available in launder - leather kid, suede, cape and pigskin in a va- ‘riety of styles, from very brief shorties for casual wear to longer |four-to-eight button lengths for dressier costumes. Gift packages can be made highly individual with slogans cut i ads, names done in rickrack. okes or toys can be tied on, or yarn and pom-pom trim added. When You Think of Music, Think of Gallagher's! YOU SAVE MORE BY SHOPPING IN PONTIAC er all, life is so full and so in teresting, who has time for re- membering past troubles?” Use Color Swatch ‘in Choosing Carpet When choosing a carpet in a neutral hue, keep in mind that greys and beiges come with subtle color differences, There are rosy beiges, and yellow beiges-—~ like sand. Greys can have overtones of blue or pink, to make them blend better with thé“major colors in a room, To be sure you choose the right neutral when you go carpet-shop- ping, carry a small swatch of fab- ric or a paint chip in ‘the color you intend 4o feature, BEFORE YOU BUY ANY PIANO Rent a Betsy Ross or Galbransen SPINET PIANO OF YOUR CHOICE $20 Deposit, $10 Monthly Cartage and Six Months’ Rental Allowed on Purchase of Piano Open Monday & Friday ‘til 9 P. M. CLOSED WEDNESDAY AFTERNOONS DURING AUGUST GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 18 £ Huron, Pontise, FE 4-0566 Michigan's. Largest Jewelers 24 N. Saginaw St. Freed Slates Dance , Act as Master of +. q THE PONTIAC PRESS. at _SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1955 aa | SPECIALTIES CONCRETE CULVERTS -—T ovrpoon riRePLacts 670 W. Huron FE 4-3525 | you. Nowadays bathrooms are | arnong the most dazzling rooms in ms area: Decor Possible i _ If you like to sing in the bath- room, you certainly ought to have) surroundings as glamorous as your baritone or soprano, or what have a house, new or old. Remodeling\ or WARM WALL plaster walls? Well, it’s not hope- less, especially with today's mate- rials and methods. In Bathroom ‘Atmospheric Soil’ , |Fades Carpeting your carpet colors will probably lose some especia light colors so popular recently. | . This dulling is due to “atmo- spheric soil,” ried in the atmosphere and set- . But to.do a superficial, stand- by job of brightening the surface, try sponging the carpet every six ~months with an approved synthet- ic. Apply is sparingly and with a “wiping’’ motion, the directions advise. In this way, you wet only the tips of the fibers; and this is important, for excess moisture may leave rings or soak into the backing and soften it. But if you work gently and sponge lightly, you can give your carpet a suc- Lg Gradually over the months, of their freshness, y if they are the clear the dirt that is car- pREERRLILEORULEESRE SESE: aa kK kK kk Ook kk kk kk CIVILIANS - VETERANS NEW 2-Bedroom Gas Heat FHA Homes 695. FOR VETS $56 500 down Pius Costs These vanity combinations pro- vide as much storage space as the average kitchen refrigerator > > d > Machine Works 17-19 §. Perry St. FE 5-6184 DIXIE LUMBER CO., Inc. 831 Oakland Ave. FE 2-0224 maraaron | MINEO Tote Lodbateek PEARL BUILDING CO. rar CONTRACTOR AREA WALLS rt i Ch fant eee $ £ Youilnti__ Mile North of Faber Body CALCIUM CHLORIDE OV i WIRING | hk kK OK OK Ow 5 | SILICA SAND oe (2 INSTALLATIONS CEMENT & MORTAR i @ COMMERCIAL H | t Ce t CEMENT COLORS o INDUSTRIAL ome improvement Venter eT oe _— PIPE 8 45. W Years Hi rons : . | @ ATTICS ©@ GARAGES AIN T est Huron St. | . — | LINK— INSULATING BOARD == de __FE 23924 & Fe 24008 | ‘tow Modew and how: @RECREATION ROOMS e@ADDITIONS Bond's Plaster or Concrete | . MODERN BATHROOM—The modern vanity lavatory provides a » eeeeeeee RAPP PPDPPR AAR >| Grveniens pecenarte wih : i ‘ a: i dressing table with lots of linen storage in bathroom. $ 2 F 4. ; ~ ' > ; SI B L F y SHEATHING for: | Upper Brookville, N. Y¥., which, steel like automobile fenders 2 3 The ready mixed oil plastic paint me had just sold for $78,000. that are easy for one man to i> 4 Creates that beautiful » More uniform temperature} among the main features that | handle. Or lighter still, you can | @ $ = , COAL & SUPPLY CO.) —rloor 16 ceiling. will make wus remember that | S: Plasto reanrircenhandie. |$ ANGLE—TEE $| ‘eh ‘ere decoration MIDWEST SUPPLY 140 N. Cass Ave. » Stronger bracing. house were the bathrooms, They a ae iz S| mane tn'e male uamner= , FE 5.8163 ’ Comfort and economy. had miatature flower gardens New ad oo ope - pea eq REINFORCING BARS > ph 9 N TELEGRAPH a= Gems kaaw planted in tile countertops -sur- tieable to put up clay tile over > $| with a point brush ° - Iated in eda as well as rool —— the wash basins. any firm wall surface. $ I BEAMS—CHANNEL 2 | = = = ceftisidcine Philo | et cia tedatatng board | grata 202 SOU have," “Fat bine, you certainly can earn «|$ HOT ROLLED AND a ‘ | Build wit néulating boar $78,000, or ante ith of tha ber, ¥ : ye orem ; G-E—Zenith—lronrite | a toon oo and feel warmer in amount *e aoe a chesetal sacs lot about how these things are) 3COLD FINISHED BARS$ 00. painting process c j S k f CRUMP ELECTRIC | winter, ceoler in summer, to sing, and splash. Modern ma- done and what you are paying | $ 2 Come ia for a finished omp ete toc oO 9665 Aubern A terlale ond ideda make it possibk your money for when it comes to 3 > | INTERIOR “ EXTERIOR DOORS AUBURN HEIGHTS, MICH. f to ganar o a budget this | hiring the job done. 2 FLAT $ sample and Color Card 5 an &. 0. Grane eth meeted| | } hardest-used of all rooms in your’ EQUIPMENT > ROUND—SQUARE 4) ft 134" Interior Flush Birch Doors.......... $12.00 enema . hose.” Smart, and popular bathroom | $ 2| — 13%4" Exterior Flush Birch. Choice of Lites — LUMBER WHERE TO START | equipment includes a countertop $y 3 or Planted Wood Moldings Ahoddsnagac 9.00 TO BUY OR SELL | The question usually is where @round the wash basin with linen | SHOT ROLLED SHEETS$ GLAZED SASH DOORS REAL ESTATE to start. In planning a new house | S!rase cabinets below. ail § AND PLATES e 4 ae | FE 5-6910 this is relatively simple. But with combines vanity table = pope | 3 $ i ma A) | ee by, rey OHN ry NZLER 3360 W an older house, what are you going San case ea wane | 2 3 | Extruded Aluminum Combination Door, $92.50 . to do with a tub on lion-claw legs, $ > PAI N I | complete with hardware ....5...... wars JOHN & BUILDER | Huron a pine board floor and cracked | Past year. ‘3Pontiac Welding &} | > t $ . 3 ; , 3 4 4 ‘Asbestos Siding | S.s-i=" reine c | Build —— Pn acomnentee. | Garages ommercial Buildings . yuntertops are same 1S Fe teclon Needs Attention | =2x'ssac"" Additions Roding | Spilled perfume and other cos- Ati Remodeling Sing Britle Shingles Demand | tae men bata Recreation Rooms Bath Rooms i Care, Caution and Some tile, of course, provides a virtually A, can be used tor commercial, residential or industrial it or. develop it on either a cash basis or partnership or we'll do it om a tee basis, completing all of the engineering and plat work, A large corporation with all of the skills necessary will help you get the most for your property SYLVAN REALTY, FE 5-9418 2383 Orchard Lake Road, Rt. No. 5 is well as the roads DON'T BE A ‘WISH | HADDA’ Kitchen Remodeling io T “There 1s No Substitute for Experience” | OPEN SUNDAYS 12:00 - 4:00 BOB‘S BUILDING SERVICE . 207 W. MONTCALM At the flashing amber light just east of Oakland Ave. FE 4-9544 Murray White these shingles but the shingles must Clarkston to Northview » fun o e ‘ TRIM & S HUTTER PAI NT be bone dry and the practice is to |] Greenlawn, just South of Com- right to the model. See it FHA and Gl Financing first coat them with linseed oil merce Reed. 3 blocks East of cd Near schools, church- = Union Lake Rd. today! « seal the pores. A less complicated oN pred . Siete < * 405 and safer finish to use is a paint|| Model Open Saturday & | ’ beautiful. Clarkston . Q especially formulated for asbestos Sunda 1 6 j : Village. : shingles and other masonry sur- ya . a Tener, fee pu PokT puLux, ‘Do You Own Land Suitable for Development? We are looking for property, either undeveloped or developed that If you're a do-it-yourself en- thusiast, you can get plumbing | _Sateres ot pressed and enameled | | Swimming Pools | Thought When Cleaned Asbestos shingles, in case you ‘are interested, are made out of | cement and asbestos. They make a fine material for roofs ant for | sidewalls because they don't burn, |don't rot and aren't bothered by | insects. Also, they will last almost | | inde finitely witheut much in the | way of upkeep. } & * Asbestos shingles are sort of brit- tle and therefore you've got to be jcareful not to pump them. When you want to drive a nail through them to fasten something to the | | wall or to refasten a loose shingle, | first drill a hole through the shingle and then drive the nail through this hole. Be careful not to strike the , shingle with the hammer. Robert E. White shingles can often be removed by just brushing with a stiff brush. Plain water will also remove a lot of the dirt. When the shingles We'll buy become very soiled there are compounds available, Many people with asbestos shin- gle on the sidewalls of their homes | don't know that these shingles can become badly soiled or stained or of you wish to change their color you simply give them a coat of paint. Ordinary oil paints suitable for exterior .woodwork can be used on faces. This -type of paint (there are many excellent brands) isn’t both- ered by the moisture that might —8 cubic feet. Styles nick- 54 N. Parke FE 2-4121; named “Mr. and Mrs." have two | sinks, two storage cabinets and | two medicine chests. They are | not difficult to install for the | do-it-yourself handyman, except | foolproof surface. When you get into all of the tricks that can be done with tile) there seems to be no end to glamor | in the bath. Tile murals on bath- > room walls have been designed by artists in Los Angeles and New| York in the old mosaic manner. | junken bathtubs, Roman style, so | captivated a Baltimore builder. ' that he plans 80 luxury homes And in keeping with the indoor- | outdoor spirit of modern architc- | ture, the bathroom is not neglect- | ed. A private garden adjoining | the bathroom is fenced off for ‘Surface dirt on asbestos special asbestos shingle cleaning | be painted. They don't require | paint for protection but if they | privacy to provide a place for sun-_ | bathing and relaxation. About all that is missing in | today’s bathroom is a hamburger grill, 2 BEDROOM ‘450 DOWN | FHA TERMS Monthly Payments ONLY $ S31 Includes Everything COLWELL 3 Bedroom IN BEAUTIFUL CLARKSTON VILLAGE VISIT THE MODEL OPEN DAILY { to 8 Drive out Dixie Highway to M-15 .. follow M-15 through Bricks 13,900 Exclusive Features q & TOI ITOK TOK KOK KKK KD f) : hi = tinea ; ssful home beauty. treatment. " ¢ TENN. LEDGE ROCK _experts, launching their dream- tles into the fibers. In time, you | ©*** ‘ BOWN i FLAG STONE. — boats in the bathtub,-seem to get will need professional cleaning to contd Payments $3372 Plus Costs ; : Sng f mode! on than wi get rid of this. Pius Taxes . farther in rnzation t hen a. wine Tose BRIAR HILL STONE they start at the. front door. MEW WALLS “e F tel w. A a = -BRICK And when it comes to glamor, ? Ms Beaut coded Area, new Homes... Behind New BELDEN FACE architects and decorators certainly ED Pontiac Junior High School, off Madison and North Perry. COMMON BRICK are going to town with their new FR OTE FOR OLD B ne ns va ivess, 18 E Ypsilanti, 1 Mile North of Last weekend we | , eS P METAL CULVERTS | Dstbroom ideas. moO nae GLASS BLOCK took a look at a new howe 2 at WwW > | Also have 4 left—3 bedrooms, full basement, gas HOT LIME . heat. Completely finished. be in = shingles, HOMES, : ING PONTI AC mi " 5 istee : ; ilw ; e ice 0 s A new doubl : * ‘ 3 . net, 82 fet long eat ee. tt €-2003, : relate amt eu = live in beautiful ee +h eC Pebeed Besemante mpeghied oir Gand qpalphoyrerstoy Maple Rd. arkston Village. Here is the easy pace, th 2 Sipngneae te the world although not the longest. a ’ It is 32 feet high and 3i feet wide. Birmingbem @ Select Oak Floors ... warm friendliness of small town living within minutes of your job or business. Big 100’ by 150’ lots. All houses at least 60 foot apart. ADING no problem now! @ Pickled Birch Cabinets ae te geal as" « S lela ee alous dows \ TORIDHEET 'WALL-FLAME OIL HEAT the Tops - fuiiinitntins Reve oad teimna tah AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. eS, $.000 Successful Installations in Pontice Area. 17 Orcherd Lake Ave. FE 2-9124 Vesnsersresserssogs | © 21%4"x12%4" Living Room © Ceramic Tile Bath, Kitchen - Counters, Vestibule Floors ae DR ieterero’ As many as 7,000 persons per Square mile live'in the Ganges yalley of India, 2 70 BUY-T0 C. SCHUETT REALTOR Farms, New and Used Homes. Lake Front Homes... * Cottages, Lake and Acts oilfes. | SEE SCHUETT’S AD OF SPECIAL VALUES IN BUILDING SECTION PAGE 20 5 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU Listings and Saies Help Needed In Oor Expansion Program AT THIS VALUE! © BiG, NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME FOR ONLY ‘45 PER MONTH including Taxes and Insurance Total Price $7400 FHA TERMS Model Home Is at $14 Third (Off Joslyn) Open Daily and Sunday Built by BVG Invc: tment Company Phone FE 4-4138 *12,000. AS 'THIS YOU? Perhaps you. have noticed that ELL some bome handy men take great work. | pride in.pampering their shop tools, They are sg outspoken in favor of this policy that their recommendations on the Care and Use of Hand Tools are often pub licized ? ¥ Never, that ye knew of; has | the case for the ether side been | presented, Tool by tool, here it is: Screw driver—whenever “possi ble, use it for ‘a wrecking bar You can never tell when you'll ineed a screw driver with a right- jangle be FUEL SAVINGS UP TO 50% OWNERS REPORT NO FURNACE- TENDING! BOILERS—FURNACES GENERAL QD ELECTRIC HEATING—SHEET METAL CONTRACTOR FE 5-6973 351 North Paddock St. times with £ t+ i THE PONTIAG PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1955 A Self Examination _~ Are You a Homer Workslop? Wrecking bar —- a worthless tool; “you can't even drive screws * with at. Claw himmer — this cousin to the sledge hammer will do every- thing the Sledge will do if you just strike a harder blow with it. Never mind if the handle breaks You ‘ean either tape it together again or get @ new handle, ‘nd | that's cheaper than bu ying a sledge hammer, € * = Cress-cut saw :— don't let any> body tell you different, you can use it for rip-sawing, That donkey at the hardware -stere is trying to sell you tw6 saws when you only need one. Chisel — you really should have two of these, You'll need one if you misplace your serew driver Keep the other one around for sharpening pencils (you broke the blade of your pocket knife when you used it as a screw. driver) too Ld J End wrenches — you won't be happy with the standard sizes the first thing vou'll want to do is either grind the jaws biggrr or BO pound them together, They won't fit any nuts made in America but some day you may own a British sports ear, and you'll have the laugh on everybody Square — this precision tool is really not broken in until you've mud off your straightened it a a hammer. shoes few scraped the with it, or ef Puty knife a fine substitute mud scraper to use when the kids borrow your square to s¢e¢ if it will make like a boomerang Plane — this one is so obvious it seems silly to. point it out Since a plane is really nothing but a chisel affixed to a metal frame equipped with adjusting ce vices, you can easily slip out the blade end use it as emé ren ies, Like missus it Using your! clean grease out of the oven Files Home found that these tools will do lots of odd jobs. One fellow discovered "i the to a chisel when chisels craftsmen have 51025 Van Dyke ‘Corner 23 Mile Rd. SPECIMEN STOCK LANDSCAPING Shade Tree Planting—Our Specialty J. C. TEAR NURSERY FARM Utica, Mich. RE 9-5041 Past wo; : s } » 3efore putting lids on pain mark a line on the outside dicate ‘the level of remaining paint. | | Next paintting job, the lid need not | | f pried up to discover how much | * i | iS left. ; Specialists in Re-Modeling! ELLIS CONST. CO. 2690 S$. Woodward FE 2-267) Poor Homer Worksiop doesn't realize that he could do a better job, faster and safer, if he had good tools and used them properly that they'll even do, a passable job of filing « a La So much for don't -« pamper You get the idea great many do-it-yourselfers are brothers in that fraternity. And while treating, tools. like that map hurt only their poeketbooks, it is the - too s fraternity Seriously, a indicative of a cfreless attitude toward home repairs. That brand of carelessness can be catastro phic ALL UNSAFE A pyblication of the Safty Council recently it up, saying: "We tape a frawed wire instead of replacing it. What we can't nail down we glue down, National summed what we can't saw off we break off, and what we can't fix we set aside for another day. Many of our repairs are tem-~ porary and quite unsafe, They are temporary until we can get better tools, which We never seem to do, If vou want to do a better job in less time and in a@ safe way, Selection Saves Costs Some home handymen make the mistake. of buying the highest grade of lumber for jobs on which lower grades would do. If choose the right grade for the right use can often make yequ lumber dollar go twice as far. you vou Unless we provide to get nig of this water vapor before it can get into the outside walls and in- sulation or unless We can coat the walls with some material through which this water pass, we are going to be in trouble a WRAY Views of the - It might have added that a man is judged by the tools he keeps > SOFTENS - > REGENERATES REFRIGERATION ITSELF SERVICE All Types—All Makes Commercial and Residential DAY OR NIGHT » RETURNS TO SERVICE FG Oe poker at oe saseee . 10 YEAR vow “ower ! SERVICE cab eerie WARRANTY &§ Authorized en mare H Kelvinator Saies & Service MASON REFRIGERATION FE 2-6400 461 Elizabeth Lake Road See this amaning sofienet todey. H. H. STANTON 103 State Complete Basement Waterprocfing All Work Guaranteed — Free Estimates! Reliable Waterproofing vapor @cannot ~ 24 Whitfield Phone FE 4-0777 MODERN-COMFORTABLE-LOW COST 2 and 3 BEDROOM NATIONAL HOMES “A HOME YOU CAN AFFORD” LOCATION: OPEN Mrive nerth om Minte Highway to Sasha * Mon. thu Fri. baw, nerth on Sashabaw to Maybee Kd., wKIVE trom 9 until 5 JOHNSON CONSTRUCTION 8010 OAK PARK Model Home Phone OR 3-2757 Office Phone Mi 4-0328 The Maceday Home 3-BEDROOM RANCH HOME In Beautiful Lorraine Manor- FHA $1100 DOWN Maceday Home ee a a a a a a Pius Mortgage Costs $70 Motthly Payments atelohall gets Bailt HARTMAN by * TYNER Le Ene FE 5-1683 7 7 if A ein gee hate ep Be AL We ht Poe: OFC PROTECT CHILDREN, | PETS and PROPERTY “5 — with sturdy, permanent Anchor Fence. Requires no annual painting —is zine coated after weaving, not before. Call for, FREE estimate. 62 Years of Fence Building -FE 5-747] mo sow | rare IN NOVEMBER 36 MONTHS TO PAY. Quality? Price? See the Famous | Blind Ai CENTRAL HEATING FURNACE And.tind out why this fine modern furnace and top quality installation add up to the LOWEST PRICE for your heating requirements. Goodwill Heating offers the finest quality merchan- 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 3401 West Huron. (Cor. of Elizabeth Lake Rd.) FE 2.7849 « Perimeter Under Floor Heating 1150, Sq. Ft. Under One Roof Large Picture Window Knotty Pine Kitchen Excellent Location Large Lots Paved Streets Carports Copper Flumbing Fully Insulated Lake Privileges on Williams & Maceday Lakes A GAS HEATED ranch type home in Beautiful Lorraine Manor with lake privileges on two of Oakland County's favorite lakes—Williams and Maceday — minutes drive from downtown Pontiac, near schools, churches and shopping areas. WHITE BROS. REAL ESTATES Office at 5660 Dixie Highway — Waterford OR 3-1872 or OR 3-1769